The General Liability (Public Liability) Policy is designed to pay other people (third parties) for claims that you and/or your company may be liable for. Keep in mind that this policy has exclusions, which means you may not have coverage for some common exposures in construction such as pollution among other things. Keep in mind that if it is excluded on your General liability policy, it is because you can purchase the coverage elsewhere. Consult with your agent to be sure everything you want coverage actually is!
General Liability policy pays OTHER PEOPLE. It almost never pays you or your company. If you want your tools covered for example, you would need an Inland Marine policy.
The Commercial General Liability Policy provides the insurance protection needed to pay damages for bodily injury or property damages for which the insured is legally responsible. The policy provides coverage for Liability arising from personal injury and advertising injury. Coverage for medical expense is also provided. The policy also covers accidents occurring on the premises or away from the premises. Coverage is provided for injury or damages arising out of goods or products made or sold by the named insured. The insured is the named insured and the employees of the named insured. However, several individuals and organizations, other than the named insured, may be covered, depending upon certain circumstances specified in the policy. In addition to the limits, the policy provides supplemental payments for attorney fees, court costs and other expenses associated with a claim or the defense of a Liability suit.
There are two commercial General Liability coverage forms available, the occurrence form and the claims-made form. Both forms are somewhat identical in the coverages offered. The main difference is in the way claims are handled under the two forms. It is RARE to have a “Claims Made” General Liability policy in construction, but they are out there. Beware that they are very cheap your first year (for a reason). We have a brief description about Claims-Made general Liability at the bottom of this page. The following terms reflect both forms.
These are common terms you will see listed in the policy:
General Aggregate – The General Aggregate Limit is the most money the insurer will pay for all claims occurring during the policy term.
Each Occurrence – Each occurrence is considered to be an accident, which could include continuous or repeated exposure to the same harmful conditions. An occurrence can also be a sudden event, or a result of a long term series of events.
Premises/Operations- Coverage is provided for damages arising out of ownership or occupancy of the insured premises when not maintained in a reasonable manner. This also covers damages arising out of operations performed by the insured business.
Products/Completed Operations – Products coverage is provided for damages arising out of products manufactured, sold, handled or distributed by the insured. Completed Operations covers damages occurring after operations have been completed or abandoned, or after an item is installed or built and released for its intended purpose.
Medical Expense Limit – Medical payments coverage pays medical expenses resulting from bodily injury caused by an accident on premises owned or rented by the insured, or locations next to such property, or when caused by the insured’s operations. These payments are made without regard to the Liability of the insured. THIS IS NOT MEDICAL INSURANCE FOR YOUR EMPLOYEES! This is typically used to cover “slip and fall” type claims that occur near your jobsite to people who do not work for you or are related to the work being done.
Fire Damage Limit – The fire damage limit provides coverage for fire damage caused by negligence on the part of the insured to premises rented to the named insured. If a fire occurs because of negligence of the insured and causes damage to property not rented to the insured, coverage would be provided under the occurrence limit.
Personal Injury – Personal Injury means injury other than bodily injury. Coverage is provided for injury resulting from offenses such as false arrest, malicious prosecution, detention or imprisonment, the wrongful entry into, wrongful eviction from and other acts of invasion, or rights of private occupancy of a room. Coverage for libel and slander is also provided in the policy.
Advertising Injury – This coverage pays for damages done in the course of oral or written advertisement that disparages, libels or slanders a person’s or organization’s goods, products or services. Coverage for these offenses is provided under advertising injury coverage only if they occur during the course of advertising the named insured’s own goods, products or services.
Do you Subcontract most of your work?
If you subcontract work it is important to understand that you are ultimately responsible for the actions and work performed by your subcontractor. Should a subcontractors operations or products give rise to a Liability claim, you may be named in the ensuing lawsuit – meaning that your insurance company will be called upon to defend you. Additionally if the subcontractor carries “inadequate” insurance, your insurance company may have to pay the claim.
To protect yourself (and your insurance company) any subcontractor of yours should maintain Liability insurance as follows: At a minimum you should require $500,000 per occurrence and $1,000,000 General Aggregate however $1,000,000 per occurrence and $2,000,000 is more typical. In addition, the subcontractors General Liability insurance company should be rated “A” or better by A.M. Best. Failure to maintain these limits could cause additional charges to you at time of audit.
Claims Made Form – What is it?
The occurrence form covers bodily injury or property damage claims that occur during the policy term, regardless of when the claim is reported. The claims-made policy form only covers claims made against the insured during the policy term. A claim made after the policy expires is not covered by a claims-made policy unless the claim is covered by an extended reporting period. The claims-made policy will only have the extended reporting period.
These are terms you will ONLY see in a “Claims Made” General Liability policy:
Basic Extended Reporting Period (Basic Tail) – This coverage is provided automatically without an additional premium charge if coverage is canceled, not renewed, or the insurer renews with a later retroactive date. The basic extended reporting period starts at the end of the policy period and last for five years for claims made against the insured within the five year period and reported to the insurer within 60 days after the end of the policy period.
Supplemental Extended Reporting Period (Supplemental Tail) – The supplemental extended reporting period is available under the same circumstances as the basic one. However, it becomes effective only if the named insured makes a written request within 60 days after termination of the policy period and the additional premium is paid. The supplemental extended reporting begins when the basic one ends, and it continues forever. It cannot be canceled by the insured or insurer. The supplemental tail endorsement would provide coverage for claims reported to the insurer within sixty days after the end of the policy period but did not result in a claim being made against the insured until after the end of the five year policy period.
Other types of occurrence or offenses that are unknown by the insured and therefore not reported within the sixty days after the end of the policy period could also be covered by the supplemental tail. When the tail is purchased the policies General aggregate limit and the products/completed operations aggregate limit is reinstated.
Retroactive Date
The retroactive date shown in the policy declarations is the same as the inception date, or the retroactive date can be a date prior to the inception date. A policy can also be written with no retroactive date.