Can a Mentally Disturbed Person form the Intent to Apply an Intentional Act Exclusion
When Mentally Ill Son Sets Fire to House in an Attempted Suicide May his Innocent Parents Recover?
Read the full article at https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/mentally-disturbed-person-capable-forming-intentional-barry and at https://zalma.com/blog plus more than 3600 posts.
When an insurer denies a claim because of an intentional act exclusion and whether his co-insureds were entitled to recover indemnity for losses caused by the insured acting intentionally.
In Kentucky, in Foreman v. Auto Club, 2018-SC-0618-DG, Supreme Court of Kentucky (February 18, 2021). Foreman brought a declaratory judgment action to establish that Auto Club owed payment under a homeowner’s insurance policy for property damage caused by a house fire started by their teenage son, Logan, in a suicide attempt. Auto Club denied liability based on the intentional-loss exclusion in the policy.
ZALMA OPINION
It is difficult to imagine that a parent reasonably expected to be excluded from homeowners’ insurance coverage if his or her child, struggling with mental health issues, starts a fire in the house during an attempted suicide. The Kentucky legislature should note that it is time to enact greater protections for innocent co-insureds.
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