Capelouto v. Valley Forge Ins. Co.

990 P.2d 414
CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedDecember 7, 1999
Docket43317-2-I
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 990 P.2d 414 (Capelouto v. Valley Forge Ins. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Capelouto v. Valley Forge Ins. Co., 990 P.2d 414 (Wash. Ct. App. 1999).

Opinion

990 P.2d 414 (1999)
98 Wash.App. 7

Leon CAPELOUTO, a single man, and Capelouto Enterprises, Inc., d/b/a Shafrans, Appellants,
v.
VALLEY FORGE INSURANCE COMPANY, and a foreign corporation and First National Insurance Company of America, a Safeco Insurance Company, Respondents.

No. 43317-2-I.

Court of Appeals of Washington, Division 1.

November 1, 1999.
Publication Ordered December 7, 1999.

*416 Charles Kenneth Wiggins, Kenneth Wendell Masters, Wiggins Law Ofc., Bainbridge Is., Robert W. Burns, Hansville, for Appellants.

John Patrick Cook, Dirk Jonathan Muse, Lee, Smart, Cook, Martin & Patterson, Seattle, Lisa Allison Hollomon, Lee, Smart, Cook, Martin & Patterson, Bellevue, for Respondents.

Robert Francis Riede, Jerret E. Sale, Bullivant, Houser, Bailey, Pendergrass & Hoffman, Seattle, for First Nat. Ins. Co.

William Robert Hickman, Reed McClure, Seattle, for others.

*415 COLEMAN, J.

Leon Capelouto appeals the trial court's orders dismissing his coverage, bad faith, and Consumer Protection Act (CPA) claims against his insurers, Valley Forge Insurance Company and First National Insurance Company. Capelouto claims that an inadequate pump used on a sewer replacement project near his property caused sewage to back up into his basement. He contends that his insurers incorrectly concluded that an exclusion for damage caused by inadequate specifications or construction of property off of the premises prevents recovery for his losses, arguing that the exclusion is ambiguous and that the use of an inadequate pump is a distinct, covered peril. Capelouto also contends that his insurers erroneously concluded that any ensuing losses were caused by an excluded risk, water that had backed up from a sewer, arguing that sewage is a distinct peril and that the exclusion does not unambiguously apply to damage caused by sewage. Finally, Capelouto contends that his insurers failed to determine the efficient proximate cause of his loss, misrepresented facts, failed to disclose relevant policy provisions, and failed to inform him of the grounds for their denials.

Because neither inadequate specifications and the use of an inadequate pump nor sewage and sewer water can be reasonably understood to be distinct perils, we conclude that the policies' exclusions unambiguously preclude recovery for the claimed loss. Therefore, we affirm the orders dismissing Capelouto's coverage claims. We also conclude that Capelouto's bad faith and CPA claims are without merit, and we affirm the orders dismissing these claims.

FACTS

Leon Capelouto operates a retail business in a building he owns on California Avenue in West Seattle. At approximately 2:45 pm on February 21, 1996, he discovered raw sewage overflowing from his toilet. That day, King Construction Company was replacing the sewer pipes under California Avenue and had installed a temporary bypass of the main sewer line at a manhole approximately 100 feet from Capelouto's store. The bypass system consisted of a plug on the main sewer that was connected to hoses and a pump. When notified of the overflow, a project manager for King Construction told Capelouto that the bypass system was inadequate and had caused the sewage to back up. By the time the flow was stopped, approximately an hour after it had been discovered, six to eight inches of sewage covered Capelouto's basement floor, resulting in damage to fixtures and merchandise. Capelouto filed a claim with the City, which was referred to King Construction's insurer, but he ultimately rejected a settlement offer as inadequate.

On August 12, 1996, Capelouto submitted claims to Valley Forge and First National under his building, personal, and commercial property policies. In investigating the claims, the insurers interviewed Capelouto and visited the site of the loss. The insurers also interviewed King Construction's project manager, who reported that their bypass equipment had not failed, but was inadequate to handle the flow through the sewer line after it had rained. The project manager explained that they had not realized that storm drains were tied into the sewer line *417 above their bypass pump and that the accident occurred on the first day the bypass system was used in that area. Another King Construction employee, who had stopped the overflow, told the insurers that it had rained just before he learned of the accident. The insurers reviewed a blueprint of the area and the bypass system used in the sewer project. The insurers also obtained an analysis from Northwest WeatherNet, which concluded that it had likely rained in West Seattle on that day.

On December 4, 1996, Valley Forge denied coverage for the claim under its main policy, finding that the policy extended only limited coverage for $2,500 under an additional coverages endorsement. Valley Forge denied further coverage on the ground that all the possible efficient causes of the loss are excluded risks. Their investigation had identified three possible causes for the loss: the rain, King Construction's faulty bypass system, or a faulty, inadequate, or defective pump that Capelouto claimed was the efficient cause of the loss. The Valley Forge policy, however, does not cover damage caused by a weather condition which results in water backing up from a sewer or damage caused by faulty, inadequate, or defective design, specifications, workmanship, repair, and construction of property off of the insured's premises. Valley Forge concluded that King Construction's inadequate bypass system is an excluded risk under the latter provision and that the inadequacy of the pump is not a distinct peril.

On December 20, 1996, First National also denied coverage. First National concluded that the rain reported by King Construction's employees was the predominant cause of Capelouto's loss and that this peril is excluded by a weather conditions exclusion. First National further concluded that all other contributing causes of the loss are also excluded, citing an inadequate specifications or construction exclusion that is identical to the Valley Forge exclusion, and rejecting Capelouto's attempts to recharacterize the inadequate pump as a distinct peril.

Capelouto sued both insurers for breach of contract, bad faith handling and investigation of the claim, and violations of the Consumer Protection Act, RCW 19.86. Capelouto argued that the pump, not the rain, was the efficient proximate cause of his loss, and he produced evidence showing that it had not rained or had rained only lightly prior to the overflow. Capelouto also submitted expert testimony and analysis on the pump's limited capacity. The expert, Erik Davido, confirmed that the sanitary sewer pipe connected to Capelouto's building received rainwater as runoff from building roof drains and from two surface water catch basins. Davido estimated that at the time of the accident, most of the flow through the bypass system was rainwater. He concluded that the cause of the accidental overflow was the bypass pump, finding that the original sewer pipe had a larger capacity than the bypass system and that the pump would have had to operate continuously to prevent the other equipment from causing an overflow. His report concluded that the pump did not have the capacity to handle the peak minimum flow of sewage and rainwater that he had calculated for the day of the accident.

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Bluebook (online)
990 P.2d 414, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/capelouto-v-valley-forge-ins-co-washctapp-1999.