(January 2024)
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The focus of this analysis is on
the DP 00 03–Dwelling Property 3 – Special Form. An analysis of each section is
included and, where possible, examples and relevant court cases will be
referenced.
Note: This
analysis is of the 07 14 edition of this form. Any differences between it and
the previous edition (12 02) appear in
bold.
Related Articles:
Dwelling Property 1 - Basic Form Coverage Analysis
Dwelling Property 2 - Broad Form Coverage Analysis
Dwelling Policy Program Personal Liability
Supplement Coverage Form Analysis
The policy begins with the commitment to cover the insured’s
described property as long as the insured pays the premium and obeys the policy
conditions.
This section is quite brief, containing definitions for the
following:
“You” and “your” mean the named insured. The named insured
is the individual that appears on the policy Declarations page. The term, named
insured, also includes the individual’s spouse, but the spouse must live in the
same household.
“We,” “us,” and “our” mean the company that issues the
policy and, naturally, provides the coverage.
This policy’s coverages refers to the property identified as
the described location, subject to the existence of specified coverage limits
and the causes of loss (perils) that qualify for protection under the policy.
1. The first
section of this policy explains what is meant by a dwelling. The term dwelling
applies to the building structure that is used mainly as a dwelling and which
is described on the Declarations, and any structures
which are attached to the dwelling.
Related Court Case: Fire to a Dwelling Not Used For
the Insured's Primary Residence Held Not Covered
Protection under Coverage A extends to materials and
supplies which are located on or next to the dwelling which are being used to
construct, alter, or repair the dwelling or other structures on
the described location.
Example: Leslie Woodwurk's home is covered by a DP 00 03 form.
She is upset because, on Friday, a builder's supply store delivered some
lumber and fixtures to her property. On Saturday, a large windstorm came
through and scattered and destroyed the material and fixtures. Scenario 1: The material and
fixtures were to be used to build a concession stand for a local soccer
league's field. The loss is not covered by her fire policy. Scenario 2: The material and
fixtures were to be used to build an additional room onto the back of her
home. It was to be used for a baby Leslie would soon be adopting. The loss of
the materials and fixtures would be covered. |
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Finally, if coverage isn’t provided by another part of the
dwelling policy, building and outdoor equipment that is used to service the
covered structures is also insured under Coverage A.
2. The land
occupied by the dwelling is not covered by the policy. The value used to insure
all of the eligible structures must reflect the fact that the land’s value is
NOT included. This point should be carefully explained to the insured so that
he or she has the proper coverage expectations for the value of the home.
Example: Mollie’s modest home is insured under a DP 00 03. Mollie
has a new door and nearly $1,000 in building materials lying in her backyard.
The door and materials are intended to add a screened-in porch.
Unfortunately, a fire starts after lightning strikes a dead tree in Mollie's
yard. The fire spreads to the home. The fire destroys the tree, the building
materials and part of the dwelling. In this case both the damage to the home
and the loss of the materials are covered. However, the cost of repairing the
lawn after the remains of the tree is removed is not covered since land isn’t
eligible as covered property. |
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The limit of liability for this is the amount that is shown
on the policy’s declarations page under Coverage A.
1. Coverage B,
Other Structures, protects real property that is set apart from the dwelling
and separated by clear space. Structures that are connected only by fences,
utility lines or similar types of devices qualify under the “clear space” requirement.
2. The following
situations are ineligible for coverage under Coverage B:
·
Land, including the land upon which the other
structure sits
·
Other structures which are used in whole or part
for business
Example: Kenny’s home is located outside a city on several acres
of land. Besides his home, he has a large pole barn that was built a long
time ago by the original owners. He does not use the barn. A couple of months
ago, some friends approached him and they signed an agreement to lease the
barn. His friends then use it as product storage for their micro-brewery. The
barn is no longer eligible for coverage under Kenny’s DP 00 03. |
·
Other structures which an insured either rents
or holds for rental to any person who is not a tenant of the dwelling UNLESS used
only as a private garage
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Example: Joan rents a home from George. Joan is a retired teacher
and, since she has a lot of time, she decides to take advantage of a
long-term hobby. Joan is a skilled mechanic. After getting approval from
George, she advertises her business, "Joan's Small Engine Repairs"
in the local paper and via a sign in front of the rental property. One day, a
storm blows over a huge tree on George's property. It lands on the garage,
heavily damaging it and destroying nearly a dozen lawnmowers and various
engines. The loss is not covered. |
Example: Paul has had a problem keeping tenants in one of his
properties that is adjacent to a business district. While looking for a
tenant for his property on |
Both of these are examples of business use and they
disqualify both garages and the utility shed from coverage under the DP 00 03–Dwelling
Property 3 - Special Form.
Related Article: Covering the In-Home Business
How about a situation that would be covered?
Example: Another one of Paul's renters, Lydia Storcarz, could use
a few extra dollars. There is a two-car garage on the rental and |
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The Dwelling Property 3 - Special Form has an interesting
twist regarding a commercial situation. Coverage is more flexible so that a
structure (not the dwelling) may be used to store commercial property that
belongs to the insured or an insured's tenant. Therefore, a building used for
commercial storage (except for fuels) is still an eligible building as long as
a covered person is doing the storing.
·
Gravemarkers (including mausoleums)
Example: The home rented by Paul has been in his family for
generations. In fact, a small corner of his backyard includes a family
cemetery. One Halloween, some rowdies kick over and destroy several headstones.
The loss is not covered. |
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The limit of insurance for other structures is the amount
that is shown on the policy’s declarations page under Coverage B.
1. Covered Property
Personal property owned by or used by the named insured or
members of the named insured’s family is covered as long as the property is at
the described location and the family member is living at that location. Other
coverages can be extended at the client's request. This coverage is
automatically included in the policy and the named insured, rather than the
owner of the items, must make the claim for coverage. Personal property is
covered for guests or servants if the property is on
the described location.
The limit of liability for personal property usually located
at the described location is the amount that is shown on the policy’s
declarations page under Coverage C.
Related Article: Personal Articles Floater
2. Personal Property
Not Covered
Under Coverage C - Personal Property, the following items
are excluded:
·
Accounts, bank notes, bills, currency of any
type, any type of gold or silver (except eating utensils), manuscripts, medals,
notes, passports, personal records or securities, tickets, and stamps.
Technology has not been ignored. The current edition of the Dwelling Property 3
- Special Form also bars coverage for any type of card capable of storing
monetary value, including gift cards. Money substitutes, such as scrip
(money-like certificates issued by banks), are also ineligible for protection.
Example: Soo Myx discovers a tragedy when she returns home from
running errands. A thief ransacked her home. While straightening up the
damage, she notices that $2,000 worth of grocery store and fashion clothing
store cards are gone. Unfortunately, none of this property would be covered. |
·
Animals, birds, or fish
·
Aircraft and parts. Aircraft is considered as
meaning any contrivance used or designed for flight. An exception is made for
model or hobby aircraft BUT ONLY if such aircraft is not used or designed to
carry people or cargo.
Note: This wording is flexible enough
that coverage already extends to use of certain types
of drones. Those that are capable of carrying items would be ineligible for
coverage.
·
Hovercraft and parts - the policy mentions that
the term applies to all air-cushioned vehicles.
·
Motor vehicles or all other motorized land
conveyances, including their equipment and parts and portable electronics that are designed to be operated solely by use of the power from the
electrical system of motor vehicles or all other motorized land conveyances. Portable electronics refers to items
designed to manage audio or visual signals and data. The exclusion of portable electronics applies only
while the property is in or upon the
vehicle or conveyance. Such property is considered to be better covered
elsewhere—such as under an auto policy.
Note: The policy now
refers to portable electronics and no longer mentions accessories, devices, or
instruments. (07 14 change).
Important Exception:
The dwelling fire policy does cover vehicles which do not require motor vehicle
registration, but only if either of the following apply:
a.
The vehicle services the property at the described location (such as a riding
lawnmower or snow blower)
b.
The vehicle is designed to assist handicapped persons (e.g., a motorized
wheelchair).
Related Article: Eligibility Requirements for ISO
Personal Auto Policy
·
Watercraft, with the exception of rowboats and
canoes
·
Data, including such data stored in any of the
following:
a. Books of
account
b. Drawings or other
paper records
c. Electronic data
processing tapes, wires, records, discs, or other software media
Note: The cost of
blank recording or storage media, and of pre-recorded computer programs
available on the retail market is covered.
Related Article: ISO Valuable Papers Coverage Form
·
Credit or fund transfer (debit) cards
·
Water including steam
·
Gravemarkers
3.
Property Removed to a Newly Acquired Principle Residence
A final personal property coverage item involves moving
property from the described location to a new principal residential dwelling.
The insurance shown in the declarations page for Coverage C will apply to both
the current and the new location for up to 30 days (UNLESS the policy expires
first). The coverage begins immediately when you start moving property and the
coverage limit is proportional to the amount of property at each location.
Example: Jay Citydweller has been living in a very old home on the
outskirts of Bigtown. The home is written on a DP 00 03 policy and has $20,000
for Coverage C - Personal Property. Jay has just received a big promotion and
he’s purchased a townhouse in the middle of Bigtown. To save money, he begins
to move his personal possessions by car, making a trip or two after work.
After the third day of such trips, he has about 40% of his belongings at his
old house left. In this situation, Jay still has a total of $20,000 of
insurance coverage. However, the coverage is now limited to $8,000 (40% of
$20,000) at his current home and $12,000 (60% of $20,000) at his new
townhouse. |
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1. If a loss occurring under Coverages A, B or C makes part of the
described location which is rented to others or is held for rental to others
unfit for living, this coverage part will pay the Fair Rental Value. The term
refers to the lost income of that part of the described location which is
rented or is held for rental, minus any expenses that do not continue while the
portion of the premises is unavailable as a residence.
Example: The top floor of your dwelling, which is rented, was
heavily damaged by smoke. During the repairs to this floor, you have the
utilities turned off. You normally pay the utilities for your tenants. The
insurance company is not going to reimburse you for the average cost of your
utilities while they are turned off, since this expense has temporarily
ceased. |
Payment under fair rental value will be for the time
required to repair or replace the damage, whichever occurs first.
2. If a civil
authority prevents your use of the described location as a result of direct
damage to a neighboring premises by a covered cause of loss, Coverage C covers
the fair rental value loss for no more than two weeks.
|
Example: The home next to your rental dwelling burns to the
ground and a city inspector decides that it would be safer for your tenant to
live elsewhere while the neighboring property site is demolished and cleared.
The longest amount of time that the policy will pay is two weeks. |
Example: Again, the home next to you is damaged. However, the
damage was caused by your tenant who, instead of parking in the garage,
slammed into the neighbor’s foundation. An inspector requires the tenant to
move until the neighbor’s home is safely supported. In this case there is no
fair rental value coverage because the damage was caused by the renter’s
vehicle. This is not a covered cause of loss under your dwelling policy. |
3. The periods of
time referenced in this coverage part are not affected by the expiration date
of the policy.
Example: Harry’s home was damaged by a tenant accidentally
starting a grease fire in his dwelling’s kitchen on 2/10/24. Harry had
already arranged to switch his coverage to a new insurer and the new policy
switch was effective on 2/17/24. Harry’s lost rental coverage due to the home
being uninhabitable will still extend under his old policy until 2/24/24 when
the home is once again habitable. |
4. There is no
coverage available due to the cancellation of a lease or an agreement.
Example: Revisiting Harry’s loss, the tenant was Babe who, at the
time of loss, had five months left on a 6-month rental agreement. A week
after living with friends, Babe finds another rental home and breaks her
lease with Harry. The loss caused by Babe’s abandoning her lease would not be
eligible for coverage. |
1. Sometimes a
covered cause of loss (peril) damages the dwelling, other structures or
personal property and the damage makes the described location uninhabitable.
When this happens, the DP 00 03–Dwelling Property 3 - Special Form will pay for
extra costs incurred by the insured to maintain the insured’s normal living
standard.
The payments for such extra expenses last only until the
property is repaired, replaced or, if the insured moves to a new location,
until the insured is settled at the new address, whichever option takes the
shortest amount of time.
Example: Eric’s home is insured by a DP 00 03–Dwelling Property 3
- Special Form. An old refrigerator’s wiring overloads catches on fire and fills
the entire house with thick, black smoke. It will take a week to make the
home fit to live in again. Eric and his family rent
a modest suite at a nearby hotel for a week. The additional living expense
coverage reimburses him for the cost of renting the suite, and his dining
costs (less his estimated weekly grocery bill). |
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2. If the insured
is unable to live at the described location because of orders from civil
authorities, the policy will pay for additional living expenses for up to two
weeks. However, the order to temporarily vacate the described location has to
be the result of a neighboring property being damaged directly by a covered
cause of loss.
Related Court Case: HO Claim Includes Structure, Contents
And A.L.E.
Example: Ola’s dwelling is covered by a DP 00 03–Dwelling
Property 3 - Special Form. Her neighbor’s home is threatening to collapse
because of a foundation that is crumbling due to the use of improper building
materials. A city building inspector orders Ola and her family to live elsewhere
for two or three days until supports are put in next door. There is no
coverage for extra expenses. Why? The reason Ola’s family had to leave their
home was due to damage from a neighbor’s weak foundation. That is not a cause
of loss that is covered by the DP 00 03–Dwelling Property 3 - Special Form. |
1. Other Structures
A policy owner may apply up to 10%
of the insurance limit applicable to the dwelling (Coverage A) to protect other
structures. This option extends coverage from the dwelling to structures on the
described location that are separated from the dwelling by clear space. Again,
structures merely connected to the dwelling by a fence, utility line or similar
property are still considered separated by a clear space and so are eligible
for this extension of coverage.
Example: Pete Jones has an old home that is covered by a DP 00 03
policy. His declarations page shows the following: |
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Pete Jones DP 00 03 Insurance Limits |
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Coverage A |
$35,000 |
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Coverage B |
$7,500 |
|
Coverage C |
$15,000 |
|
Coverage D |
$8,000 |
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One day, his son is playing
with matches and his garage catches on fire. Because it’s windy, burning
embers spread the fire to a large utility shed. Both garage and shed are
totally destroyed for a total loss of $9,000. Pete is upset because he thinks
that he only has $7,500 of coverage. His adjuster says, “not to worry.” Pete
has up to $3,500 of coverage (10% of Cov. A) which he can apply to the loss,
so the whole amount will be covered. |
Note: Using this option does not divert coverage from the dwelling.
The situation would not change if the dwelling also suffered substantial damage
because any of the 10% used for other structures would not affect the
dwelling's coverage.
Example: In the Pete Jones fire loss above, here’s how the
protection for his dwelling was affected by the payment on the garage and
shed loss: |
|
Coverage available to dwelling BEFORE the Loss |
Coverage available to dwelling AFTER the Loss |
$35,000 |
$35,000 |
2. Debris Removal
Debris Removal coverage includes
the expense of removing remnants of insured property if that property is in
pieces because of a source of loss that the policy protects against.
This expense is included in the limit of liability that
applies to the damaged property. In other words, any payment made for getting
rid of loss-related debris DECREASES the insurance available for repairing or
replacing damaged property.
Related Court Case: Debris
Removal Obligation Was Paid
Note: This is a commercial
insurance claim, but it illustrates the importance of debris removal coverage.
3.
Improvements, Alterations and Additions
This is an optional coverage
extension that is available to a named insured who is a tenant. If the named
insured as a tenant has paid for an improvement, alteration, or addition to the
property at the described location, it may be protected by applying up to 10%
of the Coverage C limit. Use of this option DOES NOT reduce the amount of
coverage available to protect personal property that may be damaged in the same
loss.
4.
World-Wide Coverage
The DP 00 03 also allows an insured to
use up to 10% coverage available under Coverage C to protect personal property
while it is anywhere else on the planet. This extension is subject to the
following limitations:
·
The personal property must be damaged by an
eligible cause of loss
·
The extension reduces the amount of coverage
available under Coverage C for the same loss (of course, it’s hard to imagine a
single loss that could apply simultaneously to separate locations)
·
This extension is not available to the property
of guests or servants
·
The extension does not apply to rowboats or
canoes
Example: Lily and Daniel suffered some truly bad luck during a
cruise to celebrate their 20th wedding anniversary. A galley fire erupted
on the 3rd day and the ship has to be evacuated. Their berth was
close to the galley. Their area is destroyed, along with all of their luggage
and clothing. Fortunately, they may use the Coverage C extension of
protection from their Dwelling Policy to handle their loss. |
5.
Rental Value and Additional Living Expense
The DP 00 03 also allows an insured to
use up to 20% coverage available under Coverage A to cover a fair rental value
loss (see description of coverage under Coverage D - Fair Rental Value) and additional
Living Expense (see description of coverage under Coverage E - Additional
Living Expense). Exercising this coverage option does not affect the protection
available under Coverage A for the same loss.
Example: Chris
Bumbles owns a modest two-family home. Chris lives on the 1st
floor and rents out the top floor. One day, Chris has a grease fire in his
kitchen and both floors of his home suffer heavy smoke damage. Chris’s DP 00
03–Dwelling Property 3 - Special Form has $15,000 Coverage A Dwelling and
$1,000 protection under Coverages D - Fair Rental Value and E - Additional
Living Expense. Chris is relieved to find out that the $14,000 cost for
repairs and cleaning expense is fully covered under Coverage A and that an
additional $3,000 (20% of Coverage A) is also available to help with his
extra costs. |
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6. Reasonable Repairs
Reasonable Repairs coverage covers
the reasonable expense for repairs necessary to protect covered property
damaged by an eligible peril (cause of loss) to protect any property from further
damage. Please refer to the section of this analysis on policy conditions.
Example: Jenna’s
home is one of dozens that are damaged by a windstorm that blew through hers
and several other neighborhoods. A large limb from a tree in her front yard
was ripped off and smashed against her roof. She calls her insurer, but due
to the number of homes affected, she’s told it will be several days before
anyone has a chance to inspect her home. Scenario 1: Jenna hires a
couple of handymen who remove the limb and cover the hole with a heavy tarp
to protect against rain. Jenna spends about $300 for the tarp and the labor.
Her insurance will likely cover the entire expense. Scenario 2: Jenna hires a company
that puts up an enclosure around her entire home that costs $3,000. Her
insurer refuses to pay more than $200 (their estimate to get temporary
repairs) because they deemed the enclosure as unnecessary. |
Any reimbursements made by the
insurer for such repairs reduce the amount of coverage available for the
damaged property. Also, the insured is still obligated to fulfill its
obligations as explained under Condition D.2.
7. Property Removed
If covered property is removed from a premises that is
endangered by a covered peril, the relocated property is protected by the DP 00
03–Dwelling Property 3 - Special Form against ANY CAUSE OF LOSS for up to
thirty days. This does not increase the amount of available coverage; rather it
extends coverage while the property is being protected.
Example: Pearl Wizdum comes home from work and sees smoke and
flame surrounding her home's upper story. She and her two teenaged sons are
able to enter the home and save their computers, digital entertainment
equipment and an expensive drum set. |
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8. Trees, Shrubs and
Other Plants
The DP 00 03–Dwelling Property 3 - Special Form protects an
insured’s outdoor greenery on a limited basis. Up to 5% of the policy’s
Coverage A limit may be used to cover trees, shrubs or plants that are damaged
by the following:
·
Fire or lightning
·
Explosion
·
Riot/civil commotion
·
Aircraft
·
Vehicles (as long as they’re not owned by the
insured or a dwelling tenant)
·
Vandalism or malicious mischief
·
Damage by burglars (but not for actual theft)
The coverage does have a sub-limit. $500 is the most that
the policy will pay for any single shrub, plant, or tree. This single item
maximum applies, regardless of the insurance limits that appear on the
declarations. Business pursuits involving this class of property are excluded.
This coverage represents an extra source of coverage, so payment under this
section does not affect any other policy limit.
9.
Fire Department Service Charge
Fire Department
Service Charge coverage applies in the following manner:
If the insured contractually assumes liability to help pay
for fire department charges incurred when the fire department is called to save
or protect covered property from a covered peril, the policy will provide
coverage of up to $500. However, NO coverage applies if the insured property is
located within the limits of the city, municipality or protection district
which responds to the fire.
Example: Fred Philanthrope lives a half mile outside of
Flametown. Fred, along with dozens of his neighbors, lives in "Flaming
Acres," an unincorporated community. One summer, Fred's home, which is
insured under a DP 00 03, suffers a fire. The fire is
extinguished by one of Flametown's fire department units. A few weeks after
the loss, Fred receives a bill for $450 from Flametown. The bill was for the
cost of the fire department response to his emergency. Fred, when he bought
his home, also signed an agreement to pay for the cost of the fire department
response. This charge would be covered under his dwelling policy. |
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Note: This is
additional insurance (it does not reduce any other available protection) and
the policy’s deductible is inapplicable to this coverage.
10.
Collapse
This provision has been changed in the 07 14 Edition. The biggest difference is that the
provision was edited and expanded in an attempt to clarify what is meant by
collapse.
a. The provision opens with a statement
that coverage is only meant to respond to loss involving abrupt collapse. Since
the form is making this distinction, it may have made more sense to title this
item “Abrupt Collapse.”
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b. The policy includes an explanation
of what is meant by collapse. Collapse is explained as an abrupt falling down
of an entire building or part of a building. The collapse has to be severe
enough to make the building or part of the building unusable for residential
purposes.
c. Neither a building nor a building
part that is in danger of collapsing NOR a part of a building which remains
standing is considered as being in a state of collapse. The nonexistence of a
collapse condition applies even when the remaining structure shows evidence of
cracking, bulging, and sagging, bending, leaning, settling, shrinking, or
expanding.
d. This additional coverage protects
against direct physical loss to covered property involving collapse of a building
or any part of a building caused only by one or more of the following:
(1) Perils insured against in personal
property (Coverage C). These perils apply to covered buildings and personal
property for loss insured by this additional coverage.
(2) Hidden decay
(3) Hidden insect or vermin damage
Note: Under items (2) and (3), coverage
is barred if any named insured is aware of such damage before a collapse
occurs.
(4) The weight of contents, equipment,
animals, or people wherever they are
(5) The weight of rain when that rain
collects on a roof
(6) A collapse that occurs while
construction, remodeling or renovation is taking place but only if the reason
for the collapse is because defective material or methods are being used in that
construction, remodeling, or renovation.
e. Collapse loss to an awning, fence,
patio, deck, pavement, swimming pool, underground pipe, flue, drain, cesspool,
septic tank, foundation, retaining wall, bulkhead, pier, wharf, or dock that is
not attributable to a peril insured against is not covered. The only exception
is when a building collapses and these items are damaged because of that
building collapse.
f. This coverage does NOT increase the
limit of insurance that applies to the covered property.
Example: Paula Unfortunata has a DP 00 03 policy with a Coverage
A Limit of $30,000. One day her home catches fire, causing extensive damage
to the front part of the dwelling. However, while the fire department is
putting out the flames, the rear half of the home unexpectedly collapses. An
investigation reveals that the builder used a type of glue as a wood fastener
instead of nails. The intense heat dissolved the glue and caused the rest of
Paula’s home to cave in. While the loss from both the fire and the collapse
are covered, total damages are close to $50,000. The policy will only pay the
maximum amount of $30,000. |
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11.
Glass or Safety Glazing Material
a. This provision covers
against:
·
Loss to glass or safety glazing material that is
part of a covered dwelling. Eligible loss includes broken glass that is a
component of storm door and storm windows.
This distinction MAY be to allow coverage for damage related
to breakage of door and window glass that occurs at times when they are not
installed on covered structures.
·
Damage caused by such material
The covered property includes glass building blocks, windows,
storm doors, storm windows, skylights, etc.
Example: Paula Unfortunata is really unlucky. Last year her home
was rebuilt after being destroyed by fire and collapse. Just last week a
severe thunderstorm came through her part of town. Strong winds shattered the
glass in her garage panels. The force of the wind was so great that the
shards of glass became embedded in the drywall which covers the garage’s rear
wall. Paula takes consolation in the fact that both the wind damage and the
damage suffered by the wall are covered. |
b. Losses under
this coverage are excluded if, as of the date of loss, the dwelling has been
vacant for more than 60 days. Buildings under construction are not considered
to be vacant.
No coverage exists for damage that results from broken glass
or safety material, except direct damage to covered property that is caused by
broken glass shards, etc.
This minor exclusion reduces the possibility of double coverage.
Example: Let’s add a twist to the
Paula Unfortunata incident. Again, last week a severe thunderstorm came
through her part of town. Strong winds shattered the glass in her garage
panels. The force of the wind was so great that the shards of glass became
embedded in the drywall which covers the garage’s rear wall. However, rain forced
through the broken windows destroys the drywall. Paula turns in a claim, seeking
coverage for both causes of damage. Under this provision, her insurer pays to
repair only the damage caused by the glass. Other portions of the policy will
handle the water damage, resulting in indemnification. |
c. This coverage
does not increase the limit of insurance for the covered property.
12. Ordinance or Law
a. This extension
(which applies as an additional amount of coverage) allows a covered building
owner or tenant to apply a limited amount of their policy's protection to a
loss that involves a requirement to make repairs or replacement in compliance with
a construction-related law. Specifically, the coverage extension will handle an
increased expense caused by the enforcement of a law related to any of the
following:
·
Building, renovating, demolishing, repairing a
covered structure which has suffered a loss
·
Demolishing and rebuilding an undamaged portion
of a covered structure which is required to be totally demolished because of
covered damage to another part of that covered structure
·
Working upon (remodeling, remodeling, or
replacing) an undamaged portion of a covered structure in order to complete rebuilding,
remodeling, or replacement of a damaged portion of that covered structure
Note: Coverage for
such instances applies ONLY when the damage to the covered structure is due to
a cause of loss that is eligible under the policy
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Example: Joe owns a home that he rents out to others. After a
flood causes the front half of the dwelling to cave in, the city points out
that the home is now subject to a revised building code so the remainder of
the dwelling has to be demolished. This cost is ineligible for protection
under the Ordinance or Law provision because the loss was not created by an
eligible peril. |
b. The named
insured may use up to:
·
10% of his Coverage A (or Unit-Owners Building
Items) limit – when coverage under either item is written under the applicable
policy
·
10% of his Coverage B limit – when no coverage
is written for a structure under Coverage A
c. If the named
insured is a tenant up to 10% of his policy's coverage for Improvements, Alterations
and Additions – that applies to a given Described Location may be used.
Related Court Case: Homeowners Challenge Code
Enforcement Limit
d. The
applicable limit under this provision may also be used, either in total or in
part, for the cost of cleaning up debris caused by post-loss, construction-related
efforts that are covered by this provision.
e. This coverage
is unavailable to handle any diminished property value. That remains an
assumption of risk on the insured's part. Further, none of this coverage
applies to a requirement to monitor, test, remediate, or otherwise respond to a
situation involving pollutants.
A. Coverage A - Dwelling and Coverage B -
Other Structures
1. The DP 00 03– Dwelling
Property 3 - Special Form provides protection for dwelling and other structures
against the possibility of direct losses.
2. There is no
coverage for:
2a. Any item
referenced as excluded by the policy’s general exclusions section.
2b. Collapse
Please
refer to the previous paragraphs on collapse. This provision has been changed in the 07 14
Edition. It has been edited and expanded in an attempt to clarify what is meant
by collapse.
The Special Form policy excludes coverage for collapse,
except for what it protects against under Other Coverage, item 10 Collapse.
Example: John Nye Eve has just bought his dream home, a 1,100 square
foot dwelling located in Lots O’ Lumps Estates. John insures the home with a
DP 00 03. A couple of months later, after a particularly rainy spring, John
notices that there’s an eight-inch drop from his front lawn to his front
entrance. Two weeks later, John returns from work and finds that his home has
completely collapsed. An engineer explains to John that the land chosen by
the Lots O’ Lumps builders was totally inadequate to support dwellings. The
soft ground couldn’t possibly support a large structure without it rapidly
settling. This cause of loss would not be covered under the policy’s collapse
coverage. |
|
Related Court Case, , Collapse Coverage Did Not Apply to Replace All Stucco
Note: Although this involves a commercial case, it helps illustrate the
complexity of determining what is meant by collapse.
2c(1).
Loss caused when a residential system or appliance
freezes while the home is vacant, unoccupied or under construction.
Systems or appliances include plumbing, heating, air conditioning,
fire sprinklers, washers, refrigerators, water heaters, etc.
This exclusion applies only if the insured failed to make a
reasonable effort to keep the dwelling heated, shut off the water supply, or
drain the system or appliance.
Example: Erin
Gobraw and her kids are leaving their home tomorrow to go for a two-month
summer vacation in |
Note: Sump systems
and gutter systems are not considered part of a structure’s plumbing system.
2c(2).
Loss caused by the freezing or thawing, pressure or weight of ice or water to
non-building structures such as the following:
·
Fences, pavement, patios, or swimming pools
·
Foundations, retaining walls or bulkheads
·
Piers, wharves, or docks.
2c(3).
Theft of property that is not a building structure
Example: Let’s use Erin Gobraw again. This time |
|
2c(4).
Any theft that occurs within or to any structure that is being built.
2c(5).
Wind, hail, ice, snow, or sleet losses to the following:
·
Outdoor antennas and aerial. This exclusion
includes any related wiring, towers, and masts. Although the language has not
been updated, the exclusion likely extends to newer cable and satellite
set-ups.
·
Trees, plants, lawns, and shrubs
2c(6).
Vandalism, malicious mischief, theft, and attempted theft but only if the
dwelling is vacant for more than 60 days before such losses (again note that
dwellings under construction are not considered vacant).
2c(7).
Continuous or a pattern of seepage or leaking water or steam:
The discharge must come from a covered dwelling’s household
appliances or plumbing, heating, air conditioning or fire sprinkler system to
be excluded.
2c(8).
Loss caused by any of the following:
·
Wear, tear, marring or deterioration
·
Inherent vice, latent defect, or mechanical
breakdown
·
Smog, corrosion, mold, or rot (wet or dry)
·
Smoke caused by agricultural or industrial
operations
·
Pollution (of any type or source)
·
Foundations, retaining walls, pavement, floors,
roofs, or ceilings which have shrunk, expanded, cracked, settled, or bulged
·
Birds, domestic animals, rodents, or insects
·
Damage
that is related to presence of creatures and insects including creating living
areas (nests), creature/insect excrement (waste and secretions). 0714 Change
Exception to exclusion 2c(8) - Any
type of water damage to the covered property that originates from a household
appliance or plumbing, heating, air conditioning or fire sprinkler system which
is NOT excluded in the policy is covered. In such instances, the coverage will
include the cost of gaining access to the system or appliance (such as tearing
out floors or walls) and repairing the damaged floors or walls. However,
coverage would not include repairing any damaged appliance or system.
Example: A rental home has been vacant for nearly five weeks when
a radiator valve develops a leak. The valve is next
to an electrical outlet that becomes covered with condensation and violently
short circuits. The electrical sparking starts a
fire that causes thousands of dollars in damage. The broken valve and damage
caused by the steam (ruined adjacent plaster walls) is excluded, but the
resultant (ensuing) electrical and fire damage is covered by the policy. |
Important: This
policy’s water damage exclusion that references surface water and underground
water does NOT apply to the exceptions stated above.
Note: An important
qualifier is that the policy will pay for losses to buildings which follow
(ensue) the occurrence of either collapse (2b) or freezing (2c). However, the
ensuing loss must be the result of a covered cause of loss.
B. Coverage C
- Personal Property
The DP 00 03–Dwelling Property 3
- Special Form provides protection for personal property against the perils
listed below, with the exception of items that are contained in the GENERAL EXCLUSIONS section of the
policy.
Note: The coverage applies to direct damage to the covered
property. In order for coverage to apply, a limit of insurance must appear next
to the Coverage C section on the policy declarations.
1. Fire or lightning
Please remember that we are talking about hostile fire and
natural lightning, as opposed to friendly fire or artificially generated
electricity.
Related Article: Fire - A Discussion.
2. Windstorm or hail
This is self-explanatory, but
windstorm or hail doesn’t include:
Coverage for damage to the property within a building that
is caused by rain, snow, sleet, sand, or dust unless the wind or hail has first
caused an opening in a roof or wall and the rain, snow, sleet, sand, or dust
enters through this opening.
|
Example A: Wendy Hale is busy with spring cleaning. She is so
thorough that she and her husband have moved their living room furniture
outside in order to clean the living room floor and walls. Unexpectedly, a
severe thunderstorm rolls through. Wendy makes it inside her home, but her
furniture is left to suffer through the storm. Unfortunately, her ruined wood
and upholstered furniture is not covered. |
Example B: Again, Wendy is cleaning her house when a thunderstorm
comes to call. Wendy rushes into her house, closing all of her doors and
windows with all of her belongings inside. However, the thunderstorm is
accompanied by very high winds. A particularly heavy gust sends a large
branch through her living room’s bay window. The high wind and rain break or
soak most of their furniture before the Hales are able to get the window
boarded up. This is a covered loss since the storm first created an opening
and then damaged the Hales’ personal property. |
|
Coverage for damage to outside property such as radio or TV
antennas (including wiring), awnings, signs, masts, towers, canoes, or rowboats
is excluded. It is likely that this exclusion also extends to cable TV and
satellite TV equipment.
However, when inside
a covered building, coverage under this peril does extend to canoes, rowboats,
trees, shrubs, plants, or lawns. 0714 Change
Related Article: Windstorm or Hail - A Discussion
3. Explosion
Direct damage for both internal and external explosion is
covered.
Related Article: Explosion - A Discussion
4. Riot or civil
commotion
Here is a summary from Bouvier’s
Law Dictionary of the elements which constitute a riot:
·
At least three persons must be involved
·
There must be a common purpose
·
There must be actual inception or execution of
that purpose
·
There must be an attempt to help one another or
to cooperate by force if necessary
·
There must be a display of force or violence in such
manner as to alarm a person of reasonable courage
|
Example: Joe Bigfan is thrilled that his team, the Bigtown
Battlers, have won the countrywide basketball championship. He runs outside
to join the crowd of Bigtowners who are also celebrating the victory. Joe’s
ecstasy quickly turns to agony when part of the crowd bursts into his home,
trashes his personal property and then sets fire to everything. Luckily, this
commotion is a covered loss! |
Related Article: Riot or
Civil Commotion, A Discussion
5. Aircraft, including self-propelled missiles and spacecraft
Example: Your home is located a couple of miles from a military
base. A new pilot loses control of his fighter. The pilot safely ejects from
the fighter, leaving it to crash into your two-car garage and all of the
furniture stored there. Since it is insured by a DP 00 03–Dwelling Property 3
- Special Form, the contents are protected. |
|
Example: The Bigtown Future Aeronauts Club is holding their model
rocket contest in the school parking lot a couple of blocks away. Your home
turns out to be in the flight path and a half dozen gas engine rockets crash
through a bay window, shredding several of the living room’s upholstered
chairs and a couch. This damage is also covered, even though the rockets are
self-propelled missiles. |
6. Vehicles
Example: Karla’s rental home is located at the bottom of a
cul-de-sac. After an ice storm, a driver loses control when turning into the
area, slides, and the vehicle smashes into the front of the house. This loss
to the contents is eligible for coverage. |
|
7. Smoke
Direct damage caused by smoke is covered except when it
results from smoke from agricultural smudging or industrial operations.
|
Example: You throw a turkey in the oven and decide to go to the
movies, thinking that you have plenty of time. The movie turns out to be a
six-hour “art film.” You return to a blackened carcass and the contents of
your home are thoroughly smoked. This is a covered loss. |
8. Vandalism or
malicious mischief
Damage to personal property caused by vandals and
troublemakers is covered unless the damage involves property that is stolen.
|
Example: Jim rented his 2nd home out to a family for
the summer. One of the rental family’s teens gets on the bad side of a local
gang. While the renters are out of town for a weekend trip, the house and
garage have their windows smashed out and furniture, belonging to Jim
(furnished with the rental home), was slashed, and smashed into pieces. Some
appliances were spray-painted with gang logos. This damage is eligible for
coverage. |
9. Damage by Burglars
While the DP 00 03–Dwelling Property 3 - Special Form does
not offer coverage for personal property that is stolen from the property at
the described location, at least it protects against damage that may occur
during the burglary. However, no coverage is provided if the dwelling has been
vacant for more than 60 days before
the loss.
Example: Hal and Kurt break into Sally Knott’s home. They cause a
lot of damage to several of Sally’s doors, floors and walls while stealing
her TV, CD stereo system and DVD players. Hal is upset that they’re causing
Sally such hardship. Kurt mentions to Hal that he noticed that Sally had a
copy of a DP 00 03 on her coffee table the same type of policy that he owns.
Kurt explains that, while Sally will have to replace her belongings, the
insurance company will pay for the damage they caused to Sally’s home. Hal
feels a lot less guilty as they take the stolen goods to their favorite pawn
shop. |
10. Falling Objects
This coverage is similar to the
windstorm or hail peril. The covered property is protected from direct damage from
objects that first damage the building’s exterior.
Example: Aggie Mostik has a home that is covered by a DP 00 03–Dwelling
Property - Special Form. She lives next to the Bigtown Cathedral, which is
having its bell tower repaired. A gust of wind blows off part of the
scaffolding next to the tower. The scaffolding falls at an angle that takes
it through Aggie’s open front door, demolishing a huge glass case filled with
decorative dishes and statuary. Since the object did not cause exterior
damage, the loss is not covered. |
11. Weight of ice, snow,
or sleet
Coverage applies only if the weight of ice, snow, or sleet
on a dwelling causes damage to items within that dwelling.
Example: |
12. Accidental
discharge or overflow of water or steam
Coverage is available under the Special Form Dwelling policy
for loss caused by water or steam that suddenly bursts or overflows from
plumbing, heating, air conditioning, or sprinkler systems. Protection also
exists for water or steam bursting or overflowing from appliances.
Coverage is excluded for all of the following:
·
The damaged appliance or system itself
·
Damage resulting from discharges or overflows
that occur away from the premises
·
Damaged sump pumps, related equipment, gutters,
or downspouts (as these are disqualified as parts of a structure’s plumbing
system)
·
Any loss caused by freezing unless covered in
item 14 in this section
Note: This
policy’s water damage exclusion does not apply to this specific cause of loss.
13. Sudden and accidental
tearing apart, cracking, burning, or bulging
Losses from such an event are covered when they involve a steam,
water heating, air conditioning or protective
sprinkler system. Losses involving hot water appliances are also covered. In
this case, damage to the system itself is covered. Loss caused by freezing is
excluded unless covered in item 14. in this section.
14.
Freezing
Damage to the covered property that results from the
freezing of a plumbing, heating, air conditioning, protective sprinkler system
or any appliance is covered if the insured has done one of the following:
·
Taken reasonable measure to maintain heat
·
Turned off and drained the system or appliance.
Note:
When a covered property includes a fire sprinkler system, the system must be
allowed to continue to function, even when no one is occupying the home for an
extended period.
The provision clarifies that its
reference to a plumbing system only includes components and piping that
facilitate normal, internal movement of water for regular residential use.
Therefore, it does not consider items such as sump pumps and related equipment
as part of the plumbing system.
15.
Sudden and accidental damage from artificially generated electrical current
Tubes, transistors, and other, similar components are not
covered for loss due to this peril.
16.
Volcanic Eruption
As long as the damage is caused
directly by volcanic action, such as flowing lava or flying objects caused by
the explosion, the loss is covered up to the limits shown on
the policy. The incidental causes of damage such as quakes, shocks and tremors
are excluded.
There are a number of exclusions
which are clearly spelled out in the DP 00 03–Dwelling Property - Special Form.
This section is the first place to look in order to answer the question often
asked by insureds, "Is this covered by my policy?”
A. The exclusions listed here are categorically excluded. Unless
an exception appears, it doesn’t matter if the loss is direct, if it originated
with some other cause or even if it happens at the same time (concurrently) as
another cause of loss. The GENERAL
EXCLUSIONS prohibit the following sources of loss:
1.
Ordinance or Law
a.
There is no coverage due to any ordinance or law concerning building,
construction, repair, or demolition. The amount of any property loss attributed
to the enforcement of an ordinance or law, or any,
related, increased cost to repair or replace the damaged property is not covered.
b.
This exclusion also bars claims involving loss of property value that is
created by construction-related ordinances or laws.
c. No coverage exists for costs in any way connected to dealing
with pollution events. The exclusion also applies to obligations to monitor,
test for, assess or remediate the effects of pollution.
A major reason for this exclusion
is to prevent coverage for building codes that were changed or created after
the insured property’s construction. Commonly, after a building has been
damaged, new requirements for wiring, plumbing, or materials may apply. Other
instances involve laws which prevent the repair of a building which has
suffered damage of 50% or more of its value. Without this exclusion, the policy
would have to replace an entire structure rather than pay for a partial loss.
Example: Clem Huggle owns a single-story home that is insured by
a DP 00 03 policy. The home was built in 1925 and is located in a part of
town that, in the last decade, has become a very hot area for restaurants,
bars and clubs. The town council enacted a law five years ago which forbids
private residences to be built in the area and, if a
residence suffers damage to more than 49% of its structure, it must be
totally demolished. Clem’s home is struck by lightning. The lightning strike
and resulting fire destroys half of the home. Clem files a claim for the
total value of the policy, plus expenses to build a new home at a new
location. The policy excludes coverage for the claim, reimbursing Clem only
for the actual monetary damage to his house. |
|
Note: This exclusion does not apply to the limited amount of
protection available under the policy's ordinance or law additional coverage.
2. Earth Movement
The earth movement exclusion
further clarifies the limitation mentioned under the coverage for volcanic
eruption by specifically excluding mine subsidence from coverage. Mine
subsidence is when earth collapses into the spaces
created by underground mines. While the damage to a home is the same, mine
subsidence wasn’t originally interpreted by claimants, courts and regulators as
falling under the exclusion. Coverage for losses caused by any movement of the
earth, whether or not it accompanies volcanic activity, or involves underground
excavation is specifically excluded. The policy wording clarifies that the
event that causes any earth movement, including an act of nature, is irrelevant
as damage from such a loss remains excluded. There is no longer a reference to loss events involving human or animal
forces. (07 14 change).
There is an exception for fire
damage that may be triggered by earth movement. In that case, the policy will
respond to loss that can be attributed to the subsequent fire.
Related Court Case: Earth Movement Exclusion Challenged
3. Water (Retitled from “Water Damage.” 07
14 Change)
The
Special Form policy does not cover a loss caused by any of the following:
a. Flood, surface water, waves, tidal
water, overflow of a body of water, or spray from any of these, whether or not
driven by wind. (Adds reference to exclude
loss caused by storm surge, tidal waves, and tsunamis. 07 14 Change).
b. Water which backs up through sewers
or drains or which overflows from a sump
c. Water below the surface of the
ground, including water which exerts pressure on or seeps or leaks through a
building, sidewalk, driveway, foundation, swimming pool, or other structure.
d. The excluded situations mentioned
under water damage also apply to damage caused by waterborne material. So, a distinction
exists between damage caused by water and damage caused by items borne
(carried) by water. The reference, allegedly, is intended make the exclusion
definitive in barring coverage for damage caused by debris-laden water or
sewage.
This
exclusion applies regardless of whether it is connected to acts of nature. No specific reference to acts
of human or animals is included. 07 14 Change.
Besides
excluding damage from water and waterborne material, this exclusion attempts to
make its intent clearer by stating that it also bars coverage from water (and material
carried by water) that escapes or overflows from any containment system. The
systems referenced in the form include:
·
Dams
·
Levees
·
Seawalls
·
Other boundaries
·
Other containment systems
This
clarification is a 07 14 Change.
Note:
Direct loss by fire or explosion resulting from water damage, as described
by this policy, is covered.
4. Power Failure
The exclusion of loss caused by
“power failure'' warrants special attention, because
such losses have revealed general uncertainty and have resulted in claim problems.
The DP 00 03–Dwelling Property 3 - Special Form simply excludes power
interruption. Power interruption refers to the interruption of power or other
utility service if the failure takes place off the residence premises. If a
covered cause of loss then damages the described
location, the insurance company will pay only for loss caused by the covered
cause of loss.
It is clear that the exclusion
would apply if a power failure were caused by damage to a power station or
utility equipment located away from the premises. But if, for example, lightning
struck and damaged wiring on the insured premises, the exclusion would not
apply and the policy would pay for damage to covered property resulting from power
failure caused directly by the lightning.
5. Neglect
This refers to any instance when
the insured does not make a reasonable effort to save and preserve property
during and after the time of a loss. This effort to protect property only
applies when the property is threatened by a covered cause of loss.
Example: Bernie’s
roof is severely damaged when a large tree limb falls from an old, neglected
tree. The limb pierces the roof in the area over an unused bedroom that is
used for storage. It happens the night before a long-planned, three-day trip
that Bernie and his girlfriend have been looking forward to for nearly a
year. Bernie decides that he can go on the trip and handle things when he
returns. He comes back from a great trip but discovers that a heavy rainstorm
occurred while he was away. When the insurer sends out an adjuster, Bernie’s
told that the extensive, additional damage caused by water entering the home
through the roof won’t be covered. |
This exclusion emphasizes the
insured's obligation to protect their own property which may face damage or
destruction. However, the obligation calls for reasonable steps as opposed to
heroic actions. The insured is not required to risk his or her personal safety
(such as entering a smoke-filled house to retrieve furniture).
Related Court Case: Neglect
To Protect Exclusion Held Not Applicable To Mailing Of Ring By Certified Mail
6. War
The term “war''
includes undeclared war, civil war, insurrection, rebellion, revolution,
warlike acts by a military force or military personnel, destruction or seizure
or use of property for a military purpose. It also includes any consequence of
any of the above.
Note: Discharge
(which is a broad term) of a nuclear weapon is considered to be a warlike
act, even if it was discharged by accident. |
|
7. Nuclear Hazard
The policy refers the
reader to the Condition section’s Nuclear Hazard Clause, which defines the term
and explains what events are excluded from coverage.
8. Intentional Loss
This exclusion applies to loss
caused by and intended by an insured and denies coverage for all insureds when
any insured commits an intentional loss. This provision even includes acts
which are performed at the request of an insured. In other words, if an insured
either directly or indirectly causes any intentional damage to covered property,
the damage is not covered.
The provision is worded in a
manner that denies coverage even when incidents also involve other insureds who
may be innocent of any intentional act.
Example: Ned and Marcy Toughluv have an incident just before
Christmas. As a surprise, Marcy and her son spend hours putting together an
extensive model railroad setup for her husband, Ned. Ned is a serious
railroad hobbyist. When Ned arrives home the next morning, instead of being
thrilled, he’s enraged. His wife failed to buy him the model and layout he
preferred. He sets fire to the railroad set-up. By the time the family
extinguishes the fire, the model, all of the other gifts, their expensive
artificial Christmas tree and their living room are all destroyed by smoke
and flames. The Toughluvs ask for coverage under their policy, but their
insurance company denies the claim since it was an intentional act. They also
notify the Toughluvs that it does not matter that Marcy was not involved in setting
the fire. |
|
However, some jurisdictions have
rendered decisions that preserve the insurable interest of innocent insureds.
In these instances, state laws protect innocent insureds.
Related Court Cases:
"Intentional Act Exclusion Held
Not Applicable When Severe Injury Was Not Intended"
"Intentional Damage Exclusion
Held Applicable Although Damage Was More Severe Than Expected"
9. Governmental
Action
With the lone exception
of property that is destroyed in order to create a fire break, the special form
policy does not cover any damage or loss related to acts of any unit of
government.
Examples of losses that are not covered: ·
New porch ordered to
be demolished because it violates a city's easement. ·
A storage barn is removed because a city
inspector says it was not approved for the particular construction zone. ·
A home is demolished by city order because an
insured (a local science teacher) dropped a boxful of thermometers and
mercury spills out onto the home's flooring. ·
The sheriff's office seizes thousands of dollars
of electronics and computer equipment from an insured's home. The insured
innocently purchased the items from someone who stole the items in a
semi-trailer hijacking. |
|
B. Items listed in this part apply to property described under Coverage
A - Dwelling and Coverage B - Other structures.
Direct losses caused by the
following sources of loss are excluded. However, these losses may be covered if
they follow (ensue) any source of loss that isn’t excluded elsewhere in the
policy.
1. Weather conditions
This exclusion applies ONLY IF weather conditions have any
effect on a cause of loss that is listed in part 1 of
the General Exclusions.
Example: A very powerful thunderstorm rages through Bigtown,
centering over the Bigtown Nuclear Plant. A series of freak lightning strikes
destroys the plant, causing a disastrous meltdown. The irradiated homes that
are insured with a DP 00 03–Dwelling Property 3 - Special Form are not
covered for the nuclear accident, even though it was caused by lightning. |
2. Acts or decisions
There is no coverage under the policy for losses caused by
the act or failure to act on the part of individuals, groups, organizations, or
governmental bodies.
3. Any loss that is caused
partially or totally by the following if faulty, inadequate, or defective:
This applies whether the property is on or off the described
location.
Instead of focusing on what is
or is not covered, the conditions section is primarily concerned with what is
required by the insured or insurer as well as how the insurance contract
operates.
A. Insurable Interest and Limit of Liability
Regardless of the number of
people who have an insurable interest in the property covered, the most that
the policy will pay for any single loss is limited. The insurer does not have
to pay more than the lesser of:
·
The amount of the insured person’s interest
in the covered property. The amount of interest is only that which exists at
the time of the loss.
·
The applicable limit of liability.
This was previously Condition B. 07 14 Change
Example: Jan Tazia insures her home for $20,000. A month later,
the volcano that’s down the block erupts and buries her home with volcanic
ash. The island’s records established that the house was worth $75,000 and
Jan has an outstanding mortgage of $40,000. Regardless of Jan’s mortgage and
the home’s market value, she is only entitled to the policy’s limit of
$20,000. |
B. Deductible
Any coverage paid under the DP 00 03–Dwelling Property 3 - Special
Form is net of any deductible that applies to a given loss. That deductible is
shown on the policy declarations.
In the instance of a
loss that qualifies for the application of more than a single deductible, the
only amount actually applied will be the highest deductible amount. 07 14
Change.
This item previously appeared directly after the policy’s Definitions
paragraph. 07 14 Change
Related Court Case: Disputed Legal Fees Held
Obligation Of Insured Law Firm Up To Amount Of Policy Deductible – though this
does not involve a dwelling policy, it illustrates the enforceability of a
valid deductible.
C. Concealment or Fraud
If the person insured by the
policy has deliberately hidden or lied about any important fact connected with
securing the insurance or having a loss covered, the insurance contract may be
nullified. Insurance contracts are legally enforceable ONLY when all of the
parties to the contract deal with each other in an honest manner.
Example: Evo Darksyde is covered by a DP 00 03 policy for the
following amounts: |
||
Coverage A |
$30,000 |
|
Coverage B |
$5,000 |
|
Coverage C |
$20,000 |
|
Coverage D |
$3,000 |
|
Unknown to his insurer, Goodfolks Insurance, Evo only
owns an old T.V. and a couch, worth a total of about $80. Evo’s home catches
fire and burns to the ground. Instead of filing a loss on the two pieces of
furniture, Evo submits a ten-page list of new furniture and false store
receipts. Goodfolks Insurance not only denies Evo’s entire claim, but they
also send him formal notice that the insurance contract is considered void (nonexistent).
They also promptly report his actions to the local authorities. |
Note: This is a condition that may create ambiguity because of its
wording. The text says that it will “provide coverage to no persons” who aren’t
truthful about information that affects an insurer’s decision to grant coverage.
The phrasing appears awkward and could be interpreted in various ways,
resulting in possible litigation.
D. Duties after Loss
Whenever a loss occurs, the
policy owner is responsible for:
1. Quickly
telling the insurer or its agent about the loss
2. Protecting the
damaged property, including arranging for needed repairs and keeping track of
the related expenses
Related Court Case: Law Bars Suit Against Public
Adjuster
3. Cooperating
with the insurance company by agreeing, whenever needed, to display the damaged
property, provide the insurance company with records and documents that they
request and allow them to make copies
4. Creating an
inventory of damaged personal property. The inventory must show the quantity,
description, actual cash value and amount of loss. The "insured"
should also attach any bills, receipts and related documents that will justify
the figures reported in the inventory.
5.
Further, the policy owner must agree to submit to examinations under oath. Such
examinations are made while not in the presence of any
other "insured" and the policy owner must sign any statement.
The requirement for cooperation is quite important. The
insured is generally the primary source used by an insurance company in investigating
a loss. It is vitally important that the insured is flexible in assisting the
insurer in its investigation. However, the insurance company is obligated not
to abuse this provision. The requests for examinations and information must be
reasonable in relation to the loss circumstances.
6. Sending the
insurance company a sworn proof of loss. The proof of loss must be signed and
sent in within 60 days after it is requested by the insurance company.
The signed statement must accurately include the following:
a. The time and
cause of loss
b. Property
involved, including parties (such as creditors) who have liens on the property
c. Information on
any other insurance which may cover the loss
d. Details of any
changes in title or occupancy during the term of the policy
e. Any specifications
of damaged buildings and detailed repair estimates
f. An inventory of
damaged personal property
g. Valid receipts
for additional living expenses and records that support the fair rental value
loss
E. Loss Settlement
The settlement provision of the
DP 00 03 policy depends upon the class of property that suffers a loss.
1. Settlement on
damage to:
If items such as the above covered property are damaged, the
loss is settled at actual cash value at the time of loss. However, the
settlement will not be more than the amount necessary to repair or replace the
property.
Example: Your client has a ten-year-old sofa that is destroyed in a fire. The insurance company discovers that the same model costs $1,700 today. However,
they consider the age and information from the insured about its condition,
stains, etc., and determine that its actual cash value is only $319 and that
is all that will be offered. |
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Related Article: Actual Cash Value Guide
Remember, the purpose of insurance is to restore an insured
to approximately the same position they enjoyed before the loss. Without this
provision, an insured whose loss was based on new or
replacement value would be financially enriched by a loss.
2. Settlement on
damage to dwelling and other structures:
Loss settlement for this type of property is more complicated.
If such property is damaged, settlement may be based on replacement cost (where
no deduction is made for depreciation). However, the use of replacement cost is
conditional upon the following:
The limit of insurance written on the damaged property must
equal at least 80 percent of the structure’s full replacement value.
Although the loss is settled according to replacement cost,
the maximum to be paid under the policy is the least expensive among the
following:
Related Court Case: Replacement Cost Provisions
Barred Recovery Of Difference Between Expenditures And Insurer's Higher
Estimate
Regardless the option, there will be a deduction for the
policy deductible.
The settlement is different when the limit of insurance at
the time of loss is less than 80% of the structure’s full replacement value.
Under this circumstance, the policy will pay the greater of:
IMPORTANT: The
loss payment will still subtract the deductible and it will be no more than the
actual limit of insurance.
In order to determine the amount needed to meet the 80% of
full replacement cost requirement, only include the value of the structure that
is above the structure’s foundation walls or the lowest basement floor,
whichever is applicable.
Only actual cash value of the loss will be paid unless one
of the following applies:
a. the damage is fixed
b. the loss amount is less than $2,500 AND
less than 5% of the limit of insurance.
Finally, the policy owner has the right to have the loss
settled on an actual cash value basis and has up to 180 days (from the loss
date) to make claim for any additional amount on a
replacement cost basis.
F. Loss to a Pair or Set
If there is a loss to a pair or
set, the insurance company has a choice. It may pay the amount that represents
the loss of value (on an actual cash value basis) to the property before and
after the loss.
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Example: Kendra was startled awake by her apartment's smoke
alarm. As she ran outside, she managed to grab her cat and a handful of
jewelry from the top of her dresser. Her apartment and several others are gutted.
She finds that she only saved one of her heirloom emerald earrings. As an
intact set, the earrings were worth $500. Kendra requests that amount as part
of her claim. Her insurer pays her $275 after discovering that the lone
earring still has a value of $225. |
An insurer may also choose to
repair or replace the damaged or lost property. The policy wording obligates the insurer to restore the property's pre-loss
value. This could create some ambiguity. Let's use Kendra's situation again,
but with a different twist.
Example: Kendra was startled awake by her apartment's smoke
alarm. As she ran outside, she managed to grab her cat and a handful of
jewelry from the top of her dresser. Her apartment and several others are
gutted. She finds that she only saved one of her heirloom emerald earrings.
As an intact set, the earrings were worth $500. Kendra requests that amount
as part of her claim. Her insurer locates a match for her remaining earring.
They found it at a local pawn shop and only paid $100 for it. In the first example, Kendra
receives a higher cash payment, but only one earring. In the second, she has
her earrings, but the set may not be worth as much as the original. Kendra
may be able to have the "new" set appraised and, if it is worth
less, may be due additional compensation. |
G. Appraisal
If the insured and the insurance
company can’t agree on the amount of loss, either may demand a loss appraisal.
This provision requires both parties to do the following in order:
·
Choose a competent appraiser
·
The appraiser has to be selected within 20 days
of getting a written appraisal request
·
Accept the umpire which is chosen by their
appraisers (an umpire will be chosen within 15 days)
·
Accept the selection of the umpire by a judge of
a court of record in the same state of the described location. But this is only
if the appraisers can’t agree on an umpire
·
Allow their appraisers to separately set the
amount of loss. If the appraisers agree on a cost, the insurance company uses
the amount to settle the loss. If they disagree, the umpire joins the process
and agreement by any two sets the amount of loss
·
Pay its own appraiser and split the cost of the
umpire and other appraisal expenses
H. Other Insurance and Service Agreement
If a loss covered by this policy
is also covered by other insurance, the insurance company will pay only its
share of the loss. The insurance company’s share is determined by how much
coverage is written under the policy and how much total coverage is available
to cover the loss.
Example: A. Abel has DP 00 03–Dwelling Property 3 - Special Form
protecting his home. The policy has $25,000 written under coverage A.
Coincidentally, the bank that lent A. the money to buy the home bought a separate
fire policy on the same dwelling. The 2nd
policy was for $35,000. A’s home has an $8,000 dollar loss. While
investigating the loss, the insurance company finds out about the other
policy. The insurer determines that the loss is covered and they pay A.
$3,200. The $3,200 is roughly 40% of the loss, which is the insurance company’s
share of the total amount of insurance written by both policies
($25,000/$60,000 [sum of two policies] = 41.67%). |
This provision allows an insurer
considering a loss payment to take into consideration any protection that is available
under a non-insurance contract, such as a maintenance, warranty, or similar
arrangement. That other source of coverage must respond to the loss before any
coverage is provided by the special form policy. In such circumstances, the
special form policy becomes an excess insurance contract.
I. Subrogation
A subrogation is a right owned
by the insured to recovery any payment made under the insurance policy from the
party that’s responsible for the loss. This right to recover payment is passed
onto the insurance company. An insurer, after paying their insured, may try to
recover any money it’s paid out, so it is very protective of this right. An
insured may, in writing, waive this right to recover payment. However, such a
waiver has to be in writing and has to be done prior to a loss.
Example: Jerry Atrick invites some friends over for a dinner
party. The party is cut short by a fire which started in the bathroom by a
burning cigarette that Jerry’s friend, Sally, threw into a waste basket.
Jerry’s insurance company pays $3,500 in damages to Jerry. A week later,
Sally receives a certified letter from Jerry’s insurance company, demanding
to be reimbursed $3,500. The insurer has just subrogated Jerry’s claim
against Sally. |
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J. Suit Against Us
As mentioned earlier, a policy
is a contract between the insurance company and the insured policy owner. Under
this provision, the insured cannot attempt to sue her insurance company until
the insured or claimant uses all of the avenues within the policy. In other words,
legal action can’t begin until after the policy provisions have been complied
with. Finally, the action has to start within two years after the date of loss.
Courts have upheld this
limitation. Of course, the issue that controls a policy owner's right to sue is
whether he or she has complied with the policy provisions, not how long it
takes for a payment to be made (or for an insurer to investigate a claim). An
insured may preserve the right to bring suit by
seeking expert advice regarding when and how to file a claim against the
insurance company.
Related Court Case:
Insurer Waived Suit Limitation Clause
K. Our Option
If the insured is given written
notice within 30 days after the insurance company receives the insured's
signed, sworn proof of loss, the insurance company may repair or replace any
part of the damaged property with similar property.
It is important that insurance
consumers understand that paying a loss in cash is just one option available to
an insurance company to settle a claim. The insurance company can actually
replace the damaged property with new, used, or similar property. This
provision is meant to balance the insured’s right to recover for an eligible
loss against the insurer’s right to settle losses at a reasonable cost. As time
passes, it may be difficult or impossible to find exact material or property to
replace or repair what has been lost or damaged.
L. Loss Payment
The insurance company is
obligated to handle any loss, including payment, with the insured policy owner.
If a payment is made, the payment will go to the insured. Exceptions to this
exist when another person is named in the policy or has a legal right to
receive payment.
Once the insurance company gets
the policy owner’s signed proof of loss and the value has been established through
one of the following:
·
an agreement with the insured
·
notice that a final judgment is entered
·
an appraisal award has been filed
the
insurance company has 60 days to pay the insured.
M. Abandonment of Property
The insurance company is not
required to accept any property which is abandoned by the insured. This
provision keeps the insurance company out of the junkyard or realty business.
An insurance company’s goal is to protect property, not to accumulate real or
personal property.
N. Mortgage Clause
An insurance company is obligated
to recognize the financial interest of the mortgagee which is not always the
same as the insured’s interest.
1. When one or
more mortgagees appear on a policy, any loss payments made involving the dwelling
or other structures coverage will be paid to the mortgagee(s) and the insured.
The payments must recognize each party’s interest and any order of precedence.
Example: Joe Overdrawn borrowed money from Bank A to buy his home
and garage. Joe insured both on a Special Form Dwelling policy with Bygone
Insurance, listing Bank A as the mortgagee. Later, Joe borrows more money to
pay some bills. He borrows this additional amount from Bank B, which insists
on using his home as collateral. However, Bank A insists that Bank B be
listed as an additional interest which can’t claim any payment until after
Bank A’s interest is handled. A year later, Joe’s home is totally destroyed by
a windstorm. Bygone Insurance pays the policy limits to Bank A. Even though
Bank B is listed as an interest, it couldn’t claim any of the insurance
proceeds since the entire amount was needed to satisfy Bank A’s primary
financial interest. |
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2. After
investigating a loss, the insurance company may reject (or deny) a claim by a
policy owner. However, the rejection of the policy owner’s claim may not apply
to a mortgagee’s claim. A mortgagee can preserve a separate right to payment by
sharing any information it may have regarding a change in ownership, occupancy
or level of risk, paying premiums when the policy owner fails to do so and by
complying with the policy’s proof of loss, appraisal, lawsuits and loss payment
provisions. Of course, this only applies after the mortgagee has been notified
that the insured has failed to comply with the provisions.
3. If the insurance
company decides to cancel or not to renew the policy, the mortgagee will be
notified at least 10 days before the cancellation or non-renewal takes effect.
This separate, advanced notification allows the mortgagee time to arrange for
replacing coverage.
4. In the event that
the insurance company denies coverage to the insured, but pays a mortgagee, the
insurance company may either pay just the loss or choose to pay off the entire
mortgage debt.
5. The insurance
company also has the option of obtaining all subrogation rights under the
policy. Therefore, the insurer, after paying the mortgagee, could pursue
reimbursement from the insured or other responsible party.
O. No Benefit to Bailee
The insurance company isn’t
obligated to honor any assignment or provide any coverage that benefits a
person or organization holding, storing, or moving property for a fee regardless of any other provision of
this policy. In other words, the insurance contract recognizes the interest of
the insured and any valid interests, with the exception of extending coverage
to parties that have temporary control over the insured property. This
provision forces such parties to take full responsibility for their actions
instead of enjoying the benefit of coverage purchased by others.
AN IMPORTANT NOTE ON THE CANCELLATION AND NON-RENEWAL CONDITIONS:
The following information
concerns only what is in the dwelling policy regarding cancellation and
non-renewal. Most states have their own provisions which supersede these
provisions. The reader must be familiar with the requirements of their
operating states as these provisions may differ substantially from the basic
dwelling policy provisions. The differences commonly revolve around the
cancellation or non-renewal reasons, time of notice, proof of sending notice
and length of advance notification.
P. Cancellation
1. The insured
has the right to cancel coverage whenever he or she wishes by surrendering the
policy or by sending written notice to the insurance company. The notice has to
include the effective date of the cancellation.
2. The insurance
company may cancel the policy, but the policy limits the conditions when it can
cancel the policy. The insurance company must give advanced, written notice of
cancellation and it can only do so when:
·
The insured fails to pay the premium and is
given (at least) 10 days' notice;
·
The policy has been active less than 60 days; it
can then be canceled for any reason as long as (at least) 10 days’ notice is given;
·
The policy has been active more than 60 days (or
the policy is a renewal) and it gives (at least) 30 days notice IF:
o
The insured has seriously misrepresented an
important fact; or
o
There has been a significant change in the
subject of the insurance
·
The policy has a term of more than one year if
the insurer gives (at least) 30 days notice prior to the anniversary date.
3. The insurer
must return any premium based on the date of the cancellation until the policy
expiration date.
4. Any refund
due, if not returned along with the cancellation notice, must be returned
within a reasonable time after the cancellation date.
Q. Non-Renewal
If the insurance company decides
not to issue a renewal of the expiring policy, it must give the insured at
least 30 days advanced notice.
R. Liberalization Clause
An insurance company has the right
to make changes to the coverage it offers. However, if the changes expand the
coverage under the policy and does so without charging more premium, the
company must automatically provide the coverage under this policy if the change
meets both of the following criteria:
The Liberalization requirement
does not apply when changes involve items that both broadens and restricts
coverage via either a new policy edition or a required (mandated) endorsement.
Example: Bygone Insurance decides to add expanded coverage, free
of charge, to all of its DP 00 03– Dwelling Property 3 - Special Forms issued
in BigState. The free, expanded coverage is effective August 1, 2023. Jane
Everfair’s policy, with a described location that is in BigState, renewed on
June 14th. On August 10th, her property suffers a loss
which is the type which is covered by the expanded coverage. Because the
change was implemented during Jane’s policy period, she receives the broader
benefit. However, Tom Woeful is also
covered by Bygone Insurance under their DP 00 03–Dwelling Property 3 -
Special Form. His policy renews on August 5th and he
suffers a loss that could be handled by the expanded coverage. Unfortunately,
his property is in LittleState. Since Bygone did not expand coverage for its
LittleState policies, Tom’s policy is not liberalized, regardless of his
policy term. |
S. Waiver or Change of Policy Provisions
An insured may ask to waive or
change a policy provision, but the request must be approved by the insurance
company and the insurer must agree to the change in writing, otherwise the waiver
or change is no good. An insurance company may ask for an appraisal or an
examination without giving up any of its rights under the policy.
Example: Bygone insurance is not comfortable with the
circumstances of a loss or with the value of the damaged property that is
claimed by the Patricia. While it is still trying to determine whether the
loss qualifies for coverage, Bygone may ask for an appraisal. The fact that
it asked for an appraisal does not block it from possibly denying coverage
when its investigation is complete. |
T. Assignment
A policy owner may not assign
his or her policy to another party without getting written approval from the
insurance company.
U. Death
If the named insured dies, the
policy will still provide coverage according to the policy's provisions while
the covered property is the responsibility of the deceased’s legal
representative or a party that controls the covered property. The coverage
applies only to the covered property. When the situation involves a person who
temporarily controls the property, coverage applies only until the property is
assigned to a legal representative.
Example: Sollie's home was insured by a dwelling policy with
effective dates of 6/10/2023 to 6/10/2024. On Jan 13, 2024, Sollie dies. His
old friend and next-door neighbor looks in on the property for the three
weeks it takes to have someone appointed as Sollie's executor. For that
three-week period, the policy would respond to a loss, treating Sollie's
neighbor as the insured. |
Examples:
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V. Nuclear Hazard Clause
"Nuclear hazard" is
defined as any controlled or uncontrolled nuclear reaction, radiation, or radioactive
contamination. Nuclear hazard includes any consequence of such events.
Any loss caused by nuclear hazard,
as it is defined, is not considered loss caused by fire, explosion, or smoke,
whether or not these perils are specifically named in or included as eligible
causes of loss covered by the policy. The one exception is that coverage will
apply to any direct fire loss that is a result of a nuclear hazard.
W. Recovered Property
If the insured or the insurance
company recovers any property for which the insurance company has made payment,
the recovering party will notify the other party. The insured may choose to
keep the recovered property and have the loss settlement adjusted accordingly.
Related Court Case:
Insured Has Right To Claim Recovered Property
X. Volcanic Eruption Period: All volcanic eruptions that occur
within a 72-hour period will be treated as one eruption. This limits the amount of times the full amount of coverage under the policy
will be available to respond to separate losses and also the number of
deductibles that can be applied.
Y. Loss Payable Clause: This condition obligates the insurer to
treat a legitimate insurable interest that is listed on the policy as an
insured, including an obligation to send advanced notice in case the policy
coverage is terminated.
Z. Policy Period
This is the period of time that
appears on the policy declarations page. A loss that is caused by an eligible
peril must occur within this time period in order to qualify for coverage. This was previously Condition A. 07 14
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