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A Year of Unprecedented Tornadoes and Floods — And How Insurance Helps Companies Rebuild

(This is a special guest post written by Barry I. Buchman and Benjamin R. Davidson of Gilbert LLP, a firm that represents companies on a wide variety of insurance issues. Buchman is a partner and Davidson is an associate in the company’s Washington office. – JW)

A young girl beholds the devastating power of Mother Nature following an EF5 tornado in Joplin, Mississippi. (Photo: Dustie / Shutterstock.com)

As floodwaters have threatened Missouri communities along the Mississippi River, and as the town of Joplin, Mississippi, reels from the recent devastating tornado, the residents of these communities are quite appropriately absorbed with efforts to regain some semblance of normal daily life. But, eventually, the waters recede, the debris is cleared, and business owners must turn their attention to rebuilding their businesses and recouping losses sustained.

Depending on the circumstances and the insurance purchased, insurance contracts may help businesses recover losses resulting from damaged buildings, vehicles, equipment and other property. Here are a few of the business losses that may potentially be insured.

Property Damage
The most basic type of loss that may be covered by insurance is property damage. Buildings, equipment, records, vehicles, and other property may sustain direct damage, or damage from disaster events.

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A typical property policy would cover the cost of rebuilding or repairing such property, if the property is “covered property” and if the cause of damage is a “covered cause of loss.”

Commercial property policies also often provide some protection for lost profits that result from damage to “covered property” based on a “covered event,” such as a flood, tornado, or earthquake. These types of losses generally fall into one of two categories of coverage: “business interruption” and “contingent business interruption.” Business interruption losses occur when a company loses profits due to damage to its own facilities. Contingent business interruption losses occur when a company loses profits due to the inability to get materials from a supplier or to sell its products to a customer, due to property damage sustained by that supplier or customer at its facilities.

A third category of loss that may be covered consists of expenses that businesses may incur in order to address the impact to their business of the flooding or tornado. For example, a business may incur expenses to shift production away from a damaged plant to other facilities.

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A business also may incur “extra expense” if, during the period that its normal suppliers cannot operate, the business has to use more expensive suppliers. These types of losses often fall under the extra expense coverage of a typical property policy, which also may cover costs and fees for professional services (e.g., from accounting firms and consultants) that are necessary for the company to deal with the disaster.

Potential Coverage Disputes
One dispute that often arises under property policies is whether there actually has been physical damage to insured property, which, as noted, typically is required for business interruption and contingent business interruption claims. For example, an insured company or its supplier may not have sustained physical damage to its factory, but because of a lack of power or an inability to get people/items in and out of the property, the company cannot use the facility.

Businesses have several tools at their disposal to address such disputes. For example, even if neither an insured company nor its direct suppliers have sustained physical property damage, some courts have interpreted the term “supplier,” for contingent business interruption purposes, to include more than direct suppliers (e.g., suppliers of direct suppliers).

Many property policies also provide types of coverage that may not require physical damage to the insured company’s own premises, such as “civil authority” coverage, “ingress/egress” coverage, and “service interruption” coverage.  Civil authority provisions, for example, typically cover business interruption losses caused by an order, such as a curfew or road closure, that prevents use of insured facilities. For example, due to flooding, the Mississippi Gaming Commission shut down nine casinos in the city of Tunica, leaving the companies with no way to continue generating revenue.

Although such provisions often provide coverage only when the civil authority order results from property damage, civil authority provisions tend to vary materially between policies, and not always in obvious ways, so a careful examination of the precise language is critical.

For example, after the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001, U.S. Airways and United Airlines each litigated with their insurers over whether their civil authority coverage provisions applied to losses caused by the closure of Reagan National Airport.

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U.S. Airways won, and United lost, the merits of that coverage dispute, based on nuanced differences in the language of their civil authority provisions. (U.S. Airway’s victory was later vacated on appeal, on grounds independent of the merits of the policy interpretation dispute between U.S. Airways and its insurer.)

The same careful review of policy language is necessary for “ingress/egress” provisions and “service interruption” provisions.

Another potential dispute arises from the fact that some property policies contain flood exclusions, and insurers almost certainly will raise any such exclusions as a complete defense to claims based on the recent flooding. But in instances where the floodwaters themselves did not directly cause damage, but instead precipitated events (such as fires) that caused damage, businesses may have rights to coverage under insurance law concepts like the “efficient proximate cause” and “concurrent causation” doctrines.

Although the insurance industry has attempted to contract around these causation doctrines through the use of so-called “anti-concurrent causation clauses,” courts have taken differing approaches to the scope and enforceability of these clauses. Thus, as in many insurance disputes, the issue of which jurisdiction’s law applies to these issues will be important.

Insurers also may challenge the efficacy of loss mitigation measures that businesses adopt to address the effects of the recent tornado or flooding. Typical property policies require business owners to take reasonable steps to minimize losses, and insurers often question, after the fact, the measures that businesses take to do that. Businesses should be prepared to rebut any such hindsight-based arguments, and to defend their business decisions. Furthermore, under many property policies businesses may be able to recover expenses incurred in order to mitigate loss.

Practical Pointers for Preserving Insurance Rights
There are steps that businesses can and should take now to put themselves in the best possible position to secure coverage if and when the need arises.

  • First, businesses should collect, organize, and review their insurance policies. This process should include an effort to identify and obtain policies issued to other businesses, such as current and former affiliates, that may also provide coverage.
  • Second, most property policies require policyholders to provide notice of potential claims and to submit “proofs of loss” quickly, and these policies also often have express deadlines for when any lawsuit against the insurer must be brought if there is a dispute.
    For example, many property policies require that businesses “immediately” give notice of a loss that may give rise to a claim, and policies often further require that a policyholder submit a “proof of loss,” documenting the insured damage, business losses, and expenses, within 60-90 days. These policies often also require that any lawsuit against the insurer be brought within one or two years. It is critical that businesses promptly give at least precautionary notice, absent business reasons to refrain from doing so. Business owners should also keep their insurers informed of their efforts to mitigate their damages and to reopen their businesses, in order to limit future disputes.
    Moreover, businesses should consider approaching their insurers about postponing, or “tolling,” the referenced proof of loss and lawsuit deadlines, by agreement. Insurance companies often are willing to do so in situations that involve widespread losses, like those that can be anticipated with the recent tornado and flooding. Note, however, that some jurisdictions differ in their rules regarding the extent to which parties can enter into such “tolling” agreements, and thus an examination of the applicable law is necessary.
  • Third, businesses should carefully document their property damage, lost revenues, and additional expenses, and they also should set up protocols for communicating both internally and externally about any losses and insurance issues. Because of the nuances in the coverage issues raised, such protocols are important to help protect against inadvertent characterizations regarding the nature or cause of losses, for example, that insurers might use later if a coverage dispute arises.  Thus, businesses should consider involving their legal departments and insurance lawyers in such communications.
  • Finally, because of the complicated coverage questions and potential procedural traps previewed here, businesses should consider consulting with experienced professionals, such as insurance brokers, accounting consultants, and coverage counsel, who can help prepare for a potential coverage claim.

The coverage provided by a business’s insurance policies can be an extremely valuable business asset.  Business owners can maximize the benefits of insurance, and minimize the chances of protracted disputes later, by acting proactively now to assess and preserve their rights.

More Springtime Disaster with Arizona Fires

As if record-setting floods in the Midwest and deadly tornadoes throughout the South and Midwest were not enough disaster for this country in the last couple of months, Arizona is now battling the second-largest blaze in the state’s history.

The blaze has burned 486 square miles of ponderosa pine forest, driven by wind gusts of more than 60 mph, since it was sparked May 29 by what authorities believe was an unattended campfire. Now more than twice the size of Chicago, the fire became the second-largest in Arizona history Tuesday. No serious injuries have been reported, but the fire has destroyed 10 structures so far. It has cast smoke as far east as Iowa and forced some planes to divert from Albuquerque, N.M., some 200 miles away.

Firefighters from as far away as New York are working day and night in attempt to slow the spread of flames. But residents and firefighters alike are understandably worried since a blaze of this size accompanied by winds of such a high speed could move the Wallow Fire to the number one spot in Arizona’s list of largest fires.

So what’s the deal with all of these wild, weather-related disasters?

According to Bill Patzert, a research scientist at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in California, the cause it not solely global warming, but more “global weirding.”

“Sometimes it gets wild and weird,” says Patzert. In more technical terms, weather forecasters searching for a unifying explanation point to the La Niña climate pattern, a phenomenon born far out in the Pacific Ocean that shapes weather across the globe, in combination with other atmospheric anomalies that have altered the jet stream flow of air across North America. Less famous than its warm-water climate sibling El Niño, this year’s La Niña has been “near record-breaking” in its intensity, says climate scientist Michelle L’Heureux of the Climate Prediction Center in Camp Springs, Md.

La Niña conditions occur every few years and can persist as long as two years. With the tornadoes, flooding and fires that have already ravaged parts of the U.S., and hurricane season upon us, it is unfortunately shaping up to be an active, expensive and deadly La Niña season.

Meet Mason, the Tornado-Surviving Dog Who Crawled Home on Two Broken Legs 19 Days After the Storm

We always cover the deaths and destruction caused by disasters. It’s nice to sometimes see a touching tail tale of hope. And it would be hard to come up with any more amazing than that of Mason, a dog who found his way home, on two broken legs, 19 days after being swept away by the April 27 tornado that hit North Smithfield, Alabama. (video via Buzzfeed … h/t Trey Kerby)

The Deadliest Tornado to Hit the United States in 50 Years Kills More Than 100 in Joplin, Missouri

This weekend, a massive tornado struck Joplin, Missouri, devastating yet another Midwest town with vicious winds. At least 90 people are dead and some 2,000 structures are no longer standing.

Residents received a 24-minute warning that a tornado was headed toward the city, giving many a few precious moments to gather children and run for safety. When the tornado struck, it caused what officials are estimating to be a path of damage through Joplin that was a mile wide and four miles long, with wind speeds reaching 166 miles per hour.

As much as 30 percent of the town was damaged, including more than 2,000 buildings, among them a nursing home and several schools, firehouses and large stores, including a Wal-Mart and a Home Depot. Water treatment and sewage plants were also hit by high winds, and authorities cautioned residents to boil water.

It was the deadliest tornado to hit the United States in more than 50 years. (video above also via this Telegraph article)

Officials said the last twister to cause such loss of life in the US occurred in 1953 in Worcester, Massachusetts, and killed 90 people.

The Joplin tornado was one of 68 reported across seven Midwest states over the weekend, from Oklahoma to Wisconsin. An outbreak of twisters killed more than 300 people and caused more than $2 billion (£1.24 billion) in damage to the US South last month.

For more info and media related to the twister, visit Mashable, the Weather Channel and The Lede.

And for those affected, the Insurance Information Institute has some good advice on how to get your tornado insurance claims paid quickly.

The I.I.I. offers the following advice to speed the insurance claims settlement process following a tornado:

  • Be prepared to give your agent or insurance company representative a detailed description of the damage to your property. Your agent will report the loss to your insurance company or to a qualified adjuster who will contact you as soon as possible in order to arrange an inspection of the site.
  • If it is safe to access the area, take photographs of the damaged property. Visual documentation will help with the claims process and can assist the adjuster in the investigation.
  • Prepare a detailed inventory of all damaged or destroyed personal property. Make two copies—one for yourself and one for the adjuster. Your list should be as complete as possible, including a description of the items, dates of purchase or approximate age, cost at time of purchase and estimated replacement cost.
  • Collect canceled checks, invoices, receipts or other papers that will assist the adjuster in obtaining the value of the destroyed property.
  • Make whatever temporary repairs you can. Cover broken windows and damaged roofs and walls to prevent further destruction. Save the receipts for any supplies and materials you purchase as your insurance company will reimburse you for reasonable expenses incurred by making temporary repairs.
  • Secure a detailed estimate for permanent repairs to your home or business from a licensed contractor and give it to the adjuster. The estimate should contain the proposed repairs, repair costs and replacement prices.
  • If your home is severely damaged and you need to find other accommodations while repairs are being made, keep a record of all expenses, such as hotel and restaurant receipts.