Example Two—Cost of Replacing Property Because of Faulty Work (j. (6))
"Property damage" to:
(6) That particular part of any property that must be restored, repaired or replaced because "your work" was incorrectly performed on it.
The state hires GBGC to resurface portions of the highway. The work involves removing the existing surface and laying bituminous concrete (asphalt) over the "grooved" pavement. Unfortunately, GBGC scrapes away far too much, accidentally scraping way most of the compacted gravel that is the base of the highway. The resurfacing project quickly becomes a disaster—the new asphalt being applied by GBGC crumbles into small pieces only hours after the roller passes over it. The project is quickly halted, and the state brings a claim against GBGC for the cost of replacing the compacted gravel base.
Exclusion j. (6) expressly excludes damage to the highway base—the compacted gravel—as it is property that must be replaced or repaired because GBGC's work was incorrectly performed on it. GBGC has no CGL coverage for the claim by the state.
- See more at:
Faulty Work and the CGL