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Insurance regulation in Asia Pacific
Ten things to know about insurance regulation in 19 countries.
United States | Publication | June 4, 2021
A former employee filed suit against Rite Aid and a supervisor in 2008 for wrongful termination. After a trial, and two retrials following subsequent appeals, a California Court of Appeals largely affirmed the jury's US$6M verdict against the defendants. On appeal, Rite Aid contended that interim earnings of the plaintiff should be deducted from the past economic damages award. The Court of Appeals agreed, rejecting plaintiff's argument that the interim earnings should not be an offset because the job she took after her termination was not substantially similar to the one she held at Rite Aid.
An employer can prove that a former employee failed to mitigate damages caused by termination by showing that plaintiff failed to make a reasonable effort to search for other work or that plaintiff turned down offers of comparable employment. The duty to mitigate damages is separate than the question whether actual interim earnings should be deducted from an economic damages award. The Court of Appeals held that the amount actually earned from other employment must offset the damages award, and reduced the jury's verdict by more than US$140,000. Surprisingly, the court's decision creates a conflict in the lower courts which the California Supreme Court may be asked to resolve.
Publication
Ten things to know about insurance regulation in 19 countries.
Publication
In King Crude Carriers SA & Ors v Ridgebury November LLC & Ors [2024] EWCA Civ 719 the Court of Appeal held that the claimant sellers (the Sellers) were entitled to claim the deposits promised under sale contracts as a debt despite the defendant buyers’ (the Buyers) breach of contract, which had resulted in the non-fulfilment of a condition precedent to the payment of the deposits.
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As previously observed, conflicts occasionally arise between mortgagees and charterers where a mortgagee wishes to take prompt action to enforce its rights, but the charterer wishes such enforcement action to be deferred until the end of the charter.
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