Desiree DEBARTOLO
v.
UNDERWRITERS AT LLOYD'S OF LONDON.
Supreme Court of Vermont.
*1020 Prеsent: REIBER, C.J., and DOOLEY, JOHNSON, SKOGLUND and BURGESS, JJ.
ENTRY ORDER
¶ 1. Insurer, Lloyd's of London, appeals the superior court's grant of summary judgment to its insured, Desiree DeBartolo. Insurer argues that the superior court erred: (1) in concluding that the policy it issued to insured provided coverage for damage to a restaurant property she owned, and (2) in finding that insured did not deliberately conceal that she had reopened the restaurаnt before the loss. We affirm.
¶ 2. The facts, which were largely stipulated below, may be briefly summarized. Ms. DeBartolo owned a restaurant property in Poultney, Vermont. She closed the restaurant in the fall of 2000 and let her commercial insurance lapse. The holder of the mortgage on the property demanded that Ms. DeBartolo obtain property coverage sufficient tо pay the $92,000 outstanding mortgage debt. Accordingly, in March of 2001, Ms. DeBartolo applied, through her agent, for a six-month policy with a property coverage limit of $92,000, enough to cover the balance on the mortgage.[1] Ms. DeBartolo represented, on the application, that the restaurant was "closed for the season."
¶ 3. Ms. DeBartolo's agent placed the coverage with Lloyd's of London through one of its United States agents, S & H Underwriters. Lloyd's is a surplus lines insurer in Vermont, and therefore can issue coverage only if it is not reasonably available from other sources. 8 V.S.A. § 5024. The agent sent Ms. DeBartolo a copy of the policy, which was effective March 14, 2001, along with a letter on May *1021 1, 2001. The letter stated that if Ms. DeBartolo decided to reopen the restaurant, she must notify the agent so that he could "make the necessary changes regarding the insurance." Ms. DeBartolo received the letter and the policy before the loss but did not read either. The policy's Declarations page described the covered property as a "vacant restaurant" on Route 30 in Poultney. The policy explicitly provided coverage for property damage resulting from fire, with several pages of specific exclusions and limitations delineating risks not covered. No exclusion or limitation stated that the reopening of the restaurant would void the coverage. The policy also included a vacancy permit, which provided that the "VACANCY Loss Condition does not apply to direct physicаl loss or damage: (1) At the location; and (2) During the Permit Period; shown in the Schedule or in the Declarations."
¶ 4. Ms. DeBartolo opened the restaurant for business on May 26, 2001. At some point in the preceding days, a plumbing leak soaked a carpet, which Ms. DeBartolo attempted to dry using a kerosene heater. The heater caused a fire on May 30, 2001, resulting in damage to the restaurant exceeding the policy's property coverage limit. Ms. DeBartolo concedes that the restaurant was not vacant at the time of the loss.
¶ 5. Lloyd's denied coverage for the loss, contending that the policy provided property coverage only while the restaurant remained vacant, and asserting that Ms. DeBartolo had intentionally concealed a known material factthe reopeningboth at the time of the loss and when she applied for coverage. Ms. DeBartolo commenced a breach-of-contract action against insurer in 2003, also alleging that insurer's denial of coverage was made in bad faith. Insurer raised as defenses the same claims it raised in the denial letter. The parties stipulated to the abovе-detailed facts and submitted cross-motions for summary judgment.
¶ 6. The superior court concluded that the policy was ambiguous as to whether coverage would continue if the restaurant reopened. The court therefore construed the policy in favor of Ms. DeBartolo, granted her motion for summary judgment, and ordered Lloyd's to pay the full property-coverage amount, less the $500 deductible, plus prejudgment interest and costs. The superior court later issued a supplemental finding that Ms. DeBartolo had not concealed from Lloyd's that she had reopened the restaurant.[2] This appeal followed.
I.
¶ 7. Lloyd's argues, first, that the trial court erred in granting summary judgment to Ms. DeBartolo because the policy's plain language unambiguously limits property coverage to a vacant restaurant. It notes that the policy's Declarations page describes the covered property as a vacant restaurant, and contends that this description is material to, and limits the extent of, property coverage under the policy. DeBartolo asserts, by contrast, that the policy is at best ambiguous as to whether property coverage would continue when the restaurant reopened, and should therefore be construed in favor of finding coverage.
¶ 8. We review a grant of summary judgment de novo, applying the same standard as the trial court. Town of Lunenburg v. Supervisor & Bd. of Governors of Unorganized Towns & Gores of Essex County,
¶ 9. We interpret insurance policies much like other contracts, striving to give effect to the intent of the parties as expressed by the plain language of the instrument. Sanders v. St. Paul Mercury Ins. Co.,
¶ 10. We note at the outset that, while there is copious case law concerning the interpretation of vacancy provisions in property policies, neither party has found, and nor have we, any case presenting closely analogous facts and claims to these. The typical vacancy-provision case concerns virtually the opposite circumstance from that present here: an insured property becomes arguably vacant, thereby possibly voiding coverage by operation of a vacancy provision that explicitly conditions coverage on the property's remaining occupied. See, e.g., Gas Kwick, Inc. v. United Pac. Ins. Co.,
¶ 11. Other superficially analogous cases are those concerning builder's-risk coverage, which is commonly issued to builders to cover the risk of property loss during construction, and is often expressly conditioned on a building's continued vacancy. Builder's-risk-coverage cases often arise when a building is occupied upon completion, but a clаim is nonetheless made under the builder's-risk coverage. See, e.g., Peerless Ins. Co. v. Bailey Mortgage Co.,
¶ 12. Lloyd's cites a number of cases in support of the proposition that coverage should be limited to the premises described in the declarations. However, all arose from facts very different from those present here. In Evergreen National Indemnity Co. v. Tan It All, Inc.,
¶ 13. Similarly unhelpful to Lloyd's is Ruiz v. State Wide Insulation & Construction Corp.,
¶ 14. Lloyd's reliance on Pfeiffer v. Grocers Mutual Insurance Co.,
¶ 15. Lloyd's also cites Wickramasekra v. Associated International Insurance Co.,
¶ 16. Lloyd's attempts to bring Wickramasekra into concord with the instant case by characterizing the property coverage's "Description of Premises" as having been intended to "identify the premises and business activity to which the insurance relates." (Emphasis added.) But this overstates the importance of the premises description and ignores the rest of the policy, with which it must be construed as part of an integrated whole. Concord Gen. Mut. Ins. Co. v. Madore,
¶ 17. The vacancy permit in the property policy also supports a finding of property coverage for the fire loss. The typical vacancy permit voids the vacancy loss conditionalso sometimes known as an occupancy clausein a property policy. A vacancy loss condition, when not voided by a vacancy pеrmit, suspends property coverage when the subject property is unoccupied for a specified period. "The purpose of an occupancy clause is to avoid liability where the risk has been increased by vacancy." 6A L. Russ & T. Segalla, Couch on Insurance § 94:102, at 94-111 (3d ed.2000). The vacancy permit in this case provided that the "Vacancy Loss Condition does not аpply to direct physical loss or damage: (1) At the location; and (2) During the Permit Period; shown in the Schedule or in the Declarations." The vacancy permit simply allowed, but did not mandate, vacancy.
¶ 18. Lloyd's also makes much of the fact that it is a surplus lines insurer in Vermont, and is therefore authorized to write policies only when "the full amount of insurance required is not reasonably procurable from admitted insurers." 8 V.S.A. § 5024(a).[3] Lloyd's asserts, in essence, that it would not, as a surplus lines insurer, have been allowed to issue a policy to a restaurant that would reopen at any time during the policy period. We disagree.
¶ 19. Even assuming, arguendo, that Lloyd's is correct that it could not have issued this policy to a restaurant that was open at the time of the application because such coverage would have been readily available from Vermont insurers, we part ways with Lloyd's when it construes the policy to avoid coverage as soon as the restaurant reopened. Surplus lines coverage would not only have been available to a permanently vacant restaurant, but also *1025 to one that was vacant when the policy was рurchased but would reopen during the policy period; the latter coverage would not have been any more "reasonably procurable" from admitted insurers than the former. Id. Lloyd's status as a surplus lines insurer does not militate strongly, if at all, in favor of construing this policy against Ms. DeBartolo.
¶ 20. Further, Lloyd's claim that the property coverage would be void upon the restaurant's occupancy is belied by its letter to insured, in which Lloyd's agent requested that Ms. DeBartolo notify insurer when the restaurant reopened so that insurer "could make the necessary changes regarding the insurance." This language is not sufficient to impose an obligation on insured to notify insurer prior to the restaurant's reopening in order to retain property coverage. See Patrons Mut. Ins. Co. v. Rideout,
¶ 21. In sum, the premises description in the instant case, the policy's explicit exclusion of several causes of loss other than opening the restaurant, the policy's explicit limitation of CGL coverage to operations described in the declarations, and the vacancy permit all support the superior court's grant of summary judgment. The policy, read as a whole, may reflect a presumption on insurer's part that the restaurant would remain vacant. It does not, however, unambiguously provide that coverage will end upon the reopening of the restaurant. At most, the policy is ambiguous as to whether property coverage would continue when the restaurant opened. It virtually needs no citation to say that ambiguities in insurance policies are to be construed against the insurer, who created them. Sanders,
II.
¶ 22. Lloyd's next argues that the superior court erred in finding that Ms. DeBartolo did not conceal the restaurant's reopening. The superior court did not explicitly so find in its initial order, but later issued a supplemental finding stating that Ms. DeBartolo "did not conceal from [Lloyd's] that she had reopened the restaurant." The property policy was subject to a condition voiding the policy if Ms. DeBartolo should, "at any time, intentionally conceal or misrepresent a material fact concerning: (1) This Coverage Part; (2) The Covered Property; (3)[her] interest in the Covered Property; or (4) A claim under this Coverage Part." Ms. DeBartolo argues, in response, that the record supported the trial court's finding and that, at worst, she was negligent in failing to alert Lloyd's that the restaurant had reopened.
¶ 23. We review trial court findings of fact for clear error, and will sustain them when there is any credible evidence in the record to support them. Lawrence v. Pelletier,
¶ 24. Even if the restaurant's opening were a material fact, the superior court did not err in finding that Ms. DeBartolo did not intentionally conceal it. Although there was also evidence arguably to the contrary, there was credible evidence suppоrting the trial court's finding. Ms. DeBartolo testified that she did not tell Lloyd's about the restaurant opening because she "didn't think of it." She further testified that she had only a rudimentary understanding of the impact of the restaurant's vacancy on her insurance coverage. We will not, on appellate review, disturb the trial court's decision to credit this testimony over the conflicting testimony offered by insurer. Seе Solomon,
Affirmed.
NOTES
Notes
[1] The policy also provided commercial general liability (CGL) coverage with limits of $500,000 per occurrence and $1,000,000 in the aggregate. Ms. DeBartolo made no claim under that coverage.
[2] The superior court also found that neither party acted in bad faith.
[3] Our law also provides that "contracts procured as surplus lines insurance . . . shall be valid and enforceable to the same extent as insurance contracts procured from admitted insurers." 8 V.S.A. § 5029.
