When Does the Carrier’s Duty to Defend End?
Although it seems reasonable that the carrier’s duty to defend ends when no insurable allegations remain in the suit – this is not necessarily always true. Some courts have a different opinion as to when an insurance carrier’s duty to defend ends. In some cases, the insurer has been required to defend insureds when NO covered allegations remain in the suit simply because there was the possibility a covered allegation may be brought back on appeal. CRAZY! Or is it?
?Author: Chris Boggs? Several weeks ago the VU addressed an insurance carrier’s duty to defend. As presented in the previous article, an insurer’s duty to defend flows from the facts alleged in the lawsuit compared to the coverage provided. When the pleadings allege damage or injury that is covered by the policy, the insurance carrier has a duty to defend, regardless of whether the insured is ultimately liable and/or the insurer has a duty to indemnify. Conversely, when the pleadings allege facts or events not covered by the policy, the carrier is not obligated to defend. Because it seems self-evident, an issue not addressed in the prior article was the point at which the insurance carrier no longerhas a duty to defend. Law and policy language seem to clearly indicate the insurance carrier’s duty to defend ends when there are no longer any allegations in the suit covered by the insurance policy.
Undoubtedly the carrier’s duty to defend ends when any and all allegations potentially covered by the subject policy are dismissed. Wanna bet? Several often-cited court cases disagree with this contention, asserting that the insurance carrier’s duty to defend ends only when an appeal is no longer available. Essentially, if an allegation that would be covered by the policy can still be resurrected on appeal, the insurance carrier must continue defending even if the remaining allegations are unquestionably excluded or otherwise not covered by the policy. Imagine this, initially the insurance carrier must defend its insured because one count of a 10-count suit is covered by the policy. Ultimately, that one allegation is thrown out; this decision should release the carrier from any duty to defend the other nine uncovered allegations. The carrier is ready to walk away, but the court calls them back saying, “Hey, the defendant can still appeal this finding; and until all appeals are spent, you must provide a defense.” The insurance carrier is left defending allegations for which there is clearly no coverage because there is still a potential for a covered claim. Example Case Law Five court decisions are regularly cited to support the finding that the insurance carrier’s duty to defend remains until all possibilities of resurrecting a covered allegation are gone:
Policy language and even other court findings tend to support the position that a carrier’s duty to defend ends when there is no longer any charge or complaint before the court potentially triggering coverage. In fact, holding otherwise seems to punish the insurance carrier for extending any coverage. However, the logic applied by some courts is that the potential for a covered claim is just as important as an actually covered claim. While there may be some logic in this thought process, it does penalize the carrier. Is it any wonder why an insurance carrier would seek to deny coverage up front? Depending on the jurisdiction, the carrier may be released when all coverable charges are released, or they may be on the hook until all possible attempts to reassert a covered claim are spent – even to the point of defending an insured even though there is never a chance they will have to indemnify or pay on behalf of the insured. Last Updated: March 2, 2018 |









