Candido v. Worcester Insurance Co., No. Cv93 0343978 (Jul. 22, 1997)

1997 Conn. Super. Ct. 7459
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedJuly 22, 1997
DocketNo. CV93 0343978
StatusUnpublished

This text of 1997 Conn. Super. Ct. 7459 (Candido v. Worcester Insurance Co., No. Cv93 0343978 (Jul. 22, 1997)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Connecticut Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Candido v. Worcester Insurance Co., No. Cv93 0343978 (Jul. 22, 1997), 1997 Conn. Super. Ct. 7459 (Colo. Ct. App. 1997).

Opinion

[EDITOR'S NOTE: This case is unpublished as indicated by the issuing court.]MEMORANDUM OF DECISION The above-captioned case involves a claim of nonpayment on an insurance claim in which the plaintiff, the named insured, sought compensation for personal property she reported to have been stolen from her home on March 17, 1992. The defendant claimed in special defenses that it denied the claim under provisions of the policy that excluded claims involving concealment or misrepresentation.

This case was claimed for trial by jury. When jury selection was about to begin, the parties both agreed to waive their right to jury trial and to proceed to a nonjury trial. Only the first count of the complaint remains to be decided, the plaintiff having withdrawn the second, third and fourth counts on the record in open court.

The plaintiff, Nicole Candido, testified concerning her claim of property loss in a burglary, the items she claimed were taken, and the circumstances concerning the procuring of the insurance coverage under which she made her claim for compensation. She called no other witness in support of her claim. The parties stipulated that the plaintiff's father, Joseph Candido, the only witness to the burglary, was unavailable to testify because he was hospitalized. The plaintiff's mother, who lived with the plaintiff at the time of the burglary, was not called as a witness as to any of the issues. The plaintiff presented portions CT Page 7460 of the deposition testimony of her father, a deposition from John Eby on the issue of the value of certain property claimed to have been stolen, and numerous documents.

The facts are very much in dispute. Joseph Candido gave differing accounts of the burglary on different occasions. Though the plaintiff alluded to the fact that he was in his eighties at the time of the events and statements at issue, the court received no information to suggest that he was impaired in his ability to recount what he had experienced when he was asked to do so by police and others.

After carefully analyzing the evidence and making determinations as to credibility, the court finds the facts to be as follows.

The plaintiff, who was forty-eight years old at the time of the trial, has lived with her parents, Maria and Joseph Candido, in a single family home at 765 Townsend Avenue in the Annex section of New Haven since about 1967. Between 1986 and February 6, 1991 the plaintiff's parents owned the home and insured it through the Hartford Insurance Company. On December 7, 1990, that insurer sent the Candidos a notice of nonrenewal. The Candidos had filed seven claims totalling over $80,000.00 from 1987 to 1991; and the Hartford gave its reason for declining to renew the following: "Increase in hazard associated with reckless acts or omissions of the named insured resulting in the 03-08-86 fire loss from cooking materials on hot stove, 05-23-87 explosion from an aerosol can left next to a running dish washer and 10-26-90 water damages from overflowing of tub."

Soon after receiving the nonrenewal notice, Marie Candido called a different insurance agent than the one that had obtained the Hartford coverage. That agency's representative, Ruth Hubbard, was acquainted with the Candido family. Marie Candido supplied Hubbard with information concerning the residence and the coverage desired. Hubbard entered this information and information she secured from city tax records on an application for insurance which she sent to Marie and Joseph Candido as owners of the property. On some date after December 11, 1990 but before January 2, 1991, Nicole Candido telephoned Hubbard and advised her that Nicole's parents were deeding the house and other property to her and that the insurance should be obtained for her as the name insured. Hubbard wrote Nicole Candido's name in over her parents' on the application and made no changes in CT Page 7461 the information contained in the document. The plaintiff signed the application on January 2, 1991. The application contained as question 10 "Any insurance declined, cancelled or non-renewed (last 3 years?)". In the box following the question, "No" is checked. In the box headed "Loss History", the word "None" appears. This court finds that these representations were on the form when Nicole Candido signed it. Ruth Hubbard noted on the application that "This property was recently transferred from Marie Candido to her daughter Nicole Candido. Nicole has always lived at home." Hubbard bound coverage with the defendant effective February 6, 1991, and the defendant issued a one year policy on the basis of the application.

While the defendant claims that the plaintiff concealed information sought in the application, the court finds instead that the application was unclear as to whether "history of loss" was the individual applicant's history as to the property at issue and whether the nonrenewal question related to the property or the applicant. Hubbard did not attempt to clarify the situation but took the position that the questions could be answered as to Nicole Candido's history of ownership of the property and need not reflect the facts as to her parents as prior owners. Such a course plainly enhanced the chances that the application would be approved and Hubbard would complete a transaction. Hubbard otherwise revealed herself to be a flexible purveyor of insurance; she indicated on the application that she had known Nicole Candido for twenty-five years while at trial she claimed only very slight acquaintance for a much shorter time.

One of the claims made under the Hartford policy was a claim by Nicole Candido as an unnamed insured when she was mugged at the New Haven railroad station in October 1990. This court does not find that Hubbard either read the defendant's procedures as requiring such an off-premises claim to be listed or that she communicated to the plaintiff the need to list claims that did not relate to the premises but to herself personally even when the plaintiff was not the named insured. The court finds that the failure of Nicole Candido to list her claim for personal property from the mugging was not a willful, knowing or conscious attempt to conceal information that was explained to be required. It appears that Hubbard limited her inquiry to the loss history of the property under Nicole Candido's ownership and that no representative of the defendant ever communicated to the insured that a different scope of information was required. CT Page 7462

The policy issued by the defendant insured the seven room brick house for $145,000.00 and provided $105,000.00 of coverage for personal property at replacement cost (see H.O. 250), along with liability coverage with a limit of $500,000.00.

The coverage for personal property limited coverage of unscheduled jewelry and furs to $1,000.00, of unscheduled firearms to $2,000.00, of unscheduled silverware to $2,500.00. The plaintiff, who testified that she told the insurance agent that her house was filled with antiques and valuable collectibles, did not seek to schedule any items for full value coverage beyond the limits stated in the policy as to such categories of property as furs, jewelry and art.

The Worcester homeowner's policy was renewed for a second year. On March 17, 1992, while Joseph Candido was home alone in the late afternoon, a woman and two men got him to open the door and pushed their way into the house. The woman held him at gunpoint while the men went through the house stealing items.

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Bluebook (online)
1997 Conn. Super. Ct. 7459, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/candido-v-worcester-insurance-co-no-cv93-0343978-jul-22-1997-connsuperct-1997.