Pamela Lutz V. Grange Insurance Association

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedMarch 3, 2025
Docket87213-3
StatusUnpublished

This text of Pamela Lutz V. Grange Insurance Association (Pamela Lutz V. Grange Insurance Association) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pamela Lutz V. Grange Insurance Association, (Wash. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

PAMELA LUTZ, No. 87213-3-I

Respondent, DIVISION ONE

v. UNPUBLISHED OPINION

GRANGE INSURANCE ASSOCIATION,

Petitioner,

and

ERIC DAVIS and DUKE HART,

Defendants.

FELDMAN, J. — We accepted discretionary review of a partial summary

judgment order interpreting and applying the Farm and Ranch Property Insurance

Policy that Grange Insurance Association issued to Pamela Lutz (the Policy).

Although the trial court correctly interpreted the Policy, it erred by deciding the

amount payable to Lutz thereunder. Accordingly, we affirm in part, reverse in part,

and remand for further proceedings.

I

The relevant facts are not in dispute. In June 2020, Lutz’s septic system

overflowed, causing sewage to back up into her home. Lutz filed an insurance

claim with Grange, which accepted coverage for the loss, and Lutz relocated with

her children to a hotel. Grange paid for the relocation pursuant to the “Your No. 87213-3-I

Additional Living Expense” provisions of “Coverage D,” the “Loss of Use” coverage

included in the Policy.

At some point, Lutz moved back home, but she later moved again to

temporary housing, and Grange resumed paying for Lutz’s housing and certain

other living expenses under Coverage D until August 24, 2021. Grange refused

to make any further payments thereafter, even though Lutz had not moved back

into her home, explaining that Lutz had exhausted her Coverage D policy limits of

$59,400.

This lawsuit followed. Lutz moved for partial summary judgment, arguing

that she was entitled to another 12 months of additional living expenses (ALE)

coverage under a policy endorsement. The trial court agreed. It ordered “that

[Lutz] is entitled to an additional 12 months of ALE benefits.” It also

ordered Grange “to pay [Lutz] an additional $59,400.00 representing an[ ]

additional 12 months of ALE benefits” within 30 days of the court’s order. Grange

sought discretionary review of these orders. Division Three of this court granted

review and transferred the case to this division of the court.

II

Grange argues that the trial court erred by interpreting the Policy to provide

Lutz with an additional 12 months of ALE coverage after exhausting her Coverage

D policy limits. We disagree.

We review orders on summary judgment de novo. Werlinger v. Clarendon

Nat’l Ins. Co., 129 Wn. App. 804, 808, 120 P.3d 593 (2005). Similarly,

interpretation of an insurance contract is a matter of law, which we also review de

-2- No. 87213-3-I

novo. Hall v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co., 133 Wn. App. 394, 399, 135 P.3d

941 (2006). “When we interpret an insurance policy, we consider the insurance

policy as a whole, giving the policy ‘a fair, reasonable, and sensible construction

as would be given to the contract by the average person purchasing insurance.’”

Kut Suen Lui v. Essex Ins. Co., 185 Wn.2d 703, 710, 375 P.3d 596 (2016) (quoting

Key Tronic Corp. v. Aetna (CIGNA) Fire Underwriters Ins. Co., 124 Wn.2d 618,

627, 881 P.2d 201 (1994)).

The Policy states, in relevant part, that Grange will “insure up to the limit of

insurance shown in the Declaration for Coverage D”:

1. Your Additional Living Expense

If a Covered Cause of Loss renders your principal living quarters uninhabitable, we will pay any necessary increase in living expense you incur so that your household can maintain its normal standard of living, provided that such uninhabitable quarters are located in:

a. A dwelling covered under Coverage A; or

b. A dwelling in which covered Household Personal Property is located if you are a tenant.

Payment under this Coverage will be for the shortest time required for repair or replacement of the damaged property, or, if you relocate, the shortest time required for your household to settle elsewhere.

(Boldface omitted.) Additionally, the Policy came with a “FarmPak Plus”

endorsement that provided as follows:

Increased Loss of Use Limit of Insurance

We will increase the Coverage D – Loss of Use limit of insurance shown on the declarations by an amount necessary to pay for your additional living expense or fair rental value for up to 12 months if the amount of loss or expense is more than the limit of insurance shown

-3- No. 87213-3-I

on the declarations for Coverage D – Loss of Use.

(Boldface omitted.) The limit of insurance shown for Coverage D in the

declarations for the Policy was $59,400.

Both parties agree that the FarmPak Plus endorsement increases the

Coverage D policy limits under certain circumstances. However, they disagree

about what those circumstances are. Grange asserts that the endorsement

increases the policy limits only if the insured incurs additional living expenses in

excess of those limits “within a 12-month period.” Meanwhile Lutz asserts—and

the trial court agreed—that the insured is entitled to an additional 12 months of

Coverage D payments after the Coverage D policy limits are exhausted—which in

Lutz’s case was on August 24, 2021.

We agree with Lutz and, thus, with the trial court. Standing alone, the Policy

places no temporal limit on payments under Coverage D except that payments

thereunder “will be for the shortest time required for repair or replacement of the

damaged property, or, if you relocate, the shortest time required for your household

to settle elsewhere.” The relevant section of the FarmPak Plus endorsement

“modifies insurance provided under” Coverage D “if the amount of loss or expense

is more than the limit of insurance . . . for Coverage D”—as Lutz alleges it was

here. When that is the case, the endorsement provides that Grange “will increase

the Coverage D . . . limit of insurance . . . by an amount necessary to pay for [the

insured’s] additional living expense . . . for up to 12 months.” The average person

purchasing insurance would reasonably interpret these provisions to mean that

when the insured exhausts Coverage D’s policy limits, Grange will continue to pay

-4- No. 87213-3-I

living expenses that are otherwise subject to Coverage D for “up to 12 months,”

i.e., that the 12-month period begins when Coverage D policy limits are exhausted.

Accordingly, the trial court correctly interpreted the Policy.

Grange disagrees and points to the following parenthetical in the policy

declarations that appears after the line specifying the $59,400 policy limit for

Coverage D: “(Fair Value up to 12 months per form F1046).” According to Grange,

this notation “unambiguously provide[s] a Loss of Use limit of $59,400 for ‘up to 12

months.’” But the parenthetical is not a complete sentence, it refers to “Fair Value”

without defining the term, and it does not mention additional living expenses.

Furthermore, Grange’s interpretation of the notation leaves unanswered when the

relevant 12-month period begins. Although Grange suggests that it begins on the

date of the underlying loss, it points to no policy language to support that notion.

For these reasons, the parenthetical does not support Grange’s proposed

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