Huntington Ingalls lost millions because of COVID. So it filed a lawsuit. [Daily Press]
The insurers maintain that, because the shipyards didn’t suffer physical damage, their coverage won’t kick in.
The company is suing in
Huntington Ingalls has appealed to the
“This holding puts (HII) in a classic ‘heads you win, tails we lose’ scenario,” the company argued in its appeal.
“Because HII was able to continue operations, although at a reduced capacity, by spending large sums to mitigate its (and its insurers’) losses and protect its employees, the continued operations establish that there is no loss or damage and thus no coverage,” HII said.
“Had HII closed its doors, there would have been no insured loss or damage because, with no employees or customers present, there is no pervasive, long-term presence of the virus. In both cases, there is no coverage for the losses that HII paid to insure.”
The company last year estimated the impact of delay and disruption just for 2020 at
The pandemic kept thousands of HII’s 42,000 employees away from work, threw off schedules for construction and overhaul of aircraft carriers and submarines at Newport News and led the company to spend millions on cleaning and equipment, tools and materials maintain as much social distancing as possible. More than 8,300 HII employees tested positive for the virus since
Insurance companies, and their trade associations have stated from the start of the pandemic that COVID-19 related losses are not intended to be covered under their business interruption policies – the coverage that kicks in when a business can’t operate normally, the
“The insurance industry has asserted that the BIEE (business interruption) coverage does not apply to COVID-19 related losses because the slowdown or cessation of business operations has not been the result of direct physical loss,” the NAIC said.
Within days of the first reported US cases in
“The presence of an infectious agent or communicable disease at a location where there is covered property generally will not mean that property has suffered “physical loss or damage” under your policy,” said a
Insurers have taken that position whether policies specifically exclude coverage when the interruption is caused by a virus, language that became a standard addition about 15 years ago.
Huntington Ingalls said its policies provided “all risk” coverage, and so do not exclude disruption caused by an outbreak of virus.
In rejecting HII’s claim,
“At all times the Plaintiffs (HII) have remained in operation, albeit at reduced capacity. This fact indicates that Plaintiffs did not suffer a loss of property as that term is commonly understood, but instead suffered a non-covered loss of income,” Mello wrote.
Last month, a
Zurich “claims that there is nothing ‘physical’ about the loss or damage flowing from the COVID-19 virus,” the ruling said. “But can this merely be asserted to become true?”
In August, the same judge ruled that
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