Insurer’s “Failure to Cooperate” Defense

Failure with paper peeling around it

The Fourth District confirmed that in a failure to cooperate defense case, “the insurer must show a material failure to cooperate which substantially prejudiced the insurer.”

November 14, 2018
David Adelstein - Florida Construction Legal Updates

The “failure to cooperate” defense is a defense an insurer may raise when its insured fails to cooperate with it in the defense of the claim against the insured. If an insurer takes this position, it will typically be denying both defense and indemnification obligations, meaning the insured could be forfeiting coverage that otherwise exists through his/her/its failure to cooperate with the insurer. This defense by the insurer is not absolute as recently explained by the Fourth District in Barthelemy v. Safeco Ins. Co. of Illinois, 43 Fla.L.Weekly D2379a (Fla. 4th DCA 2018) discussing the elements of this failure to cooperate defense.

Mr. Adelstein may be contacted at dma@kirwinnorris.com



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