petem
Well-Known Member
As has been said many times, those in the know consider "Y" to be the most comprehensive policy.
I agree that the wording is ambiguous - which is a very bad thing when it is on an insurance policy. A couple of years ago, following a similar thread to this on this forum, I called my insurer (Y) to ask if I would be covered if a dehumidifier caught fire on an unattended yacht. Their answer was that their policy was "all risks" which meant that everything ACCIDENTAL was covered unless there was an explicit exclusion.
That's your interpretation - which may be true in practice - but it was not their response - they specifically said that any loss that wan not the subject of a specific exclusion was covered.Fixed that for you.
That's your interpretation - which may be true in practice - but it was not their response - they specifically said that any loss that wan not the subject of a specific exclusion was covered.
I have a smart battery charger has a storage mode, specifically designed for leaving the batteries on charge for long periods. The charger reduces the charging voltage to eliminate any charge of gassing.
So in the unlikely event that my boat catches fire, I can claim that this is something that has "happened by chance, unintentionally, or unexpectedly"
What I mean john is say the dehumidifier set the boat on fire ,if you have had it tested , you can prove you have done the most you could.I know it is of course and have my own PAT tester, but surely just simple regular inspection is sufficient, unless of course you leave it dangling in sea water for months, which is what I observed in our marina to several boats this month. I got fed-up pulling them up onto the pontoon in the end....! Even saw one with an electrical connection taped-up in the water, not ideal!
Pants have two policies one comes under the control of the Financial Conduct Authority whom I would doubt support a declinature of a claim based on "Grossly negligent" unless the boat owner was reckless which is far reaching in legal jargon.
The other policy from Pants being Yachting 24 which is outside of Financial Conduct Authority and may have a different interpretation in a German Court of law.
EDIT: I wrote this at the same time as Jrudge was writing his post above and he finished first. I have deleted "Y" from my examples......Might pay to check with the insurer MSAmlin the interpretation of insurance cover available ..After all they are the decision makers.
Who have you moved to Porto?btw I,am with neither at the mo ........after finding a underwriter that better fits covering our intended use pattern .
I disagree. It's somewhat irrelevant who the insurer or broker is, what's important is the cover provided by the policy as specified in the Policy Document. It's that that you'll be waving in front of the Insurance Ombudsman and ultimately the courts. People shouldn't make the assumption that policies sold by different insurer are the same. As I've tried to illustrate above, they vary greatly. It's really important to take 10 minutes to read the policy before you buy. And ideally avoid any policies that contain subjective terms such as "recklessness". in the grand scheme of things (the cost of running a boat) the difference between a cheap crappy policy riddled with exclusions and the best ones is trivial.EDIT: I wrote this at the same time as Jrudge was writing his post above and he finished first. I have deleted "Y" from my examples.
I think this is the lesson which most people end up learning the hard way if anything goes wrong. The people we think of as "Insurers" (Pantaenius etc.) are NOT actually insurance companies at all. What they do is design policies which they want to market, find underwriters who will underwrite (and, usually, re-insure) the risks, then offer the policies to the market. Sometimes different risks which the policy covers will be underwritten by different underwriters. But the company you buy the policy from isn't really the insurer and if there is a claim all the important decisions will be taken by the underwriters. It's nothing like the old days where you could buy an insurance policy from a company like Commercial Union who would underwrite their own policies. In practice what this means is that however much the "insurer" would like to accept your claim for a fire if the underwriter says they won't pay because you had shore power connected you are stuffed. And you can't talk to the underwriter directly. You have to go via the claims handler at the "insurer". Sometimes the "insurer" doesn't even do its own claims handling, it sub-contracts that elsewhere. I experienced this recently when I made a claim under a car hire excess insurance policy.
I'm in no way minted but I no longer hire cars that have any excess whatsoever (life is too short to be arguing with these people / taking photos of cards before and after a rental)!I experienced this recently when I made a claim under a car hire excess insurance policy.
It’s with N+G part of Zurich .Its on the boat .Who have you moved to Porto?