A material supplier's delivery truck damages the project site access road. The supplier's insurance certificate shows general liability coverage but excludes auto liability. Who is responsible for the damage?
Correct Answer
B) The supplier is responsible and should have separate auto liability coverage
The supplier is responsible for damages caused by their operations, including vehicle-related incidents. Auto liability coverage should be separate from general liability and is the supplier's responsibility to maintain.
Why This Is the Correct Answer
The supplier is responsible for damages caused by their delivery operations, including vehicle-related incidents on the project site. General liability insurance typically excludes auto-related claims, which is why suppliers must carry separate commercial auto liability coverage. The supplier's failure to have adequate auto insurance doesn't transfer responsibility to other parties - they remain liable for damages their vehicles cause. This is a fundamental principle of contractor/supplier responsibility for their own operations and equipment.
Why the Other Options Are Wrong
Option A: The general contractor's insurance covers all on-site damages
The general contractor's insurance does not automatically cover damages caused by subcontractors' or suppliers' vehicles. Each party is responsible for insuring their own operations, and the GC's policy would likely exclude coverage for third-party vehicle incidents.
Option C: The project owner's property insurance covers the damage
The project owner's property insurance covers the building/structure itself, not damages caused by third-party operations. The owner's insurance would not be primary for damages caused by a supplier's negligent delivery operations.
Option D: The damage is considered normal wear and tear
Vehicle damage to an access road is not normal wear and tear - it's an incident caused by specific negligent operation. Normal wear and tear refers to gradual deterioration from expected use, not sudden damage from vehicles.
Memory Technique
Think 'SOAP' - Supplier Owns Auto Problems. If their truck causes damage, it's their auto insurance responsibility, not someone else's general coverage.
Reference Hint
Florida Building Code Chapter 1, Section 105 - Permits and Responsibilities, or Construction Law reference materials covering contractor insurance requirements
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