(February 2018)
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Motor truck cargo legal liability
coverage forms insure the liability that common or contract
carrier trucking concerns have for property of others the trucker hauls
or transports. Coverage on a particular shipment begins when the insured
trucker takes possession of the property being shipped
at its point of origin, includes necessary stops incidental to the shipment,
such as for meals and rest, and ends when the shipment arrives at the intended
destination where the designated party accepts it.
The American Association of Insurance
Services (AAIS) provides two basic coverage forms. One is broader than the other
is and contains built-in reporting conditions. Both insure motor carriers and
cover all shipments of described cargo by truck or other types of motor
vehicle. Both cover property at scheduled terminals and each includes some
built-in additional coverages.
AAIS also provides a coverage form that
provides contingent cargo coverage that protects the named insured for the
legal liability that it may incur due to actions of its subcontractors.
If a cargo owner wants coverage for
property on its own vehicle or on the vehicles of another party, the
Transportation Coverage Form should be used instead of
the Motor Truck Cargo Forms.
Related Article: AAIS
Transportation Coverage Forms
Any common or contract carrier trucking
concern that hauls cargo or property of others for remuneration or a charge is
eligible. Transportation brokers are covered in a
similar way under the Contingent Cargo Coverage Form.
AAIS Motor
Truck Cargo Legal Liability 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 7450–Motor Truck Cargo Legal Liability
Coverage–Reporting Form. IM 7455 contains the following information:
The 01 12 edition added a space to enter the policy
number.
Property covered must
be described in the space provided.
This is the most paid
for loss that involves any one vehicle.
This is the most paid
in a single occurrence.
Note: This may or may not involve multiple vehicles and/or
terminals.
The 01 12 edition added quotation marks around the
word Limit (“Limit”) in several places because Limit is a defined word.
The terminal number(s),
addresses, or descriptions, and limits are entered in the spaces provided. IM 7484–Additional Terminals Schedule–Motor Truck Cargo is used to
list additional terminals.
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.
No entry is required.
The limit is $1,000
unless a different limit is entered.
Each of these coverages provides
additional limits of coverage or additional coverage. Required entries vary by
type of coverage.
The limit is $5,000
unless a different limit is entered.
The limit is $5,000
unless a different limit is entered.
The limit is $5,000
unless a different limit is entered.
The limit is $5,000
unless a different limit is entered.
The limit is $100,000
unless a different limit is entered.
The limit is $5,000
unless a different limit is entered.
The limit is $5,000
unless a different limit is entered.
The limit is $5,000
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.
One deductible that applies to all
covered losses is entered in the space provided.
If the
premium charge for the coverage provided is based on
reports of value, any additional premium owed to the insurance company is due
on the date on the billing invoice.
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
01/07 edition. Changes from the previous
edition are in bold print.
Definitions are an important part of
the coverage form. You and your are defined as the
party or parties that are named on the declarations as the insured. We, us, and
our are defined as the insurance company that provides
coverage. These are not the only defined terms. The other terms can be found in
the definitions section at the end of the coverage form (01 07 change).
The insurance company agrees to provide
the coverage described in the coverage form and in the schedule of coverages while
the named insured agrees to pay the premium. Both agreements are subject to all
of the coverage form's terms plus additional conditions that are
found on the CL 100 and endorsements.
It is important to point out that this
is legal liability coverage not first party coverage. Therefore, the property being covered does not belong to the named insured. Only covered
property that is in the named insured‘s care, custody, and control is covered. Nevertheless,
this coverage does not extend to all property but only property the named
insured is legally obligated for as a common or contract carrier that is based on a bill of lading or similar shipping document.
A named
insured may face a costs, expenses, fees, fines, penalties, or damages because
of how it violated laws and regulations due to proper claims handling. This
coverage form does not pay for those.
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Example: Farquahr Freight Lines received a loss notice from a customer and
promptly misplaced it. The customer called Farquahr repeatedly and was told that the claim had been sent to the insurance
company. Farquahr discovered the misplaced notice months later and sent it to
the insurance company. By this time, the customer was angry about the delay
and contacted the Public Safety Commission which, in
turn, fined Farquahr. While the insurance company settled the claim with the
customer, Farquahr had to contend with the fine, since it was
levied because Farquahr was careless and
mishandled the claim notice. |
Only property
of others is covered and it is subject to exclusions and
limitations found later in this coverage form. The property is covered only while in or at the following:
1. Property in
Vehicles
Property of
others is covered for direct physical loss from a
covered peril but only while the property is in transit or being loaded or
unloaded. The property must be described in the
schedule of coverages to be covered. There is no coverage unless the property is considered in transit and is either in or on a vehicle.
Loading and unloading is part of transit and is covered but only when the
property is situated in the area adjacent to the vehicle. Coverage ends either 72 hours after the property arrives at the intended
destination or the time stated in the shipping document, whichever is less.
2. Property in
Terminals
Property of others is
covered for direct physical loss from a covered peril while at a
terminal location that is listed on the schedule of coverages or is within 100
feet of the listed location. It is important to note this coverage applies only
to property that is considered in transit even though
at the terminal. Only property described on the schedule of coverages is
covered. Coverage ends 30 days after the property arrives at the terminal or
the maximum amount
of time list on the shipping document, whichever is less.
Example: Hot Deals requested
Jerry’s Motor Carrier to pick up cargo from its warehouse and deliver it to
Just Ordered 3,000 miles away. Jerry’s picks up the cargo. Just Ordered
refuses the order. Hot Deals requests that Jerry’s place the items in a
terminal until a decision is made on the return.
While Hot Deals ponders its next step, the property is no
longer covered under Jerry’s Motor Truck Cargo coverage form. |
Ten specific types of property are not
covered.
1. Art
Paintings, statuary, and other items
that are considered objects of art, are not covered.
2. 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: Anything Goes Trucking
is hired to transport marijuana from one community
in Colorado to another. Under federal guidelines, this could
be considered contraband but, under Colorado guidelines, it is legal
and could be covered. This could be a controversy. If Anything Goes Trucking is diverted, for any reason, into Nebraska where marijuana
remains illegal, any damage to the marijuana during that diversion is not
covered. |
3. Jewelry, Stones,
and Metals
Jewelry of every type and description, precious and semi-precious stones, gold, silver, platinum, and other precious metals and alloys are not covered.
4. Live Animals
Live animals are not covered property.
There is an important exception. When a specified
cause of loss causes the death of an animal or injures an animal so that it must be killed, coverage does apply.
Note:
This is an unusual Property not
Covered item. Live animals remain not covered. This exception is about a live
animal becoming a dead animal. The dead animal is covered
only if the death is due to a specified cause of loss. One further complication
is added that if injuries, due to a specified peril,
occur to a live animal that necessitates its death, once killed, that dead
animal is also covered property. However, there are no answers as to the
meaning of a death that is made necessary or as to who
must make that decision.
5. 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.
6. Other Carriers
Covered property in which the named
insured has waived or impaired its subrogation rights against another carrier that
is in possession of that property is not covered.
Note: It is very important to note that the named insured
is never permitted to waive its subrogation rights.
Example: Fredo, Inc. requested that Jasmine, Inc. collect Fredo’s covered
property in a local terminal and deliver it to
another terminal. Jasmine, Inc. is concerned because the type of property is not listed on its motor truck liability coverage form.
Fredo agrees to waive all rights of subrogation against Jasmine because there
are no other options. That property must leave the one terminal immediately.
Fredo has no available drivers. Jasmine collides with
another vehicle and the cargo is destroyed.
Jasmine’s carrier will not cover the loss. Fredo presents the claim to his carrier which is declined because subrogation rights have
been waived. Fredo is responsible for the entire loss because he also has no
subrogation rights against Jasmine. |
7. Property That Has Been Delivered
Property of others is no
longer covered after it is delivered to its intended destination and 72
hours have expired.
8. Property at a
Terminal
Property of others is not
covered after it has been at a terminal for more 30 days.
9. Storage
This is a motor truck cargo policy not
warehouse legal liability, so property that is being stored with the named
insured for which it issued warehouse
receipts or other written storage contracts is not covered.
10. Trailer,
Container, or Conveyance
This coverage
is for the cargo of others that is inside the named insured’s vehicle. There is
no coverage for any trailer, carrying conveyance or intermodal container. There
is also not coverage for equipment or supplies that are part of such items. There is an exception for property of others
described on the schedule of coverages as trailers, containers, conveyance or
equipment or supplies when this property is considered
covered property.
Note: An intermodal container
is a reusable, transportable cargo container or enclosure of rigid construction
and usually rectangular. It is fitted with devices to secure it to a container
chassis vehicle and other devices that facilitate its handling, particularly in
its transfer from one mode of transportation to another. They are designed for easy filling and emptying and are intended
to contain one or more articles of cargo or bulk commodities for transportation
by rail, highway, water, or air.
Provisions That Apply
To Coverage Extensions
There are three coverage extensions. The
limit for each is either the limit on the schedule of coverages or the default
limit for the item included in the coverage form. These coverages are part of
the applicable limit for covered property and not in addition to it, unless
otherwise indicated. These limits are not added to or combined with limits for
any other coverage extension or supplemental coverage and are not subject to
any coinsurance provisions that apply elsewhere in the coverage form.
1. Debris Removal
When a
covered peril damages or destroys covered property, the cost to remove any
created debris is covered under this extension.
Debris
removal does not include any costs for removing, restoring,
replacing polluted land or water or to extract
pollutants.
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.
An additional
$10,000 (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.
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.
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.
The named
insured’s only involvement in the claim is to act within the written approval
of the insurance company.
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:
3. Fraud and Deceit
When covered property is
willingly given to another person, even by trick or device, coverage is
excluded. This extension provides a limited amount of coverage for such a
situation. When the named insured, its agents, consignees, or customers) allows
covered property to be stolen in any of the following
circumstances and it is stolen, a limited amount of coverage is provided:
The most paid in a single occurrence is
$1,000 but the limit can be increased.
Provisions That Apply To Supplemental Coverages
There are ten supplemental coverages.
Each has its own default limit that can be increased.
If there is no limit for a supplemental coverage, coverage is
provided up to the full limit for the applicable covered property.
Limits entered for any supplemental coverage are separate from and not part of
the applicable limit for covered property.
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 and are not subject to any
coinsurance provisions that apply elsewhere in the coverage form.
1. Contract Penalty
The insurance company pays up to $5,000
for the costs of contractual penalties the named insured must pay because it
cannot deliver covered property of others according to the terms of a shipping
document. The cause of the delivery issue must be direct physical loss by a
covered peril to the property.
The maximum paid in a 12-month policy
period is $50,000.
2. Expediting
Expenses
This coverage applies to the named
insured's expenses paid to hasten repairs to a vehicle that transports covered
property or the expenses needed to arrange for another way to deliver the
property. Examples of such expenses are additional labor or overtime costs,
additional fuel costs, and freight charges.
Coverage applies only when a vehicle is
unable to complete its delivery of property because that vehicle was damaged or lost due to a covered peril.
Payment is made
only if the expenses are actually incurred, they were reasonable and they were
required in order to achieve the delivery of the covered property.
The most paid in a single occurrence is
$5,000.
Example: Jason was taking hogs to a processing plant when he swerved to avoid a
deer and struck the side of a bridge. The tractor was
damaged but the trailer carrying the hogs was not. Jason knew he
needed to get those hogs delivered quickly so he called a nearby competitor,
Jamila, who was willing to take over the trip. The cost to hire Jamila was
$1,500 and was paid by this coverage because it was reasonable, necessary and
incurred. |
3. Freight Charges
Freight charges that are
owed to the named insured but that the customer refuses to pay because a
covered peril damages or destroys the property being transported are covered.
The most paid in a single occurrence is $5,000.
Example: Marbella is transporting maple
syrup from Maine to South Carolina for Sticky Folks when a collision occurs,
resulting in a massive syrup mess on the interstate. The cargo is a total
loss and Sticky Folks refuses to pay the freight charge because the delivery
was not successful. The insurance company would pay but only the amount of
the freight charge up to the point of the collision. |
4. Moving Equipment
Direct physical loss by a covered peril
to moving equipment the named insured uses to handle and ship
covered property is covered for up to $5,000 per occurrence. Examples of
such moving equipment are dollies, tarps, chains, and hand trucks. Vehicles,
trailers, or other conveyances are not considered
moving equipment.
5. Newly Acquired
Terminals
When the named insured acquires a terminal
during the policy period coverage applies to covered property that is at that
terminal but only if the named insured already has a terminal(s) listed on the
schedule of coverages.
Coverage at that newly acquired terminal
ceases 60 days after acquisition, until the acquired terminal is reported to the insurance company or the policy expires,
whichever occurs first.
The most paid in a single occurrence is
$100,000. This is not free coverage because additional premium is due from the
date the terminal is acquired.
6. Off-Board
Electronics
The named insured's off-board electronic
equipment and similar property of others that is in its care, custody, or
control is covered while on owned or operated premises and also while the
electronics are in transit between such premises.
On-board
electronic equipment and entertainment equipment is excluded,
as is off-board equipment that belongs to others and is being transported under
a shipping document.
The most paid in a single occurrence is
$5,000.
Off-board electronic equipment is
equipment, related software, antennas, and accessories that are
used to communicate with or to track vehicles as they transport covered
property.
7. On-Board
Electronics
The named
insured's on-board electronic equipment is covered while
in vehicles that transport covered property. Similar property of others in its
care, custody, or control is also covered. Off-board electronic equipment and entertainment
equipment is excluded, as is on-board equipment that
belongs to others and is being transported under a shipping document.
The most paid
in a single occurrence is $5,000.
On-board electronic equipment is equipment, related software, antennas, and accessories permanently installed in a vehicle that is used to communicate, monitor, weigh, track, and/or navigate the vehicle. The equipment must be housed in a unit permanently installed in the vehicle and operate from the vehicle's electrical system.
8. On-Board Expendable Supplies
The named insured's expendable supplies are
covered but only while they are in vehicles that are transporting covered
property. Similar property of others that the named insured is transporting under
a shipping document is not covered.
The most paid in a single occurrence is
$5,000.
Note: The term “on-board expendable supplies” is defined as oil, grease, fuel, and similar supplies.
Example: Aaron is transporting cans of motor oil when a bird flies into his
windshield; the truck swerves, Aaron loses control, and flips his load. The
cargo of fuel oil is covered as part of the covered
property loss. Arron’s fuel oil, supplies, and the fuel that were lost in the
incident are covered under this supplement. |
9. 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 at that location
during each separate 12-month policy period causes. This limit can be increased.
10. Rewards
When a covered arson, theft, or
vandalism loss occurs, a reward for information that leads to the conviction of
the party or parties who caused the loss can be offered.
The payment limit of $1,000 is based on the
occurrence, not the number of persons who provide information.
Coverage applies to risks of direct
physical loss unless the loss is limited or caused by an
excluded peril.
Perils Excluded
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 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 a civil authority destroys property as a
means of controlling a fire which causes the loss or
damage. 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 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 result 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.
This
exclusion is unusual in that it applies only to four Supplemental Coverages: 4.
Moving Equipment, 6. Off-board Electronics, 7. On-board Electronics, and 8. On-board
Expendable Supplies.
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.
c. Loss of Use
There is no coverage for loss caused by
or that result from delay, loss of use, or loss of market.
d. Mechanical Breakdown
Loss caused by or that results from any
mechanical or electrical breakdown or malfunction is excluded.
This
exclusion is unusual in that it applies only to four Supplemental Coverages: 4.
Moving Equipment, 6. Off-board Electronics, 7. On-board Electronics, and 8.
On-board Expendable Supplies.
e. 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
exclusion is unusual in that it applies only to four Supplemental Coverages: 4.
Moving Equipment, 6. Off-board Electronics, 7. On-board Electronics, and 8.
On-board Expendable Supplies.
f.
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:
g. Spoilage
Coverage does not apply to perishable
stock when the loss is caused by or that results from
spoilage. If spoilage results in a specified peril, the insurance company covers
the loss or damage that specified peril causes.
Example: Red label adhesives are being shipped. The temperature in the cargo trailer
exceeds 90 degrees, the fumes combust, and an explosion occurs. The damage to
the adhesives is excluded but the damage caused due
to the explosion is covered. |
h.
Voluntary Parting
There is no
coverage for loss or damage to covered property when it is voluntarily
given to others, even if the surrender was due to a fraudulent scheme,
trick, or false pretense. The good news is that Coverage Extensions 3. Fraud or
Deceit provides limited coverage.
i. Wear
and Tear
Loss caused
by wear, tear, marring, or scratching is excluded.
This
exclusion is unusual in that it applies only to four Supplemental Coverages: 4.
Moving Equipment, 6. Off-board Electronics, 7. On-board Electronics, and 8.
On-board Expendable Supplies.
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 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 to do so if the named insured
maintains 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 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.
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Example: A driver for Rapid Run Trucking takes a turn too fast for conditions.
The truck flips over, rolls down an embankment, and lands in an area
inaccessible to motor vehicles. A helicopter is needed
to rescue the driver. Because the cost to retrieve the cargo is more than its
value, the owner offers it to the insurance company but the company refuses.
Local authorities demand that the debris be removed
and Rapid Run bears the entire cost to do so. |
9. Cooperation
The named
insured must cooperate with the insurance company and perform all acts this
coverage form requires.
Valuation
1. Property of Others
The value of
property of others is its actual cash value at the time of loss or damage.
Actual cash value is replacement cost new minus depreciation.
Often
property is transported under a released bill of lading
that sets the value at less than the actual cash value. When this occurs, the insurance
company pays no more than what has been agreed upon
with the bill of lading.
The value
though will include the cost of labor, materials, and services the named
insured either furnishes or arranges to be furnished.
The reduced
amount valuation may be set by law and not by the bill
of lading but this valuation applies in the same manner.
2. Equipment and
Supplies
The value of equipment and supplies is
their actual cash value at the time of loss. Actual cash value is replacement
cost minus depreciation. This applies only to moving equipment, off-board
electronic equipment, on-board electronic equipment, and on-board expendable
supplies as described above. These items are not cargo and not property of others.
3. 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. 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.
4. 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: This condition is difficult to apply when property
of others is the only covered property. 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.
There are times when the insurance company will pay all or a portion of the
deductible amount in order to expedite a claim or suit. When this happens, the named
insured is expected to reimburse the insurance company
for any such amounts owed to it.
3. Loss Settlement
Terms
Subject to the other items in this section, the insurance company pays
the least of the following:
The catastrophe limit on the schedule of
coverages is the most the insurance company pays regardless of the number of
vehicles, terminal locations, or combination of vehicles and terminal
locations.
Example: The Regional Players
catastrophe limit is $5,000,000 and has remained unchanged for 10 years. During that time,
Regional has grown to include five terminals and a fleet of 50 trucks. A
massive flash flood takes the city by surprise. Cargo in all terminals and 40
of the trucks are destroyed. The terminal and per
truck limits were sufficient to coverage the loss but the $5,000,000
catastrophe loss resulted in Regional receiving a payment of less than 60% of
its actual loss. |
A vehicle
that is inside a terminal building or within 100 feet of that terminal is
subject to terminal limit and NOT the vehicle limit. This terminal limit is not combined with the vehicle limit.
4. 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.
5. 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 5. 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 an obligation to notify the named insured of its intent to rebuild,
repair, or replace no later than 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 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 that involve property of others
with either the named insured acting on behalf of the property owner or
directly with 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. Reports
a. Within 30 days of the end
of the reporting period that is shown on the selected schedule
of coverages, the named insured must report to the insurance company one of the
following:
b. If
a policy is cancelled early, the information above is
to be provided through the period the policy was in effect and the insured is
to pay any additional premium due.
2. Premium
Computation and Adjustment
A final
premium is determined by multiplying the reported exposure basis by the
reporting rate on the schedule of coverages.
a. Annual
Adjustment Period
If the
adjustment period selected is annual, the premium calculated above is compared
to the deposit. If that 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. If the calculated premium is less
than the minimum premium, the minimum premium applies.
b. Other
Adjustment Period
If the
adjustment period is other than annual, the calculated premium is subtracted from the deposit until it is exhausted. Once
the premium is used up all further reports will
require payment of the calculated premium. At expiration, if the calculated
premiums are still less than the deposit the calculated premium is compared to the minimum premium. If the minimum premium
is higher than the calculated premium, the insurance company returns the different
between the minimum premium and the deposit to the named insured. If the
calculated premium is higher than the minimum premium, the difference between
the deposit premium and the calculated premium is returned
to the named insured.
3. Provisions That
Affect How Much We Pay
a. Failure
to Submit Reports
If reports are not submitted on time or at all, the most the insurance
company pays is 90% of the limit.
b.
Reported Values are less than the Full Value
If the last
report submitted before a loss reflects values that are less than the actual
values, the insurance company pays only part of the loss. The penalty ratio is developed by dividing the exposures reported by the
actual exposure amount. The penalty ratio developed is
multiplied by the amount of loss to determine the lower amount of loss
paid.
c. We Will
Not Pay More than the Limit
The insurance
company does not pay more than the limit on the schedule of coverages.
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. Bankruptcy of an
Insured
The insurance
company's obligations under this coverage are not affected
by the bankruptcy or insolvency of any insured.
3. Benefit to Others
The insurance
provided does not directly or indirectly benefit any
party that has custody of the named insured's property.
4. Conformity with
Statute
Any condition
in this coverage form that conflicts with any applicable law is
amended to conform to that law.
5. 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.
6. 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.
7. Policy Period
Only covered
losses that occur during the policy period are paid.
Note: This can be problematic when vehicles and terminals
are located across time zones because the policy period starts and ends at
12:01 am standard time at the mailing address NOT where the loss occurs.
Example: Charles policy runs
from July 1, 2017 – July 1, 2018 and the mailing address on the policy is in
North Carolina. A loss occurs in Seattle at 11:00 PM on June 30. Because it
is 3:00 AM on July 1 in North Carolina, the policy does not cover this loss. |
8. 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.
9. Restoration of
Limits
Payment of a
claim does not reduce the limit available for future claims except as
Supplemental Coverages–Contract Penalty states.
Note: Supplemental Coverages–Pollutant Cleanup and Removal
is also subject to an aggregate but that is not mentioned
as an exception to this condition.
10. 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.
Note: This must be read alongside
the Not Covered Property Other Carrier item that eliminates coverage for
property with other carriers if the named insured waived its recovery rights
against that other carrier or made them unenforceable. This applies if the
waiver happens before or after a loss.
11. 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.
12. 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.
13. Your
Reimbursement to Us
A mandatory
regulatory endorsement may require that the insurance company make payments
beyond provisions in the coverage form. When such an outside the coverage form
payment is made, the named insured is required to reimburse
the insurance company for the not covered amounts it paid. The reimbursement payment
must be made within 30 days of the insurance company notifying
the named insured of the amount due.
|
Example: The state Public Service Commission (PUC) makes Ajax Insurance Company
responsible for $50,000 in damages for a covered loss but the coverage form limit
is only $30,000. Ajax must pay $50,000 to the claimant and then bill Tom's
Tanker Transport for the excess $20,000 payment the PUC regulation requires. |
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. Fifteen terms are defined:
Note: The
definitions for Earth movement, Flood, and Sinkhole collapse in the previous
edition are not in this edition. The definitions for you, your, we, us, and our are moved to the Introduction (01 07 change).
1. Limit
This is the amount of coverage that applies to the insured property.
2. Off-board electronic
equipment
Electronic
equipment the named insured uses to communicate with and track vehicles while
they are on the road. Related software, antennas, and accessories are considered part of off-board electronic equipment.
3. On-board
electronic equipment
Permanently
installed electronic equipment that is used to do any
of the following:
This equipment
must be installed in a vehicle. Related software,
antennas, and accessories are considered part of
on-board electronic equipment.
Permanently
installed equipment must operate using electrical power from the vehicle’s
electrical system. The equipment can be removable provided the units that house
the equipment are permanently installed in the
vehicle.
4. On-board
expendable supplies
Fuel, oil,
lubricants, and other similar expendable supplies.
5. Perishable stock
Property that must be stored or maintained under specific controlled
conditions in order to prevent spoilage. If the controlled conditions change, the perishable
stock will suffer loss or damage.
Note: Common controlled
conditions include heating, refrigeration, and humidity control but are not
limited to just these.
6. 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.
7. Schedule of
coverages
This is any page labeled as such that contains coverage information,
including declarations or supplemental declarations.
8. Specified perils
The named
perils of fire, lightning, windstorm, hail, collision, overturn or derailment
(upset) of a transporting vehicle, collapse of a bridge or culvert, and theft.
Note: This is a much smaller list of perils than is provided in most of the other inland marine coverage forms.
9. Spoilage
A negative change in the physical condition of perishable stock. Thawing, freezing,
warming, and solidification are some of the types of spoilage but the
definition is not limited to only these.
10. Suit
This is a
judicial proceeding. It includes arbitration proceedings. The purpose of the
proceeding must be to determine liability that relates to direct physical loss
to covered property of others while in the named insured's possession.
11. Terms
These are all
policy provisions, limitations, exclusions, conditions, and definitions that
apply to this coverage.
12. Terminal
A building or structure where a transfer of covered property from one mode
of transport to another occurs. The terminal may provide temporary storage for the
covered property but no permanent storage. The term transfer is limited to
loading, unloading, and temporary storage.
13. Trailer
A vehicle that
is used over the road that is designed to carry cargo
and to be hauled by a tractor or other self-propelled motor vehicle. The
following are examples of trailers that this definition includes:
14. Transit
The shipment or transport of covered property by the named insured.
Note: This assumes a reasonable expectation that the property will,
in fact, be transported.
15. Vehicle
This is any
vehicle, truck, tractor, trailer, or combination of these that are being hauled by a single power unit.
This Schedule of Coverages is used with
IM 7451–Motor Truck Cargo Legal Liability Coverage. IM 7456 contains the
following information:
The 01 12 edition added a space to enter the policy
number.
Property covered is
described in the space provided.
The
01 12 edition added quotation marks around the word Limit (“Limit”) in several
places because Limit is a defined word.
This is the most paid
for loss that involves any one vehicle.
This is the most paid
in a single occurrence, regardless of the number of vehicles involved.
Note: This may or may not involve multiple vehicles and/or
terminals.
The terminal numbers, addresses or
descriptions and limits of insurance are entered in
the spaces provided.
IM 7484–Additional Terminals Schedule–Motor Truck Cargo is
used to list additional terminals.
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.
No entry is required.
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 $50,000
unless a different limit is entered.
The limit is $10,000
unless a different limit is entered.
One deductible is
entered that applies to all covered losses.
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 01 07 edition.
This coverage form is similar to IM
7450–Motor Truck Cargo Legal Liability Coverage–Reporting Form analyzed above
except for seven sections. This analysis addresses only the
seven sections that are different.
IM 7451 does not have the Coverage
Extension for Fraud and Deceit.
Two
Supplemental Coverages in IM 7451 are changed and seven are
eliminated.
The following
are the two changes:
The following
are the seven supplemental coverages that are eliminated:
Note: The only Supplemental
Coverages in IM 7451 are Freight
Charges, Newly Acquired Terminals, and Pollutant Cleanup and Removal.
Four
exclusions in IM 7450 are not in IM 7451 because they apply to only
Supplementary Coverages that are not in IM 7451. They are:
Valuation
The valuation terms for Equipment and
Supplies in IM 7450 are not in IM 7451 because they are not covered property.
The Reporting Conditions section in IM
7450 is not in IM 7451 because it is a non-reporting coverage form.
The exception in the Restoration of
Limits condition under Supplemental Coverages–Contract Penalty in IM 7450 is
not in IM 7451 because IM 7451 does not cover Contract Penalty.
The following
three definitions in IM 7450 are not in IM 7451 because they are
not used in IM 7451:
This Schedule of Coverages is used with
IM 7453–Contingent Cargo Coverage. IM 7457 contains the following information:
The 01 12 edition added a space to enter the policy
number.
Property covered is
described in the space provided.
·
Property in
Vehicles Limit
This is the most paid
for loss that involves any one vehicle.
·
Property in
Terminals Limit (if checked)
This is the most paid
for loss in a single terminal.
·
Catastrophe
Limit
This is the most paid
in any one occurrence.
The only coverage extension is Defense
Costs. It does not have a limit.
One deductible amount that applies to
all covered losses is entered in the space provided.
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 coverage form is similar to IM
7450–Motor Truck Cargo Legal Liability Coverage–Reporting Form analyzed above
except for 11 sections. This analysis addresses only the 11
sections that are different.
The primary difference is that this coverage responds only when the
required subcontractors policy does not respond as expected.
This analysis is of the 08 09 edition.
This analysis is of the 01 07 edition.
There is not coverage section in the IM 7453. All coverage information is within the Property Covered Section.
Coverage applies to both property in vehicles and property at a terminal location. A subcontractor of the named insured must be legally liable as a common carrier or contract carrier but the named insured is unable to collect from the subcontractor of its insurance carrier.
The reason the named insured is unable to collect from the subcontractor must be due to one of the following reasons:
· The subcontractors insurance policy was either cancelled or nonrenewed and the named insured was not notified.
· The subcontractor’s limits were insufficient to cover the loss.
· The loss or damage was not covered under the subcontractors coverage form.
The named insured is required to obtain evidence of insurance from the subcontractor prior to any shipment with that subcontractor. The insurance must provide motor truck legal liability coverage with limits that are sufficient to cover the legal liability in the bill of lading.
The IM 7450 covers the named insured legal liability not the subcontractor legal liability.
All are the same except that the IM 7453 does not list Other Carriers.
IM 7453 does not have the Coverage
Extension for Debris Removal or Fraud and Deceit.
The IM 7453
does not contain any Supplemental Coverages.
Four
exclusions in IM 7450 are not in IM 7453 because they apply to only
Supplementary Coverages that are not in IM 7453. They are:
What Must
be Done In Case of Loss
Recovery from Subcontractor is added. The named insured is required to take all reasonable efforts to obtain coverage from the subcontractor and this includes meeting requirement for filing claims against that subcontractor’s insurance carrier.
Valuation
The valuation terms for Equipment and
Supplies in IM 7450 are not in IM 7453 because they are not covered property.
The Reporting Conditions section in IM
7450 is not in IM 7453 because it is a non-reporting coverage form.
The exception in the Restoration of
Limits condition under Supplemental Coverages–Contract Penalty in IM 7450 is
not in IM 7453 because IM 7453 does not cover Contract Penalty.
The following
three definitions in IM 7450 are not in IM 7453 because they are
not used in IM 7453:
The definition of Subcontractor is added. It is a trucking company the named insured hires to transport property of the type described in the schedule of coverages.
Motor Truck Cargo Legal
Liability Coverage Forms, Endorsements and Schedules
IM 7460–Concealed Damage Exclusion
This restrictive endorsement excludes
loss or damage to covered property unless the damage to the shipping container
or packaging materials is visible.
IM
7461–Refrigeration Breakdown Coverage–Vehicles
This
endorsement covers cargo that spoils because the refrigeration unit breaks
down. An important condition of
coverage is that the units must be inspected at least
monthly and records of inspections kept for a minimum of one year.
IM
7463–Reporting Conditions Endorsement
(Use with IM 7451)
This endorsement adds reporting
conditions. IM 7482–Reporting Schedule must be attached
to supply necessary information.
IM
7465–Operating Territory (01 12 change)
This endorsement restricts coverage to
only shipments made within a specific radius of the designated city and state. The 01 12 edition added a space to enter the policy number.
IM
7466–Property Excluded (01 12 change)
This restrictive
endorsement excludes all coverage for the types of property selected in the
endorsement. Five are listed but to be excluded they
must be selected. Other property can also be added and
selected. The 01 12 edition added
a space to enter the policy number.
IM
7468–Contingent Coverage
This endorsement covers property of
others in terminals and in or on vehicles in a subcontractor’s care, custody,
or control and for which the named insured is legally liable as a broker,
freight forwarder, or consolidator. This endorsement defines subcontractor as a
trucking company the named insured hires to transport property of others. This
coverage is subject to a number of requirements, conditions, and limitations. IM 7469–Contingent
Coverage Schedule–Motor Truck Cargo must be attached.
IM
7469–Contingent Coverage Schedule–Motor Truck Cargo (01 12 changes)
This schedule is used with IM
7468–Contingent Coverage to provide certain required information. The 01 12 edition added a space to enter the policy number. It also
added quotation marks around the word Limit (“Limit”) because Limit is a
defined word.
IM
7470–Mobile Equipment Coverage (01 12 changes)
This
endorsement covers mobile equipment that is in a terminal, on a vehicle, or is used to load or unload property. The mobile equipment can
be owned or be property of others in the named insured's care, custody, or
control. The 01 12 edition added a space
to enter the policy number. It also added quotation marks around the word Limit
(“Limit”) because Limit is a defined word.
IM
7471–Trailer Coverage
This
endorsement covers non-owned trailers that are under either a bailment or a
trailer interchange agreement. This coverage is subject to a number of
requirements, conditions, and limitations. IM 7472–Trailer Schedule–Motor Truck
Cargo must be attached.
IM 7472–Trailer Schedule–Motor Truck Cargo (01 12
changes)
This schedule
is used with IM 7471–Trailer Coverage to provide certain required information. The 01 12
edition added a space to enter the policy number. It also added quotation marks
around the word Limits (“Limits”) because Limit is a defined word.
IM 7473–Additional Named Insured Endorsement (01 12
change)
This
endorsement extends coverage for the additional named insured entity or
entities on the endorsement schedule. The 01 12 edition added a space to
enter the policy number.
IM
7474–Theft Exclusion–Motor Truck Cargo (01 12 change)
This restrictive endorsement excludes
coverage for loss due to theft from a vehicle or terminal but only for the
types of property listed on the endorsement. Five commodities are listed that
can be selected but there are also many open spaces in which to enter property. The 01 12
edition added a space to enter the policy number.
IM
7475–Theft Limitation (01 12 change)
This restrictive
endorsement first excludes theft and then adds it back
in on a limited basis. Theft coverage is limited to only the type of property
described on the endorsement schedule and that property is covered only while
at a covered terminal or in or on a transporting vehicle. A per occurrence
limit must be entered in the space provided. The 01 12 edition added a space to
enter the policy number.
IM
7476–Unattended Vehicle Exclusion
This restrictive endorsement excludes
coverage for loss due to theft from an unattended vehicle. It applies unless
someone was hired to guard and watch the vehicle and
its contents, or somebody was on or in the vehicle while it was in transit or
at a terminal or another location for loading or unloading.
IM
7477–Electronic Equipment Coverage
(Use with IM 7451)
Coverage for direct physical loss or
damage from a covered peril to off-board electronic equipment used to
communicate with or track vehicle movement and for on-board electronic
equipment used for communications and to monitor the vehicle's characteristics. IM 7478–Electronic Equipment
Schedule–Motor Truck Cargo must be attached.
IM
7478–Electronic Equipment Schedule–Motor Truck Cargo (01 12 changes)
This schedule is used with IM
7477–Electronic Equipment Coverage to provide certain required information. The 01 12 edition added a space to enter
the policy number. It also added quotation marks around the word Limits
(“Limits”) because Limit is a defined word.
IM
7479–Parked Trailer Exclusion (01 12 change)
This restrictive endorsement excludes theft
coverage for covered property of others from a trailer that is
parked and detached from its power unit. However, coverage does apply if
the trailer is at a terminal or location on the endorsement schedule. The 01 12 edition added a space to enter
the policy number.
IM
7480–Cotton Exclusion
This restrictive endorsement excludes
coverage for loss or damage to cotton from fire. It applies only if the cotton
was in the named insured's care, custody, or control within 72 hours following the
ginning process.
Note: Ginning removes the cottonseeds from the cotton.
IM
7481–Vehicle Alarm Endorsement
Theft
coverage is excluded if an alarm is not maintained and
activated on vehicles at all times when covered property is in transit. The
alarm can be deactivated during loading and unloading
but only if a designated employee or the power unit's owner-operator is present
throughout the loading or unloading process as a guard.
IM
7482–Reporting Schedule–Motor Truck Cargo (01 12 change)
(Use with IM 7451)
This schedule is used with IM
7463–Reporting Conditions Endorsement to state the type of reporting and
adjustment periods. It also lists the basis of the reports, the reporting rate,
the deposit premium, and the minimum premium. The 01 12 edition added a space to enter the policy number.
IM
7483–Personal Property Coverage (01 12 changes)
Business personal property and personal
property of employees is covered, subject to the
limits and deductible on the endorsement schedule. Coverage applies when the
property is in transit in or on a vehicle the named
insured operates. It also lists additional property not covered, additional
perils excluded, and loss settlement terms. The 01 12 edition added a space to enter the policy number. It also
added quotation marks around the word Limits (“Limits”) because Limit is a
defined word.
IM
7484–Additional Terminals Schedule–Motor Truck Cargo (01 12 changes)
(Use with IM 7455 and IM 7456)
This endorsement lists and describes
additional covered terminal locations and their limits. The 01 12 edition added a space to enter the policy number. It also
added quotation marks around the word Limits (“Limits”) because Limit is a
defined word.
IM
7485–Refrigeration Breakdown Coverage–Vehicles and Terminals
This
endorsement is similar to IM 7461–Refrigeration Breakdown Coverage–Vehicles
except that it also provides coverage inside the terminal.
IM 7486–Refrigeration Breakdown Schedule–Motor Truck
Cargo (01 12 changes)
This schedule
is used with IM 7461–Refrigeration Breakdown Coverage–Vehicles and IM
7485–Refrigeration Breakdown Coverage–Vehicles and Terminals to provide
necessary information. The 01 12 edition added a space to enter the policy
number. It also added quotation marks around the word Limits (“Limits”) because
Limit is a defined word.
IM
7487–Flood and Earth Movement Exclusion (01 12 changes)
This endorsement restricts coverage by adding
exclusions for loss or damage to covered property at a terminal location from
earth movement, volcanic eruption, and flood. The 01 12
edition added a space to enter the policy number. It also updated the flood and
earth movement exclusions and definitions.
IM 7488–Named Perils Endorsement
This endorsement changes the Perils
Covered provision to restrict coverage to only specified perils as defined in
the coverage form.
Note: The specified perils are much more restrictive than
other inland marine forms so it is important to review them before recommending
this endorsement.
IM 7489–Scheduled Vehicle Limitation
(01 12 changes)
This restrictive endorsement is used to limit coverage to only the vehicles listed and
described (and for the limit entered) in the spaces provided on the endorsement
schedule. The 01 12 edition added a
space to enter the policy number. It also added quotation marks around the word
Limits (“Limits”) because Limit is a defined word.
Note: Additional company specific endorsements may be
available and used. Each should be examined to
determine its effect on coverage. Safeguards such as theft security, alarms,
and climate controls may be required as a condition of an insurance company to
provide coverage or to accept a particular exposure.
Contingent
Cargo Coverage Forms Endorsements and Schedules.
IM 7490–Named Perils
Endorsement–Contingent Cargo Coverage
This endorsement restricts coverage. It
changes the perils insured to direct physical loss or damage caused by a
specified peril.
IM 7491–Parked Trailer
Exclusion–Contingent Cargo Coverage (01 12 change)
This
endorsement excludes theft from a parked trailer disconnected from its tractor
or other power unit. It then gives the coverage back but only when such
trailers are parked at terminals or other locations on
the endorsement schedule. The 01 12 edition added a space to enter the policy
number.
IM 7492–Property Excluded–Contingent
Cargo Coverage (01 12 change)
This endorsement excludes coverage for
loss or damage to the commodities on the endorsement schedule. The 01 12 edition added a space to enter
the policy number.
IM 7493–Refrigeration Breakdown
Coverage–Contingent Cargo Coverage
This endorsement
adds spoilage coverage but only when the vehicle's refrigeration or heating
unit malfunctioning causes it. The Spoilage exclusion under Perils Excluded
remains in effect other than with respect to the coverage this endorsement
provides.
IM 7494–Reporting Conditions
Endorsement–Contingent Cargo Coverage
This endorsement changes the coverage
form to a reporting basis. The Reporting Conditions are the same as in IM
7450–Motor Truck Cargo Legal Liability Coverage–Reporting Form.
Note: A reporting schedule must be added
to state the rate, adjustment period, reporting period, and reporting basis.
IM 7495–Theft Exclusion–Contingent
Cargo Coverage (01 12 change)
This endorsement
restricts coverage. It excludes coverage for theft loss or damage to the commodities
listed on the endorsement schedule. However, it does cover loss or damage
caused by looting during a riot or civil commotion. The 01 12 edition added a space to
enter the policy number.
IM
7496–Theft Limitation–Contingent Cargo Coverage (01 12 change)
This
endorsement excludes theft. It then provides theft coverage on a limited basis
but on only the type of property described on the endorsement schedule. It is
covered only while at a covered terminal or in or on a transporting vehicle. A
per occurrence limit must be entered in the space provided. The 01 12
edition added a space to enter the policy number.
IM 7497–Unattended Vehicle
Exclusion–Contingent Cargo Coverage
This endorsement restricts coverage. It
excludes loss or damage due to theft of covered property from a vehicle or
property in or on a vehicle that disappears at the time of loss or when the
vehicle is stolen. It does not apply if an employee or
another party is hired or appointed to occupy or attend the vehicle.
Note: Additional company specific endorsements may be available
and used. Each should be examined to determine its
effect on coverage. Safeguards such as theft security, alarms, and climate
controls may be required as a condition of an insurance company to provide
coverage or to accept a particular exposure.
REGULATORY COMMISSION
REQUIREMENTS
Financial Responsibility
Trucking concerns that operate as common
or contract carriers for hire are subject to governmental regulation and
requirements with respect to their financial responsibility and liability to
shippers of property. Based on the nature and scope of the trucker's
operations, the
Department of Transportation (DOT), Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration
(FMCSA), or the individual state Public
Utilities Commission (PUC) or Public Service Commission (PSC) provides rules
and regulations that apply to the conduct of the trucking operations and the
degree of financial responsibility required. To comply with such requirements,
the trucking concern either purchases insurance or carries some form of
indemnity bond. Insurance is the method usually chosen to comply with such
requirements.
The Department of Transportation (DOT) Federal Motor Carrier Safety
Administration (FMCSA) requires an
endorsement to the policy. The endorsement obligates the insurance carrier of a
trucking concern to pay a shipper or consignee of goods up to $5,000 in or on
any one vehicle and up to $10,000 in any one occurrence for loss due to the
trucking concern's negligence.
The Public Service Commission (PSC) or
the Public Utilities Commission (PUC) of certain states requires certain levels
of insurance on intrastate shipments trucking concerns make in or on their
vehicles. Compliance is overseen and supervised by the commission in each state
and requires that motor truck cargo legal liability insurance coverage forms
and policies have an endorsement that obligates the insurance company of the
trucking concern to meet that state’s minimum financial responsibility limits. Because
these limits can be different in each state, the named insured and the
insurance company must be aware of the limits, as well as the rules and laws,
which apply to trucking activities in a given state.
Common and contract carriers are
required by law to file certificates of cargo insurance with the regulatory or
supervisory commissions of the states where they operate. If they operate in
more than one state, a different but similar certificate must
be filed with the FMCSA because of the different laws and requirements
in each state. These certificates obligate the insurance company to insure
against some perils that the coverage form or policy may not include. This
provision and requirement obligates the insurance company to include the
necessary endorsements with the insurance coverage form or policy and to file
certain prescribed forms with the proper governmental agency or authorities to
help the named insured comply with the laws.
Motor Truck Cargo Legal Liability
Coverage does not pay all losses that a trucking concern can be liable for on
the cargo or property hauled or transported. This coverage may not as broad as
the liability assumed by motor carriers under the bills of lading or shipping
documents they issue. Under the terms of the FMCSA endorsement, the insurance
company must assume the full extent of the cargo liability of the motor carrier
imposed by the endorsement if it is required to pay such a loss to the shipper
or consignee of the property. Policy terms and agreements between the insurance
company and the named insured entitle the insurance company to be reimbursed by the named insured for payments made to
others beyond what the coverage form or policy provides.
Motor truck
cargo legal liability coverage insures the legal liability of common and
contract motor carriers for the lawful goods of others they accept for
transportation between certain points under tariffs and bills of lading or
contracts and shipping receipts. Coverage applies from the time the trucker
takes possession of the cargo to be carried at the point
of origin to the time the goods arrive at their intended destination and the
consignee accepts them.
Some general
points to consider are the motor carrier’s experience, financial strength, and
loss history and the quality of the motor vehicles that make up the fleet. The
types of merchandise hauled, their value, and susceptibility to loss, damage,
or theft affect the underwriting and pricing decisions. If terminal coverage is provided, location-oriented underwriting must be applied
and the values in a terminal at any one time may create a catastrophic loss
potential.
Common
carriers have a higher degree of responsibility for the merchandise they haul
than do contract carriers. While contract carriers are responsible only to the
extent of their liability as spelled out in the shipping contract (and only if
their negligence contributes to the loss), common carriers are liable for all
loss or damage to the goods with only five exceptions. The exceptions are loss
or damage due to acts of nature, acts of the public enemy, exercise of a public
authority, fault, or neglect on the part of the shipper, or inherent vice or
the nature of the property itself.
Key elements
in underwriting motor carriers include evaluating and determining their
financial condition and experience. The trucker’s financial condition should be
sufficiently healthy so it can afford to hire a suitable number of qualified drivers and purchase and maintain a safe and adequate fleet
of vehicles appropriate for the operations conducted.
A trucking
concern's experience is measured in part by
determining the length of time it has been in business, the nature of property
hauled over that time, and evaluating the reasons for any changes in the nature
or types of property hauled. Consistency and stability in operations enables a
trucking concern to have a greater level of competency in the work it does. It
also eliminates guesswork and learning new tasks that allow
the named insured to focus on safely and efficiently performing the work
it is best qualified, prepared, and experienced to do.
Drivers must be evaluated carefully. More control can
be exercised over drivers who are employees than over independents or
owner-operators. Non-employee drivers must be carefully
screened and it is best if the named insured uses the same ones
consistently. The degree of experience of all drivers and periodic scheduled
training and education are essential to keep bad habits from occurring or
developing. Periodic and unscheduled drug testing and securing motor vehicle
reports are essential activities to maintain control over drivers and to be
aware of their current status through such periodic
tests and reports.
The radius of
operations is important. The greater the distance from the base of operations,
the greater the number of problems and issues that can develop through the
natural loss of control as distances increase. Depending on the radius of
operations, the degree and methods of control will be affected and have to
change to respond to individual circumstances.
Terminal
operations introduce fixed location underwriting issues and greater concern
over fire and other property-based perils. The elements of construction detail,
the nature of the occupancy or goods stored, public and private fire
protection, and the influence of surrounding exposures must
be addressed, understood, and problems or shortcomings resolved. The
catastrophe limit becomes a more significant factor when terminals are involved
and the number of vehicles with loads at such facilities must
be evaluated in light of the possibility of a total loss. The services
provided at such terminals can vary and facilities that include truck washes,
repairs with welding and painting, and substantial storage operations can
change the complexion of the facility and the trucking operation as a whole.
Related Article: Commercial Property
Underwriting Considerations