Navigators Insurance Company v. Goyard, Inc.

CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedJanuary 31, 2024
Docket1:20-cv-06609
StatusUnknown

This text of Navigators Insurance Company v. Goyard, Inc. (Navigators Insurance Company v. Goyard, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Navigators Insurance Company v. Goyard, Inc., (S.D.N.Y. 2024).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF NEW YORK er ee ee a eee x NAVIGATORS INS. CO., : : ORDER GRANTING Plaintiff/ Counterclaim Defendant, : DEFENDANT’S MOTION FOR : SUMMARY JUDGMENT AND -against- : RELATED RELIEF GOYARD, INC., 20 Civ, 6609 (AKH)} Defendant/ Counterclaim Plaintiff. :

ee ee ee ee ee ee ee ee x ALVIN K. HELLERSTEIN, U.S.DJ.: This is an insurance coverage dispute. Goyard, a luxury leather goods company with a storefront and corporate office on the Upper East Side of New York City, suffered an overnight break-in and loss of $684,855 in merchandise during the civil rioting following George Floyd’s murder. The next day, June 2, 2020, Goyard filed a claim with its insurer, Navigators Insurance Company, which Navigators denied on the grounds that its policy does not extend to retail storage losses caused by strikes, riots, and civil commotion (SR&CC). The parties both seek declaratory relief in support of their competing interpretations of their insurance contract. Goyard, as the insured, seeks also to recover litigation fees and punitive damages, and adds a claim for breach of contract. After completing discovery, the parties filed cross-motions for summary judgment. Goyard also filed a motion to strike portions of Navigators’ supporting exhibits because they contained hearsay and improper expert testimony. Goyard’s motion for a declaration of coverage and reimbursement of loss is granted. Navigator’s motion dismissing

Goyard’s claim for attorneys’ fees and punitive damages is pranted. Goyard’s motion to strike is denied as academic, THE 20620 POLICY Navigators Insurance is a marine cargo insurer that issues ocean marine open cargo policies. Goyard, a luxury leather goods company, insured its marine cargo with Navigators through Marsh & McLennan Insurance Agency (MMA) as its broker. The policy provides coverage to Goyard for goods during shipping and when held in specific locations listed on the declarations page, including Goyard NY’s East 63" Street location, the site of the riotous thefts. Policy at 5.) “Goods insured” include “luxury bags, wallets, fine leather goods and travel accessories.” Policy at 4. They are to be valued “{ajt the amount of invoice, including all charges therein . . . plus ten percent.” Policy at 4, 13.7 The policy contains “paramount” warranties, including an SR&CC warranty, that “shall not be modified or superseded . . . or endorsed hereon unless such other provision refers to the risks excluded by these Warranty(ies) and expressly assumes the said risks.” Policy at 23. Endorsement No. 1 (SR&CC Endorsement) covers three categories of such risks: (1) “strikers, locked-out workmen, or persons taking part in labor disturbances or riots or civil commotions,” (2) “vandalism, sabotage or malicious acts,” and (3) “act or acts... carried out for political, terroristic or ideological purposes.” Policy at 37. “Coverage under... subsection □□ is conditional upon the property insured being in the ordinary course of transit... .” Policy at 37,

Citations | 101 the policy track the pagination as designated by ECF No. 1, Ex. 1, not the underlying document, ? Defendant, in its summary judgment motion, urges the Court to make the vafuation based on classifying the goods insured as “raw materials, supplies in storage, used goods,” which excludes the ten percent premium. Nothing in the record supports a finding that the goods insured were raw materiais, supplies, or used goods,

Jessica Bratz, Goyard’s insurance broker at MMA, sought coverage from her counterpart at Navigators, Karla Scott, to add coverage for retail stock throughput, or retail inventory, kept at scheduled locations, Effective January 1, 2020, Endorsement No. 4 was added. Goyard paid a 585.77% increase in premium, from $15,000 in 2019 to $102,865 in 2020. Navigators issued the complete policy, with the endorsements to MMA for Goyard, on or around March 6, 2020, Endorsement No. 4 (Storage Coverage Endorsement) provides coverage to “soods insured... while detained in lecations approved by these Assurers subject to terms and as hereinafter provided.” Policy ai 44. Subsection 9(e) of the endorsement excludes certain perils. Specifically, it excludes “risks excluded by the F.C. & S and SR & CC warranties contained in the open policy, to which this coverage is attached.” Policy at 46. The flat annual premium “includes all charges for transit, war risk, SR&CC, □□□□□□ inventory stock.” Policy at 4. DISCUSSION This is a contract construction dispute, not a Tactual dispute. When parties dispute the terms of an insurance contract, the court is to ‘to give effect to the mtent of the parties as expressed in the clear language of the contract.” Parks Real Est. Purchasing Grp. v. St. Paul Fire & Marine Ins. Co., 472 F.3d 33, 42 Qd Cir, 2006). Summary judgment is proper if the language is “wholly unambiguous.” Schiavone v. Pearce, 79 F.3d 248, 252 Qd Cir. 1996). L Declaratory Relief & Breach of Contract A. Text of the Policy Navigators does not dispute that the SR&CC endorsement, Endorsement No. 1, takes precedence over the SR&CC warranty. ECF No, 109 {31 (The SR&CC Endorsement also takes precedence over the SR&CC Warranty”), Cutp. ef Columbia v, Cont’l ins. Co, , 634 N.E.2d 946, 950 (N.Y. 1994) (“[I]t is settled that in construing an endorsement to an insurance

policy, the endorsement and the pelicy must be read together, and the words of the policy remain in full force and effect except as altered by the words of the endorsement.”); CGS Indus., Inc. v. Charter Oak Fire Ins. Co., 720 F.3d 71, 84 Gd Cir. 2013) (the endorsement unambiguously altered the original Policy, which therefore no longer governs the scope of [the insured’s] coverage”). Nor does Navigators dispute that Goyard’s claim arose out of a riot or crvil commotion, which falls under SR&CC endorsement subsection (2}.2 Unlike subsection (3), which requires goods to be “in the ordinary course of transit,” subsection (2) contains no coverage carveouts. The insurance contract has three clauses covering loss of property because of a riot: the Warranties clause that excludes coverage unless added by an endorsement; Endorsement No. | that adds such coverage; and Endorsernent No, 4 that excludes risks excluded by the Warranties clause. Navigators argues that Goyard’s loss caused by the riot of June L, 2020 is not covered, because Endorsement No. 4 excludes SR&CC perils by referring back to the Warranties clause. The Warranties Clause, however, does not entirely preclude SR&CC perils; it excludes them only to the extent an Endorsement does not bring them back, and Endorsement No. | brings back losses caused by riots. There is no basis to read Endorsement No. 4 so that it cancels Endorsement No. 1. An insurance contract, like any other, must be read in its entirely, giving effect to allits terms, Nomura Home Equity Loan, Inc., Series 2006-F M2 v. Nomura Credit & Cap., ine., 93 N.E.3d 745, 747 GLY. 2017). Goyard, for an additional premium, extended Navigator's marine policy, to cover goods in its Fifth Avenue store, as well as goods being brought into that store. It did that by procuring Endorsement No. 4. But there is no hint of an intention that, by

7 ¥t is irrelevant that goods had come to rest and were no longer “in the ordinary course of transit,” as that condition applies only to claims arising under the SR&CC endorsement’s subsection (3).

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Bluebook (online)
Navigators Insurance Company v. Goyard, Inc., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/navigators-insurance-company-v-goyard-inc-nysd-2024.