Charles R. Allen and Julie L. Allen v. State Farm Lloyds

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 1, 2017
Docket05-16-00108-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Charles R. Allen and Julie L. Allen v. State Farm Lloyds (Charles R. Allen and Julie L. Allen v. State Farm Lloyds) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Charles R. Allen and Julie L. Allen v. State Farm Lloyds, (Tex. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

Affirm in part, reverse in part, and remand; Opinion Filed August 1, 2017.

In The Court of Appeals Fifth District of Texas at Dallas No. 05-16-00108-CV

CHARLES R. ALLEN AND JULIE L. ALLEN, Appellants V. STATE FARM LLOYDS, Appellee

On Appeal from the County Court at Law No. 2 Dallas County, Texas Trial Court Cause No. CC-12-02015-B

MEMORANDUM OPINION Before Justices Francis, Myers, and Whitehill Opinion by Justice Myers This is a dispute about whether a State Farm Lloyds homeowners insurance policy

provides coverage under the dwelling foundation and water damage endorsements for damages

to Charles and Julie Allen’s home that they contend were caused by two plumbing leaks.

Through several summary judgments and directed verdicts, the trial court concluded the Allens

had not established the damages were covered by the policy and rendered a take-nothing

judgment in favor of State Farm. The Allens challenge the trial court’s various rulings and the

take-nothing final judgment. We reverse the trial court’s judgment and remand for further

proceedings. I. BACKGROUND

The Allens’ home was built in 2005 in Cedar Hill, Texas. Before 2009, the Allens had

not had any problems with the home’s foundation. Julie Allen testified a sewer pipe leaked in

2006 on the northeast corner of the house, but the leak did not affect the home. In late 2009, on

two separate occasions two months apart, the water line leading from the water main meter to the

Allens’ house developed a leak near the meter. The two leaks together emptied over 244,000

gallons of water onto the Allens’ property. Sometime later, the Allens noticed their home was

settling and cracking both inside and outside, primarily on the southwest side in the master

bedroom, bathroom, and closet. The damages resulting from an unlevel floor were significant

enough that Charles Allen, a wheelchair-bound paraplegic, had difficulty accomplishing his daily

life tasks, such as showering and brushing his teeth. Although the standard homeowners policy

did not cover foundation movement or damages from plumbing leaks, the Allens had purchased

endorsements covering these perils and filed a claim with State Farm.

State Farm sent Ricky Richards of Norseman Engineering to inspect the Allens’ house

and conduct an engineering evaluation in February 2010, two months after the second leak had

been repaired. In his report prepared a month later, Richards noted that at the time of his

inspection, the crawl space was standing in about three or four inches of water and the house was

about two inches out of level. He did not dispute that the water in the crawl space was the cause

of the foundation movement, which in turn was the cause of the damages. He concluded,

however, that the plumbing leaks were not the source of the water in the crawl space or the

resulting foundation movement because the yard had positive drainage away from the house and

the leaks were located about seventy feet away from the house. Instead, he concluded that the

source of the water in the crawl space and the resulting foundation movement was rainfall, which

–2– he said had been unusually heavy during that time. He took the following photographs during his

inspection; the water main is up the hill in both photographs:

–3– Richards noted his observations of the exterior and interior of the house with respect to

soil, slope, drainage, condition, and damages. He reviewed the water usage for the relevant

periods and determined that the usage corresponded with the reported leaks. The water usage in

October 2009 was approximately 80,000 gallons above the usage the prior month; and in

December 2009, the water usage was approximately 166,000 gallons above the usage for the

months before and after December. But he concluded that this “major discharge” did not enter

the crawl space because of the location of the leaks and because the water followed the natural

grade of the lawn, and “did not flow next to the perimeter grade beam, because the lawn at the

southwest corner of the house slopes away from the foundation.”

Richards referred to a U.S.D.A. Conservation Survey for Dallas County to describe the

characteristics of the soil in and around the Allens’ residence. The survey indicated that the soil

in that area was “corrosive and well drained.” The permeability, which Richards said refers to

the rate at which water can flow through the soil, was very slow; and the water capacity, which

he said is the amount of water that the soil can hold before it becomes saturated, was high.

According to the survey, “the vertical speed of water movement through soil with very slow

permeability is less than 0.06 inches per hour.” The survey also indicated that the soils in that

area “have high to very high shrink/swell potential.”

Richards explained that the most common cause of foundation movement in a pier and

beam foundation such as the Allens was shrinking or swelling of the soil due to changes in the

moisture content. He made a diagram of the elevations and contours and concluded that the low

areas in the foundation did not correlate with the flow pattern from the plumbing leaks and,

instead, indicated settlement. He stated that the crawl space was flooded two months after the

second leak was repaired, indicating “the current flooding is more closely associated with

ongoing heavy rains in this area.” Based on Richards’ report, State Farm denied coverage.

–4– The Allens sued State Farm for breach of contract and insurance code violations. The

trial court granted summary judgments in favor of State Farm on several issues. The claims

remaining for trial were breach of contract and statutory violations.

At trial, Charles Allen described seeing water coming out of the meter box and going

downhill and traveling to the left, or southwest corner, of the house during the first leak. And he

said when Richards conducted his inspection, the outside of the house was “very, very wet

around like around that corner and in the front right there and around the side.”

Julie Allen testified that she saw a lot of water coming from the water main during both

leaks. In December 2009, she drove into the driveway and saw water “kind of gushing out again

in the same area.” She walked over to the water main and then toward the house. She said the

ground was saturated. She said if she could “draw the line, it would be straight towards the

shower, that area there,” demonstrating on the photographs; the shower was located near the

southwest corner of the house. She said she had “[n]o doubt” that the water from the plumbing

leak “was coming down that way and going right at the house.” She said she “walked over to the

side of the house. My shoes would sink into – because there was so much water.” Using

photographs, Julie Allen demonstrated the areas she was talking about. She testified she believed

the house had suffered deterioration, which she defined as a “breakdown of something,” as a

result of the plumbing leaks.

The Allens also presented testimony from three engineering experts, a residential

building contractor, and the State Farm adjuster who handled the Allens’ claim. Two of the

Allens’ experts, Tom Witherspoon and Ralph Mansour, disagreed with State Farm’s expert and

concluded that the damages to the Allens’ house were caused by the plumbing leaks, not rainfall.

The other expert, John Foose, was not presented as a causation expert.

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