(February 2018)
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This floater covers patterns, dies, molds, and
forms but only while they are off the named insured’s premises. Patterns and
dies are extremely valuable to the named insured because they are used to make the named insured’s products. They can be
very small or quite large. They are custom made and usually meant to be
long-lived with their lifespan depending
on the materials they are made of and the total number
of products to be made from them.
This article analyzes AAIS IM 7502–Patterns and Dies Floater 04 04 edition.
Any commercial
business that has patterns, dies, molds,
and forms at locations away from its premises is eligible.
AAIS Patterns and Dies Floater coverage requires at least these four forms:
Related Article: CL 0100–AAIS Commercial Lines Common Policy Conditions
This Schedule of Coverages is used with IM 7502–Patterns and Dies Floater. IM 7508 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.
The item number(s),
property description(s), and limit(s) are entered in
the spaces provided.
The limit on the Schedule of Coverages for this coverage applies to all covered locations:
The limit is $5,000 unless a
different limit is entered.
This coverage provides additional coverage.
The limit is $10,000 unless a different limit is entered.
A deductible amount
must be entered in the space provided.
One of the following coinsurance options must be selected:
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.
This analysis is of
the 04 04 edition.
The insurance company agrees to provide the coverage described in the coverage form and in the schedule of coverages and the named insured agrees to pay the premium. This agreement is subject to all the coverage form's terms, conditions, endorsements, and definitions.
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. The definitions can increase or decrease coverage so should be carefully reviewed. Nine terms are defined:
1. You and your
The party(ies) named on the declarations as the insured.
2. We, us and our
The insurance company that is providing the coverage.
3. Limit
The
amount of coverage that applies to the insured property.
4. 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.
5. Schedule of
coverages
Any page that is labeled as such and that contains coverage information. Declarations
and supplemental declarations are included in this definition.
6. Sinkhole collapse
A sinkhole is created when an underground opening is created by water acting
on limestone or some other rock formation. The earth’s surface suddenly
settling or collapsing into that sinkhole is sinkhole collapse. Sinkhole
collapse does not include either the land’s value or the cost to fill
sinkholes.
7.
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, the 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 by
falling object is not covered unless the falling
object first breaches the building's exterior.
The cracking or
breaking of part of a system or appliance
holding water or steam that causes a sudden or accidental discharge or leakage
of water or steam is considered water damage.
8. Terms
All policy
provisions, limitations, exclusions, conditions, and definitions that apply to
this coverage.
9. Volcanic action
An
airborne volcanic blast or shock wave. It is also ash, dust, and particulate matter along with any lava flow.
The term does not include the cost of removing dust, ash, or particulate matter
from covered property unless there is
direct physical damage to the property.
Coverage applies to
the property described below, subject to any exclusions or limitations found later
in the form or elsewhere in the policy.
1. Coverage
Direct
physical loss by a covered
peril to the named insured's patterns, dies, molds,
and forms are covered as is such loss to similar
property of others that is in the named insured’s care,
custody, and control.
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Example: Metal Goods, Inc. provides a number of different products. It works
with A&J Tool and Die to develop
the appropriate dies for both its own product but also for its customers’
products. Scenario 1: Metal
Goods sends owned dies to two different machine shops to use in the
contracted parts punching that will become part of a product Metal Goods is manufacturing under its own name. Scenario 2: Metal
Goods sends non-owned dies to two different machine shops to use in the
contracted parts punching that will become part of a product Metal Goods is completing for the owner of the dies. The Pattern and
Dies Floater covers the dies in both of these scenarios. |
2. Coverage
Limitation
Coverage applies to
only items listed on the schedule of coverages. A further limitation is that these
items are covered only when they are at a premises the
named insured does not own, lease, or operate.
Note: This coverage is usually
written on a scheduled basis, listing each item of covered property and
entering a limit for it. This may not be practical in every case, especially
when there are a large number of insurable items. A different approach to
resolve this issue, subject to the insurance company's approval, may be to
develop a signed and dated schedule of property that lists each item to be
covered and its limit. The entry on the schedule of coverages then refers to
the schedule, its date, and its location, such as "per schedule of
equipment on file with the insurance company" dated MM/DD/YYYY.
Three specific types of property are excluded:
1. 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.
Example: Paul sent dies to Juniper Machine Shop to make a knockoff of a
popular product. A loss occurs at Juniper and during the investigation, it is discovered that the dies had been stolen from the
actual manufacturer of that product. The coverage for the dies is denied and Paul is arrested for theft. |
2. Property at Your
Premises
Patterns, dies, molds,
and forms that are located at a
premises the named insured owns, leases, or operates are not
covered.
Note: Patterns and Dies Coverage is off premises
only coverage. This Floater does not cover property at the named insured's
premises because patterns and dies are considered
business personal property under commercial property forms.
3. Waterborne
Property
Waterborne property is not covered. The only exception is
that such property is covered while in transit in a
carrier for hire's custody.
Provisions That Apply
To Coverage Extensions
There is one coverage extension. Its limit 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.
Debris Removal
a. The insurance company pays costs incurred to remove debris that is created because a covered peril to covered property
occurs.
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.
Supplemental Coverages
Provisions That Apply
To Supplemental Coverages
There is one supplemental coverage. It 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.
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.
Coverage applies to risks of direct physical loss unless the loss is 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 the 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.
Related Article: Concurrent Causation and Anti-Concurrent Causation Clauses–A Discussion
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. 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 actions by a military force are 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.
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.
This exclusion does
not apply to covered property in the custody of carriers for hire.
c. Electrical Currents
Electrical arcing or currents caused loss or damage is excluded unless lightning is the cause. When the excluded arcing or currents results in the occurrence of a specified peril any resulting loss from that specified peril is covered.
d. Loss of Use
There is no coverage when delay, loss of use, or loss of market cause a loss.
e. Mechanical Breakdown
Note: This is a particularly important exclusion for this coverage form because the covered property is exposed to damage from mechanical breakdown.
When mechanical, structural, or electrical breakdown or malfunction
causes a loss, it is excluded. The loss is excluded even if a breakdown is the result of a
structural, mechanical, or reconditioning process. The only exception is when a covered peril occurs
which results in loss or damage caused by that covered peril.
Example: The punch press malfunctions and begins making punch passes at a
higher rate of speed than called for in the specifications. Scenario 1: The
die in the punch press is damaged There is no
coverage because the loss was due to a malfunction. Scenario 2: The
machine heats up rapidly and ignites the nearby oily rags. The loss to the
die caused by the fire is covered. However, there remains no coverage for
loss to the damage that is solely based on the
malfunction. |
f. Missing
Property
The
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. The one exception
is that this does not apply to covered property in the custody of carriers for
hire.
g. 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:
h. Processing
Work
Loss or damage that
is due to any processing or other type of
work done on the property is not covered. The only exception is that fire or
explosion results from the processing, coverage applies to the fire or
explosion loss.
Example: Klevor and Sons send its dies to Jonestown Dies to be
refurbished. Jonestown makes a mistake in the tempering process and
the die becomes useless. There is no coverage for this loss. |
i. Temperature/Humidity
Loss that dryness, dampness, humidity, changes in or extremes of temperature causes is excluded. The exception is that when a specified peril occurs as a result of any of these, coverage does apply but only to the loss or damage that the specified peril causes.
j. Theft from an Unattended Vehicle
Coverage does not apply to theft of covered property from an
unattended vehicle. There are two exceptions. Coverage does apply to such theft if the vehicle was locked, its
windows securely closed, and there was
visible evidence of forced entry into the vehicle. Coverage also applies when the
covered property is in the custody of carriers for hire.
k. Voluntary
Parting
Loss to covered property that is
voluntarily given to others is not covered, even if the surrender was
due to a fraudulent scheme, trick, or false pretense.
l. Wear and Tear
Loss caused by
wear, tear, marring, or scratching is excluded. The
only exception is when a covered peril occurs as a result
of any of these. However, only the loss or damage caused by that covered peril is
covered.
Example: Johnson’s pattern is at Matthew’s Shop.
The pattern has been in use for 90 days. Matthew tells Johnson that the
pattern is no longer producing acceptable parts and asks for a new pattern.
The pattern’s damage is due to wear and tear and is not covered. |
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 any notice to it 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: It is important to
realize that any such costs
incurred will 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 the 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.
Example: Priestly had 30 different dies at the
Peppy Machine Shop. A loss occurred that damaged the dies but did not destroy
them. Peppy demanded that Priestly remove the dies from its premises
immediately and Priestly told the insurance company to move the damaged
property. The insurance company refused to accept the damaged property as
salvage. Priestly was responsible to pay the costs to move the dies as Peppy required.
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9. Cooperation
The named insured
must cooperate with the insurance company and perform all acts this coverage
form requires.
1. Actual Cash Value
The value of the covered property is its actual cash value at
the time of loss. 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 individual parts but that the remaining parts
still have value as separates.
3. Loss to Parts
The value of a lost
or damaged part of property that consists
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: Insurance
is meant to restore a person’s pre-loss financial
position, not to improve or enhance it.
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 other
items in this section, the insurance company pays the least of the following:
4. Coinsurance
a. When coinsurance applies to a coverage provided, the insurance company pays only part of the loss if the limit is less than the percentage of the value of the covered property on the schedule of coverages.
b. The following are the three steps to determine the amount of loss to be paid:
Step 1. Multiply the percentage on the schedule of coverages by the covered
property’s value at the time of loss.
Step 2. Divide the covered property’s limit by the result determined in step 1.
Note: There is no
coinsurance penalty if the result is1.00 or higher.
Step 3. There is a coinsurance penalty when step 2. is less than 1.00. Subtract the deductible from the amount of loss and then multiply the total amount of loss by the percentage determined in step 2.
The insurance company does not pay more than the amount determined in step 3. or the limit, whichever is less. It does not pay any remaining part of the loss.
c. If there is more than one limit on the schedule of coverages, this procedure applies separately to each limit.
d. If there is only one limit on the schedule of coverages, this procedure applies to the total of all covered property insured under that limit.
e. This coinsurance provision does not apply unless there is a coinsurance percentage entered on the schedule of coverages.
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 must notify the named insured of its intent to rebuild, repair, or
replace within 30 days after it receives a properly completed proof of loss.
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 either through 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 involving property of others to either
the named insured acting on behalf of the property owner or to the property
owner.
b. We Do Not
Have to Pay You if We Pay the Owner
The insurance
company is not obligated to pay the named insured when it pays the property
owner. In addition, if the property owner sues the named insured, the company
has the option to defend the named insured in that suit.
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.
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 he or she is 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.
Note: It is important to recognize the time and date of loss are based on the mailing address on the declarations, not the location where the covered property is.
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.
AAIS has developed the following endorsement for use with this coverage form:
This endorsement restricts the perils covered to only the named
perils of fire, lightning, windstorm, hail, collision, overturn, or derailment
of a transporting conveyance, collapse of
a bridge or culvert, theft, and vandalism.
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.
Manufacturers
subcontract the manufacture of some parts that go into their finished product
to other manufacturers or job shops. The manufacturer develops the pattern, die,
mold, or form for a specific part and retains ownership of it. That pattern,
die, mold, or form is sent to the
subcontractor or job shop and kept at that location as long as the part is being manufactured by them. When the job is done or the contract ends, the pattern, die, mold, or form is returned to the manufacturer.
Example: Mortimer’s Machine Shop successfully bids on a three-year contract to
manufacture cooling fan blades for automobile engines. Mort has the required
punch press to do the work and the engine manufacturer supplies the die for
the press. When the three-year contract expires, it is not
renewed because of Mort’s high failure rate. Mort returns the die to
the engine manufacturer, as the contract required. While the die was at Mort’s, the engine manufacturer purchased coverage for that die
by using the patterns and dies floater coverage form. |
The most important
underwriting questions involve the actual pattern, die, mold, or form. The type
of item must be clearly identified, its details disclosed,
and the insurance value established. The amount of time needed to replace it
must also be determined. Many are made of metal but some are made of other
materials and the susceptibility of these materials to damage must be
determined. They are used in many different
applications and require different degrees of precision. If a part requires
extremely fine machining or tolerances, a damaged item may not be repairable to
the extent needed to meet those requirements. In such cases, it becomes a
functional total loss. In addition, if a foreign manufacturer made the item and
is now defunct or out of business, the time needed and the cost to repair or
replace the item could increase dramatically and this time element must also be
considered and written under other coverage forms and policies.
The contract
between the manufacturer of the pattern, die, mold, or form or its owner and
the subcontractor or job shop that has and uses the item should clearly
establish each party's responsibility toward it. It should also specify the
party responsible for insuring it and the
degree or amount of damage to it that must occur before it must
be repaired or replaced.
Subcontractors
such as machine shops, jobbers, and manufacturers with patterns, dies, molds, or forms that belong to their customers
might also need this coverage because their contract may require coverage for
the items even when they are off the subcontractor’s premises. Because the
subcontractor is contractually responsible for the item, this coverage form
could be used to cover its off premises exposure.
Manufacturers
frequently overlook the need for this coverage because they pay more attention
to other insurance issues. However, this can be a significant exposure for
certain manufacturers. Not paying proper attention to it could lead to a
significant gap in coverage, with no coverage in place when needed. Any
business that makes a proprietary product must review its need for this
coverage and establish an appropriate insurance solution.