Garden-Aire Village South Condominium Association v. QBE Insurance Corporation

591 F. App'x 868
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit
DecidedDecember 23, 2014
Docket13-12249
StatusUnpublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 591 F. App'x 868 (Garden-Aire Village South Condominium Association v. QBE Insurance Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Garden-Aire Village South Condominium Association v. QBE Insurance Corporation, 591 F. App'x 868 (11th Cir. 2014).

Opinion

HINKLE, District Judge:

An insured who disagrees with a property insurer’s determination of the amount of a covered loss may have a right under the insurance policy to compel an appraisal. In this action to compel an appraisal, the parties have debated recurring questions of Florida law. The recurring questions include these: if the insured does not comply with the policy’s terms on things like *869 submitting to an examination under oath or providing an inventory of — or otherwise identifying — the damaged property, may the insured nonetheless compel an appraisal? Does the answer depend on whether the noncompliance prejudiced the insurer? If so, who has the burden of proof on the prejudice issue?

After a bench trial, the district court ruled for the insurer. On the unusual facts of this case, this was the correct result, regardless of which side is correct on the recurring legal questions. We affirm.

I

Garden-Aire is a 7-story, 126-unit condominium complex in Pompano Beach, Florida. The complex includes a main building and a separate clubhouse. The appellant Garden-Aire Village South Condominium Association, Inc. is responsible for maintaining the complex. The Association obtained insurance coverage from the appellee QBE Insurance Corporation. On October 24, 2005, while the policy was in effect, Hurricane Wilma damaged the complex.

On October 25, 2005, the Association provided QBE a written notice of loss, asserting there was damage to the buildings, roofs, windows, and fences. On November 2, 2005, an adjuster preliminarily inspected the property. He noted damage, some of which had already been repaired. The adjuster contacted an expert — a building engineer — to obtain a better assessment of the roofs. The adjuster also expected to obtain from the Association a further indication of any damage not visible from the initial inspection.

By January 24, 2006, the adjuster had received' no further specification of damages from the Association. The Association had spent $12,000 to repair screens and $16,000 to repair the roofs. Based on information received to that point, the adjuster later estimated total damages at $45,940.57, not including any interior damage (the adjuster had not yet inspected the interior) and not including any further roof damage (the engineer had not yet inspected the roof). The estimate included the full $16,000 in completed, roof repairs, even though the contractor who did the work attributed only about half of that amount to the hurricane.

On January 24, the adjuster called the Association’s president. The president told the adjuster that the Association “had made various repairs and that the damages would be well below the deductible.” The deductible was $255,355, many times higher than the damages calculated to that point. The president expressly withdrew the Association’s claim. The adjuster sent the president a letter confirming the withdrawal, and the adjuster canceled the engineer’s planned inspection of the roof. So far as QBE knew, the matter was at an end.

On December 14, 2006, more than a year after the hurricane, the Association applied for insurance with an unrelated insurer. The Association said the complex had no unrepaired damage and had suffered no insurance loss within the prior two years (an accurate statement if, as appeared to be the case, the damage from Hurricane Wilma-was below the deductible).

In April 2010, more than four years after the hurricane, the Association began replacing the main building’s roof.

In the summer of 2010, a public adjuster, who was cooperating with an attorney, made an unsolicited visit to the Association, asking to investigate a possible claim against QBE. The Association accepted the entreaty.

On October 18, 2010, the Association filed this action, demanding an appraisal of *870 the damage caused by Hurricane Wilma. This was QBE’s first indication that the Association’s express withdrawal of its claim on January 24, 2006, did not end the matter.

II

The policy is written in the first person from QBE’s perspective. It thus refers to QBE as “we” and the Association as “you.” The policy requires the Association to “see that the following are done in the event of loss or damage” to the complex:

(2) Give us prompt notice of the loss or damage. Include a description of the property involved.
(5) At our request, give us complete inventories of the damaged and undamaged property. Include quantities, costs, values and amount of loss claimed.
(7) Send us a signed, sworn proof of loss containing the information we request to investigate the claim.
(8) Cooperate with us in the investigation or settlement of the claim.

The policy adds: “We may examine any insured under oath ... about any matter relating to this insurance or the claim.... ” The policy says that legal action cannot be brought against QBE unless there has been “full compliance” with all the policy’s terms.

The policy also includes an appraisal provision: “If we and you disagree on the value of the property or the amount of loss, either may make written demand for an appraisal of the loss.” The policy sets out the procedures that will govern an appraisal.

III

After filing this lawsuit, the Association provided a sworn proof of loss, but it included amounts that plainly should not have been included: the roofing contractor’s estimate for repairing damage the contractor said was unrelated to the hurricane; the cost of replacing every window in the complex, including those that were not damaged; and the cost of replacing the windows with higher-cost “impact” glass rather than with glass of the original quality. The Association refused to provide an inventory of damaged property — asserting the policy’s requirement to provide an inventory did not apply to buildings or their components — and did not otherwise identify the damaged windows. The Association said the proof of loss should not be taken as a representation that the identified losses in fact resulted from Hurricane Wilma.

The Association produced its current president for an examination under oath. But he knew virtually nothing about the claim, having come to the Association after the hurricane, and having made no effort to learn even the most basic information about the claim. So QBE faced a claim that was asserted roughly five years after the hurricane, after significant repairs, from a now uncooperative insured who refused to provide even basic information about the damage purportedly caused by the hurricane and who submitted a sworn proof of loss but simultaneously disclaimed its reliability. The Association asserted then, and asserts now, that the obligation to figure out what was damaged fell solely to QBE.

IV

After the bench trial, the district court entered thorough and accurate findings of fact. The court addressed the significant legal issues raised by the recurring pat *871 tern of a claim and an insured’s alleged failure to comply with terms of the policy. The issues are governed by Florida law.

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Bluebook (online)
591 F. App'x 868, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/garden-aire-village-south-condominium-association-v-qbe-insurance-ca11-2014.