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Associated Insurance Professionals,
Inc.
Action Insurance Professionals - AIP Action
Insurance Agency
A New Mexico Corporation
New
Mexico - Colorado - California - Arizona - Nevada
Licensed Agents and Brokers
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Notary, License, Permit
& Court Bonds
The
Commercial surety market
includes numerous types of bonds categorized as court judicial,
court fiduciary, public official, license and permit, and many
miscellaneous bonds that include guarantees of financial
performance.
Contract
bonds
guarantee the performance of obligations covered by a
written agreement between two parties. The most common types
include bid, performance and payment bonds.
If Interested in
any type of bond click below to leave your contact information
and we will get back to you within the next business day.
Common
types of bankruptcies are:
-
Chapter 7: calls for the
"liquidation" of a business and allows for the sale of the
assets to pay outstanding debts.
-
Chapter 11: calls for the
"reorganization" of a business and the debtor remains in
possession of the assets after the filing of a plan for the
reorganization.
- Bid
Bonds
Bonds which guarantee that a contractor will enter into a
contract at the amount bid and post the appropriate
performance bonds. These bonds are used by owners to
pre-qualify contractors submitting proposals on contracts.
These bonds provide financial assurance that the bid has
been submitted in good faith and that the contractor will
enter into a contract at the price bid.
-
Blanket Bonds
Bonds which guarantee the honesty of all of the employees of
an entity to the stated amount of the bond.
-
Blanket Position Bonds
Bonds which guarantee the honesty of each of the employees
of an entity stated on the bond to the stated amount of the
bond.
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Blanket Public Official Bond
Blanket public official bonds
cover all public employees of the public entity stated on
the bond to the stated amount of the bond.
-
Blanket Position Public Official Bond
The blanket position public
official bond covers each public employee of the public
entity stated on the bond to the stated amount of the bond.
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Capacity
A term that refers to the size of a bond which a surety is
able to write.
-
Commercial Bonds
A
general classification of bonds that refers to all bonds
other than contract and performance bonds. Commercial bonds
cover obligations typically required by law or regulation.
Each bond is unique to the circumstances at hand.
-
Commercial Blanket Bonds
These
bonds provide a single amount of coverage to cover dishonest
acts of employees, regardless of the number of employees
involved in the loss. In other words, this type of bond
covers all employees to the amount stated on the bond.
-
Conservator
A
person, official, or institution designated to take over and
protect the interest of an incompetent or minor.
-
Contract Bonds
A type
of bond designed to guarantee the performance of obligations
under a contract. These bonds guarantee the obligee that the
principal will perform according to the terms of a written
contract. Construction contracts constitute most of these
bonds. Contract bonds protect a project owner by
guaranteeing a contractor's performance and payment for
labor and materials. Because the contractor must meet the
surety company's pre-qualification standards, construction
lenders are also indirectly assured that the project will
proceed in accordance with the terms of the contract.
- Court
Bonds
A
general term referring to bonds required in some action of
law.
-
Damages
Term that refers to monetary measures of harm which may have
occurred in a claim.
-
Defendant
The term that refers to the person or institution being
accused in a court case.
-
Defendant Bonds
Defendant bonds counteract the
effect of the bond that the plaintiff has furnished. These
bonds are more hazardous than plaintiff bonds. Often they
require the posting of collateral to be written.
-
Employee Retirement Income Security Act
The 1974 act that created a
requirement for a bond to be posted, in the amount of ten
percent of the funds, on the fiduciary of pension funds and
profit-sharing plans.
-
Errors and Omissions Insurance
A policy that guarantees
coverage for an individual in the event of unintentional
mistakes. Errors and Omissions Insurance, commonly referred
to as E&O, covers damages arising out of the insured's
negligence, mistakes, or failure to take appropriate action
in the performance of business or professional duties.
-
Executor
A person appointed to execute
a will.
-
Fidelity Bonds
Bonds designed to guarantee
honesty. Generally, the bond guarantees honesty of
employees. These bonds cover losses arising from employee
dishonesty and indemnify the principal for losses caused by
the dishonest actions of its employees.
-
Fiduciary
One who is appointed to act in
the best interests of another. A fiduciary is a person
appointed by the court to handle the affairs of persons who
are not able to do so themselves. Fiduciaries are often
requested to furnish a bond to guarantee faithful
performance of their duties.
-
Fiduciary Bonds
Bonds which guarantee an honest accounting and faithful
performance of duties by administrators, trustees,
guardians, executors, and other fiduciaries. Fiduciary
bonds, in some cases referred to as probate bonds, are
required by statutes, courts, or legal documents for the
protection of those on whose behalf a fiduciary acts. They
are needed under a variety of circumstances, including the
administration of an estate and the management of affairs of
a trust or a ward.
- Funds
Control
A method of taking control of
a contract bond to ensure subcontractors and suppliers will
be paid appropriately. This method may be used when the
contractor would not otherwise qualify for a bond.
-
Indemnification
The act of guaranteeing
another, repayment in the event of a loss.
-
Individual Bonds
A term generally used with
public official bonds, which refers to bonds written in the
name of the specific public official.
- Large
Deductible Plans
A type of insurance program
bond in which the insurer pays all losses, including those
that fall within the deductible, and seeks reimbursement
from the policyholder on a monthly or quarterly basis. The
bond guarantees the policyholder will reimburse the insurer
for losses within the deductible. The insurance deductibles
typically range from $25,000 to $1,000,000 per claim or
larger.
-
License and Permit Bonds
A
term used to refer to bonds, which are required to obtain a
license or a permit in any city, county, or state. These
bonds guarantee whatever the underlying statute, state law,
municipal ordinance, or regulation requires. They may be
required for a number of reasons, for example the payment of
certain taxes and fees and providing consumer protection as
a condition to granting licenses related to selling real
estate or motor vehicles and contracting services.
-
Maintenance Bonds
Bonds that provide for the upkeep of the project for a
specified period of time after the project is completed.
These bonds guarantee against defective workmanship or
materials. These bonds may occasionally include a guarantee
of "efficient or successful operation" or other obligations.
- Minor
A
person who is not of legal majority. In certain situations,
a person may be appointed as a guardian of a minor.
-
Miscellaneous Bonds
A term used to refer to bonds which do not fit any of the
other well-recognized categories of surety bonds.
- Name
Schedule Bonds
A type of public official or fidelity bond that lists the
specific names and amounts of each named individual bonded.
Name schedule bonds use one bond, but attach a schedule of
individual names of the bonded public officials. Each name
will list a specific dollar amount for which that individual
is being bonded. These may be used to bond a panel of city
council members or similar body of officials.
- Name
Schedule Public Official Bonds
Name schedule bonds use one
bond, but attach a schedule of individual names of public
officials being bonded. Each name will list a specific
dollar amount for which that individual is being bonded.
These may be used to bond a panel of city council members or
similar body of officials.
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Notary Public Bonds
Include bonds that are required by statutes to protect
against losses resulting from the improper actions of
notaries.
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Obligee
The
person or institution to which a surety guarantees that a
principal perform as expected.
- Open
Penalty
A
term used to refer to the unlimited liability of the surety
on a particular bond.
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Ordinance
A
municipal regulation.
-
Payment Bonds
Payment bonds guarantee payment of the contractor's
obligation under the contract for subcontractors, laborers,
and materials suppliers associated with the project. Since
liens may not be placed on public jobs, the payment bond may
be the only protection for those supplying labor or
materials to a public job.
-
Penalty
A term
used to refer to the monetary size or limit of bond.
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Pension
A
fixed sum of money regularly paid to a person.
-
Performance Bonds
Performance bonds guarantee performance of the terms of a
contract. These bonds frequently incorporate payment bond
(labor and materials) and maintenance bond liability. This
protects the owner from financial loss should the contractor
fail to perform the contract in accordance with its terms
and conditions.
-
Plaintiff
The person or institution that brings an action in a court
of law.
-
Plaintiff Bonds
Plaintiff bonds are required
of a plaintiff in an action of law. They generally guarantee
damages to the defendant caused by the plaintiff's legal
action, should the court decide for the plaintiff.
-
Position Schedule Bonds
A type
of fidelity or public official bond, which lists specific
positions and their corresponding penalty amounts. Position
schedule bonds use one bond, but attach a schedule of
positions to be bonded. Each name will list a specific
dollar amount for which that individual is being bonded.
This type of bond may be used to bond certain positions that
have a high amount of turnover. Using a position instead of
a name will reduce the paperwork involved year-to-year.
-
Premium
A sum of money paid as consideration for an insurance policy
or bond.
-
Principal
The
individual required to be bonded by the obligee.
- Public Official Bonds
A type
of bond that guarantees a public official will act with
honesty and/or faithful performance. These bonds are
required by statutes and ordinances.
-
Public Officials
One
who holds public office.
-
Rates
The
amount of money per thousand dollars (or percentage) used to
determine the bond premium.
-
Reclamation Bonds
A bond
which guarantees that an institution will restore land, that
it has mined or otherwise altered, to its original
condition.
-
Replevin
An
action of a law used to recover specific personal property.
-
Retrospective Plans
Type of insurance program bond
in which the final premium is a combination of incurred
losses and an administrative charge. Retrospective plans are
loss sensitive insurance plans. Since final loss costs may
take years to develop, the bond guarantees payment of the
final premium amount.
- SBA
An
acronym for the Small Business Administration. The SBA has a
program to help small and minority owned contracting
businesses obtain surety bonds.
-
Self-Insurers Retention Plans
A type of insurance program bond that is commonly used with
Workers' Compensation insurance, General Liability coverage
or other liability coverage where limited coverage is
available or coverage, when available, may not be
affordable.
-
Supply Bonds
Bonds which guarantee
performance of a contract to furnish supplies or materials.
In the event of a default by the supplier, the surety
indemnifies the purchaser of the supplies against the
resulting loss.
-
Surety
A person or institution which guarantees the acts of
another.
-
Surety Bonds
Surety bonds are three-party agreements in which the issuer
of the bond (the surety) joins with the second party (the
principal) in guaranteeing to a third party (the obligee)
the fulfillment of an obligation on the part of the
principal. An obligee is the party (person, corporation or
government agency) to whom a bond is given. The obligee is
also the party protected by the bond against loss.
-
Surety Industry
The surety industry is composed of contract surety business
and commercial surety business. The products comprising each
are sold through the same type of distribution system --
agents and brokers.
-
Treasury Listing
A
financial rating published by the federal government that
lists the maximum size of federal bond a surety is allowed
to write.
-
Trustee
A trustee is a person named to
manage a business' assets and work with the business
creditors.
-
Work-On-Hand Reports
A type of financial statements
or schedule which lists a contractor's jobs in progress.
-
Workers' Compensation Self-Insurers Bond
Workers' Compensation laws, at the state and federal level,
require employers to compensate employees injured on the
job. An employer may comply with these laws by purchasing
insurance or self insuring by posting a workers'
compensation bond to guarantee payment of benefits to
employees. This is a hazardous class of commercial surety
bond because of its "long-tail" exposure and potential
cumulative liability. The "long-tail" exposure stems from
the two statutory bond forms:
-
Traditional - bond form:
The surety is liable for payment of
the principal's workers' compensation obligations occurring
during the time the bond is in force. When the bond is
canceled, the surety continues to have liability for all
workers' compensation claims incurred between the effective
date of the bond and the cancellation date of the bond.
-
Last surety on - bond form:
The surety assumes all past, present
and future liability to pay the principal's self-insurers
workers' compensation obligations. The surety is released
from all accrued liability if the surety cancels the bond
and the principal later posts an acceptable replacement
security.

You can call our customer service representatives Monday
through Friday
9 am - 5:30 pm and Saturday 9 am - 2 p.m. to give you
personalized phone quotes.
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