Kay v. United Pacific Insurance

902 F. Supp. 656, 1995 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 15891
CourtDistrict Court, D. Maryland
DecidedOctober 27, 1995
DocketJFM-95-516
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 902 F. Supp. 656 (Kay v. United Pacific Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kay v. United Pacific Insurance, 902 F. Supp. 656, 1995 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 15891 (D. Md. 1995).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM

MOTZ, Chief Judge.

Man I. Kay and Alen E. Rozansky, owners of a building known as the Tysons International Building, have brought this action against United Pacific Insurance Company (“United Pacific”) and Reliance Insurance Company, seeking a declaratory judgment that defendants are obligated under an all-risk policy issued by United Pacific to pay the costs necessary to replace pre-fabrieated brick panels on the exterior of the building. Bricks are beginning to fall out of the panels, and local government authorities have notified plaintiffs that unless they cure the problem immediately, the building will be closed. Because of the urgency of the matter, the case has been placed on an expedited track and both sides have now moved for summary judgment.

I.

The summary judgment record has been established by reports and affidavits submitted by Mlyn Kilsheimer, an independent consulting engineer retained by plaintiffs, and Therese T. McAlister, a senior civil engineer with FTI Corporation, an independent consulting engineering firm retained by defendants. Athough there are some disagreements between them and although to some extent they paint their findings with a different gloss, Kilsheimer and McAlister agree upon most of the facts that are material to the insurance coverage dispute.

The exterior facade of the Tysons International Building is composed of pre-fabricated brick panels. The panels are connected to the concrete floor slabs by anchor bolts and plates. The panels are reinforced by 9-gauge joint reinforcement wires (“joint mesh”) and $ inch reinforcing steel (“rebar”). The purpose of these reinforcement mechanisms is to enable the bricks to resist the tensions and stresses caused by gravity, wind, moisture and thermal expansion. Until very recently, the rebar has done its job; however, over the years the joint mesh has been inadequate to the task, particularly in preventing cracking caused by thermal changes.

As a result, cracks in the bricks have developed and moisture has seeped into them, causing a high percentage of them to crack further. Moreover, the moisture has begun to corrode the rebar, causing it to lose its required structural strength. 1 As the joint mesh continues to fail, as more cracking develops, as more moisture enters into the bricks and as more rebar corrodes, it is likely that more bricks will fall. If enough individual bricks fall from a given panel, there is a danger that the remainder of the bricks in the panel will eventually fall as well. Kil-sheimer and McAlister agree that at least some of the panels must be replaced as soon as possible, and there appears to be no dispute between them that over time all of the panels will have to be replaced.

II.

The policy issued by United Pacific provides coverage “for direct physical loss or damage” to the Tysons International Building “unless the ... cause of loss is listed under EXCLUSIONS....” Policy at 1. The pertinent exclusions may be succinctly described.

A. The policy expressly excludes from coverage loss, expense or damage caused by or resulting from cracking or expansion of walls. Policy at 3, Exclusion 2.1. Further, the policy expressly provides that “cracking” does not constitute a “collapse.” Policy at 4, Exclusion 3.d. (last sentence). This is significant because coverage is provided for a “collapse” under certain circumstances as described below.

*658 B. The policy expressly excludes from coverage loss, expense or damage caused by or resulting from “rust, corrosion, decay, fungus, deterioration, hidden or latent defect or any quality in property that causes it to damage or destroy itself.” Policy at 2, Exclusion 2.g. The policy goes on to provide, however, “if collapse results, we will pay for that resulting collapse to the extent not excluded under exclusion 3.d. below.” Id.

C. All “collapses” are excluded unless they are caused by certain enumerated factors. One of those factors is “hidden decay.” Thus, collapses caused by hidden decay are covered. Policy at 3, Exclusion 3.d.(12). Collapses are also covered if they are caused by “use of defective material or methods in construction, remodeling or renovation” but only “if the collapse occurs during the course of construction, remodeling or renovation.” Policy at 3, Exclusion 3.d.(16). In that regard although the parties take different positions as to whether a “collapse” has occurred, it is undisputed that no collapse occurred during the course of construction, remodeling or renovation.

D. The policy excludes from coverage loss, expense or damage caused by or resulting from “faulty, inadequate or defective ... design, specifications, workmanship ... [or] construction” and from “materials used in ... construction.” Policy at 4, Exclusion 8.c.(2) & (3).

III.

Plaintiffs make three arguments as to why the cost of replacing the pre-fabricated brick panels at the Tysons International Building are covered losses.

A.

First, plaintiffs assert that the loss of, or damage to, the rebar’s required structural strength through corrosion is a covered loss that is not excluded by Exclusion 2.g. This is a somewhat difficult argument to make since Exclusion 2.g. expressly excludes loss or damage “caused by or resulting from corrosion.”

Plaintiffs attempt to circumvent the exclusion by contending that “corrosion” does not always cause damage, e.g. corrosion film can develop, and that it is only harmless corrosion that Exclusion 2.g. is intended to exclude. The flaw in this argument is that the policy only provides coverage for “physical loss or damage,” and there is no reason to exclude from coverage “harmless” corrosion.

To overcome this obstacle, plaintiffs go further and argue that “corrosion” has two meanings — the process of corrosion and the product of corrosion — and that Exclusion 2.g. is intended to cover only the latter, i.e., the corrosion itself, not an effect of the process of corrosion such as the loss of required structural strength. There are three fallacies in this argument. First, plaintiffs have not presented one shred of evidence to suggest that the parties did not intend that the word “corrosion” as used in Exclusion 2.g. was not intended to encompass both aspects of its commonly understood meaning. Second, although there are two definitions given to “corrosion” in Webster’s Third International Dictionary, and although the second definition is “a product of corrosion,” the first definition itself includes both of the meanings ascribed by plaintiffs: “the action, process or effect of corroding.” Third, when Exclusion 2.g. is read in its entirety, i.e. beginning at the start of the exclusions section on page 1 rather than with the alphabetical heading g., it seems apparent that as a matter of grammatical structure corrosion is being used in its sense of a process, not in its sense of a completed state. Beginning at the beginning, the Exclusion states: “[w]e will not pay for loss, expense or damage ... caused by or resulting from ... corrosion.” Thus read, that which is being excluded is precisely that which plaintiffs seek to include: losses and damages, such as the loss of required structural strength, that are the effects of corrosion.

B.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
902 F. Supp. 656, 1995 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 15891, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kay-v-united-pacific-insurance-mdd-1995.