(February 2018)
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The
American Association of Insurance Services (AAIS) Riggers' Coverage is used by contractors
that lift, set in place, and move property of others. Rigging contractors (riggers) specialize
in lifting heavy property objects of others in conjunction with installation,
construction, and moving operations. When the rigger’s actions damage the property
being moved, the rigger may be held liable for the
damages. This is more of a bailee type coverage form so covered property is
property of others that is in the named insured's care, custody, or control.
AAIS has developed two Riggers' coverage forms. Each has its
own corresponding schedule of coverages. The
IM 7150–Riggers' Coverage Analysis is analyzed first and then the IM 7151–Riggers' Legal Liability Coverage is compared to the IM 7150 with only the differences between the two being analyzed.
Any contractor or commercial operation that is involved in rigging operations of objects that belong to others is eligible.
AAIS Riggers' coverage requires at least these four forms:
Related Article: CL 0100–AAIS Commercial Lines Common Policy Conditions
IM 7155–Schedule of Coverages–Riggers' Coverage is used with IM 7150–Riggers' Coverage. IM 7155 contains the following information:
The 01 12 edition added a space to enter the policy number.
The 01 12 edition added quotation marks
around the word Limit (“Limit”) because Limit is a defined word.
This is the most paid for loss to a single project.
This is the most paid for loss in a single occurrence regardless of the number of projects.
The limits on the Schedule of Coverages for the following
coverages apply to all covered locations:
The limit is $5,000 unless a different limit is entered.
There is no limit in the coverage form. As a result, full policy limits
apply but defense costs reduce the amount available to pay for the loss being defended against. The
previous edition had the word “covered” in the space provided. The 01 12
edition has the words “See Form” in that space.
Each of these coverages provides additional limits of coverage or additional coverage. Required entries vary by type of coverage.
The limit is $2,500 unless a different limit is entered.
The limit is $10,000 unless a different limit is entered.
The limit is $1,000 unless a different limit is entered.
The limit is $10,000 unless a different limit is entered.
One of two options must be selected:
The following entries are required if the reporting condition is selected:
This may be Monthly, Quarterly, or Annual.
This is entered for each project.
·
Monthly,
quarterly or annual adjustment period
One of these must be
selected.
Any additional premium the named insured owes to the insurance company
because of the reporting condition is due on the date stated on the billing
invoice.
A deductible amount must be entered.
This section of the schedule of coverages lists endorsements and forms included when the policy is issued.
The previous edition referred to this
section as Optional Coverages and Endorsements.
Note: This analysis is of the 06 08 edition.
Changes from the previous edition are in bold print.
You and your are the parties who are listed on the declarations as the insured. We, us and our is the insurance company that is providing coverage. The Definitions Section, which is at the end of the coverage form, must be consulted in order to discover how other terms used in this coverage form are to be interpreted. (06 08 addition)
The insurance company agrees to provide the coverage that is described in the coverage form and in the schedule of
coverages and in return, the named insured agrees to pay the premium. This
agreement is subject to all of this policy’s terms, conditions, endorsements,
and definitions.
Only the property
described in this item is covered and that property is subject to any
exclusions or limitations that may apply.
1. Coverage
Only property that
is property of others while is in the named insured's care, custody, or control
is covered. This property is covered only during the
time the named insured has been hired for rigging. Coverage applies when a
covered peril causes direct physical loss or damage to this property.
2. Coverage
Limitation
The property of
others is covered only while actually at a location.
The reason for the property being at the location must be for any of the
following purposes:
Note: The comma used in this last item could be a
problem. As currently expressed, this item could apply to a dismantling or
assembling project that are not related to a rigging
project.
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Example: Rollie's Rigging is working on a
commercial building construction site. Its job is to erect all scaffolding
for a specific section of the building, disassemble it, and then to move it
to the next section. Coverage begins when the scaffolding is
delivered to the construction site and continues as long as the job progresses
through all the different erection and disassembly operations. When the
scaffolding collapses, Rollie submits a claim for the damage to the
scaffolding. |
Seven specific types of property are excluded:
1. Airborne Property
Property
that is airborne is not
covered unless it is in transit but only while on a regularly scheduled airline
flight.
A very important
part of this item is that property being lifted or
moved by a helicopter is specifically not covered.
2. Buildings,
Structures, and Land
Buildings, structures and land are not covered. The only exception is for
buildings or structures that are part of the named insured's rigging,
assembling, or dismantling project.
3. Contraband
Property that is
illegal to possess is not covered. Property that is legal to possess but that is being used as part of an illegal trade or that is being
transported illegally is also not covered.
4. Money and
Securities
A number of types of property are not covered under this item. Accounts, bills, currency, food stamps, evidences of debt, and lottery tickets not held for sale, in addition to money, notes, or securities are all not covered.
5. Service Fee
Coverage does not
apply to property that the named insured accepts when it does not make a charge
for the rigging services being provided.
Example: McMillan is being a public servant and providing rigging services for
the town of Merry as they erect their Christmas decorations. All services are donated. McMillan makes a mistake and drops a
priceless decoration. The town sues McMillan and this coverage declines all
coverage because not service fee had been charged. Note: Some municipalities and contractors have circumvented such
requirements by paying minimal fees. |
6. Trees, Shrubs, and
Plants
All of these plus lawns are not covered.
Note: This not covered
item might need to be revisited when a vegetated roof
will be part of a project.
7. Waterborne
Property
Property that is waterborne is not covered. The only exception is when waterborne property is in transit and in a carrier for hire's custody.
Note: This could be a significant problem when a rigger is working on a bridge or pier project.
Provisions That Apply
To Coverage Extensions
There are two coverage extensions. The limit for each is either the limit on the schedule of coverages or the default limit included in the coverage form. This limit is part of the applicable limit for covered property and not in addition to it, unless otherwise indicated. It is not added to or combined with the limit for any other coverage extension or supplemental coverage and is not subject to any coinsurance provisions that apply elsewhere in the coverage form.
1. Debris Removal
a. When a covered peril damages or destroys covered property, the cost to
remove any created debris is covered under this
extension.
b. Debris removal does not include
any costs for removing, restoring, replacing polluted land
or water or to extract pollutants.
c. There are two parts of the Limit section. The first is restricting any
debris removal payment to no more than 25% of the amount paid for the actual
direct physical loss. The second part is that when the debris removal and the
physical damage loss are added together, no more than
the limit of insurance is paid.
d. An additional $5,000 (or a higher amount entered on the schedule of
coverages) is available if the debris removal expense is more than 25% of the
loss amount or if the combined cost of loss and debris removal is more than the
limit of insurance for the covered property.
e. The named insured must report debris removal expenses to the insurance company
within 180 days of the loss date in order for this coverage extension to apply.
2. Defense Costs
Note: This coverage form is providing third party coverage for the
benefit of the named insured. Because of this, the insurance company takes
control of the loss and negotiates with the third party that sustained damage.
This section explains how the insurance company and the named insured are to
work together on any such claim.
a. The insurance company decides when to defend suits brought against the named insured that result from covered loss or damage to covered property. This is not the decision of the named insured. This means that the insurance company is in control of the investigation and the manner in which suits or claims are handled.
b. Once the insurance company has paid out its limits, based on a judgment or written settlement, the insurance company is no longer under an obligation to defend the named insured.
c. The named insured’s only involvement in the claim is to act within the written approval of the insurance company.
d. Once the insurance company agrees to defend
a suit, it also agrees to pay seven specific expenses related to it. These
expenses are not part of the limit of insurance and no deductible applies to
any of them:
Supplemental
Coverages
Provisions That Apply
To Supplemental Coverages
There are four supplemental coverages. Each has its own default limit that can be increased by entering a higher limit on the schedule of coverages. Limits for any supplemental coverage are separate from the applicable limit for covered property, not part of it.
The limit available for coverage described under a supplemental coverage is the only limit available for it. It is not the total of the limit for a supplemental coverage and the limit for covered property. The limits are not added to or combined with limits for any other supplemental coverage or coverage extension. They also are not subject to any coinsurance provisions that apply elsewhere in the coverage form.
1. Earned Charges (06
08 addition)
The insurance company covers charges that are owed to the named insured because it provided services
but that it cannot collect because of a covered loss to covered property. The
most paid in a single occurrence is $2,500. This limit can be
increased.
Example: Rollie’s
Rigging had performed services under its contract for two weeks prior to the
scaffolding collapsing. The general contractor was furious with the drop
because it put him off schedule. A new rigging contractor was hired and the
general contractor refused to pay Rollie’s for any part of its contract. This
coverage would pay Rollie up to $2,500. |
2. Pollutant Cleanup and
Removal
a. The insurance company pays the named insured's expenses to extract pollutants from land or water if a covered peril that occurred during the policy period caused the pollutants to be released or discharged.
b. This is immediate coverage so any expenses to extract pollutants are paid only when reported to the insurance company within 180 days of the date of loss.
c. Costs related to testing, evaluating, observing, or recording pollutants are excluded except for those costs that are part of the extraction process.
d. The most paid at any one location is
$10,000 for all such expenses that a covered peril that occurs during each
separate 12-month policy period causes. This limit can be
increased.
3. Property in
Storage
Covered property that
is in storage while awaiting rigging is covered for
direct physical loss by a covered peril. The most paid in a single occurrence
is $10,000. This limit can be increased.
Note: There is no limitation as to where the property must be stored. It
could be on-site or off-site. However, the property must be property of others
and must be in the care, custody of control of the named insured at the time of
the loss. This means that if it is off-site but in the control of the property
owner, there would be no coverage.
4. Transit
Covered property that
is in transit to a rigging location is covered against
direct physical loss by a covered peril. The most paid in a single occurrence
is $10,000. This limit can be increased.
Note: The requirement that this property is in the care, custody or control
of the named insured remains in place even though it is in transit. If the
property is in the care of a carrier for hire but that hire is at the direction
of the named insured, the coverage would apply.
Coverage applies to risks of direct physical loss. This very broad statement is modified by the statement that it applies only if the loss is not limited or caused by an excluded peril.
1. Primary Exclusions
The first group of
exclusions is essentially absolute. Subject to specific exceptions, loss or
damage by each is totally excluded, regardless of any
other cause or event that contributes to a loss, either concurrently or in any
other sequence. The insurance company does not pay for any direct or indirect
loss or damage caused by or that results from any of these events.
a. Civil
Authority
There
is no coverage for a loss that results
from an order any civil or government authority issues. These orders may include seizure,
confiscation, destruction, or quarantine of property but this exclusion is not
limited to only these. The only exception is when the loss or
damage is caused by a civil authority destroying property as a means of
controlling a fire. This exception applies only if the fire is the
result of a covered peril.
b. Nuclear
Hazard
The insurance
company does not cover loss or damage caused by or that results from any
nuclear reaction, radiation, or contamination. This is absolute and applies
whether the nuclear incident was controlled or not, and by whatever means
caused. Any loss the nuclear hazard causes is not treated
as a loss that fire, explosion, or smoke causes. The only exception is when a
fire results from the nuclear fire, direct loss or damage from that fire is covered but the damage from the nuclear hazard remains
excluded.
c. Ordinance or Law
Coverage does not apply to any loss or to increased construction costs because a government regulation that controls the use, construction, or repair of any property is enforced. When the regulation requires the demolition of property and the removal of its debris created by the demolition there is no coverage. This exclusion applies to enforcement that occurs even if the property has not been damaged and it applies to increased costs that are incurred as a result of the named insured complying with the regulations.
d. Penalties
Penalties the named insured incurs because it failed to complete a project according to a contract’s terms and conditions are excluded. Penalties exacted against the named insured did not comply with terms of the construction contract are also excluded.
Example: The general contractor notified Rollie’s that it was in non-compliance with contract terms. The accident investigation following the scaffolding damage revealed that Rollie was not using union employees even though he was being paid union scale under the contract. Rollie is not covered for this non-compliance penalty. |
e. War and
Military Action
The insurance
company does not pay for loss or damage caused by any act of war. Undeclared
and civil war or warlike action by a military force is all considered war. All
actions taken to hinder or defend against an actual or expected attack by any
government or sovereign authority that uses military personnel or other agents are also considered war and excluded. In addition, acts of
insurrection, rebellion, revolution, or unlawful seizure of power and any
action any government authority takes to prevent or defend against any such
acts are excluded. If any action within the terms of
this exclusion involves nuclear reaction, radiation, or contamination, this
exclusion applies in place of the nuclear hazard exclusion.
Note: This means that the exception for resulting fire under the nuclear
hazard is not covered when it is the result of war.
2. Secondary
Exclusions
The second group of
exclusions applies to loss or damage caused by or that
results from any of the following loss events. Some of these exclusions
have exceptions, conditions, or limitations that should be
noted and reviewed carefully. The insurance company does not pay for any
loss or damage caused by or that results from any of these events.
a. Contamination
or Deterioration
Loss or damage that
is caused by contamination or deterioration is
excluded. This applies to corrosion, decay, fungus, mildew, mold, rot, and rust.
It also applies to any quality, fault, or weakness in covered property that
causes it to damage or destroy itself. However, this exclusion is not limited
to only these described causes.
b. Criminal,
Fraudulent, Dishonest, or Illegal Acts
Coverage does not
apply to loss caused by or that results from criminal, fraudulent, dishonest,
or illegal acts that any of the following commit alone or in collusion with
another:
Coverage applies if
employees destroy property. It does not apply if employees steal.
Note: Crime coverages should be used to cover this
type of loss. However, because the property being covered
is property of others, the CR 04 01–Client’s Property will need to be attached
in order for employee dishonesty coverage to apply.
Related Article: CR 04 01–Clients’ Property
c. Defects, Errors and Omissions
Any
loss that is caused by any act, defect, error, or
omission related to specific construction activities is excluded. The
activities can be in design,
specifications, construction, materials, and workmanship, as well as
maintenance, installation, renovation, remodeling, or repair. They may also be
in planning, zoning, development, siting, surveying, grading, or compaction
activities. There is an exception. If any of these excluded acts, defects, errors,
or omissions result in a covered peril then the loss or damage from that
covered peril is covered.
Example: Rollie’s Rigging continues to have bad news The accident investigation used improper bolts while assembling the scaffolding. Rollie’s claim was denied because it was due to a defect in construction. |
d. Electrical Currents
Loss caused by electrical arcing or currents is excluded, unless the electrical is from lightning. The exception is when the excluded arcing or currents results in a covered peril any loss or damage from that covered peril causes is covered.
e. Explosion, Rupture, or Bursting
Loss or damage to
boilers, turbines, pipes, or engines that are powered
by steam or to gas turbines is excluded when they explode, rupture, or burst.
Loss or damage to other property due to these items exploding, rupturing, or
bursting would be covered.
f. Loss of Use
There is no coverage for loss that results from delay, loss of use, or loss of market.
g. Mechanical Breakdown
Loss that is due to a mechanical breakdown is excluded. Damage to moving parts of machinery that is due to centrifugal force is also excluded. The exception is when either results in a covered peril, the loss or damage that covered peril causes is covered.
h. Missing
Property
Unexplained or
mysterious disappearance of covered property is excluded
when there is no physical evidence to suggest what happened to it and the only
proof that a loss occurred is based on an audit or physical inventory. This exception
is that covered property that is in the custody of carriers for hire is covered.
i. Pollutants
There is no
coverage for loss caused by or that results from any release, discharge,
seepage, migration, dispersal, or escape of pollutants. There are three
exceptions:
Example: An earthquake causes a container of acid
to spill. The acid burns through an electrical cord and a fire occurs. The
loss due to the fire is covered even though the
cause was a pollutant because the loss that resulted was due to a specified
cause of loss. |
j. Rain, Snow,
Ice, or Sleet
Loss caused by or
that results from rain, snow, ice, or sleet to covered property that is in the
open and that is not yet a part of the permanent building or structure is
excluded. The exception is for any covered property that is in a carrier for
hire’s custody.
k. Temperature/Humidity
Loss that is due to dryness, dampness, humidity, changes in or extremes of temperature causes is excluded.
l. Testing
A loss that is caused because of any type of testing is not covered. Start-up, performance, stress, pressure, or overload testing of covered property are examples of such testing.
m. Voluntary Parting
When loss or damage
occurs to property that has been given to another on a
voluntary basis, it is not covered. This applies even if a trick or scheme
caused the property to be given to away.
Example: John arrived at the construction site in a panic. He told Marvin that
parts of the rigging property he was installing were needed
immediately at another jobsite. Marvin did not know John but John had
credentials and was in such a panic that Marvin not only agreed to release
the items but also helped to secure it on the trailer. A few days later, when
Marvin had not received the replacement property he attempted to contact
John. When that was unsuccessful, he contacted the general contractor’s supervisor
who denied all knowledge of John. Marvin has a problem because John and the
property could not be found and he has no coverage
for its loss under this coverage form. |
1. Notice
The named insured
must give prompt notice of a loss to the insurance company or its agent. The
notice must include a description of the property lost or damaged. If a
criminal act caused the loss, the appropriate law enforcement agency must also be notified. The insurance company has the right
to require that the notice be in writing.
2. You Must Protect
Property
During and after a
loss, the named insured must take all reasonable steps to protect covered
property from further loss. The insurance company pays reasonable costs the
named insured incurs but to do so the named insured must maintain accurate records to substantiate the
costs. Paying these costs is not in addition to the policy limits. There is no
coverage for any repairs or emergency measures performed on property not
already damaged by a covered peril.
Note: Such costs incurred reduce the amount
available to pay the actual loss.
3. Proof of Loss
The named insured
must complete and return the insurance company's prescribed proof of loss forms
within 60 days after the company requests it. The information provided must
include the time, place, and circumstances involved with the loss and
information on any other insurance coverage that may apply. It must also
include the named insured’s interest and the interest of others with respect to
the property involved, including lienholders, loss payees, and mortgagees. Any
changes in title to the property during the policy period must
be disclosed, in addition to providing any other reasonable information
the company may require to adjust and settle the loss.
4. Examination
Examination under
oath may be required in matters that relate to the loss. The insurance company
may request these examinations more than once but such requests must be
reasonable. If multiple persons are examined, the
company has the right to examine each individual separately.
5. Records
The named insured
must produce any records related to the loss. The insurance company must be allowed to make copies and take extracts of them as
often as it reasonably requests. Records include tax returns and bank
microfilms of all related cancelled checks but records are not limited to just
these.
6. Damaged Property
Both damaged and
undamaged property must be made available for the
insurance company's inspection as often as reasonably necessary. It must also be allowed to take samples of the property to the
extent necessary to adjust and settle the loss.
7. Volunteer Payments
The named insured
may not voluntarily make payments, assume obligations, pay or offer rewards, or
incur other expenses without the insurance company's express approval. If it
does, it does so at its own expense. The only exceptions are those costs
incurred to protect property as item 2. above
describes.
8. Abandonment
The named insured
may not abandon damaged property to the insurance company without its written
consent.
9. Cooperation
The named insured
must cooperate with the insurance company. Any actions required of the named
insured within this policy must be performed.
1. Actual Cash Value
The value of covered property is based on its actual cash value. Actual cash is replacement cost new minus depreciation.
2. Pair or Set
The value of a loss
that involves damage to or loss of one part of a pair or set is
based on a reasonable proportion of the value of the entire pair or set.
However, the loss of one part of a pair or set is not
considered a total loss.
Note: This recognizes that the value of the whole
is greater than the value of the individual items but that the remaining items
still have value as separates.
3. Loss to Parts
The value of a lost
or damaged part of property consisting of several parts is the cost to repair
or replace only the lost or damaged part.
1. Insurable Interest
The insurance
company does not pay more than the named insured's insurable interest in the
covered property at the time of loss.
Note: This
condition is confusing because the named insured has very little, if any,
insurable interest in property of others. A condition that states that the loss
is subject to the property owner’s insurable interest would be more helpful.
2. Deductible
The insurance
company pays only the amount of loss that exceeds the deductible amount on the
schedule of coverages.
3. Loss Settlement
Terms
Subject to the
other items in this section, the insurance company pays the least of:
4. Catastrophe Limit
(06 08 change)
The catastrophe
limit on the schedule of coverages is the most the insurance company pays,
regardless of the number of rigging projects that are damaged
at the same time.
Note: It is very important
that the named insured be aware of this limit because of how it caps damages.
Example: Mandarin
Rigging’s project limit was $40,000 and its catastrophe limit was $80,000.
Mandarin acquired another contractor and started working four jobs at a time.
In the busyness of the added jobs, Mandarin never contacted his agency to
increase the catastrophe limit. A tornado came through and flattened three
jobsites. Mandarin’s $40,000 project limit was adequate but the $80,000
catastrophe limit was not enough to cover Mandarin’s $100,000 loss. |
5. Insurance under More Than One Coverage
Two or more coverages in the coverage form may apply to the same loss. In
that case, the insurance company does not pay more than the value of the actual
claim, loss, or damage sustained.
6. Insurance under
More Than One Policy
a. Proportional
Share
The named insured
may have other coverage subject to the same terms as this coverage form. In
that case, this coverage form pays only its share of the covered loss. That
share is the proportion that its limit of insurance bears to the limits of
insurance of all insurance that covers on the same basis.
b. Excess Amount
There may be other coverage available to pay for the loss other than as described in 6. a. above. In that case, this coverage form pays on an excess basis. It pays only the amount of covered loss that exceeds the amount due from the other coverage, whether collectible or not. Any payment is subject to the limit of insurance that applies.
1. Loss Payment
Options
a. Our Options
The insurance
company has the following four loss payment options if a covered loss occurs.
b. Notice of Our
Intent to Rebuild, Repair, or Replace
The insurance
company has the right to decide how it wants to settle the loss but it is
required to notify the named insured within 30 days of receiving a property
completed proof of loss when the decision is to rebuild, repair, or replace.
2. Your Losses
a. Adjustment
and Payment of Loss
The insurance
company adjusts all losses with and pays the named insured, unless another loss
payee named in the policy is involved.
b. Conditions
for Payment of Loss
The insurance
company pays a covered loss within 30 days after it receives a properly
prepared proof of loss and the amount of loss is established. The amount of loss is determined through either a written
agreement between the company and the named insured or after an appraisal award
is filed with the company.
3. Property of Others
a. Adjustment
and Payment of Loss to Property of Others
The insurance
company has the option to adjust and pay losses that involve property of others
either to the named insured acting on the property
owner’s behalf or to the property owner.
b. We Do Not
Have to Pay You if We Pay the Owner
When the insurance company pays the property owner, it is not obligated to pay the named insured. In addition, if the property owner sues the named insured, the company has the option to defend the named insured in that suit.
The reporting
conditions apply only if there are entries for Reporting Conditions on the
schedule of coverages. This section includes details on the timing and content
of the required reports, provisions in the event of cancellation, how premiums
are calculated and adjusted, and provisions that affect how losses are paid.
1. Reports
a. A report of the total receipts due from
rigging operations (whether collected or not) for the reporting period involved
must be submitted to the insurance company within 30 days after the end of the
reporting period. Receipts include amounts earned from materials, labor,
reasonable overhead and profit, and delivery charges forming part of rigging
projects.
b. In case of cancellation, the report
described above must be provided for the period up to
and including the cancellation date. Any additional premium for that period must be paid.
2. Premium
Computation and Adjustment
Premiums are calculated by multiplying the value of the reported
receipts by the reporting rate on the schedule of coverages. The adjustment
periods may be annual or for some other period.
a. Annual
Adjustment
If the adjustment
period on the schedule of coverages is annual, the calculated premium is compared to the deposit premium. If the calculated
premium is more than the deposit, the named insured pays the insurance company
the difference. If it is less, the insurance company refunds the difference to
the named insured, subject to any applicable minimum premium.
b. Other
Adjustment Period
If the adjustment
period is other than annual, the calculated and reported premium is applied to the deposit until it is used up. After that,
the named insured pays the insurance company any premiums that exceed the
deposit. At expiration, if the calculated premium is less than the deposit, the
insurance company refunds the difference to the named insured, subject to any
applicable minimum premium.
3. Provisions That
Affect How Much We Pay
a. Failure to
Submit Reports
If required reports
are not submitted and a loss occurs, the most that the
insurance company pays for that loss is 90% of the limit.
b. Reported
Values Are Less than the Full Value
If the receipts
reported are less than the actual receipts earned during the reporting period,
the insurance company pays only a proportion of the loss. The proportion is the
receipts reported divided by the actual receipts. The deductible is then subtracted from the loss and multiplying the
remaining amount by the proportion.
c. We Will Not
Pay More than the Limit
The insurance
company does not pay more than the applicable limit at the designated location.
1. Appraisal
The insurance
company and the insured may not always agree on a covered claim’s value. This condition
provides one method to resolve disputed claims.
Either party can
request an appraisal to determine a disputed claim’s value. Once requested, the
parties have 20 days to obtain their own independent and competent appraisers
and give their appraiser's name to the other party. The two appraisers then
have 15 days to select a competent impartial umpire. If they cannot agree on an
umpire within that time period, either can request
that a judge in the court of record in the state where the property is located
appoint one.
The appraisers then
determine the claim’s value. They submit any differences to the umpire. Once
any two of the three parties agree, the amount of loss is set.
Each party pays its
own appraiser. Both parties share the umpire’s cost and other expenses equally.
2. Benefit to Others
The insurance
provided does not directly or indirectly benefit any
party that has custody of the named insured's property.
Note: This does not appear to apply because the named insured’s property is
not covered.
3. Conformity with
Statute
Any condition in
this coverage form that conflicts with any applicable law is
amended to conform to that law.
4. Estates
Note: This condition applies only if the named
insured is an individual.
a. Your Death
If the named
insured dies, the person who has custody of the named insured's property is an
insured until a qualified legal representative is appointed. The named
insured’s legal representative becomes an insured once appointed. Both are
insureds but only with respect to the property this
coverage form insures.
b. Policy Period
Is Not Extended
This coverage does
not extend past the policy’s expiration date.
5. Misrepresentation,
Concealment, or Fraud
This coverage is
void if any insured at any time willfully concealed or misrepresented a
material fact that relates to the insurance provided, the property covered, or
its interest in the property. It is also void if fraud or false swearing by any
insured took place concerning the insurance provided or the property covered.
Note: The named insured must deal with the
insurance company honestly. Its rights of recovery may be
voided if it intentionally misrepresents or conceals a material fact or
information. This means that the insurance is treated
as simply having never existed versus denying a particular claim.
6. Policy Period
Only covered losses
that occur during the policy period are paid.
7. Recoveries
Paying the loss
does not end the obligations of the named insured and the insurance company
toward one another. Additional provisions apply if the insurance company pays a
loss and the lost or damaged property is subsequently
recovered or the parties responsible for the loss pay for it.
Either party that
recovers property or payment must inform the other. Recovery expenses that
either party incurred are reimbursed first. If the
named insured keeps the recovered property, it must refund the amount of the
claim the insurance company paid, unless the company agrees to a different
amount. If the claim paid is less than the agreed loss due to applying a
deductible or another limitation, any recovery is prorated
between the named insured and the insurance company based on the company's
respective interest in the loss.
8. Restoration of
Limits
Payment of a claim
does not reduce the limit available for future claims.
9. Subrogation
The insurance
company acquires the named insured's rights of recovery from third parties
after it pays a loss. The named insured must help the insurance company secure
those rights. The company is not obligated to pay a loss if the named insured
hinders or impairs the company's rights of subrogation. However, the named
insured can agree in writing to waive recovery rights from others before a loss
occurs.
10. Suit against Us
The insurance company
cannot be sued by anyone for any coverage until all
the terms of the coverage form are met. Suits must be brought
within two years after the named insured first knew about a loss. If a state
law invalidates this condition, any suit brought must comply with the
provisions of that law and begin within the shortest period
of time allowed by law.
Note:
It is normal for a
basic coverage form to be modified by mandatory
state-specific endorsements that address issues that relate to that specific
state.
11. Territorial
Limits
Covered property
must be located in the United States, its territories and possessions, Canada,
or Puerto Rico in order for coverage to apply.
12. Carriers for Hire
The named insured may accept shipping documents from transportation companies that limit the carrier’s liability to amounts that are less than the covered property’s actual cash value.
Coverage ends when the first of the following events takes place:
Note: This could be a problem because the coverage includes property of others in the care, custody, and control of the named insured. The named insured never has an insurable interest in such property so does that mean there is never any coverage?
Note: Because coverage ends on the earliest date that one of these events takes place, it is extremely important to inform the named insured of them so that coverage being in force is not automatically or incorrectly assumed.
Defined terms are used throughout the coverage form. Restricting their meaning to the definition in it is how all parties have a clearer understanding of the coverage intended. Nine terms are defined:
1. Limit
This
is the amount of coverage that applies to the insured property.
2. Pollutant
This is a broad and
expansive term. It is solids, liquids, thermal or radioactive contaminants, and
irritants. It includes, but is not limited to, acids, alkalis, chemicals,
fumes, smoke, soot, vapor, and waste. Waste includes materials intended for
recycling, reclamation, and reconditioning, as well as for disposal. Visible
and invisible electrical or magnetic emissions and sound emissions are also considered pollutants.
3. Rigging
In addition to
meaning rigging, this term includes moving, erecting, hoisting, or lowering.
Note: Rigging requires special skills, equipment,
and experience to move large objects and machinery vertically, horizontally,
and with pinpoint precision on an exact spot. Machinery installations may
involve subsequent precision placement of various parts together to complete
the job. It demands patience and attention to detail and relies heavily on the
rigger's experience.
4. Schedule of
coverages
This
is any page labeled as such that contains coverage information, including
declarations or supplemental declarations.
5. Sinkhole collapse
The earth’s surface suddenly settling or collapsing into an underground opening that was created by water acting on limestone or some other rock formation. The value of the collapsing land or the cost to fill sinkholes is not sinkhole collapse.
6. Specified perils
The named perils of
aircraft, civil commotion, explosion, falling objects, fire, hail, fire
extinguishing equipment leakage, lightning, riot, sinkhole collapse, smoke,
sonic boom, vandalism, vehicles, volcanic action, water damage, weight of
sleet, snow or ice and windstorm. Two terms need further explanation.
Falling objects
does not include loss to personal property that is stored in the open. Damage
to the interior of buildings or personal property stored in buildings is not considered falling object unless that object first
breaches the building's exterior.
When part of a
system or appliance that holds water or steam cracks or breaks, the sudden or
accidental discharge or leakage of water or steam from that system or appliance
is considered water damage.
7. Suit
Any judicial or
arbitration proceeding. The purpose of the proceeding must be to determine if
the named insured is liable for damages to covered property of others while
they were in its care, custody, or control. The proceedings will also determine
the type or amount of the damages. (06 08 change)
8. Terms
All
provisions, limitations, exclusions, conditions, and definitions that apply to
this coverage policy.
9. Volcanic action
An airborne
volcanic blast or shock waves, ash, dust, and particulate matter. The cost of to
remove dust, ash, or particulate matter is not volcanic action unless the
covered property has been damages. Lava flow is also volcanic action.
IM 7156–Schedule of Coverages–Riggers' Legal Liability Coverage is used with IM 7151–Riggers' Legal Liability Coverage. IM 7156 contains the following information:
The 01 12 edition added a space to enter the policy number.
The 01 12 edition
added quotation marks around the word Limit (“Limit”) because Limit is a
defined word.
This is the most paid for loss to any one rigging, assembling, or dismantling project.
This is the most paid for loss in any one occurrence for all projects.
The limits on the Schedule of Coverages for the following coverages apply to all covered locations:
The limit is $10,000 unless a different limit is
entered.
The limit is $5,000 limit unless a different limit is
entered.
There is no limit in the coverage form. As a result, policy limits apply but defense costs reduce the amount available to pay for the loss. A limit entered restricts the amount of defense costs coverage available. The previous edition had the word “covered” in the space provided. The 01 12 edition has the words “See Form” in that space.
Each of these coverages provides additional limits of coverage or additional coverage. Required entries vary by type of coverage.
The limit is $10,000 unless a different limit is entered.
The limit is $2,500 unless a different limit is entered.
The limit is $10,000 unless a different limit is entered.
The limit is $10,000 unless a different limit is entered.
The limit is $1,000 unless a different limit is entered.
The limit is $10,000 unless a different limit is entered.
One of two options must be selected:
The following entries are required if the reporting condition is selected:
·
Monthly,
Quarterly, or Annual reporting period
·
Reporting
Rate for each project
·
Monthly,
Quarterly, or Annual adjustment period
Additional Premium Due After Expiration
Any additional premium owed to the insurance company because of the
reporting condition is due on the date on the billing invoice.
A deductible amount must be entered.
This section of the schedule of coverages lists endorsements and forms included when the policy is issued.
The previous edition referred to this
section as Optional Coverages and Endorsements.
The difference between these two forms is the term “legal liability.” The term means that payment is made to the owner of the covered property only when the named insured is found legally liable and then only for damages for which it is legally liability to pay. The IM 7150 does not contain this restriction so the loss paid is based only on the valuation of the covered property. The difference between legal liability and valuation only adjustment is often called “goodwill” because the customer is compensated for loss regardless of the named insured’s legal liability, which allows the named insured to maintain the customer’s goodwill.
This analysis is of the 08 08 edition.
This coverage form is identical to IM 7150–Riggers Coverage analyzed above except for changed made in specific sections. The differences are discussed as follows:
This new section is added because it addresses the legal liability aspect of
the coverage form.
1. Legal
Liability Coverage
Only the named
insured's legal liability for loss or damage to covered property that is under
its care, custody, or control is covered. The legal requirement to pay must
result from the named insured being a rigger, millwright or contractor. The
obligation must be found in either statute, case law, or within a construction
contract to which the named insured is a party.
Example: Metal Joy is working on a commercial
building construction site. A tornado tears through the construction site
destroying the property of others that Metal Joy was handling. Metal Joy was
not legally liable by the law or in contract, so no coverage applies. |
2. We Do Not
Cover
When the named
insured chooses to violate a law or regulation related to claims handling, the
insurance company will not pay for any consequences of that violation. It will
not pay any penalties, costs, expenses, fines or damages that result. So, any payments imposed upon it because of such violations
are not payable under this coverage.
1. Coverage is worded slightly differently by not requiring that
the named insured be hired for a rigging project.
2. Coverage
Limitation is changed by including other operations
specific to the rigging project but not including operations incidental to
assembling or dismantling project.
3. Time
Limitation is
added. The time period coverage
applies only during the period of time which the named
insured is legally liable for the property of others.
Example: The construction contract stated that Jacob was legally liable for
the scaffolding only from March 1 – March 31. An unusual weather opening
occurred and Jacob was asked to start the job on
February 15. No change was made in the contract so
when Jacob’s action caused damage to the scaffolding on February 27, there
was no legal liability and therefore no coverage. |
The following two
items are considered property not covered.
4. Contractors’
Equipment
All kinds of
contractors’ equipment such as tools, hoists, jacks, lifts, or similar property
used in the named insured's rigging operations is
excluded.
Note: Remember that only property of others is covered. Under the IM 7150,
these items would be covered but under the IM 7151,
they are not.
9. Vehicles
All kinds of
vehicles are excluded. Trailers and other conveyances that
have been specifically designed and used to transport covered
property are specifically excluded.
Note: This is not limited to only vehicles on the road. All
types of conveyances are not covered. There is no such restriction under
the IM 7150.
The following
coverage extension is added.
1. Claim
Mitigation Expense
Expenses that the
named insured incurs to prevent further loss or damage to covered property are paid if they are reasonable and necessary and incurred within
12 hours of the loss or damage. The most paid is $10,000 in a single
occurrence but the limit can be increased.
This coverage
extension is not subject to a deductible.
Two supplemental
coverages are added and one is changed.
Added Supplemental Coverages
The following are
the two supplemental coverages added:
1. Contract
Penalty
The penalties
exclusion specifically excludes contractually agreed upon penalties imposed on
the named insured for non-completion or non-compliance. This Supplemental
Coverage is added because of that and provides up to $10,000 if the reason the
penalty is accessed is because a covered loss or
damage prevented the named insured from completing the project according to
contract terms. The most paid is $10,000 in a single occurrence but it can be increased.
3. Expediting
Expenses
When a covered loss
impedes the ability of the named insured to complete the job within a
designated time frame, this supplemental coverage pays
up to $10,000 in a single occurrence for expenses the named insured incurs to
quicken the pace so that it can meet the time frame. Examples of covered
expenses are overtime pay, hiring additional labor, transportation costs,
storage expenses, and costs of renting additional equipment. This $10,000 limit
can be increased.
The following are
the two supplemental coverages slightly changed:
Changed
Supplemental Coverage
5. Property in
Storage adds a time
limitation. Coverage starts when the property arrives at the storage facility
and ends 30 days later.
One
exclusion is added and
one is changed.
Added Exclusion
n. Wear and Tear
Loss or damage
caused by wear, tear, marring, or scratching is excluded.
The exception is that if any of these causes a covered peril to occur, the loss
or damage caused by that covered peril is covered.
Changed Exclusion
The following is
the exclusion changed:
d. Penalties is
changed by the exception for
coverage that Supplemental Coverages 1. Contract Penalty provides.
This Actual Cash Value items is replaced by the
following labeled Property of Others.
1. Property of
Others
The named insured’s liability as established in its construction contract
PLUS the cost of labor, material or services furnished or arranged for by the
named insured is the most paid. However, if the actual cash value of the
covered property is less, then only the actual cash value of the property at
the time of the loss is paid.
Note: While Pair or Set and Loss to Parts remain in the Valuation section,
there is no indication as to how they work with the Property of Others
Valuation.
3. Loss
Settlement Terms
This item is changed by the additional of a paragraph that limits the
maximum amount paid to the legal liability as established under the
construction contract. This would seem to conflict with the Valuation section
which provided some coverage for cost of labor, material or services.
4. Limits is changed from
Catastrophe Limit to Project Limits because a Project Limit is added.
a. Project Limit
The Any One Project
Limit on the schedule of coverages caps how much will be paid at a single
project.
b. Catastrophe
Limit
The Catastrophe
Limit on the schedule of coverages caps how much will be paid in a single
occurrence regardless of the number of locations, rigging projects, coverages,
or combination of these.
One condition is added and one is changed.
Added Condition
The following is
the condition added:
2. Bankruptcy of
an Insured
When an insured is declared bankrupt or insolvent the insurance company must
continue its obligations as though that insured remained solvent.
Changed Conditions
The following is
the condition changed:
11. Suit against
Us
The time limit
during which a suit can be brought has been
eliminated. Instead, the suit cannot be brought until
the liability of the insured has been established in a trial or in a written
agreement between the insured, the insurance company, and the claimant.
In addition, a
statement is added that prevents any party from
impleading the insurance company into any action in order to establish the
insured’s liability.
When Coverage
Ceases, item 5 is amended to:
5. The rigging,
millwright, or construction project has been completed
more than 30 days.
Note: The words "assembling or
dismantling" in IM 7150 are not in IM 7151. The words "millwright, or
construction" are added in IM 7151.
Rigging is changed to specifically refer to millwright operations.
3. Rigging
Millwright
operations are added. Examples are lifting,
installing, or disassembling machinery or equipment.
AAIS has developed two endorsements for use with this coverage form:
IM 7160–Contract
Penalty Endorsement
(Use with IM 7150)
This endorsement
adds coverage for loss due to contractual penalties imposed on the named
insured because the rigging project is not completed based on a contract's
requirements. The non-completion must be due to direct loss or damage to
covered property by a covered peril.
IM
7161–Expediting Expenses Endorsement
(Use with IM 7150)
This endorsement
adds coverage for expenses that become necessary so that a rigging project can be completed within a contract's time requirements. The
expense must be necessary because of a delay caused by direct loss or damage to
covered property by a covered peril.
Note: Additional company specific endorsements may be available and used. Each should be examined to determine its effect on coverage, especially when some may impose restrictions or controls that may be minimum requirements or prerequisites for the company to provide coverage or to accept a particular exposure. Some endorsements limit or broaden coverage or change conditions and terms. Particular areas of concern include weight exceeding the load capacity of a crane or lifting device, height restrictions, and property in transit. Earthquake and flood exclusions may be required or be subject to special deductibles, if not excluded.
This is coverage
for property of others. The risk to this property is more than that of a
storage facility though because while the named insured has the property it is
becoming part of another structure.
PRIOR JOBS
A list of completed
past jobs is probably the most important tool an underwriter can receive. The
list should go back at least five years but for larger contractors more is
better. The listing should include the following:
By reviewing the
past jobs, the underwriter has a good idea of the types of jobs that can be anticipated in the future.
CURRENT JOBS
A listing of
current jobs that includes the following information is
needed:
Comparing past jobs
to current jobs is important especially if the types of jobs appear to be
changing. A rigger that is taking on significantly larger projects should always be evaluated to make sure the rigger has the
expertise and equipment to handle the job. A rigger taking on much smaller jobs
is also a concern because its equipment for larger project is sitting idle
which could indicate a financial problem.
OPERATIONS
The type of operation and the exposures presented vary greatly from one rigger to another because the specialty of one rigger can be quite different from the specialty of another. Placing a large piece of machinery on the grade floor of a manufacturing building is much different from hoisting large steel beams at a high-rise building under construction. The primary causes of loss for this coverage form are dropping the covered property, the covered property striking other objects, and the covered property striking an overpass while in transit. Most of these losses are due to simple human error, failure to pay attention, and failure to plan. Riggers lift heavy, bulky, and awkward objects that can also be extremely valuable. If those objects fall or are upset, the loss or damage can be enormous.
In most cases,
riggers' coverage begins when lifting devices are attached
to the property to be moved and ends when the devices are removed and the owner
or other authorized party accepts the job. Riggers must be evaluated based on
the types of property moved, previous loss experience, descriptions of previous
jobs performed (both successfully and unsuccessfully), annual receipts,
operating territory, employee experience and training, condition of equipment,
and the average and maximum values per job.
Some rigging
projects involve multiple set up and take down situations. A movie production
company will hire a rigger to set up the equipment throughout the making of a
particular film. Outdoor concert venues may hire a rigger throughout a concert
weekend or even season.
Equipment the
rigger uses must be evaluated by type and must include
information concerning the manufacturer, model number, serial number, and the
year of manufacture. The use of the equipment is important, especially if it is used to lift large, heavy, or high-value property. The
height of the lift must also be determined.
The underwriter
must explore and be satisfied with the fact that the rigging contractor knows what it is doing, has been doing it successfully for some time, and
employs experienced, trained, competent, and professional workers.
JOBSITE
The job site must be evaluated. It should be reasonably level so the
lifting devices do not overturn. The site should be large enough so cranes or
other lifting devices can be assembled and erected correctly, placed in the
proper position, and outriggers deployed appropriately. The site must also be evaluated from the standpoint of earthquake and
water damage, including flood. Wind is a factor in many lifts and lifts should never be attempted during periods of high winds or
severe weather. Property moved indoors should have sufficient room to make the
move safely without the property coming into unintended contact with other
property or objects.
SPECIALIZATION
Another area to
evaluate is specialization. A rigging business that concentrates on or
specializes in a specific type of work is easier for an insurance company
underwriter to evaluate than a generalist or one that does not have a
particular focus or emphasis. The nature of employees and work crews are also
important to evaluate along with the specialization issue. If the contractor
uses the same people consistently, whether they are employees or independent
contractors, the chances of successful operations are greater than if new crews
and people are used for each project as it comes up.
Teamwork is an essential element in successfully completing jobs and this comes
about only through regularly working together over a long period
of time.
EQUIPMENT
Equipment is
another issue. Does the rigger use owned equipment or does it rent or lease
equipment for the specific job? If equipment is leased,
is it leased with or without operators and whose responsibility is it to
maintain it? If the insured uses owned equipment, does it keep maintenance
records and have a preventive maintenance program in place? Are
operators experienced, periodically re-qualified, and are the working
ranges and lifting capacities clearly marked and adhered to? All of these are
important questions and points to consider, because even an experienced rigging
contractor is only as good and effective as the equipment it uses.
PROPERTY OF OTHERS
Finally, the nature
of the property being set into place must be considered.
It is best to evaluate this issue from a "worst case scenario" basis,
giving attention and consideration to a number of factors. Things such as the
type of property involved, its availability, be it
custom-made, one-of-a-kind, or readily available stock or mass-produced, its
damageability, and the consequences if the property is actually dropped or
upset must all be considered.
Rigging risks are
difficult to evaluate, because of the broad scope of operations that can be involved.
If they are approached systematically and step-by-step,
paying attention to the important elements, they can be less intimidating and
less difficult to evaluate.