Quantcast
National Underwriter Property And Casualty Insurance News.

Breaking News
NU Exclusives

 Flu Cases Could Spur Homeowner Claims, Lawyer Says 

 
Published 10/29/2009 

Print This Article
Return To Article
Normal Text
Large Text

NU Online News Service, Oct. 29, 1:20 p.m. EDT

Property and casualty insurers can expect to be hit by a swirl of claims arising from swine flu that include actions against homeowners and businesses, a medical malpractice defense attorney is predicting.

Charles Kutner, whose New York-based law firm defends individuals and institutions in the health industry, said he believes that p&c insurers may have to modify coverage to limit liability.

As hypothetical examples of the kind of legal action the illness could create, Mr. Kutner suggested that a suit could arise if a guest contracted flu after attending a cocktail party where the host did not warn that their child had the illness.

Similarly, a homeowner could be at risk of becoming a defendant if they failed to vaccinate their child against flu and the youngster passed on that illness to children invited for a play date--one of whom sickens and dies.

“The exposure is there [and] you’ve got a lawsuit on your hands,” he warned.

Mr. Kutner said he thought malpractice actions could arise because of a lack of availability of flu vaccine, but he doubted they would be found to have merit.

There are also possible actions from medical complications arising from a flu shot, because “invariably there are complications from vaccines and lawsuits.”

Employees, he said, can be encouraged to get flu shots, but, “Can you force employees to get flu shots? Probably not.”

 On the other hand, Mr. Kutner said that he believed an employer could be held liable “if you knew an employee was diagnosed with flu and you didn’t tell everyone else on the staff.”

To prevent against that sort of liability, he noted, universities make it a point to announce it to everyone at their institution when a student has contracted a communicable illness such as meningitis.

 The key to a defense, he said, is putting third parties on notice when you have information. When a suit is brought, Mr. Kutner explained, the key issues are “What did you know? When did you know?  And, what did you do about it.”

In New York, Mr. Kutner noted there is a pending $40 million lawsuit brought by the family of school principal Mitchell Weiner against the city, claiming the Board of Education failed to alert the principal that he had been in contact with children who had tested positive for the virus; that it did not act quickly enough to stop the transmission of the disease; that it did not disseminate adequate information about health conditions that would increase the risks of the virus; and that it did not provide a safe working environment for Mr. Wiener and other school employees, among other allegations.

Mr. Kutner suggested that with so much exposure, insurers “are going to have to start thinking about homeowner policies and these big general liability policies.”

“If there is a pandemic, it’s potentially a major casualty loss,” he said.

 

 

 



Comment on This Article

Name:
Email (will not be published):
Subject:
Comment:

    • 10/29/2009 2:44:50 PM
    • Dan Specht
    • WHAT BS
    • Another lawyer trying to scare up defense fees. Get real. Please tell how you will show causation between "getting flu at a cocktail party" as compared to getting it at the supermarket or subway train when the virus, by definition, is omnipresent and circulating throughout the population. Also, given an incubation period, how can you tie directly to one exposure (e.g., at the cocktail party) Utter hype.
    • 10/29/2009 2:48:48 PM
    • Denise R
    • A bit of exaggeration about vaccine lawsuits?
    • The Vaccine Injury Act of 1986 (Public Law 99-660) created the National Vaccine Injury Compensation Program (VICP). The VICP was established to ensure an adequate supply of vaccines, stabilize vaccine costs, and establish and maintain an accessible and efficient forum for individuals found to be injured by certain vaccines. The VICP is a no-fault alternative to the traditional tort system for resolving vaccine injury claims that provides compensation to people found to be injured by certain vaccines
    • 10/29/2009 3:23:46 PM
    • dirtdevil
    • Homeowner claims from flu?
    • Has this lawyer ever read the liability section of a HO policy? The standard ISO form has the following exclusion applicable to the liability and medical payments coverage: 6. Communicable Disease "Bodily injury" or "property damage" which arises out of the transmission of a communi-cable disease by an "insured"; No coverage. Plain and simple.
    • 10/29/2009 3:28:11 PM
    • Mike E
    • no wonder insurance premiums are only going up!
    • Get sick, sue your neighbor! This is unreal. First doctors are liable for every disease you might get from your lack of living a healthy lifestyle, now homeowners will be liable for their kids' classmates or teachers getting the flu. Apparently there can never be a natural occurrence that causes injury, illness or death. It must always be someone else's fault.
    • 10/29/2009 4:14:32 PM
    • Nancy P. James
    • Homeowners claims re H1N1 flu
    • HO-3 1991 form Sect.II exclusions 1.J and HO-2000 Sect.II exclusions E.6. seem to clearly cover this situation with communicable disease exclusions. Else, why have we not had prior widespread diseases result in homeowners claims? Is there some additonal "gross negligence" action for this H1N1 virus?
    • 10/29/2009 4:29:14 PM
    • Ken
    • Flu could spur Homeowner Claims
    • This sounds like a typical lawyer trying to think up ways to sue people. I wonder if Mr. Kutner is the lawyer for the New York case he mentioned. Using Mr. Kutners logic here, I could sue someone personally if my kids get sick from theirs no matter where it occurs. Who is liable if the play date is at a park instead of a home? I am in the United States so if I get sick in the United States, Can I sue the goverment? The same logic would have to apply before it could be used in a homeowner suit. Unless one could prove intentional harm or negligence there seems to be no grounds for suit. Let's please not stoop so low as to try to play on fears of what is already a tragice health situation.
    • 10/29/2009 4:33:50 PM
    • what is wrong with this country
    • Swine Flu Lawsuits
    • No wonder this contry is going down the tubes.
    • 10/30/2009 8:17:10 AM
    • Dennis Morley
    • Scare tactics
    • This is a scare headline! What is the legal basis for any illness related lawsuit against a homeowner?
    • 10/30/2009 11:44:24 AM
    • Need an attorney
    • Caught a cold in a movie theatre
    • Does anyone know an attorney who will take my case? I caught a cold in a movie theatre and had to miss a week of work. My pay was docked while I recovered at home. Mr. Kutner, can you help me?
    • 10/30/2009 11:59:54 AM
    • Ismael LLera
    • Flu Suits
    • This is part of a much worst syndrome: The who can we sue syndrome!
    • 10/30/2009 12:26:43 PM
    • Mike Mansel
    • Swine 'Flu Impact on HOs
    • I can see the potential impact on business insurance but on Homeowner's policies, what then is the purpose of the Section II Exclusion "Communicable Disease?"
    • 10/30/2009 1:31:49 PM
    • Jim Turner
    • Swine Flu law suits
    • If someone going out in public does not understand the risk of catching Swine Flu or some other type of illiness, they have had their head in the sand, do not watch TV or listen to the radio.
    • 11/2/2009 10:35:54 AM
    • Insurance Geek
    • HO Policies Exclude Most Flu Claims
    • In the examples given in the policy, the ISO Homeowners forms and any equivalent proprietary HO forms would exclude such claims as follows: 6. Communicable Disease "Bodily injury" or "property damage" which arises out of the transmission of a communicable disease by an "insured"; However, if the insured had a party and a non-insured was obviously suffering from flu symptoms, the policy would likely respond to claims against the insured on the basis that s/he was legally liable for exposing guests to transmission of a communicable disease by a non-insured.
    • 11/6/2009 11:22:33 AM
    • Greg Shelton, CPCU
    • Swine flu HO claims
    • Maybe I'm missing something, but what about the communicable diseases exclusion in the HO-3 form? Exclusion E. 6, page 18 of the 10-00 edition specifically addresses this issue, or am I missing something?

Recent Issues


Archived Issues

Most Read Articles


Related Articles


From Our Partners
Provides practical, authoritative sales and management information for indepent retail and wholesale producers of P&C insurance.
Online training, course development, live events, CE program management and processing services for financial, tax and insurance professionals.
Highline Data’s Insurance Analyst PRO is the market’s premier source for insurance industry statutory and GAAP financial filings. Our suite of online advanced search and analytical tools serves the industry’s need for timely data on more than 8,000 companies.


www.summitbusinessmedia.com © Copyright National Underwriter Property & Casualty. A Summit Business Media publication. All Rights Reserved.