| Insuring Contractual
Obligations
By Blake Johnson
This article will attempt to address where you find insurance coverage
for the obligations you accept once you sign on the dotted line.
|
Whether you are a subcontractor or general contractor,
a frequent occurrence is the review and signing of construction contracts. From
an insurance perspective, one section in these contracts is extremely important
to review (aside from the section that outlines your insurance requirements).
The section I am referring to is the Indemnification/Hold Harmless provision.
This article will attempt to address where you find insurance coverage
for the obligations you accept once you sign on the dotted line.
One of
the most mysterious insurance policies you will ever purchase is the Commercial
General Liability Policy (CGL). At the same time, it is one of the most important
in terms of providing protection for you and your business. Because there are
a number of different CGL policies in use today, these comments will be directed
to the ISO CG 00 01 12 04 policy.
You may be familiar with the term "Contractual
Liability" coverage, as being found in a CGL policy. The reality is that
Contractual Liability is actually an exclusion under this policy. This exclusion
reads: "This insurance does not apply to: "Bodily injury" or "property
damage" for which the insured is obligated to pay damages by reason of the
assumption of liability in a contract or agreement".
There is however,
an exception to this exclusion that provides coverage for liability assumed in
a contract provided it is an "Insured Contract" and provided the bodily
injury or property damage occurs after the contract has been executed. What is
an "Insured Contract"? The CGL policy defines it. While there are a
number of agreements that fit the definition, one of the more important ones is:
"that part of any other contract or agreement pertaining to your business
under which you assume the tort liability of another party to pay for bodily injury
or property damage to a third person or organization."
This rather
broad definition is then narrowed down to what is not covered and that would be:
1.
A contract that indemnifies a railroad arising out of construction within 50 ft.
of any railroad property
2. A contract that indemnifies an architect, engineer
or surveyor for damage arising out of the preparing, approving, or failing to
approve maps, shop drawings, opinions, reports, field orders, change orders, drawings
or specifications
3. A contract under which the insured (you), if an architect,
engineer or surveyor, assumes liability for injury or damage arising out of the
insured's (your) rendering or failure to render professional services To
the extent outlined above, you do have coverage under a CGL policy for the obligations
you take on in contract to indemnify and hold harmless either the general contractor
or owner depending on with whom you are contracting. There are, however, some
VERY important issues to consider:
Protection is provided but only
to the extent coverage is provided under the policy. The CGL policy ONLY responds
to claims of bodily injury and/or property damage.
A CGL policy excludes
pollution related claims, therefore, no coverage if you agree to indemnify and
hold harmless a third party for claims of this type or nature.
A CGL
policy excludes professional liability (see 2. & 3. above)
A CGL
policy excludes coverage from claims arising out of work within 50-ft. of any
railroad property. A new requirement of many railroads (if you are working on
or within 50 ft. of their property) is to have No. 1 above deleted in addition
to providing a Railroad Protective policy. Many insurance carriers will not do
this.
Some CGL policies EXCLUDE, as an Insured Contract, "f."
as described above (in other words, construction contracts). This is done by attaching
to the policy a Contractual Limitation Endorsement. It is imperative that you
review your policy and all endorsements to make certain this valuable coverage
has not been removed.
The contractual coverage provided under most CGL
policies is a critical component of a sound insurance program. As the insurance
industry continues to struggle with the liability issues unique to construction,
we are seeing more and more carriers remove this coverage as a way to limit their
liability. Unfortunately, the contractor is left taking on these obligations personally
when this is done.
Blake Johnson is vice president
of Minard-Ames Insurance Group in Phoenix, Ariz.
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