Defendant-appellant The Continental Insurance Company (“Continental”) appeals from a judgment holding it liable under an insurance policy issued to plaintiff-appellee Adams-Arapahoe Joint School District No. 28-J (“Adams-Arapahoe” or “the District”) for expenses incurred after the partial collapse of the roof of Gateway High School in Aurora, Colorado. 1 We affirm the trial court’s decision that the loss, if fortuitous, was covered. We reverse the judgment entered on the jury’s verdict that the loss was fortuitous, and remand for a new trial on that issue, because of a prejudicially erroneous instruction.
I. BACKGROUND
The construction of Gateway High School took place from 1972 to 1974, with the roof put up during the winter of 1972-73. R.Vol. II at 6. The original plan called for galvanized steel sheets to be placed over the roof beams, then overspread with lightweight concrete and covered with asphalt and gravel. R.Vol. II at 40. During the construction, however, the general contractor received permission to use gypsum-based concrete instead, because the material originally chosen would not cure properly in cold weather. R.Vol. VI at 8.
The roofing subcontractor discussed the proposed change with the concrete manufacturer, who said that some corrosion had been experienced when the gypsum-based concrete was applied to metal decking. R.Vol. IV at 225; Attachment to Opening Brief of Appellant at 16. The subcontractor notified the general contractor, who in turn informed the project’s architect. R.Vol. IV at 235-36. After a meeting with the contractors and a District representative, the architect decided to proceed with the change. R.Vol. VI at 11. It is not clear whether the corrosion danger was discussed at this meeting. At the trial, representatives of the District denied ever having been informed of any increased risk. R.Vol. IV at, e.g., 194-95, 201-02.
Continental issued an all-risk insurance policy for the school, effective September 1, 1982. The policy covered “all ... risks of direct physical loss,” but excluded any loss caused
“[b]y wear and tear, deterioration, rust or corrosion, mould, wet or dry rot; inherent or latent defect; ... unless such *774 loss results from a peril not excluded in this policy. If loss by a peril not excluded in this policy ensues, then this Company shall be liable for only such ensuing loss.”
Attachment to Opening Brief of Appellant at 75 (emphasis added).
On April 23, 1984, a small portion (six to twelve square feet) of the roof collapsed. R.Vol. II at 9. An inspection revealed extensive corrosion throughout that portion of the roof which had been filled with gypsum-based concrete, making continued occupation of the building unsafe. R.Vol. II at 15, 39. Adams-Arapahoe spent about $8.8 million to remove and replace eighty thousand square feet of roofing (approximately forty percent of the total area).
After Continental denied the District’s claim, Adams-Arapahoe filed suit in state court. The action was removed to the United States District Court for the District of Colorado. The trial court granted plaintiffs motion for partial summary judgment, holding that (1) defective design and/or construction was a risk covered by the policy, and was the cause of the District’s loss, (2) the corrosion exclusion did not preclude coverage, and (3) the District’s loss included the entire corroded area of the roof.
A jury trial was held on the remaining issues. Continental argued at trial that the District expected the loss, rendering it non-fortuitous (and therefore not covered). The jury was instructed that the District bore the burden of showing fortuitousness, but that Continental bore the burden of proof on its affirmative defense of the District’s expectation, or knowledge of a substantial risk, of collapse. A verdict was returned in favor of the District for $8,674,-778.
II. DISCUSSION
The substantive law of Colorado governs our decision in this diversity case.
Erie R.R. Co. v. Tompkins,
A. Partial Summary Judgment
The trial court interpreted the policy to cover the loss in question, if the loss was fortuitous. The construction of an insurance policy is a matter of law.
Marez v. Dairyland Ins. Co.,
1. Whether defective design and/or construction was a covered risk.
An all-risk insurance policy covers any fortuitous loss not resulting from an excluded risk or from fraud by the insured.
Kane v. Royal Ins. Co. of Am.,
In
Wolfe v. LeVasseur-Hinson Construction Co.,
*775
Yet, most of the decisions addressing this question hold that defective design and/or construction
is
a risk of physical peril, even if it predates the policy.
See, e.g., Texas E. Transmission Corp. v. Marine Office—
Appleton
& Cox Corp.,
Still, an all-risk policy does not cover losses which were not fortuitous.
Texas E. Transmission Corp. v. Marine
Office—
Appleton & Cox Corp.,
One group of cases holds that a loss is not fortuitous if it was inevitable when the policy was issued.
See, e.g., Greene v. Cheetham,
A more recent line of decisions rejects the use of hindsight and holds that a loss caused by a pre-existing defect is fortuitous so long as neither party knew of the defect or expected the loss.
See, e.g., Standard Structural Steel Co. v. Bethlehem Steel Corp.,
“A fortuitous event ... is an event which so far as the parties to the contract are aware, is dependent on chance. It may be beyond the power of any human being to bring the event to pass; it may be within the control of third persons; it may even be a past event, ... provided that the fact is unknown to the parties.”
Texas E. Transmission Corp. v. Marine Office
—Appleton
& Cox Corp.,
Continental contends that even if a loss due to defective design and/or construction is a covered risk, coverage of the District’s loss is barred by the exclusion for loss by “inherent or latent defect.” Prior to considering this argument, we must decide whether or not it is properly before us. Adams-Arapahoe contends that Continental abandoned this issue on appeal. In fact, though, the issue was not raised and ruled upon in the trial court, so it never existed to be abandoned.
Continental’s references to the latent defect exclusion before the district court were infrequent and nonspecific. In its answer, Continental raised as an affirmative defense
“one or more of the following provisions ...: loss by wear and tear, deterioration, *776 rust or corrision [sic], wet rot, inherent or latent defect, settling, cracking, shrinkage, bulging or expansion of pavements, foundations, walls, floors, roofs or ceilings.”
Answer, R. Vol. I at Tab 8, p. 3. Its brief in opposition to Adams-Arapahoe’s motion for summary judgment repeats this list, and also states that, because “the eventual collapse of the roof was due to no casualty or risk other than the inherent deficiency within the design of the roof itself,” the loss was not fortuitous. Memorandum Brief in Opposition to Plaintiffs Motion for Partial Summary Judgment, R. Vol. I at Tab 6, pp. 6, 9. Continental made no other references to the latent defect exclusion. A matter not pursued before the trial court, such as this one, is “inappropriate for consideration on appeal.”
Stephens Ind., Inc. v. Haskins & Sells,
Even if the latent defect exclusion had been raised below, it was not preserved as an issue on appeal. The only exclusion which appears in the statements of issues in Continental’s docketing statement and opening brief before this court is the corrosion exclusion. An issue not included in either the docketing statement or the statement of issues in the party’s initial brief is waived on appeal.
Bledsoe v. Garcia,
We will not consider the issue.
2. Whether the corrosion exclusion applies.
a. “corrosion”
Continental contends that the policy excludes from coverage any loss due to corrosion. The District argues that the word “corrosion” refers only to normal or natural corrosion.
Kane v. Royal Insurance Co.,
Our inquiry, then, is whether the common meaning of “corrosion” includes all corrosion or only naturally occurring corrosion. One source of the plain meaning of a term is the dictionary.
See Kane v. Royal Ins. Co.,
Other decisions construing similar exclusions confirm this construction.
Arkwright-Boston Manufacturers Mutual Insurance Co. v. Wausau Paper Mills Co.,
We conclude that under Colorado law the word “corrosion” unambiguously refers to all corrosion, however brought about.
b. “unless such loss results from a peril not excluded in this policy”
Under the policy, coverage of a loss due to an excluded cause is excluded “unless such loss results from a peril not excluded in this policy” [hereinafter “the ‘unless’ clause”]. The trial court held that, because the corrosion in this case resulted from a covered risk (defective design and/or construction), the exclusion did not apply.
The only published decision construing such a clause
3
is
Adrian Associates v. National Surety Corp.,
Like the district court, we see no other reasonable construction of the clause. Contrary to Continental’s fears, this interpretation of the “unless” clause does not render the entire exclusion nugatory. Rather, the policy still excludes losses due to corrosion with no identifiable non-excluded cause. In effect, the corrosion exclusion applies only to naturally occurring corrosion.
Accordingly, we affirm the trial court’s decision that the District’s loss, if fortuitous, was covered. 4
3. Whether the District’s loss included the entire corroded area, or just that portion of the roof which actually collapsed.
Continental contends that the only loss Adams-Arapahoe suffered was the collapse of a small portion of the roof. The trial court, relying upon
Western Fire Insurance Co. v. First Presbyterian Church,
B. Jury Instructions
The trial court granted partial summary judgment on the issue of whether the loss, if fortuitous, was covered, but reserved the fortuitousness question for the jury. The jury received the following instructions:
“The District has the burden of proving by a preponderance of the evidence that ... a fortuitous loss took place_ Continental has the burden of proving by a preponderance of the evidence its affirmative defense that the District had knowledge, either actual or imputed, before it obtained its insurance policy, that a substantial risk already existed that the roof deck would collapse because of corrosion.”
R. Vol. V at 326-27 (emphasis added). The substance of the jury instructions in a diversity case is a matter of state law, but the question of whether an error is harmless is one of federal law.
Brownlow v. Aman,
An insurer bears the burden of proving an affirmative defense which will enable it to avoid a policy.
Commercial Ins. Co. v. Smith,
In its answer, Continental stated that the District’s loss was “not the result of a fortuitous event,” Answer, R. Vol. I at Tab 3, p. 3, but did not make any reference to the District’s alleged knowledge. The pretrial order is similar.
See
Pretrial Order, April 11, 1986, R. Vol. I at Tab 5, p. 2.
5
We feel that Continental did not plead Adams-Arapahoe’s alleged knowledge of the increased risk of corrosion as an affirmative defense. The argument was raised merely to rebut the District’s claim that the loss was fortuitous. The affirmative defense instruction should not have been given. Even if Continental were asserting the District’s knowledge both as an affirmative defense and as a rebuttal, the instruction, without further delineation, would have been erroneous.
Britt v. Travelers Ins. Co.,
We will not reverse the judgment unless the error prejudiced Continental.
Lusby v. T.G. & Y. Stores, Inc.,
In Britt v. Travelers Insurance Co., the life insurance policy on plaintiffs husband paid double indemnity for an accidental death, and had an exclusion for death caused by a mental or physical infirmity. Decedent died under circumstances which may have been accidental, and may have been caused by a mental or physical infirmity. The insurer raised decedent’s infirmities both to contest plaintiffs claim that the death was accidental, and to show that the infirmity exclusion applied. The insurer bore the burden of proof on the second issue, but not on the first.
The jury instruction correctly allocated the burden of proof regarding whether the death was accidental, but then stated that the insurer bore the burden of proving a mental or physical infirmity, without distinguishing between the two ways the insurer was using that argument. This was held to be a prejudicial error.
Britt v. Travelers Ins. Co.,
The trial court in Britt, by failing to distinguish between a rebuttal and an affirmative defense, shifted part of the plaintiffs burden of proving that the death was accidental onto the defendant. The affirmative defense instruction in the instant case had the same effect. In both cases, the error was prejudicial.
We realize that jury instructions are to be reviewed as a whole, and that “ ‘only in those cases where the reviewing court has a substantial doubt whether the jury was fairly guided in its deliberations should the judgment be disturbed.’ ”
Lutz v. Weld County School Dist. No. 6,
This case differs from
Fox v. Ford Motor Co.,
On appeal from a verdict for the plaintiff, the warranty instruction was found to be erroneous, but not prejudicial. The error was harmless because the trial court had not treated negligence and warranty as separate issues: “It blended both of these in with the extensive charge on negligence and reasonableness.” Id. at 786 (emphasis added). Because of this blending, “the jury very probably gave effect to the negligence charge ... since there was no statement by the court that the warranty was a separate basis for recovery.” Id. Unlike in Fox, we have no reason in this case to believe that the jury did not give effect to the improper instruction.
Finally, the District argues that the error was harmless because the evidence would not have supported any other verdict. However, there was enough evidence of the District’s knowledge to support a verdict by a properly instructed jury that the loss was not fortuitous.
6
Therefore, “ ‘the jury
might
have based its verdict’ ” on the erroneously given instruction.
Farrell v. Klein Tools, Inc.,
C. Other issues
Adams-Arapahoe filed a cross-appeal in this matter, challenging the trial court’s application of the federal post-judgment interest rate, pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1961, instead of the state post-judgment interest rate. Since then, this court decided in
Everaard v. Hartford Accident & Indemnity Co.,
The District also challenged our jurisdiction, because Continental filed this appeal more than thirty days after judgment was entered (but within thirty days of the resolution of plaintiffs motion for prejudgment interest). This argument subsequently was foreclosed by the Supreme Court’s holding in
Osterneck v. Ernst & Whinney,
— U.S. —,
III. CONCLUSION
The trial court correctly granted partial summary judgment in favor of the School District. If fortuitous, the loss (which included the entire corroded area) was insured against because defective design and/or construction was a covered risk, and the corrosion exclusion did not operate to exclude corrosion brought about by a covered risk. The judgment against Continental must be reversed and remanded, however, because the jury instructions erroneously and prejudicially shifted part of the District’s burden of proving fortuitousness.
The judgment is AFFIRMED in part, and REVERSED and REMANDED in part for a new trial limited to the question of whether or not the loss was fortuitous.
Notes
. During the pendency of this appeal, both parties made motions to file supplemental briefs. Both motions were granted, and both supplemental briefs were received and considered.
. Similarly, in
Sabella v. Wisler,
. Continental cites a number of decisions, such as
Aetna Casualty & Surety Co. v. Yates,
.Because we have decided that defective design and/or construction was a covered risk, and that the corrosion which occurred was not an excluded risk, we need not consider the question of which of these risks actually caused the loss. There is no cause to consider the parties’ discussion of the last section of
Kane v. Royal Insurance Co. of America,
. The District’s first motion in limine, to which Continental did not object, stated that "Continental has raised as a defense to coverage” that the District knew or suspected, when it obtained the insurance policy, that the roof deck would collapse because of corrosion. R. Vol. Ill at 9-10; Plaintiff s First Motion In Limine, R. Vol. I at Tab 11, p. 2 (emphasis added). The District contends that Continental’s failure to object to either the motion or the making of such introductory remarks to the jury precludes Continental from now appealing the issue. We disagree.
The statement is ambiguous. Stating that Continental has raised the issue as "a defense” is not the same as stating that it is an affirmative defense upon which Continental bears the burden of proof.
Besides, Continental made a specific objection to the affirmative defense instruction.
See
R.Vol. V at 304-306. Nothing more is necessary to preserve the right to appeal the instruction.
Weir v. Federal Ins. Co.,
. The exhibits included a letter from the roofing subcontractor to the general contractor that the manufacturer of the gypsum-based concrete had withdrawn its recommendation of the material as roof fill because of problems with corrosion. R. Vol. IV at 225; Attachment to Opening Brief of Appellant at 16. There was evidence that this letter was forwarded to the project architect, R. Vol. IV at 235-36; Attachment to Opening Brief of Appellant at 19, and that such issues would be discussed among the architect, the general contractor, and a representative of the District. R. Vol. VI at 11. The jury could conclude that the District had either direct or imputed knowledge of an abnormal risk of corrosion.
