No, you need to go after the manufacturer of the product.
Earth movement is generally not covered under a homeowners insurance policy so that should answer your question. The only case it might be covered is if you purchase an endorsement to add coverage for earthquake. Remember that maintenance and faulty building is not covered under homeowners insurance.
Homeowners insurance covers many things, but not faulty construction or damage caused by deferred maintenance. You will have to check with your insurance company to see if the problem and its cause are covered.
definition of faulty causation
In most cases, yes. All policies have different provisions, so this scope is not a narrow one. You should contact your agent for coverage advice.
No, but if you have a home warranty policy that policy may cover it.
No, if the gutters were not installed correctly.
No. In the court case "Grimshaw v. Ford Motor Co.", the California Court of Appeals for the Fourth Appellate District upheld compensatory damages of $2.5 million and punitive damages of $3.5 million against Ford Motor Co., partly because Ford had been aware of the design defects before production but decided against changing the design. 27 deaths were attributed to the faulty design, and 3,173,491 cars were produced over a nine-year period.
No. Specific exclusions apply to faulty construction, workmanship, renovations, ect. //
It depends on why your roof is leaking. If your roof was damaged by a covered peril such as fire lightning etc. Then your Homeowners insurance would cover the damage. If your roof is old and worn out, it just needs to be replaced and would not be covered by your homeowners insurance. Roofs require the home owners maintenance and upkeep along with replacement every 20 years or so. It's just part of the cost of owning a home. Failure to engage in expected normal maintenance of your home can be interpreted as a moral hazard and can result in cancellation of your homes insurance policy. If your roof is fairly new and you just have a leak with no visible damage, then it is most likely the result of faulty workmanship and again, not covered by your home insurance policy.
depends what you mean, insurance will pay for a fire from an faulty electrical system, the insurance company will not pay for the faulty product itself only the resulting damage.
Yes, the single purchase crab is reversible if it faulty and the causes is covered in the warranty.
your security deposit is for DAMAGES caused by the tenant. Note this is major damages (broken windows, holes in the walls), not normal wear and tear. This flood was caused by faulty plumbing, not the tenant, so the tenant's security deposit should not be effected by this. Therefore the tenant should get his security deposit back, unless there were damages caused by the tenant themselves (not by the flood).