Hey all,
I wanted to provide a follow up. My employer has reached out to their attorney to help answer this question. This is the response we've received.
"I spoke with a few insurance attorneys in our office, and the consistent response was that as a practical matter, it is incredibly rare for an individual engineer employee to be sued personally regarding work performed by or for the firm. We almost never see an individual engineer sued for some alleged design flaw that presumably leads to property damage or bodily injury. Usually it would just be the engineering firm entity being sued.
There are a couple caveats to this, generally speaking. If an engineer, for example, drew up shoddy plans, the plaintiff could theoretically sue the individual engineer in her personal capacity. But generally the company itself is the one with the money the plaintiff paid or against which the plaintiff could collect, which is why the individual employee doesn’t get sued. However, an individual can also be sued even if the engineering firmed is dissolved or has no assets, and dissolution of the company was for questionable reasons (such as trying to avoid liability) or if the company was not properly capitalized from the beginning. This is usually limited to shareholders or other owners of the firm, not employees, although it can depend on specific facts of the scenario.
But even if a company were to dissolve, the company’s General Liability (GL) policy that was in place at the time the acts occurred would normally be triggered if the complaint alleges a claim that could potentially be covered. That is true even if the complaint comes a few years down the road and the GL policy is no longer in force, as GL policies are “occurrence” based rather than “claims made.”
The company’s E&O policy may also be triggered but it may be set up as a claims made policy, which is where the “tail” or “extended reporting period” (ERP) you mentioned would come into play. Hopefully the ERP is long enough to cover the Statute of Limitations for claims against design professionals, which in Oregon is generally two years, but depends on the claim and specific facts of the scenario.
Regarding employee coverage, the vast majority of CGL and E&O policies our office has dealt with cover both the entity and “employees” (a defined term). Assuming the employee is working within the scope of their employment, the employer’s policies should cover the employees, subject to the terms of the policies. That’s not to say an aggressive plaintiff won’t sue the individual in addition to the firm, but ultimately, the firm’s insurer should pick up the defense and pay for covered indemnity for the individual engineer. Assuming the firm has adequate liability limits (so, for example, you aren’t working on projects where the employer could incur $100 million in liability and have a policy that only has $1 million limit), the employee shouldn’t be concerned. This all assumes that there isn’t any ownership interest for the employee (as noted above, it then gets more complicated), the employee should never incur personal liability for the work she does for the employer. However, we would need to review your specific professional liability/E&O policy to determine whether it covers individual employees in addition to the named insured entity, to be sure."
I will formulate a response to the attorney, but I'm curious as to what liability you typically put in your contracts. The attorney's letter says "Assuming the firm has adequate liability limits (so, for example, you aren’t working on projects where the employer could incur $100 million in liability and have a policy that only has $1 million limit), the employee shouldn’t be concerned." In our current contract my employer has it written so that we are liable up to our maximum insurance policy (1 mil). If we design a single house, and let it be re-used 10 times (with a fee for reuse) and a design flaw is found later, could we potentially be sued for 10 mil and run into a problem? What do you typically limit your liability per project/occurrence to?
Any suggestions on things I should ask the attorney in my response that I may not be thinking about?