Builders Mutual Insurance Company v. GCC Construction, LLC

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Tennessee
DecidedJanuary 5, 2024
Docket1:22-cv-00208
StatusUnknown

This text of Builders Mutual Insurance Company v. GCC Construction, LLC (Builders Mutual Insurance Company v. GCC Construction, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Builders Mutual Insurance Company v. GCC Construction, LLC, (E.D. Tenn. 2024).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT EASTERN DISTRICT OF TENNESSEE AT CHATTANOOGA

BUILDERS MUTUAL INSURANCE ) COMPANY, ) Case No. 1:22-cv-208 ) Plaintiff/Counter-Defendant, ) Judge Travis R. McDonough ) v. ) Magistrate Judge Christopher H. Steger ) GCC CONSTRUCTION, LLC and ) TAHINI MAIN STREET, LLC, ) ) Defendants/Counter-Claimants. )

MEMORANDUM OPINION

On December 20, 2023, the Court granted Defendants/Counter-Claimants GCC Construction, LLC (“GCC”) and Tahini Main Street, LLC’s (“Tahini”) motion to revise the Court’s November 30, 2023 memorandum opinion and stated it would enter a revised memorandum opinion at a later date. (Doc. 151, at 4.) This revised memorandum opinion wholly supplants the Court’s previously filed memorandum opinion.1

1 In its December 20, 2023 order, the Court only discussed revisions with respect to whether genuine issues of material fact existed as to whether the collapse of bricks that fell on November 15, 2021, rendered the west wall structurally unsound and as to whether there is coverage under the policy for the removal and replacement of the portion of the exterior west wall that remained standing. (Doc. 151, at 4.) However, GCC and Tahini also moved to revise the opinion on two additional grounds not addressed in the Court’s December 20, 2023 order: (1) whether “the Existing Building(s) or Structure(s) coverage endorsement controls damages resulting from a ‘collapse’”; and (2) whether “genuine issues of material fact remain as to Tahini’s fraud and misrepresentation count.” (Doc. 135, at 6–7.) The Court GRANTS IN PART AND DENIES IN PART the motion to revise with respect to these two issues. The Court revises the section of the opinion discussing Tahini’s lost rental profit below, but it does not revise the section regarding Tahini’s fraud-and-misrepresentation counterclaim. First, the existing building(s) or structure(s) endorsement provides the method of calculating “[t]he most [Builders Mutual] will pay for any ‘loss’ to the existing building(s) or structure(s).” (Doc. 89-10, at 21.) This endorsement changes how the amount of loss is calculated; it does not change what is a “loss.” This previously unidentified endorsement does not change the Court’s analysis regarding whether Tahini’s lost rental profit is a “direct physical loss” covered by the policy. However, Colby Butterfield’s opinion does change the Court’s analysis with respect to whether Tahini’s lost rental profit is covered under the policy. In its November 30, 2023 memorandum opinion, the Court concluded that “the undisputed facts demonstrate that the lost rental profit stemmed from the impaired structural integrity of the wall, not the fallen bricks” and concluded that, because the lack of structural integrity was not a “collapse” and also did not result from a “collapse,” the rental profit did not result from a “collapse.” (Doc. 132. at 36–37.) Accordingly, the Court concluded that Tahini’s lost rental profit was not covered by the policy. (Id. at 37.) But, as discussed in the Court’s order December 20, 2023 order, Butterfield’s opinion creates a factual dispute as to whether the collapse of the fallen bricks caused the building to become structurally impaired. (Doc. 151, at 3–4.) If the fallen bricks—which the Court found constituted a “collapse”—caused the structural instability in the west wall, which then in turned caused the building to become unrentable, then Tahini’s lost rental profit would be covered under the policy. Therefore, the Court revises this section of the opinion below. Second, GCC and Tahini argue that a genuine issue of material fact remains as to Tahini’s fraud- and-misrepresentation counterclaim. (Doc. 135, at 7.) The Court disagrees. In its November 30, 2023 memorandum opinion the Court granted Builders Mutual’s motion for summary judgment on Tahini’s counterclaim for fraud and misrepresentation. (Doc. 132, at 44–45.) The Court reasoned that GCC and Tahini provided “no evidence that could support a finding that [Builders Mutual’s] representations were false when Builders Mutual made them or that Builders Mutual knew these statements were false, did not believe them to be true, or was reckless in making them.” (Id. at 45.) The Court also concluded that “these statements all involved Builders Mutual’s future intent to investigate a claim or review the engineering reports” and future statements are not actionable as fraud. (Id.) In the fraud-and-misrepresentation section of their response to Builders Mutual’s motion for summary judgment, GCC and Tahini did not include a single citation to the joint appendix in the portion of their brief discussing Tahini’s fraud counterclaim. (See Doc. 103, at 11–13.) Rather, they stated that “Builders Mutual knew all along that it would maintain its denial of the claim and had already engaged counsel to file suit against its insured, all the while leading GCC and Tahini to believe that it was actually still considering the claim.” (Id. at 12.) GCC and Tahini now point to specific evidence. (See Doc. 135, at 8–10.) But none creates a material issue of fact. GCC and Tahini argue that Builders Mutual represented that “we are seriously reviewing” the updated information provided in GCC and Tahini’s insurance claim when it was instead preparing for litigation. (Id.) GCC and Tahini emphasize that Builders Mutual represented that “we are seriously reviewing” the submitted materials, and such a statement is a representation of present fact. (Id. at 10 (emphasis in original).) But this evidence fails to establish a question of fact on Tahini’s counterclaim for two reasons. First, the provided evidence does not contradict Builders Mutual’s representation that they were “seriously reviewing” the claim. (Id. at 10.) Tahini focuses on the fact that Builders Mutual obtained a coverage opinion and engaged counsel to file this present action. (Id. at 9–10.) But Before the Court is Plaintiff/Counter-Defendant Builders Mutual Insurance Company’s (“Builders Mutual”) motion for summary judgment (Doc. 88) and GCC and Tahini’s motion for partial summary judgment (Doc. 94). Also before the Court are GCC and Tahini’s joint motion to exclude expert testimony of Matthew G. Richardson and John Speweik (Doc. 92), GCC and Tahini’s motion to strike testimony cited by Builders Mutual in support of its motion for

summary judgment (Doc. 104), and Builders Mutual’s motions to exclude certain expert testimony from William Warfel (Doc. 96) and Arch Willingham (Doc. 97). For the following reasons, Builders Mutual’s motion for summary judgment (Doc. 88) will be GRANTED IN PART and DENIED IN PART, GCC and Tahini’s joint motion for partial summary judgment (Doc. 94) will be GRANTED IN PART AND DENIED IN PART, GCC and Tahini’s joint motion to exclude expert testimony of Matthew G. Richardson and John Speweik (Doc. 92) will be GRANTED IN PART and DENIED IN PART, GCC and Tahini’s motion to strike (Doc. 104) will be DENIED, Builders Mutual’s motion to exclude certain expert

these actions are not mutually exclusive with continuing to review the claim. Builders Mutual could have been obtaining a coverage opinion, preparing for litigation, and continuing to investigate the merits of the claim at the same time. And Tahini provides no evidence this was not the case. Nor does Susan McCracken’s statement that it would not be fair or honest to request an extension if Builders Mutual had already engaged counsel to file an action show the “seriously reviewing” was false. Whether action is “fair” or “honest” is a different inquiry from whether it is fraudulent, and there is no evidence that Builders Mutual was not “seriously reviewing” the claim. There is nothing inherently fraudulent about hiring counsel or seeking redress in court. Second, GCC and Tahini provide no evidence they were damaged by these representations or that these representations were material.

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Bluebook (online)
Builders Mutual Insurance Company v. GCC Construction, LLC, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/builders-mutual-insurance-company-v-gcc-construction-llc-tned-2024.