Across the United States, most states hold that an insurer can’t deny coverage to a policyholder because of a trivial failure to comply with the policy’s “notice” provisions after a claim. See, e.g., Arrowood Indemnity Co v King, 304 Conn 179, 203; 39 A3d 712 (2012) (joining the “overwhelming majority” of jurisdictions that require insurers to establish prejudice); PAJ, Inc v Hanover Ins Co, 243 SW3d 630, 633-634 (Tex. 2008) (noting that most jurisdictions presented with the issue have adopted a “notice-prejudice rule” in some form, consistently with the modern trend); Prince George’s Co v Local Gov’t Ins Trust, 388 Md 162, 182-183; 879 A2d 81 (2005) (vast majority of states have adopted a prejudice requirement and noting that 38 states have adopted a “prejudice rule” whereas only 6 states have maintained a traditional “no prejudice rule”); Brakeman v. Potomac Ins. Co., 371 A.2d 193, 198 (Pa. 1977)(Under Pennsylvania law, “where an insurance company seeks to be relieved of its obligations under a liability insurance policy on the ground of late notice, the insurance company will be required to prove that the notice provision was in fact breached and that the breach resulted in prejudice to its position.”); Cooper v. Gov’t Employees Ins. Co., 237 A.2d 870, 874 (N.J. 1968)(Under New Jersey law, insurer must prove a breach of the notice provision and a likelihood of appreciable prejudice).

The rule makes sense. If you pay, and pay, and pay, for insurance coverage, and then report your incident, say, 60 days after it happened as compared to the 30 days required by the policy, then the insurer can’t just take your money and run like a thief unless it can show the delay somehow prejudiced them. Maybe critical evidence was lost. Who knows — the key issue is that the insurance company has to show some reason why that delay really caused a problem. Otherwise, it’s no harm, no foul.

William DeFrain was minding his own business as a pedestrian on May 31, 2008, when a hit-and-run driver ran him over, causing severe head injuries. Severe enough that they sent him to the hospital, where he was diagnosed with serious and permanent brain injuries, from which he died five months later. His mother was dealing with her son, the brain surgery he received soon after the accident, and his crippling disability, and so she didn’t end up notifying State Farm, with which she had an uninsured driver insurance policy, until August 25, 2008, a whole 56 days later than the 30 days required by the policy.

That, of course, didn’t prejudice State Farm. There’s nothing else they needed to know. There’s no evidence that was lost. Nobody knew who the driver was, not even the police, and the delay didn’t do anything to change that. William’s condition was documented from the moment he was found, and all those documents were available to State Farm. But some soulless bloodsuckers at State Farm saw a way to keep the company’s reserves up and their “policy losses” down, so, like a good neighbor who ransacks your house for jewelry after a hurricane*, State Farm saw the chance to make a quick buck by denying a faithful policyholder their due and went for it. 
Continue Reading State Farm Cheats Brain Injury Victim, Michigan Supreme Court Approves

Really, you should:

The New York Court of Appeals held Pepper Hamilton had a duty to disclose in advance to the insurers the firm’s potential involvement in litigation concerning fraudulent loan securitization activities by its client, Student Finance Corp., according to a New York Law Journal article reprinted in New York Lawyer (reg. req.).