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At & T CORP. v. Faraday Capital Ltd.

Del.February 5, 2007No. 236, 2006Cited 29 times
RemandedAT&T Corp.
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Case Details

Judge(s)
Berger, Jacobs, Ridgely
Status — whether other courts must follow this ruling
Published
Procedural Posture — the stage the case had reached
appeal

Related Laws

No specific laws identified for this ruling.

Outcome

The Delaware Supreme Court reversed the Superior Court's interpretation of 'Claim' in directors and officers liability policies, holding that each pleaded cause of action may constitute a separate claim rather than each lawsuit constituting one claim. The case was remanded for reconsideration of claim identification and coverage analysis.

What This Ruling Means

This case involved a dispute over how to interpret insurance policies that protect company directors and officers when they face lawsuits. AT&T Corp. was involved in litigation regarding their directors and officers liability insurance coverage, specifically disagreeing about what counts as a separate "claim" under these policies. The Delaware Supreme Court made an important ruling about how to count claims in these insurance policies. The court decided that each individual legal complaint or cause of action should be treated as a separate claim, rather than treating an entire lawsuit as just one claim. This means that if someone files a lawsuit with multiple complaints against company executives, each complaint could be considered its own separate claim for insurance purposes. The court sent the case back to a lower court to reconsider how claims should be identified and what insurance coverage applies. **Why this matters for workers:** While this case specifically deals with executive insurance, it could affect workers indirectly. When companies have better clarity about their insurance coverage for legal disputes, it may influence how they handle employment-related lawsuits and workplace policies. However, this ruling primarily impacts high-level executives rather than typical employees.

This summary was generated to explain the ruling in plain English and is not legal advice.

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