(February 2018)
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The American Association of Insurance Services (AAIS) warehouse legal liability coverage insures warehouse owners' or operators' liability for loss or damage to goods their customers store in their warehouses. They can be public, private, bonded, and specialized warehouses. Because this is liability coverage, the insurance company also defends against suits brought for damages.
The warehouse receipt is a vital part of this coverage. It is the storage agreement between the property owner and the warehouse operator. It provides the foundation for the liability that the warehouse owner or operator assumes for loss or damage to property of others it stores. In addition, the Uniform Commercial Code (UCC) provides the standards for warehouse operator’s liability. The combination of the UCC requirements and the warehouse receipt provide the legal framework that determines the named insured's liability for property stored.
Any commercial warehouse operation that stores property of others for a fee and issues a warehouse receipt subject to requirements of the Uniform Commercial Code is eligible. Because of these requirements, mini-warehouse operations and self-storage facilities are not eligible for this coverage.
AAIS Warehouse Legal Liability Coverage requires at least these four forms:
This Schedule of Coverages is used with IM 7650–Warehouse Legal Liability Coverage. IM 7655 contains the following information:
The 01 12 edition added a space to enter the policy number.
The Catastrophe
Limit is the most paid for loss in a single occurrence.
The 01 12 edition added quotation marks
around the word Limit (“Limit”) because Limit is a defined word.
The warehouse numbers, addresses or descriptions, and limits
of insurance are entered in the spaces provided. IM 7673–Additional Warehouse Schedule–Warehouse Legal Liability is
used to list additional warehouses.
The 01 12 edition added quotation marks
around the word Limit (“Limit”) because Limit is a defined word.
The limits on the Schedule of Coverages for the following coverages apply to all covered locations:
The limit is $5,000 unless a different limit is entered.
There is no limit in the coverage
form. As a result, policy limits apply but defense costs reduce the amount
available to pay for the loss. A limit entered restricts the amount of defense
costs coverage available. The previous
edition had the word “covered” in the space provided. The 01 12 edition has the
words “See Form” in that space.
This applies for ten days unless a different number of days is entered.
The limit is $50,000 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 $50,000 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.
A deductible amount must be 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 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 in return, the named insured pays the premium.
This agreement is subject to all of the policy’s terms, conditions,
endorsements, and definitions.
Defined terms are used throughout the coverage form. It is very important to review these because coverage can be restricted or broadened in this section. Fifteen 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 has agreed to provide the coverage.
3. Earth movement
Earthquake,
landslide, mudflow, mudslide, mine subsidence, sinking, rising, or shifting of
earth or any other movement or vibration of the earth’s surface. The only exception is for sinkhole collapse.
4. Flood
Flood is flood but it is also surface water, waves,
tidal water, or overflow of bodies of water. Spray
of any of these is also flood when driven by the wind or when not.
5. Limit
The
amount of coverage that applies to the insured property.
6. Perishable stock
Property
that must be stored or maintained under specific controlled conditions. If the controlled conditions change, the
property is subject to loss or damage.
Note: Common controlled conditions include
heating, refrigeration, and humidity control but are not limited to just these.
7. 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.
8. Schedule of
coverages
Any page that is labeled as such and contains coverage information. Declarations
or supplemental declarations are also included in this definition.
9. Sinkhole collapse
The earth’s surface suddenly settling or collapsing into an underground opening that was by water acting on limestone or some other rock formation. Neither the value of the collapsing land nor the cost to fill the sinkhole is considered sinkhole collapse.
10. 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 that is stored in buildings by
a falling object applies only when the falling object first breaches the
building's exterior.
The cracking or
breaking of part of a system or appliance
that holds water or steam causing sudden or accidental discharge or leakage of
water or steam is considered water damage.
11. Spoilage
A
negative change in the physical condition of perishable
stock. Frozen
goods thawing, refrigerated property warming, and liquids solidifying are
examples of spoilage but this definition is not limited to just these.
12. Suit
A
judicial proceeding. Required
arbitration proceedings that take place in
order to determine liability and damages to covered property of others that were
in the named insured's care, custody, or control is also
considered a suit.
13. Terms
All policy
provisions, limitations, exclusions, conditions, and definitions that apply to
this coverage.
14. Volcanic action
An airborne
volcanic blast or shock waves, ash, dust, and particulate matter. The cost to
remove dust, ash, or particulate matter that has not directly damaged covered
property is not volcanic action. Lava flow
is also considered volcanic action.
15. Warehouse receipt
The document the named insured issues to the customer to acknowledge that the named insured is holding property of the customer. The receipt describes the property being stored in the warehouse, provides information on the weight, number of units, or other measure of the quantity or amount stored, and the amount of liability the named insured assumes.
Note: This receipt is vital for coverage so it should be treated as valuable paper. Without a receipt, the customer has no coverage if a loss should occur.
1. Legal Liability
Coverage
Loss to covered property that is in the named insured’s care, custody, and control is covered but only if the named insured is legally liable for that loss. Coverage is limited to only the obligation for which the named insured is legally liable as a warehouse operator as explained in the warehouse receipt that the named insured issued for the property.
Example: Joe Customer sues Grateful Receiver for $50,000 because the painting he entrusted to Grateful was damaged. Scenario 1: Joe Customer cannot produce a warehouse receipt for the painting. There is no coverage. Scenario 2: Joe Customer produces the receipt but the legal liability is $5,000 based on the receipt. Coverage is limited to $5,000 because that is Grateful Receiver’s legal liability. Scenario 3: Joe Customer damaged the painting as he moved it from the warehouse to his truck. Coverage does not apply because the painting was not in Grateful’s care at the time of loss. |
2. We Do Not Cover
If the named insured violates laws or regulations with respect to appropriate claims handling procedures that insurance company is not responsible for any costs, expenses, fees, fines, penalties, or similar damages that are imposed on the named insured.
Coverage applies to
the property described below, subject to any exclusions or limitations.
1. Coverage
Direct physical loss by a covered peril to property of others is covered when that property is stored at the named insured's warehouse.
2. Coverage
Limitations
The covered property must be in a warehouse that listed and described on the schedule of coverages or within 100 feet of it. The named insured must have issued a warehouse receipt for that property in which the property was described.
Twelve specific types of property are excluded:
1. Aircraft or
Watercraft
Aircraft and watercraft are not covered.
2. Art
Any and all objects of art are not covered. Examples are paintings and statuary but this item is not limited to only these.
3. Assumed Liability
When the named
insured assumes liability for property what goes beyond what the law requires
all coverage for that property is removed.
Note: The named insured can assume any degree of
liability it wants but doing so does not broaden the scope of coverage
provided. In addition, by assuming the broadened liability all coverage for the
property, even the legal obligation is eliminated.
Example: Micah and Jessica negotiated a change in
the warehouse receipt so that Micah assumed liability starting when he picked
up Jessica’s containers, while transporting them, and while they were in his warehouse.
Because of the alternation to the receipt, Micah has no coverage under this
coverage form for any damage to Jessica’s property. |
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4. 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: Mike’s Warehouse issues a receipt to Convenience Company for a large
amount of liquor. A fire loss occurs and the liquor is
destroyed. The loss investigation reveals that the liquor had been
smuggled into the country. Convenience Company’s loss is not paid and later
Convenience Company’s president is arrested. |
5. Furs
Any garment that includes any amount of fur is not covered. The owner of the fur should secure coverage
under a Furriers Customers Coverage Form.
Related Article:
ISO Furriers Customers Coverage Form
6. 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.
7. Live Animals
This is an absolute
exclusion. Live animals are excluded under all
circumstances.
Note: This is a departure from most coverage forms that exclude animals except
for death of the animal or necessary
destruction of the animal that results from a covered peril. This exclusion does not have an exception so
there is no coverage for live animals.
8. Money and
Securities
A number of types of property are not covered under this item. Accounts, bills, currency, food stamps, evidence of debt, and lottery tickets not held for sale, in addition to money, notes, or securities are all not covered.
9. Property You Own,
Lease, or Rent
This coverage form is not intended to provide coverage for property of the named insureds.
10. Property in
Transit,
Property that is in transit is excluded even when it is considered storage-in-transit and is under a bill of lading.
Note: Storage-in-transit is when property is temporarily stored as it awaits the
next leg of its travel.
11. Property in
Storage Space
Property of others that is kept in a space leased from the named insured.
Note: This differs from property under warehouse receipt because the named insured is taking control of property when issuing a receipt. It is not taking control of any property when it is supplying a space for lease.
12. Property Not
Under a Warehouse Receipt
Coverage applies only to property for which a warehouse receipt has been issued. If no warehouse receipt is produced, there is no coverage.
Coverage Extensions
Provisions That Apply
To Coverage Extensions
There are four coverage extensions. The limit for each is either the limit on the schedule of coverages or the default limit included in the coverage form. These limits 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 $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.
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. Emergency Removal
This covers direct
physical loss to covered property
that is moved or stored in order to avoid loss or damage from
an impending covered peril. The loss can occur while in transit to the
sanctuary location or while being stored there. This coverage is unique in that
the property that is being moved is not subject to any exclusion while in
transit or at a sanctuary location. However, the reason for moving the property
must be due to a covered peril.
Coverage applies
for up to 365 days after the property is first moved
but does not extend past the policy’s expiration date.
Note: Coverage does not extend past the expiration
date, which means that if the insured has property at a sanctuary location when
coverage renews, the sanctuary location must be listed
as a premises or coverage no longer applies.
4. 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 give covered property away taken in any of the following circumstances and it is ultimately stolen, a limited amount of coverage is provided:
The most paid in a single occurrence is $50,000 but the limit can be increased.
Note: This is a sub-limit. If the property limit at the location is less than $1,000, the property limit caps the amount available. While the limit can be increased, it remains a sub-limit to the property limit.
Provisions That Apply
To Supplemental Coverages
There are four supplemental coverages. Each has its own default limit that can be increased by entering a higher limit on the schedule
of coverages. Limits for any supplemental coverage are separate from the
applicable limit for covered property,
not part of it.
The limit available for coverage described under a supplemental coverage is the only limit available for it. It is not the total of the limit for a supplemental coverage and the limit for covered property. The limits are not added to or combined with limits for any other supplemental coverage or coverage extension and are not subject to any coinsurance provisions that apply elsewhere in the coverage form.
1. Earned Warehouse
Charges
When a covered loss occurs, the owner of the damaged property may refuse to pay its warehouse change. This supplemental coverage pays up to $5,000 in a single occurrence for such uncollectible but earned charges. This limit can be increased.
Example: Klean and Shine stored property at Barely There Warehouse. The contract called for them to pay a deposit in advance and then at six month intervals. Before it paid its six month payment, Klean and Shine inspected the property and discovered significant smoke damage. An accident investigation determined that a small fire had occurred that produced significant smoke but no actual fire damage. Klean and Shine’s property had to be destroyed and they refused to pay for storage charges due because of Barely There’s negligence. This coverage pays for those earned charges up to $5,000. |
2. Newly Acquired
Warehouse
When the named insured acquires a new warehouse during the policy term, coverage is automatically provided for a maximum of 60 days. The limit is $5,000 per warehouse in order to allow the named insured time to report it to the insurance company. Coverage ceases when the property is reported, when the policy expires or after 60 days, whichever occurs first. This is not free coverage since additional premium for the coverage must be paid starting from the acquisition date. The $5,000 limit can be increased.
3. Pollutant Cleanup and
Removal
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.
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.
Costs related to testing, evaluating, observing, or recording pollutants are excluded except for those costs that are part of the extraction process.
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.
4. Rewards
A reward for information that leads to a conviction for arson, theft, or vandalism is available but only if the conviction involves a covered loss caused by that peril. The most paid in a single occurrence for a reward of information is $1,000, regardless of the number of persons who provide the information. 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 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.
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
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. Animals and
Fumigation
There
is no coverage for a loss that insects,
rodents, and other animals cause. Coverage also does not apply when loss
is caused by attempts to eliminate them through
fumigation or spraying.
b. 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. This exclusion is not limited to only
these described causes.
c. Cancellation of
Lease
There is no
coverage for loss due to a lease, contract, or order lapsing or being cancelled or suspended.
Note: There is no exception even for loss or damage to covered property by a
covered peril.
d. Criminal, Fraudulent,
Dishonest or Illegal Acts
Coverage does not
apply to loss caused by or that results from criminal, fraudulent, dishonest,
or illegal acts that any of the following commit alone or in collusion with
another:
Coverage applies if
employees destroy property. It does not apply if employees steal.
Note: Crime coverages should be used to cover this
type of loss. However, because the property being covered
is property of others, the CR 04
01–Client’s Property will need to be attached in order for employee dishonesty
coverage to apply.
Related Article: CR 04 01–Clients’ Property
e. Loss of Use
There is no coverage for a loss that results from delay, loss of use, or loss of market.
f. Missing
Property
Unexplained
or mysterious disappearance of covered property is excluded
when there is no physical evidence to suggest what happened to it and the only
proof that a loss occurred is based on an audit
or physical inventory. This exception is that covered property that is in
the custody of carriers for hire is covered.
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:
Example: Oil in a forklift leaks out and seeps into
five different containers. Scenario 1: The
leak is due to poor maintenance by the named insured. There is no coverage. Scenario 2: The
leak is due to another forklift accidentally
striking that forklift. The damage is covered because
the leak is the result of a covered specified peril (vehicles). Scenario 3: Another
forklift loses traction on the oil and plows into the containers. The vehicle
damage to the containers and their contents is covered but the damage that
resulted from the initial oil leak is still not covered. |
h. Processing,
Work and Packaging
Loss that is caused by the
processing of, work on, or packaging or repackaging covered property is
excluded. There is no exception.
Example: Warehousing Plus
provides extra services as requested. Minky asks that the pallet of products
Warehousing receives on her behalf be broken down, sorted, repackaged, and
then stored. While Warehousing Plus employees are sorting the items, a newly
trained forklift driver plowed into the workspace containing the unpackaged
porcelain items. There is no coverage for the damage because it occurred
during processing. |
i. Spoilage
Coverage does not apply when a perishable stock loss is
caused by or that results from spoilage.
There is an
exception. If spoilage results in a specified peril, any loss caused by that
resulting specified peril is covered.
j. Temperature/Humidity
Any loss that that is caused dryness, dampness, humidity, changes in, or extremes of temperature is excluded. There is no exception.
k. 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.
There is an
exception under Coverage Extension 4. Fraud or Deceit.
l. Wear and Tear
Loss caused by
wear, tear, marring, or scratching is excluded.
1. Notice
The named insured
must give prompt notice of a loss to the insurance company or its agent. The
notice must include a description of the property lost or damaged. If a
criminal act caused the loss, the appropriate law enforcement agency must also be notified. The insurance company has the right
to require that the notice be in writing.
2. You Must Protect
Property
During and after a
loss, the named insured must take all reasonable steps to protect covered
property from further loss. The insurance company pays reasonable costs the
named insured incurs but to do so the named insured must maintain accurate records to substantiate the
costs. Paying these costs is not in addition to the policy limits. There is no
coverage for any repairs or emergency measures performed on property not
already damaged by a covered peril.
Note: 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. Warehouse Receipt
The named insured is required to give the insurance company its copy of the warehouse receipt it issued for the property that is involved in a covered loss.
Example: Penelope’s Pictures used We're Number One Warehouse for years. A loss occurred at the warehouse and some of Penelope's goods were destroyed. We're Number One and Penelope agreed that the property was there but neither party could produce a warehouse receipt. As a result, the claim was denied. |
6. 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.
7. 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.
8. 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.
9. Abandonment
The named insured does
not have the right to turn over ownership of property
to the insurance company unless that insurance company agrees to accept it. Any
such agreement must be in writing.
Example: A covered fire occurred at Yearly
Warehouse. Some contents were destroyed so all client’s containers were
opened to determine potential damage. A container that belonged to The
Chemical Shop contained chemicals used to create meth. They were damaged but The Chemical Shop could not be located.
Yearly wants to get rid of the chemicals and attempts to abandon them to the
insurance company so that it can pay the Haz-Mat
disposal costs. The insurance carrier refuses to accept the abandonment and
Yearly must pay the costs to safely remove the
chemicals. |
10. 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 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 the 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
is legal liability coverage. 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 appropriate.
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
a. Subject to other items in this section, the insurance company pays the least
of the following:
b. The amount the company pays is capped by the amount of the named insured's liability as stated on the warehouse receipt.
c. The insurance company does not pay more than the catastrophe amount, regardless of the
number of warehouse locations.
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 by
either a written agreement between the company and the named insured or
after an appraisal award is filed with the company.
3. Property of Others
a. Adjustment
and Payment of Loss to Property of Others
The insurance
company has the option to adjust and pay losses that involve property of others
either to the named insured acting on the property
owner’s behalf or to the property owner.
b. We Do Not
Have to Pay You if We Pay the Owner
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. Bankruptcy of An Insured
The insurance
company's obligations under this coverage are not affected
by any insured's bankruptcy or insolvency.
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 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.
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.
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.
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.
11. Suit against Us
The insurance
company cannot be sued by anyone for any coverage
until all the terms of the coverage form have been met AND the insured's
liability has been determined. The liability can be determined
by either a final trial judgment or based on a written agreement between
the claimant, the named insured, and the insurance company. In addition, the
insurance company is not to be named as part of any
actions brought to determine the named insured's liability.
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.
AAIS has developed the following endorsements and schedules for use with the Warehouse Legal Liability Coverage Form.
IM 7662–Inventory Shortage
Coverage
This endorsement is needed because of the Missing Property exclusion in the coverage form. It covers the named insured's legal liability for covered property that apparently disappeared when a scheduled inventory reveals the disappearance.
IM 7663–Defense Limit
Endorsement
This endorsement provides a sub-limit for defense costs. It deletes and replaces Coverage for Defense Costs with the limit for defense costs being separate from the limit for coverage described under Property Covered, not part of it. This means that the cost of defense does not deplete the limit of liability available to pay for damages but it also limits the amount available to the insured for defense.
IM 7665–Flood and
Earth Movement Exclusion
This is a restrictive endorsement. It excludes earth movement, volcanic eruption, and flood as covered perils.
IM 7666–Reporting
Conditions Endorsement
This endorsement adds reporting conditions.
IM 7667–Reporting
Schedule–Warehouse Legal Liability
This schedule is used with IM 7666–Reporting Conditions Endorsement. It states the reporting period, adjustment period, rates, deposit premium, and minimum premium that apply when the coverage form is amended to be on a reporting basis.
IM 7668–Leakage of
Refrigerant Exclusion
This exclusion is often used with IM 7669–Cold Storage Coverage but it can be used with any covered warehouse. It excludes coverage for loss or damage due to leakage of a coolant or refrigerant from a cooling or refrigeration system.
IM 7669–Cold Storage Coverage
This endorsement covers direct physical loss by spoilage to property of others consisting of perishable stock at a covered warehouse location. The Cold Storage Limit, Catastrophe Limit, and Cold Storage Deductible are entered on the endorsement schedule in the spaces provided.
IM 7671–Spoilage
Coverage
This endorsement covers loss or damage that results from spoilage. The spoilage must be caused by a covered peril selected on IM 7672–Spoilage Schedule–Warehouse Legal Liability. The covered perils that can be selected are Equipment Breakdown, Refrigeration Contamination, and Power Disruption. The other causes of loss that can be selected are Refrigerant Contamination and Power Disruption.
IM 7672–Spoilage
Schedule–Warehouse Legal Liability
This schedule of coverages is used with IM 7671–Spoilage Coverage. It has spaces to enter the spoilage limits, the separate spoilage deductible, any additional conditions, the insured perils that apply, and a list of covered warehouse locations.
IM 7673–Additional
Warehouse Schedule–Warehouse Legal Liability
This schedule is used with IM 7655–Schedule of Coverages–Warehouse Legal Liability to list additional covered warehouses and their limits.
IM 7674–Processing Work Coverage
This endorsement is used to cover direct physical loss by a covered peril to covered property in the named insured's care, custody, or control to be assembled, packaged, repackaged, or packed. Coverage applies at warehouses listed on IM 7675–Processing Work Schedule–Warehouse Legal Liability and while in transit to and from listed warehouses.
IM 7675–Processing Work Schedule–Warehouse Legal
Liability
This schedule is used with IM 7674–Processing Work Coverage to describe covered property, the location, and to enter the applicable coverages, limits, and deductible.
IM 7676–Additional Covered Locations Schedule–Processing
Work Coverage
This schedule is used with IM 7674–Processing Work Coverage, to list additional locations and limits.
IM 7677–Property Excluded
This endorsement is used to exclude certain property from coverage. Manufactured tobacco products, alcoholic beverages, narcotics, and prescription drugs can be selected on the endorsement schedule but other property can also be scheduled.
Note: Some insurance companies may use additional endorsements that broaden or limit the basic coverage forms. Some examples include limited or named perils in place of all risk perils or full perils coverage instead of only legal liability coverage. Other endorsements may affect valuation, loss adjustment and reporting, adjusting, and premium payment methods.
Warehouse owners
and operators are responsible for damage caused by their negligence as bailees of
goods of their customers that are stored in their warehouses. Almost all
warehouses fall into one of four categories:
In recent years,
logistics has caused an evolution in traditional warehouse legal liability and
transportation exposures. Logistics involves integrating transportation,
storage, handling, and processing of merchandise from the point of manufacture
to the final location for sale or distribution most efficiently and cost effectively. In addition, logistics has
become part of the world of electronic commerce. Providers of logistical
services are integrated managers of services, some or all of which may be outsourced to others.
Warehouse operators
and transportation companies now provide numerous value-added functions to the
traditional operations of transportation and warehousing. This includes pick up
and packing services in addition to processing and cross-docking
(as defined at the end of this section). All services provided for moving goods
may be combined under one contract for services or
bill of lading. Since liability exposures are undergoing fundamental changes as
operations and services evolve, a need has developed to understand who is
responsible for liability for each part of the transaction. In some cases, the
Warehouse Legal Liability Coverage Form may not completely address all of the
exposures that logistics operations present. The language of the coverage form must be compared with the actual operations the logistics
party performs and copies of their contracts obtained.
Note: Cross-docking involves unloading goods on an
incoming semi-trailer truck or rail car just to re-load them onto outbound
trailers or rail cars. There is little or no storage. The reason for the change
is to move from one conveyance to another, to separate goods intended for
different destinations, or to combine goods from different origination points.
There is usually little or no warehousing. Many cross-docking operations
require large staging areas where inbound goods are sorted,
consolidated, and stored until the outbound shipment is loaded, complete, and
ready to ship. Cross-dock distribution centers usually require less than
a day to complete the staging. Distribution centers that hold goods for more
than a day are considered to be warehouses. Cross-dock
operations are used to decrease inventory shortages
because the flow of goods between the supplier and the manufacturer is
streamlined.
Several general
factors are important to effectively and successfully
underwrite warehousing risks.
Coverage depends on
the language in the warehouse receipt. These should be
completed in a structured and consistent manner and follow prescribed
procedures to guarantee uniformity and accuracy. There is no coverage on the
merchandise stored without a warehouse receipt and nothing should be stored
without one. Receipts should be duplicated and the
duplicates stored off premises so that losses can be handled accurately and
promptly if the copy kept at the warehouse location is itself lost or
destroyed. Both the customer and the named insured should be able to produce
their copies of the storage receipt if a
loss occurs.