Are Your Property Transfers and Acquisitions at Risk?

28 05 2009

Over the past several years, exclusions for mold, microbial matter and lead-based paint have consistently appeared on general liability policies to create substantial coverage gaps.

As a result, uncovered claims can be significant. Take, for instance, the discovery of mold in an apartment community in the State of Delaware. A leaking kitchen sink was the verified cause of discoloration and foul odor in a bedroom ceiling as well as the dark-rimmed holes in the bedroom ceiling.

Despite repeated complaints, building management was slow to respond resulting in health-related issues for the two women living in the apartment. During the law suit, the women demonstrated that the owners rarely performed repairs beyond cosmetic patchwork. After two weeks of testimony, the jury awarded $1.04 million to the complainants for personal injuries.

Another example of catastrophic loss occurred at a condominium complex in the Northeast. It included the sickening of two people as well as the death of a 50-year-old woman who contracted Legionnaire’s Disease. The resulting effects included evacuating the entire complex, disinfecting the water system and a significant law suit.

As the above-mentioned situations show, habitational property owners have significant environmental worries.

Other environmental risks commonly associated with habitational real estate may include, but are not limited to:

  • Contaminants from known and unknown historical usage/operations or neighboring properties
  • Construction debris containing hazardous materials
  • Sick Building Syndrome i.e. carbon monoxide, mold, or bacterial air releases from faulty heating, ventilation or air conditioning systems
  • Hazardous chemical storage (such as maintenance degreasers, pool chemicals, pesticides and herbicides used both indoors and outdoors)
  • Lead, asbestos, polychlorinated byphenols (PCBs)
  • “Midnight dumping” on vacant land parcels
  • Leaking underground or aboveground storage tanks or piping.

Managing the risks

Despite the obvious challenges, environmental liabilities needn’t be an obstacle to property transfers and acquisitions if they are proactively identified, managed and mitigated.
In recent years, habitational real estate developers and owners alike have mitigated their environmental exposures through contractual means, the use of environmental insurance or the combination of both. This trend is also likely to continue due to the ever-increasing need of financial institutions to protect their loans in today’s economic climate and the desire of sellers, who would prefer to be free from potential claims related to unknown legacy issues.

At the top of the ($2.5B annual premium) environmental insurance market are the five leading environmental liability insurers of AIG, XL Capital, Zurich, ACE USA, and Chubb, which account for approximately 90 percent of the total premiums written. However, the remaining 10 percent of the environmental liability insurance market is growing with a number of very solid insurers providing at least some form of environmental liability insurance. These markets include Liberty, Markel Underwriting Managers, American Safety, Freberg Environmental/Endurance and Great American.

Available coverages

Each environmental liability insurer offers its own manuscripted coverage forms. To complicate matters even more, each insurer also offers a portfolio of environmental liability coverage forms, with the largest offering up to 15 different coverages totaling over 100 forms in the marketplace.

Among these is Premises Environmental Liability/Pollution Legal Liability (PLL), which provides coverage for pollution conditions or events on, at, under or migrating from a covered location(s). Coverage is afforded for third-party bodily injury, property damage, clean up costs and legal defense expense. A unique feature of many PLL policies is their ability to offer various and different coverage parts under one policy form. This includes, but is not limited to:

  • New pollution conditions
  • Existing pollution conditions
  • On site clean-up coverage
  • Transportation coverage
  • Non Owned Disposal Site (NODS) coverage
  • Business interruption including Loss of Rental Income
  • Mold liability coverage and clean-up
  • Legionella coverage
  • Fines and Penalties and Punitive Damages where allowable by law
  • Natural Resource Damages.

PLL is an effective risk management tool for commercial real estate since it helps to fill the “environmental gap” left in most general liability policies. It also helps reduce the uncertainty about environmental liability associated with the property and provides simple asset protection from potentially catastrophic environmental events associated with day-to-day operations.

In today’s environmental insurance market, available programs can even be tailored to address the diverse needs of each property and then structured to meet a variety of requirements that include regulatory obligations, contract requirements, lender requirements, landlord obligations, and business objectives. Another important aspect of coverage offered under PLL is that it can be structured to provide coverage for contamination, even if it is known certain environmental conditions already exist on site.

Fortunately, the environmental insurance marketplace is continually adapting to keep pace with the growing risk management demands of real estate owners and lenders—demands that are not likely to subside in the near future due to the costly nature of environmental liabilities.





DIFFERENT TYPES OF COMMERCIAL INSURANCE

6 03 2009

The most common types of commercial insurance are property, liability and workers’ compensation. In general, property insurance covers damages to your business property; liability insurance covers damages to third parties; and workers’ compensation insurance covers on-the-job injuries to your employees. Depending on your business, you may want additional specialized coverages. Listed below are some of the different types of business insurance.

PROPERTY INSURANCE Property insurance pays for losses and damages to real or personal property. For example, a property insurance policy would cover fire damage to your office space. You can purchase additional coverages for business property, including:

Boiler and Machinery Insurance Boiler and machinery insurance, sometimes referred to as “equipment breakdown” or “mechanical breakdown coverage,” provides coverage for the accidental breakdown of boilers, machinery, and equipment. This type of coverage usually will reimburse you for property damage and business interruption losses. For example, this coverage would cover fire damage to computers.

Debris Removal Insurance Debris removal insurance covers the cost of removing debris after a fire, flood, windstorm, etc. For example, a fire burns your building to the ground. Before you can start rebuilding, the remains of the old building have to be removed. Your property insurance will cover the costs of rebuilding, but not of removing the debris.

Builder’s Risk Insurance Builder’s risk insurance covers buildings while they are being constructed. For example, a Builder’s risk policy would cover losses if a windstorm takes down your partially constructed condominium complex.

Glass Insurance Glass insurance covers broken store windows and plate glass windows.

Inland Marine Insurance Inland marine insurance covers property in transit and other people’s property on your premises. For example, this insurance would cover fire-damage to customers’ clothing from a fire at your dry cleaning business.

Business Interruption Insurance Business interruption insurance covers lost income and expenses resulting from property damage or loss. For example, if a fire forces you to close your doors for two months, this insurance would reimburse you for salaries, taxes, rents, and net profits that would have been earned during the two-month period.

Ordinance or Law Insurance Ordinance or law insurance covers the costs associated with having to demolish and rebuild to code when your building has been partially destroyed (usually 50 percent). For example, your three-story building is 100 years old. A flood destroys the basement and first two stories. Because more than 50 percent of your building has to be rebuilt, a local ordinance requires that the building be completely demolished and rebuilt according to current building codes. Property insurance covers only the replacement value, not the upgrade.

Tenant’s Insurance Commercial leases often require tenants to carry a certain amount of insurance. A renter’s commercial policy covers damages to improvements you make to your rental space and damages to the building caused by the negligence of your employees.

Crime Insurance Crime insurance covers theft, burglary, and robbery of money, securities, stock, and fixtures from employees and outsiders.

Fidelity Bonds A bond company covers losses due to a bonded employee’s theft of business property and money.

LIABILITY INSURANCE Liability insurance covers injuries that you cause to third parties. If someone sues you for personal injuries or property damage, the cost of defending and resolving the suit would be covered by your liability insurance policy. A general liability policy will cover you for common risks, including customer injuries on your premises. More specialized varieties of liability insurance include:

Errors and Omissions Insurance Errors and omissions (“E & O”) insurance covers inadvertent mistakes or failures that cause injury to a third party. The act must actually be an inadvertent error, and not merely poor judgment or intentional acts. For example, an E & O policy would cover damages arising from an insurance agent failing to file policy applications, or a notary forgetting to fill out notarizations properly.

Malpractice Insurance Malpractice insurance, or professional liability insurance, pays for losses resulting from injuries to third parties when a professional’s conduct falls below the profession’s standard of care. For example, if a doctor makes a mistake that other doctors of his specialty would not have made, his patient might sue him. A malpractice policy will pay his defense costs and any judgment or settlement. Malpractice insurance is available for doctors, dentists, accountants, real estate agents, architects, and other professionals.

Automobile Insurance Commercial automobile policies cover the cars, vans, trucks and trailers used in your business. The coverage will reimburse you if your vehicles are damaged or stolen or if the driver injures a person or property.

Directors’ and Officers’ Liability Insurance This type of insurance is generally purchased by corporations and nonprofit organizations to cover the costs of lawsuits against directors and officers.

WORKERS’ COMPENSATION INSURANCE Workers’ compensation insurance covers you for an employee’s on-the-job injuries. Businesses with employees are required by various state laws to carry some type of workers’ compensation insurance. In most cases, workers’ compensation laws prohibit the employee from bringing a negligence lawsuit against an employer for work-related injuries.  

Source: Findlaw.com





Federal judge says commercial general liability policy didn’t cover

5 11 2008

Danny Jacobs

A building contractor’s insurance policy does not cover the amounts an arbitrator awarded to a Sparks couple for faulty home construction, a federal judge has ruled.

Mutual Benefit Group, which issued the commercial general liability policy to Wise M. Bolt Co. Inc., successfully argued that the CGL did not cover the $115,000 arbitration award to Herbert and Elaine Tracey.

“The repair and replacement damages awarded as a result of Bolt’s poor performance are simply a cost of doing business, not a component of the insurance objective of shifting risk,” U.S. District Judge William M. Nickerson wrote in granting summary judgment for Mutual Benefit last week, ending a seven-year legal dispute.

William C. Parler Jr., Mutual Benefit’s attorney, said the decision provides guidance to insurers on contract-based damages awarded to builders on home construction projects. Previous rulings in state and federal courts had reached a similar conclusion for commercial projects, he said.

“If there are damages awarded based on a contractual obligation … then there will be no duty to indemnify,” said Parler, of Parler & Wobber LLP.

The Traceys are still living in their home on Thornton Mill Road, said their attorney, Douglas T. Sachse of Towson. Sachse declined to comment on Nickerson’s decision.

David B. Applefeld of Adelberg, Rudow, Dorf & Hendler LLC in Baltimore, who represented Bolt, also declined to comment. Court records indicate Bolt’s filings in the lawsuit were based on Mutual Benefit’s duty to defend and attorneys’ fees.

The Traceys entered a construction agreement with Bolt in October 1998, according to court records. The couple moved in seven months later even though construction was not completed.

The Traceys first sued Bolt for negligence and breach of contract in July 2001 in Baltimore County Circuit Court. Amended complaints were filed in 2002 and 2005 as more construction defects were found.

The complaints all alleged structural defects and code violations. The Traceys also blamed improperly installed windows, heating and cooling systems for “unexpected damage” to their furnishings and the food in their pantry, according to Nickerson’s memorandum.

The case went to arbitration in January 2007 before retired Judge Paul E. Alpert, who two months later awarded the Traceys more than $115,000 from Bolt, which was about $200,000 less than they had sought.

Alpert denied the couple’s motion for reconsideration in March 2007, a decision upheld by Judge Robert E. Cahill Jr. in circuit court in August 2007, according to court records. The judgment was recorded last March.

Mutual Benefit, meanwhile, had filed a complaint in federal court in December 2001 for declaratory judgment to determine if it had a duty to defend or indemnify Bolt. In October 2002, Senior District Judge Alexander Harvey II found Mutual Benefit had to defend Bolt, but stayed the indemnification and attorneys’ fees issues pending the outcome of the case in state court.

Nickerson administratively closed the federal case in August 2005 because of delays in the state case. The federal case was reopened in June 2006 at the request of Bolt, which was granted $34,000 in attorneys’ fees from Mutual Benefit that August, according to court records.

The Traceys requested the stay on the indemnification issue be lifted last November, a motion Nickerson granted in April.

Andrew H. Vance, a veteran construction lawyer not involved in the case, said Nickerson’s ruling last week is consistent with case law that excludes insurers from covering repair work done by a policy holder.

“This is what I’ve seen time and time again in the commercial realm,” said Vance, of counsel at Hodes, Pessin & Katz P.A. in Towson.

Copyright 2008 Dolan Media Newswires
Provided by ProQuest Information and Learning Company. All rights Reserved.





Condominium and Homeowner Associations

5 11 2008

For decades, Farmers has been a preferred provider of coverages for condominium and homeowner associations. We have worked extensively within this industry and have designed our coverage packages to provide you with the most comprehensive and innovative insurance solutions. Whether your association is just a few units or large and complex with exercise facilities, swimming pools and spas, saunas, playgrounds, etc., Farmers has a coverage plan for you.

Condominium and homeowner associations may face severe financial consequence from property loss by fire, wind, or other causes. The association could also face liability from claims associated with the management of swimming pools and spas, saunas, playground equipment, sponsored events, parking areas, advertising, and more.

While our highly dedicated, top-tier Claims professionals are here to help you to get back where you belong, our Loss Control professionals will work with you to show you how to prevent potential losses.

The Coverages

Here are some of the coverage options that are available to you to help you with your insurance needs:

Property and Inland Marine

·      Buildings at Extended Replacement Costs or Actual Cash Values

·      Separate limit for Specified Property (such as Pools, Fences, etc.)

·      Automatic Increase in Building Amount (inflation guard)

·      Contents at Replacement Costs or Actual Cash Values

·      Condominium Unit Owners Coverage

·      Loss of Association Fees and Extra Expense

·      Loss in value of undamaged building portion, demolition or increased construction cost to meet ordinance or law requirement

·      Comprehensive equipment breakdown coverage

·      Coverage extension to newly acquired buildings

·      Fire department service charge and extinguisher recharge cost

·      Outdoor signs

·      Debris removal or clean up cost

·      Pollutant clean up cost

·      Back up of sewers or drains or appliances

·      Accounts Receivables and Valuable Papers coverage

·      Computer equipment including Media & Records

·      Earthquake or earthquake sprinkler leakage

Crime

·      Employee Dishonesty

·      Money & Securities – both inside and outside of the premises

·      Forgery & Alteration

·      Money Orders & Counterfeit Currency

 

General and Other Liability

·      Operations and Premise liability including parking lot liability

·      Personal and Advertising injury liability

·      Products and Completed Operations liability

·      Contractual and Owners Protective liability

·      Hired and Non-owned automobile liability

·      Employee Benefits Liability

·      Medical payments and Tenant’s Legal Liability

·      Per location aggregate limits








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