Professional liability insurance covers consultants against injuries and damages resulting from their negligent professional acts, errors or omissions. To prove negligence, a claimant must establish a professional standard of care, establish the consultants' duty to adhere to that standard of care, and establish their failure to do so - and then prove that this failure proximately resulted in injury or damage to the claimant.
Unfortunately, many indemnity clauses require firms to assume risks that go beyond the consultant's negligent errors and omissions and shift liability to the consultant for all acts regardless of whether there was any negligence by the consultant. There are indemnity clauses that require consultants to be liable for negligent acts of The Agency and its employees and other consultants or contractors; certain clauses go so far as to require the consultant to be liable for alleged acts. Some of these clauses even require the consultant to defend the client by paying for the owner's defense costs from the moment a suit is filed or a claim has been made, even if it is ultimately determined that the consultant was not negligent in their services. Unfortunately, these legal costs are then borne by the consultant, since they are not paid for under their professional liability insurance policy. Indemnity clauses which go beyond what a consultant can be insured for do not provide the public with any meaningful protection since consulting firms do not maintain any assets which would be available to meet the cost of any but the smallest judgments. These costs increase the overhead of firms thereby needlessly increasing the fees charged for their services and put many firms in a position of losing their businesses if an uninsurable claim results in a judgment and/or defense costs that are beyond their ability to pay.
Legislation introduced in the assembly and senate - A.7275 (Schimminger/S.5038 (Martins) - will make indemnity language standard throughout NYS for public entities. Professional firms will indemnify and hold clients harmless from liabilities, damages and costs arising out of negligent acts, errors and omissions for which the design consultant is legally liable.
Unreasonable and uninsurable indemnity clauses in contracts are harmful to every party involved. It not only puts businesses at risk of failing but it will, at the end of the day, prevent individuals who are harmed from just compensation. ACEC N.Y. urges N.Y. to reform the way these clauses are worded.
ACEC N.Y. is a proactive coalition of more than 270 firms representing every discipline of engineering related to the built environment—civil, structural, mechanical, electrical, geotechnical—and affiliated companies. We are a diverse group of consulting engineering firms from across NYS, ranging from sole proprietors to multinational corporations that collectively employ over 20,000 New Yorkers and 10 times that number worldwide. Our shared goals are to further the business interests of our membership, enhance the quality and safety of the environment we live and work in, and help ensure the vitality of our communities.
For more information on ACEC N.Y., visit our website at www.acecny.org.
Jay Simson, CAE, is president of ACEC New York, New York, N.Y.
Thanks for Reading!
You've read 1 of your 3 guest articles
Register and get instant unlimited access to all of our articles online.
Sign up is quick, easy, & FREE.
Subscription Options
Sign up is quick, easy, & FREE.
Already have an account? Login here