I Set Off the Alarm and Police Came: False Alarm Fines

I punched in the code the owner gave me: 1-2-3-4. It didn’t work. The siren wailed. I tried again. Nothing. Five minutes later, the police arrived, guns drawn. It turned out the owner changed the code and forgot to tell me. The city issued a $500 “False Alarm” fine to the homeowner, and they want me to pay it.

Key Takeaways

  • Fines and Penalties Exclusion: Insurance covers damages, not fines. Almost every policy excludes civil or criminal fines.
  • Professional Liability (E&O): If the alarm went off because you inputted the wrong code (your error), E&O might cover the financial loss (the cost of the fine) as a liability to the client.
  • Locksmith/Alarm Endorsement: Some policies bundle “Lost Key” and “Alarm Re-setting” costs.
  • Documentation: If the owner gave you the wrong code, it’s their fault. You shouldn’t pay.

The “Why” (The Trap): Damages vs. Fines

The policy says: “We will pay those sums the insured becomes legally obligated to pay as damages…”
A ticket from the City Police is a fine, not damages. Therefore, standard GL denies it.
However, if the client pays the fine and then demands reimbursement from you, that reimbursement request is a “claim for financial loss.” This is a grey area where Professional Liability helps.

[IMAGE: Photo of a red “Notice of False Alarm Violation” ticket]

The Investigation: I Called Them

I asked, “Who pays the police ticket?”

1. PCI

  • The Answer: Fines are excluded. However, if the police broke the door down entering, the door damage is covered.

2. Travelers (E&O)

  • The Answer: If the client sues you for the financial loss caused by your negligence, E&O might respond. But for a $500 fine, the deductible (usually $500) makes it pointless to file.

3. Bonding

  • The Answer: Irrelevant. Not theft.

Comparison Table

ScenarioInsurance CoverageWho Pays?
Police Fine ($200)ExcludedYou or Owner
Door Broken by PoliceProperty Damage (Yes)Insurance
Lost Income (Client fires you)NoYou

Step-by-Step Action Plan

  1. Verify the Code: Before the job starts, test the code while the owner is home (or on the phone).
  2. App Logs: Use an app like “Time To Pet.” It logs when you viewed the code. If the owner didn’t update the app, you have proof the error was theirs.
  3. Pay it Yourself: If it was your fat fingers, pay the $200. It’s cheaper than your premiums going up.
  4. Call the Station: Sometimes, as a business, you can call the precinct, explain the error, and get the fine waived as a “first offense.”

FAQ

What if the ADT system needs resetting?
If you broke the keypad? Property damage covers it. If it just needs a code reset? That’s a service call, likely out of pocket.

Did I commit a crime?
No. Accidental false alarms are civil infractions, not criminal.

Can I charge the client for the time dealing with police?
If it was their wrong code? Absolutely. Bill them for the extra hour.

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