General Liability Doesnt Cover Bad Workmanship, South
Carolina Court Rules ~
In most states, builders, like other businesses, are
required to carry liability insurance. And builders typically
count on that insurance to cover them against homeowner
lawsuits alleging damage due to construction defects even if
the damages were caused by a mistake the builder made.
But its complicated. Different courts in different states
have applied different interpretations to the standard language
found in most commercial general liability (CGL) policies. In
South Carolina, a January ruling from the state Supreme Court
has limited the insurance companys obligation in cases where
the builder made a mistake and the ruling comes as a surprise
to some builders.
The Courts opinion, authored by Justice John W. Kittredge,
is posted at the Courts website, (26909 -
Crossmann Communities v. Harleysville Mutual). In the
ruling, Justice Kittredge says the decision hinges on what
constitutes an occurrence of liability. Kittredge explains that
an occurrence, in insurance policy language, has to be an
accident which the court has defined as an unexpected happening
or event, which occurs by chance and usually suddenly, with
harmful results, not intended or designed by the person
suffering the harm or hurt."
Faulty workmanship, the Justice reasons, is not an accident,
because it is foreseeable and preventable its under the
builders control. If the workmanship created damage to some
other persons property if, say, bad wiring sparked a fire that
killed a person that secondary event might be considered an
unforeseeable accident. The policy would not necessarily cover
replacing the wiring, but it would cover liability for the
death. But in the Crossman case, homeowners werent suing about
consequential damages, but about the faulty nature of their
houses. In a case like that, the Court ruled, where theres no
consequential damage except to the builders own work, general
liability insurance does not have to compensate the builder for
his liability to the homeowner.
In a concurring opinion, Justice Costa M. Pleicones wrote,
As the majority notes, the homeowners allege negligent
construction on many fronts, including improper installation of
siding, windows, flashing at the windows, walkway floor
sheathing, and wind resistant tie down straps; deterioration of
structural columns and structural components; failure to
completely install the building wrap; flooding of units; water
infiltration; failure to properly attach handrails; failure to
properly construct emergency stairs; termite infestation and
destruction; and defective storm water drainage system. This
complaint alleges nothing more than negligent acts constituting
faulty workmanship, not an occurrence.
However straightforward the logic may appear to the high
court, however, the result dismayed some builders, reports the
Charleston Post and Courier
(
Ruling worries S.C. contractors: Responsibility for settlements
shifts, by Katy Stech). The court's decision surprised the
construction community and attorneys who represent the building
industry, the paper reports. Both parties are asking state
lawmakers for a bill that would protect contractors from paying
out lawsuit settlements.