Brown v. Mid-Century Ins. CA2/7

215 Cal. App. 4th 841, 156 Cal. Rptr. 3d 56, 2013 WL 1750432, 2013 Cal. App. LEXIS 316
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 2, 2013
DocketB238357
StatusUnpublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 215 Cal. App. 4th 841 (Brown v. Mid-Century Ins. CA2/7) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brown v. Mid-Century Ins. CA2/7, 215 Cal. App. 4th 841, 156 Cal. Rptr. 3d 56, 2013 WL 1750432, 2013 Cal. App. LEXIS 316 (Cal. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

Opinion

SEGAL, J. *

INTRODUCTION

Leroy and Terrie Brown appeal the trial court’s judgment in favor of Mid-Century Insurance Company on the Browns’ claims for breach of contract and breach of the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing. The trial court concluded that the Browns’ claim for water damage caused by a broken pipe in their house was not covered under their Mid-Century policy and that Mid-Century was entitled to summary judgment. We affirm.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

A. The Water

On or about February 18, 2009 the Browns began observing condensation on the windows of their three-story, split-level home and on the drywall around the windows. There was moisture from the windowsills running down the walls and mildew on some of the windows and walls. When they cleaned the condensation off the windows, it returned the next day. About a week later, the Browns began noticing mold forming around the inside of their windows and on the walls in the living room and kitchen, “developing everywhere simultaneously.” Every room that had a window had mold or mildew.

*845 On March 17 or March 18, 2009 Leroy Brown’s brother, Robert Brown, crawled under the house and observed moisture. Robert Brown testified at his deposition that he shined a flashlight into the crawl space and observed damp soil. Leroy Brown testified that he was not able to see the source of the water, nor did he hear anything like water spraying. After his brother came out of the crawl space, Leroy Brown shut off the water to the house, told his wife about the problem, and then either he or his wife called the insurance agent.

On March 18, 2009 the Browns hired a plumber, Michael Lewis, to find and fix the leak. Leroy Brown took Lewis to the laundry room, where there was moisture on the walls. Lewis testified in his deposition that when Mr. Brown took him to a hallway and the laundry area, he could see condensation and moisture on the walls. Lewis told Mr. Brown that “from experience, it seemed like ... he had a hot water leak. And because his home was on slab, it probably was underneath the cement.” Lewis did a couple of tests and determined that it was hot water. Lewis testified that he told Mr. Brown that “the leak was on the hot water side. And in that situation, I told him that when you have a slab house, that sometimes you can’t—you can’t find the leak because water [has] a way of traveling. The leak could have been anywhere in the bottom floor of the house, and because it already had made a path, the water was just trickling, you know, wherever it was coming out at. And I told him, pretty much because we had the most damage in the laundry room, that nine times out of ten, it was going to be in the laundry room.” 1

Lewis also went into the crawl space under the house where he encountered mud and discovered a pool of water that appeared “pretty deep.” While Lewis was in the crawl space, Mr. Brown turned on the water “very low” so Lewis could determine where the water was coming from. Lewis observed that water was coming into the crawl space from the back side of a vertical pressurized copper hot water line attached to the hot water manifold.

Lewis then went into the laundry room and began drilling with a jackhammer and searching for the hot and cold water manifolds, with the water system still off. When he located the hot water manifold, he “got the pipe exposed and [saw] the leak.” With the water turned on “very low,” Mr. Brown went back into the house and observed “water coming from an *846 open hole in the pipe,” which “was just a drip out at that point, just enough to show me where the water was coming out... the back side of the pipe.” The water was coming out at “a slow pace, because [Leroy Brown] did not turn it on full blast.”

The Browns notified Mid-Century of the problem.

B. The Policy

Mid-Century had issued the Browns a “Farmers Next Generation Homeowners Policy” providing them with first party property damage coverage for structural damage in the amount of $404,000, with a $1,000 deductible. The policy insured some, but not all, of the Browns’ property and stated “[coverage is dependent upon both the (1) cause of the loss or damage and (2) type of loss or damage.” The policy listed certain types of loss or damage that were not covered under the policy, “however caused,” including “loss or damage consisting of, composed of or which is water damage.” The policy included an “extension of coverage” that provided “limited” water damage coverage “for direct physical loss or damage to covered property from direct contact with water, but only if the water results from ...[][] (4) a sudden and accidental discharge, eruption, overflow or release of water . . . [f] (i) from within any portion of: (a) a plumbing system.” The policy described what was not included in the limited water damage coverage: “A sudden and accidental discharge, eruption, overflow or release of water does not include a constant or repeating gradual, intermittent or slow release of water, or the infiltration or presence of water over a period of time. We do not cover any water, or the presence of water, over a period of time from any constant or repeating gradual, intermittent or slow discharge, seepage, leakage, trickle, collecting infiltration, or overflow of water from any source . . . whether known or unknown to any insured.”

For mold, the policy stated: “We do not insure loss or damage consisting of, composed of, or which is fungi. Further, we do not insure any remediation.” The policy also contained the following exclusion: “We do not insure loss or damage directly or indirectly caused by, arising out of or resulting from fungi or the discharge, dispersal, migration, release or escape of any fungi. Further, we do not insure any remediation . . . .” The policy defined fungi as “any part or form of fungus, fungi [or] mold . . . .”

C. The Investigation

On March 20, 2009 Mid-Century claim representative Seann Clifford inspected the Browns’ home and took photographs of the laundry room and the adjacent crawl space. Clifford “observed pervasive, visible mold and *847 moisture on the interior walls of each level” of the Browns’ home. Clifford stated in his declaration that Mr. Brown took him to the laundry room and showed him “the horizontal section of the piping which had been leaking. The section, which was part of a pressurized hot water line attached to the hot water manifold, was heavily corroded near a 90 degree angle bend. The horizontal section of the pipe below the bend had been embedded in the room’s concrete slab foundation.” Clifford inspected the pipe and “observed and photographed a hole in the pipe approximately 1/8 inch in diameter in the section of pipe that had been embedded in the room’s concrete foundation,” and saw that the “hole was facing down.”

Mid-Century then assigned the Browns’ claim to another claims representative, Rosie Acevedo, who inspected the home the next day, March 21, 2009.

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215 Cal. App. 4th 841, 156 Cal. Rptr. 3d 56, 2013 WL 1750432, 2013 Cal. App. LEXIS 316, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-mid-century-ins-ca27-calctapp-2013.