Joseph Jugan v. Economy Premier Assurance Co

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedMarch 22, 2018
Docket17-2410
StatusUnpublished

This text of Joseph Jugan v. Economy Premier Assurance Co (Joseph Jugan v. Economy Premier Assurance Co) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Joseph Jugan v. Economy Premier Assurance Co, (3d Cir. 2018).

Opinion

NOT PRECEDENTIAL UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT _____________

No. 17-2410 _____________

JOSEPH JUGAN; ROBIN JUGAN,

Appellants

v.

ECONOMY PREMIER ASSURANCE COMPANY _____________

On Appeal from the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania (D.C. No. 5-15-cv-4272 ) District Judge: Hon. Jeffrey L. Schmehl _______________

Submitted Under Third Circuit LAR 34.1(a) March 12, 2018

Before: JORDAN, KRAUSE, and GREENBERG, Circuit Judges

(Filed: March 22, 2018) _______________

OPINION _______________

 This disposition is not an opinion of the full court and, pursuant to I.O.P. 5.7, does not constitute binding precedent. JORDAN, Circuit Judge.

Joseph and Robin Jugan appeal from the grant of summary judgment against them

on their claim that Economy Premier Assurance Company (“MetLife”)1 breached an

insurance contract. We will affirm.

I. Background2

The Jugans own a home in Fleetwood, Pennsylvania, which they insured under a

homeowners insurance policy (the “Policy”) issued by MetLife. “Coverage A” in the

Policy said that MetLife would “pay for sudden and accidental direct physical loss or

damage to the property …, except as excluded in SECTION I – LOSSES WE DO NOT

COVER.” (J.A. at 139.) Section I, in turn, excluded from any coverage losses or damage

resulting directly or indirectly from “freezing of a plumbing, heating, air conditioning, or

automatic fire protective sprinkler system, or of a domestic appliance, or by discharge,

leakage or overflow from within the system or appliance caused by freezing.” (J.A. at

141.) That “Absolute Freezing Exclusion” stated that it did “not apply if you have used

reasonable care to maintain heat in the building or if you shut off the water supply and

drained the plumbing and appliance of water.” (J.A. at 141.)

Sometime between February 1, 2015, and March 13, 2015, while the Jugans were

away, water leaked from their dishwasher, causing damage to their home and its contents.

Economy Premier Assurance Company’s parent company is MetLife, Inc. 1

Because the parties and the District Court refer to the Defendant as MetLife, we do likewise. 2 The facts set forth here are in the light most favorable to the Jugans. See infra note 4. 2 Mr. Jugan contacted MetLife the day after he discovered the water damage to report the

loss and to file a claim for coverage under the Policy. MetLife hired an expert, a certified

engineer, to investigate the loss. He did so and issued a report stating that the water

damage was due to a frozen dishwasher solenoid valve that fractured due to freezing in

the water supply line to the dishwasher. He further concluded that the water froze

because of insufficient heat within the home, which he “attributed to the thermostat for

the hot water baseboard heat [having been] set too low[.]” (J.A. at 274.) His research led

him to report that the outside temperatures in the area during the relevant timeframe were

“adequate to cause piping system freezes.” (J.A. at 275.) And he concluded that hot

water continuously leaked from the broken dishwasher solenoid valve after the water in

the supply line thawed, which caused the fuel-fired boiler that provided hot water for the

first-floor heating system to fail after the fuel oil tank ran dry.3 The Jugans offered no

evidence rebutting those expert conclusions.

The Jugans’ home included a main floor and a walkout basement. The dishwasher

was in the kitchen on the main floor, and the water supply lines to the dishwasher ran

along the basement ceiling, below the kitchen floor. The main floor was heated using a

forced hot air system, and its temperature was controlled by a digital thermostat. The

basement was heated using two hot water baseboard radiators, and the temperature was

controlled by an analog thermostat. Neither basement radiator was located below the

kitchen. The Jugans had the home’s heating system serviced during the summer of 2014,

3 Hot water from the fuel-fired boiler was used both to service the hot water baseboards in the basement and to heat the air that flowed to the main floor through a forced air system. 3 at which time the radiators in the basement were replaced. Mr. Jugan stated that he

wanted to be present when the new radiators were turned on so that he could test them for

leaks. But he never did test the new radiators, and he testified that there was no way to

know whether they worked at all before the water damage occurred.

Since 2009, the Jugans had frequently left the home empty, sometimes for weeks

at a time. Mrs. Jugan moved to Massachusetts in 2009 and did not live in the

Pennsylvania home after that time. In October 2014, Mr. Jugan’s mother became

terminally ill and Mr. Jugan began to spend most of his time with her in New Jersey. He

did not set the thermostat at any particular temperature when he left the house in October

2014. After Mr. Jugan’s mother passed away on January 1, 2015, he continued to spend

most of his time away from the home until March 13, 2015. His last time at the home

before the dishwasher leak was February 1, 2015, when he was present for only one or

two hours. He did not remember much about that visit because he was “very much in

withdrawal” from medication he had been on that caused his recollection to be “kind of a

haze.” (J.A. at 145.) Mr. Jugan suffers from a brain tumor that requires him to take

prescription narcotics. The tumor and the medications have led to forgetfulness,

including a failure to recall events. He did not remember adjusting the digital thermostat

on the main floor, and he could not definitively state whether the thermostat was set at

62°F before he left. He also did not remember adjusting the analog thermostat in the

basement, and he could not remember the temperature it was set at when he left that day.

But Mr. Jugan testified that he kept a thermometer on an interior wall of the basement,

and that it generally read 54°F year round.

4 Mr. Jugan watched weather reports for the Fleetwood, Pennsylvania, area between

February 1 and March 13. He saw that the weather was cold and snowy. In fact,

MetLife’s expert reported that the low temperature in nearby Reading, Pennsylvania, was

between -1°F and 8°F on at least six days in mid-February.

Mr. Jugan testified that neighbors had access to the Jugans’ home, and he had

sometimes asked them to check on the house while he was away. He did not, however,

ask his neighbors to check on the home between February 1 and March 13.

The Jugans sued MetLife for breaching the Policy after MetLife denied coverage.

MetLife moved for summary judgment on that claim. When it did so, Mr. Jugan filed an

affidavit containing averments that he said raised genuine issues of material fact barring

summary judgment. The District Court applied the sham affidavit doctrine, striking

certain averments that contradicted Mr. Jugan’s earlier testimony without sufficient

explanation, while crediting other averments that did not contradict other evidence in the

record. The Court rejected Mr. Jugan’s averment that, when he “traveled away from his

house during the winter of 2014-2015[,] he set the thermostat on the main level of his

house at 62 degrees Fahrenheit and set the thermostat in the basement at its low setting.”

(J.A. at 14.) The District Court said that statement contradicted Mr. Jugan’s earlier

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Joseph Jugan v. Economy Premier Assurance Co, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/joseph-jugan-v-economy-premier-assurance-co-ca3-2018.