I understand that. But what you guys fail to realize is even though you have a contract with a carrier, you don't have a contract with the carrier's customer. The carrier's customer has a contract with your carrier, not you. Therefore if there is a claim your insurance will only pay who is listed on the insurance..your carrier. Since the freight belongs to your carrier's customer, your insurance company will NOT pay that claim. Your carrier's insurance company will not pay that claim because the freight was damaged on YOUR truck, and your truck is not listed on your carrier's insurance policy since you have your own.
Do you now understand what I am talking about?
I can figure this out. But what you can't figure out is your policy has YOUR carrier listed as additionally insured, NOT the customer that gave the load to your carrier. The contract is between the customer and your carrier. In order for that claim to be paid, the load has to come from who is listed as additionally insured on the policy. Your carrier has the customer listed as additionally insured, your policy does not, it has your carrier.
Do you see the issue with this?
Very Simply, additional insured does nothing but make the insurance company NOTIFY all additional insureds if they CANCEL your policy. If I have your property or any body elses cargo on my truck it is insured. The insurance is protecting me from damage claims from whoever they may be from. If it's on my truck, it is insured.
I'm not a lawyer but the way it would work is the shipper would put a damage claim into the carrier. The carrier would submit ta claim against me and I iun turn would submit a claim to my insurance.
If you still don't believe it, then call a truck insurance broker and ask them.
It's no different than if you have your own rights and take a broker load. The shipper has no relationship to you and is not named additional insured.