You Restoration LLC v. First Protective Insurance Company

CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedJuly 23, 2025
Docket4D2024-1553
StatusPublished

This text of You Restoration LLC v. First Protective Insurance Company (You Restoration LLC v. First Protective Insurance Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
You Restoration LLC v. First Protective Insurance Company, (Fla. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

DISTRICT COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF FLORIDA FOURTH DISTRICT

YOU RESTORATIONS LLC, a/a/o CORINA DE LEON and CESAR DE LEON, Appellant,

v.

FIRST PROTECTIVE INSURANCE COMPANY, d/b/a FRONTLINE INSURANCE, Appellee.

No. 4D2024-1553

[July 23, 2025]

Appeal from the County Court for the Seventeenth Judicial Circuit, Broward County; Ellen Feld, Judge; L.T. Case No. COINX22-078292.

Lynn A. Brauer and Rebecca A. Gallagher of Insurance Trial Lawyers, Miami, for appellant.

Elizabeth K. Russo of Russo Lima Appellate Firm, P.A., Miami, for appellee.

WARNER, J.

Appellant You Restorations (“YR”), under an assignment of benefits from insured homeowners, challenges a final summary judgment on its insurance breach of contract claim. The trial court determined no issue of material fact existed that the damage to the insured home was not a covered claim under the policy. While appellee Frontline concedes the record contains disputed evidence as to causation, Frontline contends no genuine issue of material fact exists as to the insureds’ late notice of the claim and resulting prejudice. We agree that the summary judgment may be upheld on this alternative claim. We thus affirm.

The insureds, husband and wife, purchased an all-risk insurance policy from appellee Frontline for their home. The policy contained exclusions from coverage, including wear and tear and repeat seepage or leakage. In the event of a loss, the policy required the insureds to give “prompt” notice to Frontline and to take reasonable measures to protect the property from further damage. On March 21, 2022, the insureds reported a windstorm loss to Frontline caused by a storm occurring on April 26, 2020, a date within the policy period. Frontline followed up with a letter informing the insureds that the company was investigating the claim, but the 694-day delay between the storm and the insureds reporting the damage “may have prejudiced [Frontline’s] ability to independently confirm the cause, origin, date of loss and duration of the reported damages.” Frontline also reserved all of its rights under the policy.

A Frontline adjuster came to the home to observe the damage. She also took a recorded statement from the insured husband. In the statement, the insured husband explained that a contractor with YR had come to the house in March 2022 to examine a bathroom leak. The insured husband said, “that is when I made them aware [of a stain in the garage], but that stain I had seen it for a long time, but I had not acted on it.” When the adjuster stated that the insureds had reported April 26, 2020 as the loss date, the insured husband responded a storm had occurred that day. The insured husband then said, “I do remember a little shortly after that, that is when I started seeing the damage in the garage, the leaking, but I had not acted on it[.] I was letting it be.”

The insured husband continued to explain to the adjuster how he had showed the contractor the garage damage:

I took advantage when the people from “You Restoration” came I talked to them about that because it had gone on for a while because I had also noticed that some of the wood ended becoming rotten it’s the one that is at the front and it is related to that corner where that leak was, so they checked it and if (sic) fact they confirmed that the damage had spread.

The adjuster asked about when the insureds first saw the damage:

(Adjuster): OK so the first time it was in April 26, 2020, but you didn’t do anything you noticed it weeks later there was a stain in the ceiling inside the garage you saw a stain and what was the stain more than once or?

(Insured husband): No, it was there, and it continued growing.

(Adjuster): And it continued growing?

2 (Insured husband): And then I noticed some shingles were already broken on top.

The insured husband said he had mentioned seeing the stain to his wife, telling the adjuster: “[S]he said we have to do something about that, but we did not act on it, I did mention it to her.” The adjuster questioned why the insureds had not reported the claim:

(Adjuster): So then can you then explain to me, I know you didn’t act at that moment, the stain kept getting bigger throughout time, is there a reason you did not report the claim when it happened or when you found out about it?

(Insured husband): No, a word we use, procrastinate, I did not act at that moment, the problem was there but it was not big it continued growing throughout the rain, so it was until now when they came for the bathroom, that’s when I mentioned that to them they went over and looked at it and they said we have to act on this otherwise this will continue to grow every rain season that’s when these people started working here. Although they mentioned that if I didn’t do anything about it, the roof problem would continue even after they fixed the inside.

Although the insured husband had not been up on the roof, he told the adjuster that workers who came to clean the tile roof each year had been up there and saw damaged tiles. The damaged tiles were in different parts of the roof but concentrated over the garage. The last time someone had been up on the roof to clean was approximately ten months before the interview.

The insured husband described the damage to the interior as “in the garage, that part of the stain when you open it there was water and there is the wood that is underneath the roof tile that is rotten, and there is also a beam in front of the house that is rotten.” Tiles were also damaged, and “[t]hat is why the water seeps through.”

The insureds had not made any roof repairs or taken any steps to protect the property from further damage prior to YR’s appearance. YR placed a tarp on the roof and placed equipment to dry out the garage.

Frontline informed the insureds that it was denying coverage for their loss. The denial letter incorporated the policy’s post-loss duties and stated, “Failure to notify Frontline of the loss as soon as possible may have

3 prejudiced our ability to independently confirm the cause, origin, date of loss and duration of the reported damages.” The letter also stated that Frontline’s engineer had determined the damage to the insureds’ roof and garage was the result of normal wear and tear.

YR, as the insureds’ assignee, 1 initiated the instant lawsuit alleging breach of contract against Frontline for failing to indemnify a covered loss and alleging damages. Frontline filed an answer and affirmative defenses, denying it had breached the policy. Frontline’s affirmative defenses alleged that the insureds’ damages were caused by events excluded under the policy, and the insureds had failed to comply with the policy’s post-loss duties, namely the duties to promptly notify Frontline of the damage and to take reasonable measures to protect the property from further damage.

Frontline filed a motion for final summary judgment. Frontline’s primary argument was that the insureds had failed to comply with their post-loss obligations, prejudicing Frontline’s investigation of their claim. Frontline also argued that the loss was caused by wear and tear, deterioration, insufficient maintenance and long-term seepage of water. In support, Frontline attached engineering and expert affidavits stating the damage was wear and tear. Frontline also attached the insured husband’s recorded statement and excerpts from the insured husband’s deposition taken after suit was filed.

The insured husband’s deposition excerpts were in sharp contrast to his recorded statement. In the deposition, when asked, the insured husband claimed he did not know the date of loss, and did not remember how often he had his roof pressure cleaned.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
You Restoration LLC v. First Protective Insurance Company, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/you-restoration-llc-v-first-protective-insurance-company-fladistctapp-2025.