The Author

The Author
Greg Gotwald is an insurance coverage attorney and partner at the law firm of Plews Shadely Racher & Braun LLP

Sunday, November 13, 2011

The Structure of an Insurance Policy--General Overview (Part 1 of 8)

Have you ever actually read through your insurance policy? If so, you’re a masochist; welcome to the club. If not, congratulations—you’ve saved yourself a migraine. Insurance policies are brutal to read.

Even if you did read it, did you understand what it actually said? Fortunately for you, I’m a “coverage geek” (many co-workers call me this; I tell myself it’s a term of endearment—the jury’s still out on that though). With the next several of posts, I hope to help you understand the basic structure of an insurance policy and some of the general rules of constructions that are used to determine their meanings.

Because of the length, I’m going to do this is in eight parts. Plus, that’s how movies are done these days (think Harry Potter or Twilight). Side bar: Did I really just refer to Twilight?

Just so we’re clear, the legal disclaimer at the bottom isn’t lying. THIS IS NOT LEGAL ADVICE. However, I hope it is helpful.

PART 1—POLICY STRUCTURE

General Overview

A typical insurance policy has six sections: (1) the Declarations Page (a/k/a the “Dec Page”); (2) the Insuring Clauses/provisions (a/k/a the coverage grant); (3) the Exclusions Section; (4) the Definitions Section; (5) the Conditions Section; and (6) the Endorsements.

Generally, you receive a full copy of your policy the first time you purchase it. However, if you renew the policy, you won’t receive another copy. If the policy changes, you won’t get a revised version. The insurance company is only going to send you Dec Pages and Endorsements. Not to fear, if you threw out the policy, the insurance company/agent/broker should be able to provide you with another. However, this is the part where I tell you make a note to yourself: “NEVER THROW OUT INSURANCE DOCUMENTS!” Honestly, don’t do it. I keep mine in my safety deposit box.

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