Masonry Magazine March 1965 Page. 16
STARK
STRUCTURAL
GLAZED TILE
Insurance For Contractors
(continued from page 6)
or drilling or injury to or destruction of property at any time resulting therefrom.
In most states, the following classes of contracting work are commonly subject to exclusions as indicated:
CLASS OF WORK
EXCLUSIONS APPLICABLE
Building raising or moving
X. c
Caisson work
x, c, u
Clay or shale digging
X
Coffer-dam work
X, c, u
Conduit construction
X, C, u
Contractors equipment rented to others with operators
X, C, U
Drilling
X
Electric light or power line construction
Excavation
X, C, U
X, c, u
Gas mains or connections construction
Gas pipe line construction
x, c, u
x, c, u
Grading of land
x, c, u
Iron or steel erection-subway construction
x, c, u
INITIAL
Irrigation or drainage system construction
x, u
Landscape gardening
X, C, U
X, c, u
Pile driving
X, c. u
X, c
Oil or gas pipe line construction
Plumbing
Railroad construction
Salvage operations
Sand or gravel digging
Septic tank systems installation
Sewer construction
Shaft sinking
x, c. u
Steam mains or connections construction
x, c, u
Street or road construction
X, c, u
Street or road paving or repaving
X, c. u
Subway construction
X, C, U
Telephone, telegraph or fire alarm line construction
x, c. u
Tunneling
X, c, u
Underpinning buildings or structures
X, c
Water mains or connection constructions x, c, u
Welding or cutting
X
Wrecking operations
x, c
These exclusions do not ordinarily apply to Owners' or Contractors' Protective Liability or to Completed Operations.
LOWEST MAINTENANCE
SCRATCH
RESISTANCE FIRE-PROOF SAFETY.
UNEQUALLED DURABILITY
ECONOMY.
PERMANENT COLOR
Only Structural Glazed Tile offers all of these performance, esthetic and economical advantages for wall construction.
Only Stark offers Structural Glazed Tile in such a wide variety of types to satisfy requirements of fire safety, sanitation, economy and design versatility.
NEW FEATHEREDGE
COVE BASE...
Eliminates need for recessed floor construction. Stark Featheredge base may be installed after floor construction to accommodate resilient type floor coverings.
K-"Care, Custody or Control"
Perhaps no one policy exclusion has been the cause of more discussion, if not actual application, than that which excludes damage to:
1. property owned, occupied by or rented to the insured,
2. property used by the insured (except liability under insured Railroad Sidetrack Agreements)
3. property in the care, custody or control of the insured, or
4. property as to which the insured for any purpose is exercising physical control.
It never was the intent of a Legal Liability Insurance Policy to pay for damage to the insured's own property, of course, nor is it meant to cover damage to material actually being worked on. A dry cleaner, and not his insurance carrier, should be responsible for damage to a dress because a spot remover was improperly applied; a carpenter who in his shop hopelessly splits cabinet he is repairing for a customer has similar responsibility. These are matters of technique and work.
STARK
CERAMICS, INC.
CANTON 1, OHIO
16
MASONRY March, 1965