Duyệt tất cả câu hỏi

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Điều khoản bổ sung & Trách nhiệm

15 câu hỏi

1. A homeowner buys a $1,000,000 Personal Umbrella Policy (PUP). Which feature most accurately describes how the PUP responds to a covered liability loss?

a.It replaces the underlying auto and homeowners liability coverage entirely
b.It pays first, before the underlying auto or homeowners policy responds
c.It pays excess only after the required underlying limits have been exhausted, and may drop down for certain perils not covered below
d.It pays the insured's share of property losses to the dwelling and contents

A PUP sits OVER underlying auto and homeowners liability coverage. The insured must keep the required underlying limits (commonly $250,000/$500,000 auto BI and $300,000 HO liability). The umbrella pays excess once those limits are exhausted and may drop down to cover certain perils (such as personal injury) excluded by the underlying policies, subject to a self-insured retention (SIR).

ISO HO 04 90; CIC Personal Umbrella concepts

2. An insured with an HO-3 policy adds a Scheduled Personal Property endorsement for her jewelry collection. Which statement BEST describes the coverage provided for the scheduled jewelry?

a.Coverage is limited to losses that occur inside the residence premises only
b.Coverage is on an open-perils basis, applies worldwide, typically has no deductible, and includes mysterious disappearance
c.Coverage applies only to perils named in the underlying HO-3 contents form
d.Coverage replaces the dwelling Coverage A limit when the jewelry is stolen

Scheduled Personal Property removes the unscheduled special-limit cap on jewelry. Each item is listed and appraised. Coverage is generally on an open-perils ("all risk") basis with no deductible, applies worldwide, and notably includes mysterious disappearance, which the base HO contents form excludes.

ISO HO 04 61 Scheduled Personal Property

3. Which of the following losses would be covered ONLY after a Personal Injury endorsement is added to a homeowners policy?

a.A guest slips on icy steps and breaks an arm
b.The insured's child accidentally breaks a neighbor's window with a baseball
c.Wind blows shingles off the roof during a storm
d.The insured is sued for libel after posting a false accusation on social media

The standard HO Coverage E covers bodily injury and property damage but does NOT cover personal injury offenses such as libel, slander, false arrest, invasion of privacy, or wrongful eviction. A Personal Injury endorsement is needed to extend liability to those offenses. The slip-and-fall and broken window are bodily injury/property damage already covered under Coverage E.

ISO HO 24 82 Personal Injury endorsement

4. A heavy rainstorm causes the municipal sewer to back up through floor drains, flooding the insured's finished basement. Under a standard HO-3 without endorsements, what is the likely coverage outcome?

a.The loss is excluded; a Sewer/Drain Back-up endorsement would be needed to cover it
b.The loss is fully covered under Coverage A dwelling
c.The loss is covered as a Coverage C personal property peril
d.The loss is covered because it originated outside the home

Water that backs up through sewers or drains is a standard exclusion in the unendorsed HO-3. A separate Water Back-up and Sump Overflow endorsement is required to cover damage caused by sewer or drain back-ups or sump pump failure. Without it, the cleanup and finished-basement damage would not be paid.

ISO HO 04 55 Water Back-up endorsement

5. A California homeowner wants earthquake coverage. Which statement is MOST accurate about earthquake insurance in California?

a.Earthquake coverage is automatically included in every HO-3 sold in California
b.Earthquake coverage is offered through the California Earthquake Authority (CEA) or by some private insurers; deductibles are typically a percentage of the dwelling limit, often 10%-25%
c.Earthquake coverage uses the same standard deductible as fire (typically $500)
d.Earthquake coverage is provided by the federal NFIP program

California insurers that sell residential property coverage must offer earthquake insurance. Most policies are written through the California Earthquake Authority (CEA), a publicly managed, privately funded pool, although private market options also exist. Earthquake deductibles are notably high and typically expressed as a percentage of the dwelling Coverage A limit, commonly 10% to 25%, not a flat dollar amount. NFIP is for flood, not earthquake.

California Insurance Code §10081 (CEA); CEA program rules

6. Which statement about residential flood insurance is correct?

a.Flood is a standard endorsement that any insurer can add to a homeowners policy
b.The Coverage A perils on an HO-3 automatically include rising surface water
c.Flood coverage is generally written as a separate NFIP policy and typically has a 30-day waiting period before it takes effect
d.Flood policies have no waiting period and bind the same day the application is signed

Standard homeowners policies exclude flood. Flood is generally written as a separate policy through the National Flood Insurance Program (NFIP) or through private flood markets. NFIP policies typically have a 30-day waiting period from application/payment before coverage takes effect (with narrow exceptions, such as a loan-closing requirement), so a homeowner cannot buy flood insurance the day a storm is forecast and expect coverage.

National Flood Insurance Act of 1968; NFIP rules

7. Tenant Rachel buys an HO-4 renters policy. Which coverage is provided by the HO-4 that DIFFERS from what an HO-3 owner would receive?

a.HO-4 provides NO Coverage A dwelling because the tenant does not own the building; it provides Coverages C (contents), D (loss of use), E (liability) and F (medical payments)
b.HO-4 provides Coverage A dwelling at full replacement cost just like an HO-3
c.HO-4 provides Coverage B other structures but no Coverage C
d.HO-4 provides only liability coverage and no property coverage at all

HO-4 is the renters/tenants form. The tenant does not own the dwelling, so there is no Coverage A and no Coverage B. The tenant receives Coverage C for personal property, Coverage D for loss of use/additional living expense, Coverage E personal liability, and Coverage F medical payments to others. HO-6 (condo unit-owners) provides limited Coverage A for interior improvements and the unit-owner's share, plus C, D, E and F.

ISO HO-4, HO-6 forms

8. Coverage E personal liability on a homeowners policy responds to which of the following?

a.Only injuries that occur on the residence premises
b.Bodily injury or property damage for which the insured is legally liable, on or off the premises, including suit defense in addition to limits
c.Only property damage caused intentionally by the insured
d.Only liability arising out of the insured's employment

Coverage E pays sums the insured is legally obligated to pay because of bodily injury or property damage caused by an occurrence. It applies on or off the residence premises (with some exclusions) and provides defense costs in ADDITION to the policy limit. Intentional acts are excluded, and business or auto liability is excluded (covered elsewhere).

ISO HO Coverage E personal liability

9. Coverage F medical payments to others on a homeowners policy is BEST described as:

a.A liability coverage that pays only if the insured is found legally at fault
b.A coverage that pays medical bills of the insured and resident relatives only
c.A property coverage that pays for damage to a visitor's belongings
d.A no-fault coverage with a low limit (typically $1,000-$5,000) that pays reasonable medical expenses for non-insured persons injured on the premises or by the insured's activities

Coverage F is a goodwill, no-fault coverage. It pays reasonable medical expenses, usually limited to $1,000-$5,000 per person, incurred by guests or others (not insureds or regular residents of the household) who are injured on the premises or by the insured's activities off the premises. It pays without proof of legal liability, helping to head off small claims from becoming lawsuits.

ISO HO Coverage F medical payments to others

10. Which pairing of endorsement to covered loss is CORRECT?

a.Identity Theft endorsement pays the stolen funds drained from the insured's bank account
b.Service Line endorsement pays for damage to plumbing INSIDE the dwelling walls
c.Service Line endorsement pays for damage to underground utility lines (water, sewer, power) on the insured's property between the street main and the home
d.Equipment Breakdown endorsement pays for normal wear and tear on appliances

A Service Line endorsement covers the homeowner's privately owned underground utility lines (water, sewer, electrical, gas, communications) running from the public main to the home, including the cost of excavation. Identity Theft endorsements typically pay RECOVERY expenses (lost wages, attorney fees, notarization) - not the stolen funds themselves. Equipment Breakdown covers sudden mechanical or electrical failure, never normal wear and tear.

ISO HO 04 96 Identity Fraud Expense; ISO HO 23 70 Service Line

11. An insured runs a small in-home tutoring business out of her residence. Which statement is MOST accurate about the homeowners liability for this exposure?

a.The base HO-3 Coverage E will automatically cover any business-related lawsuit
b.Business liability is largely excluded under the base HO; a Business Pursuits or Permitted Incidental Occupancies endorsement is generally needed to extend coverage to the limited home business activity
c.Only a commercial general liability policy can ever cover any home-based business activity
d.Homeowners policies in California are required to include unlimited business liability

Standard homeowners forms exclude liability arising out of business activities. For limited home-based businesses, a Business Pursuits or Permitted Incidental Occupancies endorsement can extend liability coverage for specific qualifying activities. Larger or higher-risk operations require a separate commercial policy (BOP or CGL). California law does NOT mandate unlimited home-business liability on HO policies.

ISO HO 24 50 Permitted Incidental Occupancies / Business Pursuits

12. Coverage E on a standard HO-3 excludes liability for watercraft above certain size and horsepower thresholds. An insured who owns a 20-foot powerboat with a 90-horsepower outboard motor will most appropriately:

a.Add a Watercraft endorsement to the homeowners policy or purchase a separate boatowners policy to cover liability arising from the boat
b.Rely on the homeowners policy as written because all watercraft are covered with no limits
c.Add an Earthquake endorsement to cover the boat
d.Rely on personal auto liability, which always extends to boats

The HO Coverage E exclusion for watercraft removes liability coverage for boats above defined size/horsepower thresholds (the exact limits vary, but a 20-foot, 90-hp powerboat is typically EXCLUDED). The insured needs either a Watercraft endorsement (where available) or, more commonly, a separate boatowners or yacht policy that provides hull and liability coverage. Personal auto policies do NOT cover boats, and the Earthquake endorsement is unrelated.

ISO HO Coverage E exclusions; ISO HO 24 75 Watercraft

13. An applicant for a Personal Umbrella Policy has $50,000/$100,000 auto bodily injury limits and a $100,000 HO Coverage E limit. The umbrella insurer requires $250,000/$500,000 auto and $300,000 HO E underlying. What is the MOST likely underwriting outcome?

a.The umbrella will be issued and will fill the gap below as primary coverage
b.The umbrella will be issued at no extra cost because the underlying limits do not matter
c.The applicant must either raise the underlying auto and HO liability limits to meet the umbrella's required underlying limits, or accept a self-insured retention equal to the gap, before the umbrella will be issued
d.The umbrella will automatically reduce its own limit to match the underlying limit

Umbrella underwriting requires that the insured carry specified MINIMUM underlying liability limits. If the applicant's underlying limits are below the umbrella carrier's requirement, the insurer will either decline, require the insured to increase the underlying limits, or in some cases require the insured to accept a self-insured retention (SIR) equal to the shortfall. The umbrella does not act as primary for the gap unless specifically structured to drop down.

Personal Umbrella underwriting; SIR concept

14. The standard HO-3 generally excludes liability for motor vehicles, with limited exceptions. Coverage for a snowmobile or ATV used OFF the residence premises is BEST obtained how?

a.The base HO-3 always covers snowmobile and ATV liability worldwide
b.By adding a Snowmobile/ATV (off-road vehicle) endorsement or purchasing a separate recreational vehicle policy
c.By relying on the personal auto policy, which automatically covers all recreational off-road vehicles
d.By adding an Identity Theft endorsement

Motor vehicles are largely excluded from HO Coverage E. Recreational off-road vehicles (snowmobiles, ATVs) used OFF the residence premises require either a specific endorsement to the homeowners policy or a separate recreational/off-road vehicle policy. Personal auto policies are written for licensed road vehicles and do NOT extend to off-road recreational use. Identity Theft is unrelated.

ISO HO Coverage E exclusions; Snowmobile/ATV endorsement

15. The insured's dog bites a jogger in a public park three blocks from the home. Assuming no policy exclusion for the specific breed and no prior bite history, how does the standard HO Coverage E generally respond?

a.It does not respond because the bite occurred off the residence premises
b.It responds only after the insured's health insurance has paid
c.It pays only the dog owner's veterinary bills
d.Coverage E generally responds because personal liability follows the insured off-premises for bodily injury arising from an insured's activities, subject to policy exclusions

Personal Coverage E is not limited to the residence premises. It pays for bodily injury or property damage anywhere in the world (with some exclusions) for which the insured is legally liable. Dog bites are bodily injury and typically covered, unless the policy contains a specific breed exclusion or a prior-bite exclusion. Health insurance coordination is not a precondition, and veterinary bills for the insured's own pet are property to the insured, not third-party liability.

ISO HO Coverage E off-premises liability