• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer

McKennon Law Group HomepageMcKennon Law Group

E-Book Download Now

Free Phone Consultation Nationwide

(949) 504-5381

We Offer No Fee or Cost Unless You Get Paid

CALL US NOW
EMAIL US NOW
  • Home
  • About Us
    • Attorneys
      • Robert J. McKennon
      • Joseph McMillen
      • Joseph Hoff
      • Nicholas A. West
      • Cory Salisbury
      • Zlatina (Ina) Meier
    • Awards & Recognitions
    • Insurers We Fight
      • A-L
        • Aetna
        • AIG
        • Ameritas
        • Anthem
        • AXA
        • Berkshire
        • Broadspire
        • CIGNA/LINA
        • Guardian
        • Insurance
        • Liberty Mutual
        • Lincoln Financial Group
      • M-Z
        • Mass Mutual
        • MetLife
        • Mutual Of Omaha
        • New York Life
        • Northwestern Mutual
        • Principal Mutual
        • Provident
        • Prudential
        • Reliance Standard
        • Sedgwick
  • Our Services
    • Bad Faith Insurance
      • Disability Insurance Bad Faith
      • Life Insurance Bad Faith
    • Disability Insurance
      • Anxiety Claims Denial
      • Arthritis Claims Denial
      • Back, Neck And Spine Injury Claims
      • Cancer Claims
      • Chronic Headache Claims Denial
      • Cognitive Impairment Claims Denial
      • Depression Claim Denial
      • Medication Side Effects Claims Denial
      • Mental Illness Claims Denial
      • Multiple Sclerosis Claims Denial
      • Orthopedic Injury Claims Denial
    • Life Insurance
    • ERISA Insurance & Pension Claims
    • Accidental Death & Dismemberment Insurance Claims
    • Health Insurance
    • Long-Term Care
    • Professional Liability Insurance
      • Directors And Officers Liability Insurance
      • Property Casualty Insurance
  • Reviews
  • Success Stories
  • Blogs
    • News
    • Insurance & ERISA Litigation Blog
    • Disability Insurance Blog
  • FAQs
    • How Do You Pay Us
    • Disability Insurance FAQs
    • Life Insurance FAQs
    • Insurance Bad Faith FAQs
    • ERISA FAQs
    • Health Insurance FAQs
    • Long-Term Care FAQs
    • Annuities FAQs
    • Professional Liability FAQs
    • Accidental Death FAQs
  • Contact Us
Firm News
Get Legal Help Now

The Ninth Circuit Amends Opinion in Du v. Allstate removing policyholder friendly language

We recently wrote about a policyholder friendly opinion by the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals that seemingly held that an insurer’s duty of good faith and fair dealing, which is implied in every contract of insurance, may be violated by the insurer’s failure to attempt to effectuate a settlement within policy limits after liability of its insured has become reasonably clear, even without a policy limits settlement demand.  In other words, the court held that a demand within policy limits was not an element of a bad faith failure to settle claim.  The Ninth Circuit, on October 5, 2012, issued an amended opinion deleting this language and leaving open the questions: 1) whether the duty to settle can be breached absent a settlement demand from the third party claimant; and 2) whether the genuine dispute doctrine can be applied in third-party cases.

California appellate courts have been clear that an insurer can be held liable for bad faith or for a judgment in excess of policy limits (i.e., open up policy limits) when there is an offer to settle an excess claim made within policy limits or when a settlement offer is made in excess of policy limits and the policyholder is willing and able to pay the excess.  See Merritt v. Reserve Ins. Co., 34 Cal. App. 3d 858, 873 (1973)(“When a claimant offers to settle an excess claim within policy limits a conflict of interest immediately arises between carrier and assured. In such circumstances the carrier is required to evaluate the settlement offer in good faith, and good faith requires it to consider the interests of the assured equally with its own or, as some of the cases have said, to evaluate the settlement offer as though the carrier itself were liable for the full amount of the claim.  If the carrier rejects the offer to settle within policy limits without having made an honest, intelligent, and knowledgeable evaluation of the offer on its merits, then the carrier has acted in bad faith and may become liable to its assured for consequential damages caused by its bad faith rejection.”) see also Coe v. State Farm, 66 Cal. App. 3d at 981, 995-996 (1977) (“[u]nder the controlling authorities actionable ‘bad faith’ arises, not from an insurance carrier’s obligation ‘to settle,’ but from unwarranted failure to accept a reasonable settlement offer.”)

The Ninth Circuit, in its amended opinion in Du v. Allstate Insurance Company et al., __ F.3d __ (9th Cir. 2012) U.S. App. LEXIS 20889 (apparently done to avoid an en banc hearing), deleted the policy holder friendly language regarding an insurer’s duty to settle, and replaced it with a discussion of current California law that states that an insurer cannot be held liable under a bad faith failure to settle claim in the absence of a demand within policy limits.  Thus, what once was a case – at least for a few months – being hailed as a victory for policy holders, has done very little to change the landscape of bad faith duty to settle cases.  The decision simply cited long standing authority that has held an insurer cannot be liable for bad faith failure to settle claim in the absence of a demand within policy limits, and then decided that the question needed not be answered for purposes of this case.

The Ninth Circuit similarly chose not to decide the question of whether the genuine dispute doctrine applies to third-party cases.  The court found that the ultimate issue – whether the trial court gave a proper jury instruction that the jury could consider the insurer’s failure to effectuate a settlement in determining whether the insurer breached the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing – did not require the expansive discussion of the issues found in its earlier opinion.  However, it is likely that what was once a very policyholder friendly decision is no longer.

Robert J. McKennon Named in a List of Top Business Attorneys

McKennon Law Group PC founding partner Robert J. McKennon was named in the Business Edition 2012 Thomson Reuters/Super Lawyers annual list of the nation’s top attorneys in business practice areas.

Governor Jerry Brown Signs Law Changing Lapse Requirements For Life Insurance Policies

Insurance Commissioner Dave Jones last week announced that Governor Jerry Brown has signed AB 1747, authored by Assembly Member Mike Feuer (D-Los Angeles).  The bill was strongly supported by Commissioner Jones and the California Department of Insurance and provides important consumer safeguards for life insurance policyholders.  AB 1747, which will be effective January 1, 2013, adds new Sections 10113.71 and 10113.72 to the Insurance Code and will apply to every individual and group life insurance policy issued or delivered in California after January 1, 2013.

AB 1747 will require that every life insurance policy issued or delivered in this state contain a provision for a grace period of not less than 60 days from the premium due date and that the policy remains in force during the 60-day grace period.  The law will also require an insurer to give the applicant for an individual life insurance policy the right to designate at least one person, in addition to the applicant, to receive notice of lapse or termination of a policy for nonpayment of premium.  The law will require an insurer to provide each applicant with a form, as specified, to make the designation and to notify the policy owner annually of the right to change the designation.  The law will also prohibit a notice of pending lapse and termination from being effective unless mailed by the insurer to the named policy owner, a named designee for an individual life insurance policy, and a known assignee or other person having an interest in the individual life insurance policy at least 30 days prior to the effective date of termination if termination is for nonpayment of premium.

The new statutes will read as follows:

The people of the State of California do enact as follows:

SECTION 1. Section 10113.71 is added to the Insurance Code, to read:

10113.71. (a) Every life insurance policy issued or delivered in this

state shall contain a provision for a grace period of not less than 60 days

from the premium due date. The 60-day grace period shall not run

concurrently with the period of paid coverage. The provision shall provide

that the policy shall remain in force during the grace period.

(b) (1) A notice of pending lapse and termination of a life insurance

policy shall not be effective unless mailed by the insurer to the named policy

owner, a designee named pursuant to Section 10113.72 for an individual

life insurance policy, and a known assignee or other person having an interest

in the individual life insurance policy, at least 30 days prior to the effective

date of termination if termination is for nonpayment of premium.

(2) This subdivision shall not apply to nonrenewal.

(3) Notice shall be given to the policy owner and to the designee by

first-class United States mail within 30 days after a premium is due and

unpaid. However, notices made to assignees pursuant to this section may

be done electronically with consent of the assignee.

(c) For purposes of this section, a life insurance policy includes, but is

not limited to, an individual life insurance policy and a group life insurance

policy, except where otherwise provided.

SEC. 2. Section 10113.72 is added to the Insurance Code, to read:

10113.72. (a) An individual life insurance policy shall not be issued or

delivered in this state until the applicant has been given the right to designate

at least one person, in addition to the applicant, to receive notice of lapse

or termination of a policy for nonpayment of premium. The insurer shall

provide each applicant with a form to make the designation. That form shall

provide the opportunity for the applicant to submit the name, address, and

telephone number of at least one person, in addition to the applicant, who

is to receive notice of lapse or termination of the policy for nonpayment of

premium.

(b) The insurer shall notify the policy owner annually of the right to

change the written designation or designate one or more persons. The policy

owner may change the designation more often if he or she chooses to do

so.

(c) No individual life insurance policy shall lapse or be terminated for

nonpayment of premium unless the insurer, at least 30 days prior to the

effective date of the lapse or termination, gives notice to the policy owner

and to the person or persons designated pursuant to subdivision (a), at the

address provided by the policy owner for purposes of receiving notice of

lapse or termination. Notice shall be given by first-class United States mail

within 30 days after a premium is due and unpaid.

SEC. 3. Section 10173.2 of the Insurance Code is amended to read:

10173.2. When a policy of life insurance is, after the effective date of

this section, assigned in writing as security for an indebtedness, the insurer

shall, in any case in which it has received written notice of the name and

address of the assignee, mail to the assignee a written notice, postage prepaid

and addressed to the assignee’s address filed with the insurer, not less than

30 days prior to the final lapse of the policy, each time the policy owner

has failed or refused to transmit a premium payment to the insurer before

the commencement of the policy’s grace period or before the notice is

mailed. The insurer shall give that notice to the assignee in the proper case

while the assignment remains in effect, unless the assignee has notified the

insurer in writing that the notice is waived. The insurer shall be permitted

to charge the policy owner directly or against the policy the reasonable cost

of complying with this section, but in no event to exceed two dollars and

fifty cents ($2.50) for each notice.

As used in this section, “final lapse of the policy” means the date after

which the policy will not be reinstated by the insurer without requiring

evidence of insurability or written application.

As the Insurance Commissioner has noted, under existing law, individuals can easily lose the critical protection of life insurance if a single premium is accidentally missed, even if they have been paying premiums on time for many years.  Furthermore, if an insured individual loses coverage and wants it reinstated, he or she may then have to undergo a new physical exam and be underwritten again, risking a significantly more expensive, possibly unaffordable premium if his or her health has changed in the years since purchasing the policy.  Worse yet, they will not qualify for coverage at all under the insurers’ standards in place for reinstating coverage because of health changes.  Over the years, we have observed that insurers have improperly lapsed life insurance policies without complying with existing law and even in situations where they have complied with the law, insurance company agents have not properly notified/warned policyholders of the impending lapse.  Our office has been involved in a significant amount of litigation with insurers and their agents over improper life insurance policy lapses (last week one of the cases settled for just under $500,000).  We expect that this law will make significant strides in reducing the amount of litigation over this issue.

Under ERISA, Communications with In-House Counsel Before a Final Claims Decision are Not Privileged and are Subject to Discovery to Show a Conflict of Interest

Are insureds entitled to communications between an insurance company’s in-house counsel and the claims handlers that might otherwise be protected by the attorney-client privilege?  Following a new ruling by the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals, if the claimant is insured under an ERISA plan, the answer might be “yes.”

For decades, courts, including the Ninth Circuit, have recognized a “fiduciary exception” to the attorney-client privilege in the context of ERISA.  Courts have required production of legal advice given to plan fiduciaries when they are acting as fiduciaries for the benefit of the beneficiaries.  This “fiduciary exception” has however been subject to exceptions.

In Stephan v. Unum Life Insurance Company of America, __ F.3d __, 2012 U.S. App. LEXIS 19139, 2012 WL 3983767 (9th Cir. September 12, 2012), for the Ninth Circuit for the first time addressed whether the fiduciary exception applies to insurance companies in the ERISA context.  The Court ruled that, in an ERISA case, a claimant is entitled to conduct discovery regarding communications between claims handlers and in-house counsel in an attempt to determine whether the insurer’s decision was improperly influenced by a conflict of interest.  Following the Third Circuit’s ruling in Wachtel v. Health Net, Inc., 482 F.3d 225 (3d Cir. 2007), the court held that the ERISA “fiduciary exception” to the attorney-client privilege did not apply to communications made while the claim is still being evaluated.

Unlike most cases involving long-term disability insurance, the dispute in Stephan was not over whether the claimant was entitled to benefits, but rather the amount of those benefits.  Following a bicycling accident that left him quadriplegic, Unum calculated Stephan’s earnings using only his monthly salary, but not his annual bonus.  Given that Stephan’s bonus was 1 ½ times his salary, Unum’s interpretation of the Plan terms to exclude to bonus resulted in a substantial cost savings for the insurer.  Stephan, with the full support of his employer, who provided evidence that the bonus was not a discretionary addition to his income, but rather the “main portion” of his compensation, sued Unum to have the bonus included as part of his monthly earnings.

On cross motions for summary judgment, the District Court applied the abuse of discretion standard of review and held that Unum’s interpretation of the Plan was not an abuse of discretion.  The District Court also denied Stephan’s motion to compel discovery of a series of internal memoranda created by Unum’s in-house counsel regarding Stephan’s claim.  Stephan appealed both rulings.

As to the issue of the proper standard of review, the Ninth Circuit ruled that District Court’s decision to apply the abuse of discretion standard of review was proper, rejecting the plaintiff’s arguments that an agreement between Unum and the California Department of Insurance prohibits the discretionary authority provision, as well as the argument that the discretionary provision is contrary to California state law and public policy and is therefore void.  However, the Ninth Circuit criticized the District Court’s failure to consider evidence showing that Unum’s decision might have been improperly influenced by a conflict of interest.

The district court held that “Unum’s conflict of interest did not weigh heavily upon its decision-making process in this case and therefore does not tip the scale towards a finding of an abuse of discretion.”  In reaching this conclusion, the district court erred by failing to apply traditional principles of summary judgment; denying Stephan’s motion to compel discovery of certain internal memoranda between Unum’s claim analyst and its in-house counsel; and ignoring evidence that Unum has a history of biased decision making that indicates that its conflict of interest in this case ought to be given more weight.”

Similarly, the Ninth Circuit criticized the District Court’s refusal to compel the production of certain documents that Stephan sought in an effort to demonstrate that Unum’s decision was influenced by its conflict of interest.  Specifically, “Stephan sought to discover a series of internal memoranda created between December 2007 and February 2008 by Unum’s in-house counsel, at the request of Unum’s claims analyst.”  Acknowledging that ordinarily such documents would fall under the attorney-client privilege, Stephan argued that because Unum is a fiduciary of the ERISA Plan, the fiduciary exception to the privilege permits his discovery of the documents.”

The Ninth Circuit agreed with the District Court’s finding that the fiduciary exception applies to wholly insured ERISA plans, but disagreed with the District Court’s application of the doctrine.  The District Court refused to compel the production of the documents because “the interests of plaintiff and defendant had sufficiently diverged at the time the disputed memoranda were created.”  However, after reviewing the documents, the Ninth Circuit ruled that they merely “offer[ed] advice solely on how the Plan ought to be interpreted,” and did not address any potential civil or criminal liability Unum might face.  The Ninth Circuit further noted that the documents “were prepared to advise Unum claims analysts about how best to interpret the Plan, and were communicated to the analysts before any final determination on Stephan’s claim had been made.”  (Emphasis added.)  In discussing the issue, the Ninth Circuit rejected the conclusion of Wachtel, expressing its view that the justifications for the fiduciary exception did not support excluding insurers from the fiduciary exception:

ERISA has broad disclosure requirements: It requires that “every employee benefit plan . . . afford a reasonable opportunity to any participant whose claim for benefits has been denied for a full and fair review by the appropriate named fiduciary of the decision denying the claim.” 29 U.S.C. § 1133. Because “[t]he opportunity to review . . . pertinent documents is critical to a full and fair review,” Ellis v. Metropolitan Life Insurance Co., 126 F.3d 228, 237 (4th Cir. 1997), the regulations implementing this provision require that upon request, a claimant be provided all “information relevant to the claimant’s claim for benefits,” 29 C.F.R. § 2560.503-1(h)(2)(ii). Neither the statute nor the regulations provide any reason why the disclosure of information is any less important where an insurer, rather than a trustee or other ERISA fiduciary, is the decisionmaker.

Similarly, the obligation that an ERISA fiduciary act in the interest of the plan beneficiary does not differ depending on whether that fiduciary is a trustee or an insurer.  There is therefore no principled basis for excluding insurers from the fiduciary exception.  Accordingly, because the advice was given before the interests of Unum and the claimant became adverse, the Court ruled that the fiduciary exception to the attorney-client privilege applied.

Finally, while the Ninth Circuit remanded the ruling on the underlying claim decision to the District Court, the Court of Appeals offered a detailed analysis of the Plan language and controlling case law suggesting that there is ample evidence that Unum’s decision was likely tainted by a conflict of interest and the decision to exclude Stephan’s bonus from the calculations of the LTD benefits was improper and should be overturned.

This plaintiff-participant friendly decision has some very beneficial statements and holdings and should be referred to by attorneys for plan participants/beneficiaries.

An Insurance Company Cannot Shield Itself from Negligence Liability by Filing an Interpleader

In Lee v. West Coast Life Insurance Company, 2012 U.S. App. LEXIS 15768 (9th Cir. July 31, 2012), the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that a stakeholder insurance company cannot use an interpleader filing to shield itself from tort liability for its negligent actions.  With this holding, the Court of Appeals confirmed that “where the stakeholder may be independently liable to one or more claimants, [an] interpleader does not shield the stakeholder from tort liability, nor from liability in excess of the stake.”

In 1998, West Coast Life Insurance Company issued a policy on the life of Steve Lee, Sr.  Over the next ten years, West Coast received numerous change of ownership and change of beneficiary forms from members of the Lee family.  However, in 2005, West Coast’s Director of Policy Administration gave erroneous instructions regarding who should sign particular forms, and in what capacity those forms should be signed.  Assuming that West Coast had properly instructed them in completing those forms, the Lee family made several subsequent changes to the policy’s ownership and beneficiaries.  When Mr. Lee died in 2009, West Coast realized that the 2005 changes were not properly executed, and informed certain members of the Lee family that they were not entitled to the life insurance benefits.

With West Coast’s discovery, two groups of the Lee family claimed that they were entitled to the life insurance proceeds:  the named beneficiaries prior to the 2005 changes and the named beneficiaries at death.  That first group of Lee family members (the pre-2005 beneficiaries) filed suit against West Coast for breach of contract and breach of the covenant of good faith and fair dealing.  West Coast filed a counterclaim-in-interpleader, deposited the life insurance proceeds, plus interest, with the Court, and added the other members of the Lee family (the post-2005 beneficiaries) as counterclaimants.  The post-2005 beneficiaries then filed counterclaims for negligence and declaratory relief against West Coast, as well as cross-claims against the pre-2005 beneficiaries.

Eventually, the members of the Lee family settled their disputing claims to the life insurance proceeds, with the pre-2005 beneficiaries receiving $290,000, and the post-2005 beneficiaries collecting the remainder of the funds.  This did not end the litigation however, as the post-2005 beneficiaries maintained that West Coast was liable to them for the insurance proceeds allocated to the pre-2005 beneficiaries, as well as for attorneys’ fees incurred in litigating the cross-claims against them.

Following a bench trial on stipulated facts, the district court issued judgment in West Coast’s favor, ruling that the post-2005 beneficiaries failed to allege any cognizable damages flowing from West Coast’s alleged negligent conduct, and therefore it did not need to address the merits of the post-2005 beneficiaries’ negligence claims.  Specifically, the district court “concluded that attorney’s fees are not recoverable in interpleader actions absent a showing of bad faith.”  In overturning the district court’s ruling, the Ninth Circuit explained that while an interpleader does protect “the stakeholder from being obliged to determine as this peril which claimant has the better claim … interpleader protection generally does not extend to counterclaims that are not claims to the interpleaded funds.”

Here, the post-2005 beneficiaries “alleged that West Coast’s negligent actions in 2005 caused the instant controversy, and claim damages flowing from that negligence.”  Thus, because their “damages flowed not from West Coast’s filing of an interpleader complaint but from its alleged negligent conduct,” the post-2005 beneficiaries were not required to show that West Coast acted in bad faith.  Accordingly, because interpleader protection does not extend to counterclaims that are not claims to the interpleaded funds, West Coast could be liable for its negligent actions.

Based on this ruling, an insurance company cannot use an interpleader filing as a shield to protect itself from liability for its own negligent (or for that matter bad faith) actions.  When the insurance company is not blameless with respect to the underlying controversy, it can face tort liability from a party that claims an interest in the disputed funds.  In fact, an insurance company can face liability for negligence, and can even be liable for certain attorneys’ fees incurred in such an action.

Robert J. McKennon Rated AV Preeminent

For the year 2012, Robert J. McKennon has been rated AV Preeminent in Insurance Law by his peers, an achievement of Martindale Hubbell’s highest rating in legal ability and ethical standards. Mr. McKennon will be featured in the August 2012 issues of Corporate Counsel magazine and The National Law Journal, both of which will feature the 2012 Top Rated Lawyers in Insurance Law.

  • « Go to Previous Page
  • Go to page 1
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Go to page 50
  • Go to page 51
  • Go to page 52
  • Go to page 53
  • Go to page 54
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Go to page 76
  • Go to Next Page »

Practice Areas

  • Disability Insurance
  • Bad Faith Insurance
  • Long-Term Care
  • Los Angeles Insurance Agent-Broker Liability Attorneys
  • Professional Liability Insurance
  • Property Casualty Insurance
  • Unfair Competition Unfair Business Practices

Recent Posts

  • Mundrati v. Unum: An Important Decision on How Insurers Are to Characterize a Claimant’s Occupation in Long-Term Disability Disputes
  • McKennon Law Group PC is Recognized as 2025 Insurance Litigation Law Firm of the Year in the USA
  • ERISA and Mental Health Disability Claims: What You Need to Know
  • What is ERISA and How Does It Impact Your Employee Benefits?
  • McKennon Law Group PC Recognized as 2025 Insurance Litigation Law Firm of the Year in California

Categories

  • Accidental Death and Dismemberment
  • Agent/Broker
  • Annuities
  • Arbitration
  • Articles
  • Bad Faith
  • Beneficiaries
  • Benefits
  • Breach of Contract
  • Case Updates
  • Commissioner of Insurance
  • Damages
  • Directors & Officers Insurance
  • Disability Insurance
  • Discovery
  • Duty to Defend
  • Duty to Investigate
  • Duty to Settle
  • Elder Abuse
  • Employee Benefits
  • ERISA
  • ERISA – Abuse of Discretion
  • ERISA – Accident/Accidental Bodily Injury
  • ERISA – Administrative Record
  • ERISA – Agency
  • ERISA – Any Occupation
  • ERISA – Appeals
  • ERISA – Arbitration
  • ERISA – Attorney Client Privilege
  • ERISA – Attorneys' Fees
  • ERISA – Augmenting Record
  • ERISA – Basics of an ERISA Claim Series
  • ERISA – Choice of Law
  • ERISA – Church Plans
  • ERISA – Conflict of Interest
  • ERISA – Conversion Issues
  • ERISA – De Novo Review
  • ERISA – Deemed Denied
  • ERISA – Disability Insurance
  • ERISA – Discovery
  • ERISA – Equitable Relief
  • ERISA – Exclusions
  • ERISA – Exhaustion of Administrative Remedies
  • ERISA – Fiduciary Duty
  • ERISA – Full & Fair Review
  • ERISA – Gainful Occupation
  • ERISA – Government Plans
  • ERISA – Health Insurance
  • ERISA – Incontestable Clause
  • ERISA – Independent Medical Exams
  • ERISA – Injunctive Relief
  • ERISA – Interest
  • ERISA – Interpretation of Plan
  • ERISA – Judicial Estoppel
  • ERISA – Life Insurance
  • ERISA – Mental Limitation
  • ERISA – Notice Prejudice Rule
  • ERISA – Objective Evidence
  • ERISA – Occupation Duties
  • ERISA – Offsets
  • ERISA – Own Occupation
  • ERISA – Parties
  • ERISA – Peer Reviewers
  • ERISA – Pension Benefits
  • ERISA – Pre-existing Conditions
  • ERISA – Preemption
  • ERISA – Reformation
  • ERISA – Regulations/Department of Labor
  • ERISA – Restitution
  • ERISA – Self-Funded Plans
  • ERISA – Social Security Disability
  • ERISA – Standard of Review
  • ERISA – Standing
  • ERISA – Statute of Limitations
  • ERISA – Subjective Claims
  • ERISA – Surcharge
  • ERISA – Surveillance
  • ERISA – Treating Physicians
  • ERISA – Venue
  • ERISA – Vocational Issues
  • ERISA – Waiver/Estoppel
  • Experts
  • Firm News
  • Health Insurance
  • Insurance Bad Faith
  • Interpleader
  • Interpretation of Policy
  • Lapse of Policy
  • Legal Articles
  • Legislation
  • Life Insurance
  • Long-Term Care Insurance
  • Medical Necessity
  • Negligence
  • News
  • Pre-existing Conditions
  • Premiums
  • Professional Liability Insurance
  • Property & Casualty Insurance
  • Punitive Damages
  • Regulations (Claims & Other)
  • Rescission
  • Retirement Plans/Pensions
  • Super Lawyer
  • Uncategorized
  • Unfair Business Practices/Unfair Competition
  • Waiver & Estoppel

Get the Answers and Assistance You Need

  • Disclaimer | Privacy Policy
  • This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.
Newport Beach Office
20321 SW Birch St #200
Newport Beach, CA 92660
Map & Directions

San Francisco Office
71 Stevenson St #400
San Francisco, CA 94105
Map & Directions
San Diego Office
4445 Eastgate Mall #200
San Diego, CA 92121
Map & Directions

Los Angeles Office
11400 W Olympic Blvd #200
Los Angeles, CA 90048
Map & Directions

Phone: 949-504-5381

Email: info@mckennonlawgroup.com

© 2025 McKennon Law Group PC. All Rights Reserved | Privacy Policy | Disclaimer | Site Map

Manage Consent
To provide the best experiences, we use technologies like cookies to store and/or access device information. Consenting to these technologies will allow us to process data such as browsing behavior or unique IDs on this site. Not consenting or withdrawing consent, may adversely affect certain features and functions.
Functional Always active
The technical storage or access is strictly necessary for the legitimate purpose of enabling the use of a specific service explicitly requested by the subscriber or user, or for the sole purpose of carrying out the transmission of a communication over an electronic communications network.
Preferences
The technical storage or access is necessary for the legitimate purpose of storing preferences that are not requested by the subscriber or user.
Statistics
The technical storage or access that is used exclusively for statistical purposes. The technical storage or access that is used exclusively for anonymous statistical purposes. Without a subpoena, voluntary compliance on the part of your Internet Service Provider, or additional records from a third party, information stored or retrieved for this purpose alone cannot usually be used to identify you.
Marketing
The technical storage or access is required to create user profiles to send advertising, or to track the user on a website or across several websites for similar marketing purposes.
Manage options Manage services Manage {vendor_count} vendors Read more about these purposes
View preferences
{title} {title} {title}