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WATER DAMAGE INSURANCE

Ownership does not necessarily determine insurance obligations--an association's governing documents can assign duties unrelated to ownership. Moreover, insurance carriers sometimes deny claims that should be covered and pay claims that should be denied. The rules of coverage seem to shift from carrier to carrier and from claim to claim.

Water Damage. Insurance carriers do not cover all forms of water damage. Generally, their coverage is limited to sudden, accidental water damage. For example, losses associated with storm damage, burst pipes, and drain line backups. As a rule, they do not cover losses from lack of maintenance.

Master Policies. If an association carries "bare walls" insurance, the carrier will not pay for an owner's damaged cabinets, counters, and carpets--it pays only for bare walls. However, some CC&Rs require coverage for unit improvements in addition to the common areas. This type of insurance is referred to as "original builder's specsifications" or “all in” policies. In that case, the association's insurance will cover the owner's carpet, cabinets, and fixtures even though he caused the loss.

Sometimes CC&Rs are irrelevant. Some master policies provide broader coverage than required by the governing documents. As a result, even when CC&Rs exclude unit improvements and require owners to carry their own insurance, carriers will confound boards by covering a negligent owner's loss. This encourages more claims by negligent owners and drives up insurance premiums.

Submitting Claims. Many boards try to keep premiums under control by managing which claims are submitted and which are not. Unfortunately, some CC&Rs allow owners to make claims directly against the association's policy. This encourages owners to go uninsured and file claims, no matter how small, against the association's policy. The higher the claims history, the higher the premiums.

Deductibles. One of the best methods for controlling claims is to adopt a deductible policy that spells out that whichever entity (association or homeowner) causes the damage is responsible for paying the deductible. Association deductibles used to be in the $500 to $2,500 range. Now they commonly vary from $5,000 to $25,000, with most at $10,000. If negligent owners are made responsible for the deductible, and the deductible is high enough, owners will be less inclined to file claims or be uninsured.

Recommendation: Boards should have their insurance broker compare the association's insurance against their CC&Rs to make sure the policy meets or exceeds what is required by the governing documents. To keep insurance premiums down, associations should amend their CC&Rs to clearly assign maintenance duties, broadly define exclusive use common areas, add mitigation provisions, require owners to carry insurance, make owners responsible for losses originating in their units, and define liability for deductibles. In addition, boards should consider raising their deductibles.

ASSISTANCE: Associations needing legal assistance can contact us. To stay current with issues affecting community associations, subscribe to the Davis-Stirling Newsletter.

Adams Stirling PLC