Cleveland OHIO

ABOUT Nathan P. Woodward

Nathan is a member of the Casualty Department, focusing his practice on the defense of commercial and individual defendants in product liability, premises liability, automobile liability, trucking and transportation, construction claims, uninsured/underinsured motorist coverage, and personal injury matters. Nathan has extensive experience in insurance coverage matters, providing coverage analysis and defending coverage disputes under commercial general liability, commercial property, commercial auto, personal auto, homeowners, professional liability, and directors and officers liability insurance. He has obtained favorable results for clients through trial, motion practice, and alternative dispute resolution.

Prior to joining the firm in 2018, Nathan worked as house defense counsel for a large insurance company, litigating first and third-party claims in courts throughout Ohio. During his career, he has represented a wide variety of insurers and insureds as a law firm associate at a prior firm.

Nathan grew up in the Quad Cities area of Iowa and Illinois and graduated from the University of Iowa with a bachelor's degree in Mathematics. He went on to attend Case Western Reserve University School of Law, where he earned his juris doctor in 2011. He enjoys playing golf, spending time with his wife and daughter, and watching the Hawkeyes and Cleveland sports.

Year joined

2018

Results

Summary judgment for insurance broker and two Lloyds syndicates.

Insurance Services
March 1, 2020

We obtained a ruling granting summary judgment in favor of an insurance broker and two Lloyds syndicates in a case pending in the United States District Court for the Northern District of Ohio. The case involved a claim arising from a fall from a tree stand at a hunting camp.

Thought Leadership

Riegel Has Landed: Ohio’s Construction Statute of Repose Now Applies to Breach of Contract Claims

Cleveland
Architectural, Engineering and Construction Defect Litigation
December 1, 2019
Ohio’s ten-year statute of repose for construction claims was long believed to apply only to tort actions. The construction statute of repose was recently held to apply to breach of contract actions as well. Defense Digest, Vol. 25, No. 4, December 2019 is prepared by Marshall Dennehey Warner Coleman & Goggin to provide information on recent legal developments of interest to our readers.

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