Insurance coverage – take care in pleading what “Defendants” did.

February 16, 2015

Fernando Ramirez died after a beating by security guards at a nightclub.  His estate sued the guards and the business that owned the club, as well as subsequent owners, alleging a scheme to hide assets.  This lawsuit led to an insurance coverage dispute between the subsequent owners and the CGL carrier at the time of the incident.  Colony Ins. Co. v. Price, No. 14-10317 (Feb. 12, 2015, unpublished).  The specific allegations against the later owners in the underlying suit are far from clear, and appear to be obscured by broad use of the term “Defendants.”  Nevertheless, the district court and Fifth Circuit agreed that these parties were not covered as “employees” under the policy:  “Most obviously, the Price Defendants fail to explain how MTP and TOM, a partnership and a limited liability company, can be employees at all, let alone employees who falsely imprisoned Ramirez on October 1, 2008, particularly given that the Petition alleges that they were not formed until December 31 of the following year.”

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