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Monthly Archives: March 2019

ABEX Office Relocation

We are moving! ABEX office will be closing at 12:00 p.m. EST on Friday, March 29 for relocation.  We will not have access to our phones or systems during the move.

We will resume our regular business hours of 8:30 a.m. – 5:00 p.m. EST, on Monday, April 1.

Effective April 1, our new address will be:

139 Northfield Dr. W., Suite 206
Waterloo, ON N2L 5A6

Our telephone, fax number, email addresses and all other contact details remain unchanged.

If you need to submit a claim during our move or after hours, please contact

Crawford Adjusters. They can be reached by phone: 1-877-313-2585  or email: newabexclaims@crawco.ca

We thank you for your patience while we’re making the transition to our new space!


The Hazards of Products and Completed Operations: Understanding the Fundamentals

Even those who are relatively new to the insurance industry cannot help but be exposed to continual references to products liability or completed operations coverage. Unfortunately, any type of coherent explanation as to how this coverage actually works is it too often misleading or lacking.

After all, liability coverage for products liability and completed operations liability insurance has been included in both the occurrence and claims-made Insurance Services Office, Inc. (ISO), commercial general liability (CGL) form for over 20 years—everyone knows it is there. So why pay it much heed?

Consider this—the most common reaction of an insurance professional who finally grasps the limitations of how the coverage applies is “What good is it?”1

Even more interesting is the reaction of many clients’ attorneys or accountants, or even of the clients themselves, when the fundamentals of this coverage are presented to them—some go as far as to suggest (or demand) a “tail.” Others point out how insurers try to weasel out of paying covered claims. Sorry, please try again!

Here is a litmus test that measures a basic understanding of what bodily injury or property damage will be covered within the products-completed operations hazard. Failure to grasp this deceptively simple concept will likely result in a fundamental misunderstanding of how products and completed operations coverage works.

An Example Illustrating the Harsh Reality

Consider an example. Dave’s Decks has been installing high-quality residential decks for the past 10 years. He is a sole proprietor with no employees and has done all the work himself. For the past decade, Dave has purchased through his insurance agent an occurrence-based ISO CGL policy (1985 edition or later) with no unusual endorsements. The policy has been in force continuously with the same insurance company for the past 10 years at the cost of about $1,000 per year. Dave’s CGL policy always included coverage for the products-completed operations hazard.

Dave has done well financially and has decided to retire. He sends his policy back to his insurance agent for cancellation on July 1, 2018; the policy is terminated on that date as Dave has requested.

The Deck Collapse and Resulting Bodily Injury

Unfortunately, Mary, one of Dave’s customers, is seriously injured when the deck she is standing on collapses on August 31, 2018. It is later found that in May 2018, when Dave built the deck, he forgot to properly fasten it to the wall. The collapse is the direct result of Dave’s failure to fasten the deck to the wall. Mary’s injuries are found to have been caused by the deck’s collapse.

Mary sues Dave for her injuries.2 In turn, Dave submits the complaint to his insurer. Surely, there is coverage, at least defense, for this mishap? Bear in mind, Dave has always purchased coverage for the products-completed operations hazard! Nevertheless, the harsh reality is that Dave’s CGL insurer has no obligation to defend or respond in any way to the suit by Mary—Dave has no insurance for this claim. Why? After all, Dave did purchase products-completed operations coverage for all 10 years he was in business.

CGL Coverage Trigger

Here is the point—the CGL insuring agreement promises to pay only if bodily or property damage occurs during the policy period.3 While Dave did purchase products-completed operations coverage as part of his CGL policy, the injury to Mary occurred about 2 months after his policy was terminated. Products-completed operations coverage of the CGL is subject to and does not override this trigger requirement—even if the bodily injury or property damage does arise from the named insured’s product or completed operation.

Put another way, products-completed operations coverage does not extend the policy period—the policy must be in effect when the bodily injury or property damage occurs. It does not matter that, or even if, a CGL policy was in effect when Dave designed, built, or sold the deck. An occurrence-based CGL policy applies to the completed deck only if the bodily injury or property damage takes place during the policy period. (But see also “The Montrose Endorsement—15 Years Later” [September 2014].)

The “Wrong” Tail

The supplemental extended reporting period (SERP) or “tail” that is sometimes offered as the solution to Dave’s coverage gap simply doesn’t work. First, the SERP or tail is not available on an occurrence CGL policy. Second, even if it was available, or if Dave had purchased a claims-made CGL policy and purchased the SERP, the SERP does not apply to bodily injury or property damage that occurs during the tail or reporting period. As the name suggests, the SERP only extends the CGL policy to include claims made against an insured during the extended reporting period that result from bodily injury or property damage that took place when the policy was in effect.

Discontinued Products-Completed Operations Coverage

What if Dave continued to purchase a CGL policy for some time after retirement? As now may be obvious, this or a similar approach will close the coverage gap, at least for as long as Dave continues to renew his CGL policy. However, as seasoned practitioners know, purchasing coverage for a business that is no longer operating is not that simple. While continuing Dave’s CGL policy would provide the needed protection, insurers may refuse to provide a CGL policy once the insurer understands that Dave has stopped building decks. Even the insurer that has provided Dave with CGL insurance for 10 years may not want to continue providing coverage for Dave’s Decks once the business closes down.

This is in part due to ISO’s withdrawal of the “Discontinued Operations” classification formerly available to insurers. Even though the exposure for Dave’s Decks is actually decreasing during his retirement, the practical result is that Dave’s Decks will likely have to seek CGL coverage in the nonadmitted marketplace, usually at a cost that is greater than the premium paid when Dave was actively building decks. Nonetheless, CGL coverage must continue in force for Dave to have coverage.4

The Products-Completed Operations Hazard—Important Considerations

Now that we have established a baseline understanding of the workings of products-completed operations coverage, it is important to consider several other situations in which a better understanding of exactly what is included in the “products-completed operations hazard” (which is a defined term in the CGL policy) is necessary.

Policy Limits

One of the six CGL limits is the products-completed operations aggregate limit. Knowing the types of claims that fall within and, therefore, reduce or exhaust this aggregate limit is critical.

Policy Exclusions

Several exclusions included within the CGL policy are tied directly to the products-completed operations hazard. For example, property damage exclusion j.(6), which eliminates coverage for the cost of restoring, repairing, or replacing the named insured’s work that was incorrectly performed, does not apply to property damage that is included within the products-completed operations hazard. Exclusion l. eliminates property damage to your work if the property damage arises out of your work and is included within the products-completed operations hazard.5 In either case, whether the exclusion applies is dependent on whether the claim falls within the products-completed operations hazard.

Even certain bodily injury claims are eliminated if they fall within the products-completed operations hazard. Specifically, medical payments coverage expressly excludes any bodily injury included within the products-completed operations hazard.

Endorsement Excludes Products-Completed Operations Coverage

Based on the type of business or organization being provided CGL coverage, an insurer may exclude or the policyholder may choose not to purchase coverage for any bodily injury or property damage that falls within the products-completed operations hazard. In circumstances like these, it is crucial to understand precisely what coverage is being removed from the policy.

For example, in litigation that alleged liability on the part of handgun manufacturers and distributors for contributing to market overflow, the question before the court was whether such allegations fell within the products-completed operations hazard, as the policyholder’s CGL policy excluded products-completed operations coverage. Market overflow was an assertion that manufacturers and distributors of handguns negligently created and supplied an unlawful national market in firearms, the source of the handguns that killed and wounded plaintiffs and their loved ones.

The policyholder asserted that the alleged liability was covered even with the products-completed operations hazard exclusion because (1) the products-completed operations hazard was intended to apply only to defective products claims and (2) the actions do not allege actual injuries from the distributor’s products but rather injuries from the company’s management and strategy, thereby rendering the exclusion inapplicable.

The appeals court concluded that the allegations arose out of the policyholder’s products and fell directly within the products-completed operations hazard exclusion. The court looked closely at the definition of the products-completed operations hazard and observed that wording applied to “all bodily injury and property damage occurring away from your premises and arising out of your product …” and that the proximate cause of the plaintiffs’ injuries was firearms.

Only Products-Completed Operations Coverage Is Provided

For liability policies that are written specifically for a construction project, such as a consolidated insurance program (CIP) or “wrap-up,” it is common to provide full CGL coverage for the period of the construction and then to provide products-completed operations only coverage for some period after construction is complete.

For example, in an owner controlled insurance plan (OCIP) (a type of CIP or wrap-up), the full CGL policy may be provided for a period of 24 months—the anticipated life of the construction. The OCIP usually includes extendedcompleted operations,6 providing only completed operations coverage for an additional period beyond the policy expiration date (usually 36 to 120 months, depending on several factors, including the applicable statute of repose). As everyone enrolled in the OCIP program (e.g., owner, general contractor, and subcontractors) is relying on the OCIP liability policy to provide them protection for the entire project, including liability that may result from injuries or damage arising out of completed work, fully comprehending the specifics of what is included within the products-completed operations hazard is vital.

The Products-Completed Operations Hazard—An Overview

As previously mentioned, products-completed operations hazard is a defined term and is found in the definitions section of the CGL policy.

Must occur away from your premises—To be included within the products-completed operations hazard, the bodily injury or property damage must occur away from premises owned or rented by the named insured andarise out of “your product” or “your work.” Said differently, bodily injury or property damage that takes place on the named insured premises is not within the products-completed operations hazard (this can be amended by endorsement—See Products-Completed Operations Hazard Redefined—CG 24 07). Second, the bodily injury or property damage must arise out of “your product” or “your work,” terms also defined in the CGL.

Your product—A broadly defined term, this includes goods or products manufactured, sold, handled, distributed, or disposed of by the named insured, others trading under the named insured’s name and includes a person or organization whose business assets a named insured has acquired. Your product includes containers (but not vehicles), materials, parts, or equipment used or furnished in connection with goods or services but does not include any real property.7

Your product—warranties—For those insurers who routinely break out the boilerplate “the CGL never provides coverage for any breach of contract claim,” take note—the definition of your product specifically includes warranties and representations made with respect to the fitness, quality, durability, performance, or use of your product.

Black’s Dictionary (Seventh Edition) states:

  • Warranty
  • 2. Contracts. An express or implied promise that something in furtherance of the contract is guaranteed by one of the contracting parties; esp. the seller’s promise that the thing being sold is as represented or warranted.

Breach of warranty is a contract theory of liability, not a tort theory. Claims that allege a product caused bodily injury or property damage (to other than to the product itself) because of a breach of warranty are asserting a breach of contract claim. Breach of warranty claims, while subject to other policy terms and conditions, cannot be dismissed simply because the theory of liability is a breach of contract. The CGL policy has, for over the last 45 years,8 plainly intended to provide coverage for claims alleging bodily injury or property damage arising out of products (or completed work), even if the theory of liability is a breach of warranty. In addition to warranties, your product also includes providing or failing to provide warnings.

Not your product—Vending machines or other property rented to or located for the use of others but not sold is not considered to be your product. For example, a hardware store rents chainsaws to home owners for their personal use. If the hardware store failed to properly maintain the equipment, and the home owner was injured using the chainsaw, the home owner’s claim against the hardware store is not considered by the hardware store’s CGL insurer to be within the products-completed operations hazard. The bodily injury did not arise out of the hardware store’s product as defined in the CGL policy.

Your work—Similarly, “your work” is a broadly defined term and includes operations performed by the named insured or on the named insured’s behalf, including material, parts, or equipment in connection with the operations. Operations or work performed on behalf of the named insured means that work done by a subcontractor is still considered your work.

Also similar to your product, the definition of your work includes warranties and representations made with respect to the fitness, quality, durability, performance, or use of your work, as well as providing or failure to provide warnings or instructions. The breach of contract issue raised above applies in the same manner to your work as it does to your product.

Not Products-Completed Operations Hazard

Physical possession—Products still in the named insured’s possession are not included in the products-completed operations hazard. In other words, for a claim to be within the products-completed operations hazard, the named insured has to have given up physical possession, and the injury or damage must take place away from the named insured’s premises. In most cases, bodily injury or property damage caused by a product that takes place on the insured’s premises or that takes place while the product is still within the possession of an insured would be considered a premises or operations claim.

Completed work—The products-completed operations hazard does not apply if the work has not yet been completed or abandoned. The work completed by the policy definition earlier of the following.

  • When all the named insured’s work as required in a contract has been finished.
  • When all the work at a job-site has been completed if the named insured’s contract requires work under the same contract but at another job-site.
    • For example, Chris’s Cooling has a contract to repair the air conditioning systems for The Real Estate Group at three different office buildings. Once Chris has completed the repair of the air conditioning equipment at the first location, that job is considered to be complete. Thus, any bodily injury or property damage that may arise from that first location is included within the products-completed operations hazard, even if the other two jobs are not finished.
  • When that part of the work done at a job has been put to its intended use by someone other than another contractor or subcontractor working on the same project.
    • An example of the above involves an elevator maintenance contractor. In this example, the contractor, Lyle’s Lift Service, has a multiyear contract with a building’s property manager to maintain the building’s elevators. After performing maintenance work on a particular elevator, Lyle puts the elevator back into service for use by patrons and tenants.Any bodily injury or property damage caused by the recently maintained elevator is within the products-completed operations hazard from Lyle’s standpoint—despite the fact that the contract for maintenance of the elevators remains ongoing for all elevators in the building. Because the elevator was put back into service and thus put to its intended use, the elevator causing the bodily injury falls within the definition of the products-completed operations hazard found in Lyle’s CGL policy.

Service or repair work—An important and often confused clarification of what constitutes completed work follows the above three-part completed work test. The CGL policy states that work is considered complete even if the completed work (as defined above) may need subsequent service, maintenance, repair, or replacement. Here is another example: Bill’s Builders is constructing a 3-story building that is to be sold as 20 residential condominium units. Even though construction is still ongoing for a majority of the units, three units are sold and occupied by the owners—meaning these three units have been put to their intended use.

If Bill’s Builders is called back to repair one of the sold units to fix doors that are not properly hung, the CGL policy makes clear that the unit is still considered completed work. Bodily injury or property damage that arises from the finished unit will be included within the products-completed operations hazard.

Performing work on completed workIt is, however, important to point out that the products-completed operations hazard does not apply to an injury to the unit owner that occurs while Bill is actually in the unit adjusting the doors. Say Bill’s ladder falls over and hits the unit owner while Bill is working on the doors—this injury to the unit owner is an operations claim and not a products-completed operations claim. In other words, this paragraph does not mean (as is too often assumed) that performing operations on completed work is the same as an injuryarising out of the complete work itself.

While this may seem inconsequential, it can become a major coverage issue when the only coverage provided to a contractor is products-completed operations coverage, which is commonly the case in consolidated insurance programs or wrap-ups. Insurers who regularly provide wrap-up liability coverage generally recognize that a contractor or subcontractor may have a warranty period in which they are obligated to go back to perform service or repair work and thus amend their CGL policy accordingly. For example, an insurer may extend the policy term to provide limited operations liability coverage beyond the policy expiration for bodily injury or property damage that takes place while certain contractors are performing required repair work during the warranty period.

Other Situations Not Considered Included within the Products-Completed Operations Hazard

Transportation of property—Transporting property is generally not considered to fall within the products-completed operation hazard. An illustration: a manufacturer of plastic resin engages a common carrier to transport its product (the plastic resin) to distributors. During the trip, some of the resins escape from the common carrier’s trailer onto the highway, causing very slippery conditions that result in auto accidents and injuries to motorists. As the resin is the product of the manufacturer, resulting claims against the manufacturer would otherwise be within the products-completed operations hazard. To keep such claims within the general aggregate limit, the policy removes from the definition of products-completed operations hazard the transportation of property.

Dangerous conditions caused by loading or unloadingA noted exception to the above is a claim that is caused by the improper or negligent loading or unloading of a vehicle that is not owned or operated by the named insured. In this instance, the loading or unloading (and not the transportation) of the property is considered a completed operation.

If a Christmas tree lot ties trees to the top of the customer’s autos and that tree flies off the auto because the tree was not properly tied down, any bodily injury or property damage that results is within the products-completed operations hazard of the tree lot.

Tools and equipment—Bodily injury or property damage that is caused by the existence of tools, uninstalledequipment or abandoned or unused materials are not included within the products-completed operations hazard.

Included in general aggregate limit—Certain CGL classifications (ISO Commercial Lines Manual or CLM—ISO Classification Table) specifically note that products and completed operations are included, such as the classification Buildings or Premises—Office—Not-for-Profit Class Code: 61227 NOC (not otherwise classified). No separate premium charge is made for products-completed operations hazard for such businesses or organizations (any charge is included within the premises and operations premium), and thus any claims that would otherwise be considered products or completed operations claims are considered premises and operations claims and thus reduce the general aggregate limit.

On occasion, the “products/completed operations included” classification seems to cause confusion; some insurers contend that the intent of this classification wording is to eliminate coverage entirely for any claim that arises out of your product or your work.9 Of course, this wording does not reduce coverage; it merely states that the products-completed operations hazard does not include such claims—it does not say that no coverage applies to such claims.

Restaurants and other food vendors—The ISO Classification Table of the CLM also requires that an endorsement is attached to the CGL policy for certain classifications, such as a restaurant, to change the definition of products-completed operations hazard. The required endorsement is the Products-Completed Operations Hazard Redefined (CG 24 07), which changes the definition by removing the requirement that bodily injury or property damage takes place away from the named insureds’ premises for the claim to be included within the products-completed operations hazard. The intent is to consider food consumed on the premises to be included within the products-completed operations hazard (and within the products-completed operations aggregate limit). Therefore, a claim by a customer alleging food poisoning resulting from a meal consumed at Chef’s Best Restaurant will be included within the restaurant’s CGL products-completed operations hazard despite the fact the bodily injury from food poisoning took place on the restaurant’s premises.

As with the “products/completed operations included” classifications, some insurers wrongly contend that the Products-Completed Operations Hazard Redefined endorsement eliminates coverage for any bodily injury or property damage that arises out of the restaurant’s products. A careful reading of the endorsement reveals that the definition of products-completed operations has been expanded to include bodily injury or property damage that arises out of your products, even if the bodily injury or property damage takes place on the premises of the insured (in this case, the premises of the restaurant).

The above are two examples of the few instances in which the applicable CGL classification affects how the coverage is to apply.

Conclusion

The coverage provided for products and completed operations in the standard CGL policy seems to get short shrift. Too little attention is paid to the basics of how the coverage works within the context of the entire policy, including the requirement that any bodily injury or property damage, even if caused by an insured’s product or completed work, must take place during the policy period for coverage to apply.

It is only after this deceptively simple concept is properly understood can the more specific issues that surround the “products-completed operations hazard” be appreciated—such as how policy exclusions and other coverage endorsements affect the products-completed operations hazard.

Source: www.irmi.com


This reaction is usually based on the mistaken belief that products-completed operations coverage in effect when the product was made or sold or when the work was finished should provide protection for the insured for that product or work for the life of that product or work (e.g., forever)—regardless of whether a CGL policy is in effect when that product or work causes bodily injury or property damage.

This example sometimes goes “off the rails” as many immediately focus on the collapsed deck and begin to think about construction defects, including that the deck was defective when built, etc. Note that the only claim made against Dave is for bodily injury—Mary does not make a claim for property damage to the deck. In this example, there should be no dispute when the bodily injury took place.

If the bodily injury or property damage is cumulative or progressive—taking place over a period of months or years—determining when the bodily injury or property damage occurred is more complex. For more information, see “Trigger Theories and the CGL” (December 2008).

Failing to disclose to the insurer upon renewal of the CGL policy that an insured has ceased operations or otherwise representing to the insurer that the insured is continuing in business (when the insured is not), with the goal of continuing the CGL policy, is not a reasonable alternative. Any such representations may result in policy rescission due to material misrepresentation.

An important exception to this exclusion—the so-called subcontractor exception—applies to this exclusion and states: “This exclusion [exclusion L.] does not apply if the damaged work or the work out of which the damage arises was performed on your behalf by a subcontractor.”

Extended completed operations coverage is not an ISO policy form.

This distinction is often blurred by reference to “work product” in relation to products-completed operations coverage. Despite such terminology, “your product” does not include real property.

The comprehensive general liability Insurance policy (edition 1973) specifically granted coverage for product/work warranty claims as an exception to the contractual liability exclusion: “This insurance does not apply: (a) to liability assumed by the insured under any contract or agreement except an incidental contract; but this exclusion does not apply to a warranty of fitness or quality of the named insured’s products or a warranty that work performed by or on behalf of the named insured will be done in a workmanlike manner [italics added].

The Supreme Court of Alabama has ruled that this classification wording may negate the exclusion l.—Damage to “your work.” For more information, see “The ‘Your Work Exclusion’—A Curious View” (June 2014).


Cyber-Threat Awareness Requires Training and Vigilance

Employees need training when it comes to recognizing potential cyber threats. They should be on notice that, no matter their position within an organization, they too are responsible for doing their part in maintaining security standards and following proper reporting protocols.

Consider this real-life example. An organization in Scotland is suing an employee for failing to spot a CEO spoofing scam, but the employee claims she never received any real training in how to recognize fraudulent emails.1 Though the employee appears to have acknowledged a brief warning, this case demonstrates the need for organizations to clearly and consistently set expectations when it comes to cyber training and awareness.

When it comes to training programs, employees often express the same kind of nonchalant attitude that pervades the entirety of their organization’s mindset on cyber security. If cyber-security culture is not prioritized, employees are not going to pay particular attention to a deck of slides and a short true-or-false quiz at the end to demonstrate their “mastery” of the material. In the case of the Scottish employee, her organization insists that she clicked a box acknowledging that she had been warned about the threat of CEO spoofing. When cyber-security efforts are merely boxes to be checked, it is unclear how much more useful they are than nothing at all.

Personalized Cyber-Security Training Is Key

Cyber-security awareness and training must be personalized. Namely, employees need to be provided with the tools to develop knowledge to achieve a better understanding of the critical cyber threats they come into contact with every day. More complex technologies, newly implemented systems, and harder to understand technologies, such as cloud infrastructures, may require specialized training for specific stakeholders or responsible parties. While training may not look exactly the same for each employee, compliance with security protocols and procedures should be.

Perhaps unexpectedly, compliance with security protocols should strengthen and support an employee’s ability to think critically and have a questioning mindset. In an organizational setting, it may seem counterintuitive to expect employees to take on a critical eye. But once an employee has received training of relevant systems and procedures, a questioning employee is going to have a better chance of spotting red flags and knowing when and how to report them.

Training programs should emphasize the need for employees to trust their gut when it comes to suspicious activities and act with caution even if something seems to correlate to company policy. Recognizing the type of CEO spoofing email mentioned above is a good example.

Training must evolve and be administered with the understanding that technology changes regularly as well as your organization’s usage of technology. Just as security procedures must never be a “set it and forget it” affair, continuing education also needs to reflect policy.

Cyber Training Needs To Be Useful and a Priority

The usefulness of different training programs should also be assessed regularly. It is possible that with this sort of feedback, it would have been understood that having an employee check a box is not an effective training tool in acknowledging emerging cyber threats. Instructing employees on where to find relevant cyber-security policies is also important in ensuring compliance as well as providing a point of contact for all related questions and reporting. This responsible party may also be the individual held accountable for evaluating compliance, the usefulness of certain training programs, and assessing when changes need to be made and retraining needs to take place. Communication is key when it comes to keeping training useful and not a checked box formality.

To ensure that training remains a priority and that initiatives are funded adequately, cross-organizational communication channels need to exist. Knowing what key threats an organization faces as well as understanding which assets need to be most protected are impossible tasks without interdepartmental communication, especially with the information technology department. Cyber-security leaders within an organization must also be sure to keep upper management apprised of what is considered most important when allocating cyber-security resources. In the case of the company mentioned in this article, in-depth training sessions focusing on the “human element” of security and the threat of social engineering attacks might have prevented the disaster.

Conclusion

While the jury is still out as to whether or not a lack of adequate training or negligence is to blame in the case of the employee falling for a CEO spoofing scam, either way, it points to an increasing need for organizations to implement, and strongly document, their training and education programs for their employees. Ultimately, the effectiveness of a training program is only going to be as strong as the overarching attitude toward cyber security that an organization has. Additionally, employees need to recognize their individual responsibility for upholding their organization’s cyber-security protocols. When it comes to cyber security, everyone is a stakeholder.

1Company Sues Worker Who Fell for Email Scam,” BBC, February 5, 2019.

Source: www.irmi.com


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