Commercial Insurance Glossary
A | B | C | D | E | F | G | H | I | J | K | L | M | N | O | P | Q | R | S | T | U | V | W | X | Y | Z
![]()
Auto
In the Commercial General Liability coverage
part, an auto includes motorized vehicles meant to be used on public roads, but
not certain specifically defined mobile equipment.
Avoidable Consequences
Consequences that are caused
by lack of care on the part of an individual, and that could have been avoided
had the individual exercised proper care. Generally refers to events that occur
following a loss as the result of a person’s failure to take steps to prevent
the consequences.
Accident
An unforeseen, unintended and expected
event.
Accounts receivable insurance
Insurance against loss
of revenue that cannot be collected because accounts receivable records are
destroyed by an insured peril. Coverage commonly includes any extra expense to
recapture records and payment of interest on loans needed to cover the interim
period reduction in collections. An insured’s keeping duplicate records in safe
storage off premises is a highly recommended risk reduction technique—and the
cost of coverage is considerably reduced thereby. Insurance may be arranged to
cover electronic records as well as paper.
Actual cash value (ACV)
A method for placing value on
property as of the time of its loss or damage. ACV may be determined by market
value (the current price for a like item in the same general condition) or
replacement cost new less use depreciation (the cost of the same item brand new
minus the insured’s contribution to pay for the added life expectancy of the
property new property). The insured may generally select whichever method is
more favorable. Contrast with replacement cost.
Additional insured
One who qualifies as "insured"
under the terms of a policy even though not named as insured. Officers of a
corporation may be included as insureds under the terms of a policy written in
the name of the corporation.
Additional living expense insurance
This coverage,
found in the broad and special dwelling and homeowners forms, applies to extra
expenses necessitated by the insured’s inability to reside in the insured
dwelling because of a covered loss—for example, restaurant meals and hotel
bills. The amount is the difference between normal household expenses and the
increase.
Adjuster
A person may act either on behalf of the
insurance company or the insured in the settling a claim. Independent adjusters
represent the insurance company on a fee basis; public adjusters represent the
insured on a fee basis.
Admitted company
An insurance company that is
licensed (admitted) to conduct business within a given state.
Admitted market
The range of insurance available
through admitted companies.
Advance premium
Relates to a policy premium that
cannot be precisely determined until the end of the term. The advance premium,
also called "deposit premium," is a downpayment on what will be final
premium.
Adverse selection
The idea that the greater the
likelihood of loss, the more attractive the idea of buying insurance to cover
that loss becomes.
Advertising injury
Claim arising out of slander,
libel, copyright infringement, or misappropriation of advertising ideas.
Coverage is provided as part of coverage B of the commercial general liability
policy.
Agent
The term used for one person acting on behalf
of another in an insurance transaction.
Aggregate limit
The maximum amount an insurer will
pay under a policy in any one policy period.
Anniversary date
The anniversary of the original date
of issue of a policy as shown in the declarations.
Annual aggregate deductible
A deductible applied
annually to the total amount paid in claims during a policy period. Claims are
generally subject to a per-occurrence deductible; the aggregate is the limit
beyond which no further deductibles are applied.
Arson
The intentional setting afire of
property.
Assigned risk
A risk that may not be generally
acceptable to any insurance company but for which the law says that insurance
must be acquired. Personal auto liability is one such necessary coverage.
Insurance companies doing personal auto business in a state can be required to
accept assignment of a portion of the state’s unacceptable drivers as
insureds.
Automobile liability insurance
Insurance in which the
insurer agrees to pay all sums for which the insured is legally obligated
because of bodily injury or property damage arising from the ownership,
maintenance, or use of an auto.
Automobile medical payments
Insurance applying to the
medical, hospital, or funeral expenses of anyone injured while on or in an
insured automobile. The coverage is not dependent on liability, being triggered
simply by an accident. It may be included in either the Business Auto Policy or
the Personal Auto Policy.
Bodily Injury
In Commercial General Liability
insurance, refers to injuries to a person, as well as sickness, disease and
death.
Basic named perils
Covered perils in a property
insurance contract: fire, lightning, windstorm, civil commotion, smoke, hail,
aircraft, vehicles, explosions and riot.
Binder
An insurer’s agreement, by way of an agent, to
provide non-life insurance on the spot, pending issuance of the policy
contract.
Blanket coverage
A means of insuring various items of
property under one limit of liability.
Blanket insurance
Insurance covering multiple items
of property as a group. Covered property may be at one location or
several.
Bodily injury
A term that refers to physical injury,
sickness, or disease, or death resulting therefrom. In some jurisdictions
"bodily injury: includes emotional injury.
Bodily injury liability
Legal obligation that flows
from the injury or death of another person. This insurance is commonly limited
to bodily injury liability derived by the way of negligence, but coverage of
liability by way of contract (holding another harmless) is also
possible.
Boiler & machinery insurance
Fired vessels, steam
generators, mechanical and or electrical objects and turbines, are all examples
of "objects" that might be listed for coverage under a boiler and machinery
policy. Coverage is for damage to covered property caused by an accident to an
object identified in the policy’s schedule. Coverage includes extra expense,
automatic 90-day coverage at new locations, defense against liability claims,
and supplementary payments like those provided under public liability
policies.
Bond
A document for expressing surety. A bond engages
three entities; the "surety" (bonding company) sells the bond to the "principal"
for the purpose of paying off the party the principal will owe to the "obligee"
upon failure of the "principal" to perform some act or provide some service
under agreed terms.
Bond, surety
A surety bond is the financial
assumption of responsibility by one or more persons for fulfilling another’s
obligations.
Broad form perils
A property insurance designation
for coverage that extends beyond the basic named perils.
Broker
One who acts as the insured’s agent in
arranging insurance. A broker may also serve an the agent of an insurance
company.
Builders risk insurance
A variation of property
coverage specifically applicable to construction projects. It is commonly
written in an amount to cover the value of the structure when completed. The
premium charged takes into account that values at risk increase gradually over
the term of the policy.
Business Auto Policy (BAP)
A standardized contract
for writing liability and property coverage on commercial autos.
Business income coverage
Insurance protecting the
income derived from an insured’s business activities when curtailed peril.
Coverage includes reasonable extra the insured undertakes to expedite return to
business operations.
Business personal property
A tern relating to
"contents" of a commercial enterprise, it may include furniture, fixtures,
machinery and equipment as well as stock, all other chattels owned by the
insured, and even use interest in building improvements and
betterments.
Business Owners policy (BOP)
A package of property
and liability insurance for small and medium size businesses, the BOP owes its
origin to the success of the homeowners policy.
Cancellation; flat, pro rata, or short rate
In a
flat cancellation the full premium is returned to the insured. A pro rata
cancellation means the insurer has charged for the time the coverage was in
force. Short rate cancellation entails a penalty in excess of pro rata for early
termination.
Cargo insurance
An inland marine or ocean marine
policy covering cargo in the care, custody, or control of the
carrier.
Casualty insurance
The type of insurance concerned
with legal liability for losses caused by bodily injury to others or physical
damage to property of others.
Certificate of insurance
A written description of
insurance in effect as of the date and time of the certificate. The certificate
does not ordinarily confer any rights on the holder, i.e., the issuing insurer
does not promise to inform the holder of change in or cancellation of
coverage.
Claims-made coverage
A type of public liability
insurance that responds only to claims for injury or damage that are brought (to
the insurer) during the policy period (or during a designated extended reporting
period beyond expiration). The development was in response to "long tail"
claims, such as those related to asbestosis injury, carrying over many years and
multiple layers of coverage limits. However, most public liability policies are
written on an "occurrence" basis, covering injury or damage occurring during the
policy period even if a claim is brought months or even years
later.
Coinsurance clause
"Coinsurance" refers to the
bargain between commercial property owners and the insurance industry. The
clause in property policies encourages the property owner to gauge coverage
needs by possible, not probable, maximum loss. With $1 million at risk but a
probable maximum loss of $100,000, for example, the property owner would
probably buy $100,000 insurance and bank on avoiding the larger disaster. The
bargain offered by the insurance industry is a reduced rate per $100 of coverage
if the owner agrees to buy coverage at a specified relation (80% commonly) to
value (to possible maximum loss in other words). If the insured accepts the
bargain but events prove the amount of insurance is inadequate to the stated
coinsurance percentage, the insured becomes "co-insurer" in the same ratio as
the amount of insurance bears to the amount that should have been
carried.
Collapse
A property insurance peril, subject to its
own specific agreement in commercial property policies, which otherwise insure
on an open perils basis.
Combined Single Limit (CSL)
Liability policies
commonly offer separate limits that apply to bodily injury claims for property
damage. "50/100/25" is shorthand under such a policy for $50,00 per
person/$100,000 per accident for bodily injury claims and $25,000 for property
damage. A combined single limits policy might cover for $100,000 per covered
occurrence whether bodily injury or property damage, one person or
many.
Commercial General Liability (CGL)
The CGL policy is
an ISO form, widely used to provide commercial enterprises with premises and
operations liability coverage, products and completed operations insurance and
personal injury coverage. Premises medical payments coverage is often included
as well.
Commercial lines
A distinction marking property and
liability coverage written for business or entrepreneurial interests as opposed
to personal lines.
Commissioner of Insurance
The official in a state (or
territory) responsible for administering insurance regulation: sometimes called
the Superintended of Insurance.
Compensatory damages
The award, usually monetary,
that is intended to compensate the claimant for injury sustained.
Comprehensive physical damage (automobile)
Auto
insurance covering physical damage except collision.
Contractors equipment floater
Coverage designed for
the special needs of contractors to insure their machinery and other
equipment.
Contractual liability
Liability that does not arise
by the way of negligence but by assumption under contract. For example, in
certain leases, a tenant may assume a landlord’s liability to others unsafe
conditions on the premises. Some such assumptions are covered automatically
under the Commercial General Liability form.
Contributory negligence
A defense to a negligence
action in which it is asserted that the claimant failed to meet the standard
required for his or her own protection, and that the failure contributed to the
loss.
Covered loss
An accident, including accidental damage
by forces of nature, that brings a contract of insurance into
play.
Credit card forgery
A criminal act involving the
illegitimate of credit cards to obtain goods or money. Limited coverage for such
losses is automatically provided in most homeowners policies.
Crop Insurance
Insurance covering growing crops
against hail, wind, and fire. Protection against a broader range of perils can
often be arranged as well.
Claim
A demand to recover under an insurance policy
for loss. In Commercial General Liability insurance, a policy for loss. In
Commercial Liability insurance, the claim may be against the insured by a third
party under the insurance policy held by the insured. In this case, claims are
referred to the insurer to handle on behalf of the insured in accordance with
the term of the policy.
Claims-Made Policy
In Commercial General Liability
insurance, a policy that pays for events occurring during a specified period and
for which a claim is made during the policy period, subject to stipulated
limitations and extensions.
Commercial General Liability Insurance
A line of
insurance available to commercial organizations and providing coverage on behalf
of insureds for sums they may be legally required to pay to others as a result
of the insureds’ actions or negligence. May include coverage for bodily injury,
property damage, personal injury, advertising injury, medical payments, and
certain supplemental payments specified in the policy.
Commercial Package Policy (CPP)
The Insurance
Services Office (ISO) commercial lines policy that contains two or more lines of
insurance or two or more coverage parts. It will include some forms and/or
endorsements that are common to all lines of insurance or coverage parts, as
well as the individual forms and endorsements required for the individual
coverages selected. In order to quality as a CPP, the policy must include two or
more of these coverage parts: Commercial General Liability, various other
liability coverage parts, Commercial Property, Commercial Crime, Commercial
Inland Marine, Boiler and Machinery, Farm or Commercial Auto. Individual
insurers may have similar commercial packages with different
requirements.
Contract
A legal agreement between two or more
parties. An insurance policy is a contract.
Coverage
In insurance, the guarantee to pay for
specific losses as provided under the terms of the policy. Coverage means the
same as protection and is often used synonymously with the word
"insurance."
Cross Liability Coverage
In the event of a claim by one insured for which another insured covered by the
same policy may be held liable, this endorsement covers the insured against whom
the claim is made in the same manner as if separate policies had been issued.
However, it does not operate to increase the insurance company's overall limit
of liability.
Debris removal clause
A consequential coverage
commonly included in direct loss policies. For example, fire policies limited
recovery for the insured’s cost of removing the debris after a covered fire. Not
to be confused with "removal."
Declaration page
That part of a property or liability
insurance policy that discloses information pertinent to the coverage promised
including names, addresses, limits, locations, term, premium, forms, and so on.
The same information, perhaps in a shorthand version, is contained as well in
the daily.
Deductible
The part of the loss that is to be borne
by the insured; it comes off the top of any payment from the
insurer.
Deposit premium
When the price of insurance is tied
to fluctuating values or costs that cannot be known until the end of the policy
period, inventory or payroll are two common examples, a deposit or provisional
premium or estimated premium may be charged at the outset of a policy with final
adjustment to come at the end of the term.
Depreciation
A property ages and becomes worn it
often loses value and that has to be taken into account in any property
insurance that covers loss of actual cash value.
Driver Other Car (DOC) endorsement
A business auto or
garage policy endorsement providing coverage for named individuals while driving
non-owned autos in situations related to the business of the
insured.
Earned premium
The amount of policy premium that
has been earned at any point in time from inception of term to the end. A
disproportionate amount will have been "earned" during the early days of
contract that is subject to short rate cancellation.
Effective date
The date shown in the declarations of
policy upon which coverage is to take effect.
Employee dishonesty coverage
Insurance protecting
employers from loss due to theft by their employees.
Employers liability insurance
A feature of standard
workers compensation policies, this coverage applies to liability that may be
imposed on an employer outside the provisions of a worker compensation
law.
Employers non-ownership liability
Employers who buy
commercial auto coverage on a basis other than "any auto" have this exposure
whenever an employee uses his or her own auto on the employer’s
behalf.
Employment practices liability
Coverage against
allegations of illegal or discriminatory hiring firing practices, sexual
harassment of employees, an so on.
Endorsement
An amendment to a policy
form.
Errors and omissions coverage
A type of professional
liability insurance protecting the insured against claims alleging bodily injury
or property damage caused by the professional or technical incompetence of the
insured.
Excess insurance
Coverage that applies on top of
underlying insurance that is primary, i.e., that pays until its coverage limit
is exhausted at which point that excess coverage takes over.
Excess or surplus lines market
The range of insurance
available through non-admitted insurers, i.e., insurance companies that are not
licensed in a particular state or territory. Specific provisions of state or
territorial law control placements.
Experience
A record of losses.
Experience modification
The rising or lowering of
premiums under term of an experience rating plan.
Extended period of indemnity
A time of recovery of
proved business income loss after physical property is restored and business
reopened. The 30-day extension of business income forms may be extended by
endorsement.
Excess Insurance
Insurance coverage that pays only
after other insurance, called primary insurance, has been
exhausted.
Exclusion
Anything specifically stated in an
insurance policy as not covered by the policy.
Farm Owners-ranch owners policy
A "homeowners"
type package policy adapted to include farm and ranch exposures.
Fiduciary liability insurance
The insurance covers
claims arising from a breach of the responsibilities or duties imposed on a
benefit administrator, or a negligent act, error, or omission of the
administrator.
Fire
Combustion evidenced by a flame or glow.
Insurance distinguishes between a "hostile" fire (one out of bounds) and
"friendly" fire (such as that contained within the fire box of a
stove).
Fire department service charge
A fee that may be
imposed by a fire department for responding to a call. Most fire coverage
agreements include indemnification provisions for such
eventualities.
Fire legal liability
Public liability policies
routinely exclude coverage for damage to property in an insured’s care, custody,
or control. This leaves a big gap in a tenant’s coverage, a gap partially filled
by an exception in the commercial general liability policy that restores limited
coverage for fire damage to the landlord’s building. Perhaps the best benefit of
the exception is to call attention to the exposure so arrangement can be made
for broader coverage at appropriate limits.
First named insured
An insurance policy may have more
than one party named as insured. In such cases, the first named insured attends
to policy "housekeeping," i.e., pays premium, initiates (or receive notice of)
cancellation, or calls for interim changes in the contract. This is spelled out
in commercial policies in the "common policy conditions."
Floater
An inland marine form covering movable
property wherever located within territorial limits.
Flood insurance
Flood insurance, like earthquake
coverage, is usually only of interest to those relatively few whose property is
exposed. Consequently, losses among this small group will be high and premiums
can be prohibitive. However, in 1968 the Federal government stepped in to help
property owners in designated "flood plains" with the National Flood Insurance
Act of 1968. Coverage is not only available, but may even be required to obtain
financing financing for exposed properties.
Fraud
The intentional perversion of the truth in
order to mislead someone into parting with something of value.
Gap coverage
Insurance for a lessee designed to
cover the difference in selling price between a vehicle’s actual cash value, and
the payout left on a lease.
Garage policy
One of the early package policies, it
is written for automobile dealers and may include liability for garage
operations, automobile operations, physical damage coverage on garage owned
autos, bailees coverage on customers cars, and auto and premises medical
payments coverage.
Garagekeepers liability
A bailee coverage applying to
automobiles. Commonly included in garage policies, it may be written to provide
coverage for limited perils or for comprehensive physical damage, with or
without collision damage coverage. Coverage may be expressed as covering the
legal liability of the garagekeeper or amended to cover on a direct basis, as
primary insurance or excess.
Glass insurance
Commercial property form that covers
plate glass, glass signs, lettering, etc.
Hired auto
A nonowned auto that may be borrowed as
well as rented or leased by the insured. Personal auto policy insureds are
covered automatically for hired autos, but business auto policy insureds may not
be.
Hold harmless agreement
A contractual assumption by
one party of the liability exposure of another. Lease agreements, for example,
commonly require the tenant to hold the landlord harmless for bodily injury to
property damage experienced by others on the premises.
Home Owners insurance
An early and hugely successful
example of "packaged" property and liability insurance. A mid-twentieth century
insurance development was introduction of the so-called "multi-line era" in
which insurers became empowered to write both property and liability forms of
insurance, making way for the first packaging of these coverages within a single
policy.
Indemnity
A fundamental concept governing
insurance: compensation for loss or injury sustained.
Independent agent
A "retailer" of insurance who, by
contractual arrangement with a number of insurance companies, sells, and
services property and liability insurance. The independent agent "owns" the
policy information and expiration dates of his client’s coverage and thus
controls renewals and their placement.
Inflation guard endorsement
An endorsement attached
to an insurance policy whereby the limits of liability on a piece of property
are increased on a regular basis by a certain percentage in order to offset
increasing building costs associated with inflation.
Inland marine insurance
Property insurance signaling
broad coverage of properties exposed to the transportation peril and those
subject to being used or kept at a location other than the insured’s customary
premises. Eligible property is identified in the so-called "Nationwide
Definition of Marine Insurance."
Insurable risk
The exposure to significant,
measurable accidental loss from identifiable perils. The exposure, while not
catastrophic, must be shared by a sufficient number of potential insureds so
that the cost of loss for one can be measured and affordably shared throughout
the market.
Insurance
A mechanism whereby risk of financial loss
is transferred from individual, company, organization, or other entity to an
insurance company.
Insurance policy
The document containing the contract
between the insured and the insurer which defines the right and duties of the
contracting parties.
L
A | B | C | D | E | F | G | H | I | J | K | L | M | N | O | P | Q | R | S | T | U | V | W | X | Y | Z
Loss experience
What the loss history has been on a
particular line or book of business.
Loss exposure
A set of circumstances presenting the
possibility of loss, whether or not the loss actually occurs.
Marine insurance
Insurance primarily concerned
with transportation exposures and property that is commonly moved around from
place to place. The field is divided between inland marine and ocean
marine.
Mobile Equipment
In the Commercial General Liability
coverage forms, refers to certain carefully and specifically described vehicles
for use on land. Some such vehicles are self-propelled while others are not.
Some are used only when attached to other vehicles or to provide mobility to
certain equipment. Some are intended for use on public roads while others are
not.
Medical malpractice
Type of insurance protecting
physicians, surgeons, nurses, and other medical practitioners against claims
alleging failure to perform.
Merit rating
A form of auto rating in which an
insured’s past experience as well as anticipated experience is taken into
account when arriving at a rate.
Minimum premium
An insurer’s lowest charge for an
insurance policy.
Misrepresentation
Generally, misstatement of facts
made on an application for insurance. May also be misstatement of coverage made
by an agent to an insured.
Monoline policy
An insurance policy covering one
subject of insurance, as opposed to a combination of multiline
policy.
Named insured
The party of parties specifically
named as insured in the insurance contract. Others may have claim on the
coverage of a policy by way of internal provisions, but any such right is by way
of the agreement between the named insured and the insurance
company.
Named insured
The individual or organization named in
the declaration of an insurance policy as the insured, as opposed to someone who
may have an interest in the coverage, but is not named in the
policy.
Named Perils
A formal and specific listing of perils
covered in a policy providing property insurance. A policy covering for damage
by fire is said to cover for "the named peril" of fire.
Nonowned auto
This term signifies an auto that is
neither owned, hired, nor borrowed by the insured under a commercial auto
policy. Employees’ cars used in company business are commonly classified this
way. The employer’s auto liability cover for use of nonowned autos is covered by
entry of symbol 1 ("any auto") or symbol 9 ("nonowned autos") on the declaration
page.
Occurrence
In general, an event that triggers
coverage under any policy. Specifically, an event that triggers coverage under
an occurrence-based liability policy. Such a policy covers injury or damage that
occurs during the policy period even if claim is brought months or even years
after the policy has expired.
Off premises cover
Commercial property policies
commonly established a small coverage limit that applies to property temporarily
away from the insured’s place of business.
Occurrence Policy
In Commercial General Liability
insurance, a policy that pays for events that occur during its policy term,
regardless of when a claim is filed. That is, an expired occurrence policy will
pay a valid claim even if the claim is made years later, provided that the event
occurred while the policy was in effect.
Package policy
Any combination of insuring
agreements that combines property and casualty coverages. Homeowners, business
owners, and garage policies are examples.
Peril
A potential cause of loss.
Personal liability insurance
Insurance for
individuals or members of a household offering protection against claims by
third parties. (outsiders) alleging bodily injury or property damage due to
negligence.
Personal lines
Insurance covering the liability and
property damage exposures of private individuals and their households. Contrast
with "commercial lines."
Products and completed operations liability
The
liability exposure of the manufacturer whose malfunctioning products may cause
injury or property damage or of the contractors whose failed structures or
projects may do the same. Coverage of the exposure is a feature of the
commercial general liability policy. The insurance does not in any way
constitute a guarantee of either the insured’s product or work. Contrast with
"premises and operations liability.."
Professional liability
A form of errors and omissions
insurance, (sometimes called "malpractice" coverage of errors alleged against
those in the healing and legal professions). Arbitrarily it seems, "error and
omissions" is the term applied most often to insurance covering liability for
mistakes in matters affecting property, i.e., coverage for "Insurance Agents
E&O," "Architects E&O while "professional liability" is used in
reference to coverages such as "Druggists Professional Liability," Physicians
and Surgeons Professional Liability," and "Lawyers Professional
Liability."
Proximate cause
That event which, in an unbroken
sequence, results in direct physical loss under an insurance policy. For
example, wind is the proximate cause of loss when a windstorm blows out a window
that in turn topples a lit candle that sets fire to a structure and burns it
down.
Pure risk
The only consideration is the possibility
of loss. Contrast with "speculative risk."
Products-Completed Operations Hazard
Refers to bodily
injury and property damage that occur somewhere other than the insured’s
premises, and involve the insured’s products or work, subject to the limitations
and parameters specified in the Commercial General Liability coverage
forms.
Property Damage
In the Commercial General Liability
coverage forms, refers to physical damage to tangible property and to loss of
use tangible property, whether or not physically damaged.
R
A | B | C | D | E | F | G | H | I | J | K | L | M | N | O | P | Q | R | S | T | U | V | W | X | Y | Z
Retroactive date
The date that defines the extent of
coverage in time under claims-made liability policies. Claims resulting from
occurrences prior to the policy’s stated retroactive date are
excluded.
Risk management
The process of handling pure risk by
way of reduction, elimination, or transfer of risk, with the latter commonly
achieved through insurance.
Schedule
List of items on a policy declaration,
sometimes also showing descriptions and values.
Special form
In contrast to the named perils forms in
property insurance, those forms that list specific perils for coverage, the
special form contract covers simply risk of direct physical loss, relying on
exclusions to delimit an define the protection intended.
Split limits
As in auto insurance, where rather than
one liability amount applying on a per-accident basis, separate amounts apply to
bodily injury and property damage liability.
Umbrella liability
A liability contract with high
limits covering over top of primary liability coverages and, subject to
deductible, covering exposures otherwise uninsured.
Underinsured motorists coverage
Coverage for the
insured and passengers whenever the at-fault driver in an accident has auto
liability insurance with lesser limits than the insured’s. This coverage lies
atop "uninsured motorists coverage" or atop the at-fault driver’s low limit
automobile liability insurance and provides the insured and passengers with
protection equal (usually) to the insured’s own automobile liability
cover.
Uninsurable risk
An uninsurable risk is one which is
literally uninsurable because loss is certain rather than
possible.
Vacant property
Once defined as devoid of
occupants or contents, a stricter definition is being applied as more and more
communities find older buildings of three and four stories that are only one
quarter occupied. Property policies impose limitations on coverage of "vacant"
building so that (changing) definition of vacant property is quite
important.
Vicarious liability
The condition arising where one
person is responsible for the actions of another, as a parent is often held
responsible for the vandalism damage a minor child does to a
school.
Waiver of subrogation
An insurer has the right of
subrogation; however, it may waive that right through this method.
Wear and tear exclusion
A common heading for an "all
risks" exclusion relating to a group of events that do not represent risk at
all. Property will become worn out and torn; it will rust, settle, become
rotted, infested, marred, scratched, etc. It is easy to distinguish however
between the marring that occurs over time (excluded) and marring that occurs
when a concrete block is dropped into a fine wooden table.
Workers compensation insurance
Coverage that conforms
to the workers compensation laws of the states in which it written.
Workers Compensation and Employers Liability
Insurance
A type of liability insurance not included in the Commercial
General Liability coverage part. Workers Compensation makes benefits payable for
injuries to, disability or death of an employee without regard to liability.
Employers Liability covers the common-law liability of an employer for injuries
to an employee. Because these coverages are related specifically to
employer-employee relationships, they are not characterized as general
liability.
X
A | B | C | D | E | F | G | H | I | J | K | L | M | N | O | P | Q | R | S | T | U | V | W | X | Y | Z
Y
A | B | C | D | E | F | G | H | I | J | K | L | M | N | O | P | Q | R | S | T | U | V | W | X | Y | Z
Z
A | B | C | D | E | F | G | H | I | J | K | L | M | N | O | P | Q | R | S | T | U | V | W | X | Y | Z