Liquor Liability Coverage
Personal property that is
attractive to collectors usually requires special coverage under a Homeowners
(HO) policy. This is due to severe coverage restrictions on special property.
The premiums charged for personal property protected by a HO policy is designed
to cover regular furnishings and ordinary property that face an average risk of
loss. A regular stove, a chair, kitchen table or bed is no big deal. Such
property is common to all homes and they're subject to routine losses. What
makes property special? Usually certain circumstances that increase its
susceptibility to loss such as:
·
Rarity
(age or scarcity)
·
Small
size, but high value
·
Appreciating
value
·
High
marketability
·
High
utility value
Many businesses have the
majority of their exposures against lawsuits covered by a standard, general
liability policy. However, business owners and managers often overlook their
responsibility for losses related to alcoholic beverages. A typical liability
policy for a business excludes losses that involve:
·
causing
or contributing to the intoxication of any person
·
furnishing
alcoholic beverages to a person under the legal drinking age
·
furnishing
alcoholic beverages to a person already under the influence of alcohol
·
any
statute, ordinance or regulation related to the sale, gift, distribution or use
of alcoholic beverages.
However, the exclusions
only apply to businesses that make, distribute, sell, serve or furnish
alcoholic beverages. This means that most companies are covered for their
liquor liability exposures, such as holiday parties. Other companies may need
to consider special protection, such as what is offered by a Liquor Liability
policy. This type of insurance protects bars, restaurants, hotels, motels,
package liquor stores or other places where liquor is sold, distributed or
served. It also protects liquor manufacturers as well as owners of property
that houses liquor-related businesses. It handles claims involving injury or
damage caused by customers who were provided liquor by the covered business.
A liquor liability policy
covers only injury or damage an insured has caused due to its serving or
selling/furnishing alcoholic beverages. Therefore, a liquor liability policy
supplements an operation’s general liability protection.
Liquor liability policies
will protect a business from a variety of situations such as:
·
A
package liquor store that is sued by parents of minors who jump from a roof
after drinking wine the store had sold them
·
A bar
owner who is sued by a person who was injured when an intoxicated patron
emerged from the bar and fell on him
·
A
restaurant that is sued by a customer who is hurt during a fight between two
intoxicated patrons
·
A bar
owner who is sued by the family of a women killed by an intoxicated driver who
purchased liquor from the bar
However, the liquor policy
also has several important limitations. For instance, it only responds to
losses involving the insured businessowner and employees (not their friends and
relatives). Also, no coverage exists for intentional (deliberate) acts.
Further, coverage does not apply to injury caused by the actual alcoholic
beverage, such as food poisoning from contaminated beer. Businesses that have a
significant liquor exposure should be sure to contact an insurance professional
and arrange for proper coverage. It's the sober thing to do.
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