Casualty
insurance, often equated to
liability insurance, is used
to
describe an area of insurance not directly concerned with
life insurance, health insurance, or property insurance.
It is mainly used to describe the liability coverage of an individual or
organization's for negligent acts or omissions.
However, the "elastic" term has also been used to describe property insurance for aviation insurance, boiler and machinery insurance, and glass and crime
insurance. It may include marine
insurance for shipwrecks or losses at sea or fidelity and surety
insurance. It may also include earthquake, political risk insurance, terrorism insurance, fidelity and surety bonds.
One of the most common kinds of casualty insurance today is
automobile insurance. In its most basic form, automobile insurance provides liability coverage in the event
that a driver is found "at fault" in an accident. This can cover medical expenses of individuals involved
in the accident as well as restitution or repair of damaged property, all of which would fall into the
realm of casualty insurance coverage.
If coverage were extended to cover damage to one's own vehicle, or against
theft, the policy would no longer be exclusively a casualty insurance policy.
The state of Illinois includes vehicle, liability,
worker's compensation, glass, livestock, legal expenses, and miscellaneous insurance under its class of
casualty insurance.
In 1956, in the preface to the fourth edition of Casualty Insurance Clarence A. Kulp
wrote:
It has never been possible really to define casualty insurance. Broadly
speaking, it may be defined as a list of individual insurances, usually written in a separate policy, in
three broad categories: third party or liability, disability or accident and health, material damage. One
of the results of comprehensive policy-writing .... is to raise the question of the usefulness of the
traditional concept of casualty insurance ... some insurance men predict that the casualty insurance of the
future will include liability and disability lines only.
Later in Chapter 2 the book states that insurance was traditionally classified
under life, fire-marine, and casualty. Since multiple-line policies began to be written
(insurance contracts covering several types of risks), the last two began to merge. Fire-marine and
casualty were "portmanteau"
terms. When the NAIC approved multiple underwriting in 1946, casualty insurance was defined as a
blanket term for legal liability except marine, disability and medical care, and some damage to physical
property. Travel Insurance