1. Home
  2. |Insights
  3. |Minority Corporate Counsel Association's 13th Annual Creating Pathways to Diversity Conference

Minority Corporate Counsel Association's 13th Annual Creating Pathways to Diversity Conference

Event | 09.10.12, 12:00 AM UTC - 12:00 AM UTC

The MCCA's Creating Pathways to Diversity Conference is designed to provide practical tools and resources that individual attorneys, both in-house and at outside law firms, need to further personal career growth and meet organizational diversity goals, and that organizations need in order to build a better workplace. Conference highlights include a morning plenary session featuring the Honorable Denny Chin of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit (who became, when appointed a District Court Judge in the Southern District of New York, the first Asian American appointed to a federal judgeship outside the 9th Circuit) and a lunch plenary session on “Race, Gender, Media and the Law.”


Mika Clark, Astor Heaven, Shamiso Maswoswe, Sonia Williams Murphy, Monica Parham and Chiemi Suzuki are attending this event.


Insights

Event | 02.20.25

Has the Buss Stopped? Recoupment Today

Has the Buss Stopped? Recoupment Today: In 1997, the California Supreme Court decided Buss v. Superior Court. In Buss, the court concluded that a liability insurer that defended a mixed action could seek reimbursement from the insured for the defense costs associated with the claims that were not even potentially covered. Since then, numerous courts have held that insurers are entitled to recoup their defense costs associated with uncovered claims or causes of action. On the other hand, a significant number of courts have rejected insurers’ right to recoupment, at least in the absence of a policy provision granting the insurer that right. Some commentators have even suggested that the current judicial trend might be away from permitting insurers to recoup their defense costs. Is that correct? Has the Buss stopped? This panel of coverage experts will analyze insurers’ claimed right to recoupment today, and offer their perspectives on what the law on recoupment should perhaps be and might be in the future.