Alisha Hospitality, Inc. v. American Zurich Insurance Company

CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Oklahoma
DecidedJuly 13, 2023
Docket4:21-cv-00251
StatusUnknown

This text of Alisha Hospitality, Inc. v. American Zurich Insurance Company (Alisha Hospitality, Inc. v. American Zurich Insurance Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alisha Hospitality, Inc. v. American Zurich Insurance Company, (N.D. Okla. 2023).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE NORTHERN DISTRICT OF OKLAHOMA ALISHA HOSPITALITY, INC., ) ) Plaintiff, ) ) v. ) Case No. 21-CV-0251-CVE-JFJ ) AMERICAN ZURICH INSURANCE ) COMPANY,1 ) ) Defendant. ) OPINION AND ORDER Now before the Court are Defendant American Zurich Insurance Company’s Motion for Summary Judgment and Brief in Support (Dkt. # 59) and Defendant American Zurich Insurance Company’s Motion to Strike Portions of Jett McKay’s and Pete Scaffidi’s Declarations and Untimely Submitted Pinnacle Estimate (Dkt. # 70). This case arises out of an insurance claim filed by Alisha Hospitality, Inc. (Alisha) following a windstorm on May 25, 2019. Alisha’s insurer, American Zurich Insurance Company (Zurich),2 argues that Alisha has failed to meet its burden to show that the damages it seeks were proximately caused by the windstorm, rather than a 2017 tornado or vandalism resulting from Alisha’s failure to secure its property. Dkt. # 59, at 5. Alisha responds that it had substantially completed its repairs to the interior of the property and some exterior repairs from 1 The correct name of the defendant is American Zurich Insurance Company. Dkt. ## 13, 57. Plaintiff is directed to take note of the correct corporate identity of the named defendant and identify the defendant as American Zurich Insurance Company in future filings in this case. 2 Alisha had two separate insurance policies issued by Zurich affiliated entities, American Zurich Insurance Company and Zurich American Insurance Company. The defendant in this case is American Zurich Insurance Company; Alisha’s policy with Zurich American Insurance Company is referenced as it pertains to the factual background of Alisha’s claims. the 2017 tornado before the windstorm occurred, and any vandalism at the property occurred after the May 29, 2019 windstorm. Dkt. # 69, at 19-20. I. Alisha owns a hotel located at 6030 East Skelly Drive in Tulsa, Oklahoma, and the property

was covered by a commercial property insurance policy issued by Zurich American Insurance Company (Zurich American). Dkt. # 68-1, at 1697. The hotel suffered damage during a tornado on August 7, 2017, and Alisha filed a claim under the commercial property insurance policy. Dkt. # 59, at 7; Dkt. # 68, at 6. Zurich American retained Young and Associates (YA) as a consultant to inspect the property, and Zurich American issued payments of over $1,500,0003 to allow Alisha to repair or replace damaged doors and windows, electrical equipment, air conditioners, plumbing, and the exterior of the hotel. Dkt. # 59-16. Alisha spent approximately $1,000,000 of the insurance

proceeds to repair the property, but a substantial part of the insurance proceeds were used to pay the lease, make mortgage payments, and pay other fees not directly related to repair of the property. Dkt. # 59-17. Alisha subsequently purchased a builder’s risk policy from Zurich for the property located at 6030 East Skelly Drive, and the policy initially went into effect on February 26, 2018. Coverage under the policy covers the “risk of loss or damage from the time when you are legally responsible for the Covered Property on or after the effective date of this policy if all other conditions are met.” Dkt. # 59-1, at 14. A “Covered Cause of Loss” is defined as the “risk of direct physical loss or

damage to Covered Property except those causes of loss listed in Section B. Exclusions.” Id. at 7. 3 The parties agree that Zurich American issued a total payment of $1,869,772.85 for the tornado claim, but $1,513,324.30 was specifically designated for repairing the interior and exterior of the property. Dkt. # 59, at 7; Dkt. # 68, at 6. 2 Most relevant to this case is the remodeler coverage, under which Zurich agreed to “pay for loss or damage due to a Covered Cause of Loss to ‘existing buildings or structures’ described in the Declarations to which ‘renovations and improvements’ are being made.” Id. at 19. The policy provides that Zurich will pay the “actual cash value,” and the value of the renovations or

improvements “will be the lesser of the cost to repair or the cost to replace with like kind and quality to the same point of completion that had been achieved immediately before the loss or damage.” Id. Remodeler coverage contains an exclusion when there has been no ongoing construction activity for at least 60 days before the loss or damage occurs, and Zurich will not pay for any loss or damage caused by vandalism or water damage if this exclusion applies. Id. For other causes of loss not expressly listed in the exclusions to remodeler coverage, Zurich will reduce the amount it would otherwise pay for a covered loss by 15 percent if there has been no ongoing construction activity

within 60 days of the loss. Id. at 20. The policy contains a separate exclusion for damage to the interior of a building caused by water damage from “rain, snow, sleet, ice, sand, or dust, whether driven by wind or not, unless . . . [t]he building or structure first sustains damage by a Covered Cause of Loss to its roof or walls through which the rain, snow, sleet, ice, sand, or dust enters . . . .” Id. at 12. The parties do not dispute that the tornado damage to the hotel had not been fully repaired by May 2019. In late December 2018, Zurich had requested that YA re-inspect the property to determine “the level of completed repairs and project status,” but YA had difficulty making contact

with the insured, Vipul Patel. Dkt. # 68-1, at 1697. YA performed an inspection of the ongoing repairs in January 2019, even though it was unable to make contact with Patel, and one of the contractors asked YA to wait for a representative of the insured, Dawn Price, to arrive before YA 3 proceeded with its inspection. Id. Price met with YA and YA proceeded with the inspection, and YA found that repairs were ongoing but substantially incomplete. Id. at 1698. Stucco work on the exterior of the hotel was in progress, but most of the doors and windows were covered with boards. Id. A ground view of the roof showed that the roof was unsecured or unattached at the perimeter.

Id. No plumbing had been installed in the interior of the building, and there were minimal lighting or electrical fixtures installed on any of the four floors of the hotel. Id. No flooring had been installed on any the four floors of the hotel, and a few doors had been installed on the second through fourth floors. Id. Price spoke to Patel by telephone, and Price advised YA that Patel believed the repairs were about fifty percent complete. Id. According to Price, Patel estimated that the repairs would be completed in “August 2019 or 2020.” Id. On June 10, 2019, Alisha filed a vandalism claim under the builder’s risk policy with a

reported loss date of May 25, 2019, and Alisha claimed that “[v]andals damaged the interior finishes, plumbing, and electrical systems.” Dkt. # 59-19, at 2. Alisha also made a claim for damage resulting from a windstorm that occurred on May 25, 2019, and Alisha reported the windstorm claim to Zurich on June 10, 2019. Dkt. # 59, at 9; Dkt. # 68, at 7. Before any insurance claim had been filed, Alisha retained a public insurance adjustor, Pinnacle Limited (Pinnacle), and Jett McKay, the president of Pinnacle, conducted an inspection of the property on May 29, 2019. Dkt. # 68-1, at 9. McKay observed that the roof the of hotel had blown off during the storm from the west toward the center of the building, but the roof did not completely detach. Id. Alisha attempted to pull the

thermoplastic polyolefin (TPO) roof back into place, but water was still entering the building at several places. Id. McKay states that he saw “limited evidence of vandalism to certain building

4 components” during his initial inspection, but he saw evidence of attempted vandalism to copper pipes and the main electrical room. Id. at 9-10.

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Alisha Hospitality, Inc. v. American Zurich Insurance Company, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alisha-hospitality-inc-v-american-zurich-insurance-company-oknd-2023.