SEPARATION OF INSURED PROVISION CREATES SEPARATE INSURABLE INTEREST IN EACH INSURED UNDER INSURANCE POLICY
By: Alexander S. Beck, Esq., Stearns, Roberts & Guttentag, LLC A coverage exclusion found in many commercial general liability (CGL) policies is the “employer’s liability exclusion”. Under this exclusion, an employer’s insurance coverage does not extend to the bodily injury of its employees, when the injury arises out of and in the course of their employment. However, Florida courts have applied the separation of insured provision (also called the “severability of interest” provision) to extend coverage when the employee alleges that his bodily injuries were caused by the negligence of his co-employees, in addition to the employer’s negligence. In Evanston