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A Video Explaining How to Allocate Defense Costs When two or More  Insurers Insure the Same Risk   


https://zalma.com/blog


Since other insurance clauses usually do not prescribe how defense costs  should be apportioned among insurers, courts have developed general  allocation rules. When only one of two insurers is held to provide  coverage, that insurer must bear the entire burden of defense. [Mandell  Corp. v. Insurance Co. of No. America, 125 Misc. 2d 390, 479 N.Y.S.2d  452 (Sup.Ct. New York County 1984)]  The majority view is that the insurers must share the costs of defense  pro rata in the same proportion that the face amount of each policy  bears to the total amount of valid and collectible insurance.  Generally, an excess insurer is not required to contribute to the  defense of the insured so long as the primary insurer is required to  defend. The discussion assumes that the relationship between the  insurers arises through the operation of other insurance clauses and not  by design of the insured. The considerations regarding allocation of  the duty to defend where the relationship between the insurers arises by  design may differ from that when the relationship arises by  coincidence.   When other insurance clauses operate to make one insurer the primary  insurer and the other an excess insurer, the primary insurer is  generally held to have the burden of defending.. Nevertheless, there are  cases that suggest that in certain circumstances, insurers may owe a  duty to participate in the insured’s defense.  Policyholders should not assume, whether they agree with the decisions  in Comerica and Qualcomm or not, that they can settle with underlying  insurers for less than the amount of any applicable underlying limits  without putting excess coverage at risk. Policyholders with pending  claims must carefully review their policies for exhaustion language like  that found clear and unambiguous in Comerica and Qualcomm should  consult coverage counsel before considering settlement of a suit or  claim. Policyholders seeking new or renewal policies should seriously  consider whether the price of the coverages is sufficient to provide the  coverage needed even with the limitations created by the language found  to be effective.  © 2021 – Barry Zalma