Maine Lawmakers Vote Against Bad Faith Legislation
Insurance companies are praising a recent move by lawmakers in Maine to that bars third party bad faith lawsuits against insurers.
The Property Casualty Insurers Association of America (PCI) said the vote last week by Maine’s Joint Committee on Insurance and Financial Services was a victory for consumers. If passed, the law would have had the potential to increase litigation cost, PCI said.
The vote showed “great wisdom in rejecting legislation that would have spurred an increase in frivolous lawsuits and costs that ultimately could find their way into the premiums consumers and businesses pay for insurance,” said Frank O’Brien, vice president and regional manager for PCI.
Six states have ever adopted some version of a third party cause of action: California, Florida, Kentucky, Massachusetts, Montana, and West Virginia. All six states experienced negative effects, PCI said, including a significant increase in the cost of insurance and significant increase in the number of uninsured people as the cost of insurance rises.
California and West Virginia recently enacted legislation to prohibit the practice all together. A California study showed that by creating a loophole to allow two lawsuits for every accident, premium costs grew from 11 percent to 19 percent.
Source: PCI
- Collision Claim Trends to Watch in 2025
- Three Dozen High-Rise Buildings in South Florida Are Sinking, Study Says
- AT&T, Verizon Say Networks Now Clear After Salt Typhoon Hack
- Car-Rental Startup Turo’s Safety Team Cuts Vacations Short After Deadly Attacks
- The End of the ‘Rust’ Criminal Case Against Alec Baldwin May Unlock a Civil Lawsuit
- AccuWeather’s 2024 White Christmas Forecast Calls for Snow in More Areas
- Jane Street-Millennium Trade Secrets Fight Ends in Settlement
- Colorado Adds Record Insurance Coverage for Sanders and Hunter With Both Playing in Alamo Bowl