We are now on the sixth most popular post in my annual top ten countdown of blog and LinkedIn posts from the year just gone by. You can find the rules of the contest here.

The post that finished sixth asks the seemingly eternal question of “What Do You Do on Appeal With a

This post continues the countdown of my top ten posts of 2025. I was aiming to finish the countdown by the first of the year, but the road to heck is paved with good intentions and all that. I will now settle for finishing the countdown before the last week of the month if I

Boxing Day is my favorite post-holiday holiday, similar in many ways but better than the day after Thanksgiving, because the latter has, over the years, been overtaken by pressure to either shop or get started on end of the year rushes for work. Boxing Day, at least for me, suffers from none of that.

Boxing

For this week’s Five Favorites for Friday, I have a full stocking of gifts (too early for Xmas allusions? Maybe, but I was in New York for work and saw the Rockefeller Center Tree, which inspired that lede). Let’s get right into opening them up (and yes, I will probably beat that gag to death

About 24 years ago I won a trial on behalf of Liberty Mutual in an insurance bad faith action in which plaintiff’s counsel sought to multiply an underlying multimillion dollar judgment against the insured based on an alleged bad faith failure by the insurer to settle the tort claim. At the time, it represented –

I have litigated, arbitrated and advised on coverage and bad faith disputes from the U.K. to Guam and in every or practically every American jurisdiction in-between. (If you add in reinsurance claims I have worked on, you can add a couple more continents to the list).

Coverage itself, because it’s basically at heart a contract

I am returning to an old chestnut on my blog, a section which went dormant to some degree over the years, namely the section on interviews. They take a little time to do well, and podcasts (with their reliance on guests) seemed to have swallowed the field, so I stopped focusing on them. However, both

In the first of my two posts in this series discussing lessons I have learned over the past thirty years of practice as to how to avoid incurring Chapter 93A liability as a result of claims handling or settlement decisions, I discussed the centrality of the factual record of the claims handling and the necessity

In my last post on the lessons that I have learned in 30 years of representing insurers in Chapter 93A cases, I discussed the crucial – almost outcome determinative – role in such a case against an insurer of the actual facts of the underlying claim and the manner in which the claim was

I have counseled insurers and represented them in litigation on bad faith claims handling and Chapter 93A cases for pretty much the entire modern era of insurer bad faith law in Massachusetts. My very first trial as a first chair was a Chapter 93A bad faith failure to settle claim against a major insurer (I