Kaiser v. Allstate Indemnity Co. , 307 Neb. 562 ( 2020 )


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    12/31/2020 09:11 AM CST
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    Nebraska Supreme Court Advance Sheets
    307 Nebraska Reports
    KAISER v. ALLSTATE INDEMNITY CO.
    Cite as 
    307 Neb. 562
    Jeremy Kaiser, appellant, v. Allstate
    Indemnity Company, appellee.
    ___ N.W.2d ___
    Filed October 23, 2020.   No. S-19-858.
    1. Insurance: Contracts. Interpretation of an insurance policy is a ques-
    tion of law.
    2. Judgments: Appeal and Error. In reviewing questions of law, an
    appellate court must reach its own conclusions independent of the lower
    court’s conclusions.
    3. Summary Judgment: Appeal and Error. An appellate court reviews a
    district court’s grant of summary judgment de novo, viewing the record
    in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party and drawing all rea-
    sonable inferences in that party’s favor.
    4. Insurance: Contracts: Presumptions: Proof. In assessing which party
    in an insurance dispute bears the burden of proving or disproving cover-
    age, a court must first determine whether the insurance policy presump-
    tively extends coverage to all, or only to specific, perils.
    5. Insurance: Contracts. A specific perils policy covers limited risks and,
    by implication, excludes all other risks.
    6. ____: ____. An all perils policy impliedly covers all risks except those
    expressly addressed in the policy’s exclusion paragraphs.
    7. Insurance: Contracts: Presumptions: Proof. Under a specific perils
    policy, the insured carries the initial burden of proving that a provi-
    sion in the insurance policy requires the insurer to provide coverage
    for a specific type of loss. But that initial burden is presumed met in an
    all perils policy, provided the insured can show that covered property
    was damaged.
    8. Insurance: Contracts: Proof. Once the insured’s initial burden of prov-
    ing coverage is met, the insurer bears the burden of proving the applica-
    bility of an exclusion under the policy as an affirmative defense.
    9. Insurance: Contracts: Appeal and Error. An insurance policy is a
    contract, and an appellate court construes it like any other contract,
    according to the meaning of the terms that the parties have used.
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    KAISER v. ALLSTATE INDEMNITY CO.
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    307 Neb. 562
    10. ____: ____: ____. An appellate court gives terms in an insurance policy
    that are clear their plain and ordinary meaning as a reasonable person in
    the insured’s position would understand them.
    11. Insurance: Contracts. Terms in an insurance policy that are reasonably
    susceptible to multiple conflicting meanings are ambiguous and con-
    strued in favor of the insured.
    12. Words and Phrases. Contamination is the act of contaminating, the
    condition of being contaminated, defilement, pollution, or infection.
    13. Insurance: Contracts. Simply because multiple provisions in an insur-
    ance policy individually exclude coverage for a single peril does not
    mean that those terms are necessarily ambiguous.
    14. ____: ____. Whether terms in an insurance policy are individually
    ambiguous will depend on the susceptibility of their language to multiple
    reasonable meanings, not on whether they overlap with each other.
    15. Insurance: Contracts: Proof. If the insurer meets its burden of prov-
    ing the applicability of any exclusions under the policy as affirmative
    defenses, then the burden returns to the insured to prove the applicabil-
    ity of an exception to any exclusions.
    16. Words and Phrases. Because the phrase “sudden and accidental” is
    expressed in the conjunctive, it requires both sudden and accidental to
    be shown.
    17. Insurance: Courts. When an insured’s claim to his or her insurer is for
    one whole property loss, courts must frame the property loss accord-
    ingly, and not by its component parts.
    18. Time: Words and Phrases. An event occurring over a period of time is
    not sudden.
    19. Summary Judgment. Summary judgment is proper when the plead-
    ings and the evidence admitted at the hearing disclose that there is no
    genuine issue as to any material fact or as to the ultimate inferences that
    may be drawn from those facts and that the moving party is entitled to
    judgment as a matter of law.
    20. Summary Judgment: Appeal and Error. An appellate court will affirm
    a lower court’s grant of summary judgment if the pleadings and admit-
    ted evidence show that there is no genuine issue as to any material facts
    or as to the ultimate inferences that may be drawn from those facts and
    that the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.
    Appeal from the District Court for Douglas County: Leigh
    Ann Retelsdorf, Judge. Affirmed.
    Matthew P. Saathoff and Donald E. Loudner III, of Saathoff
    Law Group, P.C., L.L.O., for appellant.
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    Nebraska Supreme Court Advance Sheets
    307 Nebraska Reports
    KAISER v. ALLSTATE INDEMNITY CO.
    Cite as 
    307 Neb. 562
    Leslie S. Stryker Viehman and Brian D. Nolan, of Nolan,
    Olson & Stryker, P.C., L.L.O., for appellee.
    Heavican, C.J., Miller-Lerman, Cassel, Stacy, Funke,
    Papik, and Freudenberg, JJ.
    Heavican, C.J.
    I. INTRODUCTION
    Jeremy Kaiser filed an insurance claim alleging that his
    tenants damaged his rental house by producing or using meth-
    amphetamine indoors. Allstate Indemnity Company (Allstate)
    denied the claim. The district court granted summary judgment
    for Allstate, holding that the loss was excluded from coverage
    under Allstate’s insurance policy with Kaiser. Kaiser appeals.
    We moved Kaiser’s appeal to our docket to decide whether
    property loss from his tenants’ producing or using methamphet-
    amine indoors was a covered peril. We conclude that it is not
    and affirm the decision of the district court.
    II. FACTUAL BACKGROUND
    Kaiser owned real property in Omaha, Nebraska, that he
    maintained as a rental house. He carried a rental insurance
    policy for the property through Allstate. According to the
    policy, Allstate agreed to cover most direct physical loss to
    the property.
    However, as relevant here, paragraphs 12, 13(e) and (f), 18,
    and 19(d) excluded from coverage any property loss “consist-
    ing of or caused by” the following perils:
    12. Any type of vapors, fumes, acids, toxic chemicals,
    toxic gasses, toxic liquids, toxic solids, waste materials,
    [i]rritants, contaminants, or pollutants, [i]ncluding, but
    not limited to:
    a) lead in any form;
    b) asbestos in any form;
    c) radon in any form; or
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    d) oil, fuel oil, kerosene, liquid propane or gasoline
    intended for, or from, a storage tank located at the resi-
    dence premises.
    13. . . .
    ....
    e) Contamination, including, but not limited to, the
    presence of toxic, noxious, or hazardous gasses, chemi-
    cals, liquids, solids or other substances at the residence
    premises or in the air, land or water serving the resi-
    dence premises;
    f) Smog, smoke from the manufacturing of any con-
    trolled substance, agricultural smudging and industrial
    operations[.]
    ....
    18. Vandalism. However, we do cover sudden and acci-
    dental direct physical loss caused by fire resulting from
    vandalism unless your dwelling has been vacant or unoc-
    cupied for more than 90 consecutive days immediately
    prior to the vandalism.
    19. Any act of a tenant, or guests of a tenant, unless the
    act results in sudden and accidental direct physical loss
    caused by:
    ....
    d) [S]moke. However, we do not cover loss caused by
    smoke from the manufacturing of controlled substances,
    agricultural smudging or industrial operations[.]
    (Emphasis omitted.) The Allstate insurance policy further pro-
    vided that when property loss resulted from multiple causes,
    the loss was wholly excluded from coverage if “the predomi-
    nant cause(s) of loss is (are) excluded.”
    Kaiser did not make regular inspections of his rental house.
    Beginning in February 2013, he received reports from persons
    living near the property that the house was being used for drug-
    related activity.
    After his tenants voluntarily surrendered the property on
    May 1, 2013, Kaiser inspected the house and found evidence
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    KAISER v. ALLSTATE INDEMNITY CO.
    Cite as 
    307 Neb. 562
    of methamphetamine. Kaiser retained Absolute Bio Recovery
    Service to conduct preliminary tests of the house. Absolute
    Bio Recovery Service discovered methamphetamine vapor
    and residue throughout the house and recommended that the
    house be decontaminated before it could be safely rented to
    new tenants.
    On May 7, 2013, Kaiser submitted a claim to Allstate for the
    cleanup costs. On May 8, Allstate denied the claim.
    Despite the denial of coverage, Kaiser worked to remedi-
    ate and decontaminate the house throughout May 2013. He
    removed flooring, HVAC equipment, and light fixtures from
    the house, all of which had absorbed methamphetamine vapor
    and residue. He also hired Meth Lab Cleanup LLC, a com-
    pany that specialized in restorations of this kind. On May 26,
    Meth Lab Cleanup certified that the house was again fit for
    human habitation.
    On February 11, 2014, Kaiser filed a complaint against
    Allstate in the district court for Douglas County. Kaiser asserted
    two claims: breach of contract and bad faith. According to
    Kaiser, “[a]t sometime [sic] after April 15, 2012, the Tenants
    converted the Property into a methamphetamine lab and started
    producing methamphetamine.” According to the complaint,
    this claim should have been covered by Allstate as “vandalism
    and malicious mischief,” but it was wrongfully denied. Kaiser
    sought $38,361.80 for remediation costs, lost rent, and com-
    pensation from serving as the general contractor overseeing the
    house’s restoration. Allstate timely filed an answer disputing
    Kaiser’s claims.
    After some discovery, the parties filed cross-motions for
    summary judgment. Stating that it lacked “competent evidence
    of how the damage was actually caused,” the district court
    entered an order denying both motions.
    Kaiser filed an amended complaint alleging that he lacked
    sufficient knowledge as to whether the property loss was
    caused by his tenants’ using or manufacturing methamphet-
    amine. Allstate filed an amended answer in which it specifically
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    KAISER v. ALLSTATE INDEMNITY CO.
    Cite as 
    307 Neb. 562
    cited, as affirmative defenses, exclusions in paragraphs 9, 12,
    13(e) and (f), 18, and 19(d) of its insurance policy. Kaiser and
    Allstate both filed renewed cross-motions for summary judg-
    ment. Kaiser also filed a motion to file a second amended
    complaint, which the district court denied.
    On January 26, 2017, the district court issued an order
    granting Allstate’s motion for summary judgment and deny-
    ing Kaiser’s competing motion. The district court found that
    Kaiser’s tenants had manufactured methamphetamine in the
    house. Additionally, based on an affidavit from Allstate’s
    expert, a professor of chemistry at the University of Nebraska
    at Omaha, the district court found that methamphetamine dam-
    aged Kaiser’s property in two ways: first, “methamphetamine
    vapor is a toxic chemical, gas or liquid, depending upon the
    assumed physical state at a particular point in time,” and sec-
    ond, “[m]ethamphetamine residue is a contaminant, chemical
    residue and pollutant.” Accordingly, the district court agreed
    with Allstate that Kaiser’s property loss was excluded from
    coverage under paragraphs 12 and 13(e) and (f) of Allstate’s
    insurance policy. The district court also found that Kaiser’s
    property loss was not covered under paragraph 18 or para-
    graph 19(d).
    Kaiser appealed the district court’s summary judgment. This
    court summarily dismissed the appeal pursuant to Neb. Ct. R.
    App. P. § 2-107(A)(2) (rev. 2017) because we could not find
    that the district court had entered a final, appealable order. On
    remand, the district court issued an order clarifying that its
    previous order was intended to dismiss both Kaiser’s contract
    cause of action and his bad faith cause of action.
    Kaiser then filed the current notice of appeal.
    III. ASSIGNMENTS OF ERROR
    Kaiser assigns, consolidated and restated, that the district
    court erred in finding that (1) Kaiser’s property loss was
    excluded from coverage under paragraphs 12 and 13(e) and
    (f) of the Allstate insurance policy, (2) Kaiser’s property loss
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    KAISER v. ALLSTATE INDEMNITY CO.
    Cite as 
    307 Neb. 562
    was not covered under paragraph 18 or paragraph 19(d) of
    the Allstate insurance policy, and (3) summary judgment was
    improper because a genuine issue of material fact remained
    as to whether Kaiser’s property loss was caused by metham-
    phetamine production or use.
    IV. STANDARD OF REVIEW
    [1,2] Interpretation of an insurance policy is a question of
    law. 1 In reviewing questions of law, an appellate court must
    reach its own conclusions independent of the lower court’s
    conclusions. 2
    [3] An appellate court reviews the district court’s grant of
    summary judgment de novo, viewing the record in the light
    most favorable to the nonmoving party and drawing all reason-
    able inferences in that party’s favor. 3
    V. ANALYSIS
    1. Allstate Insurance Policy
    The issue presented on appeal is whether the district court
    erred in finding that under the Allstate insurance policy,
    Kaiser’s property loss was excluded from coverage.
    [4-6] In assessing which party in an insurance dispute bears
    the burden of proving or disproving coverage, a court must
    first determine whether the insurance policy presumptively
    extends coverage to all, or only to specific, perils. 4 A specific
    perils policy covers limited risks and, by implication, excludes
    all other risks. 5 In contrast, an all perils policy impliedly
    1
    See Henn v. American Family Mut. Ins. Co., 
    295 Neb. 859
    , 
    894 N.W.2d 179
    (2017).
    2
    See In re Estate of Adelung, 
    306 Neb. 646
    , 
    947 N.W.2d 269
    (2020).
    3
    Russell v. Franklin County, 
    306 Neb. 546
    , 
    946 N.W.2d 648
    (2020).
    4
    See Poulton v. State Farm Fire & Cas. Cos., 
    267 Neb. 569
    , 
    675 N.W.2d 665
    (2004) (citing 7 Lee R. Russ & Thomas F. Segalla, Couch on
    Insurance 3d § 101:7 (1997), and Annot., 
    30 A.L.R. 170
    (1995)).
    5
    See Poulton, supra note 4.
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    KAISER v. ALLSTATE INDEMNITY CO.
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    c­ overs all risks except those expressly addressed in the policy’s
    exclusion paragraphs. 6
    [7,8] Under a specific perils policy, the insured carries the
    initial burden of proving that a provision in the insurance
    policy requires the insurer to provide coverage for a specific
    type of loss. 7 But that initial burden is presumed met in an
    all perils policy, provided the insured can show that covered
    property was damaged. 8 Once the initial burden of proving
    coverage is met, the insurer bears the burden of proving the
    applicability of an exclusion under the policy as an affirma-
    tive defense. 9
    Here, Kaiser characterizes his Allstate policy as an all per-
    ils policy. Allstate did not dispute that characterization in its
    brief or at oral argument. Thus, assuming that Kaiser’s char-
    acterization is accurate, Kaiser met his initial burden when
    the parties stipulated that at the relevant time, the damaged
    property was covered under the Allstate insurance policy. It
    is, in turn, Allstate’s burden to prove that the property loss
    from Kaiser’s tenants’ producing or using methamphetamine
    in the house was specifically excluded from coverage by
    its policy.
    (a) Paragraphs 12 and 13(e) and (f)
    The district court found that Allstate met its burden of proof
    by showing that Kaiser’s property loss was caused by the pres-
    ence of “methamphetamine vapor” and “[m]ethamphetamine
    residue” in the house. According to the district court, this
    meant that the property loss was excluded under paragraphs
    6
    See
    id. 7
        See
    id. 8
        See Gage County v. Employers Mut. Cas. Co., 
    304 Neb. 926
    , 
    937 N.W.2d 863
    (2020).
    9
    See
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    KAISER v. ALLSTATE INDEMNITY CO.
    Cite as 
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    12 and 13(e) and (f) of the Allstate insurance policy because
    methamphetamine vapor is “a toxic chemical, gas or liquid,
    depending upon the assumed physical state at a particular point
    in time,” and methamphetamine residue is “a contaminant,
    chemical residue and pollutant.” Kaiser assigns first that this
    characterization was in error because the terms in paragraphs
    12 and 13(e) and (f) are ambiguous.
    [9-11] An insurance policy is a contract, and an appellate
    court construes it like any other contract, according to the
    meaning of the terms that the parties have used. 10 An appel-
    late court gives terms in an insurance policy that are clear
    their plain and ordinary meaning as a reasonable person in the
    insured’s position would understand them. 11 But terms that are
    reasonably susceptible to multiple conflicting meanings are
    ambiguous and construed in favor of the insured. 12
    We disagree with Kaiser that the terms in paragraphs 12
    and 13(e) and (f) are ambiguous. Paragraph 12 specifically
    excludes coverage for any property loss caused by or consist-
    ing of “vapors, fumes, acids, toxic chemicals, toxic gasses,
    toxic liquids, toxic solids, waste materials, [i]rritants, contami-
    nants, or pollutants.” And paragraph 13(e) and (f) uses similar
    language, excluding coverage for any property loss caused by
    or consisting of “[s]mog” or “[c]ontamination, including, but
    not limited to, the presence of toxic, noxious, or hazardous
    gasses, chemicals, liquids, solids or other substances at the
    residence premises . . . .” (Emphasis omitted.)
    [12] Although they are not defined in the insurance pol-
    icy itself, the relevant terms are contained in standard dic-
    tionaries. Contamination is “[t]he action of contaminating,
    or condition of being contaminated; defilement, pollution,
    10
    Van Kleek v. Farmers Ins. Exch., 
    289 Neb. 730
    , 
    857 N.W.2d 297
    (2014).
    11
    Id. 12
         See
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    infection.” 13 The terms in paragraphs 12 and 13(f) are also
    defined. 14
    Throughout his brief, Kaiser himself repeatedly referred to
    the property damage as “contamination” and his restoration
    efforts as “decontamination.” In corresponding with Kaiser,
    the contractors he hired to restore the house also identified
    the damage they encountered as contamination. In its work
    plan for the house, Absolute Bio Recovery Service described
    using a variety of techniques “to address contamination,”
    and in its “Final Report Methamphetamine Decontamination,”
    Meth Lab Cleanup identified the scope of its work as involv-
    ing a “decontamination and post remedial assessment.” At the
    time, Kaiser did not object to these characterizations of the
    property loss as contamination. This evidence goes to show
    that Kaiser, as the insured, reasonably interpreted the term
    “contamination” as encompassing the type of property damage
    he experienced.
    [13,14] As Kaiser now suggests, definitions of the terms in
    paragraphs 12 and 13(e) and (f) indicate that several of these
    terms are synonymous. But his conclusion that the terms are
    13
    “Contamination,” Oxford English Dictionary Online, http://www.oed.com/
    view/Entry/40057 (last visited Oct. 10, 2020).
    14
    See, e.g., “Vapor,” Oxford English Dictionary Online, http://www.oed.com/
    view/Entry/221469 (last visited Oct. 10, 2020); “Fume,” Oxford English
    Dictionary Online, http://www.oed.com/view/Entry/75429 (last visited
    Oct. 10, 2020); “Acid,” Oxford English Dictionary Online, http://www.
    oed.com/view/Entry/1547 (last visited Oct. 10, 2020); “Toxic,” Oxford
    English Dictionary Online, http://www.oed.com/view/Entry/204104 (last
    visited Oct. 10, 2020); “Waste,” Oxford English Dictionary Online, http://
    www.oed.com/view/Entry/226027 (last visited Oct. 10, 2020); “Irritant,”
    Oxford English Dictionary Online, http://www.oed.com/view/Entry/99857
    (last visited Oct. 10, 2020); “Contaminant,” Oxford English Dictionary
    Online, http://www.oed.com/view/Entry/40053 (last visited Oct. 10, 2020);
    “Pollutant,” Oxford English Dictionary Online, http://www.oed.com/
    view/Entry/146987 (last visited Oct. 10, 2020); “Smog,” Oxford English
    Dictionary Online, http://www.oed.com/view/Entry/182692 (last visited
    Oct. 10, 2020).
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    inherently ambiguous does not follow. Simply because mul-
    tiple provisions in an insurance policy individually exclude
    coverage for a single peril does not mean that those terms
    are necessarily ambiguous. 15 Instead, a well-written insurance
    policy will likely have terms that overlap, which might sup-
    port the denial of coverage on several grounds in an appropri-
    ate case. 16 Whether those terms are individually ambiguous
    will depend on the susceptibility of their language to multiple
    reasonable meanings, not on whether the terms overlap with
    each other. 17 Kaiser has failed to specifically identify any sec-
    ond meanings to which the terms are reasonably susceptible
    in context.
    Accordingly, Kaiser’s argument that the terms in paragraphs
    12 and 13(e) and (f) are ambiguous and so should be construed
    with different meanings than the district court assigned to them
    is without merit. Like the rest of these terms, “contamination”
    is readily defined in standard dictionaries, and Kaiser himself
    used and accepted the term in describing the restoration of his
    house. The district court did not err in finding that Kaiser’s
    property loss was excluded from coverage as “contamination,”
    among other perils, under paragraphs 12 and 13(e) and (f) of
    the Allstate insurance policy. Kaiser’s first assignment of error
    is without merit.
    (b) Paragraphs 18 and 19(d)
    Kaiser next assigns that even if the district court did not err
    in finding his property loss was excluded under paragraphs
    12 and 13(e) and (f), the district court still erred in not grant-
    ing him relief under two other paragraphs of the Allstate
    insurance policy. Specifically, Kaiser points to paragraphs 18
    and 19(d). Although paragraph 18 generally excludes from
    15
    See, e.g., American Fam. Mut. Ins. Co. v. Wheeler, 
    287 Neb. 250
    , 
    842 N.W.2d 100
    (2014).
    16
    See
    id. 17
         See Henn, supra note 1.
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    coverage “vandalism,” it provides an exception for “sudden
    and accidental direct physical loss caused by fire resulting
    from vandalism.” (Emphasis omitted.) Likewise, although
    paragraph 19 excludes from coverage property loss result-
    ing from most “act[s] of a tenant,” paragraph 19 provides an
    exception for “[a]ny act of a tenant [that] results in sudden
    and accidental direct physical loss caused by . . . d) smoke.”
    (Emphasis omitted.)
    According to Kaiser, his property loss was predominantly
    caused in accordance with these exceptions. And the insur-
    ance policy provides that when there are two or more causes
    of loss to the covered property, coverage is only excluded if
    the predominant cause of loss is excluded. Therefore, Kaiser
    contends that even if his property loss was excluded from
    coverage under paragraphs 12 and 13(e) and (f) of the Allstate
    insurance policy, the language regarding two or more causes
    of loss should provide relief because the perils described in
    paragraphs 18 and 19(d) were the predominant causes of loss.
    We disagree.
    [15] If the insurer meets its burden of proving the applicabil-
    ity of any exclusions under the policy as affirmative defenses,
    then the burden returns to the insured to prove the applicability
    of an exception to any exclusions. 18 Here, as discussed above,
    paragraphs 18 and 19 contain exceptions to the exclusions for
    “vandalism” and “act[s] of a tenant.” (Emphasis omitted.) In
    order for the exceptions to those exclusions to apply, Kaiser
    has the burden to show that the harm was the “sudden and
    accidental” result of fire or smoke.
    In support of his argument that he comes within these
    exceptions, Kaiser cites to insurance law cases from other
    jurisdictions in which vandalism has been inferred by ten-
    ants’ using and manufacturing illegal substances that resulted
    18
    See Dutton-Lainson Co. v. Continental Ins. Co., 
    271 Neb. 810
    , 
    716 N.W.2d 87
    (2006).
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    in property damage. 19 We need not decide here whether to
    follow those other jurisdictions because we conclude that
    Kaiser has failed to show that his property loss was “sudden
    and accidental.”
    We have previously construed the phrase “sudden and
    accidental” in an insurance policy. In Dutton-Lainson Co. v.
    Continental Ins. Co., 20 we construed the phrase in the con-
    text of an exception to a pollution exclusion. After incurring
    costs from an environmental cleanup of pollutants used in its
    manufacturing operations over some 37 years, Dutton-Lainson
    Company (Dutton-Lainson) filed a claim for indemnification
    with its insurer. Continental Insurance Company (Continental
    Insurance) denied the claim, however, under an exclusion
    for losses caused by pollution. In response, Dutton-Lainson
    claimed that a sudden and accidental exception to the pollution
    exclusion applied. The parties presented these arguments in
    district court, and thereafter, the district court granted summary
    judgment to Continental Insurance. Dutton-Lainson appealed,
    renewing its argument that the sudden and accidental exception
    to the pollution exclusion applied. 21
    We rejected Dutton-Lainson’s argument. First, we found
    that “[s]ince the ‘sudden and accidental’ exception to the
    pollution exclusion clause [was] expressed in the conjunc-
    tive, both requirements must be met for the exception to
    become operative.” 22 We then reviewed how other courts had
    interpreted the term “sudden” as a necessary component of
    the phrase:
    Courts have disagreed as to whether “sudden” refers
    to something temporally abrupt from an objective
    19
    See, e.g., Livaditis v. American Casualty Co. of Reading, Pa., 117 Ga.
    App. 297, 
    160 S.E.2d 449
    (1968); Bowers v. Farmers Ins. Exchange, 
    99 Wash. App. 41
    , 
    991 P.2d 734
    (2000); Graff v. Allstate Ins. Co., 113 Wash.
    App. 799, 
    54 P.3d 1266
    (2002).
    20
    Dutton-Lainson Co., supra note 18.
    21
    See
    id. 22
         Id. at 821, 716 
    N.W.2d at 97.
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    standpoint, something unexpected from the subjective
    standpoint of the insured, or whether the term is ambig­
    uous. In considering the meaning of the term “sudden,”
    several courts have noted that recognized dictionaries dif-
    fer as to its meaning. 23
    For example, we noted that definitions of the term “sudden”
    varied in recognized dictionaries between having primarily to
    do with a lack of notice and with a rate of occurrence. 24
    In any event, however, we found that under the terms of the
    policy, pollution that occurred over a significant period of time
    was not covered as “sudden.” 25 “[A] reasonable person in the
    position of the insured would understand the term ‘sudden,’
    as found in the context of the qualified pollution exclusion, to
    refer to the objectively temporally abrupt release of pollutants
    into the environment.” 26 Thus, we affirmed the district court’s
    grant of Continental Insurance’s motion for summary judg-
    ment. Dutton-Lainson’s loss from pollution that occurred over
    a period of 37 years was not sudden. 27
    23
    Id. 24
         See
    id. at 821-22, 716
    N.W.2d at 97-98 (comparing term “sudden” as
    defined in “Webster’s Third New International Dictionary of the English
    Language, Unabridged 2284 (1993), [as] ‘happening without previous
    notice or with very brief notice; coming or occurring unexpectedly; not
    foreseen or prepared for’”; with term “sudden” as defined in “Black’s Law
    Dictionary 1432 (6th ed. 1990) [as] ‘[h]appening without previous notice
    or with very brief notice; coming or occurring unexpectedly; unforeseen;
    unprepared for’”; and with term “sudden” as defined in “Random House
    Dictionary of the English Language 1900 (2d ed. 1987) . . . as ‘happening,
    coming, made, or done quickly’”). See, also, “Sudden,” Oxford English
    Dictionary Online, http://www.oed.com./view/Entry/193468 (last visited
    Oct. 10, 2020) (“[h]appening or coming without warning or premonition;
    taking place or appearing all at once”).
    25
    See Dutton-Lainson Co., supra note 18.
    26
    Id. at 823-24, 716
    N.W.2d at 99.
    27
    See
    id. Accord, Mapes Indus.
    v. United States F. & G. Co., 
    252 Neb. 154
    ,
    
    560 N.W.2d 814
    (1997); Bituminous Cas. Corp. v. Aaron Ferer and Sons
    Co., No. 4:06CV3128, 
    2007 WL 2066452
    (D. Neb. July 16, 2007).
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    [16] Our analysis here is similar. As in Dutton-Lainson,
    the Allstate insurance policy expresses the phrase “sudden
    and accidental” in the conjunctive. Therefore, to carry his
    burden of proving coverage under paragraph 18 or paragraph
    19(d), Kaiser must show that his property loss resulted in
    direct physical loss that was both “sudden and accidental.”
    Because we conclude that Kaiser has failed to show that his
    property loss was sudden, we need not determine whether it
    was accidental.
    Kaiser’s argument that the property loss was sudden rests
    on his assertion that as a result of his tenants’ producing
    or using methamphetamine indoors, methamphetamine vapor
    and residue “quickly bonded to most surfaces throughout the
    rental house.” 28 Because this bonding occurred “quickly,”
    Kaiser would have us infer that the resulting property loss
    as a whole was sudden. But this argument wrongly frames
    the issue.
    In Dutton-Lainson, we could also have framed the property
    loss as the result of numerous sudden discharges of pollutants
    over 37 years. 29 Likely, some amount of the pollutants at issue
    had escaped quickly every day, each time contributing to the
    ultimate loss for which Dutton-Lainson sought indemnification
    from Continental Insurance. But we opted against framing the
    property loss in terms of its smallest components. 30 Instead,
    because Dutton-Lainson sought indemnification for one prop-
    erty loss—that is, the cleanup from one pollution—we framed
    it accordingly. And because that one property loss occurred
    over a period of 37 years, it was not sudden. 31
    28
    Brief for appellant at 29.
    29
    See Dutton-Lainson Co., supra note 18.
    30
    See
    id. 31
         See
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    [17] Here, too, Kaiser’s claim to Allstate is for one whole
    property loss, not its component parts. Kaiser leased the whole
    property to tenants. Allstate insured the whole property from
    certain perils. The tenants produced or used methamphetamine
    in the house and thereby rendered the house uninhabitable as a
    whole. Kaiser filed a claim to Allstate demanding payment for
    the whole loss. Thus, we frame the property loss at issue not
    by each release of methamphetamine vapor and residue, but by
    the loss that resulted from their many releases and for which
    Kaiser sought indemnification. We decline to embrace Kaiser’s
    logic of death by a thousand paper cuts.
    Viewed through a proper frame, then, the evidence in
    the record indicates that Kaiser’s property loss as a whole
    occurred over time, not suddenly. Kaiser himself testified
    that his tenants resided at the property for more than a year,
    from April 15, 2012, until May 1, 2013. He received reports
    throughout the year from persons living near the house that
    the house was being used for suspicious drug-related activi-
    ties. On at least one occasion, in April 2013, Kaiser learned
    that someone living there had “got[ten] in trouble for doing
    meth last night.”
    Although he did not know specifically when during that year
    the tenants began producing or using methamphetamine in the
    house, Kaiser indicated in his amended complaint that such
    producing or using could have occurred as soon as April 15,
    2012, the day the tenants took possession of the house. Kaiser
    specifically stated that to the best of his knowledge, the use or
    production of methamphetamine was ongoing throughout the
    tenancy: “the Tenants who were occupying the Property had
    been using methamphetamine in the Property and/or operat-
    ing an illegal methamphetamine lab on the Property, unbe-
    knownst to [Kaiser].” (Emphases supplied.) The phrases “had
    been using” and “[had been] operating” imply that the tenants’
    use of methamphetamine or operation of a methamphetamine
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    laboratory in the house occurred in the past but on a contin­
    uous, ongoing basis. 32
    It was Kaiser’s burden to prove that his property loss
    occurred “suddenly and accidentally.” But Kaiser did not put
    forth any evidence that his property loss occurred in this way.
    To the contrary, the evidence that Kaiser himself offered indi-
    cates that the loss actually occurred as the result of his tenants’
    smoking or producing methamphetamine in the house on an
    ongoing basis over a significant period of time, perhaps up to
    a year.
    [18] But “an event occurring over a period of time is not
    sudden.” 33 Thus, just as we held in Dutton-Lainson that pol-
    lution occurring over 37 years was not sudden, 34 we now also
    hold that a property loss from methamphetamine vapor and res-
    idue occurring by indoor methamphetamine use or production
    over a period of months or more is not sudden. A reasonable
    person in Kaiser’s position would not understand “sudden”
    to refer to a property loss occurring over a period of months.
    Kaiser has failed to carry his burden of proving otherwise.
    Because Kaiser has failed to carry his burden of proving
    that his property loss was sudden and accidental, he has also
    failed to carry his burden of proving that his property loss was
    covered as predominantly caused in accordance with para-
    graphs 18 and 19(d). The district court did not err in finding
    Kaiser’s property loss was excluded from coverage under para-
    graphs 12 and 13(e) and (f) of the Allstate insurance policy and
    32
    See The Chicago Manual of Style ¶ 5.120 (15th ed. 2003); “Past perfect
    continuous,” Cambridge Dictionary Online, http://www.dictionary.cam­
    bridge.org/us/grammar/british-grammar/past-perfect-continuous (last vis­
    ited Oct. 10, 2020) (as defined in grammar section: “[W]e use the past
    perfect continuous to talk about actions or events which started before
    a particular time in the past and were still in progress up to that time in
    the past”).
    33
    Dutton-Lainson Co., supra note 
    18, 271 Neb. at 823
    , 716 N.W.2d at 99.
    34
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    not covered under paragraph 18 or paragraph 19(d). Kaiser’s
    second assignment of error is without merit.
    2. Summary Judgment
    Kaiser next assigns that the district court erred in grant-
    ing Allstate’s motion for summary judgment because a gen­
    uine issue of material fact remained as to whether Kaiser’s
    property loss was caused by the tenants’ producing or using
    methamphetamine.
    In its order, the district court concluded that the evidence
    from Allstate’s expert indicated that the tenants’ metham-
    phetamine production, not use, caused Kaiser’s property loss.
    Kaiser disputes this factual finding. He contends that although
    in his initial complaint he claimed his property loss was the
    result of methamphetamine production, he did not have a basis
    for that conclusion and now believes it could have been meth-
    amphetamine use instead. Kaiser accordingly assigns that sum-
    mary judgment was not proper. We disagree.
    [19,20] Summary judgment is proper when the pleadings
    and the evidence admitted at the hearing disclose that there
    is no genuine issue as to any material fact or as to the ulti-
    mate inferences that may be drawn from those facts and that
    the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. 35
    An appellate court will affirm a lower court’s grant of sum-
    mary judgment if the pleadings and admitted evidence show
    that there is no genuine issue as to any material facts or as
    to the ultimate inferences that may be drawn from those facts
    and that the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter
    of law. 36
    Here, it is immaterial whether Kaiser’s tenants damaged
    the house by producing or using methamphetamine indoors.
    As both parties and both parties’ experts testified, the cause of
    loss was “methamphetamine vapor” and “methamphetamine
    35
    Arnold v. Walz, 
    306 Neb. 179
    , 
    944 N.W.2d 747
    (2020).
    36
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    residue.” Based on that evidence, the district court correctly
    concluded that the property loss was excluded from coverage
    under paragraphs 12 and 13(e) and (f) of the Allstate insurance
    policy and was not covered under paragraphs 18 and 19(d).
    Even if, as Kaiser urges, we were to find that a genuine factual
    dispute remained, the dispositive fact remains that metham-
    phetamine vapor and methamphetamine residue are excluded
    causes of loss under the Allstate insurance policy. Therefore,
    whether the methamphetamine vapor and methamphetamine
    residue were released inside the house through production or
    through use is immaterial to this court’s ultimate conclusions
    of law.
    We concur with the district court’s grant of summary judg-
    ment. Kaiser’s third assignment of error is without merit.
    VI. CONCLUSION
    The district court’s order granting Allstate’s motion for sum-
    mary judgment is affirmed.
    Affirmed.