Recent Publications


Changes to Minimum Wage Requirements for Home Care Workers
October 31, 2015 | Labor & Employment | Health Services

In 2014, the United States Department of Labor (“DOL”) issued a new regulation to be effective January 1, 2015 to modify the minimum wage and overtime requirements of home care workers (including companionship and live-in domestic workers).  Prior to the new regulation being effective, a Federal District Court vacated the regulation finding that the DOL

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Judge Orders Reconsideration of “Two Midnight Rule” for Medicare Payment
October 31, 2015 | Health Services

Recently, a federal judge for the District of Columbia sided with several hospitals and health care organizations in ruling that the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (“CMS”) must reconsider a regulation that reduced the provider payment rate for Medicare Part A services. While the decision did not overturn the regulation, it did push the

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The Fair Chance Act
October 31, 2015 | Labor & Employment

The Fair Chance Act, which imposes substantial restrictions and obligations on New York City employers, goes into effect on October 27, 2015. Generally, the ordinance prohibits an employer (with at least four employees) from inquiring about a candidate’s pending arrest or conviction record until after a conditional offer of employment has been extended.  Only a

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Exclusions Bar Coverage of Homeowners’ Claims against Contractor, West Virginia’s Highest Court Rules
October 31, 2015 | Insurance Coverage

The West Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals has ruled that exclusions in a commercial general liability (CGL) insurance policy issued to a contractor precluded coverage of claims brought by two homeowners against the contractor.

The Case

In July 2009, Fred Hlad signed a contract to build a house for Travis and Teresa Nelson. The agreement

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Policy’s Exclusion Bars Coverage for TCPA Claim and for Claims for Conversion and Deceptive Practices, Illinois Appeals Court Affirms
October 31, 2015

An appellate court in Illinois, affirming a trial court’s decision, has ruled that a policy exclusion precluded coverage for claims against an insured for violation of the federal Telephone Consumer Protection Act of 1991 (TCPA), conversion, and violations of the Illinois Consumer Fraud and Deceptive Business Practices Act (the “Illinois Act”).

The Case

Wellington Homes,

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“Prior Publication” Exclusion Precludes Coverage for Continuing Course of Tortious Conduct, Third Circuit Holds
October 31, 2015

The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit, affirming a decision by the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania, has ruled that a “prior publication” exclusion prevented an insured from obtaining insurance coverage for a continuing course of tortious conduct.

The Case

On February 28, 2012, the Navajo Nation and its

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Parties May Not Reform Settlement Agreement to Revive Claim against Insurer, Oregon Supreme Court Decides
October 31, 2015

The Oregon Supreme Court, in response to a question certified to it by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit, has ruled that parties to a settlement agreement that contained an unconditional release of the insured could not amend the agreement to revive a claim against an insurer.

The Case

A homeowner’s association

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Insured’s Breach of Cooperation Clause Doomed Coverage, Vermont Supreme Court Declares
October 31, 2015

The Vermont Supreme Court, affirming a trial court’s decision, has ruled that an insured had breached his insurance policy’s cooperation clause and that, as a result, his insurance carrier had no obligation to defend or indemnify him in connection with an underlying personal injury claim.

The Case

Charles Chandler asserted that his then-girlfriend, now-wife, Faye

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Recent Decisions by the Trademark Trial and Appeal Board
October 23, 2015 | Insurance Coverage | Intellectual Property

Michael C. Cannata has issued an Intellectual Property Law Bulletin. We hope you find the Bulletin useful and interesting. We invite your suggestions. The Bulletin is not legal advice.

Recent Decisions by the Trademark Trial and Appeal Board

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Fifth Amendment Does Not Extend to ‘Digital Person’
October 20, 2015

An acrimonious marital breakup has been known to bring out the worst in some people. Those battles increasingly are fought on the technology field, thereby leaving courts to determine complex personal rights issues in the context of grown-ups behaving badly.1

In another such case, Crocker C. v. Anne R.,2 the Supreme Court, Kings County, addressed

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Federal Court Rebuffs FTC Effort to Apply Pharmaceutical Standards to Dietary Supplement Substantiation
October 2, 2015

In a highly followed litigation (CRN and NPA filed a number of amicus briefs), United States v. Bayer Corp. (US District Court for New Jersey) the Department of Justice and the Federal Trade Commission sought an Order holding Bayer in contempt of Court alleging that Bayer had violated the terms of a consent decree that

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New York Insurance Coverage Law Update
October 1, 2015 | Insurance Coverage

Court Finds Coverage For Owner As Additional Insured And Rejects Insurer’s Late Notice Argument

In October 2012, an employee of Tyco Integrated Security LLC went to a construction site to meet with the construction manager about providing security services for the project, and he allegedly tripped and fell entering a bathroom before the meeting began. 

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From the Courts
October 1, 2015 | Appeals | Insurance Coverage

Divorced Wife Was Not an “Eligible Spouse” Entitled to Survivor Benefits under Ex-Husband’s Pension Plan, Eleventh Circuit Rules

The plaintiff’s husband was a participant in the El Paso Corporation Pension Plan, under which he received retirement benefits beginning in 1987. The plaintiff and her husband divorced in 2011, and he died about eight months later.

After

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Insured’s Settlement Prejudiced Insurer as a Matter of Law, Nebraska Supreme Court Holds
September 30, 2015

The Supreme Court of Nebraska, in a case of first impression, has ruled that an insurance company must show prejudice to prevail on a defense based on an insured’s violation of the voluntary payment provision in a commercial general liability insurance policy – and that prejudice was shown as a matter of law where the

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Court Rules that Tribes’ Natural Resource Damage Claims Were Brought on Behalf of the Government for Pollution Exclusion Purposes
September 30, 2015

A federal district court in Oregon has ruled that natural resource damage (“NRD”) claims asserted by a council that included Indian Tribes as members were brought on behalf of federal or state government authorities for purposes of a pollution exclusion.

The Case

In December 2000, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (the “EPA”) listed a stretch

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