Protect Yourself And Make Sure You're Getting The Insurance You Contract For
Any discussion of your project is going to involve insurance. Whether you’re naming someone as an additional insured or being named as one is a part of every construction project. Making sure that you get what you want is not as easy as you might think. And the recent case of United Stationers Supply Co. v. Zurich American Ins. Co. et al, (Illinois, Doc. No. 1-07-2779) is proof that you need to pay attention to what you’ve contracted for and what you’ve received as proof that those obligations have been fulfilled.
In this case, the plaintiff sought a declaration from the court that the insurance company for its general contractor was required to defend and indemnify it after an employee of the company was injured while working on a construction project to replace a roof at the plaintiff’s plant. The injured worker alleged he was supervised and managed by the general contractor and injured while using the general contractor’s equipment. The employee had sued the general contractor and the general in turn had sued the plant owner (the plaintiff in this action) for contribution. The plaintiff requested that the insurance company that supplied a commercial general liability policy to the general contractor defend and indemnify the plaintiff in the underlying injury action and the insurance company denied that it had any obligation to do so. The parties filed an action seeking a declaration that their version of the obligations of the insurance company was the correct one and the lower court found that the insurance company had no duty to defend or indemnify the plaintiff.
The reasons for that lack of duty are important to anyone entering a contract related to a
construction project.
The manner in which the First District made its findings is attributable to the vague nature of the contract. As is usually the case, that ambiguity provides a learning point.
With regard to the fact that the plaintiff was named on the certificate of insurance for the CGL policy, but not on the actual endorsement to the policy or required by contract to be named as an additional insured for the policy, the court pointed out something you will likely see on all your certificates. Take a look at this sample certificate, particularly the language in the upper right hand corner:
This certificate is issued as a matter of information only and confers no rights upon the certificate holder. This certificate does not amend, extend or alter the coverage afforded by the policies below.
The court looked to that language and applied it to the coverage in this matter finding that the certificate did not alter the coverage and that the specific language put the plaintiff on notice that coverage is governed by the terms of the insurance policy and not the certificate. Remember, the certificate isn’t the policy and the endorsement needs to be clear.
Second, the court found that none of the contractual language implied that the plaintiff would be added as an additional insured to the CGL policy.
With this reasoning in mind the court found:
Based on the foregoing, we find as a matter of law that United Stationers is not an additional insured under the CGL policy because: (1) United Stationers is not specifically listed as an additional insured in the policy; (2) the construction contract requiring D.C. Taylor to purchase insurance on behalf of United Stationers did not specifically require the purchase of a commercial general liability policy; (3) there is no evidence of intent by the parties that United Stationers was to be added as an additional insured; and (4) the disclaimer language in the certificate of insurance put United Stationers on notice that the CGL policy language governed coverage of additional insureds.
Because the contract was not clear, and the certificate disclaimed any change to liability, the plaintiff was not covered under the policy.
As a side note, this is a small difference between the new ConsensusDocs and the AIA 201 – 2007 general conditions. The ConsensusDocs 200 uses specific names for the types of policies required by the contract, i.e. CGL, Employer’s Liability, Business Automobile Liability, and does not require that the parties name anyone as an additional insured, but offers the option of selecting additional insured coverage in Section 10.5. The AIA 201 identifies the types of claims against which the contractor should have coverage (Section 11.1.1) and requires that the owner be named in the commercial liability coverage as a default (Section 11.1.4). Both contracts require that certificates be furnished to the owner, but under the present case, a certificate may not be enough.
The lessons are simple for a company looking to ensure legally binding coverage on their construction project in
1) Contracts should mandate that every type of insurance required is named in the contract, including terms like “commercial general liability” or others describing the coverage needed with specificity.
2) Request that you be named on the endorsement and get a copy of the endorsement or make sure it has language sufficiently broad enough to include you as someone who has required the insured to name them as an additional insured – not just requesting a certificate of insurance.