Chapter 8 Flashcards
Standard CGL Policy
What are the five distinct sections in the 2005 IBC CGL wording?
1- Coverages 2- Who is an Insured 3- Limits of Insurance 4- Conditions 5- Definitions
What are the four insuring agreements under the CGL policy?
1- Bodily Injury and Property Damage Liability
2- Personal and Advertising Injury Liability
3- Medical Payments
4- Tenants’ Legal Liability
Insuring Agreement
Explains what the policy intends to cover.
Defines the scope of coverage.
What are the key points mentioned in the insuring agreement for Coverage A. Bodily Injury and Property Damage?
The insurer agrees to pay those sums that the insured becomes legally obligated to pay as compensatory damages because of bodily injury or property damage to a third party.
What does the phrase “legally obligated to pay” in the CGL policy signify?
There must be a legal obligation for the insured to pay a claim before coverage is triggered.
What are compensatory damages?
Those that compensate the third party for the injury sustained.
Bodily Injury
Bodily injury, sickness, or disease sustained by a person including death resulting from any of these at any time.
Property Damage
Physical injury to tangible property including all resulting loss of use of that property.
Define occurrence.
An accident including any continuous event or exposure to substantially the same general harmful conditions.
What is the difference between an occurrence policy and a claims-made policy?
Occurrence policy - triggers coverage when damage occurs during its policy term.
Claims-made policy - triggers when the third party first makes a claim against the insured. The timing of the event that caused the damage does not wholly determine coverage.
What coverage territory is specified in the CGL policy?
Canada, the United States, its territories or possessions.
International waters or airspace is included if the injury or damage occurs in the course of travel or transportation between these two countries.
Under the CGL policy, when is an international injury inflicted by the insured covered?
1- Goods or products made or sold by the insured in Canada, the United States, its territories or possessions
2- Activities of an insured person away from the defined coverage territory for a short time on business
3- Personal and advertising injury offences that take place through the Internet provided the insured’s responsibility to pay damages is determined in an action on the merits, in the coverage territory, or in a settlement agreed to by the insurer.
What coverage does the CGL policy provide for contractual liability?
Contractual liability is excluded except for compensatory damages arising from liability the insured would have had whether there was a contract or not, and compensatory damages arising from liability in an “insured contract” as described in the policy.
Describe the exclusion for injury to the insured’s employees under Coverage A of the CGL policy.
Employer’s liability arising from bodily injury to an employee during the course of employment is not covered.
This exclusion does not apply to liability assumed under an insured contract or to a claim brought by an employee who was denied coverage or benefits by a provincial workers’ compensation authority even though contributions to the plan were required.
What types of activities relating to vehicles are excluded?
1-The ownership, maintenance, use, or entrustment to others of any automobile, loading, unloading of any automobile owned or operated by or on behalf of the insured.
2-Any motorized snow vehicle, its trailers, any vehicle while being used in any speed, demolition contest, or in any stunt or in practice, and preparation for any such contest or activity are excluded.
3-Negligent supervision, hiring, employment, training, or monitoring of others by that insured in regard to claims involving automobiles are excluded.
When is watercraft covered under the CGL policy?
1- Watercraft on shore at premises the insured owns or rents
2- Non-owned watercraft less than 8 metres long and not being used to carry people or property for a fee
3- Contingent employer’s liability with respect to employees on whose behalf contributions are required to be made to a provincial workers’ compensation board but where the board denies coverage and does not pay benefits
When is automobile covered under the CGL policy?
1- Contingent employer’s liability
2- Damage arising out of a defective condition in, or improper maintenance of, any automobile owned by the insured while leased to others for a period of 30 days or more provided the lessee is obligated under contract to insure it
3- Ownership, use or operation of machinery, apparatus or equipment mounted on or attached to any vehicle while at the site of the use or operation of such equipment, but this exception does not apply when such equipment is used for loading or unloading
Why is property that is owned, rented, or occupied by the insured not covered under the CGL policy?
Damage to property owned by the insured does not constitute a liability claim.
Such property is more appropriately covered under a first party property policy.
What is the “alienated premises” exclusion?
Property damage to premises that are sold, given away, or abandoned by the insured.
What kind of property in the insured’s care, custody, or control is not covered?
1- Property that is loaned to the insured
2- Personal property that is in the insured’s care, custody, or control
3- That particular part of any real property on which the insured or any contractor or sub-contractor is working
4- That particular part of any property that must be restored, repaired, or replaced because the insured’s work was incorrectly performed on it