Delean's Tile & Marble, Llc v. American States Insurance Company

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedDecember 9, 2013
Docket69634-3
StatusUnpublished

This text of Delean's Tile & Marble, Llc v. American States Insurance Company (Delean's Tile & Marble, Llc v. American States Insurance Company) 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
Delean's Tile & Marble, Llc v. American States Insurance Company, (Wash. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

AMERICAN STATES INSURANCE, DIVISION ONE COMPANY, an Indiana corporation,

Respondent, No. 69634-3-1

v.

DELEAN'S TILE AND MARBLE, LLC, UNPUBLISHED OPINION a Washington limited liability company; DELEAN CONTRACTING & LANDSCAPING, LLC, a Washington limited liability company; TABITA DELEAN dba DELEAN'S TILE AND MARBLE, a Washington sole proprietorship; MIRCEA and TABITA DELEAN, individually and dba DELEAN'S TILE & MARBLE, a Washington sole proprietorship; and LAWLESS CONSTRUCTION CORPORATION, INC., a Washington corporation,

Appellants. FILED: December 9, 2013

Dwyer, J. — Six townhouse unit owners entered into a construction

contract with Lawless Construction Corporation, Inc. (Lawless). The owners

hired Lawless to repair construction deficiencies at their property that had been

caused by the original developer. Lawless then subcontracted with Delean's Tile

& Marble, LLC (Delean) to assist in repairing some of the damage. Delean was

insured by American States Insurance Company at the time and Lawless was No. 69634-3-1/2

made an additional insured under Delean's policy. Some of Delean's work was

defective and when Delean refused to return and fix the defective work, Lawless

paid another company to repair and complete the work. Subsequently, Lawless

brought a lawsuit against Delean. Lawless and Delean eventually settled their

dispute. In the meantime, Lawless had tendered a claim to American States, but

American States denied coverage pursuant to its Multi-Unit and Tract Housing

Residential Exclusion (hereinafter Exclusion). Thereafter, American States filed

a declaratory judgment action against Lawless and Delean, seeking a ruling on

coverage. The trial court denied Lawless's and Delean's motion for partial

summary judgment, granted American States' motion for summary judgment,

and ruled, among other things, that the Exclusion precluded coverage for the

claim submitted by Lawless and Delean. Because the work Delean performed

falls within the plain language of the Exclusion, we affirm.

I

The property at issue was designed, permitted, and built between 2001

and 2002 as "three duplex townhouses with underground parking." It is located

in Seattle at 125-127-129 26th Avenue East. A soils report prepared for the

developer in 2001 stated that "the multi unit residential construction will consist of

three, three-story buildings joined by courtyards."

In the building permit, each duplex townhouse building was listed as a

"two-family dwelling." Each duplex townhouse has continuous siding, a common

roof, and a continuous guttering system. Pedestrian access to all six units is

available using the public sidewalk on 26th Avenue East, and the stairway leads

-2- No. 69634-3-1/3

into the inner courtyard area. The inner courtyard area between the three

buildings consists of connected walkways and stairways used by all owners.

Each unit has one entrance, accessible by traversing the common courtyard

walkways. When the property owners exit their front doors, they access the

garage via a stairway from the courtyard area. The garage area is located

underneath the building bearing the address 125 26th Avenue East and it has a

continuous span of siding shared with the upper portions of the building above it.

On August 25, 2003, the City of Seattle approved a subdivision of the

property into seven parcels, denominated Parcels A to G. The six townhouse

units occupy Parcels A to F. The subdivision's stated purpose, pursuant to the

short plat for the property, was "for the creation of separate lots of record for the

construction and transfer of title of townhouse as authorized under SMC

23.45.006." A Declaration of Covenants, Conditions, Restrictions and

Easements, and Party Wall Agreement (hereinafter CC&Rs) applicable to all six

parcels was recorded in 2003. The CC&Rs refer to Parcels A through F

collectively as the "Property." The CC&Rs establish easements for walkways,

parking, shared storage space, utilities, ingress and egress, mailboxes, and state

that all six parcels are equally responsible for sharing the costs of maintaining the

easement areas. The CC&Rs prohibit owners from making improvements,

alterations, repairs, paint changes, excavations, changes in grade, or other work

which alters the exterior of "any Parcel or the Structures located thereon . . .

without the prior written approval of three-fourths (3/4) of the Owners

Additionally, the CC&Rs prohibit structural alteration of any party walls—the party

-3- No. 69634-3-1/4

walls are walls that were built as part of the original construction and placed on

the dividing line between the parcels.

The original construction of the walkways was defective, and the owners

of all six units sued the builder. The owners hired Lawless to repair the defective

work. Although the contract identified "Homeowners Association" as the party

contracting with Lawless, all of the owners signed the contract individually. The

scope of repair under the contract included the main courtyard, the six east

elevation unit decks, the garage, the storage rooms, and the staircase to the

garage.

On August 8, 2006, Lawless subcontracted with Delean to assist in

repairing the damage. Delean's work included the following: tile work in the deck

areas, courtyard areas, easement areas, and the staircase to the common

garage; lapping membranes against the siding of the building walls; and

waterproofing the penetrations from the buildings' downspouts.

Delean's work on the exterior walkways was defective, allowing water to

leak into the garage. This, in turn, resulted in rot to the joists, sheathing, and

drywall in the garage. The owners demanded that Lawless return and repair the

damage. Lawless, in turn, asked Delean to repair the shoddy work. Delean

refused to do so.

Delean's contract with Lawless required Delean to buy insurance, to make

Lawless an additional insured under his liability insurance policy, and to

indemnify and hold Lawless harmless for claims arising from Delean's

performance. Delean was insured by American States Insurance Company at

-4- No. 69634-3-1/5

the time and Lawless was listed as an additional insured under Delean's policy

pursuant to the subcontract. Delean's policy includes a severability clause:

7. Separation Of Insured

Except with respect to the Limits of Insurance, and any rights or duties specifically assigned in this Coverage Part fo [sic] the first Named Insured, this insurance applies:

a. As if each Named Insured were the only Named Insured; and b. Separately to each insured against whom claim is made or "suit" is brought.

The policy also excludes coverage for property damage arising out of any

"construction operations" that involve a "multi-unit residential building." The

Exclusion provides, in pertinent part, as follows:

2. Exclusions

This insurance does not apply to:

Multi-Unit and Tract Housing

"Bodily injury", "property damage" or "personal and advertising injury liability" arising out of any "construction operations" whether ongoing operations or operations included within the products- completed operations hazard that involve a "housing tract" or "multi- unit residential building".

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