(April 2018)
|
The Insurance Services
Office (ISO) Fine Arts Museums Coverage Form covers objects of fine art that
belong to museums and comparable items owned by others that the museum has in
its care, custody, or control. Fine arts
dealers and non-dealer commercial entities are not eligible to use this
coverage form. Examples of fine arts coverage under this form are antiques,
etchings, drawings, tapestries, sculptures, porcelains, china, and marble.
Fine Arts Museums
Coverage requires at least the following six forms:
Related Article: IL 00 17–Common
Policy Conditions Analysis
Related
Article: CM 00 01–Commercial Inland Marine Conditions
The advisory Fine Arts
Museums Declarations does not have spaces for the named insured, its mailing
address, other named insured information, the policy period, or the description
of the insured business. That information is on
the Common Policy Declarations. IH DS 87 contains the following information:
The name of the insurance
company that provides the coverage and the name of the agent or broker that
produces the business are entered in the spaces provided.
This is an unusual
section because coverage under this form is not limited to a specific location.
All limits provided are not used to grant coverage but instead to limit the
amount of coverage available at the particular place where the fine art is at
the time of loss.
Multiple
premises addresses can be listed but a limit must be entered beside each premises.
This
limit is used for property that is off the premises at other’s premises.
This is
the maximum that will be paid in a single occurrence. It is always important to
increase this limit when increasing any of the above.
This section has spaces
to enter the limits of insurance.
Additionally covered
property that consists of furniture, fixtures, office supplies, machinery,
tools, fittings, patterns, dies, molds, models, improvements, and betterments
is covered if the box in this section is checked.
The breakage exclusion in
the coverage form is deleted if the box in this section is checked.
This section has a space
to enter the amount of deductible that applies.
This section has spaces
to enter the rate per $100 and the premium that applies.
Any special provisions are entered in the space provided.
This analysis is of the
12 13 edition. Changes from the previous edition are in bold print.
Introduction
This section encourages
the careful reading of the entire coverage form to determine what is covered,
what is not covered, rights, and duties. It defines we, us, and our as the
insurance company that provides this insurance coverage. It also defines you
and your as the named insured on the declarations. Other words that have special meaning are defined in F. Definitions.
The insurance company pays for direct physical loss or
damage to covered property but only when that loss is from a covered cause of loss.
1. Covered Property
Covered property is the
fine arts owned by the named insured and
fine arts that belong to others that are in the named insured’s care, custody,
or control. Examples of covered fine arts are antiques, paintings, etchings,
drawings, tapestries, sculptures, and fragile property such as porcelain, china,
and marble.
|
Example: The Triple A Museum of Arts, Antiques, and
Artifacts displays arts, antiques, and artifacts it owns as well as similar
pieces that others own. These non-owned items are either on loan or
temporarily exhibited on its premises. In addition, there is a variety of
similar property on the premises to be restored, repaired, or renovated. Moreover,
many local and regional artists of all kinds turn to Triple A to display their works of art, because it is the only
facility of its kind in the city or the surrounding area. For these reasons,
the museum is a destination and a magnet for patrons of the arts in a large
geographical area. This coverage form insures
both owned property and property of others in Triple A's care, custody, or
control. |
2. Additionally
Covered Property
The following types of
property are covered only when the box for Additionally Covered Property on the
declarations is checked:
I&B coverage
applies only if the named insured does not own the building. Fixtures,
alterations, installations, or additions that form a part of the building that
the named insured makes at its own expense but cannot legally remove are
considered improvements and betterments.
Note: This option
could be very good for some because the same causes of loss available to the
fine arts are also available to this
additionally covered property. However, it is important to review the valuation
condition because it is not the same valuation used on a commercial property
coverage form.
3. Property Not
Covered
The following described
property is excluded:
a. Property that is being exhibited at fairgrounds or at national
or international expositions.
Note: The security at these locations is difficult to evaluate.
b. Property that is shipped by mail
Note: Coverage should be obtained through the United States Postal
Service (USPS).
c. Contraband. Any property that is illegal for the named insured
to own or that is in illegal trade or transportation is not covered.
3. Covered Causes of
Loss
Covered causes of loss are direct physical loss or damage to covered
property except for causes of loss that are listed in the exclusions section
Some of the following
additional coverages are also additional amounts of insurance.
a. Debris Removal
A property damage loss usually creates debris that must be removed. The
insurance company pays the cost of removing the debris of a covered loss. The
expenses must be reported to the insurance company in writing within 180 days
of the date of loss. The most paid is 25% of the sum of the following:
Payments under this Additional Coverage do not increase the limit of
insurance that applies. However, the insurance company pays an additional
$5,000 per occurrence when the direct physical loss or damage combined with the
debris removal expense exceeds the limit of insurance or when the debris removal
expense is more than the amount payable under the above described 25%
limitation.
This coverage does not apply to costs to extract pollutants from land or
water or to remove, restore, or replace polluted land or water.
Note: The type of museum and the items it displays
could create debris removal problems. Unique situations may require that this
limit is increased.
b. Preservation of Property
Covered property may have
to be moved from an insured location to keep it from being damaged by a covered
cause of loss. In that case, the insurance company pays for any direct loss or
damage such property sustains during the move. In addition, coverage applies at
the location where the property is stored for up to 30 days after the date it
was moved there.
The limit for this additional coverage does not increase the limit of
insurance.
Notes: There are several important points to consider:
The
property removed must be moved back to the covered location or the temporary
location must be added to the policy within 30 days from the date of the move.
Otherwise, all coverage ends after 30 days.
c. Pollutant Clean Up and Removal
The insurance company pays to clean up pollutants caused by or that
result from a covered cause of loss that occurs during the policy period. The
most paid is $10,000 per premises as an aggregate amount during each separate
12-month policy period. The expenses are paid only if they are reported to the
insurance company in writing within 180 days of the date of loss.
This coverage does not apply to costs to evaluate the presence or
effects of pollutants. However, it does pay for testing that is part of the
extracting of pollutants process from either land or water.
This
limit is an additional amount of insurance.
1. Primary Exclusions
The first group of exclusions applies whether the loss event results in
widespread damage or affects a significant geographical area and is essentially
absolute. Subject to specific exceptions, 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. Governmental Action
This exclusion applies to the legal and authorized seizure or
destruction of property by a government entity’s order. There is one exception.
Loss or damage that is caused when the governmental entity orders property to
be destroyed is covered if used as a method to prevent a fire from spreading is
covered. However, this exception applies only if the fire being contained would have been a covered fire
under this coverage form.
b. Nuclear Hazard
Nuclear reaction, radiation, or radioactive contamination is not
covered. There is an exception. If a fire results from the nuclear reaction, radiation, or radioactive contamination
there is coverage for the direct loss or damage caused by that fire.
c. War and Military Action
This exclusion lists
three specific warlike activities.
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 result from any of these events.
a. Theft from an unattended vehicle
When the loss is due to theft from an unattended vehicle, there is no
coverage. There are two exceptions.
Example: Two Triple
A employees unload most of the works of art going to another owned
location to be repaired and take a break to eat lunch before they finish.
They close the roll-down door on the back of the box truck and lock it. When
they return and open the door, they find the cargo area door pried open and empty.
Coverage applies because even though the vehicle was unattended at the time
of loss, the vehicle was locked and there was straightforward evidence of a forced
break-in. |
b. Delay, loss of use, and loss of market
These are consequential or indirect losses that develop because of a
direct loss or damage.
c. Unexplained disappearance
When covered property is gone and there is no obvious cause or
explanation of what happened to it.
d. Shortage found upon taking
inventory
Any loss that is discovered as a result of an inventory shortage and
there is no explanation as to what happened to the property, similar to the unexplained disappearance. This is sometimes
referred to as "inventory shrinkage."
e. Dishonest or criminal acts (12 13 changes)
These are any dishonest or criminal acts that the named insured, its
partners, employees, temporary
employees, leased workers, officers, directors, trustees, authorized
representatives, or members and managers of a limited liability company commit. This also includes theft.
Such acts committed by anyone with an interest in the property, their
employees, temporary employees, leased
workers, or authorized representatives who act alone or who act in
collusion with other parties or with each other are also excluded. This
exclusion also applies whether or not the acts take place during regular
working hours.
This exclusion does not apply
to acts of destruction by the named insured’s employees, temporary employees,
leased workers, or authorized representatives. However, there is no coverage
for theft by the named insured’s employees, temporary employees, leased
workers, or authorized representatives.
The 12 13 edition removed the
part of the exclusion in the previous edition that applied to dishonest or
criminal acts committed by anyone entrusted with the property for any reason.
f. Breakage
If art glass windows, statuary, glassware, bric-a-brac, marble,
porcelain, and similar fragile property break, there is no coverage for any loss or
damage related to its breaking.
There are two exceptions.
g. Repairing, restoring, or retouching
Loss or damage to property that results from ANY efforts to repair,
restore, or retouch it.
h. Marring, scratching, chipping or denting
Loss or damage to covered property that is caused by or that results
from marring, scratching, chipping, or denting. There is an exception. If such
loss or damage is caused directly by fire, lightning, explosion, windstorm,
earthquake, flood, vandalism, aircraft, rioters, strikers, theft, attempted
theft, or accidents to the conveyance that transports the property coverage
applies. These listed causes of loss apply only if this coverage form insures
them.
i. Voluntary parting
The named insured or anyone else entrusted with the property being
tricked or deceived into giving that property away.
j. Theft (12 13 addition)
Theft by any person the named
insured entrusts covered property to for any reason, whether they act alone or
act in collusion with any other party. This exclusion applies 24 hours a day/7
days a week. There is one exception. Covered property that is in a carrier for hire’s care, custody, or
control is not subject to this exclusion.
3. Other Exclusions
This group of exclusions applies to loss or damage caused by or that
result from any of the following loss events. In every case, if loss or damage
by a covered cause of loss occurs because of one of these excluded events;
coverage applies to the loss or damage
the resulting covered cause of loss
causes. The insurance company does not pay for any loss or damage caused by or
that results from any of these events.
a. Wear and tear
This is loss or damage due to wear and tear.
Note: Wear and tear is damage that occurs
naturally because of aging or normal wear.
b. Any quality in the property
These are any qualities in the property that cause it to destroy or
damage itself.
Note: An example is a loss or damage caused by hidden or latent defects in the property.
c. Insects, vermin, or rodents
This is loss or damage to covered property caused by or that results
from insects, vermin, or rodents.
Note: Some examples are damage from mice, rats,
cockroaches, squirrels, beavers, spiders, ants, centipedes, and ticks. Each is
characterized by destructive habits that cause damage, such as gnawing and
nibbling.
The most the insurance company pays for loss or damage in a single
occurrence is the limit of insurance on the declarations for the applicable
coverage.
The insurance company does not pay for loss or damage until the amount
of the adjusted loss or damage (before capping with the appropriate limit of
insurance) exceeds the deductible on the declarations. It then pays the amount
of the adjusted loss or damage that exceeds the deductible up to the applicable
limit of insurance.
1. Valuation
The following replaces
the Valuation General Condition in the Commercial Inland Marine Conditions:
a. Your Property
The value of the named
insured's property is the amount the named insured lists for it in its books
and records. An item of property that does not have a recorded value is valued
at its fair value on the date that a loss
occurs. The insurance company and the named insured must negotiate this value.
Note: It is a good idea to reach the agreement on the value prior
to a loss rather than afterward.
Example: Triple A is very
careful when it values its property. It has each item appraised regularly and
then lists that value on its inventory.
It provides that list to the insurance company and there is never any
disagreement. However, recently it was given a statue and had not yet valued
it when the statue was stolen. Triple A’s curator
evaluated the stolen statue at $45,000. The claims adjustor also evaluated
the stolen statue, but her value was $25,000. The curator and the insurance
company had quite a long discussion that included the cost of appraisals and
battling experts before the loss was settled for $40,000. |
b. Property of Others
The value of this
property in the named insured's care, custody, or control is the amount the
named insured and the property owner agree to, in writing, prior to any loss.
If there is no such agreement for a specific item, it is valued at its fair
value is at the time of loss. The insurance company and the named insured must
negotiate this value.
Note: The property’s owner does not take part in these
negotiations.
c. Additionally Covered Property
If anyone other than the
named insured repairs or replaced the damaged property, the insurance company
pays nothing.
If the named insured
repairs or replaces the property it at its expense, the insurance company pays
the actual cash value of that property. However, payment is made only if the repair
or replacement is made within a reasonable period of time.
Property that is not
repaired or replaced is paid on a percentage basis. It starts with the original
cost of the items not repaired or replaced. A percentage is then developed by dividing
the remaining term of the rental agreement on the date of loss by the period of
time from the date the improvement or betterment was installed to the rental
agreement’s expiration date.
Note: This valuation is very similar to improvements and
betterments coverage. It does not appropriately address additionally covered
property that is not improvements and betterments. Such as – what is the
percentage paid if the insured is not renting anything?
2. Pairs, Sets, or
Parts
The following replaces
the Pairs, Sets, or Parts Loss Condition in the Commercial Inland Marine
Conditions.
There are three options
if a covered cause of loss results in loss or damage to any item that makes up
part of a pair or set:
a. The first option is 100% at the named insured’s request because
it requires that the ownership of the remaining part of the pair or set must be
turned over to the insurance company. In return for a payment of the full value
the pair or set all remaining items of the pair or set are given to the
insurance company.
If option a. is not selected, the insurance
company will do one of the following, at its option:
b. Repair or replace any damaged part to
restore the pair or set to the value that existed before the loss or damage.
c. Pay the difference between the value
of the pair or set before the loss or damage and its value after the loss or
damage.
3. Other Conditions
The following conditions apply in addition to the Commercial Inland
Marine Conditions and the Common Policy Conditions:
a. Coverage Territory
The coverage territory is the United States of America, its territories
and possessions, Puerto Rico, and Canada. This includes property shipped by air
within and between these points.
b. Packing and Unpacking
The named insured agrees to have competent packers pack and unpack
covered property.
Note: If an incompetent packer is allowed to pack
or unpack covered property and a loss results, the loss is not covered.
c. Records and Inventory
The named insured is required to maintain accurate records and must
maintain them for at least three years after the policy’s expiration date. The
following records must be maintained:
d. Protective Safeguards
If the named insured states in the application that a protective
safeguard is in place at a premises, that
protective safeguard must be maintained and operational whenever the premises is not open for business.
If that safeguard is not operational when the premises is closed, all coverage at the premises is
suspended until it becomes operational again.
Note: This is a very important warranty that
removes all coverage, regardless of the cause
of loss, when the protective safeguard goes down. There are no exceptions.
There is one definition.
Pollutants
These are any solid, liquid, gaseous, or thermal irritant or
contaminant. Pollutants also include smoke, vapor, soot, fumes, acids, alkalis,
chemicals, or waste. Waste is any material intended for recycling,
reconditioning, or reclamation.
ISO has not developed any
specific endorsements for exclusive use with the Fine Arts Museums Coverage
Form. ISO has developed three other endorsements that can be used to respond to
specific situations.
IH 99 08–Value
Reporting Form
This endorsement is used
to convert the coverage from a non-reporting to a reporting basis. Reports of
value can be provided on a daily, weekly, monthly, quarterly, or policy year
basis.
IH 99 19–Additional
Covered Property
This endorsement is used
to include coverage for types of property ordinarily excluded.
IH 99 20–Additional
Property Not Covered
This endorsement is used
to exclude certain types of property the coverage form insures.
IH 99 22–Loss Payable
Loss payees who have insurable interests in covered property are listed
on this endorsement along with the property in which they have that interest.
Note: No commitment is made to notify them of any
cancellation.
Fine arts museums usually
occupy a permanent location and are exposed to the common causes of loss that
affect fixed or permanent locations. This is important to keep in mind because
most types of fine art are highly susceptible to damage by fire, smoke, and
water. They also present unique and unusual transit underwriting considerations
and other important loss issues that must be addressed include breakage, theft,
vandalism, and mysterious disappearance.
Related Article:
Commercial Property Underwriting Conditions
This coverage form does
not exclude any type of earth movement or flood so careful review of the loss
potential from those causes of loss must be evaluated.
Because of the number of potential causes of
loss and the unique nature of the covered property, the management of fine arts
museums must be underwritten closely and carefully.
Objects of fine art
should always have an independent appraisal to determine the appropriate value.
The purchase price is important but may
not have an actual bearing on the true value or market price of a fine art
object. Appraisals should be updated periodically since changes such as the
death of an artist may increase the value or cause the value to appreciate. On
the other hand, a flood of comparable items on the market may diminish or
depreciate the value.
Fire, smoke, and theft
are the major loss cause concerns and fire and theft systems and alarms should
be in place when substantial values are involved. Sensitive environmental or
atmospheric systems and alarms should be considered in cases where art is
susceptible to damage from changes in temperature or humidity. Water damage
from sprinkler systems discharging is another important loss concern. Any fine
art object especially susceptible to damage by water should be located away
from sprinkler systems and their discharge and protected in some unique way.
The degree of care in
packing and unpacking objects of art in large part determines how well they
fare in transit. Specialized moving and packing operations should be employed
when handling and transporting valuable items.
Art located off premises
should be documented and recorded and security at those premises should be
adequate for the type of item involved and its value. Fraudulent acts and
trickery can occur and there should be safeguards to prevent unintended
delivery of art objects to criminals. Security at off-site exhibits must be
evaluated and appropriate guarantees obtained before consenting to exhibit. If
a fine art object is given to another party on consignment, a signed
consignment agreement should be required to eliminate any questions of its ownership and that party’s legal responsibility
for it.
Fine arts should be kept
at ground floor level or higher because damage from humidity and water occurs
more frequently below grade. Lower levels of a building may be appropriate for
other storage or for processing and refurbishing operations. It is important to
keep activities that involve heat and flammable liquids well away from the main
inventory. Flammables should be kept in proper containers in a well-ventilated
area to prevent the build-up of fumes and
away from combustible materials that can increase the chance of spontaneous
combustion and fire.