Poulsen v. Farmers Insurance Exchange , 819 Utah Adv. Rep. 42 ( 2016 )


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    2016 UT App 170
    THE UTAH COURT OF APPEALS
    ANNALEE POULSEN AND TROY POULSEN,
    Appellants,
    v.
    FARMERS INSURANCE EXCHANGE,
    Appellee.
    Opinion
    No. 20150498-CA
    Filed August 4, 2016
    Fourth District Court, Spanish Fork Department
    The Honorable M. James Brady
    No. 140300091
    Denver C. Snuffer Jr. and Steven R. Paul, Attorneys
    for Appellants
    S. Grace Acosta and Alisha Giles, Attorneys
    for Appellee
    JUDGE MICHELE M. CHRISTIANSEN authored this Opinion, in
    which JUDGE STEPHEN L. ROTH and SENIOR JUDGE JUDITH M.
    BILLINGS concurred.1
    CHRISTIANSEN, Judge:
    ¶1     This case requires us to consider whether an insurance
    policy covered water damage to a house without a complete
    roof. We affirm the district court’s summary judgment, which
    rested on the conclusion that the policy did not provide such
    coverage.
    1. Senior Judge Judith M. Billings sat by special assignment as
    authorized by law. See generally Utah R. Jud. Admin. 11-201(6).
    Poulsen v. Farmers Insurance Exchange
    BACKGROUND
    ¶2     Annalee Poulsen and Troy Poulsen purchased a
    homeowner’s insurance policy from Farmers Insurance
    Exchange to cover their primary residence. The policy generally
    excluded from coverage water intrusion into the house with
    certain exceptions outlined in a limited water coverage
    provision, which we refer to as the LWC Provision:
    We provide limited coverage for direct physical
    loss or damage to covered property from direct
    contact with water, but only if the water results
    from:
    (1) the build-up of ice on portions of the roof or
    roof gutters on a building structure;
    (2) hail, rain, snow, or sleet entering through an
    opening in the roof or wall of a building
    structure only if the opening is first caused by
    damage from the direct force of the following:
    i.     fire;
    ii.    lightning;
    iii.   explosion (other than nuclear explosion);
    iv.    riot or civil commotion;
    v.     aircraft or vehicles;
    vi.    vandalism or malicious mischief;
    vii. collapse of a building structure or
    structural part of the building structure;
    viii. falling objects; or
    ix.    windstorm.
    ¶3     In short, and as relevant to these facts, the insurance
    policy did not cover water damage unless the water entered
    through an opening in the roof caused by a windstorm. The
    LWC Provision further specified that temporary coverings were
    not to be considered as roofs, in a clause we refer to as the
    Temporary-Roof Exception:
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    Poulsen v. Farmers Insurance Exchange
    The foregoing specified causes of loss are subject to
    the terms and limitations set forth in Section I . . . ,
    for any such specified cause of loss or extension of
    coverage. A roof or wall does not include a temporary
    roof or wall structure or any kind of temporary tarp,
    sheeting or other covering.
    (Emphasis added.)
    ¶4     In September of 2013, the Poulsens, with the help of their
    friends and neighbors, began replacing the roof shingles on their
    house. They removed the old shingles and an underlayment of
    black felt tar paper, exposing the plywood deck. The Poulsens
    then installed the new ice and water shield (the IWS) and
    underlayment. As the Poulsens installed the last two rolls of the
    underlayment, a sudden and severe storm arrived, bringing with
    it ‚gusting winds and torrential rains.‛ The storm winds ripped
    the underlayment off the roof, allowing the rain to penetrate the
    house and damage both the structure and the Poulsens’ personal
    property. The Poulsens filed an insurance claim, which Farmers
    denied.
    ¶5     The Poulsens then brought suit against Farmers, alleging
    breach of contract, bad faith, intentional infliction of emotional
    distress, fraud, and estoppel. Farmers filed a motion seeking
    summary judgment on the ground that the Temporary-Roof
    Exception applied because the plywood, IWS, and underlayment
    layers amounted to only a temporary roof. The Poulsens
    opposed that motion and submitted an expert witness affidavit.
    In the affidavit, their expert witness opined that the
    underlayment and IWS would have prevented water from
    entering the house had the windstorm not damaged them. The
    expert further explained that, because these two layers were
    intended to be permanently installed on the house, the covering
    was not a temporary roof or other covering. Finally, the expert
    stated that ‚underlayment without shingles is not a complete
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    Poulsen v. Farmers Insurance Exchange
    roofing system, neither are shingles without . . . underlayment a
    complete roofing system per code. It takes both components to
    make the roofing system resistant to high wind, snow, ice and
    water.‛
    ¶6     The district court ruled that the insurance policy did not
    provide coverage for the house because, at the time of the storm,
    ‚there was no ‘roof’ as contemplated by the policy.‛ Specifically,
    the district court stated that the combination of plywood, IWS,
    and underlayment ‚is not a roof at all‛ and that these
    components ‚constitute*d+ only ‘other coverings’ until such time
    as shingles are installed.‛ Because the LWC Provision only
    insured against water damage if the water entered through an
    opening in the roof created by a windstorm, the district court
    concluded that the absence of any roof at the time of the
    windstorm was fatal to the Poulsens’ claims.2 As a result, the
    2. We note that the district court’s summary judgment order was
    based on the lack of a roof rather than the temporary nature of
    the roof as had been urged by Farmers’ motion for summary
    judgment. Therefore, this basis for summary judgment had not
    been presented to the district court. However, the Poulsens did
    not and do not contend that it was improper for the court to
    grant summary judgment on a basis not argued by Farmers.
    The Poulsens had argued that the Temporary-Roof
    Exception did not exclude the combined plywood, IWS, and
    underlayment from the LWC Provision’s limited extension of
    insurance coverage, because those were permanent components
    of a roof. But neither party asked the district court to consider
    whether a partially completed roof qualified as a roof so as to
    trigger the LWC Provision in the first place. Consequently, the
    district court never considered whether the insurance policy’s
    use of the word ‚roof‛ included incomplete roofs, i.e., whether
    the LWC Provision still had application even in the face of the
    court’s determination that the roofing system was incomplete.
    (continued…)
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    Poulsen v. Farmers Insurance Exchange
    district court granted summary judgment to Farmers, but denied
    Farmers’ request for an attorney fees award. The Poulsens
    appeal.
    ISSUES AND STANDARDS OF REVIEW
    ¶7     The Poulsens contend that the district court erred by
    concluding that the plywood, IWS, and underlayment did not
    constitute a roof for purposes of coverage. They further contend
    that the district court erred by concluding that the component
    parts covering their house at the time of the severe storm
    amounted to only a temporary roof. And the Poulsens contend
    that the district court erred by improperly resolving material
    factual disputes before concluding that the insurance policy did
    not cover their house due to its condition on the day of the
    storm.
    ¶8     Summary judgment is only appropriate when there are no
    genuine issues of material fact and the moving party is entitled
    to judgment as a matter of law. Utah R. Civ. P. 56(a); Jones v.
    Farmers Ins. Exch., 
    2012 UT 52
    , ¶ 6, 
    286 P.3d 301
    . Accordingly, we
    review a district court’s grant of summary judgment for
    correctness, affording no deference to the court’s legal
    conclusions. Basic Research, LLC v. Admiral Ins. Co., 
    2013 UT 6
    ,
    ¶ 5, 
    297 P.3d 578
    . When contract provisions are clear and
    complete, the meaning of the contract can appropriately be
    resolved by the district court on summary judgment. See 
    id.
     ‚The
    interpretation of a contract is a question of law that is reviewed
    for correctness, giving no deference to the district court.‛ 
    Id.
    (…continued)
    The district court’s order thus reflects its unchallenged belief that
    the incomplete nature of the roofing system precluded coverage
    under the policy.
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    Poulsen v. Farmers Insurance Exchange
    ANALYSIS
    ¶9      Utah has a longstanding commitment to ‚[t]he principle
    that ‘insurance policies should be construed liberally in favor of
    the insured and their beneficiaries so as to promote and not
    defeat the purposes of insurance.’‛ United States Fid. & Guar. Co.
    v. Sandt, 
    854 P.2d 519
    , 521 (Utah 1993) (quoting Richards v.
    Standard Accident Ins. Co., 
    200 P. 1017
    , 1020 (Utah 1921)). ‚*I+n
    case of ambiguity, uncertainty, or doubt, the terms of an
    insurance contract will be construed strictly against the insurer
    and in favor of the insured, and . . . the insured is entitled to the
    broadest protection that he could reasonably believe the
    commonly understood meaning of its terms afforded him.‛ P.E.
    Ashton Co. v. Joyner, 
    406 P.2d 306
    , 308 (Utah 1965). ‚It follows
    that ambiguous or uncertain language in an insurance contract
    that is fairly susceptible to different interpretations should be
    construed in favor of coverage.‛ Sandt, 854 P.2d at 522.
    I. Whether There Was a Roof
    ¶10 The Poulsens first contend that the district court
    erroneously determined that the plywood, IWS, and
    underlayment did not constitute ‚a ‘roof’ under the Farmers
    insurance policy, as a matter of law.‛ They assert that the LWC
    Provision ‚contrasts ‘roof’ with ‘wall’‛ such that any ‚part of
    [the] structure on top of the walls‛ is a roof and any ‚part of
    [the] structure under the roof‛ is a wall.3 Thus, in the Poulsens’
    3. The LWC Provision extended insurance coverage when water
    entered the house ‚through an opening in the roof or wall of a
    building structure only if the opening is first caused by damage
    from the direct force of *a+ windstorm.‛ (Emphasis added.) The
    windstorm tore a hole or opening in the underlayment layer but
    apparently did not create any holes in the plywood layer.
    Because the district court concluded that component layers did
    (continued…)
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    Poulsen v. Farmers Insurance Exchange
    view, the plywood, IWS, and underlayment constituted a roof
    within the meaning of the LWC Provision.
    ¶11 The Poulsens concede that, at the time of the windstorm,
    this ‚roof *was+ in a state of partial completion‛ due to the
    absence of shingles, but they argue that the LWC Provision
    ‚does not say anything about the state of completion.‛ The
    Poulsens essentially argue that the presence of a roof, albeit an
    incomplete one, entitled them to coverage under the LWC
    Provision because the rain ‚enter*ed+ through an opening in the
    roof . . . caused by damage from the direct force of‛ the
    windstorm.
    ¶12 We construe language in an insurance policy in favor of
    coverage when a crucial term is ‚fairly susceptible to different
    interpretations.‛ See Sandt, 854 P.2d at 522. But the word ‚roof‛
    in such a policy is not fairly susceptible to interpretation as
    meaning an incomplete roof.
    ¶13 Layers of plywood, IWS, and underlayment covered the
    Poulsens’ house at the time of the windstorm. The Poulsens
    accept that this roof was only partially complete due to the lack
    of shingles. And the Poulsens’ memorandum in opposition to
    summary judgment included an affidavit from their expert
    witness explaining that the ‚underlayment without shingles is
    not a complete roofing system‛ because ‚*i+t takes both
    components to make the roofing system resistant to high wind,
    snow, ice and water.‛ On appeal, the Poulsens do not identify
    any authority suggesting that component parts of a roof that
    (…continued)
    not constitute a roof at all, it did not address whether the
    uncompromised nature of the plywood layer meant that the
    water did not in fact enter the house through a windstorm-
    created opening.
    20150498-CA                    7               
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    Poulsen v. Farmers Insurance Exchange
    together fall short of a complete roofing system could fairly be
    considered a ‚roof‛ for purposes of a homeowner’s insurance
    policy. Nor do they point to any authority to the effect that an
    insured ‚could reasonably believe the commonly understood
    meaning‛ of the word ‚roof‛ in an insurance policy
    encompassed an incomplete roof that was unable to resist wind,
    snow, ice, and water.4 See P.E. Ashton Co. v. Joyner, 
    406 P.2d 306
    ,
    308 (Utah 1965) (holding that ‚the insured is entitled to the
    broadest protection that he could reasonably believe the
    commonly understood meaning of [the terms used in an
    insurance policy+ afforded him‛). Thus, although we are bound
    to construe ambiguities in an insurance policy in favor of
    coverage, we are unable to identify any uncertainty in the LWC
    Provision’s use of the word ‚roof‛.
    ¶14 The Poulsens have not shown that the insurance policy’s
    use of the word ‚roof‛ was fairly susceptible to interpretation as
    including incomplete roofing systems. We therefore hold that
    the district court did not err by concluding that the layers of
    4. Cf. Gutkowski v. Oklahoma Farmers Union Mut. Ins. Co., 
    2008 OK CIV APP 8
    , ¶¶ 10–11, 
    176 P.3d 1232
     (holding that ‚a roof is a
    unified product comprised of all its component parts and
    materials, including felt [underlayment], flashing, sheathing
    (decking), valleys, nails, caulk, drip edges, and shingles‛ and
    therefore rejecting an insurance company’s argument that,
    because asphalt shingles were a second and separate roof from
    the layers beneath them, it was only obligated to pay for hail
    damage to the ‚upper roof‛ made of asphalt shingles); Dewsnup
    v. Farmers Ins. Co. of Or., 
    239 P.3d 493
    , 499 (Or. 2010) (stating that
    ‚a roof should be sufficiently durable to meet its intended
    purpose: to cover and protect a building against weather-related
    risks that reasonably may be anticipated‛ and that ‚the meaning
    of the term ‘roof’ is sufficiently plain that we need go no further
    to define its meaning‛).
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    Poulsen v. Farmers Insurance Exchange
    plywood, IWS, and underlayment did not constitute a roof
    within the meaning of the insurance policy.
    II. Whether the Roof Was Temporary
    ¶15 The Poulsens also contend that the district court erred by
    concluding that the plywood, IWS, and underlayment
    constituted only a temporary roof or temporary covering. They
    further contend that the district court erred by weighing
    competing evidence as to whether the elements in place at the
    time of the windstorm were temporary. Specifically, they argue
    that the district court ‚disregarded testimony that the home was
    not covered by any tarps or other temporary materials during
    the severe rain storm.‛
    ¶16 Both of these contentions misread the district court’s
    stated rationale for granting summary judgment to Farmers. It is
    true that the court stated that the plywood, IWS, and
    underlayment ‚constitute*d+ only ‘other coverings’ until such
    time as shingles are installed.‛ But the court did not rule these
    layers made up a temporary roof that the Temporary-Roof
    Exception would exclude from the LWC Provision’s coverage.
    Rather, the court ruled that no roof, temporary or permanent,
    existed at the time of the windstorm, and thus that the LWC
    Provision did not come into play at all.
    ¶17 The insurance policy proper did not cover damage caused
    by water entering the Poulsens’ house. As relevant here, the
    LWC Provision modified that baseline rule to cover such
    damage if the water entered through an opening in the roof
    caused by a windstorm. And the Temporary-Roof Exception
    limited the modification by providing that the LWC Provision
    did not apply if the windstorm-created opening was in a
    temporary roof.
    ¶18 The district court acknowledged that both parties had
    ‚asked the court to rule on whether the plywood,
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    Poulsen v. Farmers Insurance Exchange
    [underlayment,] and IWS constitute a temporary or permanent
    roof,‛ i.e., whether the windstorm-created opening was in a
    temporary roof such that the LWC Provision was negated by the
    Temporary-Roof Exception. But the court explained that, ‚*u+ntil
    the roof is complete, there are only individual components.‛ As
    a result, it concluded that these components were ‚not a roof at
    all‛ and that ‚there was no ‘roof’ as contemplated by the policy.‛
    In essence, the court determined that the absence of a roof
    foreclosed any analysis of the LWC Provision and the
    Temporary-Roof Exception because, if there was no roof, water
    could not have entered through a windstorm-created opening in
    the roof.
    ¶19 Because the Poulsens’ second and third contentions
    challenge conclusions that the district court either did not make
    or which were not part of its ratio decidendi, we need not and do
    not address them further.
    CONCLUSION
    ¶20 The Poulsens have not demonstrated that the insurance
    policy’s use of the word ‚roof‛ is ‚fairly susceptible‛ to
    interpretation, see United States Fid. & Guar. Co. v. Sandt, 
    854 P.2d 519
    , 522 (Utah 1993), as encompassing a roofing system ‚in a
    state of partial completion.‛ Accordingly, we see no error in the
    district court’s conclusion that, at the time of the windstorm, the
    Poulsens’ house had ‚no ‘roof’ as contemplated by the
    [insurance] policy.‛ Because this conclusion was a sufficient
    basis for the district court to grant summary judgment to
    Farmers, we decline to address the Poulsens’ other challenges.
    ¶21    Affirmed.
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    2016 UT App 170
                                

Document Info

Docket Number: 20150498-CA

Citation Numbers: 2016 UT App 170, 382 P.3d 1058, 819 Utah Adv. Rep. 42, 2016 Utah App. LEXIS 175, 2016 WL 4151905

Judges: Christiansen, Michele, Roth, Stephen

Filed Date: 8/4/2016

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 11/13/2024