nwalton2563: Is there anyone who can help on a problem with a leaking shared water supply from a legal and insurance point of view.
A couple of days ago my neighbour said they had a leak in a water pipe and the plumber feared that it was the pipe supplying our water, so he couldn't fix the leak by just cutting it off and sealing it since it went nowhere on my neighbour's side. The pipe is very old and corroded and we fear that if we merely fix the pipe it will merely give elsewhere, especially since the pipe was designed initially to supply one house and it is now supplying two.
The leak caused some damage to our kitchen wall due to damp affecting the plasterwork so I contacted our insurance company. I was told we were covered for repairing the damage to the wall but not for the cost of repairing the pipe. That was a little annoying but the cost of the latter is most likely minimal. More seriously is that the insurance company loss adjusters are insisting that the laying of a new water supply necessitated by the damage to the shared pipework is "remedial" work or repair and not damage. Hence, they claim we are not covered for such a cost which my require a large amount of external work plus a far from inconsiderable amount of work bringing the water supply into the house (including lifting tiled floors, removing kitchen units etc).
My first question is are they correct in this? Considering the law of cause and effect, the cause being a leaking pipe and the effect (or damage) is to require a new water supply to be laid, I would have expected to be covered for this.
Hi N Walton,
Usually repair to burst pipes are excluded unless the damage was caused because the pipe was frozen. Insurers usually only settle claims for the damage caused by the the burst pipe.
The problem is that the cause was not the leaking pipe, the cause was failure to maintain a 'very old and corroded' pipe. Insurers use the term 'Proximate Cause'. A room in a house is flooded due to the roof not being maintainted and fully watertight, not due to the rain as, if the roof was properly maintained, the flood would not have occured. Technically the insurer could have refused the claim but, instead, they have reduced it.
As far as I can see from what you write, this is remedial work; absolutely! The insurer will not pay out for 'other works' to be carried out further than which they accept liability for. Similarly, if 4 lower kitchen units are damaged for which they accept liability for, but the upper 'matching cupboard units' are not damaged, then they will not pay for the entire units to be replaced... only for those damaged to which they have accepted.
A lot of people will say that these are examples of 'the insurer doing all they can to get out of paying a claim' but this is due to lack of knowledge in this area. A burst pipe, a leaky roof etc. are examples of forseen hazards that should have been attended to in order to prevent a loss. Insurance is there to cover for the unexpected. You could say that you didn't expect the pipe to be so corroded, or had no idea that it was so old. But this is no defence as the insurer will rely on the insured to confirm that 'the property is in good state of repair and will so be maintained' and to undertake any remedial works that need to be carried out. The insurer will rarely see the property until a claim is made, for obvious reasons. There is an element of people not bothering to check the maintenance of their own property and the same people who have the attitude that 'Oh the insurance will cover it'. Fortunately for everybody who pays a premium, this is not the case. Can you imagine if the insurer would cover the examples (Above)? The core principles of insurance would be open to abuse!
NWalton, I do see your point. Honestly I do. Until about 4 years ago, I would have agreed with you and jumped on the same bandwagon! But, now I see it from the other side, I can understand the importance of stringent policy conditions. I'm not saying that insurers get it 100% correct 100% of the time, because they don't... but, unfortunately for you, they seem to be correct in your case.
Probably not the answer you were looking for, sorry. Good luck though.