The obligation to indemnify is the insurer's obligation to pay all secured aggregates for which the insured is held at risk, up to the furthest reaches of inclusion and subject to any deductibles, retained points of confinement, self-insured maintenance, abundance installments, or some other measures of money which the insured is required to pay out-of-take as a precondition to the insurer's obligation.
Dissimilar to the obligation to guard, the obligation to indemnify stretches out just to those cases or reasons for activity in the plaintiff's complaint which are actually secured under the approach, since a final judgment against the insured would normally be bolstered by a genuine record in the preliminary court showing precisely why the plaintiff won on each case or reason for activity. The obligation of indemnity generally originates from the assention in the middle of insurer and insured which ensures the insured against any liability, harm or loss. It is generally activated when a final judgment is entered against the insured, and it is satisfied when the insurer pays such secured sums to the plaintiff who obtained the judgment.