The law currently states the property owner could be held liable and have to face the inevitable financial consequences.
Various JCT Contract Conditions require such insurance to be arranged to protect the Employer (Property Owner/Householder) in respect of their legal liability for damage to adjacent or surrounding property. Such a requirement has arisen following the 1958 Court Case (Gold v Patman & Fotheringham) which established the legal principle that the Employer has a liability in tort for damage to third party property, where this does not flow as a result of the negligence of the Contractor.
The insurance is usually purchased by the Contractor on behalf of the Employer because the Contractor’s annual Public Liability policy is better suited to providing such an indemnity. Some Insurers will endorse the Contractor’s annual policy whereas others will issue an entirely separate non-negligence policy alongside the Contractors own Public Liability Insurance.
The cover is arranged in the joint names of the Contractor and the Employer and will protect the latter against liability for loss, claims or proceedings that arise due to ‘non-negligent’ damage to adjacent property whilst undertaking a building contract.
It is worth noting that the Contractor derives no benefit from this insurance whatsoever, hence the Employer is responsible for both the premium and any excess that becomes payable in the event of a claim.