Public Liability Insurance

Akopọ

Open a shop, run a school, build a block of flats or simply keep a dog at home, and you create a risk that has nothing to do with your own property: the risk that you injure someone else, or damage what belongs to them, and are made to pay for it in court. Public liability insurance is the cover that stands behind that risk. It does not pay for your own losses. It pays the person you have wronged, on your behalf, and it pays the lawyers who defend you.

In this lesson you will learn exactly what public liability insurance covers and who counts as a third party, how the same idea works in your private life as personal liability, how product liability follows the goods you sell long after they leave your counter, and the boundary that examiners test every year: why an injured customer is a public liability claim while an injured member of your staff is not.

Awọn Afojusun

  1. Define public liability insurance and explain the exposure it covers
  2. Explain personal liability and identify who may be held liable
  3. Explain product liability and describe the losses it indemnifies
  4. Distinguish public liability from employer's liability insurance

Akọ̀wé Ẹ̀kọ́

A customer walks into a busy supermarket in Lagos on a rainy morning. The floor near the entrance has been mopped but left unmarked and wet. She slips, falls, and fractures her wrist. She was not an employee and she had signed no contract with the shop, yet the accident happened on the owner's premises and through the owner's carelessness. She sues. The bill that follows is not for any property the shop owner has lost. It is money the owner now legally owes to a stranger, plus the cost of the lawyers. That exposure, the cost of harming other people, is what public liability insurance was built to carry.

Ìdánwò Ẹ̀kọ́

Oriire fun ipari ẹkọ lori Public Liability Insurance. Ni bayi ti o ti ṣawari naa awọn imọran bọtini ati awọn imọran, o to akoko lati fi imọ rẹ si idanwo. Ẹka yii nfunni ni ọpọlọpọ awọn adaṣe awọn ibeere ti a ṣe lati fun oye rẹ lokun ati ṣe iranlọwọ fun ọ lati ṣe iwọn oye ohun elo naa.

Iwọ yoo pade adalu awọn iru ibeere, pẹlu awọn ibeere olumulo pupọ, awọn ibeere idahun kukuru, ati awọn ibeere iwe kikọ. Gbogbo ibeere kọọkan ni a ṣe pẹlu iṣaro lati ṣe ayẹwo awọn ẹya oriṣiriṣi ti imọ rẹ ati awọn ogbon ironu pataki.

Lo ise abala yii gege bi anfaani lati mu oye re lori koko-ọrọ naa lagbara ati lati ṣe idanimọ eyikeyi agbegbe ti o le nilo afikun ikẹkọ. Maṣe jẹ ki awọn italaya eyikeyi ti o ba pade da ọ lójú; dipo, wo wọn gẹgẹ bi awọn anfaani fun idagbasoke ati ilọsiwaju.

  1. Public liability insurance covers the insured's legal liability to: A. The insured's own employees B. Third parties who are members of the public C. The insurer D. The insured's shareholders Answer: B
  2. An injury caused by a defective product after it has been sold is covered by: A. Public liability insurance B. Employer's liability insurance C. Product liability insurance D. Fidelity guarantee insurance Answer: C
  3. Employer's liability insurance differs from public liability insurance mainly because it covers injury to: A. Members of the public B. Customers C. The insured's employees D. Passers by Answer: C
  4. Personal liability insurance responds when a person incurs legal liability in a: A. Trading capacity B. Private or domestic capacity C. Professional capacity D. Contractual capacity as an employer Answer: B
  5. A public liability policy has a limit of indemnity of 8,000,000 naira with legal costs payable in addition. Damages of 3,000,000 naira are awarded and defence costs are 600,000 naira. How much does the insurer pay? A. 3,000,000 naira B. 3,600,000 naira C. 8,000,000 naira D. 8,600,000 naira Answer: B

Àwọn Ìbéèrè Tó Ti Kọjá

Ṣe o n ronu ohun ti awọn ibeere atijọ fun koko-ọrọ yii dabi? Eyi ni nọmba awọn ibeere nipa Public Liability Insurance lati awọn ọdun ti o kọja.

Ibeere 1 Ìròyìn

(a) List six experts that would require professional indemnity insurance in their operations.

(b) Explain the cover provided by each of the following insurance 'policies:
(i) personal liability
(ii) public liability
(ii) professional indemnity