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Client Wins

  • Gavel with calculator and spreadsheet

    Benford & Larkin Obtain Summary Judgment on $3.2 Million Accounting Malpractice Claim

  • Medical Hospital Complex

    Chicago Team Secures Affirmance for Insurance Company Client in Medical Malpractice Coverage Dispute

  • Cybersecurity Class Action

    Coffman, Das, Ross, Viergever and Williams Defeat Federal Data Breach Class Action

  • Class Action Complaint

    D.C. Class Action Team Prevails on Motion for Reconsideration: Court Concedes It Committed Clear Error in Certifying a Class Action

  • Airplane flying in sky

    Grace and Hogan Secure Appellate Affirmance for Airline Client in Montreal Convention Case

  • Construction hat with schematics

    Grandison, Russell, and Dolby Secure Defense Verdict on Damages in High-Stakes Construction Litigation

  • Neurosurgeon

    Huston and Shepperd Win Defense Verdict in High-Exposure Neurosurgery Case

  • Attorneys' Fees

    Koehler & Melichar Obtain Defense Verdict – Client Awarded Reasonable Attorney Fees and Costs Exceeding $400,000

  • Insurance Policy Terms and Conditions

    O’Brien and Bokeno’s Amicus Brief Bolsters Another Landmark Kentucky Supreme Court Decision on Interpretation of Insurance Policies

  • Orange trucking car on road

    Salfiti, Jones, and Longerbeam Win on Motion for Terminating Sanctions for Major Transportation Client

  • Product Liability

    Tranen and Martinez Tristani Obtain Dismissal of Product Liability Suit in Puerto Rico

  • Employment Discrimination

    Wright Obtains No Probable Cause Finding from New York State Division of Human Rights in Employment Discrimination Matter

Firm Highlights

News
Legendre Honored with President’s Award and Assumes Leadership Role at Earl Warren Inn of Court
San Francisco office associate Camille Legendre was honored to receive the President’s Award at the Earl Warren Inn of the Court’s end-of-season banquet, which is presented in recognition of outstanding participation and exceptional service to the Inn during the program year. The banquet also marked the installation of the Inn’s new Board of Directors, sworn in by the Honorable Charles A. Smiley of the First Appellate District, Division One, in San Francisco. During the past year, Camille served as a Board Member-at-Large. For the upcoming term, she will serve as Chair of Achieving Excellence, overseeing the Inn’s participation in the American Inns of Court Achieving Excellence Program and helping maintain the Inn’s status as an MCLE provider. Camille will serve as the primary liaison between the Earl Warren Inn and the national American Inns of Court organization.  Widely regarded as one of the premier Inns of Court in the country, the Earl Warren Inn has earned a reputation for excellence and engagement. In her new role, Camille will help ensure the Inn continues to uphold those high standards. She expressed gratitude for the opportunity to continue serving in a leadership capacity and to represent Wilson Elser within the broader legal community.
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Publications
New York's 2026 Tort Reform: Key Changes to New York State Civil Procedure Laws With Respect to Motor Vehicle Accident Litigation
On May 27, 2026, Governor Kathy Hochul signed New York's 2026 state budget into law. The $268.1 billion budget includes significant tort reform provisions for New York State motor vehicle litigation. The reforms took effect immediately and apply to all motor vehicle actions commenced on or after the law’s passage, other than accidents resulting in a death or property damage.  I. Shift from Pure to Modified Comparative Negligence in Motor Vehicle Cases The biggest change is to C.P.L.R. § 1411, which has long governed comparative negligence in New York. With the addition of a new subsection "b," New York now moves from a pure to a modified comparative negligence state but just for motor vehicle accident cases. Under a pure comparative negligence system, plaintiffs could recover compensation even if they were predominantly at fault. For example, a party who was 99 percent responsible for an accident could still recover one percent of the total damages. Now, under the new law, a plaintiff who is more at fault (i.e. more than 50 percent) than the other persons involved in a motor vehicle accident cannot recover. In practice, if a jury finds a car accident plaintiff is 51 percent or more at fault, it will not proceed to calculate and award damages.  II. Elimination of the 90/180-Day Serious Injury Category The tort reform also amends subsection (d) of Insurance Law § 5102 to eliminate the so-called "90/180-day" category of serious injury. Under prior law, a plaintiff could satisfy the serious injury “threshold” by demonstrating a medically determined injury of a non-permanent nature that prevented them from performing substantially all of their usual and customary daily activities for at least 90 of the 180 days immediately following the accident (e.g. going to work or school). This category faced significant criticism because it often relied on subjective, self-reported information and/or allowed someone who could go to work but didn’t to automatically meet the threshold. III. New Sequencing Requirement: Fault Before Serious Injury Another aspect is that Insurance Law § 5104(a) now requires juries to decide who is at fault for a motor vehicle accident before figuring out whether the serious injury threshold is met. Under the new rules, liability for non-economic loss (i.e., pain and suffering) isn't set until fault is determined. This means that the trier of fact must assign blame first, then assess damages afterward, specifically for non-economic losses. The new sequencing rule has significant strategic effects. Under the updated comparative negligence system for car accident cases, if the jury finds the plaintiff more than 50 percent at fault, they stop right there–no damages awarded. If the plaintiff’s fault does not exceed 50 percent, the jury then considers whether the plaintiff’s injuries satisfy the other requirements in § 5102(d). This makes trials more efficient and keeps juries from letting information about injuries bias their decision when the plaintiff is too fault-prone to recover damages. IV. Recovery Cap for Claimants Engaged in Unlawful Conduct Finally, Insurance Law Section 5104 now includes a new subsection (d). It caps non-economic loss (i.e., pain and suffering) recovery for a motor vehicle accident at $100,000 when the plaintiff is in one of three specific groups (unless the accident results in death): The plaintiff was operating an uninsured motor vehicle in violation of Article 6 of the Vehicle and Traffic Law (with an exception for lapses in coverage of fewer than 30 days). The plaintiff was operating a motor vehicle while impaired and has been convicted of that offense. The plaintiff was operating a motor vehicle in the commission of a felony or in immediate flight afterwards, with a conviction for the same. While the situations described above are thankfully rare, they do occur. The new law will prevent a significant recovery from others by drivers who were uninsured, intoxicated, and/or felons. The authors acknowledge the contributions made by summer staff assistant Christopher DeMicco.
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Events
Legal Ethics in the World of Artificial Intelligence
Jonathan Meer (Partner-New York, NY) will present the Wilson Elser Forum webinar “Legal Ethics in the World of Artificial Intelligence” on July 16, 2026. The presentation will address how attorney regulation has evolved over time and what steps are being considered for policing attorney use of AI. Jonathan will touch on some of the model rules and ethical opinions concerning technology, as well as rules being adopted by the courts regarding AI use. He’ll also highlight instances of attorneys being reprimanded for misusing AI. Using artificial intelligence as a tool is becoming more commonplace among lawyers. The AI guidelines, whether established by courts, state bar associations, law firms, individual practitioners, or otherwise, should be a growing concern that requires careful consideration by lawyers today. 
Read more
Client Wins
Dodrill and Ashbeck Bring Negligent Entrustment Claim to a Screeching Halt
Colt Dodrill (Partner-Phoenix, AZ) and Jeffrey Ashbeck (Associate-Las Vegas, NV) secured a car share lawsuit dismissal from the Eighth Judicial District Court, Clark County, Nevada, on behalf of Wilson Elser’s clients, a car-sharing platform and the vehicle owner. The plaintiff sued our clients for injuries sustained in an automobile accident. The clients had reserved the car share for a specific driver, but the plaintiff alleged a different driver was behind the wheel at the time of the accident. Colt and Jeff moved to dismiss, arguing that negligent entrustment does not recognize successive entrustments to strangers not named on the reservation. The court agreed that the law does not skip a generation, kicking the claim to the curb. The plaintiff tried to circumvent the rule against vicarious liability by alleging a failure to provide statutorily mandated insurance. However, Colt and Jeff held firm and convinced the plaintiff not proceed with further briefing after proving that the prescribed policies had been properly provided. 
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Events
Litigation Management 101
Maryan Alexander (Partner-Baltimore, MD) will present the webinar “Litigation Management 101” as part of CLM’s 2026 Insurance 101 Webinar Series, Building a Strong Foundation in Insurance Fundamentals, to be held on July 29, 2026. Maryan’s session provides a high-level overview of the litigation process and the claims professional’s role in managing outside counsel, budgets, and case strategy. Participants will gain insight into key litigation milestones, reporting expectations, and effective collaboration with defense counsel. Ideal for those newer to litigation oversight, this session emphasizes proactive management practices that support strong outcomes and cost control.
Read more
News
Wilson Elser Recognized in BTI’s The 113 Law Firms Clients Love Most
Wilson Elser has been named a “Standout” in BTI Consulting Group’s The 113 Law Firms Clients Love Most, published on June 24, 2026. BTI Consulting Group, a leading provider of independent research on how clients acquire, manage, and evaluate professional services firms, describes the distinction as reflecting a level of client loyalty that goes beyond satisfaction and trust to “client devotion.” According to BTI, firms earning this recognition distinguish themselves by helping clients succeed, acting with reliability and responsiveness, understanding their clients’ businesses, anticipating needs, communicating proactively, and delivering practical, actionable advice. Wilson Elser is proud to be included among this select group of firms recognized for building strong client relationships and contributing meaningfully to client success. The recognition reflects the firm’s commitment to providing exceptional service, assembling the right team for every matter, and leveraging its national platform to meet clients’ evolving needs. As BTI notes of the firms included on the list, “They become part of [their clients’ success]—making them indispensable."
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Publications
Analysis of Polinder v. Brand Insulations, Inc. and the Washington Construction Statute of Repose
The Washington Supreme Court’s recent decision in Polinder v. Brand Insulations, Inc., No. 102782-6 (Wash. Apr. 30, 2026), provides clarifications on how the construction statute of repose applies to contractors in asbestos litigation. By resolving conflicting appellate decisions, the Court established a more precise framework for evaluating when a contractor’s historical installation work is shielded from liability and when it is not. Background: The Construction Statute of Repose In Washington, the construction statute of repose, Wash. Rev. Code § 4.16.300 (2026), applies to claims arising from a person having "constructed, altered or repaired any improvement upon real property.” Wash. Rev. Code § 4.16.310 (2026) dictates that such claims must accrue within six years of the substantial completion of construction.  Unlike a traditional statute of limitations, which typically begins to run when a plaintiff discovers an injury, a statute of repose creates a strict outer time limit that extinguishes a cause of action after a specified period, even if the injury has not yet occurred or been discovered. The legislature enacted this statute to protect contractors and engineers from extended potential liability decades after a project is completed. See Hudesman v. Meriwether Leachman Assocs., 35 Wn. App. 318, 321, 666 P.2d 937 (1983) (citing Pinneo v. Stevens Pass, Inc., 14 Wn. App. 848, 545 P.2d 1207 (1976)); see also 1519-1525 Lakeview Blvd. Condo. Ass'n v. Apt. Sales Corp., 144 Wn.2d 570, 578, 29 P.3d 1249 (2001).  Concept Statute of Limitation (SOL) Statute of Repose (SOR) Trigger Event Accrual of cause of action (discovery of injury) Substantial completion of construction services Primary Purpose Encourages diligent prosecution of known claims Provides a date certain for the end of legal liability Duration (WA) Generally, two-to-three years for torts Six years for construction-related activities Tolling Often tolled by discovery or minority status Generally, not tollable (hard outer wall) Status of Right Bars the remedy Extinguishes the underlying right of action For decades, the application of this statute was guided by Condit v. Lewis Refrigeration Co., 101 Wash. 2d 106, 676 P.2d 466 (1984), which held that the statute of repose protects individuals whose activities contribute to a structural improvement or to "integral" systems, such as heating or plumbing, that are required for the structure to function as intended. It does not protect manufacturers of heavy equipment or non-integral "accoutrements" housed within a building. Condit, 101 Wn.2d at 12. Applying Condit to asbestos-containing industrial insulation led to a split in the Washington appellate courts: The contextual approach: In Maxwell v. Atl. Richfield Co., 15 Wash. App. 2d 569, 476 P.3d 645 (2020), Division Two determined that a contractor was protected by the statute of repose because the installation of insulation occurred during the original construction of the refinery, which itself constituted as an improvement upon real property. The evidentiary approach: In Welch v. Brand Insulations, Inc., 27 Wash. App. 2d 110, 531 P.3d 265 (2023), Division One rejected the Maxwell approach, holding that contractors must provide specific, competent evidence showing that their insulation work actively contributed to a structural improvement or an integral system necessary for the refinery's function. The Polinder Decision In April 2026, the Washington Supreme Court issued its decision in Polinder, resolving the conflict between Maxwell and Welch. The Court's opinion resolved the appellate split on two distinct but related grounds, each carrying significant implications for how contractors defend asbestos claims. 1. The Integral Systems Requirement  The Court agreed with the Welch framework, clarifying that a contractor must establish that their work contributed to the construction of an improvement on real property or to a system that is a normal and integral part of that improvement. In Polinder, the defendant successfully met this burden by submitting expert engineering testimony, which explained that a refinery cannot safely manage heat energy and mass balances without thermal insulation. Because the insulation was proven to be a "normal and integral component required for the Cherry Point refinery to function as intended," the Court ruled that the contractor's installation activities were protected by the six-year construction statute of repose. 2. The Product Seller Exception  While the installation of the insulation was protected, the Court ruled that the statute of repose does not shield contractors from claims arising from independent duties as a "product seller" or "negligent supplier." In Polinder, the record contained evidence that the contractor did not merely install the materials but also used their expertise to select the asbestos-bearing insulation, purchased it, and resold it to the facility owner at a marked-up price. Consequently, the Court held that the plaintiff's claims based on product seller or supplier liability were not barred by the construction statute of repose and could proceed. Impact on Asbestos Cases and Defendants The Polinder decision provides a framework for how asbestos cases involving contractors will be litigated moving forward: Reliance on Expert Evidence Contractors can no longer assume that working on a large industrial site automatically satisfies the statute of repose. Defendants must proactively utilize expert testimony to demonstrate that the specific piping or equipment they insulated was an integral system functionally necessary for the facility to operate. Evaluating the Contractor's Role Because plaintiffs can bypass the construction statute of repose by pursuing "seller" or "supplier" liability theories, discovery will heavily focus on a contractor's historical procurement role. Defendants will need to analyze historical contracts to demonstrate they were providing a unified construction service rather than acting as a retail merchant who purchased and resold hazardous materials. Continued Importance of Proximate Cause For claims that survive the statute of repose under the product seller exception, plaintiffs are still required to prove proximate cause under the standard set forth in Lockwood v. AC & S, Inc., 109 Wash. 2d 235, 744 P.2d 605 (1987). This requires demonstrating a reasonable connection between the plaintiff's injury and the specific asbestos product supplied by the defendant, analyzing factors, such as the plaintiff's proximity to the product, the expanse of the worksite, and the frequency and duration of the exposure. Ultimately, the Washington Supreme Court's decision recalibrated the legal landscape for asbestos litigants by solidifying a strict six-year repose bar against pure construction liability, while simultaneously preserving a distinct, viable pathway for plaintiffs to pursue historical claims against contractors who also functioned as hazardous product sellers or suppliers. See Polinder v. Brand Insulations, Inc., No. 102782-6, slip op. at 7, 14-16 (Wash. Apr. 30, 2026). Contractors can mitigate future liability by expressly stating in their agreements that the facility owner or client retains sole authority to choose, specify, and supply the materials used for the project.
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Publications
United States Supreme Court Rules on Failure to Disclose Personal Injury Claim in Bankruptcy
What happens if a personal injury plaintiff files bankruptcy but fails to disclose the personal injury claim in the bankruptcy case? The United States Supreme Court has now resolved a circuit split about how to analyze that question, and it could impact pending claims. In Keathley v. Buddy Ayers Construction, Inc,. the Keathleys were involved in a motor vehicle accident with a Buddy Ayers employee in August 2021. They had an open Chapter 13 repayment plan but did not disclose the claim in the bankruptcy case after the accident occurred or when they filed suit. Buddy Ayers learned of the bankruptcy and moved for summary judgment in March 2023, arguing the Keathleys had taken inconsistent positions—first denying the claim in bankruptcy then later asserting it in the personal injury case. Buddy Ayers argued judicial estoppel barred the Keathleys from pursuing the personal injury claim because they had previously denied it existed in bankruptcy. The district court applied Fifth Circuit precedent and granted summary judgment, which the Fifth Circuit affirmed. The Supreme Court reversed on narrow grounds, finding both lower courts used the wrong standard. Judicial estoppel is an equitable doctrine. “[W]hen a court conducts an equitable inquiry, it must act on a case-by-case basis, considering all relevant facts and circumstances.” Thus, the judgment was reversed and remanded to apply that test to the facts of this case. It gave no opinion as to what might happen when that test is applied. This ruling changes the approach in circuits that previously applied narrower standards. District courts in those areas will now consider more factors, potentially making it harder to prevail on motions like Buddy Ayers filed. Keathley may also reduce some of the disincentives for bankrupt plaintiffs to conceal assets.
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Events
Rebroadcast: Pleadings, Motions, and Briefs: AI Edition
Isaac Netzer (Associate-New York, NY) will again serve as a faculty member for the National Business Institute (NBI) in conjunction with two rebroadcasts of the CLE webinar “Pleadings, Motions, and Briefs: AI Edition,” to be held on August 20, 2026, and October 27, 2026. Back by popular demand, Isaac’s program focuses on the practical use of artificial intelligence in litigation, including AI’s capabilities and limitations, ethical and confidentiality considerations, and real-world applications in drafting pleadings, motions, briefs, and conducting document review. The rebroadcasts of Isaac’s November 2025 NBI presentation will cover topics such as strategic prompt design, identifying AI blind spots, authority validation, and using AI to assess both one’s own filings and opposing counsel’s submissions, with Isaac hosting live Q&A sessions following the rebroadcasts. 
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Client Wins
New York Team Secures Complete Summary Judgment Victory for University Client
Nancy Wright (Partner-New York, NY), Tatjana Calimpong-Burke (Associate-New York, NY), and Jenna Agatep Slater (Associate-New York, NY) secured a complete defense victory for Wilson Elser’s client, a University, when the Honorable Jed. S. Rakoff of the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York granted the University’s motion for summary judgment in its entirety and dismissed all claims. With his pre-trial procedures often described as the "rocket docket," Judge Rakoff directed both parties to be "trial ready" by May 18, 2026, after the filing of the University's answer on January 16, 2026. Operating under this less-than-ideal discovery schedule, the New York team completed 12 depositions and extensive summary judgment motion and cross motion practice by May 13, 2026.   The plaintiff, a former undergraduate with a diagnosed disability, alleged the University discriminated and retaliated against her based on her use of her dog, Zeus, which she claimed was a service animal. She asserted violations of the Fair Housing Act, Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act, the New York State Human Rights Law, and the New York City Human Rights Law, challenging our client’s handling of her accommodation requests related to Zeus, air-conditioning requests, scholarship eligibility, and eventual expulsion.   The New York team demonstrated that the plaintiff, not the University, caused the breakdown in the required cooperative dialogue, having refused to sign the University's universally applied Assistance Animal Agreement and failing to provide required documentation or properly request the accommodations she later claimed were denied. The defense also established significant weaknesses in plaintiff's contention that Zeus qualified as a service animal, highlighting evidence that showed the plaintiff inconsistently characterized Zeus as both a service animal and an emotional support animal; that her therapist reclassified the dog as a service animal only after initially identifying him as an emotional support animal and acknowledged that she was not an expert in animal classifications; and that the plaintiff herself conducted the dog's training, despite surveillance videos showing Zeus habitually disregarding her commands and barking at students. Wilson Elser further challenged the claimed effectiveness of the animal, demonstrating that the therapist's opinions were based solely on the plaintiff's self-reporting, as she had never met Zeus and lacked expertise regarding service or support animals. Nancy, Tatjana, and Jenna also established that the plaintiff's air-conditioning requests were unrelated to her disability. On the retaliation claims, they showed legitimate, non-retaliatory grounds for each challenged action, including a scholarship denial based on the plaintiff's transfer-student status and an expulsion triggered by the plaintiff’s blatant misconduct captured on a surveillance recording, and independently upheld by the University President on appeal.   The Court denied plaintiff's motion for partial summary judgment and granted Wilson Elser’s motion in full, directing entry of final judgment in favor of the University and closing the case on June 15, 2026.
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Events
Legal Ethics in the World of Artificial Intelligence
Jonathan Meer (Partner-New York, NY) will present the Wilson Elser Forum webinar “Legal Ethics in the World of Artificial Intelligence” on July 16, 2026. The presentation will address how attorney regulation has evolved over time and what steps are being considered for policing attorney use of AI. Jonathan will touch on some of the model rules and ethical opinions concerning technology, as well as rules being adopted by the courts regarding AI use. He’ll also highlight instances of attorneys being reprimanded for misusing AI. Using artificial intelligence as a tool is becoming more commonplace among lawyers. The AI guidelines, whether established by courts, state bar associations, law firms, individual practitioners, or otherwise, should be a growing concern that requires careful consideration by lawyers today. 
Read more
Publications
New York's 2026 Tort Reform: Key Changes to New York State Civil Procedure Laws With Respect to Motor Vehicle Accident Litigation
On May 27, 2026, Governor Kathy Hochul signed New York's 2026 state budget into law. The $268.1 billion budget includes significant tort reform provisions for New York State motor vehicle litigation. The reforms took effect immediately and apply to all motor vehicle actions commenced on or after the law’s passage, other than accidents resulting in a death or property damage.  I. Shift from Pure to Modified Comparative Negligence in Motor Vehicle Cases The biggest change is to C.P.L.R. § 1411, which has long governed comparative negligence in New York. With the addition of a new subsection "b," New York now moves from a pure to a modified comparative negligence state but just for motor vehicle accident cases. Under a pure comparative negligence system, plaintiffs could recover compensation even if they were predominantly at fault. For example, a party who was 99 percent responsible for an accident could still recover one percent of the total damages. Now, under the new law, a plaintiff who is more at fault (i.e. more than 50 percent) than the other persons involved in a motor vehicle accident cannot recover. In practice, if a jury finds a car accident plaintiff is 51 percent or more at fault, it will not proceed to calculate and award damages.  II. Elimination of the 90/180-Day Serious Injury Category The tort reform also amends subsection (d) of Insurance Law § 5102 to eliminate the so-called "90/180-day" category of serious injury. Under prior law, a plaintiff could satisfy the serious injury “threshold” by demonstrating a medically determined injury of a non-permanent nature that prevented them from performing substantially all of their usual and customary daily activities for at least 90 of the 180 days immediately following the accident (e.g. going to work or school). This category faced significant criticism because it often relied on subjective, self-reported information and/or allowed someone who could go to work but didn’t to automatically meet the threshold. III. New Sequencing Requirement: Fault Before Serious Injury Another aspect is that Insurance Law § 5104(a) now requires juries to decide who is at fault for a motor vehicle accident before figuring out whether the serious injury threshold is met. Under the new rules, liability for non-economic loss (i.e., pain and suffering) isn't set until fault is determined. This means that the trier of fact must assign blame first, then assess damages afterward, specifically for non-economic losses. The new sequencing rule has significant strategic effects. Under the updated comparative negligence system for car accident cases, if the jury finds the plaintiff more than 50 percent at fault, they stop right there–no damages awarded. If the plaintiff’s fault does not exceed 50 percent, the jury then considers whether the plaintiff’s injuries satisfy the other requirements in § 5102(d). This makes trials more efficient and keeps juries from letting information about injuries bias their decision when the plaintiff is too fault-prone to recover damages. IV. Recovery Cap for Claimants Engaged in Unlawful Conduct Finally, Insurance Law Section 5104 now includes a new subsection (d). It caps non-economic loss (i.e., pain and suffering) recovery for a motor vehicle accident at $100,000 when the plaintiff is in one of three specific groups (unless the accident results in death): The plaintiff was operating an uninsured motor vehicle in violation of Article 6 of the Vehicle and Traffic Law (with an exception for lapses in coverage of fewer than 30 days). The plaintiff was operating a motor vehicle while impaired and has been convicted of that offense. The plaintiff was operating a motor vehicle in the commission of a felony or in immediate flight afterwards, with a conviction for the same. While the situations described above are thankfully rare, they do occur. The new law will prevent a significant recovery from others by drivers who were uninsured, intoxicated, and/or felons. The authors acknowledge the contributions made by summer staff assistant Christopher DeMicco.
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News
Legendre Honored with President’s Award and Assumes Leadership Role at Earl Warren Inn of Court
San Francisco office associate Camille Legendre was honored to receive the President’s Award at the Earl Warren Inn of the Court’s end-of-season banquet, which is presented in recognition of outstanding participation and exceptional service to the Inn during the program year. The banquet also marked the installation of the Inn’s new Board of Directors, sworn in by the Honorable Charles A. Smiley of the First Appellate District, Division One, in San Francisco. During the past year, Camille served as a Board Member-at-Large. For the upcoming term, she will serve as Chair of Achieving Excellence, overseeing the Inn’s participation in the American Inns of Court Achieving Excellence Program and helping maintain the Inn’s status as an MCLE provider. Camille will serve as the primary liaison between the Earl Warren Inn and the national American Inns of Court organization.  Widely regarded as one of the premier Inns of Court in the country, the Earl Warren Inn has earned a reputation for excellence and engagement. In her new role, Camille will help ensure the Inn continues to uphold those high standards. She expressed gratitude for the opportunity to continue serving in a leadership capacity and to represent Wilson Elser within the broader legal community.
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Client Wins
Dodrill and Ashbeck Bring Negligent Entrustment Claim to a Screeching Halt
Colt Dodrill (Partner-Phoenix, AZ) and Jeffrey Ashbeck (Associate-Las Vegas, NV) secured a car share lawsuit dismissal from the Eighth Judicial District Court, Clark County, Nevada, on behalf of Wilson Elser’s clients, a car-sharing platform and the vehicle owner. The plaintiff sued our clients for injuries sustained in an automobile accident. The clients had reserved the car share for a specific driver, but the plaintiff alleged a different driver was behind the wheel at the time of the accident. Colt and Jeff moved to dismiss, arguing that negligent entrustment does not recognize successive entrustments to strangers not named on the reservation. The court agreed that the law does not skip a generation, kicking the claim to the curb. The plaintiff tried to circumvent the rule against vicarious liability by alleging a failure to provide statutorily mandated insurance. However, Colt and Jeff held firm and convinced the plaintiff not proceed with further briefing after proving that the prescribed policies had been properly provided. 
Read more
Events
Litigation Management 101
Maryan Alexander (Partner-Baltimore, MD) will present the webinar “Litigation Management 101” as part of CLM’s 2026 Insurance 101 Webinar Series, Building a Strong Foundation in Insurance Fundamentals, to be held on July 29, 2026. Maryan’s session provides a high-level overview of the litigation process and the claims professional’s role in managing outside counsel, budgets, and case strategy. Participants will gain insight into key litigation milestones, reporting expectations, and effective collaboration with defense counsel. Ideal for those newer to litigation oversight, this session emphasizes proactive management practices that support strong outcomes and cost control.
Read more
News
Wilson Elser Recognized in BTI’s The 113 Law Firms Clients Love Most
Wilson Elser has been named a “Standout” in BTI Consulting Group’s The 113 Law Firms Clients Love Most, published on June 24, 2026. BTI Consulting Group, a leading provider of independent research on how clients acquire, manage, and evaluate professional services firms, describes the distinction as reflecting a level of client loyalty that goes beyond satisfaction and trust to “client devotion.” According to BTI, firms earning this recognition distinguish themselves by helping clients succeed, acting with reliability and responsiveness, understanding their clients’ businesses, anticipating needs, communicating proactively, and delivering practical, actionable advice. Wilson Elser is proud to be included among this select group of firms recognized for building strong client relationships and contributing meaningfully to client success. The recognition reflects the firm’s commitment to providing exceptional service, assembling the right team for every matter, and leveraging its national platform to meet clients’ evolving needs. As BTI notes of the firms included on the list, “They become part of [their clients’ success]—making them indispensable."
Read more
Publications
Analysis of Polinder v. Brand Insulations, Inc. and the Washington Construction Statute of Repose
The Washington Supreme Court’s recent decision in Polinder v. Brand Insulations, Inc., No. 102782-6 (Wash. Apr. 30, 2026), provides clarifications on how the construction statute of repose applies to contractors in asbestos litigation. By resolving conflicting appellate decisions, the Court established a more precise framework for evaluating when a contractor’s historical installation work is shielded from liability and when it is not. Background: The Construction Statute of Repose In Washington, the construction statute of repose, Wash. Rev. Code § 4.16.300 (2026), applies to claims arising from a person having "constructed, altered or repaired any improvement upon real property.” Wash. Rev. Code § 4.16.310 (2026) dictates that such claims must accrue within six years of the substantial completion of construction.  Unlike a traditional statute of limitations, which typically begins to run when a plaintiff discovers an injury, a statute of repose creates a strict outer time limit that extinguishes a cause of action after a specified period, even if the injury has not yet occurred or been discovered. The legislature enacted this statute to protect contractors and engineers from extended potential liability decades after a project is completed. See Hudesman v. Meriwether Leachman Assocs., 35 Wn. App. 318, 321, 666 P.2d 937 (1983) (citing Pinneo v. Stevens Pass, Inc., 14 Wn. App. 848, 545 P.2d 1207 (1976)); see also 1519-1525 Lakeview Blvd. Condo. Ass'n v. Apt. Sales Corp., 144 Wn.2d 570, 578, 29 P.3d 1249 (2001).  Concept Statute of Limitation (SOL) Statute of Repose (SOR) Trigger Event Accrual of cause of action (discovery of injury) Substantial completion of construction services Primary Purpose Encourages diligent prosecution of known claims Provides a date certain for the end of legal liability Duration (WA) Generally, two-to-three years for torts Six years for construction-related activities Tolling Often tolled by discovery or minority status Generally, not tollable (hard outer wall) Status of Right Bars the remedy Extinguishes the underlying right of action For decades, the application of this statute was guided by Condit v. Lewis Refrigeration Co., 101 Wash. 2d 106, 676 P.2d 466 (1984), which held that the statute of repose protects individuals whose activities contribute to a structural improvement or to "integral" systems, such as heating or plumbing, that are required for the structure to function as intended. It does not protect manufacturers of heavy equipment or non-integral "accoutrements" housed within a building. Condit, 101 Wn.2d at 12. Applying Condit to asbestos-containing industrial insulation led to a split in the Washington appellate courts: The contextual approach: In Maxwell v. Atl. Richfield Co., 15 Wash. App. 2d 569, 476 P.3d 645 (2020), Division Two determined that a contractor was protected by the statute of repose because the installation of insulation occurred during the original construction of the refinery, which itself constituted as an improvement upon real property. The evidentiary approach: In Welch v. Brand Insulations, Inc., 27 Wash. App. 2d 110, 531 P.3d 265 (2023), Division One rejected the Maxwell approach, holding that contractors must provide specific, competent evidence showing that their insulation work actively contributed to a structural improvement or an integral system necessary for the refinery's function. The Polinder Decision In April 2026, the Washington Supreme Court issued its decision in Polinder, resolving the conflict between Maxwell and Welch. The Court's opinion resolved the appellate split on two distinct but related grounds, each carrying significant implications for how contractors defend asbestos claims. 1. The Integral Systems Requirement  The Court agreed with the Welch framework, clarifying that a contractor must establish that their work contributed to the construction of an improvement on real property or to a system that is a normal and integral part of that improvement. In Polinder, the defendant successfully met this burden by submitting expert engineering testimony, which explained that a refinery cannot safely manage heat energy and mass balances without thermal insulation. Because the insulation was proven to be a "normal and integral component required for the Cherry Point refinery to function as intended," the Court ruled that the contractor's installation activities were protected by the six-year construction statute of repose. 2. The Product Seller Exception  While the installation of the insulation was protected, the Court ruled that the statute of repose does not shield contractors from claims arising from independent duties as a "product seller" or "negligent supplier." In Polinder, the record contained evidence that the contractor did not merely install the materials but also used their expertise to select the asbestos-bearing insulation, purchased it, and resold it to the facility owner at a marked-up price. Consequently, the Court held that the plaintiff's claims based on product seller or supplier liability were not barred by the construction statute of repose and could proceed. Impact on Asbestos Cases and Defendants The Polinder decision provides a framework for how asbestos cases involving contractors will be litigated moving forward: Reliance on Expert Evidence Contractors can no longer assume that working on a large industrial site automatically satisfies the statute of repose. Defendants must proactively utilize expert testimony to demonstrate that the specific piping or equipment they insulated was an integral system functionally necessary for the facility to operate. Evaluating the Contractor's Role Because plaintiffs can bypass the construction statute of repose by pursuing "seller" or "supplier" liability theories, discovery will heavily focus on a contractor's historical procurement role. Defendants will need to analyze historical contracts to demonstrate they were providing a unified construction service rather than acting as a retail merchant who purchased and resold hazardous materials. Continued Importance of Proximate Cause For claims that survive the statute of repose under the product seller exception, plaintiffs are still required to prove proximate cause under the standard set forth in Lockwood v. AC & S, Inc., 109 Wash. 2d 235, 744 P.2d 605 (1987). This requires demonstrating a reasonable connection between the plaintiff's injury and the specific asbestos product supplied by the defendant, analyzing factors, such as the plaintiff's proximity to the product, the expanse of the worksite, and the frequency and duration of the exposure. Ultimately, the Washington Supreme Court's decision recalibrated the legal landscape for asbestos litigants by solidifying a strict six-year repose bar against pure construction liability, while simultaneously preserving a distinct, viable pathway for plaintiffs to pursue historical claims against contractors who also functioned as hazardous product sellers or suppliers. See Polinder v. Brand Insulations, Inc., No. 102782-6, slip op. at 7, 14-16 (Wash. Apr. 30, 2026). Contractors can mitigate future liability by expressly stating in their agreements that the facility owner or client retains sole authority to choose, specify, and supply the materials used for the project.
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Publications
United States Supreme Court Rules on Failure to Disclose Personal Injury Claim in Bankruptcy
What happens if a personal injury plaintiff files bankruptcy but fails to disclose the personal injury claim in the bankruptcy case? The United States Supreme Court has now resolved a circuit split about how to analyze that question, and it could impact pending claims. In Keathley v. Buddy Ayers Construction, Inc,. the Keathleys were involved in a motor vehicle accident with a Buddy Ayers employee in August 2021. They had an open Chapter 13 repayment plan but did not disclose the claim in the bankruptcy case after the accident occurred or when they filed suit. Buddy Ayers learned of the bankruptcy and moved for summary judgment in March 2023, arguing the Keathleys had taken inconsistent positions—first denying the claim in bankruptcy then later asserting it in the personal injury case. Buddy Ayers argued judicial estoppel barred the Keathleys from pursuing the personal injury claim because they had previously denied it existed in bankruptcy. The district court applied Fifth Circuit precedent and granted summary judgment, which the Fifth Circuit affirmed. The Supreme Court reversed on narrow grounds, finding both lower courts used the wrong standard. Judicial estoppel is an equitable doctrine. “[W]hen a court conducts an equitable inquiry, it must act on a case-by-case basis, considering all relevant facts and circumstances.” Thus, the judgment was reversed and remanded to apply that test to the facts of this case. It gave no opinion as to what might happen when that test is applied. This ruling changes the approach in circuits that previously applied narrower standards. District courts in those areas will now consider more factors, potentially making it harder to prevail on motions like Buddy Ayers filed. Keathley may also reduce some of the disincentives for bankrupt plaintiffs to conceal assets.
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Events
Rebroadcast: Pleadings, Motions, and Briefs: AI Edition
Isaac Netzer (Associate-New York, NY) will again serve as a faculty member for the National Business Institute (NBI) in conjunction with two rebroadcasts of the CLE webinar “Pleadings, Motions, and Briefs: AI Edition,” to be held on August 20, 2026, and October 27, 2026. Back by popular demand, Isaac’s program focuses on the practical use of artificial intelligence in litigation, including AI’s capabilities and limitations, ethical and confidentiality considerations, and real-world applications in drafting pleadings, motions, briefs, and conducting document review. The rebroadcasts of Isaac’s November 2025 NBI presentation will cover topics such as strategic prompt design, identifying AI blind spots, authority validation, and using AI to assess both one’s own filings and opposing counsel’s submissions, with Isaac hosting live Q&A sessions following the rebroadcasts. 
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Client Wins
New York Team Secures Complete Summary Judgment Victory for University Client
Nancy Wright (Partner-New York, NY), Tatjana Calimpong-Burke (Associate-New York, NY), and Jenna Agatep Slater (Associate-New York, NY) secured a complete defense victory for Wilson Elser’s client, a University, when the Honorable Jed. S. Rakoff of the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York granted the University’s motion for summary judgment in its entirety and dismissed all claims. With his pre-trial procedures often described as the "rocket docket," Judge Rakoff directed both parties to be "trial ready" by May 18, 2026, after the filing of the University's answer on January 16, 2026. Operating under this less-than-ideal discovery schedule, the New York team completed 12 depositions and extensive summary judgment motion and cross motion practice by May 13, 2026.   The plaintiff, a former undergraduate with a diagnosed disability, alleged the University discriminated and retaliated against her based on her use of her dog, Zeus, which she claimed was a service animal. She asserted violations of the Fair Housing Act, Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act, the New York State Human Rights Law, and the New York City Human Rights Law, challenging our client’s handling of her accommodation requests related to Zeus, air-conditioning requests, scholarship eligibility, and eventual expulsion.   The New York team demonstrated that the plaintiff, not the University, caused the breakdown in the required cooperative dialogue, having refused to sign the University's universally applied Assistance Animal Agreement and failing to provide required documentation or properly request the accommodations she later claimed were denied. The defense also established significant weaknesses in plaintiff's contention that Zeus qualified as a service animal, highlighting evidence that showed the plaintiff inconsistently characterized Zeus as both a service animal and an emotional support animal; that her therapist reclassified the dog as a service animal only after initially identifying him as an emotional support animal and acknowledged that she was not an expert in animal classifications; and that the plaintiff herself conducted the dog's training, despite surveillance videos showing Zeus habitually disregarding her commands and barking at students. Wilson Elser further challenged the claimed effectiveness of the animal, demonstrating that the therapist's opinions were based solely on the plaintiff's self-reporting, as she had never met Zeus and lacked expertise regarding service or support animals. Nancy, Tatjana, and Jenna also established that the plaintiff's air-conditioning requests were unrelated to her disability. On the retaliation claims, they showed legitimate, non-retaliatory grounds for each challenged action, including a scholarship denial based on the plaintiff's transfer-student status and an expulsion triggered by the plaintiff’s blatant misconduct captured on a surveillance recording, and independently upheld by the University President on appeal.   The Court denied plaintiff's motion for partial summary judgment and granted Wilson Elser’s motion in full, directing entry of final judgment in favor of the University and closing the case on June 15, 2026.
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Events
Legal Ethics in the World of Artificial Intelligence
Jonathan Meer (Partner-New York, NY) will present the Wilson Elser Forum webinar “Legal Ethics in the World of Artificial Intelligence” on July 16, 2026. The presentation will address how attorney regulation has evolved over time and what steps are being considered for policing attorney use of AI. Jonathan will touch on some of the model rules and ethical opinions concerning technology, as well as rules being adopted by the courts regarding AI use. He’ll also highlight instances of attorneys being reprimanded for misusing AI. Using artificial intelligence as a tool is becoming more commonplace among lawyers. The AI guidelines, whether established by courts, state bar associations, law firms, individual practitioners, or otherwise, should be a growing concern that requires careful consideration by lawyers today. 
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Publications
New York's 2026 Tort Reform: Key Changes to New York State Civil Procedure Laws With Respect to Motor Vehicle Accident Litigation
On May 27, 2026, Governor Kathy Hochul signed New York's 2026 state budget into law. The $268.1 billion budget includes significant tort reform provisions for New York State motor vehicle litigation. The reforms took effect immediately and apply to all motor vehicle actions commenced on or after the law’s passage, other than accidents resulting in a death or property damage.  I. Shift from Pure to Modified Comparative Negligence in Motor Vehicle Cases The biggest change is to C.P.L.R. § 1411, which has long governed comparative negligence in New York. With the addition of a new subsection "b," New York now moves from a pure to a modified comparative negligence state but just for motor vehicle accident cases. Under a pure comparative negligence system, plaintiffs could recover compensation even if they were predominantly at fault. For example, a party who was 99 percent responsible for an accident could still recover one percent of the total damages. Now, under the new law, a plaintiff who is more at fault (i.e. more than 50 percent) than the other persons involved in a motor vehicle accident cannot recover. In practice, if a jury finds a car accident plaintiff is 51 percent or more at fault, it will not proceed to calculate and award damages.  II. Elimination of the 90/180-Day Serious Injury Category The tort reform also amends subsection (d) of Insurance Law § 5102 to eliminate the so-called "90/180-day" category of serious injury. Under prior law, a plaintiff could satisfy the serious injury “threshold” by demonstrating a medically determined injury of a non-permanent nature that prevented them from performing substantially all of their usual and customary daily activities for at least 90 of the 180 days immediately following the accident (e.g. going to work or school). This category faced significant criticism because it often relied on subjective, self-reported information and/or allowed someone who could go to work but didn’t to automatically meet the threshold. III. New Sequencing Requirement: Fault Before Serious Injury Another aspect is that Insurance Law § 5104(a) now requires juries to decide who is at fault for a motor vehicle accident before figuring out whether the serious injury threshold is met. Under the new rules, liability for non-economic loss (i.e., pain and suffering) isn't set until fault is determined. This means that the trier of fact must assign blame first, then assess damages afterward, specifically for non-economic losses. The new sequencing rule has significant strategic effects. Under the updated comparative negligence system for car accident cases, if the jury finds the plaintiff more than 50 percent at fault, they stop right there–no damages awarded. If the plaintiff’s fault does not exceed 50 percent, the jury then considers whether the plaintiff’s injuries satisfy the other requirements in § 5102(d). This makes trials more efficient and keeps juries from letting information about injuries bias their decision when the plaintiff is too fault-prone to recover damages. IV. Recovery Cap for Claimants Engaged in Unlawful Conduct Finally, Insurance Law Section 5104 now includes a new subsection (d). It caps non-economic loss (i.e., pain and suffering) recovery for a motor vehicle accident at $100,000 when the plaintiff is in one of three specific groups (unless the accident results in death): The plaintiff was operating an uninsured motor vehicle in violation of Article 6 of the Vehicle and Traffic Law (with an exception for lapses in coverage of fewer than 30 days). The plaintiff was operating a motor vehicle while impaired and has been convicted of that offense. The plaintiff was operating a motor vehicle in the commission of a felony or in immediate flight afterwards, with a conviction for the same. While the situations described above are thankfully rare, they do occur. The new law will prevent a significant recovery from others by drivers who were uninsured, intoxicated, and/or felons. The authors acknowledge the contributions made by summer staff assistant Christopher DeMicco.
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News
Legendre Honored with President’s Award and Assumes Leadership Role at Earl Warren Inn of Court
San Francisco office associate Camille Legendre was honored to receive the President’s Award at the Earl Warren Inn of the Court’s end-of-season banquet, which is presented in recognition of outstanding participation and exceptional service to the Inn during the program year. The banquet also marked the installation of the Inn’s new Board of Directors, sworn in by the Honorable Charles A. Smiley of the First Appellate District, Division One, in San Francisco. During the past year, Camille served as a Board Member-at-Large. For the upcoming term, she will serve as Chair of Achieving Excellence, overseeing the Inn’s participation in the American Inns of Court Achieving Excellence Program and helping maintain the Inn’s status as an MCLE provider. Camille will serve as the primary liaison between the Earl Warren Inn and the national American Inns of Court organization.  Widely regarded as one of the premier Inns of Court in the country, the Earl Warren Inn has earned a reputation for excellence and engagement. In her new role, Camille will help ensure the Inn continues to uphold those high standards. She expressed gratitude for the opportunity to continue serving in a leadership capacity and to represent Wilson Elser within the broader legal community.
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Client Wins
Dodrill and Ashbeck Bring Negligent Entrustment Claim to a Screeching Halt
Colt Dodrill (Partner-Phoenix, AZ) and Jeffrey Ashbeck (Associate-Las Vegas, NV) secured a car share lawsuit dismissal from the Eighth Judicial District Court, Clark County, Nevada, on behalf of Wilson Elser’s clients, a car-sharing platform and the vehicle owner. The plaintiff sued our clients for injuries sustained in an automobile accident. The clients had reserved the car share for a specific driver, but the plaintiff alleged a different driver was behind the wheel at the time of the accident. Colt and Jeff moved to dismiss, arguing that negligent entrustment does not recognize successive entrustments to strangers not named on the reservation. The court agreed that the law does not skip a generation, kicking the claim to the curb. The plaintiff tried to circumvent the rule against vicarious liability by alleging a failure to provide statutorily mandated insurance. However, Colt and Jeff held firm and convinced the plaintiff not proceed with further briefing after proving that the prescribed policies had been properly provided. 
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Events
Litigation Management 101
Maryan Alexander (Partner-Baltimore, MD) will present the webinar “Litigation Management 101” as part of CLM’s 2026 Insurance 101 Webinar Series, Building a Strong Foundation in Insurance Fundamentals, to be held on July 29, 2026. Maryan’s session provides a high-level overview of the litigation process and the claims professional’s role in managing outside counsel, budgets, and case strategy. Participants will gain insight into key litigation milestones, reporting expectations, and effective collaboration with defense counsel. Ideal for those newer to litigation oversight, this session emphasizes proactive management practices that support strong outcomes and cost control.
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News
Wilson Elser Recognized in BTI’s The 113 Law Firms Clients Love Most
Wilson Elser has been named a “Standout” in BTI Consulting Group’s The 113 Law Firms Clients Love Most, published on June 24, 2026. BTI Consulting Group, a leading provider of independent research on how clients acquire, manage, and evaluate professional services firms, describes the distinction as reflecting a level of client loyalty that goes beyond satisfaction and trust to “client devotion.” According to BTI, firms earning this recognition distinguish themselves by helping clients succeed, acting with reliability and responsiveness, understanding their clients’ businesses, anticipating needs, communicating proactively, and delivering practical, actionable advice. Wilson Elser is proud to be included among this select group of firms recognized for building strong client relationships and contributing meaningfully to client success. The recognition reflects the firm’s commitment to providing exceptional service, assembling the right team for every matter, and leveraging its national platform to meet clients’ evolving needs. As BTI notes of the firms included on the list, “They become part of [their clients’ success]—making them indispensable."
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