ISO revises policy forms to address cannabis
ISO released its first cannabis-related endorsements to the business owner form, including changes to property and liability coverage.
The Insurance Services Office, Inc. (ISO), which develops standard insurance policy forms for use by insurers, recently released its first cannabis-related endorsements (Cannabis Endorsements) to the business owner policy form. This new release provides five cannabis exclusion endorsements; two of the endorsements change property coverage for cannabis, and the other three endorsements change liability coverage for cannabis. As with any insurance policy or endorsement, understanding the specific language of these new cannabis endorsements is critical to any insured engaging in cannabis-related activity.
The ISO business owner policy is a package policy that provides a number of property and liability coverages for business owners. Historically, property loss of cannabis-related businesses was not “covered property” under the Property Not Covered provision of the form, which provides that covered property does not include “contraband, or property in the course of illegal transportation or trade.” For decades under federal law, cannabis was effectively “contraband” for insurance purposes by statutes such as the 1937 Marihuana Tax Act and the 1970 Controlled Substances Act. The 2018 Farm Bill, however, changed the legal status of hemp, cannabis with a concentration of no more than 0.3% tetrahydrocannabinol (THC). Specifically, the Farm Bill amended the Controlled Substances Act and the Agricultural Marketing Act to remove hemp from regulation as a controlled substance.
With an increasing number of states legalizing marijuana for medical or adult-use and the 2018 Farm Bill legalizing hemp (in certain circumstances), ISO recognized that cannabis-related property may no longer constitute “contraband” under the business owners policy. Thus, ISO released five Cannabis Endorsements, which were approved for use in a majority of states in September 2019.
- BP 15 30-Cannabis Property Exclusion
- BP 15 31- Cannabis Property Exclusion with Hemp Exception
- BP 15 32-Cannabis Liability Endorsement
- BP 15 33-Cannabis Liability Exclusion with Hemp Exception
- BP 15 34-Cannabis Liability Exclusion with Hemp Exception and Lessors Risk
The Property Exclusion Endorsements (BP 15 30 and BP 15 31) clearly exclude coverage for cannabis by adding the term “cannabis” to the Property Not Covered provision of the business owner property form. The Liability Exclusion Endorsements (BP 15 32, BP 15 33, and BP 15 34) add a specific exclusion to the liability portion of the business owner policy form that broadly excludes from coverage any bodily injury, property damage or personal and advertising injury arising out of a laundry list of cannabis-related activities.
The most important part of these endorsements is the broad definition of the term cannabis. Each of the Cannabis Endorsements defines “cannabis” as “any good or product that consists of or contains any amount of tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) or any other cannabinoid, regardless of whether or not any such THC or cannabinoid is natural or synthetic.” The Cannabis Endorsements each specify that the term “cannabis” includes “[a]ny plant of the genus Cannabis L. or any part thereof, such as seeds, stems, flowers, stalks, and roots, or [a]ny compound, by-product, extract, derivative mixture or combination, such as (1) resin, oil, or wax; (2) hash or hemp; or (3) infused liquid or edible cannabis.” For purposes of the Cannabis Endorsements, hemp, including CBD derived from hemp, is cannabis and is excluded from coverage — unless there is an exception to that exclusion.
As noted by their titles, three of the five Cannabis Endorsements contain a Hemp Exception. Form BP15 31- Cannabis Property Exclusion with Hemp Exception adds “cannabis” to the Property Not Covered provision of the business owner form, but then provides that this exclusion does not apply to goods or products containing or derived from hemp, including (but not limited to) the following: seeds, food, clothing, lotions, oils or extracts, building materials, or paper. Similarly, the hemp-exception liability endorsements provide that the cannabis exclusion will not apply to liability for bodily injury, property damage, or personal and advertising injury arising out of goods or products containing, or derived from, hemp.
Business owners operating hemp-related businesses should be cautious in reviewing their insurance policies to ensure that if their policies have been endorsed with any of these new ISO Cannabis Endorsements, each endorsement includes the Hemp Exception. Otherwise, under the broad definition of “cannabis,” an ISO cannabis endorsement without a hemp exception would exclude coverage for any hemp-related products.
Heather Wright is a partner at Bradley Arant Boult Cummings LLP and has experience in the trial and appellate litigation of a wide variety of commercial matters. She concentrates her practice on advising commercial insurance policyholders regarding coverage available through commercial general liability, directors and officers, errors and omissions and inland marine or contractors equipment insurance policies.
This piece first published on Bradley’s “It Pays to Be Covered” blog and is republished here with consent.
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