Taylor Corporation v. XL Insurance America, Inc.

CourtDistrict Court, D. Minnesota
DecidedJuly 18, 2023
Docket0:22-cv-01151
StatusUnknown

This text of Taylor Corporation v. XL Insurance America, Inc. (Taylor Corporation v. XL Insurance America, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Taylor Corporation v. XL Insurance America, Inc., (mnd 2023).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT DISTRICT OF MINNESOTA TAYLOR CORPORATION,

Plaintiff, Civil No. 22-1151 (JRT/TNL)

v. MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER XL INSURANCE AMERICA, INC., ON CROSS MOTIONS FOR PARTIAL WESTPORT INSURANCE CORP., and SUMMARY JUDGMENT LIBERTY MUTUAL FIRE INSURANCE CO.,

Defendants.

Amran Farah, Jeanette M. Bazis, Mark L. Johnson, and Sybil L. Dunlop, GREENE ESPEL PLLP, 222 South Ninth Street, Suite 2200, Minneapolis, MN 55402, for Plaintiff.

Daniel J. Millea and Laura W. Bartlow, ZELLE LLP, 500 Washington Avenue South, Suite 4000, Minneapolis, MN 55415, for Defendants.

This is an insurance coverage dispute arising out of damage to concrete press pads in a printing facility leased by Plaintiff Taylor Corporation’s (“Taylor”) subsidiary Curtis 1000, Inc. (“Curtis”). Taylor uses highly specialized printing presses that required the installation of concrete press pads to support proper functioning. Upon attempting to install the printing presses in January of 2019, Taylor discovered that the press pads had settled and cracked—allegedly due to subsidence of the soil beneath the building— rendering the press pads unsuitable for their intended purpose. Taylor now seeks coverage for its losses caused by the damaged press pads under nearly identical insurance policies (the “Policies”) issued by Defendants XL Insurance

America, Inc.; Westport Insurance Company; and Liberty Mutual Fire Insurance Company. The parties filed cross motions for summary judgment on the single issue of whether earth movement caused in part by faulty workmanship and/or settling would be covered by the Policies’ earth movement coverage extension, or if it would be excluded under the

Policies’ faulty workmanship and settling exclusions. Because the Policies use traditional anti-concurrent causation language in a fashion that does not clearly evidence the parties’ intent to create an anti-concurrent causation clause, the Policies’ earth movement

coverage extension is ambiguous. The Court will therefore construe the Policies in favor of Taylor and grant its motion for partial summary judgment. BACKGROUND I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND

A. Press Pad Failure Curtis is a wholly owned subsidiary of Taylor. (Compl. ¶ 11, May 2, 2022, Docket No. 1.)1 Curtis contracted with a developer to lease a “build-to-suit” printing facility in Fridley, Minnesota (the “Fridley Facility”). (Id.) The Fridley Facility was built with “several

specially reinforced, isolated equipment pads” meant to support integral printing press

1 The only declaration Taylor has provided is copies of the Policies. The facts pertinent to this cross motion for partial summary judgment are largely undisputed, however. Thus, the Court will cite either to the Plaintiff’s complaint and declaration or the Defendants’ declarations where factual support is contained therein. equipment (“Press Pads”). (Id.) In particular, the Press Pads were designed and built to support the Plaintiff’s Heidelberg presses. (Decl. of Laura W. Bartlow (“Bartlow Decl.”),

Ex. 3, at 53–54, Dec. 1, 2022, Docket No. 38.) Taylor attempted to install a Heidelberg press on one of the Press Pads in January of 2019 but was unable to because the Press Pad had moved, preventing the Heidelberg press from being level. (Compl. ¶ 12, May 2, 2022, Docket No. 1.) The Press Pads had

settled and cracked, rendering them “unsuitable for their intended purpose.” (Id. at ¶ 16.) Taylor hired a geo-technical engineering firm to analyze the issue, which concluded that the soil beneath the building was non-uniform in its density, would thus experience

“differential settlement” from the force applied by operation of the printing press, and therefore was “not suitable for support of the printing press foundations.” (Bartlow Decl. Ex. 7, at 138.) Taylor had to remove the Press Pads and replace them with similar pads installed to bedrock to be able to use the Fridley Facility. (Compl. ¶ 17.)

B. The Insurance Policies Taylor sought to recover damages under its insurance policies issued by the Defendants, which all had identical terms and conditions. (See Decl. of Leland P. Abide (“Abide Decl.”), Exs. A–C, Nov. 1, 2022, Dockets Nos. 28-1, 28-2, 28-3.) Broadly, the

Policies provide coverage for physical loss or damage to insured property during the policy period, subject to the terms, conditions, exclusions, and limitations provided. (Abide Decl., Ex. A at 36, Ex. B at 27, Ex. C at 22.) The Policies include several exclusions to coverage. Of import to this present action, the Policies excluded coverage for faulty workmanship and settling:

D. EXCLUSIONS 1. This “policy” does not cover: * * * c. Loss of market or loss of use. * * * 3. This “policy” does not cover the following, but if physical loss or damage not otherwise excluded by this “policy” to Insured Property at Insured Location(s) results, then only such resulting physical loss or damage is covered by this “policy”: a. faulty workmanship, material, construction or design, from any cause. * * * c. deterioration, depletion, rust, corrosion or erosion, wear and tear, inherent vice or latent defect. d. settling, cracking, shrinking, bulging, or expansion of: 1) ceilings; 2) floors; 3) foundations, including any pedestal, pad, platform or any other property supporting machinery; 4) pavements; 5) roofs; or 6) walls. * * * j. loss or damage caused by any act, error or omission (whether by the Insured or by others) in: 1) planning, zoning, surveying, siting or developing property[.]

(Abide Decl., Ex. A at 38–40, Ex. B at 28–31, Ex. C at 24–26 (emphasis added).) The Policies included a handful of coverage extensions, which “are subject to all provisions of this ‘policy.’” (Abide Decl. Ex. A at 42; Abide Decl. Ex. B at 32–33; Abide Decl. Ex. C at 28.) One such coverage extension is for earth movement. The Policies define “earth movement” as:

1) The term “earth movement” means by any movement of earth, whether natural or man-made, including but not limited to: a) earthquake and the resultant earthquake sprinkler leverage; b) volcanic action; c) landslide; or d) subsidence; regardless of any other cause or event contributing concurrently or in any other sequence to the loss. (Id. (emphasis added).) Pursuant to the Policies, Taylor’s broker reported Taylor’s loss from the Press Pads’ failure to Defendants on May 10, 2019. (Bartlow Decl., Ex. 6, at 124.) The broker listed the type of loss as “Subsidence,”2 and described the loss as being due to “Earth movement below equipment.” (Id.) The Defendants then hired an engineering firm to investigate the damage at the Fridley Facility. The engineering firm concluded that: [T]he root cause of floor movement can be attributed to a lack of consideration by the geotechnical and structural engineers for the Heidelberg allowable floor deflection limits. Factors contributing to the floor movement include variances in the soil compaction beneath the equipment pads and low- strength soils 40 to 60 feet beneath the building.

2 “Subsidence” is the “sinking of the ground because of underground material movement,” which can be caused by the removal of water or natural resources from the ground, earthquakes, or soil compaction, among other natural and manmade causes. See What is Subsidence?, National Ocean Service (Jan. 20, 2023), https://oceanservice.noaa.gov/facts/subsidence.html (last visited April 28, 2023). (Bartlow Decl., Ex. 8, at 167.) Accordingly, the Defendants denied Taylor’s claim, citing the Policies’ exclusions for: (1) faulty design or workmanship, (2) an inherent vice or

defect, (3) settling and cracking of foundations, and (4) loss caused by an error or omission in planning or development of a property. (Bartlow Decl., Ex. 9., at 2–3.) II. PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND Taylor initiated this action in May 2022. (See generally Compl.) It brought one

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