Casualty Insurance

Amwins delivers primary and excess casualty insurance solutions for your clients' most complex risks.

Custom solutions and market clout at your fingertips

With more than 580 dedicated casualty professionals across the country,  collaboration is in our DNA. Amwins delivers trusted consultation, market access and creative program structures to place coverage for even the most complex and layered accounts —providing value-added resources, unmatched service and expertise every step of the way.

$9.4B

annual U.S. premium placements

936

dedicated professionals


700

casualty markets we place business with

Casualty areas of specialty

Construction

Whether your client is a residential or commercial general contractor, specialty trade contractor or has another role in construction projects, Amwins has the primary, excess and other coverage solutions to protect against unforeseen losses.

Energy

With energy sources continuously evolving, our specialists stay on top of market conditions to deliver premier casualty insurance solutions across upstream, midstream, downstream, utilities and many other classes.

Environmental

Our specialists understand that environmental and pollution exposures vary by region and class of business. We have the intel on regional issues and carrier appetites to find the right solution for your clients' unique needs.

Healthcare

Amwins specialists are committed to expertise, collaboration and unique product development, allowing us to provide optimal coverage solutions for nearly every segment of the dynamic healthcare industry.

Hospitality + Entertainment

Do you have a large, coverage-driven account in the hospitality sector? Bring it on. We specialize in difficult-to-place risks from nightclubs to hotels to casinos, including liquor liability.

Manufacturing + Distribution

Whether your client is involved in the design, development, manufacturing or distribution of products, we've got market access and expertise to deliver custom solutions that can't be found in the standard market.

Public Entity

Public entities come in all shapes and sizes – from municipalities and government agencies to educational entities. Our specialists have the expertise to provide comprehensive, cost-effective casualty insurance coverage that meets your clients' unique needs.

Real Estate

Whether your client owns a multi-family building or student housing on the residential side, or a strip mall or industrial warehouse on the commercial side, Amwins brokers have the casualty expertise and market relationships to protect against unforeseen losses.

Transportation

Amwins specialists strategically place coverage for a wide range of complex transportation risks, including long and short-haul trucking operations, commercial auto, medical transport, rideshare and much more.

Specialty Coverages

Our coverage expertise includes commercial auto, construction wraps, pollution liability, general liability, liquor liability, product recall, products liability, umbrella + excess liability, workers' compensation and more.
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Actuarial services

Licensing robust cutting-edge software, our in-house actuarial team runs account and portfolio-level reports ensure submission details and pricing are as accurate as possible.

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Claims advocacy

From designing a proactive claims management plan to engaging on difficult and complex claims, Amwins supports our clients when they need us the most.
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Custom product development

We collaborate with you to deliver solutions based on specific coverage needs — tapping into our specialization model to craft the right approach. 

 

Casualty resources + insights

Stay up to date on emerging casualty insurance trends and topics

Don't Fall Into The Hole: Potential Insurance Exposures for Construction Owners

Nov 17, 2020, 02:23 AM
During and after a construction project, commercial general liability and project-specific policies may not fully protect building owners against any and all risks faced. This article addresses two unique areas which should be carefully considered to ensure proper coverage.
Title : Don't Fall Into The Hole: Potential Insurance Exposures for Construction Owners
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Date : Jun 9, 2016, 04:00 AM

As always with construction projects, it is important that owners of new developments understand insurance coverage to ensure that there is adequate insurance to address any potential risks during and after the construction of the project. While most owners maintain commercial general liability policies or rely on project-specific policies, these policies may not fully protect the owner against any and all risks that they may face during and after construction. This article addresses two unique areas in which owners should take special note to ensure that they are covered for these particular risks: third party action over claims and products-completed operations coverage.

Third Party Action Over Claims

Owner contracts with Roofer to assist in the construction of the roof of a commercial building. During construction, Roofer’s employee falls and injures himself on the project site and collects workers’ compensation benefits under Roofer’s workers’ compensation policy. Typically, Owner would not consider any risks with respect to this injury as Owner required Roofer, in the subcontract, to maintain workers’ compensation insurance. However, despite receiving workers’ compensation benefits, Roofer’s employee files an action against Owner alleging negligence for failing to properly maintain a safe work site.

The action filed by Roofer’s employee is considered a third party action over claim. The employee is unable to sue Roofer because workers’ compensation is the employee’s exclusive remedy against his or her employer. Thus, the injured employee brings an action against Owner alleging that Owner’s negligence in failing to maintain the project site contributed to the employee’s injuries.

The standard ISO Commercial General Liability policy contains exclusions for bodily injuries arising out or and in the course of employment. The exclusion typically reads as follows:

“Bodily Injury” to:

1.  An “employee” of the insured arising out of an in the course of:

1)  Employment by the insured; or

2)  Performance duties related to the conduct of the insured’s business; or

2.  The spouse, child, parent, brother or sister of that “employee” as a consequence of Paragraph (1) above.
 
This exclusion applies whether the insured may be liable as an employer or in any other capacity and to any obligation to share damages with or repay someone else who must pay damages because of the injury.
 
This exclusion does not apply to liability assumed by the insured under an “insured contract”.

In this case, the owner would look to the subcontract and indemnity language in the subcontract that requires the subcontractor to defend and indemnify the owner – thus transferring the risk back to the employer/subcontractor. However, the anti-indemnity statutes in many states prohibit indemnity provisions that require an indemnitor (Roofer) to indemnify the indemnitee (Owner) for the indemnitee’s own negligence or misconduct. Thus, the risk remains with the owner where the indemnity provision is not valid under the law.

What owners should also be aware of is that standard Commercial General Liability (“CGL”) policies often contain an action over exclusion endorsement. In these instances, the sentence, “This exclusion does not apply to liability assumed by the insured under an ‘insured contract’.” is often removed and as such, no coverage is afforded under the exclusion.
 
In New York, labor statutes  provide for the “absolute liability” of third parties, including property owners, for elevation-related injuries where the employee is engaged in construction work. Given that action over claims are common in New York, many carriers have included exclusions that preclude coverage for these action over claims.

Overall, when owners are negotiating indemnification clauses with contractor entities, owners should be aware of the extent to which the law allows indemnification for the owner’s own negligence. A carefully drafted indemnification provision can be helpful in transferring risks that arise from injuries on the project site. Owners should also ensure that insurance policies they obtain for the project provide coverage for third party claims made against the owner for negligence in maintaining the project site and do not specifically contain an action over exclusion.

Products-Completed Operations Coverage

Consider the following scenario: Randy Roofer was hired by Owner X to install the roof for an apartment complex. Randy Roofer has maintained his own CGL policy with products-completed operations coverage. Randy Roofer retires five years later and cancels his policy. Within a year of his retirement, the roof collapses and injures a resident. Coverage is not afforded to Randy Roofer or Owner X under Randy’s prior policy as the policy requires bodily injury or property damage to occur during the policy period. In a nutshell, the policy must be in effect for coverage to be afforded. Here, Owner X has exposure if he relied on Randy Roofer to maintain insurance and name Owner X as an additional insured.

For project-specific policies, including Owner’s Interest only policies, whether owner controlled (“OCIP”) or contractor controlled (“CCIP”), full coverage is often provided during the course of construction and then limited to products-completed operations coverage for a specified period of time after construction is completed. This can be a period of 36 to 120 months depending on multiple factors with consideration of the statue of repose. In California, where the statute of repose is ten (10) years for latent defects, 120 months following the completion of construction does not adequately cover the owner for claims that may arise of the work done on the project by the subcontractors. The failure to ensure that a policy provides products and completed operations coverage for the entire period covering a state’s specific statute of repose can create an extreme risk to the owner and leave him or her with little protection. Thus, owners should insure through their own general liability policy, or as an additional insured under another policy, that coverage is afforded for any claims arising out of the construction of the project even after it is complete.

If a premises liability claim for bodily injury arises after construction is complete, the contractors under an OCIP would be covered for liability arising from the construction of the project. Interestingly, the owner of the project would have a gap in coverage if the products-completed operations hazard provides that the policy only covers each of the named insureds for damages caused by completed work, “away from premises that the Named Insured owns or rents.” Thus, in certain circumstances where the owner maintains the property after construction, the owner will not be protected by the products-completed operations coverage.

Project owners must take heed of the unique risks that are faced by an owner and not covered by an indemnity provision or through insurance carried by the general contractor or its subcontractors. While most of the risk is with contractors, there are situations in which the owner is subject to liability. Thus, owners should consider the unique risks discussed in this article as well as others, and ensure that they maintain their own liability coverage rather than relying solely on indemnity provisions or insurance coverage afforded under an OCIP or CCIP or through an additional insured endorsement.
 


About the Author
Grace A. Nguyen is a Senior Counsel at Chapman Glucksman Dean Roeb & Barger which has offices throughout California. Ms. Nguyen specializes in complex multi-party litigation, including construction and real estate claims, environmental, employment, professional liability, commercial, business and catastrophic casualty litigation. In 2016 Ms. Nguyen was selected as a Super Lawyers Southern California “Rising Star,” for her demonstration of excellence in the practice of law, which is an honor limited to less than 2.5 percent of California attorneys.

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Filling excess placements despite changes in exposure.

When an insured with five New York City hotels converted operations to COVID-19 shelters for the local homeless population, the change in exposure threw a wrench in the renewal. While the general liability carrier stayed on the account, the excess carrier discontinued coverage. The retail agent contacted Amwins to fill the excess coverage for these locations.

With a local government agency managing and operating these shelters, the insured’s exposure was lessened. However given the venue, occupancy and market conditions, filling out the program was still an uphill climb. Through our market access and industry expertise, we were able to fill the policy with just two layers - securing a big win for our retail client and their insured.

Amwins has the expertise to place complex risks consistently and effectively.