Allstate Ins. Co. v. Ganesh

Allstate Ins. Co. v. Ganesh, 8 Misc 3d 922 (Sup Ct, Bronx County 2005), was a case dealing with a petitioner's arbitration stay of an uninsured motorist claim. In Ganesh, the respondent, the injured individual, sought coverage from the offending party's insurance carrier [State Farm-petitioner]. State Farm disclaimed the coverage on the basis that the collision was not a motor vehicle accident ["MVA"], but instead, was an intentionally staged event, thereby constituting fraud. State Farm therefore disclaimed coverage to the injured party because per its written policy, intentionally caused losses are not covered. (Id. at 923.) The Bronx Supreme Court held that State Farm did not validly disclaim coverage because it did not give sufficient admissible evidence that it was a staged event [i.e. offering the written policy as admissible evidence]. According to Hon. Billings, "because no party introduced State Farm's policy in evidence, State Farm never proved, most fundamentally, that the policy . . . excluded intentionally caused losses or losses involving particular conduct or imposed any conditions on anyone relating to a claimed loss." Id. As such, the petitioner's arbitration stay was granted and the respondent was allowed to seek coverage under State Farm's policy.