Insurance Coverage for Construction Projects


A basic mechanism for managing risk on construction projects is insurance.  Insurance policies provide two basic benefits: protection from losses arising out of covered claims; legal representation for covered claims.  There are numerous kinds of insurance coverage available for a construction project.   It’s worth carefully assessing your risks and matching them with the appropriate coverage. 

Commercial General Liability Insurance (“CGL”).  CGL coverage is a basic business liability policy.  Typically, a CGL policy provides only “first party” coverage: it protects only the parties named in the policy. Third parties, such as an injured bystander, cannot submit a claim to the insurer.    It is therefore important to ensure that all of the parties required by contract are included as “named insureds” or “additional insureds.”  However, in doing so, the additional insureds are then made first party claimants should they be sued by a third party

Property Insurance.  Property insurance provides protection against most risks to property, such as fire, theft and possibly weather damage.  Special forms of property insurance include flood insurance, earthquake insurance, home insurance, and boiler insurance.

Builder’s Risk Insurance.  Standard property insurance policies do not cover losses to new improvements to the property.  Builder’s risk insurance provides coverage to new improvements for damage to the work during construction, including installed materials and equipment as well as permanent structures.  Typical exclusions from builder’s risk policies are land, existing structures, tools and machinery not part of the new permanent structure, contractual liabilities and faulty workmanship.  Builder’s risk insurance does not provide liability coverage in the case of loss to another party.   Both the owner and the general contractor are typically named insureds under a builder’s risk policy.  Subcontractors are sometimes also named insureds.

Professional Liability Insurance.  Professional liability insurance provides malpractice coverage to construction designers such as architects and engineers for defects or deficiencies in the design aspects of the project, and for any deficiencies in the project administration responsibilities undertaken by the design professional.  To the extent that a construction manager or the general contractor has a licensed designer on its staff, or if they have design responsibilities, the GC or CM should have an additional design insurance policy. 

Excess/Umbrella Insurance.  Additional coverage for construction parties is readily available in the form of “excess” or “umbrella” policies.  It is a good practice for construction contractors to procure liability insurance in addition to their CGL coverage in the form of excess insurance policies.  The additional coverage is implicated only when the underlying insurance is exhausted.   It is important to give prompt notice to both insurers if a claim arises.  This is so even if the two policies are issued by the same insurer as the insurer typically assigns two adjusters to the claim, one for each policy.

Other Policies.  Besides the policies described above, there are also other policies typical on construction projects including worker’s compensation, automobile/vehicles, directors and officers, so called “wrap” policies (essentially insuring all parties to the project), and products completed operations hazard policies.


For more information on insurance coverage for construction projects, contact Ken Robinson or another member of our Construction Law & Litigation team.

Flood Water Drainage Rights Between Adjacent Landowners


Everyone knows that water flows downhill, but what are the legal ramifications when the flow is obstructed and property damage results?  During flooding, conditions that historically allowed water to pass serenely from one property to another can be overwhelmed. Previously harmless objects in the drainage path become obstacles, and water reroutes without benefit of hydraulic design.  Who is responsible for resulting damage and under what circumstances?  The law governing the rights and obligations of the landowners is well-developed, but the wide range of property configurations and varying drainage patterns can still make assessment of the legal relationships challenging. 

Such questions often arise after unprecedented flooding, such as occurred in 2013 in and around Boulder and the Front Range of Colorado.  That event demonstrated that we still have a lot to learn about flood risks and how to manage them.  The relevant law can provide guidance as there are well-established legal rights that attend the flow and drainage of water over adjacent properties.  

Common Law Drainage Easements

The right to have water drain from one property onto another is in the nature of an easement.  In traditional legal terms, an easement is a form of “servitude” which is defined as “[a] charge or a burden resting upon one estate for the benefit or advantage of another” (Black’s Law Dictionary).  The benefitted property is known as the dominant estate, while the burdened property is known as the servient estate.  Thus a drainage easement benefits the adjacent upstream property, the dominant estate, and burdens the adjacent downstream property, the servient estate.  In some instances, though technically not an easement, the downstream property may have a right to require that the drainage from the upstream property be regulated such that the downstream flow will not be destructive.

Drainage easements can be established in several ways: (1) by an instrument of conveyance such as an easement deed; (2) by a dedication in a subdivision plat or an engineered drainage plan associated with a subdivision; or (3) by common law, that is by appellate court rulings.  It is the latter two types of drainage easements that give rise to most disputes.

Colorado law recognizes the right of the owner of an up-gradient property to have surface water drain onto an immediately adjacent, down-gradient property by way of a “natural easement for drainage.”   When natural and historic drainage conditions are modified or disturbed by construction or development, the law becomes more complex.  Generally, the owner of a down-gradient (servient estate) property is allowed to modify the drainage pattern on that property provided that the modifications do not adversely impact the drainage over the up-gradient (dominant estate) property.

The Colorado Court of Appeals summarized the common law of drainage easements as follows:

 Colorado has always followed the ‘civil law rule,’ which provides that the owner of upstream property possesses a natural easement on land downstream for drainage of water flowing in its natural course.  Also, “(n)atural drainage conditions may be altered . . . provided that water is not sent down in manner or quantity to do more harm than formerly.”  Neither the fact that the land concerned is urban rather than rural, nor the fact that the elevation on both properties has been lowered without materially altering the natural drainage flow, affords a rational basis for creating exceptions to the general rule. Colorado cases on water drainage have drawn no such distinctions.  (emphasis added)

Calvaresi v. Brannan Sand & Gravel Company, 534 P. 2d 652, 654-55 (Colo. App. 1975).  Note that, in Calvaresi, the Court of Appeals in the highlighted text indicated that drainage patterns can create drainage easements through the result of “urbanization,” that is the construction of improvements that alter the flow of water over servient estates.

Prescriptive Drainage Easement

The common law of access easements also provides for the creation of an easement by way of uncontested use over the alleged servient estate for a prescribed period of time.   Hankins v. Borland, 163 Colo. 575, 431 P.2d 1007 (1967) (holding that a drainage easement can be created by prescription, with a prescriptive period of 18 years).  Accord, Stoll v. MacPherson Duck Club, Ltd., 607 P.2d 1019, 1022 (Colo. App. 1979).

Repair and Maintenance of Drainage Easement

Though the primary purpose of a drainage easement is to allow water to flow over the dominant estate, there is an attendant, but limited, right of access over the servient estate in order to maintain drainage area such that entry onto the servient estate is not trespass.  In Shrull v. Rapasardi, 517 P.2d 860, 862 (Colo. App. 1973), plaintiffs brought an action for trespass when the defendants entered plaintiff’s property to reopen a ditch.  The trial court held that the defendants were acting lawfully in repairing the ditch.  The Court of Appeals in Shrull affirmed the trial court’s judgment, stating:

If the owner of the dominant estate does not unnecessarily inconvenience the owner of the servient estate and use of the easement is not expanded, the owner of the dominant estate may do whatever is reasonably necessary for the enjoyment of the easement, including repairs, ingress and egress, with space therefor as exigency may show.

Accord, Stoll v. MacPherson Duck Club, Ltd., 607 P.2d 1019, 1022 (Colo. App. 1979).

Liability for Impairment of Drainage Flow

If the owner of a down-gradient property subject to a drainage easement alters the drainage pattern for water flowing from the upstream, servient estate, and those changes substantially alter the flow so as to cause the water to back up onto the dominant estate, the owner of the servient estate may be liable for damages.  It is important to note that a physical alteration to a drainage area may not cause water to back up except during flood conditions, and thus the impairment may go unnoticed for years.  Nevertheless, the servient estate owner may be liable though the flooding may take place long after the alteration.  Also, it is useful to note that, in Colorado, the governmental immunity statute, C.R.S. §§ 24-10-101, et seq., does not apply to drainage easement disputes.  Upper Platte and Beaver Canal Co. v. Riverview Commons General Improvement Dist., 250 P.3d 711, 714-15 (Colo. App. 2010).  Thus, even if the downstream drainage blockage is created by a governmental entity, it could still be required to remove the blockage and even found liable for damages.

Upstream property owners have standing – that is, the right to file suit – to seek recovery of damages for the injury resulting from flood waters backed up by blockage of the downstream drainage.  In Romano v. Village of Glenview, 660 N.E.2d 56 (Ill. App. 1995), homeowners brought an action against the developer of a residential subdivision for injunctive and declarative relief seeking to have the developer replace drainage channels on their properties with underground drainage systems or, in the alternative, to require that the natural flow of surface water be restored so as not to flood the plaintiffs’ land.   In Romano, the city intervened, filing a motion to dismiss—based on governmental immunity and lack of standing—and contending that the plaintiffs had not alleged injury in fact.  The trial court granted the motion.  The Illinois Court of Appeals reversed, holding that the plaintiffs had alleged injury-in-fact that the drainage channels created unreasonably dangerous conditions for their children, deprived them of the use and enjoyment of their yards, and created soil erosion in their yards. 


For more information on flood water drainage rights, contact Ken Robinson or another member of our Drainage Disputes or Real Estate Law teams.

John Clune Discusses New Title IX Regulations

HBC Title IX attorney John Clune recently went on air to discuss and debate the impact of the Department of Education’s proposed regulations for school responses to sexual abuse. A founding board member of the largest Title IX training body for school administrators, Clune criticized the new regulations, explaining that they will only create more tolerance for gender-based violence in schools and make it harder for schools to discipline offenders. Colorado Public Radio’s article on the debate can be found here.

HBC Welcomes Ken Robinson, Meghan Hungate and Lucy Walker

HBC is delighted to welcome Ken Robinson, Meghan Hungate and Lucy Walker (all formerly of Robinson Hungate, PC) to the firm as of September 1, 2018.  Ken, Meghan and Lucy bring to HBC their decades of wisdom and experience in the areas of construction, real estate and commercial litigation.

Ken Robinson - Before opening his own firm in 1999, Ken was a partner in the Boulder real estate and construction firm of Wells, Love and Scoby.  His practice emphasizes design and construction litigation, construction contracts and documentation, mechanic's liens, real estate litigation, road law, drainage law, collections and real property boundary and access disputes.  Ken has been a Registered Professional Engineer in Colorado since 1977 (now inactive).  Ken has had a Martindate-Hubbell AV®Preemient™ Peer Review attorney rating for 25 years.

Meghan Hungate - Meghan's practice focuses on construction, real estate, and business disputes, including construction litigation, construction contracts, mechanic's liens, access and boundary disputes, and real estate and commercial litigation.  Prior to joining HBC, Meghan was a partner at Robinson Hungate, PC.

Lucy Kennedy Walker - Lucy's primary focus is construction litigation, representing both owners and contractors in defect and contract disputes.  She also represents clients in a wide range of real estate litigation, covering issues ranging from property rights and boundary disputes, to homeowners' association and road and access issues.

HBC's Jim Carpenter Honored as 2019 Lawyer of the Year for Boulder

HBC's Jim Carpenter was selected as a 2019 "Lawyer of the Year" for Boulder by The Best Lawyers in America.  Only a single lawyer in each practice area in a community is honored each year.  Jim was named for his exceptional work in Mergers and Acquisitions.

This honor follows other HBC's lawyers selections as "Lawyers of the Year":  Brad Peterson's selection for Denver/Boulder for Construction Law in 2013, Connie Tromble Eyster's selection for Trusts and Estates and Chris Ford's selection for Personal Injury Litigation-Plaintiffs both in 2017.

HBC Congratulates its Ten 2019 Best Lawyers

HBC is delighted to announce that ten of its lawyers were selected as "Best Lawyers in America" for 2019.  Here are the lawyers and the practice areas for which they were selected:

Jim Carpenter: Corporate Law and Governance, Mergers and Acquisitions

Maureen Eldredge:  Corporate Law

Bill Meyer:  Commercial Litigation

Brad Peterson:  Construction Law

Connie Tromble Eyster:  Trusts and Estates

Kimberly Hult: Medical Malpractice Law - Plaintiffs

Baine Kerr: Medical Malpractice Law - Plaintiffs

Chris Ford:  Personal Injury Litgation - Plaintiffs

Glen Gordon:  Personal Injury Litigation - Plaintiffs

David Driscoll:  Commercial Litigation, Insurance Law and Personal Injury Litigation - Plaintiffs

HBC's Baine Kerr, Jonathan Boonin and Lauren Groth Obtain Landmark Settlement with EEOC Against DU Law School

HBC's Baine KerrJonathan Boonin and Lauren Groth represented Professor Lucy Marsh in a landmark equal pay case against DU Law School.  HBC represented Professor Marsh in filing a charge of discrimination with the EEOC, convincing the EEOC to "find cause" and take her case not only on her behalf but on behalf of all female full professors at DU Law School.  HBC then joined with the EEOC in representing Professor Marsh in a lawsuit that resulted in the entry in May 2018 of a Consent Decree.  After initially refusing to pay Professor Marsh anything, in the Consent Decree, DU agreed to pay Professor Marsh and the other affected female professors a total of $2,660,000 in back pay, compensatory damages and attorneys' fees.  In addition, all of these professors are getting substantial pay raises going forward.  Moreover, as part of the Consent Decree, DU Law School agreed to the appointment of an external monitor for six years and to annual gender equity studies from an outside labor economist to ensure the problem does not arise again.

Media coverage:  Ward, Stephanie Francis, "After Previously Defending Lower Pay for Female Profs, DU Law School enters EEOC Consent Decree, ABA Journal, May 17, 2018.

HBC Welcomes Seasoned Trial Attorneys Daniel Williams and David Driscoll

HBC is delighted to welcome two well-known and experienced trial attorneys to the firm.

Dan Williams - Dan brings to the firm over 17 years of litigation experience in a wide variety of commercial, business, securities and consumer disputes, including bet-the-company and other complex cases for emerging and established companies of all sizes.  Dan's clients come from a diverse range of industries, including natural products and outdoor industry, technology firms, life sciences/medical device companies, financial services and energy companies.

David Driscoll - David's practice emphasizes complex commercial litigation, plaintiff's personal injury, environmental torts, and insurance litigation of all types.  He also regularly serves as an AAA arbitrator.  David is a past president of the Boulder County Bar Association and has been listed in Colorado Super Lawyers and Colorado Best Lawyers.

HBC's John Clune and Lauren Groth File Title IX Action in Montana High School Case

HBC has filed a lawsuit in Missoula, Montana alleging violations of Title IX for a high school's mishandling of repeated reports of a teacher's sexual misconduct toward two students.  The suit alleges that the school received a report in 2014 that a Frenchtown, MT music teacher, Troy Bashor, was reported for unlawful sexual contact with a young student.  The school took no action against the teacher who went on to sexually assault another student in the fall semester of 2016, according to the complaint.  The suit also alleges that the second student was forced to transfer schools afer reporting the abuse due to the horrible retaliation from several of the other students who described Bashor as their "favorite teacher."  Along with the lawsuit, Bashor is being criminally prosecuted by the Missoula County Prosecutor's Office for his behavior toward both of the students.

HBC attorneys John Clune and Lauren Groth are handling the matter.  See media coverage at:

"The country's top legal talent joins the Frenchtown Title IX suit," Missoula Independent, 1/11/18.

HBC Welcomes Newest Associate Colleen Koch

Our newest associate, Colleen M. Koch, joined the firm after graduation from the University of Colorado School of Law in 2017.  Colleen served as the Managing Editor of the Law Review and she was selected as a member of the Order of the Coif, which honors those graduating in the top 10 percent of the class.  With her background as an educator, she will join the firm's nationally-recognized Title IX practice group.  She will focus on personal injury, Title IX and general commercial litigation.

HBC Welcomes Lauren Carpenter to the Firm as an Associate Attorney

HBC is very pleased to welcome Lauren E. Carpenter as an associate with the firm.  A 2006 Order of the Coif graduate of the University of Washington School of Law, Lauren brings to the firm over 11 years of legal experience in both private practice and as a JAG in the United States Air Force.  At HBC, Lauren will emphasize corporate work, business transactions, mergers and acquisitions, financing and counseling emerging companies.

HBC Attorneys John Clune and Lauren Groth File Petition for Certiorari

HBC attorneys John Clune and Lauren Groth filed a Peititon for Certiorari to the U.S. Supreme Court in the Title IX matter of Ross v. University of Tulsa.  HBC client Aibgail Ross was raped by a student athlete at Tulsa and learned thereafter that another female student had previously reported the same offender to the Campus Security office for an earlier rape.  No action was taken by the school following the first report and the security department threw the first victim's written statement in the garbage.  On appeal, the 10th Circuit affirmed the dismissal of the case ruling that notice of a dangerous campus offender given to Campus Security is insufficient to put the school as a whole on notice.  The court concluded that despite Tulsa's deliberate failure to respond to the earlier report, there is no liability without showing notice to a higher official.

HBC has argued to the U.S. Supreme Court that where the school policy instructs students to report sexual misconduct to Campus Security and where Tulsa's security officers are the school's Title IX investigators, the school was sufficiently on notice and should be held responsible for their deliberate inaction.  A copy of HBC's Petition can be found here or at http://www.hbcboulder.com/pdf/RossPetition.pdf

HBC Attorneys John Clune and Keith Edwards Bring Action Against Former NFL Player

HBC attorneys John Clune and Keith Edwards filed a civil action against fomer NFL football player Jarryd Hayne for sexual battery in Santa Clara County California, Superior Court.  The complaint alleges that Hanye took a visibly intoxicated woman back to his home in San Jose where he raped her.  The Santa Clara County native was passed out in the Uber ride to his home and awoke the next morning in significant pain and bleeding.  Hayne later acknowledged that he did have sexal intercourse with the woman.

Media coverage includes:

"Rugby-player-turned-49er accused of rape in civil suit," Mercury News, 12/19/17.

"Lawyer John Clune is acting for Jarryd Hayne's alleged rape victim," News.com.au, 12/20/17

HBC's Bill Meyer Prevails in TTAB Cancellation Proceeding

In December 2017, HBC seasoned litigator Bill Meyer prevailed in a trademark cancellation proceeding before the Trademark Trial and Appeal Board (TTAB).  Bill represented Survival Swim Development Network, Inc., which sought cancellation of the mark SELF RESCUE registered by J. Barnett Holdings, Inc.  After lengthy proceedings, a three-judge panel of the TTAB in Washington, D.C., ordered cancellation of the registration on the ground that it is merely descriptive of the identified services and has not acquired distinctiveness.

HBC's Chris Ford and John Clune Settle Baylor Title IX Lawsuit

HBC's Title IX sexual assault lawsuit against Baylor University on behalf of a former Baylor student has been settled.  The complaint, filed in January 2017 by HBC partners Chris Ford and John Clune, received much attention by bringing to light their own investigation that found 52 acts of rape by more than 30 football players over a 4-year period at Baylor.  Both sides were able to work together in a meaningful fashion to resolve the matter.  The alleged perpetrators, Tre'Von Armstead and Myke Chatman, former Baylor football players, are awaiting a criminal trial for the 2013 rape.

The settlement was reported widely.  Below is one such article.

Baylor, Alleged Gang Rape Victim Reach Settlement in Title IX Suit, Waco-Tribune Herald, Sept. 5, 2017

More info on HBC's national Title IX practice can be found here.