Thursday, May 10, 2018

American Economy Ins. Co. v. CHL, LLC: insurer does not have to pay, because the building did not suffer a “collapse” as required for coverage



The Ninth Circuit on Wednesday refused to revive a Seattle apartment complex owner’s bid to force its insurer to cover repair costs, saying a lower court properly applied Washington Supreme Court precedent in ruling that the building did not suffer a “collapse” as required for coverage.

In a brief decision, a panel of the federal appellate court said Chief U.S. District Judge Ricardo S. Martinez properly ruled in July 2016 that American Economy Insurance Co. had no obligation to cover CHL LLC's costs to fix damage to
an apartment complex in Seattle.

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In American Economy Ins. Co. v. CHL, LLC, an insured owned an apartment complex in Seattle. The insurer issued commercial property insurance for the building from 1999 to 2005. The policy provided coverage for losses caused by a “collapse.” The policies from 1999 to 2002 did not define “collapse.” However, the policies from 2002 to 2005 defined the term to mean “actual falling down of the building or part of the building.”

In 2014, while renovation work was being performed at the apartment complex, decay of the building’s rim joists was discovered. The insured began repairing the joists. The building remained occupied while the repairs were being made. The insured then submitted a claim to the insurer for damage to the building. The insurer denied the claim.

At issue was whether there was coverage for a “collapse” under the policies in effect from 1999 to 2002. The insurer asserted that the policies from all policy periods, even those that did not include a definition, required that the building actually fall down for there to be coverage for a “collapse.”

In examining the dispute, the court noted there was jurisdictional split on the definition of the term “collapse” as used in property insurance policies. While some states define “collapse” by requiring that all or part of a building actually fall down, other states have found that the actual falling down of a building is not necessary. In such instances, these states may require that the falling down of all or part of a building be imminent. Meanwhile, other states have a broader view and only require that the insured show that the building had a “substantial impairment of structural integrity.”

In reaching its conclusion, the court relied on Queen Anne Park Homeowners Assoc. v. State Farm Fire & Cas. Ins. Co. In that case, the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals certified a question to the Washington Supreme Court on how to define “collapse.”

In Queen Anne Park, the Washington Supreme Court held that “collapse” meant “substantial impairment of the structural integrity of all or part of a building that renders all or part of the building unfit for its function or unsafe and, in this case, means more than mere settling, cracking, shrinkage, bulging, or expansion.”

Under this definition, the CHL court found that the apartment complex at issue was not severely impaired enough such that the complex was unable to remain upright. The court reasoned that “[t]he building remained standing without renovation until 2014.”

Moreover, even as the decayed joists were being repaired, tenants still occupied the complex without any shoring put in place. Given this factual background, the court ruled that the insurer was entitled to judgment as a matter of law that the 1999 to 2002 policies did not provide the insured coverage for a “collapse.”

This opinion is instructive to the extent it demonstrates how a particular jurisdiction can impact the interpretation of the language in a first party property policy. For example, as discussed by the CHL court, three different courts have arrived at three different definitions of the term “collapse” when the policy itself is silent on the definition.