Ezrasons, Inc. v. Travelers Indemnity Co. ( 2023 )


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  • 22-766
    Ezrasons, Inc. v. Travelers Indemnity Co.
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE SECOND CIRCUIT
    August Term, 2022
    (Argued: April 12, 2023                Decided: December 26, 2023)
    Docket No. 22-766
    _____________________________________
    Ezrasons, Inc.,
    Plaintiff-Appellant,
    v.
    The Travelers Indemnity Co.,
    Defendant-Appellee.
    _____________________________________
    Before:
    LEVAL, CHIN, and NATHAN, Circuit Judges.
    Plaintiff Ezrasons, Inc. (the “Insured”) appeals from the grant of
    summary judgment by the United States District Court for the Southern
    District of New York (Lorna G. Schofield, J.), in favor of defendant The
    Travelers Indemnity Company (“Travelers”), the insurer under a marine
    cargo insurance policy (the “Policy”). The Insured, which is engaged in the
    garment trade, suffered a loss of insured goods of a value, according to the
    Insured, exceeding $600,000 while the goods were stored in a warehouse
    owned and operated by Chamad Warehouse, Inc., in Marion, North Carolina.
    1
    When the warehouse was consumed by fire on August 14, 2019, Travelers
    paid $250,000, but declined to pay more based on its contention that the
    Policy’s coverage was limited to $250,000, because the warehouse building
    where the goods were destroyed was not an “Approved Location” under the
    Policy. If the warehouse qualified as an “Approved Location,” the coverage
    limit would be $600,000.
    Both parties moved for summary judgment. The district court ruled
    that the warehouse was unambiguously not within the Policy’s definition of
    an “Approved Location.” The Court of Appeals finds the Policy ambiguous as
    to whether the warehouse where the destruction occurred was an “Approved
    Location.” Furthermore, the district court erroneously excluded admissible
    evidence by which the Insured sought to prove that the warehouse was an
    “Approved Location.” Because the extrinsic evidence available to aid in
    resolving the ambiguity does not furnish a basis for preferring either possible
    meaning, New York law dictates that the ambiguity should be resolved in
    favor of the insured. Judgment VACATED and the matter REMANDED with
    instructions to enter judgment in favor of the Insured. Costs to the Insured.
    FREDERIC GIORDANO, K&L Gates LLP,
    Newark, NJ, for Plaintiff-Appellant.
    CHARLES E. MURPHY, Lennon Murphy
    Caulfield & Phillips, Southport, CT, for
    Defendant-Appellee.
    LEVAL, Circuit Judge:
    This is an appeal by plaintiff Ezrasons, Inc. (the “Insured”) from the
    grant of summary judgment by the United States District Court for the
    Southern District of New York (Lorna G. Schofield, J.), in favor of defendant
    2
    The Travelers Indemnity Company (“Travelers”), 1 the insurer under a marine
    cargo insurance policy (the “Policy”). The Insured, which is engaged in the
    garment trade, suffered a loss of insured goods of a value, according to the
    Insured, exceeding $600,000 while the goods were stored in a warehouse
    owned and operated by Chamad Warehouse, Inc., 2 in Marion, North
    Carolina. The warehouse was consumed by fire on August 14, 2019. Travelers
    paid the Insured $250,000, but declined to pay more based on its contention
    that the Policy’s coverage was limited to $250,000, because the warehouse
    building where the goods were destroyed was not an “Approved Location”
    under the Policy. If the warehouse qualified as an “Approved Location,” the
    coverage limit would be $600,000.
    1 Apparently, it is unclear which of the companies within the Travelers
    complex is the insurer. The company named as defendant in the complaint is
    The Travelers Indemnity Company. Defendant, however, asserts in its brief
    that the Insurer is in fact Travelers Property Casualty Company of America.
    Appellee’s Br. at 41. In any event, it appears, at least at this stage, that nothing
    turns on which of the Travelers companies is party to the contract of
    insurance. We refer to defendant as “Travelers.”
    2 It is not clear whether the name of the warehousing company is “Chamad
    Warehouse, Inc.” or “Chamad, Inc.,” see App’x at 557, but neither party has
    raised any argument that would be affected by the difference. We will refer to
    the company simply as “Chamad.”
    3
    The Insured brought this action originally in the New York State courts in
    March 2021 to recover the higher amount. Travelers removed the case to the
    United States District Court on grounds of diversity of citizenship. 
    28 U.S.C. § 1441
    (b). The parties submitted a joint letter to the district court stating their
    shared belief that the case could “be resolved as a matter of law without need
    for a factfinder’s determination as to material facts . . . [and that it was]
    appropriate to cross-move for summary judgment without exchanging
    discovery . . . .” App’x at 374. Both parties then moved for summary
    judgment. The district court agreed with Travelers and ruled that the
    warehouse was unambiguously not within the Policy’s definition of an
    “Approved Location.”
    In our view, the Policy was ambiguous as to whether the warehouse
    where the destruction occurred was an “Approved Location.” Furthermore,
    the district court erroneously excluded admissible evidence by which the
    Insured sought to prove that the warehouse was an “Approved Location.”
    Finally, because the extrinsic evidence available to aid in resolving the
    ambiguity does not furnish a basis for preferring either possible meaning,
    New York law dictates that the ambiguity should be resolved in favor of the
    4
    insured. We accordingly vacate the district court’s judgment and remand
    with instructions to enter judgment in favor of the Insured.
    BACKGROUND
    Many of the facts are not in dispute. The Policy provided coverage for
    “goods and/or merchandise while temporarily detained in warehouses and/or
    processing locations” within the contiguous United States and Canada. App’x
    at 135, 513. The maximum limit of coverage depended on whether the loss
    occurred at an “Approved Location.” In the part of the Policy where
    “Approved Locations” were listed, two were specified: One of the two, the
    pertinent one, was “CHAMAD WAREHOUSE, INC. 371 Branch Street[,]
    Marion, NC 28752” (with a coverage limit of $600,000). App’x at 137. Under a
    subsection entitled “Unnamed Domestic Locations,” the agreement provided
    that “goods and/or merchandise in any public warehouse or processing
    center not listed above” (i.e., not “Approved Locations”) will be covered only
    up to $250,000. App’x at 138.
    It is undisputed that “371 Branch Street,” the address listed in the
    Policy as the address of an “Approved Location,” was renumbered to “56
    5
    Branch Street,” so that, with the parties’ agreement, we read the Policy as if it
    said “CHAMAD WAREHOUSE, INC., 56 Branch Street.”
    It is also undisputed that Chamad operates its warehousing business in
    three warehouse buildings situated on a 19.03-acre parcel of land. Travelers
    has not rebutted the Insured’s evidence that the lot is surrounded by a
    continuous chain link fence. One side of the irregularly shaped parcel borders
    Branch Street, where one of its three warehouses with the address 56 Branch
    Street is located. A second warehouse on the parcel, the one that burned,
    fronts on Virginia Road. There is evidence that, at least for some purposes,
    this warehouse was known as 1386 Virginia Road.
    The Insured consigned its goods to Chamad for storage. There is no
    evidence that, prior to the fire, there was any communication between the
    Insured and Chamad as to which of the three warehouses would be, or was
    being, used for the storage. The Insured, furthermore, submitted the
    unrebutted affidavit of Chamad President Steve Guffey, stating that goods
    entrusted to Chamad are stored in any of the three warehouses. Chamad
    placed the Insured’s goods in the warehouse that fronts on Virginia Road,
    where they were destroyed by a fire.
    6
    In presenting and disputing their cross motions for summary
    judgment, the parties submitted evidence bearing on whether the destroyed
    warehouse came within the Policy’s specification of an “Approved Location.”
    Travelers cited the report of the Marion Fire Department with respect to its
    response to the fire, stating that the fire occurred at 1386 Virginia Road. It also
    cited the satellite map maintained by the McDowell County Tax Assessor
    showing rooftop views of Chamad’s 19.03-acre parcel, with street-address
    numbers added to individual rooftops. On that document, the warehouse
    fronting on Branch Street has the number “56” superimposed on its rooftop.
    The warehouse fronting on Virginia Road has the number “1386”
    superimposed on its rooftop.
    The Insured submitted a Deed of Trust by which Chamad had
    conveyed the 19.03-acre parcel in trust for the benefit of a lending bank, as
    security for its indebtedness. The deed, naming Chamad as Grantor and
    giving its address as 56 Branch Street, conveyed to the Trustee all of Grantor’s
    right, title, and interest in the 19.03 acres of “Real Property . . . commonly
    known as 56 Branch St, Marion, NC 28752” “together with all existing or
    7
    subsequently erected or affixed buildings . . . .” App’x at 444. 3 In addition, the
    Insured submitted the sworn declaration of its President Guffey stating that
    “[t]he Chamad Warehouse is located at 56 Branch Street, Marion, North
    Carolina.”
    The district court denied the Insured’s motion for summary judgment
    and granted Travelers’ motion. Ezrasons, Inc. v. Travelers Indem. Co., No. 21-
    3165, 
    2022 WL 768366
     (S.D.N.Y. Mar. 14, 2022). The court reasoned that the
    fire occurred at 1386 Virginia Road, which unambiguously is not 56 Branch
    Street. 4 
    Id. at *3
    . Explaining that the Policy is unambiguous in naming the
    3 The Insured also cited newspaper articles that refer to the warehouse fire as
    taking place at “Chamad Warehouse.” App’x at 461–79. Travelers argues that
    this evidence was inadmissible hearsay. We are inclined to disagree. Hearsay
    is defined in Rule 801 of the Federal Rules of Evidence as a declarant’s
    statement made otherwise than while testifying in the current trial or hearing,
    which is offered by a party to prove the truth of what was asserted in the
    statement. Fed. R. Evid. 801(c). The newspaper evidence was offered not to
    prove that the warehouse on Virginia Road was owned and operated by
    Chamad, but to prove that it was known as part of the Chamad Warehouse.
    In any event, we make no ruling on the question because these newspaper
    articles play no role in our decision to grant judgment to the Insured. Our
    reasoning would be the same regardless of whether this evidence had been
    offered.
    4 The district court’s first reason for its judgment was that the “Approved
    Location” listed in the Policy is 371 Branch Street and neither party contends
    that the fire occurred at 371 Branch Street. 
    Id. at *3
    . Travelers, however, as
    noted above, agrees that 371 Branch Street was renumbered to 56 Branch
    8
    Branch Street address, and not 1386 Viginia Road, as an “Approved
    Location,” it ruled that the Insured’s evidence seeking to show that 56 Branch
    Street was the address of all three warehouses must be rejected because it
    impermissibly relied on extrinsic or parol evidence to create ambiguity in an
    unambiguous agreement. 
    Id.
    This appeal followed.
    DISCUSSION
    I.   Standard of review.
    A district court’s grant of summary judgment is reviewed by a court of
    appeals de novo, “construing the evidence in the light most favorable to the
    party against whom summary judgment was granted and drawing all
    reasonable inferences in that party’s favor.” Bey v. City of New York, 
    999 F.3d 157
    , 164 (2d Cir. 2021) (citing Sista v. CDC Ixis N. Am., Inc., 
    445 F.3d 161
    , 168–
    69 (2d Cir. 2006)).
    Summary judgment should be granted only if “there is no genuine
    dispute as to any material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a
    matter of law.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(a). A genuine dispute as to a material fact
    Street and that the Policy should therefore be read as if it said “56 Branch
    Street.” We accordingly reject that reason for granting judgment to Travelers.
    9
    “exists and summary judgment is therefore improper ‘where the evidence is
    such that a reasonable jury could decide in the non-movant’s favor.’” Lucente
    v. County of Suffolk, 
    980 F.3d 284
    , 296 (2d Cir. 2020) (quoting Beyer v. County of
    Nassau, 
    524 F.3d 160
    , 163 (2d Cir. 2008)). “[S]ummary judgment should
    usually be denied” if the “resolution of a dispute turns on the meaning of an
    ambiguous term or phrase.” Dish Network Corp. v. Ace Am. Ins. Co., 
    21 F.4th 207
    , 212 (2d Cir. 2021) (quoting Fed. Ins. Co. v. Am. Home Assurance Co., 
    639 F.3d 557
    , 567 (2d Cir. 2011)).
    When parties cross-move for summary judgment, as done here, each
    motion is analyzed separately, “in each case construing the evidence in the
    light most favorable to the non-moving party.” Schwebel v. Crandall, 
    967 F.3d 96
    , 102 (2d Cir. 2020). “[T]he fact that both sides have moved for summary
    judgment does not mean that the court” is required to enter judgment “for
    one side or the other.” Schwabenbauer v. Bd. of Educ. of City Sch. Dist. of City of
    Olean, 
    667 F.2d 305
    , 313 (2d Cir. 1981); see also Morales v. Quintel Ent., Inc., 
    249 F.3d 115
    , 121 (2d Cir. 2001).
    10
    II.   New York law as to ambiguity in insurance policies.
    Under New York law, 5 an insurance policy is a contract, and
    unambiguous provisions are given their plain and ordinary meaning.
    Universal Am. Corp. v. Nat’l Union Fire Ins. Co. of Pittsburgh, Pa., 
    25 N.Y.3d 675
    ,
    680 (2015). Whether or not a term of a contract is ambiguous is a question of
    law that is reviewed by the appellate court de novo. Dish Network Corp., 21
    F.4th at 212 (quoting Duane Reade, Inc. v. St. Paul Fire & Marine Ins. Co., 
    600 F.3d 190
    , 201 (2d Cir. 2010)); see also Donohue v. Cuomo, 
    38 N.Y.3d 1
    , 13 (2022).
    Ambiguity exists “where [a contract’s] terms are subject to more than
    one reasonable interpretation.” Universal Am. Corp., 
    25 N.Y.3d at 680
    . “[T]he
    test to determine whether an insurance contract is ambiguous focuses on the
    reasonable expectations of the average insured upon reading the policy and
    employing common speech . . . .” 
    Id.
     (quoting Mostow v. State Farm Ins. Cos.,
    
    88 N.Y.2d 321
    , 326–27 (1996)).
    5We apply New York state law to this case because the parties’ briefs both
    assume New York state law governs and such “implied consent is . . .
    sufficient to establish the applicable choice of law.” Trikona Advisers Ltd. v.
    Chugh, 
    846 F.3d 22
    , 31 (2d Cir. 2017) (quoting Arch Ins. Co. v. Precision Stone,
    Inc., 
    584 F.3d 33
    , 39 (2d Cir. 2009)).
    11
    Ordinarily, in assessing whether a contract is ambiguous, a court looks
    within only the four corners of the document; extrinsic or parole evidence is
    usually “not admissible to create an ambiguity in a written agreement which
    is complete and clear and unambiguous upon its face.” Donohue, 38 N.Y.3d at
    12–13 (quoting W.W.W. Assocs., Inc. v. Giancontieri, 
    77 N.Y.2d 157
    , 163 (1990)).
    However, contractual ambiguities come in two forms – patent and latent. See
    2 Couch on Ins. 3d § 21:12. Latent ambiguities present an exception to the rule
    that courts must look within the four corners of a document to determine
    ambiguity. “A patent ambiguity appears on the face of the instrument while a
    latent ambiguity is raised by evidence[.]” Petrie v. Trs. of Hamilton Coll., 
    158 N.Y. 458
    , 464 (1899). Latent ambiguities occur when, although the words of
    the contract appear on their face to have a clear meaning, the evidence shows
    that they could apply to different facts, objects, or circumstances. Id.; see also
    Teig v. Suffolk Oral Surgery Assocs., 
    2 A.D.3d 836
    , 837 (N.Y. 2d Dep’t 2003)
    (“Even where an agreement seems clear on its face, a ‘latent ambiguity’ may
    exist by reason of ‘the ambiguous or obscure state of extrinsic circumstances
    to which the words of the instrument refer’” (quoting Lerner v. Lerner, 
    120 A.D.2d 243
    , 247 (N.Y. 2d Dep’t 1986))); Morgan Stanley Grp. Inc. v. New Eng.
    12
    Ins. Co., 
    225 F.3d 270
    , 276 (2d Cir. 2000) (“[A] contract may be ambiguous
    when applied to one set of facts but not another.”). If a person contracts for
    value to bequeath “my house to my daughter,” the contract appears to be
    unambiguous on its face. See Petrie, 
    158 N.Y. at 463
    . Nonetheless, if
    application of the terms of the contract to the facts reveals that the person
    making the commitment had two houses (or two daughters) and nothing in
    the terms of the contract clarifies which house (or daughter) was intended, the
    contract presents a latent ambiguity which cannot be interpreted without
    making resort to extrinsic evidence. See 
    id.
    An example of latent ambiguity, familiar to many law students, is the
    story from Raffles v. Wichelhaus, [1864] 159 Eng. Rep. 375 (Exch.), of a cargo of
    cotton contracted to be delivered from Bombay to Liverpool aboard the ship
    Peerless. When the cargo arrived in Liverpool aboard a ship named Peerless,
    the consignee refused to accept delivery, contending that the contract called
    for delivery on board another ship Peerless that had arrived in Liverpool
    from Bombay two months earlier. 
    Id.
     While the contract appeared
    13
    unambiguous on its face, application of its terms to real world facts revealed
    ambiguity. 6 
    Id.
    Interpretation of an unambiguous contract is for the court without a
    role for the factfinder. See Universal Am. Corp., 
    25 N.Y.3d at 680
    . However, if
    the contract is ambiguous, then relevant extrinsic evidence should be
    admitted and considered by the factfinder to resolve the ambiguity. State v.
    Home Indem. Co., 
    66 N.Y.2d 669
    , 671 (1985); Dish Network Corp., 21 F.4th at 212;
    see also In re Van Vliet, 
    181 A.D. 879
    , 880 (N.Y. 2d Dep’t 1918), aff’d 
    224 N.Y. 572
    (1918) (applying this principle in the context of a latent ambiguity). When the
    resolution of a contract depends on an ambiguous term or phrase, summary
    judgment should usually be denied and the ambiguity submitted to the
    factfinder for resolution by resort to the extrinsic evidence. Dish Network
    Corp., 21 F.4th at 212. But, “if the tendered extrinsic evidence is itself
    conclusory and will not resolve the equivocality of the language of the
    contract, the issue remains a question of law for the court” and there is no role
    6The court found that mutual mistake between the parties meant there had
    been no meeting of the minds sufficient to form a contract. Neither party
    contends that here. Further, adopting such an interpretation here would
    contravene the policy preferences of New York law to award judgment to the
    insured in cases such as these. See, e.g., Fed. Ins. Co. v. Int’l Bus. Machs. Corp.,
    
    18 N.Y.3d 642
    , 646 (2012).
    14
    for the factfinder in interpreting the contract. Home Indem. Co., 
    66 N.Y.2d at 671
    .
    When dealing with insurance policies, it is a “fundamental” principle of
    New York law that ambiguities should be interpreted against the insurer and
    in favor of the insured. Thomas J. Lipton, Inc. v. Liberty Mut. Ins. Co., 
    34 N.Y.2d 356
    , 361 (1974); Int’l Bus. Machs., 
    18 N.Y.3d at
    646 (citing Breed v. Ins. Co. of N.
    Am., 
    46 N.Y.2d 351
    , 353 (1978)). This presumption, however, is used only “as
    a matter of last resort,” after making use of all other available tools to resolve
    the ambiguity. U.S. Fire Ins. Co. v. Gen. Reins. Corp., 
    949 F.2d 569
    , 573 (2d Cir.
    1991) (quoting Schering Corp. v. Home Ins. Co., 
    712 F.2d 4
    , 10 n.2 (2d Cir. 1983)).
    When that presumption is invoked by the insured, the insurer bears the
    burden of showing that the insured’s interpretation is unreasonable. Haber v.
    St. Paul Guardian Ins. Co., 
    137 F.3d 691
    , 697–98 (2d Cir. 1998).
    We accordingly first determine whether there is an ambiguity, either
    patent or latent, in the terms of the Policy that prevents deciding the dispute
    solely on the basis of the terms of the contract without reference to extrinsic
    factors. If so, we assess whether the parties provided admissible extrinsic
    evidence that could resolve the ambiguity. If they have not, then New York
    15
    law dictates that the ambiguity should be decided in favor of the insured, as a
    matter of law, provided the insured’s interpretation is reasonable. If they
    have, then we must remand so that the extrinsic evidence may be considered
    by the factfinder.
    III.   Is the Policy ambiguous?
    Each side contends, in support of its motion for summary judgment,
    that the Policy unambiguously supports its side of the dispute.
    A
    The Insured contends that, in naming CHAMAD WAREHOUSE, INC.,
    56 Branch Street as an “Approved Location,” the Policy unambiguously so
    identifies the entire 19.03-acre parcel, including the three warehouses on it.
    This is for two reasons: First, the “Approved Location” designation gives the
    company name as its focus. Accordingly what is identified is not merely a
    single building, but all that is part of Chamad Warehouse, Inc., at 56 Branch
    Street, which is the entirety of the 19.03-acre parcel. Second, it argues that
    because the address of the 19.03-acre parcel is 56 Branch Street, so identified
    by the deed in the public land records, that designation refers to any and all
    Chamad warehouses on the 19.03 acres.
    16
    We reject the argument. When one considers that there is a Chamad
    warehouse that is publicly identified as bearing the address 56 Branch Street,
    the designation could also be reasonably read to identify only that warehouse
    as an “Approved Location.”
    B
    Travelers similarly contends that the Policy unambiguously names only
    the warehouse physically located at 56 Branch Street as an “Approved
    Location,” and not the other two warehouses, which are physically located at
    different parts of the 19.03-acre parcel, and in particular not the warehouse
    identified in public documents as located at 1386 Virginia Road. It argues
    that, if the warehouse fronting on Virginia Road is known as 1386 Virginia
    Road, it cannot also have as an address 56 Branch Street, but cites no rule of
    law or evidence of usage to support that proposition, especially as to a
    circumstance where there is evidence reasonably supporting the use of both
    addresses.
    It contends that the term “Location” unambiguously means a single
    building and not a parcel containing multiple buildings. We find no merit in
    the argument. The word “Location,” without further explanation, does not
    17
    communicate that it necessarily means a single building, as opposed to two or
    more buildings on the same parcel of land. Travelers has pointed to nothing
    in the Policy (or in application documents) specifying that a “Location,” as
    used in the term “Approved Location,” must be an individual building and
    cannot refer to multiple buildings at the same address. While it is true that an
    address such as 56 Branch Street, particularly in an urban context, often
    identifies nothing other than a single building, there is nothing unusual,
    particularly in the case of business companies or other institutions, in the use
    of a street address to identify an entire campus or parcel that includes
    multiple buildings. In fact, it is surely often the case that the additional
    buildings can have no other address (other than a subdivision of the same
    address) because no other part of the parcel touches on an identifiable street
    or road. The affidavit of Frank Harten, a Managing Director of Travelers,
    implicitly acknowledges that it is not unusual that companies in the
    warehousing business are identified by a single address that includes
    multiple warehouse buildings. He testified that in such cases, Travelers will
    “identify each building under the warehouse schedule as 111 Smith Street,
    18
    Building #1, 111 Smith Street, Building #2, and 111 Smith Street, Building #3.”
    App’x at 553.
    We can certainly understand why it might be important to an insurer
    such as Travelers to know exactly which building is being used as the
    warehouse in deciding whether to insure warehoused goods and on what
    terms. If the terms of the Policy told the Insured that a “Location” submitted
    for Travelers’ approval must be a single building, and that when insurance is
    sought classifying multiple buildings as Approved Locations, each building
    must be separately identified, the inclusion of such terms would likely dispel
    the ambiguity that inhabits the present Policy. It would be an easy matter for
    Travelers to insert such a clarifying limitation into the documentation of a
    policy. But it did not do so. It drafted an ambiguous policy as to the scope of
    Approved Locations. Upon considering the Insured’s evidence, including
    Chamad’s Deed of Trust, which gives Chamad’s address and that of the entire
    19.03-acre parcel, including the buildings on it, as 56 Branch Street, the Policy
    can reasonably be read as giving “Approved Location” status to all three
    warehouses on the parcel located at 56 Branch Street.
    19
    It is not always easy to distinguish between patent ambiguity and
    latent ambiguity. While both parties argue that the Policy is patently
    unambiguous, each undercuts that argument by relying on extrinsic evidence
    to support its contention about what is meant by its reference to “56 Branch
    Street.” In any event, this case has much in common with the case of the ship
    Peerless. The words of the contract did not make clear what warehouse or
    warehouses come within the scope of its reference to 56 Branch Street. When
    one looks at all of the contextual facts, they could as easily support the
    Insured’s argument as Travelers’, and vice versa. By looking solely at the
    terms of the Policy without reference to external facts, it is not clear whether
    the pertinent “Approved Location” includes only the warehouse building
    located at 56 Branch Street, or all three warehouse buildings on the parcel
    located at 56 Branch Street. By reason of the latent ambiguity, it was error of
    the district court to decline to consider the extrinsic evidence. When a contract
    is ambiguous, whether patently or latently, refusal to consider the extrinsic
    evidence could easily lead a court to construe the contract to mean something
    that neither side intended at the time of contracting.
    20
    In support of its decision not to consider the extrinsic evidence, the
    district court cited the opinion of the New York Court of Appeals in Donohue
    v. Cuomo, 
    38 N.Y. 3d 1
    , 13 (2022), for the proposition that that extrinsic
    evidence “is not admissible to create an ambiguity in a written agreement
    which is complete and clear and unambiguous upon its face.” Ezrasons, 
    2022 WL 768366
    , at *3 (quoting Donohue, 38 N.Y.3d at 13). We believe this was an
    oversimplification and a misinterpretation of the quoted passage from
    Donohue, rendering it misleading. Notwithstanding the ordinary rule that
    extrinsic evidence cannot be used to vary the terms of a contract whose
    meaning is clear, it has long been accepted in New York law that an exception
    to this principle arises in the relatively rare circumstances where the
    application of the contract terms to the facts encounters a latent ambiguity
    that leaves the meaning of the contract unclear. See Petrie, 
    158 N.Y. at
    463–64.
    The Donohue opinion did not purport to overturn this rule of New York law
    which is both long established and rooted in logic. The Donohue court made
    no suggestion that the circumstance it dealt with was one of latent ambiguity,
    such as arises when the meaning of a vital term of the contract cannot be
    determined because, upon consideration of extrinsic evidence, that term
    21
    could refer to one thing or another. An agreement can appear to be “complete
    and clear and unambiguous on its face,” Ezrasons, 
    2022 WL 768366
    , at *3
    (quoting Donohue, 38 N.Y.3d at 13), but its apparently clear language may
    nonetheless conceal a latent ambiguity that becomes apparent when one seeks
    to apply its terms to the facts. If so, it becomes necessary to consider extrinsic
    evidence to understand the meaning of the contract. See Petrie, 
    158 N.Y. at
    463–64. For these reasons we reject Travelers’ argument that the
    unambiguous terms of the Policy require affirmance of the district court’s
    grant of summary judgment to it.
    C
    Travelers further argues that “substantially similar” policy language
    has been held to unambiguously support Travelers’ interpretation by courts
    within our circuit. Appellee’s Br. at 26. We disagree. The cases Travelers cites
    do not support its argument. In LaptopPlaza, Inc. v. Starr Indemnity & Liability
    Co., 
    697 F. App’x 20
    , 20–21 (2d Cir. 2017) (summary order), this court found
    that goods stored in a trailer abutting a warehouse were not “detained in
    warehouses” as required for the policy coverage to attach. In Royal Insurance
    Co. of America v. Sportswear Group, LLC, 
    85 F. Supp. 2d 275
    , 277, 280 (S.D.N.Y.
    22
    2000), the district court for the Southern District of New York similarly found
    that goods that were stolen while sitting outdoors were not covered by a
    policy that covered only goods “stored in warehouses.” The fact that a
    separate part of the policy referenced goods stored “at the approved
    locations” did not negate the policy requirement that goods must be stored
    “in warehouses.” 
    Id.
     at 280–81. We would make the same ruling as made in
    Royal Insurance Co. if the goods in our case had been stored in a truck or on
    the ground on the Branch Street property, rather than in a warehouse as
    unambiguously required by this Policy.
    Those two cases do nothing for the insurer’s argument. They rule
    merely that a policy’s requirement that the covered goods be stored in a
    warehouse is not satisfied where goods are stored outside of the warehouse.
    Nor are we persuaded by the Insurer’s citation to Starr Indemnity &
    Liability Co. v. Brightside Corp., 
    388 F. Supp. 3d 304
    , 339–40 (S.D.N.Y. 2019). In
    that case, the terms of the policy required that approved locations be on the
    “schedule on file with [the] underwriters.” 
    Id. at 338
    . The question was
    whether coverage extended to new locations of which the insured notified the
    insurer, but which had not been added by the insurer to the "schedule on file
    23
    with [the] underwriters," or included only those which the insurer had added
    to “the schedule,” as the policy specified. 
    Id. at 340
    . The question was
    answered by the unambiguous terms of the policy, which limited approved
    locations to those that had been added to the schedule. 
    Id.
     The court ruled
    that because the policy specified that in order to be covered as approved
    locations, the locations must be on “the schedule,” the insured’s mere
    notification to the insurer of the locations did not make them approved
    locations. 
    Id.
     The insured’s argument, which the court rejected, was akin to
    our Insured’s arguing that a location should be viewed as approved under
    this Policy merely because the Insured had submitted the location to the
    Insurer requesting approval. Such an argument has no merit. That case sheds
    no light on ours. Again, here there is no question that “CHAMAD
    WAREHOUSE, INC., 56 Branch Street” is properly on the list of Approved
    Locations. Our question is what that meant.
    IV.   Can the extrinsic evidence submitted by the parties resolve the ambiguity?
    When a contract is ambiguous, we must determine whether extrinsic
    evidence provided by the parties can resolve the ambiguity. Home Indem. Co.,
    
    66 N.Y.2d at 671
    . If one or both parties offer extrinsic evidence that is capable
    24
    of resolving the ambiguity as to the meaning of the contract given its bearing
    on the facts, there is an issue of material fact to be resolved by the factfinder,
    which will dictate the interpretation of the contract. 
    Id.
     at 671–72. Summary
    judgment is inappropriate in such a case. If there is no extrinsic evidence
    available, or the evidence is conclusory or incapable of resolving the
    ambiguity, then there is no role for the factfinder as to the meaning of the
    contract. 
    Id.
    In our case, both parties have offered admissible extrinsic evidence in
    support of their respective contentions on how the disputed issue of material
    fact should be resolved.
    A
    With regards to the address of the warehouse, Travelers submitted
    evidence that 56 Branch Street can refer to the warehouse building at that
    address and that the warehouse destroyed by fire is, at least for some
    purposes, designated by the address 1386 Virginia Road. The Insured
    submitted evidence that Chamad’s 19.03-acre parcel in its entirety bears the
    address 56 Branch Street. Neither side, however, has submitted evidence that
    effectively rebuts the other side’s documentary evidence. Addresses do not
    25
    necessarily denote only a single building and can be ambiguous in that an
    address can both describe a single building and a larger plot containing
    multiple buildings, all of which can have the same address. “Location,” the
    word used in the Policy, is even less precise as to what it does or does not
    mean. The facts that the building at the Branch Street entrance to the parcel is
    for some purposes known as 56 Branch Street and that the building destroyed
    by fire is for some purposes known as 1386 Virginia Road do not rebut the
    Insured’s evidence that the address of the 19.03-acre parcel and all buildings
    on it is 56 Branch Street. In this case, the aggregate of the extrinsic evidence
    offered by the parties is incapable of resolving the ambiguity because it
    furnishes no rational or logical basis for preferring one meaning over the
    other. A jury deciding the case would not find answers in the parties’
    extrinsic evidence.
    B
    Travelers next argues that the declarations of Frank Harten are
    competent extrinsic evidence showing that Travelers did not intend for the
    warehouse fronting Virginia Road to be part of an “Approved Location,”
    because “Travelers was neither asked to approve the Virginia Road
    26
    Warehouse nor afforded the opportunity to underwrite that location.” App’x
    at 184. According to Travelers, this extrinsic evidence resolves the ambiguity
    in its favor.
    In his first declaration (dated August 12, 2021), Harten stated that he
    has “personal knowledge concerning the comprehensive underwriting
    process performed by Travelers in cases where an insured requests to have
    specific warehouse locations approved by Travelers and added to a marine
    cargo policy[.]” App’x at 184. He described the extensive processes by which
    Travelers “develop[s] rates [for the particular warehouse] based on
    projections of future losses” by “obtain[ing] data about past losses and then
    us[ing] probabilities to predict whether future losses will be higher, lower or
    the same . . . .” App’x at 186. An “essential component” of the process is the
    receipt of a “COPE” report from ISO (the Insurance Services Office), which
    furnishes information relating to the “physical Construction features of the
    warehouse location . . . , the contents and operations of the Occupancy inside
    the warehouse location, the public and private fire Protection available . . . ,
    and the External exposures adjacent to or nearby to the location.” App’x at
    186–87 (emphases in original). Travelers also “requests this type of
    27
    information directly from the insured/its broker, and underwriters will then
    compare that information against the information that is contained on the ISO
    Loss Report.” App’x at 187. It also collects information by “enter[ing] the
    Travelers Risk Control Portal to see if Travelers ever inspected the specific
    warehouse location in the past,” and, if so, retrieving the inspection report
    and providing it to the underwriter. App’x at 187. It will “utilize certain
    proprietary programs and systems to evaluate flood, wind, and earthquake
    risks.” 
    Id.
     Based on careful evaluation of all this information, it will:
    make a decision if the location is insurable . . . [and] will determine
    rate/premiums, terms and conditions, deductible and limits . . . [as
    well as] decide if coverage will be granted for flood, wind and
    earthquake . . . . The underwriter will view each location
    separately and may have different rates, terms and conditions or
    will even exclude flood at one location.
    App’x at 187. “Unlike the Virginia Road Warehouse, Travelers was advised
    about the Branch Street Warehouse which was underwritten per the
    guidelines above.” App’x at 188. He concluded, “The Virginia Road
    Warehouse was not a location submitted or approved by Travelers, which is
    why it falls into the classification of an ‘Unnamed Domestic Location’ which
    carries a lower insurance limit.” App’x at 188.
    28
    We are not persuaded by these arguments. We find, for several reasons,
    that Harten’s declaration gives little or no support to them. To the extent that
    it tells that Travelers never conducted the elaborate inquiries and evaluations
    that assist in making an informed decision to insure a particular warehouse
    and on what terms, concerning the warehouse that burned, and that Travelers
    never intended to underwrite it, what Travelers did or did not do on its own
    in agreeing to the Policy language is irrelevant to what the Insured could
    reasonably understand to be the meaning of the Policy. Harten did not assert
    that these facts or intentions were communicated by Travelers to the Insured.
    See Home Indem. Co., 
    66 N.Y.2d at
    671–72.
    To the extent that Harten does make statements about the contents of
    negotiating exchanges between Travelers and the Insured, which might be
    relevant to interpreting ambiguities of the Policy—such as Harten’s
    statements that Travelers was not “asked [by the Insured] to approve the
    Virginia Road Warehouse,” App’x at 184, and that “[t]he Virginia Road
    Warehouse was not a location submitted . . . [to] Travelers, which is why it
    falls into the classification of an ‘Unnamed Domestic Location,” App’x at
    188—these assertions are to no effect because Harten, so far as his declaration
    29
    reveals, had no personal knowledge of the exchanges between Travelers and
    the Insured that resulted in their agreement on the Policy. App’x at 184. He is
    therefore not a competent witness on that subject, so that his testimony that
    the Insured did not request “Approved Location” status for the Virginia Road
    warehouse must be disregarded. See Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(c)(4). (“An affidavit or
    declaration used to support or oppose a motion [for summary judgment]
    must be made on personal knowledge, set out facts that would be admissible
    in evidence, and show that the affiant or declarant is competent to testify on
    the matters stated.”). Nor did Harten’s declarations include business records,
    which, depending on what they say, might have furnished a competent
    source for his contentions.
    The same is true of his further assertions that Travelers “was never
    afforded the opportunity to underwrite the Virginia Road Warehouse.” App’x
    at 184, 188. This assertion is similarly beyond Harten’s testimonial
    competence because it depends on the content of exchanges between
    Travelers and the Insured of which Harten had no personal knowledge.
    Going further, Travelers’ assertion that giving Approved status to the
    warehouse adjacent to Virginia Road would be unreasonable and unfair to
    30
    Travelers because Travelers never had the opportunity to assess its
    insurability is also logically unpersuasive. Granting that Travelers could
    make a better-informed insurance decision if it knew exactly in which
    warehouse building or buildings the insured goods would be stored, several
    paths were open to it. It needed only to tell its Insured that it would grant
    “Approved Location” status only to an individual warehouse located at 56
    Branch Street, and that, if there was a possibility that the goods would be
    housed in other Chamad warehouse buildings, the Insured needed to so
    specify or run the risk of having coverage limited to the maximum for
    Unnamed Locations. Alternatively, Travelers could have simply worded its
    Policy to make this clear. Either avenue would have given Travelers the
    information permitting it to make an informed assessment of the risks
    attending the warehouse on Virginia Road or else limit its coverage
    responsibility to a level it was willing to accept without investigating the
    additional warehouses’ insurance worthiness. There is no basis for Travelers’
    claim that it was denied the opportunity to make an informed decision or that
    interpreting the Policy to cover the warehouse fronting on Virginia Road
    would be unfair to it.
    31
    Interpreting the Policy to include within “Approved Locations” any
    warehouses located at the address furnished by the Insured results solely
    from Travelers having written its Policy in an ambiguous manner that admits
    of that understanding. Travelers cannot fairly ask its insureds to bear the
    brunt of ambiguities that it wrote into its Policy. To the extent Travelers
    contends that so interpreting its Policy subjects it to unfairness, it is far less
    unfair than it would be for the court to rule that the Insured must bear the
    brunt of Travelers having misled it by presenting it with an ambiguous
    Policy, failing to warn that, despite the absence of anything in the Policy
    saying so, Approved status with its elevated limits will apply only to
    individually identified buildings and not to buildings reasonably identified
    by their collective addresses. 7
    We therefore reject Travelers’ arguments based on the contention that it
    was denied the opportunity to assess the insurability of the warehouse
    7Travelers argues, in addition, that being a large company experienced in the
    garment trade, the Insured should have understood that only a specifically
    identified warehouse would serve as an “Approved Location.” The argument
    has no merit as Travelers submitted no evidence to support the contention
    that this was the custom of the trade.
    32
    fronting on Virginia Road and would be subjected to unfairness by our
    reading the Policy that it wrote to say what it reasonably appears to say.
    C
    For such intractable circumstances, the law of New York furnishes a
    solution. When a contract of insurance is ambiguous and the evidence
    furnishes no basis for resolving the ambiguity, New York law provides that
    the court’s decision must favor the insured over the insurer as long as the
    insured’s interpretation is reasonable. See, e.g., Haber, 137 F.3d at 697–98;
    Thomas J. Lipton, Inc., 
    34 N.Y.2d at 361
    ; Int’l Bus. Machs., 
    18 N.Y.3d at
    646
    (citing Breed, 46 N.Y.2d at 353). As 56 Branch Street is the address of Chamad
    and of the 19.03-acre parcel on which sat the warehouse that suffered the fire,
    there is nothing unreasonable about the Insured’s interpretation of the
    Policy’s identification of the relevant “Approved Location” “CHAMAD
    WAREHOUSE, INC., 56 Branch Street” as covering the Chamad warehouse
    fronting on Virginia Road. Because the Insured’s interpretation of an
    ambiguity in the Policy is reasonable and unrebutted, judgment must be
    awarded to the Insured.
    33
    It is, of course, theoretically possible that, if the case were remanded for
    discovery and trial, Travelers might find and present evidence that would
    support its contentions. But, as noted above, both parties agreed to have the
    court hear cross-motions for summary judgment without prior discovery
    proceedings. Either party could have insisted on the opportunity to take
    discovery before being obliged to defend against the other side’s motion for
    summary judgment. See Fed. R. Civ. P 56(d) (“If a nonmovant shows by
    affidavit or declaration that, for specified reasons, it cannot present facts
    essential to justify its opposition, the court may: (1) defer considering the
    motion or deny it; (2) allow time to obtain affidavits or declarations or to take
    discovery; or (3) issue any other appropriate order.”). Both sides instead
    made the strategic decision to face the other side’s motion for summary
    judgment without discovery. As a consequence of that decision, Travelers,
    like the Insured, faced the risk that, if the record on the other side’s motion
    showed the other side’s entitlement to summary judgment, summary
    judgment would be granted, conclusively foreclosing any opportunity to take
    discovery. For the reasons described above, that is what the record showed.
    Under New York law’s requirement that unresolved ambiguities in a contract
    34
    of insurance be resolved against the insurer, the Insured showed entitlement
    to judgment.
    CONCLUSION
    For the foregoing reasons, the district court’s grant of summary
    judgment to Travelers is VACATED and this case is REMANDED with
    directions to enter judgment in favor of the Insured. Costs to the Insured.
    35
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 22-766

Filed Date: 12/26/2023

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 12/26/2023