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![]() Fog Dog wrote: For the last 15 years or so I have entertained customer's and fellow employees on my boat. I have recently decided to take a trip from the Chesapeake to NYC and my company has offered to cover the fuel expense if I were to make myself and the boat available for employee and customer outings while there. In the past I have asked my insurance providers if I would be covered under these circumstances. They always indicated that provided that I was not a charter and I made no profit from the expense reimbursement I would be covered. I have just been told by a Boat U.S. insurance underwriter that if I were reimbursed by the company for fuel expense only that this is considered business use and I would not be covered. I know literally scores of people who do this regularly and have done so for years. My question is: Can this be correct? Are there other insurance companies that have a more realistic definition of business use? Are there any suggestions for getting around this? Odds are probably 99 in a 100 that you could "get away" with doing this, but should that other 1% come up I think you would be screwed in a major way. You won't need your insurance unless something happens- but in this age of exorbitant and punitive legal judgments your insurance company has a perfectly legitimate and valid "out" in this situation. Of course, if something happens you could lie like a rug and hope the investigators don't look too hard at the situation- but once again if there are hundreds of thousands or even millions of dollars involved you can be pretty sure the insurance company is going to look at the situation *very* carefully. Essential facts: Your *employer* (double red flag) is going to reimburse you for expenses (iow: compensate you) if you will make your boat available when and where they specify. Your employer will expect you to take people who may or may not be known to you for sightseeing tours or other sorts of boatrides. (This is a lot different situation than you inviting one of your personal clients out on your boat at a time and under circumstances of your own choosing and without compensation). If you aren't licensed for a minimum of OUPV then insurance is a moot point- you're operating illegally if you take passengers for compensation of any kind. In fact, you can't even accept charitable donations in exchange for a boat ride unless you are licensed. The determining questions: "Would you have taken Mr. and Mrs. Plaintiff for a boat ride on that afternoon if they had *not* agreed in advance to pay $XXX to the American XYZ Association for the privilege?" and (to Mr. and Mrs. Plaintiff) "Would you have any reason to expect that the soon-to-be-thoroughly screwed defendant would have invited you aboard his boat for any reason *except* in response to your donation to the XYZ Association?" Unless you can make a believable case that the answer would be "yes", you're accepting compensation for your services and the fact that you're passing the right of collection off to a third party is of no consequence. I'd expect the company to provide the liabilty insurance, and it's unlikely that they will find anybody to write it unless you're licensed. |
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