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It can? Has that actually happened (in the UK or US), or been argued, ever? Can you cite a source?


Vuylsteke v. Broan, Minton v. Cavaney, State v. Weinschenk, Anderson v. Abbott.


Sorry, I was imprecise. I understand that it is possible to collect damages from controlling shareholders of corporations; for instance, in any tort case; in several states, unpaid wages also incur liability on company owners, as they did in Vuylsteke. I was asking specifically about your liability insurance argument.


You mean that insurance can count in determining adequate capitalization?

The cases I can find that are most on point is Walkovszky v. Carlton, where a claim of underinsurance was directly at issue (unsuccessful because the insurance that was carried met an explicit statutory requirement) and Autrey v. 22 Texas Services Inc. (on a summary judgement motion finding there are facts in dispute, so not squarely ruled on).

A couple of relevant papers that discuss insurance throughout:

http://scholarship.kentlaw.iit.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?artic...

http://www.law.emory.edu/fileadmin/journals/elj/56/5/Millon....




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