Will insurance coverage help you thaw?
While
the snow has melted in the Shreveport- Bossier area, the resulting
damages continue to mount. Some of these damages will be covered by
insurance as a standard form insurance policy agrees to pay for direct
physical loss of or damage to “covered property.” The most recent snow
and ice storm caused physical damages to many homes and business
closures due to those damages. Policyholders should review their
respective policies to determine if coverage for those losses is
available.
In addition, business
interruption coverage provides for payment for actual loss of income
due to “suspension” of “operations” during a period of restoration.
This “suspension” must be caused by physical loss. The covered loss
ends when the property could reasonably have been repaired.
So
the question presents itself: Does business interruption coverage
extend to the shutdowns most area businesses experienced as a result of
the recent, historic winter storms, and if so, how are the damages
computed?
Historically, most policies
covered “namedperil policies,” that is, covering only those perils
(wind/fire) identified in the policy. Most policies sold today are
“all-risk” policies, the limits of which have been the subject of a
fair amount of comment and commentary about courts. For both property
damage and business interruption, the policy requires physical damage.
Disputes typically arise when the property at issue has suffered some
other condition that has rendered the property unusable or unfit for
its intended purpose without destroying it completely. A direct
physical loss often involves some physical alteration of the covered
property. The particular provisions of the policy at issue will
dictate what coverage exists. Courts from other states have found some
policies include coverage for bacteria while other courts have found
rust is not covered where the policy excludes “all loss or damage
caused by resulting from rust.”
In a
recent New Orleans case that has not yet been decided, the policyholder
is making the argument that “nonaltering” physical damages are present
at the insured’s business location, even if the COVID-19 contamination
does not physically cause property damage. Such theories rely on older case
law from other jurisdictions which have held that a release of an
unsafe amount of ammonia in a facility constitutes “direct physical
loss” and that property could sustain a physical loss without
structural alteration.
The calculation
of business interruption loss is not a straight-line simple addition.
Instead, it requires policy construction and consideration of factors
such as ongoing expenses, historical revenue earnings and cost of
goods. Second, this formula requires a study of the policyholder’s tax
returns, profits and loss statements, and audited invoices: The
services of a financial analyst or certified business evaluator should
be seriously considered.
Once it is
determined that business interruption insurance applies to the loss,
the valuation of the loss will depend on several factors including the
nature of the business and its revenue stream, the necessity of the
expenses incurred by the insured, and the ultimate period of recovery.
Depending on the policy language, coverage for the insured’s
interruption loss will then cease according to the policy’s terms when
the insured’s business operations resume, whether at the same or a
functionally equivalent location. Ongoing expenses and extra expenses
are some of the main drivers for a business interruption loss. Ongoing,
or fixed expenses, are those expenses that are incurred
regardless of whether or not the insured is currently operating. Common
examples include mortgages, rent and utilities. Extra expenses are the
costs associated with the insured’s efforts to continue the normal
operations of the business during the period of restoration to the best
of their abilities. In other words, had the interruption not occurred,
it is likely that the extra expenses to continue operations would also
not have been incurred.
When valuing
business interruption claims, one would need to consider the
experience and history of the business leading up to the interruption.
When damages are claimed for lost profits, a valuator must prove the
lost profits with reasonable certainty based on similar business
operations and comparable markets. They may not be based merely on
conjecture, speculation or by simple estimation. Analysis of the
business’s historical performance to determine the projected profits
that might have been earned during the period of interruption will need
to be undertaken. The calculation can take into account sales trends,
including upward trends leading up to the date of loss. Ultimately,
courts have found that the proper method for determining the loss under
business interruption policies is to look at operations before the
interruption took place, rather than operations after the interruption,
as these are based on historical results.
Does
the business have to be back to its prestorm condition before business
interruption payments are discontinued? This was addressed in several
Katrina cases. Generally, business interruption coverage will pay for
the loss of covered business revenue only for the time of the period of
restoration. If that period is extended due to extraneous factors, the
carrier may deny coverage for losses during that extended period of
time.
Once those issues have been
addressed, the business interruption calculation requires a forensic
accountant and experienced coverage counsel to follow the requirements
of the policy. A typical business interruption form may state:
This
policy insures against loss resulting directly from the necessary
interruption of business caused by physical damage to real or personal
property insured under this policy, by perils insured against, during
the term of this policy.
Recovery in
the event of loss hereunder shall be the actual loss sustained by the
insured resulting directly from such interruption of business, but not
exceeding the reduction in gross earnings less charges and
expenses which do not necessarily continue during the interruption of
business, for only such length of time as would be required with the
exercise of due diligence and dispatch to rebuild, repair or replace
such described property as had been damaged, commencing with the date
of such damage and not limited by the date of expiration of this
policy.
Some policies provide business
interruption coverage if a civil authority, some government agency or
entity, causes cessation of a business. Generally, civil authority
coverage is intended to apply to situation where access to an insured’s
property is prevented or prohibited by a decision or order of civil
authority issued as a direct result of physical damage to other
premises in close proximity of the policyholder’s property. Curfews,
for instance, imposed by city officials after a riot or the closure of a
bridge after a hurricane may trigger business interruption coverage.
In accordance with policy language, if a civil authority prevents a
policyholder from conducting business due to damage to a third party’s
property, business interruption coverage may be triggered.
Ultimately,
the issue of whether a particular policyholder is entitled to business
interruption coverage due to a severe weather event will be dictated
by the policy language. A concerned policyholder should consult
knowledgeable accountants or industry professionals in order to have
such questions answered.
Article by
Brian A. Homza, shareholder of Cook, Yancey, King & Galloway,
APLC; Robert L. Dean, CPA, managing partner of Heard, McElroy &
Vestal, LLC.; and Spencer H. Lamb, CPA, representative of Business
Valuation Consultants, LLC, a strategic association of Heard, McElroy
& Vestal, LLC.