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Director & Officers Liability Issues, Trends and Loss Control

Director & Officers Liability Issues, Trends and Loss Control. Types of Claims Typically Filed Against D&O’s. Wrongful Termination “At will” provision may eliminate these claims. Sexual Harassment and Discrimination (age, sex, race, disability, etc.) Civil Rights Violation

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Director & Officers Liability Issues, Trends and Loss Control

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  1. Director & Officers LiabilityIssues, Trends and Loss Control

  2. Types of Claims Typically Filed Against D&O’s • Wrongful Termination • “At will” provision may eliminate these claims. • Sexual Harassment and Discrimination (age, sex, race, disability, etc.) • Civil Rights Violation • Retaliatory Acts – such as a transfer to a physically arduous, less desirable job or a 37 day suspension without pay • Breach of Contract (employment or other) • Breach of Fiduciary Duty

  3. Actual Claims Filed Against Golf Clubs • Alleged discrimination arising out of men’s grills/lounges. • Less Golf Time for women due to course dedicated to men’s tournaments. • Defamation or alleged lack of due process arising out of disciplinary actions taken against members when they overindulge and misbehave at club parties. • Alleged harassment of employees of the club when they are working club functions where members may be inclined to take inappropriate social liberties. • General employment practice claims filed by employees.

  4. Golf Club Claims, Continued • Many of the claims are linked to the food/beverage service aspect of club, such as bus boys, waiters/waitresses and bartenders. • The backgrounds/education levels of the employees are sometimes very diverse. • The work environments typically range from high stress to an almost social atmosphere. The former can lead to flaring tempers and impromptu reprimands. The latter to sometimes off-color humor or sexual overtones. • Because the employees generally work in close physical proximity to one another, there are often many witnesses to the alleged EPL acts, which can be good or bad. • Claims made against the board involving membership issues, such as disgruntled parties who were refused membership; club members who disapprove of the board letting in too many members, the wrong kind of members, etc. Damages are often difficult to assess in such situations.

  5. The accused is a Director or Officer Officer is the supervisor of the claimant Officer is the supervisor of the accused Officer is the decision maker in the dispute Inaction on the part of the Director/Officer Director/Officer developed the employment practice /company procedure Director/Officer approved the employment practice/company procedure Why are D&O’s Sued?

  6. Plaintiff sues employer for Wrongful Termination for Breach of Contract for Civil Rights violation Plaintiff sues employer and D’s and O’s and supervisors/mgrs. and co-employees for multiple wrongful acts based on federal statute and state law The Complaint Historically vs. Today

  7. Sex Discrimination 185 52.4% Retaliation 144 37.9% Race 58 15.3% Disability 45 11.8% Age 45 11.8% National Origin 37 9.7% Religion 16 4.2% Equal Pay 5 1.3% 2004Bases Alleged in EEOC Suits Filed *Source: EEOC Accomplishments Report for Fiscal Year 2004 (www.eeoc.gov)

  8. Title VII 264 Counts 76.1% Civil Rights Act – passed 1964 ADA 38 Counts 10.9% American with Disabilities Act – passed 1990 ADEA 28 Counts 8.1% Age Discrimination Employment Act – passed 1967 *Concurrent 17 Counts 4.9% *under more than one statute 2004 EEOC Resolutions By Statute

  9. 2004 Monetary Relief By Statute • Title VII $157.9 Million 93.9% • ADA $ 5.4 Million 3.2% • ADEA $ 2.5 Million 8.1% • *Concurrent $ 2.3 Million 1.4% *under more than one statute In 2004, the Office of General Counsel resolved a total of 347 merit lawsuits, Yielding $168,098,895 in monetary relief.

  10. The Claims Process • Review of facts and/or Complaint • Review of Policy and/or coverage issues • Correspondence/investigation • Assignment of Counsel • Response to plaintiff attorney/investigative agency • Evaluation and mediation process

  11. Plaintiffs Job Applicants Current/Former Employees Terminating Employees Customers Co-workers Independent contractors Defendants Interviewers Human Resources Supervisors & Managers Board of Directors Potential Litigants

  12. Discrimination National Origin Race Religion Sex Sexual Preference Age Failure to Promote/Hire Hostile Work Environment Harassment Breach of Implied Contract Negligent Hiring or Supervision Common Allegations

  13. Back Pay Front Pay Lost benefits and seniority Compensatory damages Punitive damages Attorneys fees and costs Damages: What the Claimants Want

  14. Assessing Case Value • Damning internal investigation or faculty committee findings • Other complaints against same accused • Multiple claimants or corroborating witnesses • About the claimant • Hign earner/Professional? • Demeanor/Credibility? • Still Employed? • Sympathetic? • Contract Employee? • Length of employment

  15. Assessing Case Value Con’t... • Prior pattern of same conduct • Documented evaluations • Publicized Policy against discrimination, harassment, etc. • Internal complaint procedures • Written employment contracts • Loss or partial loss of motion for summary judgement • Wake up call when you are dead set on defending • Reputation of the judge, and reputation and experience of claimant’s counsel • Claimant’s counsel has a lot of time/$ on the case • Attorney fees are recoverable

  16. Assessing Case Value Con’t... • Mediator’s recommendation significantly exceeds current thinking on case value • Defense counsel is telling you to settle • Agency finding of probable cause (or EEOC “A” or “B” charge rating) • Rating the alleged behavior • Sexual contact or just verbal • Frequency? - one time occurrence or repeated offenses • Related crime matter

  17. Profile of a “Bad” Claim(Features of a Potentially Costly Suit) • Egregious or Outrageous Behavior • Professional Level Plaintiff • Class Action or Potential Class Action • History of Repeated and Reported Incidents • Lack of Published Policy & Procedure • Inadequate or no civil management training • Ignored policy or procedure • Plaintiff in protected class • Multiple Allegations, Plaintiffs, Defendants • Poor, if any, documentation

  18. Establish & implement management training employee awareness manuals interview procedures complaint procedures Prevention of Employment Liability Losses

  19. Controlling Employment Litigation • Oversee internal complaints through resolution • Retain decision-making in litigation • Remain sensitive to rights of accused • Establish committees for special tasks (i.e.. Downsizing) • Offset Losses (ie. Insurance )

  20. Sexual Harassment Types of harassment ( hostile environment and quid pro quo) How to respond to formal and informal complaints of harassment, including the role of the supervisor and manager Maintaining appropriate confidentiality Non-retaliation Recommendations for Employment Law Training

  21. Employment Training (Con’t) • Equal Employment Opportunity • Define & describe protected classes ( disability, age, race, etc.) • EEO issues in hiring and interviewing • Non-discriminatory discipline & discharge • Selection for training & other job benefits • Reasonable accommodation issues

  22. Wrongful Discharge & Wrongful Demotion At will employment Types of claims including breach of contract, public policy, negligent hiring & supervision Performance evaluations Discipline & discharge Training & other job benefits Documentation of performance issues Employment Training (Con’t)

  23. Interplay Between the ADA, FMLA and Worker’s Compensation • Must understand: • Who is protected individual under the ADA & FMLA • When you can make medical inquires or request medical examinations and how this relates to worker’s compensation claims • When you have a duty to make a reasonable accommodation for a person with a disability related to occupational injuries • When you have a duty to grant leave under the ADA • Job modification or reassignment and leaves of absence

  24. Ill-considered e-mail messages Failure to document misconduct and performance problems Inappropriate complimentary evaluations Failure to follow company policies and procedures Talking with others about why an employee was discharged. Activities, which if mishandled by management, often lead to liability

  25. Activities, which if mishandled by management, often lead to liability • Failure to communicate problems to Human Resources Dept. • Uncontrolled letters of reference • Failure to treat like cases alike • Showing favoritism • Failure to obtain advice when a situation arises that is not covered by company policy

  26. QUESTIONS?

  27. Non-Profit Director & Officers Liability Overview

  28. PARTS OF A D & O POLICY • Definitions • Insuring Agreement • Conditions • Exclusions

  29. POLICY DECLARATIONS PAGE • Named Insured • Policy Period • Limit Of Liability • Retention • Premium • Retro Active Date • Endorsements

  30. WHAT’S A GOOD RISK ? • Good Loss History • Good Employment Procedures • Low Turnover Rate • Diverse Sources of Revenue • Positive Fund Balance • In Operation 3+ Years • Steady Revenue • Nature of Operation / Type of Services Provided • Experience of Directors and Officers

  31. MERIT SUITS FILED 1995 TO 2004

  32. MERIT SUITS RESOLVED

  33. Monetary Relief – 1995 through 2004

  34. Golf and Country Club Coverage

  35. DEFINITION OF GOLF COURSE • Golf Course meaning tees, cut fairways, greens, practice driving ranges, bunkers, cut and maintained roughs and other cut and maintained playing surfaces. • Golf Course means a tract of land containing at least 9, but not more than 18, separate holes of golf. • Greens, tees, fairways, and rough means: the outdoor grounds at the described locations that are specifically designed and maintained for the game of golf. • Golf Course means tees, fairways, putting surfaces, practice driving ranges and other playing surfaces used to play golf. • Golf Course means greens, rough areas, sand bunkers, fairways, tee boxes, out of bounds areas, driving ranges. • Lawns coverage – greens, tees and cut fairways.

  36. GOLF COURSE LIMITS • $1,000,000 • $2,000,000 • $100,000 • $50,000 Each Green, $250,000 Occurrence, $500,000 Annual Aggregate • $250,000 • $50,000 • Limit shown in the Declarations page

  37. GOLF COURSE - TREES, SHRUBS & PLANTS • $50,000 Any one tree, shrub or plant • $25,000 occurrence/$2,500 per tree, shrub or plant • $75,000 occurrence/$2,500 per tree, shrub or plant • $100,000 Aggregate per occurrence/up to $3,000 per tree • $500,000 Annual Aggregate/$250,000 per occurrence/$25,000 each tree, shrub or plant/$50,000 each green • $10,000 per occurrence • $1,000 each tree, shrub or plant • $50,000 any one occurrence

  38. GOLF COURSE - DEBRIS REMOVAL COVERAGE • $250,000 Annual Aggregate • $150,000 Tree Removal Sublimit • $50,000 • $50,000 Any one occurrence • $250,000 Any one occurrence • $25,000 • $10,000

  39. Golf Course – Covered Perils • Fire, Smoke • Lightning • Smoke • Explosion • Riot or Civil Commotion • Aircraft, Vehicles • V&MM • Wind/Hail if covered in the Property • Collapse, Sinkhole collapse, Volcanic Action • Ice

  40. HOW TO ANALYZE GOLF COURSE COVERAGE Golf Course Coverage can be confusing • Have your agent complete the comparison sheet • Check the definition of Golf Course • Check the limit of insurance for the Golf Course • Check the limit of insurance for Trees, Shrubs & Plants • Check the limit of insurance for Debris Removal • Check to see if there is a limit per golf hole • Check the covered perils for the Golf Course • Are the limits “per occurrence”, “Aggregate per loss”, “Annual Aggregate”

  41. QUESTIONS?

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