Construction Insurance and UK Construction Contracts
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CHAPTER 15
Property insurance (under higher tier property documents)
General
15.1 Above the relationship between client and its builder/contractor and design team are the relationships that allow the development projects to be commissioned and funded. The general contractual relationship between a developer, a funding institution, a tenant and the developer’s design team and main contractor can be seen diagramatically in . Although this diagram may initially seem complicated, the relationships reflect normal “day-to-day” contractual relationships between the main players, and in reality they only reflect the network of contractual duties and liabilities owed in a typical UK building project, involving a funding institution, typically a bank or consortium of banks, or pension fund, insurance fund, equity fund, a property developer, and a tenant or tenants. 15.2 Each of the agreements between these parties will usually contain principal contractual and indemnity clauses: first, in relation to the liability for the carrying out and completion of the works; and secondly, liabilities to third parties, and thirdly a possible loss of rent incurred by the landlord if the tenant fails to pay, whether under a lease or an agreement for lease. 15.3 In addition, the reader should not be confused by a reference to the possibility of the agreement for lease involving the client/developer, the fund and the tenant. The structure is best explained using the diagram in . In normal circumstances the lease would be granted pursuant to an agreement for lease, under which the tenant is promised his lease at or immediately after practical completion of the development, when the building becomes available. This may therefore require a tripartite agreement between the developer who is building the property as new, or refurbishing existing property, e.g. converting a shell (often described as a refurbishment, or renovation project), secondly the fund that is proceeding to forward purchase it at or after practical completion and that eventually becomes the landlord, and thirdly, the tenant or tenants. Such agreements may be signed on a pre-letting basis, or possibly signed after the main development agreement between the developer and fund is signed, in which case it is possible that the developer will have signed agreements for lease with a tenant or tenants before the fund has come onto the scene. 15.4 The contractual lines beneath the developer, with the design team on the one hand and the contractors on the other, are merely reflective of the traditional contract method, which is described in , whereas the dotted warranty lines reflect separate collateral obligations owed between the design team and the fund orPage 243
Development agreement between the developer and the fund
15.5 The development agreement between the developer and the fund will usually include the following obligations for the developer:- (1) to covenant to build the development in a good and workmanlike manner, in accordance with good building practice and, depending upon the extent of the obligations, to secure that such building works are fit for the purposes intended;
- (2) to insure such works until practical completion under the building contract, which is the date when the architect certifies, under normal building contracts, that the building works are practically complete, save any snagging works.
- (1) that the insurance is in the joint names of the funding institution, the developer and the contractor. (See Mark Rowlands Ltd v Berni Inns Ltd,1 and see .)
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- (1) First, there should be no conflict between the development agreement and the building contract (between the developer and the contractor), because in reality the contractor’s insurance policy will cover the insurance of the works.
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- (3) Thirdly, the contractor’s policy should be generally reviewed, when acting for the funding institution, and should be provided by the developer, in readiness for a request by the fund’s advisers to review the policy. The fund’s advisers should not rely on general front sheet information produced by the developer or the contractor but should look to investigate any special exclusions, special endorsements and the ambit of the cover. In addition they should perhaps require the developer or the contractor, depending upon who carries the insurance responsibility, to procure from the insurer a statement that at the date of the development agreement no events have taken place of which the insurer is aware, which could render the policy to be declared void for nondisclosure or in breach of normal insurance rules.
Agreements for lease
15.11 As with the development agreement, similar obligations exist under the agreement for lease between the developer or the funding institution as landlord (where the funding institution is granting the lease and the developer carrying out development obligations, in the agreement for lease between the developer, the fund/landlord and the tenant). 15.12 Important features worth noting:- (1) the developer’s obligations to carry insurance up to practical completion and the fund’s obligation to carry such insurance beyond that date, as if the lease with the tenants had been granted, and thereafter fulfil the obligations of the landlord under the lease;
- (2) the tenant’s interest as prospective lessee of the building or part of the building, should be acknowledged by whoever carries the insurance responsibility, whether the funding institution as landlord, or the developer or contractor.
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Lease
15.25 After the lease is granted to the tenant, pursuant to the terms of the agreement for lease, the terms and covenants in the lease will dictate:- (1) whether the landlord or tenant assumes the basic property insurance, third party liability insurance, and the loss of rent insurance;
- (2) which party therefore assumes the obligation to reinstate the premises;
- (3) the responsibility of the tenant to pay premiums; and
- (4) the availability of the policy or a copy or details thereof, to the party not assuming the prime insurance obligations.
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- (1) to give notice of material information or matters;
- (2) not to make void the policy of insurance;
- (3) to comply with insurer requirements;
- (4) to give notice of damage or loss relating to the property;
- (5) not to effect other insurances, but if the tenant receives proceeds of other insurances they must pay the proceeds to the landlord;
- (6) to pay the landlord an amount equal to the amounts that the insurer refuses to pay out because of an act or omission of the tenant.
Loan documents
15.34 The banks lending money to commercial property development will require that all policies taken out by the developer or by a commercial landlord will be takenPage 249
Refurbishments
15.35 Complications can arise under the development agreement and the building contract when one is dealing with refurbishments. In relation to the majority of standard JCT building contracts there may be clear reasons why the developer or, in the case of a building owner who is also funding the refurbishment, developer/landlord wishes to retain overall responsibility throughout the building works for insurance. 15.36 The situation usually arises because of the problems of having more than one policy covering the building and the contractor’s works. In the event of a claim, which affects both policies, e.g. if the refurbishment works include improvements to an existing envelope of a building, there could be a chance that if there were two policies in existence, one with the landlord covering the external envelope, and the other with the contractor covering the work, both insurers under the separate policies might claim under the “contribution” rules that they are entitled not to pay out the full amount of the insurance proceeds. Thus the sum total of the insurance proceeds under both policies would not cover adequately the monies required to reinstate fully. This is sometimes the reason why tenants’ fitting out works are required to be covered by the landlord under the landlord’s insurance policy.Collateral warranties
15.37 The diagram in includes reference to a network of collateral warranties. Increasingly throughout UK building projects, collateral contracts have become the norm under which the tenants, funding institutions and purchasers of buildings expect to receive direct contracts from the professional consultants and the contractors engaged on the project. This practice arose because of inherent difficulties in establishing direct relationships in the law of tort between funds and tenants, the members of the design team and/or contractors engaged by a developer on a project. Following the decision by the House of Lords in D & F Estates v Church Commissioners 14 collateral warranties have become much more widely used. This case has radically curtailed negligence claims in the construction industry and Caparo Industries plc v Dickman 15 (which related to auditors’ advice)Page 250
- (1) obligations to owe a duty of care to the beneficiaries of the warranties;
- (2) obligations to maintain professional indemnity insurance for a given number of years, usually reflective of the period of liability of the consultant under the collateral warranty (6, 12 or 15 years);
- (3) a licence granted to the beneficiaries of the warranties allowing them to reproduce documents for the project and throughout the life of the project;
- (4) step-in, or novation rights, entitling the funding institution, say, to step in and take over the engagement of the professional consultant or contractor, if the developer becomes insolvent or there is an event of default under, say, a loan agreement or a funding agreement.
- (1) In relation to the collateral warranties coming from the design team, it is common for there to be a duty on behalf of the consultant owed not only to the developer under the original appointment, but also to the third party beneficiary, to maintain professional indemnity insurance, or at least to use best or reasonable endeavours to maintain such insurance. Safeguards are usually introduced into the warranty to ensure that this obligation proceeds only so far as such insurance is commercially available in the insurance market. This obligation therefore discourages a professional consultant from failing to continue his professional indemnity insurance by not paying his premiums, because this would be tantamount to risking the duty of care liability under the collateral warranty. PI cover is renewed annually and therefore the warranty should be covered on such renewal.
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- (2) In relation to contractors’ collateral warranties, the duty is usually to the third party to maintain the CAR policy in force, in either the joint names of the existing contractor, and possibly the developer, as well as the third party tenant or fund. These may present problems with the contractor’s own insurers, particularly where the contractor has a company-wide policy covering all its projects and whereby insurers will try and resist a third party name being inserted on the policy. However, mortgagee protection clauses will commonly be included in the policies in any event and sometimes funders will acknowledge that a note of their interest on the policy will be sufficient for their purposes, rather than full joint names. There are clearly dangers in allowing the third party to engage upon carrying insurance itself, to the extent that it feels that the contractor has not taken out a sufficient policy and it may well be the case that third parties are unlikely to have a proprietary interest in the property until, for example, practical completion in any event and therefore the problem may not arise. They will, however, have a contractual interest and it may serve their purposes to advise the contractor’s insurers in writing of their contractual interest under the relevant agreement for lease or the funding agreement as appropriate.
- (3) If the collateral warranty does not contain an obligation on the part of the consultant to carry PI insurance, this may allow the consultant and its PI insurers to settle or compromise claims made against the consultant without first obtaining the permission of the beneficiary of the warranty thus putting in jeopardy the claim and value of the consultant’s obligations under the collateral warranty (see Normid Housing Association Limited v R John Ralphs and Others 16).
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Contracts (Rights of Third Parties) Act 1999
15.44
These days, collateral contracts have, to an extent, been replaced (but not entirely) by rights under the Contracts (Rights of Third Parties) Act 1999 under which rights are defined and established under the original contracts with the construction and design teams. The JCT regime offers this as an option to collateral warranties.
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1 [1986] QB 211.