Title: Class 10 Insurance and Risk Management
1Class 10Insurance and RiskManagement
-
- George D. Krempley
- Bus. Fin. 640
- Winter Quarter 2007
2Mortgage clauseprotects the mortgagees interest
- Under the mortgage clause, the mortgagee is
entitled to receive a loss payment from the
insurer to the extent of its interest regardless
of any policy violation by the insured. - Even if the insured violates a policy provision,
the insurer must make a loss payment to the
mortgagee. Thus, the mortgagees insurable
interest is protected.
3Review of HO 3 Coverages
- Section I Property Coverages
- Coverage A Dwelling
- Coverage B Other Structures
- Coverage C Personal Property
- Coverage D Loss of Use
- Additional Coverages
- Section II Liability Coverages
- Coverage E Personal Liability (100,000 per
occurrence) - Coverage F Medical Payments to Others (1000
per person)
4Additional Coverages
- cost of debris removal
- repairs needed to prevent further damage
- limited coverage of trees, shrubs, plants, and
lawns - up to 500 for a fire department service charge
- loss of credit cards, electronic fund transfer
cards, forgery of checks, and counterfeit money
up to 500 - broad coverage of property removed from premises
threatened by a covered peril for up to 30 days - loss assessment charge up to 1000
- certain collapse losses
- coverage for glass or safety glazing material
- coverage for landlords furnishings up to 2500
- limited coverage for increased construction costs
because of some ordinance or law - coverage of grave markers up to 5000.
5Exclusions Which Apply to Coverages A and B
- Collapse, except collapse losses covered under
additional coverages - Freezing of plumbing, heating, air conditioning,
or automatic fire protection sprinkler system
unless heat is maintained or the water supply is
shut off and drained. - However, if the building has an automatic
sprinkler system, the insured must continue the
water supply and maintain heat in the building. - Damage to pavements, patios, swimming pools, and
similar structures from ice, water pressure,
freezing, and thawing
6Exclusions Which Apply to Coverages A and B
- Theft of materials and supplies from the
construction site - Vandalism, malicious mischief, and glass breakage
if the dwelling is vacant for more than 60
consecutive days immediately before the loss - Mold, fungus, or dry rot losses
- Other exclusions
7Additional exclusions applying to Coverages A, B,
and C.
- Ordinance or law
- Earth movement
- Water damage, such as flood, sewer back up, and
seepage - Power failure off the residence premises
- Neglect of the insured to save and preserve the
property after a loss - War
8Additional exclusions applying to Coverages A, B,
and C.
- Nuclear hazard
- Intentional loss
- Government action
- Weather conditions that otherwise are excluded
- Failure to act by any person, group, or
government body - Faulty, inadequate, or defective planning and
design
9Coverage E Personal Liability
- Protects insureds against the financial
consequences of their liability to others for - Bodily injury
- Property damage
- Minimum Limit 100,000 per occurrence
- Single limit that applies to both bodily injury
and property damage per occurrence
10Coverage E Personal Liability
- Coverage is triggered by notice to the insurer of
potential or actual allegations of the insureds
liability. - Legal defense will be provided, even if the suit
is groundless, false or fraudulent
11Coverage E Also Pays for Legal Defense at
Insurers expense
- Costs of defense are provided in addition to the
Coverage E limit. - Does not reduce the amount of insurance that can
be used to pay damages arising from covered
liability - However, insurer is not obligated to provide any
further defense after it has paid damages equal
to the limit of liability
12Coverage E Personal Liability Insurance
- Very broad coverage Examples
- Guest in your home trips on torn carpet and sues
you for bodily injury - While burning leaves in your yard, you
accidentally set fire to your neighbors house - Your dog bites a small child while you are taking
it for a walk - You are shopping and carelessly break an
expensive vase
13Personal Liability Insurance
- Applies to most of the insureds exposures
relating to - Premises (which fit definition of an insured
location) - Personal activities
- Employment of domestic workers
- Incidental contracts
- Other incidental exposures
- E. g., Host liquor liability
14Personal Liability Insurance
- Limited protection also provided for
- Boats
- Snowmobiles
- Other vehicles besides automobiles
15Personal Liability Coverage Trigger
- To trigger personal liability coverage, the suit
or claim must - Allege bodily injury or property damage
- Be caused by an occurrence to which coverage
applies
16Meaning Bodily Injury Property Damage
- Definition of Bodily Injury
- Bodily harm, sickness or disease, including
required care, loss of service and required care - Definition of Property Damage
- Physical injury to, destruction of, or loss of
use of tangible property
17Definition of Occurrence
- An accident, including continuous or repeated
exposure to the same harmful conditions, which
results, during the policy period, in - Bodily Injury, or
- Property Damage.
18Meaning Occurrence (cont.)
- Occurrence can also be
- A sudden event or,
- A gradual series of incidents or,
- A continuous conditions, so long as it is
fortuitous - Example non sudden occurrence Gradual
accidental seepage of pollutants from a septic
tank into the neighbors well
19Example One Occurrence, Two Claimants
- During a windstorm, tree from Insureds property
falls - Strikes and injures pedestrian
- Hits and damages home of neighbor
- Both parties sue
- Pedestrian for 125,000
- Neighbor or 35,000
20Example One Occurrence, Two Claimants
- Insured has an unendorsed HO-3. Reports claim to
insurer - Insurer treats claim as one occurrence
- Insurer defends
- Insured appears to be negligent
- Failed to remove dead tree from his property,
even though he has received repeated warnings
21Example One Occurrence, Two Claimants (cont.)
- Pedestrian case is considered first.
- Cost to defend is 40,000
- Court decides in favor of Pedestrian
- Pedestrian receives award if 125,000
- Insurer pays 100,000 for Damages and 40,000 LAE
- Insured pays 25,000
22Example One Occurrence, Two Claimants (cont.)
- Neighbors case is now considered.
- Cost to defend is 35,000
- Court decides in favor of Neighbor
- Neighbor receives award of 35,000
- Insurer pays 0
- Insured pays 35,000 Damages and 35,000 LAE
23Example Defense of Non-meritorious Claim
- Insured was using a welder in his backyard
- Neighbors house catches fire
- Neighbor alleges that fire was caused by sparks
from the Insureds activity - Actual cause was sparks from neighbors own
wood-burning stove - Insurer still has to defend because claim is
within scope of Coverage E
24Example Defense of Non-meritorious Claim (cont.)
- Insurer still has to defend because claim is
within scope of Coverage E - Cost to defend 25,000
- Case decided in insureds favor
- Insurer pays
- 0 for damages
- 25,000 for LAE
25Meaning Occurrence
- One accident is one occurrence even if it
involves - Injury to more than one person, or
- Damage to more than one piece of property
- Occurrence can also be a sudden event or a
gradual series of incidents, or a continuous
conditions, so long as it is fortuitous.
26Homeowners Section II
- Coverage F Medical Payments to Others
- Pays for, regardless of whether the insured is
liable, reasonable medical expenses of another
person, who is accidentally injured, either on - An insured location, or
- By the activities of
- The insured
- Resident employee
- Or animal owned by or in the care of the insured
- Limit 1000 per person
27Exclusions Coverages E and F
- Motor vehicle liability
- Watercraft liability with certain exceptions
- Aircraft liability
- Hovercraft liability
- Expected or intentional injury
- Business activities
- Professional services
28Exclusions Coverages E and F (cont.)
- Uninsured locations
- War
- Communicable disease
- Sexual molestation
- Corporal punishment, or physical or mental abuse
- Controlled substances.
29EXHIBIT 9.1 Watercraft Exposures Covered by
Section II of the HO-3 Policy
30Coverage E Exclusions
- Contractual liability Limited exceptions
- Written contracts that relate directly to an
insured location (example apartment lease) - Written contracts in which the liability of
another is assumed before the occurrence of a
claim (example rental of a power saw) - Damage to property owned by an insured
31Coverage E Exclusions (cont.)
- Damage to property rented to, occupied or used
by, or in the care of an insured - Does not apply to property damage caused by fire,
smoke or explosion - Workers compensation claims
- Nuclear energy liability
- Bodily injury to an insured.
32Coverage F Exclusions
- Injury to a residence employee off an insured
location and not in the course of employment - Workers compensation and nuclear energy claims
- Injury to persons regularly residing on an
insured location. - Coverage F also does not cover the named insured
and resident family members.
33Impact of /Restrictions on Endorsements
- Endorsement generally takes precedence over the
conflicting terms of the contract - Unless a law or regulation requires that a
standard policy contain certain provisions - An endorsement cannot be used to circumvent the
purpose of legislation by modifying the terms of
a standard contract required by law
34Endorsements to Homeowners Policy
- Scheduled personal property endorsement (with
agreed value loss settlement) - Inflation-guard endorsement
- Earthquake coverage endorsement
- Personal property replacement cost loss
settlement endorsement - Personal injury endorsement
- Watercraft endorsement
- Home business insurance coverage endorsement
35Recall Special Limits of Liability in Homeowners
Insurance
- 200 on money, bank notes, bullion, gold, silver,
platinum, coins, medals, stored value cards, and
smart cards - 1500 on securities, valuable papers,
manuscripts, passports, tickets, and stamp
collections - 1500 on watercraft of all types, including their
trailers and equipment - 1500 on trailers not used with watercraft
- 1500 for theft of jewelry, watches, furs,
precious and semiprecious stones - 2500 for theft of firearms and related equipment
- 2500 for theft of silverware, goldware,
platinumware and pewterware - 2500 on business property on the residence
premises - 500 on business property away from the premises
(except adaptable electronic apparatus) - 1500 on electronic apparatus while in or upon a
motor vehicle - 1500 on electronic apparatus used primarily for
business while away from the premises and not in
or upon a motor vehicle
36INSIGHT 8.4 The Big Gap Between Replacement Cost
and Actual Cash Value Can Empty Your Wallet
37EXHIBIT 9.4 Tips for Buying a Homeowners Policy