Seward Park Housing Corp. v. Greater New York Mutual Insurance

43 A.D.3d 23, 836 N.Y.S.2d 99
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedMay 10, 2007
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 43 A.D.3d 23 (Seward Park Housing Corp. v. Greater New York Mutual Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Seward Park Housing Corp. v. Greater New York Mutual Insurance, 43 A.D.3d 23, 836 N.Y.S.2d 99 (N.Y. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Catterson, J.

In this insurance breach of contract action, we are asked to determine, inter alia, whether the insurance company’s denial of coverage constituted a repudiation of liability or a disclaimer of coverage, and thus, whether the plaintiff was obligated to comply with contract provisions in order to recover the replacement cost of a two-level parking garage that collapsed after a rainstorm on the Lower East Side at Grand Street and East Broadway.

The Seward Park residential cooperative apartment complex includes four high-rise apartment buildings and dozens of commercial stores, as well as a two-level garage comprised of an underground level and a partial above-ground level for approximately 400 cars. On January 15, 1999, near midnight, the northern portion of the garage collapsed. Two to three feet of soil and a lawn covered the northern portion of the garage, and were used as a park and recreation area for the residents of plaintiffs buildings. There was a system of drainage pipes that directed water absorbed by the soil away from the garage. The south side of the garage which did not collapse had no soil or grass on top, but was paved and used for above-ground parking.

In the week prior to the collapse, almost five inches of rain and freezing rain fell. Several of the drains in the collapsed area were purportedly clogged with ice, dirt and soil. Notably, the garage, constructed in or about 1960, was designed to have supports placed on top of approximately 90 garage columns, known as “capitals.” In several places these capitals were missing and this was obvious on visual inspection. The capitals were designed and used to spread the load from the slab supporting the upper level of the garage, and to reduce stresses at the point that the columns met the slab that was the concrete roof of the lower level.

[26]*26Five days after the collapse, the Department of Buildings (hereinafter referred to as DOB) ordered that the remaining portion of the northern section of the garage be demolished and that the entire garage, including the southern portion, be vacated. On June 24, 1999, DOB ordered that the southern portion of the garage be demolished immediately.

The plaintiff made a claim for the loss with its insurance carrier, the defendant Greater New York Mutual Insurance Company (GNY), under its all-risk, first-party property policy. The claim was denied on December 29, 2000, resulting in this litigation. The defendant denied coverage on the basis of the following exclusions: (1) ordinance or law; (2) hidden or latent defect; and (3) collapse. Given the denial, the plaintiff paid for the construction by obtaining a line of credit from a third party. Reconstruction of the garage commenced in or about June 2001, the underground portion was completed by April 2002, and the above-ground portion completed in October 2003. The plaintiff alleged that the total cost of rebuilding was approximately $19,000,000.

On the eve of trial, in mid-November 2003, plaintiff moved for an order in hmine seeking, inter alia, to preclude the defendant from offering evidence that the plaintiff failed to complete the repairs to the garage “as soon as reasonably possible,” a requirement of the insurance policy in order to receive damages for “replacement value.” The court granted the plaintiffs motion. The defendant filed a notice of appeal and moved for a stay of the trial, which was denied by this Court.

The case was tried from January 29, 2004 through March 29, 2004, when a verdict was rendered. The jury awarded the plaintiff a total of $12,075,503.74 for replacing the garage. Included in the total were certain amounts verdict sheet as follows: specified in the

(1) Pipes, drains and the trench $375,800
(2) Fences, trees, shrubs and plants on the roof of the garage $164,400
(4) Interest on the amount withdrawn from $20 million line of credit $641,288.57
(5) Loss of rental income $269,079.26
[27]*27(6) Paved surfaces, excavations and foundations - $851,549.14
(7) Construction of roof fountain - $0
(8) Lighting inside garage - $57,970
(9) Lighting on roof of garage - $28,500
(10) Play area - $28,850
(ID Architectural and engineering services - $750,000

The defendant moved for judgment notwithstanding the verdict, which was denied by the trial court. In the judgment entered April 2005, the plaintiff was additionally awarded interest of more than $6 million, which the court determined had accrued on the entire amount commencing August 7, 1999. Thereafter, the defendant paid the judgment instead of filing an appeal bond (since interest was running), reserving its right to recover the judgment on appeal.

On appeal, the defendant contends that any exception to the collapse exclusion, where it is “caused in part” by weight of rain, requires that the weight of rain be the dominant cause of the collapse, rather than simply “a” cause thereof; and, in any event, the damage sustained is excludable as it resulted from a hidden or latent defect.

The defendant also argues that the uncollapsed portion of the garage was not covered under its policy, since it was damaged precollapse, and its destruction was ordered due to construction defects therein; that the plaintiff was not entitled to recover finance charges as an “extra expense” since the “extra expense” provision of the policy was applicable only where the financing resulted in reducing defendant’s liability for plaintiffs loss of rents, and that coverage for such charges was not within the contemplation of the parties when the contract was entered.

Further, the defendant claims that it was error for the court to allow plaintiff to recover for the cost of items designated under the policy as “Property Not Covered,” and that the prejudgment interest was improperly calculated.

Finally, the defendant contends that its disclaimer of coverage was not the equivalent of a “repudiation” of the insurance contract, and therefore the plaintiff was not excused from compliance with the policy provision requiring the rebuilding of the garage “as soon as reasonably possible.”

[28]*28We find that the trial court correctly determined the issue of causation, and also rightly held that the defendant did not make out a case for a hidden or latent defect exclusion. The contract of insurance, under the heading “Additional Coverage-Collapse” provides that a covered cause of loss shall include collapse occurring “after construction, remodeling or renovation is complete and . . . caused in part by [weight of rain] . . . even if use of defective material or methods, in construction, remodeling or renovation, contributes to the collapse.” There is no requirement in the contract that weight of rain be the dominant cause, and clearly the contract could have so stated had that been the intent of the parties. The contract unambiguously provides coverage where “weight of rain” is a partial cause of a collapse, and the trial court, tracking the relevant contract language, properly charged the jury to that effect.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
43 A.D.3d 23, 836 N.Y.S.2d 99, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/seward-park-housing-corp-v-greater-new-york-mutual-insurance-nyappdiv-2007.