Wednesday, April 1, 2026

Law Chapter 16 Insurance

 

63. A professional liability policy is claims-made. The firm lets coverage lapse and a claim is made later for earlier services.
What is the main risk?

A. The claim may not be covered
B. Claims-made is the same as occurrence
C. Coverage is automatic forever
D. Bonding replaces insurance

Ans A

Why?

Correct answer: 👉 A. The claim may not be covered


🔹 Why A is correct

A claims-made policy only provides coverage if:

1.      The claim is made, and

2.      The policy is active at that time

👉 If the firm lets the policy lapse, then even if the work was done earlier while insured, a later claim will not be covered.


🔹 Key concept: Claims-made policy

·         Coverage is triggered by when the claim is made, not when the work occurred

·         If no active policy exists when the claim arises → no coverage


🔹 Example

·         Engineering work done: 2022 (policy active)

·         Policy lapses: 2024

·         Claim filed: 2025

❌ No coverage — because there is no active policy in 2025


🔹 Why others are wrong

·         B. Claims-made is not the same as occurrence

·         C. Coverage is not automatic forever

·         D. Bonding is unrelated (it guarantees performance, not liability coverage)


🔹 Practical takeaway (important for you as an engineer)

When stopping practice or switching insurers, you must consider:

·         Tail coverage (extended reporting period)

·         Maintaining continuous coverage

Otherwise, you expose yourself to uninsured liability for past work.


What does  option B mean?

Correct answer: 👉 A. The claim may not be covered


🔹 Why A is correct

A claims-made policy only provides coverage if:

1.      The claim is made, and

2.      The policy is active at that time

👉 If the firm lets the policy lapse, then even if the work was done earlier while insured, a later claim will not be covered.


🔹 Key concept: Claims-made policy

·         Coverage is triggered by when the claim is made, not when the work occurred

·         If no active policy exists when the claim arises → no coverage


🔹 Example

·         Engineering work done: 2022 (policy active)

·         Policy lapses: 2024

·         Claim filed: 2025

❌ No coverage — because there is no active policy in 2025


🔹 Why others are wrong

·         B. Claims-made is not the same as occurrence

·         C. Coverage is not automatic forever

·         D. Bonding is unrelated (it guarantees performance, not liability coverage)


🔹 Practical takeaway (important for you as an engineer)

When stopping practice or switching insurers, you must consider:

·         Tail coverage (extended reporting period)

·         Maintaining continuous coverage

Otherwise, you expose yourself to uninsured liability for past work.


Why option (D) is incorrect?

Option D: “Bonding replaces insurance” is incorrect because bonding and insurance serve completely different purposes.


🔹 What is bonding?

Surety bond

A bond (surety bond) is a guarantee of performance:

·         Ensures a contractor/engineer fulfills contractual obligations

·         If they fail, the surety pays the client and then seeks recovery from the professional

👉 It protects the client (project owner)


🔹 What is professional liability insurance?

Professional liability insurance

·         Covers errors, negligence, or omissions

·         Pays for legal defense and damages

·         Protects the engineer/firm


🔹 Key difference (very important)

Feature

Bonding

Insurance

Purpose

Guarantees performance

Covers negligence/errors

Who is protected

Client (owner)

Engineer/firm

Repayment

You must repay surety

No repayment (insurer bears loss)

Replaces insurance?

❌ No


🔹 Why D is wrong in this question

The question is about claims-made insurance risk.

Option D suggests:

“Bonding replaces insurance”

👉 This is incorrect because:

·         Even if you have a bond, it does not cover professional liability claims

·         It cannot substitute for an expired or lapsed insurance policy


🔹 Simple analogy

·         Insurance = “I made a mistake, insurer helps me”

·         Bond = “If I fail, someone pays—but I owe them back”


Final takeaway

Option D is wrong because:

Bonding does not replace insurance—it serves a completely different risk function.


 

64. An insurer defends a consultant under a reservation of rights.
What issue may arise?

A. Conflict between insurer and insured
B. Lien priority
C. Patent validity
D. Labour certification

Correct answer: 👉 A. Conflict between insurer and insured


🔹 Key concept: Reservation of rights

A reservation of rights means:

·         The insurer provides a defence, but

·         Reserves the right to later deny coverage

👉 In other words, they are saying:

“We’ll defend you for now, but we may not pay the claim in the end.”


🔹 Why this creates a problem

This situation can create a conflict of interest:

·         The insurer may try to steer the case toward a finding that avoids coverage

·         The insured (consultant) wants a defence that fully protects them, even if it confirms coverage

👉 Their interests are not fully aligned


🔹 Example

·         Claim alleges both:

o    Negligence (covered)

o    Intentional misconduct (often not covered)

The insurer might:

·         Defend the case

·         But prefer an outcome that proves intentional conduct → so they can deny coverage later


🔹 Why other options are wrong

·         B. Lien priority → relates to creditor rights, not insurance defence

·         C. Patent validity → intellectual property issue

·         D. Labour certification → employment/immigration issue

None relate to insurance defence strategy.


Final takeaway

A reservation of rights introduces:

⚠️ A potential conflict between insurer and insured

This is a classic NPPE exam concept—watch for it.


 

65. After paying a loss, an insurer sues the party actually responsible.
This is called:

A. Estoppel
B. Subrogation
C. Contribution
D. Set-off

Correct answer: 👉 B. Subrogation


🔹 Key concept: Subrogation

Subrogation means:

After paying a claim, the insurer steps into the shoes of the insured and sues the party responsible for the loss.


🔹 How it works

1.      You suffer a loss (e.g., property damage due to someone else’s negligence)

2.      Your insurer pays you

3.      The insurer then goes after the at-fault party to recover that money

👉 This prevents the insured from being paid twice and shifts liability to the true wrongdoer.


🔹 Example (engineering context)

·         A contractor damages your design work or structure

·         Your insurer pays for the loss

·         The insurer then sues the contractor to recover costs


🔹 Why others are wrong

·         A. Estoppel → prevents someone from going back on a representation

·         C. Contribution → sharing loss between multiple insurers

·         D. Set-off → offsetting mutual debts


Final takeaway

Subrogation = insurer pays first, then recovers from the responsible party.


 

66. An insured fails to disclose a material fact when applying for coverage.
What issue is engaged?

A. Material non-disclosure
B. Human rights discrimination
C. Criminal intent only
D. Builder’s lien

Correct answer: 👉 A. Material non-disclosure


🔹 Key concept: Material non-disclosure

Material non-disclosure occurs when:

The insured fails to disclose an important (material) fact that would influence the insurer’s decision to provide coverage or set premiums.


🔹 Why it matters

Insurance contracts are based on utmost good faith (uberrimae fidei):

·         The insurer relies on the applicant’s full and honest disclosure

·         A material fact is anything that would affect:

o    Risk assessment

o    Premium calculation

o    Decision to insure

👉 If such a fact is not disclosed:

·         The insurer may void the policy

·         Or deny a claim


🔹 Example

·         An engineering firm applies for professional liability insurance

·         Fails to disclose:

o    Prior claims

o    Known design issues

·         A claim later arises related to that undisclosed risk

👉 Insurer may deny coverage due to material non-disclosure


🔹 Why other options are wrong

·         B. Human rights discrimination → unrelated to insurance disclosure

·         C. Criminal intent only → not required; non-disclosure can be innocent or negligent

·         D. Builder’s lien → relates to construction payment rights


Final takeaway

Failing to disclose a material fact engages material non-disclosure, which can invalidate coverage.


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