By: AgencyEquity.com
Two fires at a condominium complex in Colorado combined for more than $16 million in damage. Its property insurance company denied all coverage, and two insurance agencies faced lawsuits.
A property management company oversaw the condominium associationโs daily operations. It was responsible for obtaining and administering the complexโs insurance policies. It was also responsible for communicating with the associationโs board regarding the policiesโ terms and conditions, โincluding the existence of โprotective safeguardsโ in the policy.โ
The management company engaged an independent insurance agency in 2019 to obtain the insurance. According to the courtโs opinion, the agency โheld itself out โฆ as an expert in the insurance field.โ Over the years, they provided newsletters with information about recommended coverages. The property manager asked the agency to obtain insurance that:
- Was based on the complexโs existing condition and features.
- Would cover losses caused by fire.
- Would comply with state law and the associationโs by-laws.
The agencyโs 2022 insurance proposal boasted that it could custom build insurance plans suited to the clientโs needs, obtain โbetterโ coverage terms, and deliver competitive pricing. It also suggested additional coverage for the board to consider.
The agency worked with what the opinion described as the associationโs โwholesale insurance agent.โ Unusually, the wholesaler had a direct relationship with the property manager for more than 12 years. It provided insurance-related inspections for a fee and played some role in obtaining the policies. In fact, the declarations page for the policy at issue in this case named the wholesaler as the producer. Unknown to the insured, the wholesaler did not have the necessary Colorado insurance license.
The property insurance policy covered fire losses, among losses from other causes. However, neither of the insurance agencies nor the property manager communicated to the board โabout the potential inclusion of protective safeguardsโ in the policy. In addition, they did not provide the board with a copy of the policy when it was issued.
A fire in November 2022 caused more than $12 million in damage to the complex. The insurer denied coverage for the loss, in part because the association allegedly obstructed the investigation, but also because the condominium units lacked hard-wired smoke detectors that the policy required. While the wholesaler was appealing the denial, a second fire occurred in February, causing more than $4 million in damage. This claim was also denied.
The insured, after suing the insurer, sued the property manager and the two agencies on multiple grounds in November 2023. In April 2024, the agencies asked the court to dismiss the suit.
In March 2025, the court ruled in the agenciesโ favor. Both agencies, the judge explained, had acted reasonably in obtaining fire insurance for the association and had no duty to obtain it without a protective safeguards requirement. While the insured argued that the agencies had a duty to obtain coverage โbased on the existing condition of the condominium complexโ (that is, without hard-wired smoke detectors,) the judge noted they had never discussed the complexโs fire detection equipment. Given that, he could not hold the agencies liable for obtaining a policy that required it.
The insured also argued that the wholesalerโs failure to obtain the required license caused its loss of coverage. The judge found that the failure to obtain a license had nothing to do with the existence of the protective safeguards requirement in the policy, and he rejected that claim with all the others.
These agencies were working with an insured that could be considered a sophisticated insurance buyer who could be expected to read the policy. It appears that neither the insured nor the property manager did so. If they had, they would have discovered the protective safeguards endorsement and raised it with the agencies. The courtโs opinion does not say that this endorsement was added on the 2022 renewal, so presumably it had been part of the coverage for more than three years. The agencies did their job; the insured did not do theirs.