Most property policies have a condition requiring inventory of damaged and undamaged property, including quantities, costs, values and amount of loss claimed by the insured, if requested by the insurer.
Does this apply to real property or is it intended for contents only?
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Akos Swierkiewicz, CPCU
IRCOS, LLC
215 736 9970
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Inventory of damaged and undamaged property
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Re: Inventory of damaged and undamaged property
Would really depend on the wording of each policy, but realistically, the contents values are much harder to re-create after a loss, while the real property (Building) is not so hard, especially if the broker has submitted realistic and appropriate building information.
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Inventory of damaged and undamaged property
The wording wording at issue is not the New York 165 lines fire policy but Section E. Loss Conditions 3. Duties in the event of loss or damage e. of ISO CP0010 (Ed. 07/88) to wit:
"At our request, give us complete inventories of the damaged and undamaged property. Include quantities, costs, values and amount of loss claimed."
"At our request, give us complete inventories of the damaged and undamaged property. Include quantities, costs, values and amount of loss claimed."
Re: Inventory of damaged and undamaged property
Akos,
I would assume the carrier would ask for infomation on both real and personal property. It will depend on what coverages are on the policy. There are carriers that would include "machinery" that is permanently attached as real property. An insured will be asked to verify what was damaged. The carrier will check for coverage, limits, deductible, and if co-insurance applies. The more documentaiton you can offer, the quicker the claim will be resolved.
I would assume the carrier would ask for infomation on both real and personal property. It will depend on what coverages are on the policy. There are carriers that would include "machinery" that is permanently attached as real property. An insured will be asked to verify what was damaged. The carrier will check for coverage, limits, deductible, and if co-insurance applies. The more documentaiton you can offer, the quicker the claim will be resolved.