🚧 “The Hidden Gap: Why New York Contractors Must Understand Employee Injury vs. Employer’s Liability Exclusions” 🚧

In the complex world of New York construction insurance, few topics create more confusion—and more potential financial disaster—than the difference between an employee injury exclusion in a Commercial General Liability (CGL) policy and an employer’s liability exclusion. These two provisions may sound similar, but they operate very differently and can dramatically impact whether a claim is covered or denied.

For contractors working in New York—where Labor Law claims, third-party actions, and job site injuries are common—understanding this distinction is not just helpful… it’s critical.

⸝

🔍 Understanding the Employee Injury Exclusion

An employee injury exclusion in a CGL policy is designed to eliminate coverage for bodily injury claims brought by an insured’s own employees. At its core, the intent is simple:

CGL policies are not meant to replace workers’ compensation coverage.

If one of your employees gets injured on the job, your workers’ compensation policy should respond—not your general liability policy.

However, in New York, things are rarely that simple.

Due to the state’s unique legal environment—particularly Labor Law Sections 240 and 241—injured employees often bring lawsuits against third parties such as property owners or general contractors. Those third parties, in turn, frequently seek indemnification from subcontractors.

Here’s where the danger lies:

If your CGL policy contains a broad employee injury exclusion, it may not only exclude claims brought directly by your employee—but also third-party claims for indemnification arising out of that employee’s injury.

👉 Example:

Your employee falls from scaffolding and sues the building owner. The owner then sues you for indemnification. Your CGL carrier denies coverage because the claim “arises out of injury to your employee.”

Result? You could be paying out of pocket for a massive claim.

⸝

⚠️ What Is an Employer’s Liability Exclusion?

Now let’s clarify something important:

Employer’s liability coverage is part of a workers’ compensation policy—not a CGL policy.

Workers’ compensation policies are divided into two parts:

• Part One – Workers’ Compensation (statutory benefits)

• Part Two – Employer’s Liability

Employer’s liability coverage is designed to protect the employer against lawsuits brought by employees outside of the workers’ compensation system, such as:

• Claims for negligence not covered under workers’ comp

• Third-party over actions (common in New York)

• Loss of consortium claims from family members

An employer’s liability exclusion in a CGL policy reinforces that these exposures are not intended to be covered under general liability. Instead, they should be handled under the employer’s liability portion of the workers’ compensation policy.

Article content

🔑 The Key Difference

Here’s the simplest way to understand the distinction:

• Employee Injury Exclusion (CGL Policy):

Removes coverage for bodily injury claims involving your employees—often very broadly, including third-party claims.

• Employer’s Liability (Workers’ Comp Policy):

Provides limited protection when employees sue outside the workers’ compensation system.

The problem? These two do not always overlap perfectly.

That gap—between what your CGL excludes and what your employer’s liability covers—is where contractors get burned.

⸝

💣 Why This Matters in New York

New York is one of the most challenging insurance environments in the country for contractors. Between strict liability laws, aggressive plaintiff attorneys, and frequent third-party claims, coverage gaps can quickly turn into six- or seven-figure problems.

A poorly structured insurance program can lead to:

• Denied tenders from general contractors or property owners

• Breach of contract claims

• Out-of-pocket legal defense costs

• Massive indemnification exposure

Even worse, many contractors don’t realize they have a problem until a claim is denied.

⸝

🛠️ How Smart Contractors Protect Themselves

Experienced New York contractors—and the brokers who specialize in this space—know how to structure coverage to avoid these pitfalls.

Key strategies include:

✔️ Securing CGL policies with narrow or modified employee injury exclusions

✔️ Ensuring coverage includes third-party over action protection

✔️ Carrying adequate employer’s liability limits (often $1M/$1M/$1M or higher)

✔️ Adding umbrella/excess coverage that follows form properly

✔️ Reviewing contracts to align insurance requirements with actual coverage

This isn’t something you want to leave to chance—or to a generalist insurance broker unfamiliar with New York construction risks.

⸝

🏢 Why Contractors Turn to BGES Group

At BGES Group, we specialize in one thing: protecting New York contractors from costly insurance mistakes.

We understand the real-world challenges you face because we work with contractors every single day. From small subcontractors to large construction firms, we help clients:

• Identify dangerous exclusions hidden in their policies

• Structure liability programs that meet contract requirements

• Navigate complex additional insured and indemnification issues

• Secure competitive pricing from top-rated carriers

• Eliminate coverage gaps that could jeopardize their business

We don’t just sell policies—we analyze, negotiate, and advocate on your behalf.

⸝

📞 Let’s Make Sure You’re Covered

If you’re a New York contractor, now is the time to review your coverage—before a claim exposes a gap.

At BGES Group, we offer a no-obligation policy review to identify risks and opportunities in your current insurance program.

📍 BGES Group

📞 Gary Wallach: 914-806-5853

📧 Email: bgesgroup@gmail.com

🌐 Website: www.bgesgroup.com

⸝

🧠 Final Thought

The difference between an employee injury exclusion and employer’s liability coverage isn’t just technical—it’s financial survival.

In New York’s high-risk construction environment, one misunderstood clause can cost you everything you’ve worked to build.

Make sure your coverage works when it matters most.

Posted in Uncategorized.