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#1
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posted to rec.boats
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![]() wrote in message oups.com... JimH wrote: wrote in message oups.com... wrote: I hope that this is a good lesson to those in the industry. Lying about the condition of a boat you sell may not produce the intended results. I'll bet that MarineMax thought that they had just clipped another pigeon. It looks like the pigeon won the battle in the end. Chuck, I know you are in the industry. The title of the thread seems to indicate that you think that this was excessive. What makes you feel that way? You made a very quick leap from an assumption that the title "seems to indicate" something to asking me to defend what you presumed the title must have meant. "Ouch!" means that for even a company as large as Marine Max, a $2.5mm settlement, (plus attorney fees for both sides etc that will probably bring the total to $3mm) is a good sized bite out of the bottom line. Unless the judge ordered otherwise...........their insurance company was left holding the bill. No big deal for Marine Max other than possible higher insurance rates. snip Maybe not; It wouldn't be unusual for an insurance company to exclude from coverage any damages awarded to purchasers proving blatantly dishonest sales practices. Actually not. Unless the judge or State orders/mandates otherwise they are paid by the insurance company under most standard commercial insurance policies. Even if the insurance company winds up paying that insurance company will then raise its rates to all businesses that it insures, which will then show up in higher boat prices for everybody. Yep. But in any case.........this was not as big of hurt to MarineMax as it first appears. |
#2
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posted to rec.boats
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" JimH" jimh_osudad@yahooDOT comREMOVETHIS wrote in
: wrote in message oups.com... JimH wrote: wrote in message oups.com... wrote: I hope that this is a good lesson to those in the industry. Lying about the condition of a boat you sell may not produce the intended results. I'll bet that MarineMax thought that they had just clipped another pigeon. It looks like the pigeon won the battle in the end. Chuck, I know you are in the industry. The title of the thread seems to indicate that you think that this was excessive. What makes you feel that way? You made a very quick leap from an assumption that the title "seems to indicate" something to asking me to defend what you presumed the title must have meant. "Ouch!" means that for even a company as large as Marine Max, a $2.5mm settlement, (plus attorney fees for both sides etc that will probably bring the total to $3mm) is a good sized bite out of the bottom line. Unless the judge ordered otherwise...........their insurance company was left holding the bill. No big deal for Marine Max other than possible higher insurance rates. snip Maybe not; It wouldn't be unusual for an insurance company to exclude from coverage any damages awarded to purchasers proving blatantly dishonest sales practices. Actually not. Unless the judge or State orders/mandates otherwise they are paid by the insurance company under most standard commercial insurance policies. Wrong. First, most commercial insurance policies specifically exclude punitive damages and damages from an intentional act. In fact, in many states, it is illegal to even sell insurance covering punitive damages. Here the judge ruled the misrepresentations to be "deliberate." Second, the base amount of the award, the difference between what the buyer paid and what the boat was worth, is also not usually covered by insurance. That's becasue had the misrepresentation never occured, the dealer would have been paid the lower amount; to have the insurance company now cover the difference would mean the insurance company would be paying the dealer for the loss profit that never should have existed in the first place. Sorry, Marine Max is most likely SOL in this case. And yes, I am a lawyer and have litigated many insurance coverage cases. |
#3
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posted to rec.boats
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![]() "akheel" wrote in message ... " JimH" jimh_osudad@yahooDOT comREMOVETHIS wrote in : wrote in message oups.com... JimH wrote: wrote in message oups.com... wrote: I hope that this is a good lesson to those in the industry. Lying about the condition of a boat you sell may not produce the intended results. I'll bet that MarineMax thought that they had just clipped another pigeon. It looks like the pigeon won the battle in the end. Chuck, I know you are in the industry. The title of the thread seems to indicate that you think that this was excessive. What makes you feel that way? You made a very quick leap from an assumption that the title "seems to indicate" something to asking me to defend what you presumed the title must have meant. "Ouch!" means that for even a company as large as Marine Max, a $2.5mm settlement, (plus attorney fees for both sides etc that will probably bring the total to $3mm) is a good sized bite out of the bottom line. Unless the judge ordered otherwise...........their insurance company was left holding the bill. No big deal for Marine Max other than possible higher insurance rates. snip Maybe not; It wouldn't be unusual for an insurance company to exclude from coverage any damages awarded to purchasers proving blatantly dishonest sales practices. Actually not. Unless the judge or State orders/mandates otherwise they are paid by the insurance company under most standard commercial insurance policies. Wrong. First, most commercial insurance policies specifically exclude punitive damages and damages from an intentional act. In fact, in many states, it is illegal to even sell insurance covering punitive damages. Here the judge ruled the misrepresentations to be "deliberate." Second, the base amount of the award, the difference between what the buyer paid and what the boat was worth, is also not usually covered by insurance. That's becasue had the misrepresentation never occured, the dealer would have been paid the lower amount; to have the insurance company now cover the difference would mean the insurance company would be paying the dealer for the loss profit that never should have existed in the first place. Sorry, Marine Max is most likely SOL in this case. And yes, I am a lawyer and have litigated many insurance coverage cases. That was not my understanding as I thought it was a State by State thing. But I will defer to your expertise and accept what you say. |
#4
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posted to rec.boats
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![]() "akheel" wrote in message ... " JimH" jimh_osudad@yahooDOT comREMOVETHIS wrote in : wrote in message oups.com... JimH wrote: wrote in message oups.com... wrote: I hope that this is a good lesson to those in the industry. Lying about the condition of a boat you sell may not produce the intended results. I'll bet that MarineMax thought that they had just clipped another pigeon. It looks like the pigeon won the battle in the end. Chuck, I know you are in the industry. The title of the thread seems to indicate that you think that this was excessive. What makes you feel that way? You made a very quick leap from an assumption that the title "seems to indicate" something to asking me to defend what you presumed the title must have meant. "Ouch!" means that for even a company as large as Marine Max, a $2.5mm settlement, (plus attorney fees for both sides etc that will probably bring the total to $3mm) is a good sized bite out of the bottom line. Unless the judge ordered otherwise...........their insurance company was left holding the bill. No big deal for Marine Max other than possible higher insurance rates. snip Maybe not; It wouldn't be unusual for an insurance company to exclude from coverage any damages awarded to purchasers proving blatantly dishonest sales practices. Actually not. Unless the judge or State orders/mandates otherwise they are paid by the insurance company under most standard commercial insurance policies. Wrong. First, most commercial insurance policies specifically exclude punitive damages and damages from an intentional act. In fact, in many states, it is illegal to even sell insurance covering punitive damages. Here the judge ruled the misrepresentations to be "deliberate." Second, the base amount of the award, the difference between what the buyer paid and what the boat was worth, is also not usually covered by insurance. That's becasue had the misrepresentation never occured, the dealer would have been paid the lower amount; to have the insurance company now cover the difference would mean the insurance company would be paying the dealer for the loss profit that never should have existed in the first place. Sorry, Marine Max is most likely SOL in this case. And yes, I am a lawyer and have litigated many insurance coverage cases. Perhaps that is true in the State you practice in. I just checked with a friend of mine who is a commercial lines underwriter for a fairly large insurance company. She said that it is a State by State decision (whether the insurance company can/shall pay for punitive) and that her company no longer excludes punitive damages by endorsement. |
#5
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posted to rec.boats
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" JimH" jimh_osudad@yahooDOT comREMOVETHIS wrote in
news ![]() "akheel" wrote in message ... " JimH" jimh_osudad@yahooDOT comREMOVETHIS wrote in : wrote in message oups.com... JimH wrote: wrote in message oups.com... wrote: I hope that this is a good lesson to those in the industry. Lying about the condition of a boat you sell may not produce the intended results. I'll bet that MarineMax thought that they had just clipped another pigeon. It looks like the pigeon won the battle in the end. Chuck, I know you are in the industry. The title of the thread seems to indicate that you think that this was excessive. What makes you feel that way? You made a very quick leap from an assumption that the title "seems to indicate" something to asking me to defend what you presumed the title must have meant. "Ouch!" means that for even a company as large as Marine Max, a $2.5mm settlement, (plus attorney fees for both sides etc that will probably bring the total to $3mm) is a good sized bite out of the bottom line. Unless the judge ordered otherwise...........their insurance company was left holding the bill. No big deal for Marine Max other than possible higher insurance rates. snip Maybe not; It wouldn't be unusual for an insurance company to exclude from coverage any damages awarded to purchasers proving blatantly dishonest sales practices. Actually not. Unless the judge or State orders/mandates otherwise they are paid by the insurance company under most standard commercial insurance policies. Wrong. First, most commercial insurance policies specifically exclude punitive damages and damages from an intentional act. In fact, in many states, it is illegal to even sell insurance covering punitive damages. Here the judge ruled the misrepresentations to be "deliberate." Second, the base amount of the award, the difference between what the buyer paid and what the boat was worth, is also not usually covered by insurance. That's becasue had the misrepresentation never occured, the dealer would have been paid the lower amount; to have the insurance company now cover the difference would mean the insurance company would be paying the dealer for the loss profit that never should have existed in the first place. Sorry, Marine Max is most likely SOL in this case. And yes, I am a lawyer and have litigated many insurance coverage cases. Perhaps that is true in the State you practice in. I just checked with a friend of mine who is a commercial lines underwriter for a fairly large insurance company. She said that it is a State by State decision (whether the insurance company can/shall pay for punitive) and that her company no longer excludes punitive damages by endorsement. It is indeed state by state, and my comments were perhaps too general. In California where I practice it would be very unlikely that it would be covered. But insurance for punitive damages are prohibited in many states as wel, and in those where allowed, often has to be specifically covered in the policy. Ohio, where the case was brought, seems to follow this rule. See: http://www.mcandl.com/puni_states.html This webpage is a review of all 50 states viewpoint on this issue if anyone is interested in that sort of thing. My original point was that there's a good chance the punitive damages weren't covered by insurance and an even better chance that the fraud damages weren't covered either because they merely represent the benefit of the bargain that the buyer lost, and most policies won't cover that. They only way to know for sure is to read the actual policy. |
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