ACGS Marine Insurance Company v. Spring Center, Inc. ( 2014 )


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  • Affirmed and Memorandum Opinion filed April 29, 2014.
    In The
    Fourteenth Court of Appeals
    NO. 14-13-00417-CV
    ACGS MARINE INSURANCE COMPANY, Appellant
    V.
    SPRING CENTER, INC., Appellee
    On Appeal from the 11th District Court
    Harris County, Texas
    Trial Court Cause No. 2011-09454
    MEMORANDUM OPINION
    Appellant ACGS Marine Insurance Company asserts that the trial court
    erroneously granted a partial summary judgment in favor of appellee Spring
    Center, Inc.   Specifically, the trial court found a policy condition excluding
    coverage in a limited commercial property insurance policy is ambiguous and,
    thus, construed the condition in favor of coverage. We affirm.
    BACKGROUND
    Spring Center owns a business park in the Houston area consisting of eleven
    buildings, all surrounded by a single fence. It leases space within its eleven
    buildings to various businesses, including those providing light manufacturing,
    storage, and light machine repair, among others.       Spring Center also has a
    management office located on the property that is staffed during normal business
    hours. It purchased a limited commercial property insurance policy from ACGS
    providing coverage to the property from January 1, 2010 to January 1, 2011 (the
    Policy).
    On August 13, 2012, a vacant building in the business park was broken into
    and “completely stripped of electrical wiring.” Major damage was done to the
    offices and exterior doors were broken. Spring Center timely notified ACGS of
    the damage and requested coverage under the Policy. During its investigation,
    ACGS learned from Spring Center’s representative that the building had been
    vacant for about four months prior to the loss. ACGS informed Spring Center in
    writing that it would not cover the damage based on the following Policy
    condition:
    Vacancy – Unoccupancy – “We” do not pay for loss caused by
    attempted “theft”; breakage of building glass; sprinkler leakage
    (unless “you” have protected the system against freezing); “theft”;
    vandalism; or water damage occurring while the building or structure
    has been:
    a.     vacant for more than 60 consecutive days; or
    b.     unoccupied for more than:
    1)    60 consecutive days; or
    2)    the usual or incidental unoccupancy of a “covered
    location”;
    whichever is longer.
    2
    ...
    Unoccupied means that the customary activities or operations at a
    “covered location” are suspended, but business personal property has
    not been removed. The building or structure will be considered
    vacant and not unoccupied when the occupants have moved, leaving
    the building or structure empty or containing only limited business
    personal property. Buildings or structures under construction are not
    considered vacant or unoccupied.
    Following ACGS’s denial of coverage, Spring Center sued ACGS, asserting
    contractual and extra-contractual claims. ACGS moved for summary judgment on,
    as is relevant here, whether it properly denied coverage for Spring Center’s loss
    under this Policy condition. The trial court denied ACGS’s motion, stating: “The
    Court believes that a ‘covered location’ for purposes of the insurance policy in
    question included all eleven buildings contained within the fenced area. These
    eleven buildings were collectively insured as one property by one policy with one
    vacancy clause that applied to the property as a whole.”
    Spring Center filed a partial summary judgment motion on liability,
    centering on “an interpretation of the Policy’s vacancy exclusion.” ACGS filed a
    response, asserting similar arguments as it had in its summary judgment motion
    and arguing that its previously denied summary judgment motion should be
    reconsidered and granted. The trial court granted partial summary judgment in
    favor of Spring Center on the following grounds:
    The court finds an ambiguity exists in the insurance policy regarding
    whether the vacancy clause applies to each of the 11 buildings at the
    covered location separately as ACGS contends, or to all 11 buildings
    collectively as Spring Center contends. The vacancy/unoccupancy
    condition uses both the phrases “the building or structure’’ and
    “covered location” in defining what must be not vacant/occupied in
    order for coverage to exist. Notably this condition does not use the
    phrase “each building or structure.” It is undisputed that the “covered
    location” is 22820 Interstate 45 North, Spring, TX 77373, which is a
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    fenced business park with 11 separate buildings. The Schedule of
    Coverage references the property contained on the Location Schedule
    with regard to what property was covered. The Location Schedule
    describes the “Covered Property” as a “Building” with a single limit
    of $10,350,000.
    The coinsurance provisions state: “If there is more than one
    ‘limit’ indicated on the ‘schedule of coverage,’ this procedure applies
    separately to each covered property for which a ‘limit’ applies. If
    there is one ‘limit’ indicated on the ‘schedule of coverage,’ this
    applies to the total of all covered property to which the ‘limit’
    applies.” This language eliminates any ambiguity regarding whether
    the coinsurance clause is to be applied to each building separately or
    to the property as a whole.
    The Windstorm or Hail Deductible provisions state: “The
    windstorm or hail percentage deductible applies separately to: a. each
    building or structure . . . .” This language also eliminates any
    ambiguity regarding how the windstorm or hail deductible is to be
    applied.
    No      similar     language      is   used     regarding    the
    vacancy/unoccupancy condition, making the condition ambiguous.
    ACGS Marine does not dispute that ambiguities in insurance policies
    are construed in favor of the insured. The court therefore construes
    the vacancy/unoccupancy condition as applying only if the entire
    business park at the covered location was vacant or unoccupied.
    Since it is undisputed that the entire covered location was not vacant
    at the time of the loss, there is coverage for Plaintiff’s damages
    pursuant to the terms of the policy.
    The parties subsequently settled the extra-contractual claims and entered a
    confidential agreement regarding the amount of damages. The trial court signed a
    final, appealable judgment on April 11, 2013. This appeal timely followed.
    ANALYSIS
    When both parties move for summary judgment and the trial court grants
    one motion and denies the other, the reviewing court should review all the
    summary judgment evidence, determine all questions presented, and render the
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    judgment the trial court should have rendered. Mid–Continent Cas. Co. v. Global
    Enercom Mgmt., Inc., 
    323 S.W.3d 151
    , 153–54 (Tex. 2010). We analyze disputes
    over the interpretation of insurance contracts using the well-established principles
    of contract construction, attempting to determine the parties’ intent through the
    language of the policy. 
    Id. at 154.
    That the parties may disagree about the policy’s
    meaning does not create an ambiguity; only if the policy is subject to two or more
    reasonable interpretations is it ambiguous. State Farm Lloyds v. Page, 
    315 S.W.3d 525
    , 527 (Tex. 2010). When an ambiguity involves an exclusionary provision of
    an insurance policy, we adopt the construction urged by the insured so long as that
    construction is not unreasonable, even if the construction urged by the insurer
    appears to be more reasonable or to more accurately reflect the parties’ intent.
    Gilbert Constr., L.P. v. Underwriters at Lloyd’s London, 
    327 S.W.3d 118
    , 132
    (Tex. 2010) (quoting Balandran v. Safeco Ins. Co. of Am., 
    972 S.W.2d 738
    , 741
    (Tex. 1998)).
    As noted above, the parties disagree about the interpretation of the
    “Vacancy – Unoccupancy” condition.        In its summary judgment motion and
    response to Spring Center’s motion, ACGS asserted that the phrase “the building
    or structure” used in this condition must refer to a single building or structure.
    ACGS contended that the plain language of the condition applies to a singular
    “building or structure,” not to the vacancy of a “covered location.” ACGS’s
    construction finds the following support within the policy language:
    • “We” cover direct physical loss to covered property at a “covered
    location” caused by a covered peril.
    • Covered Building Property – Covered Building Property means
    buildings and structures . . . .
    • “Covered Location” means any location or premises where “you”
    have buildings, structures, or business personal property covered
    under this coverage. However, if the Scheduled Locations
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    Endorsement is added to this policy, “covered location” means a
    location that is described on the Location Schedule.
    • The windstorm or hail percentage deductible applies separately
    to . . . each building or structure, including business personal
    property within each building or structure.
    • Collapse of a building or structure, any part of a building or
    structure, or personal property inside a building or structure . . . .
    Based on this policy language, ACGS argued the Policy indicates that
    multiple buildings and structures can be present at one “covered location.” It
    contended that “where several buildings in a warehouse complex are insured under
    a blanket policy, it is proper to evaluate the loss to individual buildings, rather than
    to determine the loss to the complex as a whole.”1 ACGS asserted that the use of
    the singular term “building or structure” in the Policy is crucial because it indicated
    a difference in application. Finally, ACGS urged that Spring Center’s
    interpretation of the policy is unreasonable because it “would require the Court to
    ignore the plain language indicating losses to ‘a building or structure,’ and the
    same is true of other Policy terms.”
    Spring Center, on the other hand, asserted in its summary judgment motion
    that the Policy, when read as a whole, identifies and insures only one “covered
    location,” not the separate buildings at that location. Spring Center’s construction
    also finds support with the policy language:
    • The “covered location” definition, excerpted above.
    • The Policy’s Schedule of Coverages, which is stated as a catastrophe
    limit applied to the property as a whole and refers to the Location
    Schedule for the limits and coinsurance penalty.
    • The Location Schedule, indicating a single covered location at 22820
    Interstate 45 North, Spring, TX 77373, identified as a “Building.”
    1
    See 12 Steven Plitt et al., Couch on Insurance § 177:72 (3rd ed. 1995).
    6
    Spring Center contended that ACGS’s asserted interpretation “ignores that the
    Policy insures one property location only and not separately the individual
    buildings at that location.”
    The “Vacancy – Unoccupied” condition refers to both a “building or
    structure” and a “covered location.” The term “covered location” is defined by the
    Policy: if the Policy contains a Scheduled Locations Endorsement, the “covered
    location” means a location described on the Location Schedule.           The Policy
    contains a Scheduled Locations Endorsement. Thus, the term “covered location”
    in the Policy means a location described on the Location Schedule. As indicated
    above, the Location Schedule only contains a single location, 22820 Interstate 45
    North, Spring, TX 77373, identified as a “Building.” Although it is undisputed
    that the specific “building” at issue was vacant for more than 60 days before the
    theft occurred, it is likewise undisputed that the “Building” insured under the
    policy was not vacant for more than 60 consecutive days before the theft occurred.
    Based on the plain language of the policy as a whole, it is not unreasonable
    to interpret the vacancy portion of the “Vacancy – Unoccupied” condition to
    require that the entirety of the “Building” located at 22820 Interstate 45 North—
    the only “building” specifically identified in the Policy—be vacant for more than
    60 consecutive days before this condition excluded coverage in the event of a theft.
    See Mid–Continent Cas. 
    Co., 323 S.W.3d at 154
    (providing reviewing courts
    attempt to discern the parties’ intent by looking at the language of the policy). And
    even if the construction urged by ACGS appears to be more reasonable or to more
    accurately reflect the parties’ intent, we adopt the construction of Spring Center
    because it is not unreasonable. See Gilbert Constr., 
    L.P., 327 S.W.3d at 132
    .
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    For the foregoing reasons, we conclude that the trial court did not err in
    granting Spring Center partial summary judgment on liability.      We therefore
    overrule ACGS’s sole appellate issue.
    The judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
    /s/       Sharon McCally
    Justice
    Panel consists of Justices McCally, Busby, and Donovan.
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