Meridian Star

Breaking News

News

September 15, 2008

Couple settles with State Farm

GULFPORT (AP) — State Farm Fire & Casualty Co. has paid $250,000 to settle a lawsuit brought by a Biloxi couple over damage to their home from Hurricane Katrina in 2005.

Terms of the settlement were not disclosed Monday in U.S. District Court documents or by the attorney for Thomas and Pamela McIntosh.

But Bloomington, Ill.-based State Farm said in a statement that the $250,000 paid to the McIntoshes was less than 25 percent of the what the couple had claimed as damages in their breach of contract lawsuit.

U.S. District Judge L.T. Senter Jr. on Monday agreed to dismiss the lawsuit after lawyers for the McIntoshes and State Farm filed documents showing the settlement had been reached.

‘‘I’m personally happy for the McIntoshes that this matter is finally coming to a resolution,’’ the couple’s attorney, William ‘‘Chip’’ Merlin of Tampa, Fla., said Monday in a telephone interview.

He said the McIntosh settlement is particular to their case and has nothing to do with other pending State Farm lawsuits.

Last week, Senter dismissed the bad-faith portions, once considered a key piece of the lawsuit, after the couple requested he do so.

The lawsuit had been considered the centerpiece Katrina litigation for now-imprisoned attorney Richard ‘‘Dickie’’ Scruggs, once one of the most prominent — and feared — tort attorneys in the country.

In the motion to dismiss punitive damages granted by Senter, the Merlin Law Group said the McIntoshes were promptly and properly paid policy limits of $350,000 for flood damage and $36,228 for wind damage before an engineer inspected their property.

State Farm said in Monday’s statement that Scruggs made up allegations in the lawsuit to launch a public relations plan to lure politicians, the media and others into publicly attacking the company. State Farm also said it was a tactic that diverted time and resources away from resolving Katrina claims.

‘‘Dick once said he used every trick in the book, political, public opinion, and legal to force State Farm to pay him money. This case was his centerpiece,’’ said Jeff Jackson, State Farm senior vice president and general counsel.

The settlement of the McIntoshes’ case should put an end to allegations State Farm acted dishonorably in handling the couple’s claim, the company said.

The McIntosh case drew national attention because two sisters who worked for a State Farm-affiliated engineering company found separate engineering reports on the property, the first allegedly emphasizing wind damage covered by State Farm and the second blaming tidal surge covered by flood insurance.

Altered reports for other properties were subsequently discovered and turned over to federal and state investigators. The two sisters left their jobs and went to work for Scruggs.

The McIntoshes, who were unaware of the first report, had accepted their initial wind payment without question. After news of the altered reports broke, the McIntoshes hired Scruggs to file their lawsuit. But personal criminal charges forced him to bow out of Katrina litigation in December.

‘‘The McIntoshes are private individuals with no intention of ever bringing a lawsuit and did not do so for months after the storm,’’ Merlin said Monday. ‘‘They did so only after becoming aware of another engineering report that had never been brought to their attention and tended to sho 1/4w the money they had gotten could be greater.’’



AP-CS-09-15-08 1904EDT

Text Only
News
  • Live Updates — Class 4A baseball state championship Game 2 (West Lauderdale vs. East Central)

    May 16, 2009

  • Feds: 43 suspected illegals deported since raid

    September 18, 2008

  • Mississippi gasoline prices continue to go higher

    September 15, 2008

  • Couple settles with State Farm State Farm Fire & Casualty Co. has paid $250,000 to settle a lawsuit brought by a Biloxi couple over damage to their home from Hurricane Katrina in 2005.

    Terms of the settlement were not disclosed Monday in U.S. District Court documents or by the attorney for Thomas and Pamela McIntosh.

    But Bloomington, Ill.-based State Farm said in a statement that the $250,000 paid to the McIntoshes was less than 25 percent of the what the couple had claimed as damages in their breach of contract lawsuit.

    September 15, 2008

  • Ike pushes water onto some areas of Miss. Coast

    September 11, 2008

  • Lawyers seek Seale’s release

    September 11, 2008

  • Bluesman King speechless during tour of new museum

    September 11, 2008

  • Mississippi Farmers assess fields after Gustav Soybean farmers who missed ideal planting times and boldly decided to risk their crop in Mississippi’s blistering summer sun have been rewarded with a wet August and heavy rains from Hurricane Gustav.

    September 5, 2008

  • First ships crawl up Mississippi after spill Ships began crawling up the Mississippi River at New Orleans in a tightly controlled procession Friday, two days after a massive oil spill shut down a stretch of one of the nation’s most critical commercial arteries.

    The pecking order was based on Coast Guard determination of the economic importance of the ships’ cargo, and the pace was slowed by a scrubbing process to remove oil from each hull. A ship carrying refinery-bound oil was the first to get the go-ahead.

    With more than 200 ships to be cleared, it was expected to take days to clear the backlog that developed after the tanker Tintomara collided with a barge in the early morning hours Wednesday. About 419,000 gallons of fuel oil spilled from the barge into the Mississippi at New Orleans.

    The shutdown of a 100-mile stretch of river to the Gulf of Mexico halted vessels ranging from oil supertankers to grain barges in one of the world’s busiest ports. Gary LaGrange, executive director of the Port of New Orleans, said a recent economic impact study conducted by the port showed that such a total shutdown could cost the national economy up to $275 million per day.

    July 26, 2008

  • Reports benefit shortfall totals $45 trillion over next 75 years The government is promising $45 trillion more than it can deliver on Social Security, Medicare and other benefit programs.

    That is the gap between the promises the government has made in benefits and the projected revenue stream for these programs over the next 75 years, the Bush administration estimated Monday.

    December 17, 2007

New Today
Community Calendar
Loading…
Events by eviesays.com
Facebook
Star Scoreboard
Facebook
AP Video
Police: Father Planned Deadly Fire for Some Time US, UK Pressure on Syria; More Homs Violence Raw Video: Mass Killer Wants Medal, Freedom Few Answers in Death of Sons of Missing Utah Mom Court Strips Contador of Tour De France Title Runaway Goat Leads Police on Wild Chase And the Winner for Best Super Bowl Ad Is... Raw Video: Deadly Helicopter Crash in Australia Raw Video: Smoke, Purported Gunfire in Syria Romney Latest Poll to Join Let-me-explain Club Blast Kills Husband of Missing Utah Mom, 2 Boys Obama: US, Israel Will Work Against Iran Nukes NJ Museum Finds 19th Century Recording Snow Causes Disruptions in Much of Europe Clinton: Vetoed U.N. Syria Resolution 'travesty' Romney Picks Up Decisive Win in Nevada Caucuses Gingrich Renews Vow to Campaign Until Convention Romney Rolls to Easy Win in Nevada GOP Caucuses Raw Video: Missing Family Found Alive in Ore. Police Clear Tents From Occupy Site in DC
Hyperlocal Search
Premier Guide
Find a business

Walking Fingers
Maps, Menus, Store hours, Coupons, and more...
Premier Guide
Popular Searches
Powered by Local.com
Twitter Updates
Follow us on twitter
Follow me on Twitter
9/11 Remembered