Owners and developers are entitled to insurance coverage under a wrap up policy

An Insurer has a duty to defend owners and developers sued by strata corporations for defective workmanship and resultant damage under a wrap-up insurance policy. The Court found that the decision in Swagger Construction Ltd v. ING Insurance Co. of Canada, 2005 BCSC 1269 applied only to general contractors, and ordered that GNAC provide insurance coverage and defend the owners and developers of a strata sued by the strata for water damage that occurred to the interior and exterior of a building.

Here is the citation: GCAN Insurance Co. v. Concord Pacific Group Inc. [2007] B.C.J. No. 443.  British Columbia Supreme Court - Garson J.   February 22, 2007. 

 Here is a link to the decision.  

 

The Insurer, GCAN Insurance Company ("GCAN"), applied for a declaration that it had no duty to defend the Respondents. Two strata companies had brought an action against the Respondents alleging that, inter alia, the Respondents built a defective building envelope which allowed water ingress, which in turn caused damage to the interior and exterior of the building.

GCAN argued that the decision of the British Columbia Supreme Court in Swagger Construction Ltd. v. ING Insurance Co. of Canada, 2005 BCSC 1269, was determinative of the issue, and was binding. The Respondents argued that Swagger was (1) distinguishable; (2) a judicial aberration that ought not to be followed, or (3) applicable only to general contractors, but not to owners, developers, or general partners. The Court accepted the third argument of the Respondents, and found that the "own work" type coverage or exclusion from coverage did not apply to owners or developers, but was limited to general contractors. The Court stated: stands for the principle that in the context of an insurance policy covering physical injury to tangible property, defective construction is not an "accident" (and therefore coverage is excluded) unless there is damage to the person or property of a third party. To deny coverage to the owner/developer when they took no part in the construction of the project is essentially akin to saying that the general contractor and the owner/developer are the same parties. While the precise roles of all the parties involved must be determined on the facts at trial, at this point it can at least be said that the "Named Insureds" contained within the Policies are not all the same party.

Swagger

 […]

 It would be unfair to allow the insurer to avoid defending an owner/developer for work performed by the general contractor in which the owner/developer took no part (paras. 95-97).

The Court therefore granted the declaration in respect of the general contractor, but found that GCAN was obligated to defend the other Respondents.

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Comments (2) Read through and enter the discussion with the form at the end
frank corpuz - October 21, 2007 11:30 AM

i live in a condo unit, and there's a water leak coming from the upper floor last june 2007. the insurance broker for our strata came and said they'll fix it. they came and fix some of it but until now its not yet finish the job. is it possible to claim for compensation like pain and suffering for the time that we have live with all the mess in our unit.
thank you and i'll appreciate for any assistance you can give us.

Mike Thomas - October 22, 2007 8:32 AM

Usually there are only limited circumstances in which you can claim for pain & suffering under a contract. The first step is to obtain a copy of the insurance policy and see what you are entitled to under the policy. Remember I can't give you any legal advice, this is just a general comment. For legal advice please retain a lawyer.

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