Liability Insurance Flashcards
Liability Insurance
Legal liability insurance provides protection against the financial impact of lawsuits. Liability losses occur as easily as property losses.
Umbrella Policy
It is important to protect yourself from legal liability by purchasing an umbrella policy. For example, if someone is injured at your home or you have an auto accident that causes personal injury, an umbrella insurance policy will begin providing coverage after the underlying homeowners’ or personal auto policy has been reached.
Categories of Loss
Bodily Injuries Wages lost while the plaintiff was recovering from an injury.
Personal Injuries Suffered when a person is deprived of his or her rights.
Property Damages Destruction and loss of use of tangible personal property.
Collateral Source Rule
The collateral source rule allows that damages for bodily injury can be assessed against the negligent party even when the injured person recovers the amount of his or her loss from other sources. For example, an injured party who was fully compensated by an insurance company can still sue the negligent party for the amount of medical expenses and lost income incurred due to his or her injuries.
Punitive Damage
Punitive damages are awards made to plaintiffs not as compensation for injuries suffered, but as a means of punishing defendants for outrageously offensive acts. What constitutes such an act is a question of fact. The insurer usually agrees to pay for injuries inflicted by negligence on behalf of the insured individual. Punitive damages usually imply gross negligence, something for which the insurer may not have contemplated making payment.
Legal Liability
Legal liability is imposed by the courts when it has been established that all of the following occurred:
- There was negligence
- There was actual damage or loss
- The negligence was the proximate cause of the damage.
Case of negligence
To establish a case of negligence, the law requires the plaintiff to prove all of the following:
- Defendant had legal duty to protect the plaintiff
- Defendant failed to perform that duty
- The plaintiff suffered injury.
Negligence Suit Defense
A tort predicated on negligence alone carries certain defenses that may negate legal liability in spite of the negligent behavior. A defendant has three main lines of defense against a charge of negligence:
contributory negligence
assumption of the risk
comparative negligence
Contributory Negligence
Assuming the plaintiff establishes the defendant’s negligence, the defendant may counter with a defense of contributory negligence. If it can be shown the plaintiff’s own negligence contributed to or led to the injury sustained, the court will not allow recovery of damages from the defendant under the contributory negligence rule.
Assumption of Risk
A second line of defense involves establishing that the plaintiff knowingly assumed the risk of injury. If the defendant establishes assumption of the risk, the plaintiff will not be awarded a judgment.
Comparative Negligence
The contributory negligence rule is harsh. Even slight negligence on a plaintiff’s part can relieve a grossly negligent defendant of responsibility for an accident. Today, most states apply a modification of the contributory negligence rule called the doctrine of comparative negligence. The comparative negligence doctrine allows plaintiffs some recovery despite contributing to their own injuries.
Tort
A tort is a private or civil wrong or injury, other than breach of contract, for which the court will provide a remedy in the form of an action for damages. While contract law is designed to compensate one person for injuries caused by another’s failure to perform under a contract, tort law provides compensation for legal wrongs committed against a person or his or her property arising independently of any contract between the parties. A person who commits a tort is known as a tortfeasor, and acts or omissions constituting torts are said to be tortious
Tort Actions
Tort actions, like other civil actions, begin when a person injured by another’s act or omission files a complaint in court, alleging that the defendant has committed a tort, and requesting damages.
Three categories of tort liability are:
- intentional torts - defendant’s actions are calculated to cause injury to another
- negligent torts - defendant unintentionally acts or fails to act in a prudent manner, and
- strict liability torts - damages result from dangerous activities.
Strict Liability
In certain cases, tort liability is imposed in the absence of both negligence and intent to interfere with the plaintiff’s legally protected interests. Such liability is known as strict liability, or liability without fault. In other words, a person is said to be “strictly liable” if legal responsibility is imposed even though he or she has not acted intentionally and has exercised the utmost care to prevent the harm.
Two other forms of strict liability are imposed upon:
suppliers of defective products that cause personal injury or property damage, and
common carriers for goods lost or damaged in transit.
Umbrella Policy needs
While high-net-worth clients need umbrella policies due to their higher risk of being sued, many other clients could benefit from this inexpensive protection. Families with young drivers in the household, people who travel and drive internationally, and owners of swimming pools and trampolines should learn more about the costs and benefits of this policy. An insured should purchase an umbrella policy from the same insurer that provides them with homeowners and auto insurance to guard against gaps in coverage.