(Note: This Guest Blog is by Michelle Claverol, an attorney with Merlin Law Group in the Coral Gables, Florida, office. This is the part of a series she is writing on business interruption claims).

Many policyholders are not familiar with the documents or income accounting records required to present a business interruption claim. To comply with the requests from an insurance carrier, policyholders are often forced to retain accountants to accumulate the data and provide a report to the company, but such services are rarely free.

Clients involved in these types of claims often ask if the cost of accounting is recoverable after the claim is resolved.

While the typical answer to this question is “It depends,” The FC&S Bulletin addresses and clarifies the question as follows:

There is nothing in the wording of the business income portion of the policy [CP 0030] that obligates the insurance company to pay the insured’s accounting cost to determine the extent of the business income loss. The policy promises to pay for "the actual loss of Business Income you sustain due to the necessary suspension of your ‘operations’ during the ‘period of restoration.’" Business income is defined in the policy to mean "a. Net Income (Net Profit or Loss before income taxes) that would have been earned or incurred; and b. Continuing normal operating expenses incurred, including payroll." The accountant’s fee is neither net income nor continuing normal operating expenses.

Now, CP 00 30 also provides extra expense coverage and some may argue that this coverage would apply to the accounting documentation charges. The argument goes that extra expense is defined to mean necessary expenses that the insured incurs during the period of restoration that would not have been incurred if there had been no direct physical loss; and, the accounting fees in question would not have been incurred had there been no loss. Furthermore, the policy also requires that the extra expense be incurred to avoid or minimize the suspension of business and to continue operations. Since it is fair to assume that the insurance company would not have paid the business income loss if the insured had not submitted the requested accounting information, and since the insured’s business would have continued to be suspended or operated at reduced income if the insured had not been paid for the business income loss, the accounting documentation was a necessary expense to continue the insured’s operations.

We do not agree with such an interpretation of the extra expense coverage. However, one of the duties of the insured in the event of loss is to cooperate with the insurer in the investigation or settlement of the claim. If the insurer requests that the insured provide accounting documentation to support a claim, this can be seen by the insured as a duty required of him by the insurer. And, it is reasonable for the insured to assume that the insurer would pay for the insured’s costs in performing this duty. The policy’s terms do not require such a payment, but the costs the insured incurs while cooperating with the insurer should be taken into consideration in the final settlement of the claim.