Peter Tsai and Barbara Tsai v. Liberty Mutual Insurance Company

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 29, 2015
Docket01-14-00677-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Peter Tsai and Barbara Tsai v. Liberty Mutual Insurance Company (Peter Tsai and Barbara Tsai v. Liberty Mutual Insurance Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Peter Tsai and Barbara Tsai v. Liberty Mutual Insurance Company, (Tex. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

Opinion issued October 29, 2015

In The Court of Appeals For The First District of Texas ———————————— NO. 01-14-00677-CV ——————————— PETER TSAI AND BARBARA TSAI, Appellants

V.

LIBERTY MUTUAL INSURANCE COMPANY, Appellee

On Appeal from the 269th District Court Harris County, Texas Trial Court Case No. 2013-61457-A

MEMORADUM OPINION This appeal arises from an insurance-coverage dispute between Liberty

Mutual Insurance Company and its insureds, Peter Tsai and Barbara Tsai,

involving the applicability of a water-damage exclusion in an all-risk homeowner’s

policy. Each side filed a motion for summary judgment. The trial court denied the

Tsai’s motion, granted Liberty Mutual’s motion, and rendered final judgment in Liberty Mutual’s favor. In five issues on appeal, the Tsais contend that the trial

court erred in denying them summary judgment and in granting summary judgment

to Liberty Mutual.

We affirm.

Background

The facts underlying this case are undisputed. In 2006, the Tsais purchased

their home in a residential gated community. The house is a three-level, wood-

frame structure, constructed with a concrete slab-on-grade foundation. The

exterior of the dwelling is a combination of conventional stucco cladding and stone

veneer. The perimeter of the home has a combination of pavers, planters, and

grass.

In March of 2012, the Tsais noticed what they later described as “ridges” on

the wood floors in the living room of their home. By August 2012, the damage

had spread across the living room, and the wood flooring was separating.

The Tsais made a claim with Liberty Mutual under their homeowners’

policy regarding the damage to their wood floors. Liberty Mutual began an

investigation to determine the source and the cause of the damage. Liberty Mutual

first eliminated a plumbing leak as the cause of the damage. Liberty Mutual

retained HSA Engineers & Scientists (“HSA”) to evaluate the Tsais’s home and to

2 uncover “the cause and extent of water ingress,” which had resulted in the flooring

damage.

Following its evaluation of the Tsais’s home, HSA prepared a report of its

findings, signed by two professional engineers. Both Liberty Mutual and the Tsais

agree with the findings in the HSA report.

HSA observed that the wood flooring in the Tsais’ living room “displayed

an uneven appearance where the edges on the top of the board were higher than the

top of the center of the boards, which is commonly referred to as a ‘cupped’

condition.” The report states,

There was evidence that the cupped appearance of the boards was reasonably attributed to moisture migrating under the wood floor from the planter at the north edge/perimeter of the Tsai property . . ., which . . . did not feature detailing for drainage, was near the same elevation as the top of the first level wood floor, and was higher than the foundation slab of the Tsais’ residence.

The report provides a description of the home’s wood floors, including the

following:

The wood floor had been elevated above the foundation slab surface utilizing a screed system, and measurements indicated that the distance between the top of the wood floor boards and the foundation slab surface measured on the order of 2–1/2 inches. These measurements are consistent with a one-inch thick wood floor board installed over a 1–1/2 [inch] thick screen member. . . . There was no ready access below the first level wood floor.

The report continues, “Mr. Tsai stated that the first one to two feet of land

north of the edge/perimeter of the Tsai foundation are part of the land parcel

3 owned by the Tsai family. However, Mr. Tsai stated that adjacent landowners

commonly are allowed to use/modify this strip of land.” The Tsais informed HSA

that in 2007 their neighbors to the north “installed a swimming pool, concrete patio

areas, and gravel planters in areas of the north neighbors’ yard, and a planter with

shrubs were installed in the strip of land along the north edge/perimeter of the Tsai

residence.”

The report also provides,

Mr. Tsai stated that the previous north neighbor (original owner in 2006 per HCAD) did not reportedly water the shrubs and the planter significantly. However, the more recent north neighbor (purchased the dwelling in February 2010 per HCAD) reportedly watered significantly . . . . The planter that lined the north edge/perimeter of the Tsai foundation featured a watering system, but it was not clear when this watering system was installed.

The report further describes the planter located on the north side of the

house:

The north edge/perimeter of the Tsai residence foundation had been lined with a planter that featured shrubs set in a mulch base. The planter was edged with metal that extended above the level of the mulch to separate the planter from the adjacent concrete patio. Relative elevations of the concrete patio revealed a general slope down from the northwest to the southeast, and there were consistently lower elevations at the south edge of the patio (near the Tsai residence) compared to the north edge of the patio (near the north neighbor dwelling). Elevations of the planter revealed that the top of the mulch was between 0.76 feet and 0.85 feet, which is similar or higher than the top of the finished wood floor at the interior of the Tsai residence adjacent to this area (about 0.79 feet to 0.81 feet along the north edge of the living room). The top of the continuous metal

4 edging also measured between around 0.78 feet for the west half of the planter and tapered down to about 0.66 feet. . . . .

The report explained HSA’s findings more specifically, as follows:

HSA’s investigation reasonably correlated the detailing along the north edge/perimeter of the dwelling as a source of moisture migration below the wood floor of the Tsai residence. Relative elevations and visual observations revealed that the planter, which lined the north edge/perimeter of the foundation . . ., was built up to a level near the same height as the top of the finished wood floor at the interior of the Tsai residence . . . . The top of the continuous metal edging that lined the north edge of this planter also was at a similar elevation as the top of the wood floor at the interior. Thus, the top of the foundation, which is nominally 2-1/2 inches below this level, was below the top of the planter that lined the north edge/perimeter of the foundation. There were no alternative means of drainage observed in this planter (surface drains, French drains, etc.), thus, water that drains into the planter can travel the path of least resistance for drainage. The path of least resistance, here, is for water to seep between the top of the foundation and the sill plate and migrate to the lower interior area below the wood floor of the Tsai residence. . . .

HSA understands that this condition has progressed recently to the owners’ surprise. HSA understands that the north neighbor purchased the dwelling in February 2010. Soon after that time[,] the greater Houston, Texas area experienced an extended and extensive drought. Thus, the supplemented moisture applied to the shrubs during watering at this time was not sufficient to build to a sufficient level (as a result of the lack of drainage in the planter) to overwhelm the detailing and migrate below the first level wood floor. HSA also understands that the previous owner did not water significantly and that the pool/patio construction was not completed until 2007.

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