With no explanation, chose the best option from "A", "B", "C" or "D". O. Turner, Insurance Coverage of Construction Disputes § 39:3 (2d ed.), Westlaw (database updated June 2017). However, “[t]his distinction for contractors is part of the larger distinction between professional services which require specialized knowledge or training and involve the exercise of judgment and those services involved in the execution of a decision based on nonprofessional judgment.” Id. Land surveying requires intellectual assessments and the use of professional judgment .in comparison to a general construction task like putting up a wall, which involves manually implementing..an existing plan. Including land surveying as a professional service will not give this endorsement improper breadth. See Maine Mut. Fire Ins. Co. v. Tinker, 178 Vt. 522, 872 A.2d 360, 362 (2005) (<HOLDING>). [¶16.] We next address the scope of the word

A: holding that a claim of faulty workmanship that results in damage to property other than the work product is an accident and that a cgl policy is not intended to insure business risks that are the normal frequent or predictable consequences of doing business and which businesses can control and manage    a cgl policy does not insure the insureds work itself rather it insures consequential damages that stem from that work    as a result a cgl policy may provide coverage for claims arising out of tort breaches of contract and statutory liabilities as long as the requisite accidental occurrence and property damage are present
B: holding that a policy exclusion applicable to any insured unambiguously barred coverage despite inclusion of severability clause
C: holding nearly identical exclusion of  any claim  unambiguously operates to bar recovery of uim benefits under policy when driver is excluded
D: holding the phrase rendering or failing to render any professional service unambiguously includes land surveying in a cgl policy exclusion
D.