Dreiblatt v. St. Paul Fire & Marine Insurance

264 F.3d 126, 2001 U.S. App. LEXIS 19970, 2001 WL 1013147
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedSeptember 10, 2001
Docket01-1037
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 264 F.3d 126 (Dreiblatt v. St. Paul Fire & Marine Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dreiblatt v. St. Paul Fire & Marine Insurance, 264 F.3d 126, 2001 U.S. App. LEXIS 19970, 2001 WL 1013147 (1st Cir. 2001).

Opinion

TORRUELLA, Circuit Judge.

The Shipway Place Condominium (“Shipway”) suffered extensive roof damage which appellants 1 attribute to a particularly heavy snowstorm that fell in the Boston area on April 1, 1997. Appellee St. Paul Fire and Marine Insurance Company (St.Paul) denied coverage after concluding that: (i) no “collapse” had occurred, as required by the insurance policy; and (ii) any collapse that did occur was not caused by the heavy snow, but resulted from cor *128 rosion damage explicitly excluded by the policy. Appellants brought suit for breach of contract. The district court granted summary judgment to St. Paul. Dreiblatt v. St. Paul Fire & Marine Ins. Co., No. 99-11334-DPW, at 27 (D.Mass. Dec. 7, 2000). This appeal followed. We agree with the district court’s determination that no “collapse” occurred under Massachusetts law, and affirm on that basis.

BACKGROUND

We review a grant of summary judgment de novo, with the facts taken in the light most favorable to the non-moving party. Coyne v. Taber Partners I, 53 F.3d 454, 457 (1st Cir.1995). The material facts, which we review here, are essentially undisputed. 2

Shipway Place is a nine building condominium complex in Charlestown, Massachusetts. The roofs of all nine buildings are flat, with a structure consisting of wood trusses supported by wood and metal webs and covered with plywood sheathing. The roof exterior is covered with a rubber membrane weighed down by stones for ballast. The ceiling of the top unit in each apartment building is made of plaster attached directly to the roof structure.

Shipway’s insurance policy is provided by St. Paul. The policy insures “against the risk of direct physical loss or damage involving collapse of a building or any part of a building” due to causes including the “weight of ice and snow or sleet.” The policy does not define the term “collapse,” but provides that “[cjollapse doesn’t include settling, cracking, bulging, shrinking, or expansion.” The policy also specifically denies coverage for loss “caused or made worse” by “wear and tear” or “deterioration, mold, wet or dry rot, rust or corrosion.”

On April 1, 1997, a heavy snow fell on Boston. Following the storm, the owners of Shipway Unit 33 returned to their condominium to discover that their living room ceiling was “hanging down a couple of inches.” The ceiling was repaired in September 1997 and St. Paul paid for the damage. 3

During the course of repairing the roof to Unit 33, Shipway discovered extensive damage to its internal support structure. The engineering firm of Simpson, Gum-pertz & Heger (SGH) was hired to investigate the problem further. In the course of its investigation, SGH found that several of the metal trusses in the roof to Unit 33 were “failed and severely corroded,” and that the problem extended to roof supports in many of the other units. In a November 18, 1997 report, SGH warned that “a collapse of the roof structure is possible.” Based on further study, in July 1998, Ship-way gave notice to St. Paul that it sought to claim damage to all nine buildings based on the April 1997 snowstorm. St. Paul denied the claim.

Four other entities evaluated Shipway’s roof damage after SGH. In November 1998, city inspector Jay Duca evaluated the ceilings of Units 32 and 34. He concluded that at least some parts of the roof system had rusted and deteriorated, and issued a citation warning the unit owners that the ceilings needed to be repaired. In deposition testimony, Duca indicated that he did not feel that a collapse had occurred *129 prior to his visit; however, he testified that he had warned owners that “there was a danger of a collapse of the roof.” He also noted that “it looked like there was some deflection [in the roof], but [that the deflection] could have been normal.”

Also in November 1998, Shipway hired engineering firm C.I.D. Associates (CID) to provide a second opinion. A CID report indicated findings of deterioration, collapse, flaking and de-lamination of metal webbing, sagging or failure of the plywood roof deck, and collapse of the ceiling onto the floor in various units. 4 The report’s author, Paul O’Connor, testified only that he observed puddles of water on some of the roofs, and that such “ponding” may suggest a sagging roof structure.

In January 1999, Medeiros Property Management Consulting conducted “deflection readings” on all of the Shipway units. 5 A number of the deflections measured exceeded that allowable under the Massachusetts Building Code (3/16 of an inch) but none of the measurements showed deflection of greater than one inch. Based on these deflection readings, expert Rene Mugnier testified that one could conclude from the deflection readings that there had been a complete collapse of the plywood deck resulting from the snowstorm. Mugnier did not base his deduction on any legal definition of the word “collapse.”

Lastly, Wiss, Janney and Elster Associates (WJE), an engineering firm retained by St. Paul, examined the roof systems in 1999 while they were being repaired. In a May 14, 1999 report evaluating three of the units, WJE determined that although there had been differing amounts of corrosion within the roof, and “some deflection of the roof system” due to load redistribution, the “load redistribution and the associated deflections do not constitute a collapse.” In later reports, WJE indicated that its evaluation of the remaining units was “generally consistent” with this conclusion.

The district court, relying on Clendenning v. Worcester Ins. Co., 45 Mass.App.Ct. 658, 700 N.E.2d 846 (1998), concluded that there had been no collapse under Massachusetts law. Dreiblatt, No. 99-11334-DPW, at 17. The court held that a collapse “must include a sudden and completed event that results in a noticeably altered appearance.” Id. at 16. In other words, under Massachusetts law, a collapse has three elements: suddenness, a perceptible change in appearance, and completeness. The court also held that evidence of internal deterioration within the roof structure was insufficient under Clendenning, given that the roof still performed its basic functions: *130 Id. at 16-17,; see also id. at 12 (“[T]he Clendenning opinion ... cannot support the proposition that an arguably sagging-roof, or deteriorating support system that had become structurally unsound but had not fallen in or become detached from the pertinent structures, is a ‘collapse.’ ”).

*129 [A collapse] must result in some significant primary ...

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Bluebook (online)
264 F.3d 126, 2001 U.S. App. LEXIS 19970, 2001 WL 1013147, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dreiblatt-v-st-paul-fire-marine-insurance-ca1-2001.