|
ConstructionRisk.com Report
http://www.ConstructionRisk.com
Vol. 8, No. 3, April 06
______________
Inside
This Issue:
* Texas Mechanic’s &
Materialman’s Liens A Complex Process Just Got More Complex
* Construction Risk Management Using Event Chains
Methodology
* Pollution
Exclusion of GL Policy Applied to Deny Coverage for Dry Cleaning
Chemicals
======================================
Construction
Law & Risk Management, Vol. 2 Case Notes – ConstructionRisk.com
Reports NOW AVAILABLE: http://constructionrisk.com/casenotesvol2/index.htm
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and papers written by well known and respected attorneys and
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and case notes that were published in ConstructionRisk.com Report during the three years of 2003, 2004 and
2005 are included here. The
cases and articles included in this book demonstrate risk management
principles to be considered and applied on construction projects.
The intent is to give a sampling of issues and cases, providing
risk management ideas and information to serve as a useful resource for
contractors, design professionals, project owners, attorneys, educators,
risk managers, and insurance professionals. Volume
I covered case notes published in Volumes 1 through 4 of ConstructionRisk.com
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7. For a limited time, this $39.95 book is being offered for only $29.95
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Chapters
1.0
Accord & Satisfaction
2.0
Americans with Disabilities Act
3.0
Changes: Managing
Change Orders
4.0
Contractor Claims
5.0
Contract Language Issues & Concerns
6.0
Damages
7.0
Design-Build
8.0
Dispute Resolution
9.0
Documentation
10.0 Drug
Testing
11.0 Economic
loss Doctrine
12.0 Environmental
Liability
13.0 Ethics
14.0 Expert
Witnesses
15.0 Federal
Contracts
16.0 Fiduciary
Duty
17.0 Indemnification
18.0 License
Requirements
19.0 Insurance
20.0
Insurance Coverage for Environmental Losses & Mold
21.0 Limitation
of Liability
22.0 Mold
23.0 Site
Safety
24.0 Standard
of Care
25.0 Surety
26.0 Time
Limitations on Suits
27.0 Warranty
======================================
___________
Article 1
___________
Texas
Mechanic’s & Materialman’s Liens --
A
Complex Process Just Got More Complex
By
Stanley
P. Santire, JD
House Bill H.B. 629, passed by the Texas Legislature in 2005
impacts the statutory lien process in
Texas
. H.B. 629 was
codified as an addition to Section 53.107 and amendments to Section
53.103 of the Texas Property Code. (i) Chapter 53 was already notable
for the State’s complex process for perfecting mechanic’s and
materialman’s liens.(ii) Before H.B. 629, owners had no obligation to
provide notices to anyone regarding lien rights. Now, some owners must
provide notices that an original contractor has been terminated or has
abandoned a project.(iii) To what degree H.B. 629 adds to the complexity
is a matter of perspective. Certainly,
it is a significant change for many owners.
An owner’s failure to send a notice in compliance with this
provision can reduce a contractor’s obligation in filing a lien for
retainage. From the view of
some contractors, the owner’s failure could simplify the lien
procedure by reducing the pressure of a very demanding notice process.
Texas
provides contractors with different types of possible liens including
contractual, constitutional, and statutory. H.B. 629 impacts the most
important of these, the statutory lien process.
Contractual Lien
A contractor can obtain a lien by contract or by operation of
law.(iv) An example of a
contract for creating a lien is a deed of trust. For most contractors,
particularly subcontractors, this is not viable. In the vast majority of
construction situations, contractors rely on liens that come into being
through the operation of law. In
Texas, the sources of such liens are the State Constitution and the Texas
Property Code.
Constitutional Lien
Lien law in
Texas
began when
Texas
was still a Republic. The
Constitution of the Republic provided a lien to anyone who improved real
property. The doctrine was
carried over to the Constitution of the State of
Texas
.
(v) The constitutional lien
is self- executing and available regardless of what notices and
affidavits a contractor may send or file.(vi)
Texas
is alone among the states in providing this self-executing. It benefits
only a contractor in privity of contract with the owner; i.e. an
original contractor. Even for them the constitutional lien protection is
very narrow.(vii) Later came a more powerful, and complex, statutory
procedure for all contractors.
Statutory Lien
Unlike the constitutional lien, the statutory lien is a powerful
tool for subcontractors as well as original contractors.
However, the statutory lien is not automatic.
Contractors must carefully follow the steps specified in Chapter
53. These steps differ
depending on the role of the contractor and the type of work done.
Every contractor doing business in the State must understand this
statutory process.(viii)
Contractor Chain
The first thing to remember about the
Texas
statutory filing requirements is that they depend on a contractor’s
position in the contract chain. The
original contractor, often referred to as a general contractor, has a
direct relationship with the owner and is therefore first in the chain,
followed by first tier subcontractors.(ix) Subcontractors who have a
relationship only with a subcontractor are even further down the
chain.(x) These are second and third tier contractors, cumulatively
referred to as derivative contractors.
The obligations of derivative contractors differ considerably
from first tier subcontractors. For example, to perfect a lien the
derivative contractor must provide a notice not required of first tier
subcontractors.(xi) In other
states, the deadline for a notice is determined by the last date a
subcontractor provides equipment or material.(xii)
Texas
law mandates a notice for each month that equipment or material was
supplied or for which payment was not made. In other words, the
Texas
procedure progresses through time rather than being keyed to completion.
Texas
law also specifies extensive minimum content requirements for notices
and affidavits.(xiii)
Notices
In addition to filing the affidavits, subcontractors must send
two different notices.(xiv) The
first notice must be sent by the 15th of the 2nd
month in which all or part of the labor is performed or material is
delivered.(xv) This notice
describes any unpaid balance. A
distinction between a first tier subcontractor and a derivative
subcontractor is the parties to whom the first notice must be sent. A
first tier subcontractor must send the first notice to both the original
contractor and the owner.(xvi) A derivative subcontractor must send this
notice only to the original contractor.(xvii) All types of subcontractor
must send a second notice that has the same information as the first
notice by the 15th of the 3rd month to the
original contractor and the owner.(xviii)
Affidavits
Unlike subcontractors, an original contractor does not need to
send any notices to the owner to perfect a lien. However, both the
original contractor and the subcontractors must file affidavits with the
county clerk and send a copy to the owner.(xix) These affidavits must be
filed by the 15th of the 4th month the debt
accrues.(xx) Though the
deadlines for both original contractors and subcontractors are tied to
debt accrual, an original contractor’s debt accrues at a different
time than a subcontractor. For
the original contractor, debt accrues on the last day of the month
following declaration of termination of the contract or completion,
settlement or abandonment of the contract.(xxi)
Except for specially fabricated material, indebtedness to
subcontractors accrues on the last day of the month in which the
subcontractor’s labor was performed or material was furnished.(xxii)
Indebtedness to subcontractors for specially fabricated material
by both first tier and derivative contractors accrues (1) on the last
day of the last month in which materials were delivered, (2) on the last
day of the last month in which delivery of the last of the material
would normally have been required at the job site; or (3) on the last
day of the month of any material breach or termination of the original
contract by the owner or contractor or of the subcontract under which
the specially fabricated material was furnished.(xxiii)
A copy of the affidavit must be sent to the owner by the 5th
day after the filing.(xxiv) A
subcontractor must also send a copy of the affidavit to the original
contractor.(xxv)
Homesteads
For a contractor working on a homestead, the requirements for a
lien increase dramatically. The term homestead refers to the special
protection given to a place that is a home or both a home and a place of
business.(xxvi)
Texas
law is very protective of a homestead. H.B. 629 expanded this special
treatment in that it does not apply to residential projects.(xxvii)
A major consideration in perfecting a lien against a homestead is
the requirement for a written contract with the owner and spouse.(xxviii)
This contract must be executed before labor or material is
furnished.(xxix) It must
then be filed with the county clerk.(xxx) Furthermore, in addition to
notice requirements as required in any construction situation, before
construction begins the owner of a homestead is entitled to a disclosure
agreement as well as a list of subcontractors from the original
contractor.(xxxi) The disclosure must include statutory notice language
regarding the rights and responsibilities of the owner.(xxxii)
Furthermore, lien affidavits for a homestead must be filed one month
earlier than the deadline specified for other types of projects.(xxxiii)
Retainage
In addition to the steps necessary to have a lien directly
against the property for unpaid funds,
Texas
law specifies a process for trapping funds to cover those same unpaid
monies. Up until H.B. 629, the only responsibility owners had was to
withhold funds as retainage.(xxxiv)
To trap funds, subcontractors must give notice of unpaid funds to
the owner and the original contractor.(xxxv) The deadline for this
notice is the fifteenth of the third month following each month in which
the claimant provided labor or delivered material.(xxxvi) When a
trapping notice is received, the owner is obligated to withhold payment
to the original contractor in an amount equal to the claimed
funds.(xxxvii)
If the trapping notice is sent after the deadline of the
fifteenth of the third month, the funds are not trapped.
This is where H.B. 629 can make a difference.
Pursuant to H.B. 629, a nonresidential property owner must
provide notice that the original contractor has been terminated or
abandoned the project.(xxxviii) H.B.
629 also specifies the content of the notice.(xxxix) This notice must be
sent to any subcontractor that, before abandonment or termination by the
original contractor, requests it and to anyone that provided notice of
specially fabricated materials or notice of an unpaid account.(xl)
Failure by the owner to respond by sending the requested notice
provides a lien to a requesting subcontractor even thought the
subcontractor does not file an affidavit if such subcontractor meets the
notice requirements.(xli)
Residential projects are exempted from H.B. 629.(xlii)
Therefore, owners of residential projects do not have an
obligation to send the notice required of other owners pursuant to H.B.
629.
Through the statutory provision for retainage,
Texas
law places a responsibility on the owner to retain 10% of the original
contract price for at least thirty days after project completion.(xliii)
If an owner does not properly trap funds in response to a
trapping notice or fails to meet the retainage requirement, the owner is
responsible to the subcontractor regardless of what monies may have
already been paid to the original contractor.(xliv) H.B. 629 did not
change this for any owner.
Conclusion
For nonresidential projects, H.B. 629 added another step to the
lien process in
Texas
and a new responsibility for many owners involved in a construction
process. A complex situation has become more complex.
About
the Author:
Stanley
P. Santire is managing principal of the Santire Law Firm in
Houston
,
Texas
. The firm deals
primarily in corporate and commercial matters with an emphasis on
construction and employment issues. A frequent public speaker on the
law, he may be reached at 713-787-0405 or by email at stanley@santire.com.
This article appears in ConstructionRisk.com Report, Vol.
8., No. 3.
Footnotes
i TEX. PROP. CODE ANN.
§53.103 & §53.107
ii The Construction Law Briefing Paper,
“We’re Not In Kansas (Or Minnesota) Anymore”, Scott A. Johnson,
The Construction Law Briefing Paper, Oct. 2002.
iii TEX. PROP. CODE ANN.
§53.107
iv Horton v. Gibson, 274 S.W. 292 (Tex. Civ.
App. 1925, no writ)
v TEXAS CONSTITUTION
Art.16 §37
vi In Re: A&M Operating Company, Inc., 182
B.R. 997 (E.D. Tex. 1995)
vii Infra
viii TEX. PROP. CODE ANN. CHAPT. 53.051
ix TEX. PROP. CODE ANN. §53.001(7)
x TEX. PROP. CODE ANN. §53.001(13)
xi TEX. PROP. CODE ANN. §53.056 (b)
xii Texas Mechanics’ Lien And Bond Claims,
All Business, Jan. 2005.
xiii TEX. PROP. CODE ANN. §53.233
xiv TEX. PROP. CODE ANN. §53.056(a)
xv TEX. PROP. CODE ANN. §53.056(b)
xvi TEX. PROP. CODE ANN. §53.056(c)
xvii TEX. PROP. CODE ANN. §53.056(b)
xviii TEX. PROP. CODE ANN. §53.056(b) &
(c)
xix TEX. PROP. CODE ANN. §53.051
xx TEX. PROP. CODE ANN. §53.051(a)
xxi TEX. PROP. CODE ANN. §53.053(b)
xxii TEX. PROP. CODE ANN. §53.053(c)
xxiii TEX. PROP. CODE ANN. §53.053(d)
xxiv TEX. PROP. CODE ANN. §53.055(a)
xxv TEX. PROP. CODE ANN. §53.055(b)
xxvi TEXAS PROP. CODE ANN. §41.002
xxvii TEX. PROP. CODE ANN. §53.107(e)
xxviii TEX. PROP. CODE ANN. §53.053(a)
xxix TEX. PROP. CODE ANN. §53.053(b)
xxx TEX. PROP. CODE ANN. §53.053(e)
xxxi TEX. PROP. CODE ANN. §53.055(a)
xxxii TEX. PROP. CODE ANN. §53.055(b)
xxxiii TEX. PROP. CODE ANN
§53.052(b)
xxxiv TEX. PROP. CODE ANN. §53.001(11)
xxxv TEX. PROP. CODE ANN. §53.056(d)
xxxvi TEX. PROP. CODE ANN. §53.056(b)
xxxvii TEX. PROP. CODE ANN. §53.056(d)
xxxviii TEX. PROP. CODE ANN. §53.107(a)
xxxix TEX. PROP. CODE ANN. §53.107(b)
xl TEX. PROP. CODE ANN. §53.107(a)
xli TEX. PROP. CODE ANN. §53.107(d)
xlii TEX. PROP. CODE ANN.
§53.107(e)
xliii TEX.
PROP. CODE ANN. §53.101(a)
xliv TEX. PROP. CODE ANN. §53.105(a)
======================================
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__________
Article 2
___________
Construction
Risk Management Using Event Chains Methodology
By: Lev Virine, Ph.D.
Construction Project Planning and Estimations
You created a well-balanced schedule of the
construction project and thought that you had taken into account almost
every possible scenario and risk. However, as soon as you started
implementing your project plan, something happened and your schedule
became obsolete. This “something” is an unpredictable event. As a
result, you have either to significantly update or create a new project
schedule and then, another unpredictable event occurs. This scenario is
very common for projects with multiple risks and uncertainties. Should
we completely give up scheduling, risk management, and concentrate only
on high-level project planning, or is there still a way to provide
realistic estimates for construction project schedules that have
multiple uncertainties?
We can perform estimations related to epistemic
(knowledge driven) uncertainties by analyzing historical data and by
tracking the current project’s performance. The problem is both
methods cannot change the subjective nature of epistemic uncertainties.
Analysis of historical data is subjective and negatively affected by the
psychological heuristics and biases. What would happen if you kept
accurate records? The answer depends on what type of tasks you are
trying to estimate. Very often these records are available. However, in
many cases significant number of tasks have never been done before;
therefore, historical records may not be available or very useful. Very
often a similar, but not exact, task has been done before. Can you use
this information about previous tasks as an analog for the estimation?
Another problem with historical data is that if there was a problem with
the activity before, project managers will avoid making the same mistake
again.
Because of these problems with historical data, the
tracking of actual project performance remains one of the primary means
of keeping construction projects on track. The goal is that by tracking
actual performance, we can somehow reduce uncertainties during the
course of an activity and derive better estimates of duration and cost.
However, the problem of estimation remains for the reminder of the
activity and project.
Therefore, because we recognize that it is
difficult to determine a single number associated with task duration and
cost, the current practice is to overcome this deficiency by defining a
range of numbers or a statistical distribution associated with this
range for cost and duration. For example, the range for a task can be
from 4 and 7 days. However, if historical records are unavailable, we
will still have the same problem. These estimates will be as subjective
as if they were defined by a single number. If the range estimations are
as subjective as a single number estimate, then analysis by using
‘classic’
Monte Carlo
simulation may not provide estimates that are any more accurate than
deterministic project schedules.
Overview of Event Chain Methodology
Therefore, we are drawn to the conclusion that if
uncertainties are expressed as events with outcomes, it will
significantly simplify our project management estimations. By mitigating
some biases in estimation, we can develop numbers that are more accurate
for task duration, cost, and other project parameters. Once we have this
data, we can perform quantitative analysis and determine how
uncertainties in each particular task will affect the main project
parameters: project duration, cost, finish time, and success rate.
However, real projects are very complex; they have multiple risks that
have the potential to trigger other risks. Risks can have different
outcomes; in one scenario a risk will delay a task, in another scenario
the same risk will cancel it. In addition, some risks are correlated
with each other. Therefore, the problem remains how to model these
complex processes so that it becomes practical for construction project
management.
Event Chain Methodology proposes to solve this
problem. It is important to note that Event Chain Methodology is not a
simulation or risk analysis method. It is based on existing analysis
methodologies including
Monte Carlo
simulation, Bayesian approach and others. Event Chain Methodology is a
method of modeling of uncertainties for different time-related business
and technological processes including construction project management.
Event Chain Methodology is based on six major
principles.
- An
activity (task) in most real life processes is not a continuous
uniform procedure. It is affected by external events, which
transform an activity from one state to another. It is important to
point out that these events occur during the course of an activity.
The moment, when an event occurs, in most cases is probabilistic and
we can define it using statistical distribution. Events (risks) can
have a negative impact on the construction project. For example, the
event “weather delay” can cause a delay in an activity. However,
the opposite is also true, events can positively affect an activity,
e.g. reduce costs.
- Events
can cause other events, which will create event chains. These event
chains can significantly affect the course of the project. For
example, requirement changes can cause a delay of a task. To
accelerate the activity, a resource is allocated from another
activity; which can lead to a missed deadline. Eventually, this can
lead to the failure of the project. Events may instantly trigger
other events or transform an activity to another state. The notion
of state is very important as states can serve as a precondition for
other events. For example, if a change of requirements causes a
delay, it transforms the activity to a different state. In this
state, the event “reallocate resource” can occur. Alternatively,
it is possible, if the task is in certain state, an event cannot
occur.
- Once
events and event chains are defined, we can perform quantitative
analysis using
Monte Carlo
simulation to determine uncertainties and quantify the cumulative
impact of the events. Sometimes we can supplement information about
uncertainties expressed as an event with distributions related to
duration for start time, cost, and other parameters, as done in
classic
Monte Carlo
simulations. However, in these cases it is important to discriminate
between the factors that are contributing to the distribution and
the results of events to avoid a double count of the same factors.
- The
event chains that have the most potential to affect the projects are
the “critical chains of events.” By identifying critical chains
of events, we can mitigate their negative effects. We can identify
these critical chains of events by analyzing the correlations
between main the project parameters, such as project duration or
cost, and the event chains. Events or event chains can be displayed
using a tornado diagram where critical event chains are shown on the
top.
- Probabilities
and impact of the events are obtained from the historical data.
Monitoring the activity's progress ensures we use updated
information to perform the analysis. In many construction projects,
it is hard to determine which historical data we should use as an
analog for future analysis. For example in most cases, in research
and development, new projects differ from the previous projects. We
can accomplish the proper selection of analogs for the historical
data by applying analysis using a Bayesian approach. In addition,
during the course of the project, we can recalculate the probability
and time of the events based on actual data.
- Event
Chain Diagrams are visualizations that show the relationships
between events and tasks and how the events affect each other. By
using Event Chain Diagrams to visualize events and event chains, we
can simplify the modeling and analysis of risks and uncertainties.
Event Chain Methodology Phenomena
The application of Event Chain Methodology can lead
to some interesting phenomena. Here are some examples:
- Sometimes
events can cause the start of an activity that has already been
completed. This is a very common scenario for real life projects;
sometimes a previous activity must be repeated based on the results
of a succeeding activity. Modeling of these scenarios using event
chain methodology is very simple. We do not have to update the
original project schedule, we just need to create an event and
assign it to an activity that points to the previous activity. In
addition, we need to define a limit to the number of times activity
can be repeated.
- Events
can generate other activities that are not in the original project
schedule. These are activities related to the mitigation plan. They
are modeled outside of original project schedule and assigned to the
event. The original schedule is augmented with these activities when
the event occurs.
3.
One potential event is the
reassignment of a resource from one activity to another, which can occur
under certain conditions. For example, if an activity requires more
resources to complete it within a fixed period, this will trigger an
event to reallocate the resource from another activity. Reallocation of
resources can also occur when activity duration reaches a certain
deadline or the cost exceeds a certain value. Events can be used to
model different situations with resources, e.g. temporary leave,
illness, vacations, etc. In some cases this can create an event chain:
due to an illness, a resource from another activity would be borrowed to
accomplish a specific task.
- Events
can cause other events to occur either immediately or with a delay.
The delay is a property of the event. The delay can be
deterministic, but in most cases, it is probabilistic. If we know
the time of the original event and the delay, it is possible to
determine when the new event can happen and in some cases, the
activity that will be associated with it.
Conclusions
The beauty of this approach is that it is
includes a very well defined mathematical model that can be easily
implemented as a software algorithm. Construction project managers must
define project schedules and risk lists or risk breakdown structures.
For each risk, the manager defines the chance the risk will occur, the
risk’s impact (delay, increase cost, trigger other risks, cancel task,
etc.), and when will the risk occur during the course of activity.
Event Chain Methodology allows us to model
construction projects with uncertainties in a much simpler manner. It
also allows us to mitigate psychological biases related estimation and
as a result provide better forecasts and project tracking. If risk and
uncertainties based on Event Chain Methodology are defined properly,
your project schedule should be much more robust. Remember, most project
managers actively create and update project schedules and risk lists.
Event chain methodology allows you to combine both lists to provide a
simple answer to the central question of project management - how long
will the construction project take and how much will it cost if an event
occurs.
About the
Author:
Lev Virine, Ph.D. is a principal with Intaver Institute Inc.; 303,
6707,
Elbow Drive S.W.
;
Calgary
,
AB
, T2V0E5,
Canada
;Phone: 1(403)6922252; Fax: 1(403)2594533; www.intaver.com.
Intaver Institute Inc. (http://www.intaver.com)
offers project risk management software RiskyProject for project
planning and scheduling, quantitative risk analysis, and project
performance measurement. RiskyProject analyzes the project schedule and
risks together, calculates the chances that the project will be
completed on time and within budget, and presents results in
easy-to-understand formats. This
article appears in ConstructionRisk.com
Report, Vol. 8, No. 3.
======================================
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_____________
Article 3
-
_____________
Pollution Exclusion of GL Policy
Applied to Deny Coverage for Dry Cleaning Chemicals
By: J. Kent Holland, J.D.
The operator of a dry cleaning business demanded that her CGL
carrier defend and indemnity her in connection with an administrative
claim by a county government requiring her to determine the extent of
pollution and then implement remedial action. Based on the pollution
exclusion of the policy, the carrier denied coverage.
The operator sued the carrier, and the court granted the
carrier’s motion to dismiss the case.
The court found that the discharge or potential discharge of a
dry cleaning chemical resulting in soil and ground water pollution
constitutes pollution that is “commonly thought of as environmental
pollution” and is excluded pursuant to the pollution exclusion of the
policy.
In Teiko Lewis v. Hartford Casualty Insurance Company, (
U.S.
District Court, Northern District of
California, No. C05-2969, Jan. 30, 2006), the County of San Mateo issued
an administrative claim letter directing Teiko Lewis, the operator of a
dry cleaners, to evaluate and implement remedial action related to the
discharge or potential discharge of perchoroethylene.
Following receipt of the county’s letter, Lewis tendered the
claim to her insurance carrier, Hartford Casualty Insurance Company
(hereinafter (“Harford”) to defend and indemnify her against the
claim.
The
Hartford
had issued a series of twelve (12) general liability (GL) policies to
Lewis starting in July 1993 and continuing through July 2004.
Each policy contained a pollution exclusion stating insurance
would not apply “to bodily injury or property damage arising out of
the actual, alleged or threatened discharge, dispersal, release or
escape of pollutants.” The
exclusion further provided that coverage would not apply “to any loss,
cost or expense arising out of any governmental direction or request
that the named insured test for, monitor, clean up, remove, contain,
treat, detoxify or neutralize pollutants.”
What was at dispute between Lewis and The Hartford was whether or
not the soil and groundwater contamination alleged in the county’s
letter constituted what is “commonly thought of as environmental
pollution” or “traditional environmental pollution.”
Lewis relied upon a California Supreme Court decision (MacKinnon
v. Truck Insurance Exchange, 31
Cal.
4th 635 (2003)) for the proposition that not all pollution is
excluded by the pollution exclusion.
The MacKinnon court had determined that the pollution exclusion
must be limited to “injuries arising from events commonly through of
as pollution, i.e., environmental pollution.”
In this case, Lewis offered two reasons why the contamination is
not traditional environmental pollution.
First, she argued that in order for contamination to be
“commonly thought of as environmental pollution,” it must be
intentional, or must be an inherent byproduct of an industrial process
with no outside force contributing to it.
Second, she argued that “environmental pollution” must be
catastrophic. In
rejecting both of these arguments, the court found that for something to
be “commonly thought of as pollution” it need not be the result of
an intentional act nor be an inherent byproduct of an industrial process
with no outside force contributing to it.
The court also concluded that “pollution need not rise to the
level of catastrophe to be ‘commonly thought of as environmental
pollution.’” With regard
to the specific contamination at issue in this case—discharge or
potential discharge of perchloroethylene into the soil and
groundwater—the court decided it constitutes pollution “commonly
thought of as environmental pollution” and is, therefore, excluded
from insurance coverage pursuant to the policy’s pollution exclusion.
The
Hartford
, therefore, owed no duty to defend or indemnify its insured in
connection with the administrative claims by the county.
Comment:
It is interesting to see businesses such as the dry cleaning
operation involved in this case, relying upon general liability policies
instead of purchasing pollution legal liability (PLL) policies
specifically designed to cover their pollution risks.
Based on the long history of pollution claims arising out of dry
cleaning operations, it seems that prudent risk management would
suggest the wisdom of maintaining a PLL policy for the risk.
These policies are readily available from numerous carriers.
About the author:
Kent Holland is a
construction lawyer in Tysons Corner, Virginia, and is a risk
management consultant for environmental and design professional
liability insurance and contracts.
He is also publisher of ConstructionRisk.com Report.
He may be reached at Kent@ConstructionRisk.com.
This article is published in ConstructionRisk.com
Report, Vol. 8, No. 3.
======================================
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Currently available on-line risk management courses written by
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Also available are: Contract Guide for the Design Professional,
Design Build Professional Liability Risk Management and Insurance; Site
Safety Risk and Liability; Risk Management for the Design Professional;
Managing Communication, Documentation and Reports; Insurance for
Design-Build and Complex Projects; Construction Contract Law; Contract
Claims against Design Professionals; Insurance Coverage Disputes; and
Environmental Claims.
======================================
ABOUT THIS NEWSLETTER & A DISCLAIMER
This newsletter Report is published and edited by J. Kent Holland,
Jr., J.D. , a construction lawyer and environmental and design
professional risk management consultant. The Report is independent of any insurance company,
law firm, or other entity, and is distributed with the understanding
that ConstructionRisk.com, LLC, and the editor and writers, are not
hereby engaged in rendering legal services or the practice of law.
Further, the content and comments in this newsletter are provided for
educational purposes and for general distribution only, and cannot apply
to any single set of specific circumstances. If you have a legal issue
to which you believe this newsletter relates, we urge you to consult
your own legal counsel. ConstructionRisk.com, LLC, and its writers and
editors, expressly disclaim any responsibility for damages arising from
the use, application, or reliance upon the information contained herein.
======================================
Copyright 2006, ConstructionRisk.com, LLC
Publisher & Editor: J. Kent Holland,
Jr., Esq.
8596 Coral Gables Lane
Vienna
,
VA
22182
703-623-1932
Kent@ConstructionRisk.com
_____________________________________________
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