F
Factory
mutual
- A mutual insurance company insuring only properties that meet high
underwriting standards. The typical risk is fire-resistive construction
with a central station alarm.
Facultative
reinsurance - A separate reinsurance agreement that is negotiated
for a particular risk or insurance policy.
Fair
Credit Reporting Act - Public Law 91-508 requires that an insurer
tell an applicant if a consumer report may be requested. The applicant
must also be told the scope of the possible investigation. Should the
application be declined because of information contained in that report,
the applicant must be given the name and address of the reporting agency.
The insurer may not reveal the contents of the report. Only the agency
that compiled the report may release its contents.
FAIR
plan - An acronym for Fair Access to Insurance Requirements, these
plans have been established in many states to make fire and extended
coverage (and homeowners in some states) available in areas otherwise
not addressed by the voluntary market.
Fair
rental value - An amount payable to an insured homeowner for loss
of rental income due to damage that makes the premises uninhabitable.
Farmowners-ranchowners
policy - A "homeowners" type package policy adapted to
include farm and ranch exposures.
FEMA
- Federal Emergency Management Agency. This agency administers the National
Flood Insurance Program.
Fidelity
bond, see Employee dishonesty coverage.
Fiduciary
- A generic term for persons or legal entities such as executors, trustees,
and guardians appointed by the court, under a will, or by a trust to
manage, control, or dispose of the property of others.
Fiduciary
bonds, see Judicial bonds.
Fiduciary
liability insurance - This insurance covers claims arising from:
(1) a breach of the responsibilities or duties imposed on a benefit
plan administrator; or (2) a negligent act, error, or omission of the
administrator.
File
and use rating laws - State laws that permit the use of new rates
by an insurance company without first obtaining the approval of that
state’s insurance department.
Financial
responsibility clause - The clause in an auto policy stating that,
when the policy is certified as future proof of financial responsibility,
then the policy will comply with the financial responsibility laws to
the extent required.
Financial
responsibility law - When applied to automobile operations, this
term signifies the minimum statutory limits of an operator’s responsibility
for bodily injury and property damage caused by negligent operation
of the vehicle.
Fine
arts floater, see Floater.
Fire
- Combustion evidenced by a flame or glow. Insurance distinguishes between
a "hostile" fire (one out of bounds) and "friendly"
fire (such as that contained within the firebox of a stove).
Fire
department service charge - A fee that may be imposed by a fire
department for responding to a call. Most fire coverage agreements include
indemnification provisions for such eventualities.
Fire
legal liability - Public liability policies routinely exclude coverage
for damage to property in an insured’s care, custody, or control. This
leaves a big gap in a tenant’s coverage, a gap partially filled by an
exception in the commercial general liability policy that restores limited
coverage for fire damage to the landlord’s building. Perhaps the best
benefit of the exception is to call attention to the exposure so arrangements
can be made for broader coverage at appropriate limits.
Fire
mark - An insignia, attached to the outside of a house, that represented
the insurer of the house.
First
named insured - An insurance policy may have more than one party
named as insured. In such cases, the first named insured attends to
policy "housekeeping," i.e., pays premiums, initiates (or
receive notice of) cancellation, or calls for interim changes in the
contract. This is spelled out in commercial policies in the "common
policy conditions."
Fixtures
- Generally, something tangible that is fixed or attached, as to a building,
so that it becomes an appendage or structural part.
Flat
cancellation, see Cancellation.
Fleet
policy - Written for a risk that has five or more vehicles.
Flesch
test - A method to determine the degree of ease or difficulty for
reading material. It counts not only the number of words in a sentence,
but also the number of syllables in each word. Some states require that
insurance con-tracts be written so that they have a certain readability
level (often, 8th grade).
Floater
- An inland marine form covering movable property wherever located within
territorial limits.
Flood
- A general and temporary condition of partial or complete inundation
of dry land caused by the overflow of the natural boundaries of a body
of water or the unusual and rapid accumulation of surface water runoff.
Some insurance policies that include flood as a covered peril only insure
against damage caused by overflow of the natural boundaries of a body
of water, but other policies also may insure against surface water losses.
Flood
insurance - Flood insurance, like earthquake coverage, is usually
only of interest to those relatively few whose property is exposed.
Consequently, losses among this small group will be high and premiums
can be prohibitive. However, in 1968 the Federal government stepped
in to help property owners in designated "flood plains" with
the National Flood Insurance Act of 1968. Coverage is not only available,
but may even be required to obtain financing for exposed properties.
Flood
Insurance Rate Map (FIRM) - Provided by FEMA (Federal Emergency
Management Agency), this map delineates base flood elevations and flood
risk zones, and is used for rating purposes for flood insurance.
Forgery
or alteration coverage - This type of insurance covers loss sustained
through forgery or alteration of outgoing negotiable instruments made
or drawn by the insured; drawn on the insured’s account(s); or made
or drawn by someone acting as the insured’s agent. This includes loss
caused by any of the following: (1) Checks or drafts made or drawn in
the insured’s name, payable to a fictitious entity; (2) Checks or drafts,
including payroll checks, executed through forged endorsements; and
(3) Alteration of the amount of a check or draft.
Form
- The central document or documents of an insurance contract. Forms
may be altered by endorsement.
Fraud
- The intentional perversion of the truth in order to mislead someone
into parting with something of value.
Friendly
fire, See Fire.
Fronting
- The practice, in reinsurance, of the ceding company retaining only
a small portion of a risk and ceding the remainder to a reinsurer.
Functional
replacement cost - The cost to repair or replace damaged property
with materials that are functionally the equivalent of the damaged or
destroyed property. For example: replacing a solid mahogany banister
with a pine banister.
Fur
floater, see Floater.
Furriers
customers insurance, see Bailees floater.