(September 2023)
Collapsible Index Bodily Injury and Property Damage Liability Coverages Personal and Advertising Injury Liability Coverage |
An aviation general liability policy covers the liability
exposure of various commercial aviation operations, such as (but not limited
to) airports, fixed-base operators, aircraft service operations, aircraft
manufacturers, and flight schools.
This coverage analysis is based on a review of coverages
that should be expected on an aviation policy as there is no standard policy
form. Whenever non-standard coverage forms are used, it is possible that
switching coverage among carriers could result in an unintentional reduction of
coverage. It is important to make thorough policy comparisons.
Insuring Agreement
The insurer pays all sums that the insured becomes legally
obligated to pay as damages because of bodily injury or property damage
resulting from aviation operations. The insurer has the right and duty to
defend any suit seeking these damages.
The insurance applies only to bodily injury and property
damage that happen within the covered territory and during the policy period.
Bodily injury includes claims for care, loss of services or death resulting from
such injury.
Exclusions
The following exclusions apply:
There is no coverage for bodily injury or property damage involving any of the following
situations.
1. Losses that are expected
or intended from the standpoint of the insured. (This exclusion does not apply
to injury resulting from the use of reasonable force to protect persons or
property).
2. Any loss an insured must
pay because the responsibility for the damage was assumed under a contract or
agreement.
3. A loss involving allegations
that the insured caused or contributed to the intoxication of any person;
furnishing of alcoholic beverages to a person under the legal drinking age or
under the influence of alcohol; or any statute, ordinance or regulation
relating to sale, gift, distribution, selling, serving or furnishing alcoholic
beverages.
There is an exception. This
exclusion does not apply if the insured is not in the business of selling,
distributing servicing, furnishing, or manufacturing liquor. This exception
applies even if the insured has a tenant who IS in an alcohol-related business.
4. Loss involving the
conduct of any air meet, contest or exhibition that is permitted, sponsored or
in which an insured is a participant. This exclusion doesn't apply to
stationary displays located in public access areas.
5. Any loss arising out of
the ownership, maintenance, use or entrustment to others of any aircraft, auto
or watercraft owned or operated by or rented or loaned to any insured. This
exclusion does not apply to any of the following:
·
Auto or watercraft while on premises
·
Auto or watercraft responding to an aviation
emergency
·
Watercraft liability assumed under an insured
contract.
Note: "Insured contract" is a term that is typically
defined in a given policy, so the exception would only apply to situations that
comply with an applicable definition.
6. Loss related to any of
the following:
·
Transportation of mobile equipment by an auto
owned or rented to an insured
·
Use of mobile equipment in racing or stunt
activities that are prearranged – including all practices and preparation for
the event.
Arnie’s
Air Corral is a private strip which specializes in package delivery. Two
linemen have a friendly rivalry over who is the best at loading cargo. They
decide on a race to settle the question. During the race to load packages,
they collide, resulting in property damage and injuries. Scenario 1: The race is a spontaneous one between only the
two of them. The loss is covered. Scenario 2: The date is set for the race and others are
informed of the event. The loss is NOT covered because it was pre-arranged. |
|
7. Loss resulting from
ownership, maintenance or use of grandstands, bleachers or observation
platforms is not covered. An exception exists for observation decks or
promenades that are components of permanent structures that are located on the
insured's premises.
8. Loss related to lodging
accessible or made available to the general public.
9. Loss involving swimming
pools.
10. Loss connected to an
insured's operation of a control tower.
There is no coverage for property damage to:
1. Property that is owned,
rented or occupied by an insured.
2. Premises that has been sold,
given away or abandoned, if property damage arises out of any part thereof
unless the property is the work of the insured and has never been occupied or
rented out by the insured.
3. Property that has been loaned
out by the insured to other parties.
4. The particular part of
real property on which the insured or contractors/subcontractors hired by the
insured are performing operations when the damage is a result of that work.
Example: The
owner of |
|
5. The particular part of
any property that must be restored, repaired, or replaced because work of the
insured was incorrectly performed unless assumed by a sidetrack agreement or
included in the products-completed operations hazard.
6. Any aircraft that is being
maintained (such as stored) or repaired by an insured.
7. An insured’s product.
8. Property that is
protected under a products-completed operations coverage part.
9. Impaired property or
property that is defective or that is affected by an inherent, dangerous
condition.
10. Property when the loss
is created by an insured's failure or delay to comply with an agreement.
11. Property when the loss
has any connection with an insured's product or work when the insured either
knew about or suspected a problem with that work or product.
Items 3, 4, 5 and 6 above don’t
apply to liability assumed within a sidetrack agreement.
There is no coverage for bodily injury:
1. To an employee of the
insured (including the insured's spouse or relatives) when the BI is related to
the insured's employment.
|
Example:
Chesterson Industries owns a helicopter that the president frequently uses
for business trips. The president realizes that he left his briefcase in the
copter and he tells his administrative assistant to retrieve it and to hurry
since he’s going to an important meeting. The assistant gets the briefcase
and stumbles out of the copter, severely injuring herself. Her injuries would
not be eligible for coverage. |
2. That should be handled
under a workers compensation, disability benefits or unemployment compensation
law.
This coverage pays sums that the insured becomes legally
obligated to pay as damages because of personal injury or advertising injury
for which insurance applies resulting from aviation operations. The insurer has
the right and duty to defend any suits.
The amount that the insurer will pay is limited as described
in the declarations. The carrier's duty to defend ends when the insurer has
used up the applicable limit of liability under Bodily Injury, Property Damage,
Personal Injury and Advertising Injury or Medical Expenses Liability. Types of
personal injury that do not qualify for coverage include advertising,
publishing, broadcasting, or telecasting performed by the insured. Eligible
acts of advertising injury refer to advertising the insured’s goods, products,
or services.
Note: ANY eligible
offense must be committed in the coverage territory during the policy year and
arise out of the named insured’s operations.
Exclusions
Insurance does not apply to personal injury or advertising
injury arising out of any of the following:
·
Oral or written publication of material done by
or at the direction of the insured with knowledge of its falsity.
·
Oral or written publication of material whose
first publication took place before the beginning of the policy period.
·
Willful violation of a penal statute or ordinance
committee by or with the consent of the insured.
·
Assumed liability in a contract or agreement.
·
Participation in any contest or exhibition
(including sponsorship) than static displays in public access areas.
Other incidents that are ineligible for coverage are advertising
injury arising out of:
·
Breach of contract
Note: An exception exists for claims that an insured has
misappropriated advertising ideas under an implied contract.
·
Goods, products, or services that don't meet
quality or performance expectations.
·
Errors in pricing goods, products, or services.
·
Offenses committed by an insured whose business
is advertising, broadcasting, publishing, or telecasting.
The insurer pays medical expenses as described for bodily injury
caused by an accident and resulting from the insured’s operations. However,
coverage is contingent on whether the accident takes place in the coverage
territory and during the policy period. Further, it only applies to expenses
that are reported to the insurer within one year of the date of the accident.
The injured person must agree to be examined by an insurer-approved physician.
Payments will be made regardless of fault. They may not
exceed the applicable limit of insurance. Eligible expenses include first aid at
the time of the accident; necessary medical, surgical, x-ray and dental
services, prosthetic devices; and necessary ambulance, hospital, professional, nursing,
and funeral services.
Exclusions
The following are ineligible expenses:
·
Expenses incurred by an insured (for that
insured's injuries)
·
Those incurred by any tenant or hireling of an
insured
·
Expenses suffered by persons who regularly
occupy the premises where the injury takes place
|
Example: Harry
has a small flight school located in a converted, multi-plane area hangar
which includes two areas that were remodeled into living space. A lifelong
friend, Perri, lives in one of the converted spaces. Harry turns in a $2,700
claim for medical costs he paid after Perri was injured. A propeller blade
that Harry was planning on cleaning had been lying on the hangar floor and
Perri tripped over it, breaking her leg. Harry's insurer denies the claim because
the fall had occurred in the area occupied by Perri. |
·
Incurred by anyone when the payments are a type that
should be covered under a workers compensation, disability benefits or a
similar law
·
Incurred by persons injured during athletic
activity
·
Expenses related to an injury involve the
products-completed operations hazard
·
Any bodily injury that is excluded under bodily
injury or property damage liability
The
insurer pays those sums that the insured becomes legally obligated to pay as
damages because of loss to aircraft that happens while such aircraft is in the care,
custody, or control of the insured for safekeeping, storage, service, or
repair. The coverage also applies to damage or injury and insured causes to
other property or persons that arise out of ownership, rental or use of the
general premises where the insured runs its operation as well as to damage or
injury related to the insured’s defective work.
The insurer has the right and duty to defend any suit.
The coverage is subject to a deductible shown in the declarations
unless the loss results from fire or explosion or while the aircraft is
dismantled and being transported.
Insurance applies to damages because of loss to aircraft
only if the loss takes place in the coverage territory and it occurs during the
policy period. The coverage extends to liability claims involving an aircraft's
loss of use.
Example:
Jabberwock Air Mechanix is insured with a Hangarkeepers Liability policy. A
few weeks ago, Jessy Jabberwock was working on the landing gear on a
customer's plane. A wheel had been removed and the plane was supported by a jack.
While moving an empty barrel used for cleaning solvent, Jessy loses her grip,
the barrel falls over, rolls across the floor and crashes into the jack
supporting the plane. The jack falls over and the plane's landing assembly
smashes down. The irate customer sues Jabberwock for
more than $4,700 in damages. Jabberwock's policy responds to the claim. |
Exclusions
The insurance does not apply to damage to aircraft:
·
Owned, rented, or leased by the named insured or
loaned to the named insured
Example: Jabberwock
Air Mechanix is insured with a Hangarkeepers Liability policy. A few weeks
ago, a leak developed from a barrel filled with solvent used to clean tools
and parts. A spark from some welding equipment starts a fire that destroys half
of their Hangar as well as severely damages a Cessna that was inside the
hangar. The Cessna belonged to a friend who lent it to Jessy Jabberwock to
use on her family’s vacation. Their Hangarkeepers Liability policy will not
respond to either the hangar damage or the plane damage. |
|
·
Which occurs while it is in flight
·
Assumed under contract – unless coverage would
exist without the contract.
These apply under Bodily Injury, Property Damage, Personal
and Advertising Injury and Hangarkeepers Liability coverages. All payments are
in addition to the limit of liability that is used to pay the actual damages.
The cost of bonds and the reimbursement for loss of earnings are normally
capped in a range between $100 and $1,000 (depending on the company).
The insurer pays all of the following:
·
All expenses it incurs
·
The cost of bail bonds
·
The cost of bonds to release attachments
·
Reasonable expenses incurred by the insured at
the insurer’s request to assist in investigation or defense of a claim or suit,
including actual loss of earnings because of insured’s time off from work
·
Costs taxed against the insured in the suit
·
Pre-judgment interest awarded against the
insured
·
Interest on the full
amount of any judgment that accrues after entry of the judgment and before being
paid.
There is no coverage for the following:
·
Absolute asbestos pollution
·
Noise pollution and other types of pollution
·
War, hijacking and similar perils (such as
terrorism exclusions)
·
Radioactive contamination
The insured in the policy includes the following:
The first grouping depends on the named insured’s type of
entity as shown on the declarations
1. Individual. The named individual
and his or her spouse are insureds. The spouse is an insured for only actions
related to the insured business.
2. Partnership or joint
venture. The named partnership or joint venture is an insured. Members,
partners, and their spouses are insured too but only with respect to the
specific business operations.
3. Public Corporation. The
named public corporation is an insured. Appointed or elected officers or
members of commission, agency, or board with respect to the specific business
operations are also insureds.
4. An organization other
than those above. The named organization is an insured. Executive officers and
directors are also insureds but only with respect to their duties as such.
Stockholders are insureds with respect to their liability as such.
The second grouping applies regardless of the entity status.
5. Employees, other than
executive officers, for acts within the scope of their duties of employment
within the business operations. However, an employee is not an insured for:
·
Bodily injury or personal injury to the insured
or a co-employee while in the course of the employee’s job. An employee is not
an insured for any contingent claims brought by spouses or relatives of an
injured insured or co-employee.
·
Bodily injury or personal injury arising out of
the employee providing or failing to provide professional health care services.
·
Property damage to property owned or occupied by
or rented or loaned to that employee, any other employees, or any partners or
members.
6. Persons or organizations
while acting as a real estate manager. This doesn’t apply to employee real
estate managers because he or she would be an insured under 5
above.
The third grouping is a conditional status that applies only
after another event occurs.
7. When the named insured
who is an individual dies, persons or organizations having proper temporary
custody of the insured’s property are insured but only with respect to
liability arising out of the maintenance or use of the property. This status
applies only until the insured’s legal representative has been appointed.
8. When the named insured, who
is an individual, dies, the named insured’s legal representative.
Example: Harold,
owner of SteadyFlight Hangar, died a couple of months before Jane, his
attorney, was giving a tour of his hangar to a prospective buyer. The client
was inspecting a chain lift when he was injured after, accidentally, hitting
the lift’s release lever. Treating his broken arm and severe lacerations
costs $3,900. The client decides to sue for recovery beyond the treatment
costs. SteadyFlight’s policy responds to the loss and treats Jane as an
insured as she was attempting to sell the hangar as part of her estate
representative duties. |
9. When any person is using
mobile equipment registered in the insured’s name, that person is an insured. Any
person or organization responsible for the conduct of that person using the
mobile equipment is also granted insured status. The insured status under this
item only applies to liability arising out of the operation of the equipment.
Note: This insured status does NOT apply to an equipment operator
who causes bodily injury to a co-employee, or damage to property owned by,
rented to, in the charge of, or occupied by the insured or any insured's
employee.
10. Newly acquired or
formed organizations that the applicable insured holds a controlling ownership
interest in is an insured but usually for no longer than 90 days from the date
of acquisition. This item does not apply to partnerships and joint ventures and
does not apply to any losses that occur before the acquisition date or before the
policy period.
The Declarations Page and this section work together.
Aggregate Limit
If applicable, a General Aggregate affects the entire policy
except when the limit is superceded by coverages that
have their own specific aggregates. The existence of aggregates can radically
affect how much coverage is available and how it is applied to a given loss or
to multiple losses that occur during a policy term.
|
||
Example:
Parkertown Airfield has an aviation general liability policy. Consider the
coverage limits under the following scenarios: |
||
Policy Feature |
Scenario 1 |
Scenario 2 |
Coverage Limit |
$1,000,000 |
$1,000,000 |
General Aggregate |
$3,000,000 |
$3,000,000 |
Products-Completed Operations Aggregate |
$1,000,000 |
None |
Personal-Advertising Aggregate |
$1,000,000 |
None |
During one policy term, Parkertown suffers the following,
separate losses: |
||
Products |
$1,000,000 |
|
Advertising |
$1,500,000 |
|
Completed Operations |
$1,000,000 |
|
Under Scenario 1, the policy would pay only $2,000,000 out
of Parketown’s total of $3,500,000 in losses. However, under Scenario 2, the
insurer would pay $3,000,000. |
Occurrence Limit
An occurrence limit applies to all losses that are the
result of one event or accident. Each occurrence gets the full occurrence limit
without regard to occurrences that happened during the rest of the year.
Example:
Company A has an occurrence limit of $1,000,000. On the first day of the
policy, there is a loss. That incident has up to $1,000,000 available for
payment. On the second day, there is another loss. There is $1,000,000
available for the second occurrence. This could happen every day and,
theoretically, the insurance company could pay up to $365,000,000 on this
policy. However, most policies are subject to aggregates, so a frequency of
losses would exhaust a policy's payment obligation. |
Offense Limit
A personal advertising offense limit applies to all losses
that are the result of a single, personal advertising loss/claim.
Sub-limits
There are other situations where sub-limits are subject to
additional limitations. Medical expense coverage is often limited by a small
per person limit of $5,000 or other amount. Fire damage to a rented premise may
be capped at $50,000 or 100,000. These payments are subject to the occurrence
limit just as an occurrence limit is subject to an aggregate limit.
Hangarkeepers Sub-limits
Hangarkeepers Coverage may contain a per occurrence sub
limit and a per aircraft sub-limit. The per occurrence sub-limit can be subject
to the policy occurrence or separate from it. This means there can be three
layers of limitation. First, the per aircraft, then the per Hangarkeeper
occurrence limit, then the overall occurrence limit.
Example: Airport
Reale is covered by an aviation policy with the following features: $50,000 - Per Aircraft Limit $150,000 - Hangarkeeper Limit $1,000,000 - Overall Occurrence Limit Airport Reale has ten hangars. A loss damages aircraft in
five of their hangars (see the per plane damage in table below). That same
loss also involves serious injuries to three bystanders. The limits are
applied as follows: |
|
|||||
|
Plane 1 |
Plane 2 |
Plane 3 |
Plane 4 |
Plane 5 |
Total |
Damages |
$25,000 |
$65,000 |
$15,000 |
$100,000 |
$125,000 |
$330.000 |
Cap |
$50,000 |
$50,000 |
$50,000 |
$50,000 |
$50,000 |
$250,000 |
Initial Insured Amt. |
$25,000 |
$50,000 |
$15,000 |
$50,000 |
$50,000 |
$190,000 |
Initial Unpaid Amt. |
0 |
$15,000 |
0 |
$50,000 |
$75,000 |
$140,000 |
Hangarkeepers Occurrence Cap |
|
$150,000 |
||||
Additional Unpaid
Amount |
$190,000 - $150,000 Hangarkeepers Cap |
$40,000 |
||||
Total Bystander Bodily Injuries |
|
$900,000 |
||||
Total BI and (cap adjusted) PD |
$900,000 BI + $150,000 (capped PD) |
$1,050,000 |
||||
Add'l Unpaid Amt.
Due to Occ. Limit |
$1,050,000 (BI and Capped PD) - $1,000,000 (Occ. Cap) |
$50,000 |
||||
Total Unpaid Amount |
Sum of unpaid items (in bold face) |
$230,000 |
The deductibles act in a manner that is similar to the
policy limits. There are aggregate deductible and each occurrence/each offense
deductibles. All coverages in the policy are subject to the deductible. This
means that medical payments, hangarkeepers and all other coverages are subject
to the deductible. The insured can pay the deductible, or the insurance company
may pay the loss and then have the insured reimburse them.
Loss Notification
A major concern with deductibles is that an insured may
handle a claim that is less than the policy's deductibles and not notify the
insurance company. While this omission may be understandable, it violates the
policy's notification requirements. Regardless the amount of a suit or claim,
the insured must report the loss to the insurer. Failure to notify could result
in a claim denial.
|
Example: An FBO
pays a customer who is injured while on their premises. They pay the person
$2,500, which is well under their policy deductible of $4,000. The FBO does
not report the loss to their insurer. Seven months later, the same injured
person sues the FBO, claiming substantial,
additional injuries. The FBO then reports the loss. The insurer, due to the
long delay, denies the claim on the grounds that their ability to investigate
the loss was seriously impaired. |
The Policy Conditions section explains how the insurance
company will handle most situations and also how the insured must respond in
order to preserve coverage and be in compliance with
the agreement. Many of the conditions used in this policy are similar to the
Commercial General Liability and Auto Dealer policy provisions, such as:
Related Article: Auto Dealer Coverage Form Analysis -
for more information on the generic conditions
Rather than discuss the “standard” conditions, this section
will review only conditions that are tailored to or are particularly important to
an aviation general liability policy.
Other insurance
Under this provision, the aviation policy is normally
considered primary when another source of coverage exists. When other coverage
is also written as primary protection, the two policies share the response to
an eligible loss as outlined in the policy. The policy acts as excess coverage
under four specific circumstances. The first two circumstances (again, please
refer to our explanation of this provision in our CGL analysis referenced
above) are typical but the second two are unique to this policy. This policy
responds on an excess basis if:
Related Court Case: "Insurers Must Share Loss Involving
Rented Plane"
Transfer of Rights of
Recovery
The insured must agree to transfer all of their rights of
recovery against others to the insurance company and must do nothing to impair
those rights.
Aviation exposures are complicated and large. They often involve
relationships with many other parties and activities. Since loss severity is
always an issue, it is critical that insureds avoid any chance of affecting an
insurer’s ability to pursue another party for reimbursement of losses it pays
on behalf of the insured. However, sometimes, the loss of an insurer's ability
to recover from another party is due to the insurer's own actions.
Related Court Case: "Company's Failure to Act
Voids Subrogation Rights”
Related Article: Aircraft and Aviation Insurance Available
Endorsements – see Breach of Warranty endorsement which illustrates how this
provision gains greater importance
Many of the definitions used in this policy are similar to
those used in Commercial General Liability and Auto Dealer policies. Rather
than discuss the “standard” definitions, this section will review only
definitions that are unique to an aviation policy.
Related Articles:
Commercial General
Liability Policy Coverage Analysis
Auto Dealer Coverage Form
Analysis
The following Definitions are unique to an Aviation policy:
Aircraft - the aircraft (fuselage, wings, engine, etc.)
as well as all parts and equipment.
Related Court Case:
“Aircraft” Definition Held Not to Include a Parachute
Airport - the actual airport plus roadways that are right next to the airport.
Aircraft noise - the noise of aircraft and associated
vibration including sonic boom.
Aviation operations - all operations
arising from the ownership, maintenance or use of locations for aviation activities
including that portion of roads or other accesses that adjoin these locations.
Aviation operations also include all operations necessary or incidental to
aviation activities.
In flight - the time commencing with the actual take-off
run of the aircraft until it has completed its landing roll. For rotorcraft,
the terms refer to the time the rotors start to rotate under power until they
cease to rotate.
Spacecraft - launch vehicle (for spacecraft), satellite,
spacecraft, spaceship, or space station that is intended for traveling to
and/or operating in space. The term does NOT apply to either aircraft or
missiles.
Related Article: Glossary of Aviation Terms
There are endorsements available to customize this policy to
the needs of the particular insured. Additional insured endorsements,
exclusions, amendments, and additional coverages can be considered and should
be discussed. It is always important to review endorsements that are added to a
policy. Endorsements that add coverages may also introduce new exclusions, restrictions,
and limitations.
Related Article: Aircraft and Aviation Insurance
Available Endorsements
Most airport operations need an Aircraft Policy to protect
aircraft they own. If there are no owned aircraft, then non-owned coverage
should be purchased since there may be times when non-owned aircraft must be
moved. Without non-owned insurance, there is no coverage for the actions of the
airport operation that results in damage to aircraft that belong to other
parties.
An aviation operation needs standard Property, Automobile,
Inland Marine, and other coverages since they face loss exposures similar to
other businesses. Such coverages are often available in the standard marketplace.
An umbrella policy that includes the aviation and aircraft
exposures should be considered. Only an aviation specialist will consider
writing such umbrellas.