Connie, Most homeowners policies have a $2,500.00 limit for boat coverage. Any sailboat under 26' is provided full liability coverage by your homeowners policy. If your boat is worth much more than $2,500.00 you might reconsider getting a policy on your boat. Jerry Williams M 15 ----- Original Message ----- From: "Irv Kooris" <kooris@rcn.com> To: <montgomery_boats@mailman.xmission.com> Sent: Wednesday, July 31, 2002 5:12 PM Subject: RE: M_Boats: Surveying M17
Thanks Connie. Irv
-----Original Message----- From: montgomery_boats-admin@mailman.xmission.com [mailto:montgomery_boats-admin@mailman.xmission.com]On Behalf Of Conbert H Benneck Sent: Wednesday, July 31, 2002 12:09 PM To: montgomery_boats@mailman.xmission.com Subject: Re: M_Boats: Surveying M17
Hi Irv
For another view on the survey question, here are my two bits worth.......
If you need a survey for insurance purposes, then you have to get one: no survey; no insurance
But then the question arises, why insurance? Without researching my Home Owner's Police, plus my Extended Policy, I think that I am totally covered for small craft like a Montgomery 15 or 17, and I certainly am not carrying a Marine Insurance Police on a 15 foot boat that weights 1000 lbs! How much damage could it do to anything else? A scratch, maybe, and the cost of removing it would be far less than the yearly premium for a policy.
When I sold my Tripp-Lentsch, the buyers had a survey made, and the surveyer, just confirmed all that I had told them, but they needed it for the Marine Insurance policy.
I had a survey done on a Northeast 38 sailboat that I bought in Hamburg, Germany in 1985. Totally wasted money!
I got a nice report telling me the boats layout; the number of sails;(but not their condition); that it had an engine - I knew that (but he didn't tell me that it just had had a major overhaul - the sellers told me that); how many drawers were in the main cabin, and on and on - with photos of the deck, and interior.
When I sailed the boat in Denmark for 5 weeks and then brought it back to Hamburg to get small items fixed prior to sailing it back to the States, the man doing an Algrip paint job called me to tell me that the hull had a severe case of gell coat blistering underwater.
My "good" surveyor, who said in his report how good it was that he could examine the boat out of water, totally failed to make any comments about hull condition or blistering
Now, I knew what the boat was all about - it's layout; and had a list of equipment from the sellers; that's why I wanted to buy it. Blistering in the gell coat sure would have changed my mind about buying it.
I checked if I could sue the surveyer for a lousy job, but he had a paragraph in his contract that in effect said ' anything found after the survey is conducted is not the responsibility of the surveyor...." .....and there I was.
So, his survey was a total waste of money, though I did get some pretty pictures.
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I bought my M15 sight unseen from an owner in Sauselito, CA, with boat at Panama City, Florida. No regrets: got a great boat!
Connie
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