Standard Fire Insurance v. Berrett

910 A.2d 1072, 395 Md. 439, 2006 Md. LEXIS 752
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedNovember 13, 2006
Docket8, Sept. Term, 2006
StatusPublished
Cited by51 cases

This text of 910 A.2d 1072 (Standard Fire Insurance v. Berrett) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Standard Fire Insurance v. Berrett, 910 A.2d 1072, 395 Md. 439, 2006 Md. LEXIS 752 (Md. 2006).

Opinions

BATTAGLIA, Judge.

This action arises out of the refusal by the Petitioner, The Standard Fire Insurance, Co., to pay a claim on a homeowner’s insurance policy taken out by Respondent, Robert Berrett, on 4305 Gallatin Street, a property which was destroyed by fire, after approval of a contract of sale on the property by a circuit court judge in guardianship proceedings for his mother, Charlotte Berrett, but before settlement. Standard Fire filed a petition for writ of certiorari seeking review of the Court of Special Appeals’s judgment reversing the Circuit Court for Baltimore City’s entry of summary judgment for Standard Fire and raised the following questions:

1. When a person holds an unrecorded deed, pursuant to which grantor conveys to him a vested remainder and retains a life estate, does the court-ordered sale of the [445]*445property in fee simple, in an action to which the grantee is a party, extinguish the grantee’s interest in the property?
2. Under the scenario described above, do the grantee’s representations to the court that grantor owns the property, coupled with his failure to raise an interest in the property, estop him from claiming such an interest by virtue of the unrecorded deed or improvements to the property?
3. If a person fails to protect his economic interest in a property, does he retain an insurable interest in that property?

Standard Fire Ins. v. Berrett, 393 Md. 160, 900 A.2d 206 (2006).

We shall hold that Mr. Berrett continued to possess an economic interest in the property even after the court’s approval of the contract of sale of the property, and that he was not estopped from claiming an insurable interest therein by his representations that his mother was the owner of the property during guardianship proceedings.1

Facts

In December, 1995, Robert Berrett relocated from California, where he had been living for some twenty years, to his home state of Maryland and began residing at 4305 Gallatin Street, his family’s home. In February, 1999, after having made numerous improvements to the home, he learned that it was not insured, which precipitated his application for insurance with Standard Fire. Mr. Berrett timely paid all of the premiums on the policy and, when it expired in February, 2000, renewed for another year.

In March, 2000, Mr. Berrett filed a verified petition, through counsel, in the Circuit Court for Prince George’s County, to be appointed guardian over the person and proper[446]*446ty of his mother, Charlotte Berrett. He alleged that he was her primary care taker and that she was no longer able to handle her financial, business, legal, and personal matters. He also alleged that his mother “owns two parcels of real estate commonly known as 4305 Gallatin Street, Hyattsville, Maryland 20783 and 2303 Fordham Street, Hyattsville, Maryland 20783,” and listed himself and his four siblings as interested parties to the proceedings. Mr. Berrett filed a verified amended petition in May, 2000, in which he again alleged that his mother owned 4305 Gallatin Street, and a verified emergency petition in June, iterating that she owned 4305 Gallatin Street. After a hearing on Mr. Berrett’s petition, a judge of the Circuit Court for Prince George’s County appointed Richard C. Daniels, an attorney, as the guardian of Charlotte Berrett’s property, and Theresa Grant of the Prince George’s Office of Aging, as guardian of her person. Shortly thereafter, Mr. Daniels petitioned the court for approval of a contract of sale for $89,000.00 for 4305 Gallatin Street, to which Mr. Berrett filed an opposition, alleging that the purchase amount was below market value, that the sale was not necessary to sustain his mother’s care because he was supplementing her payments to the nursing home, and that his mother intended to reside at 4305 Gallatin Street in the future. The court overruled Mr. Berrett’s opposition and on November 9, 2000, approved the contract. On November 25, 2000, fire destroyed the home before settlement and thereafter the purchaser exercised his right to rescind, pursuant to the contract’s risk of loss clause, and the home was razed and the property subsequently sold to the same purchaser for a reduced price of $40,000.00.

In the interim, Mr. Berrett filed a claim for $388,000.00 with Standard Fire to recover for the loss of the home. Standard Fire denied the claim, alleging that the court-approved sale of 4305 Gallatin Street extinguished Mr. Berrett’s interest in the property so that he did not possess an insurable interest at the time of the loss.

[447]*447In his complaint against Standard Fire,2 Mr. Berrett alleged that he had an insurable interest in 4305 Gallatin Street because his mother, in an unrecorded deed, had conveyed a remainder interest to him in the property,3 while retaining for herself a life estate, and also because Mr. Berrett had resided in and made extensive improvements to the home between 1995 and 2000. He alleged that he never recorded the deed because, by the deed’s terms, it was not to be recorded until his mother’s death. He further alleged that he did not disclose the existence of the unrecorded deed during the guardianship proceedings because he was under the impres[448]*448sion that his mother’s life tenancy enabled her to dispose of the property.

In response to Mr. Berrett’s complaint, Standard Fire filed a motion for summary judgment, alleging that the judicial approval of the sale of 4305 Gallatin Street on November 9, sixteen days before the fire, had extinguished Berrett’s insurable interest in the property. Standard Fire also argued that, because Mr. Berrett alleged in his verified petitions for his mother’s guardianship that his mother was the owner of 4305 Gallatin Street, that he now was precluded under both the doctrines of collateral estoppel and estoppel by admission from asserting his claim in the property.

Mr. Berrett responded by alleging that, as a remainderman in the property, he could not be divested of his interest until the property was sold and, at the time of the fire, the sale had not been completed. He further contended that he was not collaterally estopped from asserting his insurable interest because the issue during the guardianship proceedings was whether Charlotte Berrett was disabled, whereas, in the Standard Fire proceedings, the issue was whether Mr. Berrett possessed an insurable interest in the property. Moreover, Mr. Berrett maintained that his allegation that his mother was the owner of the property in the guardianship proceedings was not inconsistent with his statement of ownership during proceedings on the insurance claim because both possessed ownership interests in the property; his mother’s of a life estate interest, and his of a remainder interest.

After the hearing on Standard Fire’s summary judgment motion, at which both parties were represented by counsel and presented oral arguments, the trial court granted summary judgment to Standard Fire, concluding that Mr. Berrett was both collaterally and judicially estopped from asserting an insurable interest in the property. Mr. Berrett noted a timely appeal to the Court of Special Appeals, which determined in a reported opinion that, by virtue of the unrecorded deed, Charlotte Berrett had, after retaining a life estate for herself, granted Mr. Berrett a vested, indefeasible remainder in 4305 [449]

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Bluebook (online)
910 A.2d 1072, 395 Md. 439, 2006 Md. LEXIS 752, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/standard-fire-insurance-v-berrett-md-2006.