HARLEYSVILLE LAKE STATES INSURANCE COMPANY v. CARL E. MOST & SON, INC.

CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Indiana
DecidedJanuary 23, 2025
Docket1:22-cv-01822
StatusUnknown

This text of HARLEYSVILLE LAKE STATES INSURANCE COMPANY v. CARL E. MOST & SON, INC. (HARLEYSVILLE LAKE STATES INSURANCE COMPANY v. CARL E. MOST & SON, INC.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Indiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
HARLEYSVILLE LAKE STATES INSURANCE COMPANY v. CARL E. MOST & SON, INC., (S.D. Ind. 2025).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF INDIANA INDIANAPOLIS DIVISION

INDIANA INSURANCE COMPANY, ) ) Cross Claimant, ) ) v. ) ) CARL E. MOST & SON, INC., DENISON, INC., and ) DENISON PARKING, INC., ) ) No. 1:22-cv-01822-JMS-CSW Cross Defendants, ) _________________________________________ ) ) DENISON, INC. and DENISON PARKING, INC., ) ) Cross Claimants, ) ) v. ) ) INDIANA INSURANCE COMPANY, ) ) Cross Defendant. )

ORDER

Pending before the Court is Cross Claimant and Cross Defendant Indiana Insurance Company's ("Indiana Insurance") Motion for Leave to Designate Expert. [Filing No. 197.] The Motion is ripe for the Court's consideration. I. BACKGROUND The following is a condensed background of the case relevant to the pending motion and is derived from both the Court's June 24, 2024 Order, [Filing No. 177], and the Court's August 30, 2024 Order, [Filing No. 192]. From 1992 to 2013, Cross Defendant Carl E. Most & Son, Inc. ("Most") provided inspection, repair, and maintenance services to Cross Defendants and Cross Claimants Denison, Inc. and Denison Parking, Inc. (collectively, "Denison") related to parking garages owned by Denison. After a dispute arose regarding damage to a garage owned by Denison, Denison sued Most in Marion Superior Court ("the Underlying Action") and ultimately obtained a jury verdict in its favor, but only on one of its claims. Former Plaintiff Harleysville Lake States Insurance Company ("Harleysville")1 and Indiana Insurance (collectively, the "Insurers") were commercial

general liability insurers of Most. Harleysville insured Most from June 2001 through June 2008, and Indiana Insurance insured Most from June 2008 through June 2018. Both Insurers defended Most in the Underlying Action pursuant to reservations of rights. Shortly before the Underlying Action proceeded to trial, Harleysville initiated this declaratory judgment litigation against Most, Denison, and Indiana Insurance regarding its duty to indemnify Most in connection with the Underlying Action. [Filing No. 1; Filing No. 110; Filing No. 111.] Indiana Insurance filed a declaratory judgment counterclaim against Harleysville and crossclaims against Most and Denison seeking the same relief as Harleysville. [Filing No. 25.] Denison filed counterclaims against Harleysville and crossclaims against Indiana Insurance also

seeking a declaratory judgment and alleging breach of contract. [Filing No. 29; Filing No. 120.] Most filed a counterclaim against Harleysville for breach of contract. [Filing No. 70.] All parties except for Most filed Motions for Summary Judgment, which the Court ruled on in its June 24, 2024 Order. [Filing No. 130; Filing No. 131; Filing No. 152; Filing No. 177.] The Court also ruled on Denison's Motion for Reconsideration regarding one of the Court's findings in its June 24, 2024 Order. [Filing No. 185; Filing No. 192.]

1 The Court granted Harleysville's Motion for Summary Judgment, such that it ended Harleysville's participation in this lawsuit on all claims. [Filing No. 177.] See Harleysville Lake States Ins. Co. v. Carl E. Most & Son, Inc., 2024 WL 3105833, at *17-21 (S.D. Ind. June 24, 2024). At a high level, the following is a summary of the Court's main rulings from the June 24, 2024 Order on the Motions for Summary Judgment and the August 30, 2024 Order on Denison's Motion for Reconsideration: • Relating to the Motions involving Harleysville's liability, the Court found that Harleysville had no obligation to provide coverage under its Policies, thereby ending its participation in this lawsuit on all claims (declaratory judgment and breach of contract). [Filing No. 177.]

• Relating to the Motions involving Indiana Insurance's liability:

o With respect to declaratory judgment, the Court found that there were triable issues of fact regarding whether all three requirements of its Policies were met and coverage was triggered, thereby leaving the parties' declaratory judgment claims for trial. [Filing No. 177.]

 Specifically, the Indiana Insurance Policies set forth three requirements that must be met before coverage is triggered: (1) the property damage is "caused by an 'occurrence' that takes place in the coverage territory"; (2) the property damage "occurs during the policy period"; and (3) the insured did not know that the property damage had occurred, in whole or in part (this requirement is known as the "Known Claim Exclusion"). See Indiana Ins. Co. v. Kopetsky, 14 N.E.3d 850, 852-53 (Ind. Ct. App. 2014) (describing the third requirement as the Known Claim Exclusion). [Filing No. 177 at 24.]

 The Court found the following with respect to each of the three requirements: (1) it is a triable issue of fact whether the Underlying Action constitutes an "occurrence" under the Indiana Insurance Policies; (2) property damage did occur during some of the earlier Indiana Insurance Policies but it remains an open issue whether property damage occurred after a certain point; and (3) the Known Claim Exclusion bars coverage under the last Policy issued by Indiana Insurance. [Filing No. 177.]

o With respect to Denison's breach of contract theory, the Court found that Denison could pursue such a claim under the language of the Indiana Insurance Policies that it identified, but that the claim depends on the jury's determination of whether and to what extent the Underlying Action's judgment is covered under the Indiana Insurance Policies and that if any part is covered, Indiana Insurance is only liable for damages that are payable under the terms of the Coverage Part of the Policies per the explicit terms of its Policies' language. [Filing No. 192.]

Trial is set for April 11, 2025. [Filing No. 196.] Pending before the Court is Indiana Insurance's Motion for Leave to Designate Expert. [Filing No. 197.] The most recent Case Management Plan ("CMP") in this case ordered Indiana Insurance to disclose any experts by August 18, 2023, and any rebuttal experts by October 17, 2023. [Filing No. 53 at 6.] II. DISCUSSION Indiana Insurance argues that the Court's June 24, 2024 Order on the parties' cross motions for summary judgment helped clarify and frame the issues for trial. [Filing No. 197.] It specifically highlights this paragraph from the June 24, 2024 Order: The Court clarifies that, pursuant to Indiana law, Denison/Most have the burden to establish at trial that they are entitled to coverage. Further, the Court clarifies that the Policies' grants of coverage do not cover faulty work itself, but rather only "property damage" that is "caused" by unintentionally faulty work. Thus, at trial, assuming that Most's liability is due to unintentional faulty work, Denison/Most must seek to separate damages caused by the faulty work from the faulty work itself.

[Filing No. 177 at 56-57 (citations omitted).] Harleysville Lake States Ins. Co., 2024 WL 3105833, at *30. Indiana Insurance seeks leave to designate its previously disclosed witness, Timothy Gregor, P.E., from Wiss Janey Elstner Associates, Inc. ("WJE"), as an expert witness to opine on the issues that the Court framed in the June 24, 2024 Order and "other issues." [Filing No. 197 at 1-2 (referencing the above quoted paragraph from the Court's June 24, 2024 Order).] It argues that Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 37(c)(1) states the standard that the Court should use in deciding the Motion—whether the failure to disclose was "substantially justified or is harmless." [Filing No.

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Bluebook (online)
HARLEYSVILLE LAKE STATES INSURANCE COMPANY v. CARL E. MOST & SON, INC., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harleysville-lake-states-insurance-company-v-carl-e-most-son-inc-insd-2025.