Thousands of homes and commercial buildings have been damaged or destroyed by hurricanes Helene and Milton. More than a few of those were buildings under construction or re-construction when the hurricanes hit. Losses will be major. Any time a project is damaged before final completion, who should pay? The owner or the contractor? Does it make a difference if the work was paid for or not?
As a general rule, any portion of the work completed belongs to the owner. For example, once framing is up, that framing belongs to the owner. Storm damage to any portion completed is the owner’s loss. Not true for a stack of lumber sitting on the job site or contractor equipment left on site. For those, any loss falls on the contractor. It doesn’t make any difference if the work was invoiced or not.
Of course, collecting could be a problem if there’s no readily available source of funds. That raises the next issue.
Obviously, it’s better if both owner and contractor are insured. The bad news: The owner’s property insurance probably doesn’t cover work in progress. Neither does your contractor’s liability policy. A builder’s risk policy is designed to fill this gap between owner and contractor coverage. Anyone with a financial interest in the project can buy a builder’s risk policy. But don’t be confused by the name. Builder’s risk insurance should be the owner’s responsibility, not the builder’s. Remember the general rule: Any portion of the work installed is property of the owner.Some builder’s risk (course of construction) policies require a special endorsement for rising water or earthquake. But most other risks are covered: theft, vandalism, fire, lightning, arson, collapse, windstorm, hail, debris removal, back up of sewers or drains. Premium will vary with scope of work. But don’t delay. The costs may be higher if work starts before applying for coverage.
Make risk of loss during construction part of your standard agreement. Make it clear:
Occupancy or use of the building before completion should not limit the recovery for any loss. But it’s OK to exclude the value of excavation, backfill, foundations and underground utilities. Sitework and foundations are seldom destroyed.Add good choices like builder’s risk coverage to your agreements. Savings could be in the thousands.
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