The question is what is the best way to insure this exposure? My first thought was E&O with contingent BI/PD coverage.
Am I on the right "track"?

Moderators: Josh, independent guy
Ok at first I was thinking of products liability but was concerned that although bodily injury or pd would be covered caused by the product, I was concerned that it would not cover the "failure to perform" part of the exposure.Shagster12 wrote:That's not how I would work on this exposure. You're looking at a technology product that likely has market appeal in several standard market technology divisions. I would look to provide full GL coverage with Prod/ops. I see the real exposure as being in the faulty operation of the device, so I see it as a product exposure.
I would think that there are several standard markets that would be interested in providing the Products coverage on this.
Good luck.
Shagster
Rlevine, are you saying that even if we get GL with products and Manufacturer's E&O along with RR protective that an injury to a railroad worker would not be covered if the product failed to properly alert the rail worker? (since GL excludes your work and the PL would only cover a financial loss)?Rlevine wrote:Sorry, I meant role not roll.
The GL covers BI & PD. There is an exlcusion for your work. I had a client that streched out metal to make it smooth. The mfg who purchased and used the product sued. They alleged that the processing of the metal caused the thickness to be too small and would not be able to be used as intended. We provdied Mfg E&O attached to their Gl to cover those types of claims.
Professional liability is thought of when there is a financial loss. A design flaw that causes the loss is different then when the mfg's process causes the loss. I suggest both coverages to eliminate the carrier from saying it should be professional and not GL. This is necessary if they are involved in the design.
As far as Railroad Protective, there is an exclusion on the Gl when there is construction work being performed within 50 Feet of a RR. The RRPLI provides coverage for this exclusion. It would be very unlikely that a carrier would exclude coverage for a mfg of a product being used by a worker on a RR.
The GL exclusion is "damage to your work"- and not simply " your work". . The apparent intent there, I believe, is that the GL does not pay for replacing the faulty, sheet metal, does not pay for rebuilding a house that the city ordered torn down because you built it too close to something, etc etc. But it would cover bodily injury or property damage caused by the product. Which brings up an interesting point- the product, in this case, in the example you give of it failing to work, is not "causing" the damage, it is instead failing to prevent it. And that, I must say, I do not know how that situation will interact with the CGL policy. But, to the best I can tell, it isn't the "damage to your work" exclusion that creates that ambiguity.Rob wrote:Rlevine, are you saying that even if we get GL with products and Manufacturer's E&O along with RR protective that an injury to a railroad worker would not be covered if the product failed to properly alert the rail worker? (since GL excludes your work and the PL would only cover a financial loss)?Rlevine wrote:Sorry, I meant role not roll.
The GL covers BI & PD. There is an exlcusion for your work. I had a client that streched out metal to make it smooth. The mfg who purchased and used the product sued. They alleged that the processing of the metal caused the thickness to be too small and would not be able to be used as intended. We provdied Mfg E&O attached to their Gl to cover those types of claims.
Professional liability is thought of when there is a financial loss. A design flaw that causes the loss is different then when the mfg's process causes the loss. I suggest both coverages to eliminate the carrier from saying it should be professional and not GL. This is necessary if they are involved in the design.
As far as Railroad Protective, there is an exclusion on the Gl when there is construction work being performed within 50 Feet of a RR. The RRPLI provides coverage for this exclusion. It would be very unlikely that a carrier would exclude coverage for a mfg of a product being used by a worker on a RR.
By the way, my client is the designer and manufacturer.
The prospect (insured) is the manufacturer and so he is concerned about suits brought against him for alleged design flaws, i.e. the product fails due to that and then someone is injured as a result. I think of a warranty as something that would replace the product if it failed.gregcw wrote:I've been watching this thead for several days and while I understand the concepts of Manufacturer's E&O and Products Liability, it sounds to me like this is realy an issue of Warranty of the product, i.e. the product not doing what it was designed for because of conditions outside of the manufacturers control.
Shagster, I agree and have recommended both and am going to attempt to procure both. However, one of my concerns was whether the E&O portion will clearly state that the coverage will apply to BI/PD due to malfunction. When I receive a quote, I'm going to need to speak with the carrier and have them clarify it in writing as to exactly their intent.Shagster12 wrote:Rob:
I agree that your concern is not a Warranty question. You are really looking at two basic exposures to the manufacturer;
1) There is an inherent design flaw which may cause a malfunction of the product which jeopordizes both persons and property. In which case the Mfg. E&O should be the appropriate cover.
2) Through an unforeseen event the product malfunctions causing BI / PD or both, and while the malfunction cannot be attributed to a design flaw the product never the less malfunctioned causing the damages to occur. In this case the Client should have a GL policy with complete Products coverage.
I recommend you obtain both covers for the insured and ideally from the same carrier to help avoid any other potential cover gaps. With a product of this nature and so much exposure to consider I don't believe you can go wrong having more coverage rather than less. There are too many ambiguities and cross-over causes of loss to consider to try to pare coverage down to one policy or the other... Recommend them both! Better safe than sorry......
Shagster