Maldonado v. Allstate Fire & Casualty Insurance

849 F. Supp. 2d 1080, 2012 WL 917285, 2012 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 36770
CourtDistrict Court, D. Colorado
DecidedMarch 19, 2012
DocketCivil Action No. 10-cv-01413-RBJ-KMT
StatusPublished

This text of 849 F. Supp. 2d 1080 (Maldonado v. Allstate Fire & Casualty Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Maldonado v. Allstate Fire & Casualty Insurance, 849 F. Supp. 2d 1080, 2012 WL 917285, 2012 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 36770 (D. Colo. 2012).

Opinion

ORDER

R. BROOKE JACKSON, District Judge.

Defendant Allstate Fire and Casualty Insurance Company, which indicates that its correct name is Allstate Insurance Company, moves for a determination that it properly denied coverage for water damage to plaintiffs’ home under an exclusion in their homeowner’s policy. For the reasons set forth herein the motion is denied.

Facts

Darlene and Angel Maldonado purchased a home at 780 East Clarion Drive in Pueblo, Colorado in 2001 or 2002. Mr. Maldonado was a sergeant in the United States Army, sometimes stationed at Fort Carson near Colorado Spring and at other times stationed in other overseas and domestic locations. In approximately June 2009 he was assigned to Fort Hood in Texas for a one or two year period. In July 2009 he began his tour at Fort Hood. His wife Darlene took a leave from her job as an elementary school paraprofessional in order to join him at Fort Hood. They left clothes and, apparently, most of their possessions in their home in Pueblo.

During the period July through December 2009 the Maldonados traveled to Pueblo approximately every other month to check up on their home, typically for only one night or so each time. In months when they did not return, Mrs. Maldonado’s father, who lived in Denver, drove to Pueblo to check out the house for them. The Maldonado’s last visit to their home before the incident that gives rise to this lawsuit occurred in early to mid-November 2009. Neither the Maldonados nor Mrs. Maldonado’s father found anything amiss during these visits. Likewise, a neighbor who was keeping an eye on the house from [1082]*1082outside while the Maldonados were gone reported nothing amiss.

The Maldonados left Fort Hood in their truck on December 23, 2009, arriving at their Pueblo home in the very early morning hours of December 24. Mrs. Maldonado found a red tag on the front door indicating that the water department had turned off their water. The door did not open until Mr. Maldonado was able to push his way in. Inside they discovered that the home had been all but destroyed by leaking water. Water in one or more pipes, apparently in the attic, had frozen causing the piping to burst and the house to be flooded.

Mr. Maldonado immediately called Allstate. Approximately two or three hours later, while the Maldonados waited in them truck outside the home, an adjustor named Phillip Spallo returned the call. Mr. Maldonado’s recollection is that Mr. Spallo told him that Allstate had two other homes in the area with the same problem, but that there was nothing he could do because the policy did not cover damage from frozen pipes. However, Mr. Maldonado also recalls that Mr. Spallo requested copies of the Maldonados’ heating bills for November and December 2009.

The heating bills for the two months were supplied and are in the record as Exhibits C [# 28-5] and E [# 28-7]. Exhibit C shows that for November 2009 (for 29 days through November 5) the Maldonados were billed $10.83 for gas and had “thermal usage” of “0”, compared to thermal usage of “43” in November 2008. For December 2009 (for 33 days through December 8) they were billed $12.15 and had thermal usage of “2,” compared to thermal usage of “96” in December 2008. After receiving the November and December bills Allstate formally denied coverage.1

In his deposition Mr. Maldonado testified that he had raked insulation, which had been pushed into the corners of the attic, over the pipes. A. Maldonado deposition [# 28-2] at 50. However, Mrs. Maldonado’s father indicated that when they gutted the home after the water damage, he observed that there was no insulation over the pipes. Bernal deposition [# 31-5] at 19.

Mr. Maldonado also testified that the home had an electronically operated heating system that permitted him to set a temperature at which the heat would kick on. Id. at 25-26. He set the temperature at 50 degrees during the summer months. He is “pretty sure” that he reset it at 55 degrees when the Maldonados visited the home in September 2009, and he thinks it was set at 55 degrees when they left from their visit in November. Id. at 25, 41. However, the power was off when the Maldonados discovered the damage on December 24, 2009. Id. at 31. They turned the power on when they blew the insulation out of the attic. Id. at 40.

Mrs. Maldonado testified that pipes had frozen at least three or four previous times but on those occasions they had not burst or caused damage. Each time her father came and thawed them out. She did not know how he did it, and he did not do [1083]*1083anything to prevent the pipes from freezing again. D. Maldonado deposition [# 28-3] at 18-1. She states that on those occasions she was living in the home, and she had maintained the heat at about 70 degrees. Id. at 22. Mr. Bernal recalls that he fixed pipes in the bathrooms “about two times.” Bernal deposition at 16-17.

The policy excludes coverage for property loss caused by the freezing of plumbing while the house is “vacant, unoccupied or being constructed” unless that policyholder has used “reasonable care” either to “maintain heat in the building structure” or to shut off the water supply and drain the system and appliances. Exclusion A [# 28-6]. Allstate seeks a ruling as a matter of law “that Plaintiffs failed to take reasonable steps to maintain heat at the Property while the Property was vacant or unoccupied in violation of their Homeowners Insurance Policy and therefore, Exclusion A of the Policy relating to frozen pipes supports the denial of coverage for Plaintiffs’ water loss in accordance with Colorado law.”

Conclusions

Unoccupied

Allstate first argues that the home was “unoccupied” when the loss occurred, citing as “of critical importance” that both Maldonados testified in their depositions that the property was unoccupied. Actually, Mr. Maldonado testified that his definition of “occupied” is “living there permanently,” and by that definition, the house was not occupied. A. Maldonado depo. [# 28-2] at 16. When asked whether the house was unoccupied at the time of the loss, Mrs. Maldonado responded, “meaning that we weren’t there?” Using that definition she agreed that the house was unoccupied.

In any event, terms in an insurance contract are not defined by a policyholder’s attempted definition in a deposition. Rather, construction of terms in an insurance policy, like any contract, is a matter of law for the Court. The Maldonados now suggest that the dictionary definition of “unoccupied” is “not lived in: empty.” They note, as have cases cited in their response, that it is not uncommon for people to leave their homes for periods of time, perhaps on an extended vacation or while occupying a second home, but that this does not mean that their home is unoccupied.

One case cited by the plaintiffs is Estate of Wavie Luster v. Allstate Ins. Co., 598 F.3d 903, 906 (7th Cir.2010), which involved a term in an Allstate policy similar, though not identical, to that involved here. An elderly widow, living alone, was injured in a fall and, after leaving the hospital, moved into an extended care facility. Meanwhile, no one lived in the house, although her lawyer, who had her power of attorney, continued to pay the insurance premiums. A fire caused extensive damage to the home three months after the woman’s death.

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Related

Estate of Luster v. Allstate Insurance
598 F.3d 903 (Seventh Circuit, 2010)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
849 F. Supp. 2d 1080, 2012 WL 917285, 2012 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 36770, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/maldonado-v-allstate-fire-casualty-insurance-cod-2012.