HUMANA WORKER'S COMPENSATION SERVICES, et al., Petitioners,
v.
HOME EMERGENCY SERVICES, INC., Respondent.
Supreme Court of Florida.
*779 Debra Potter Klauber of Haliczer Pettis, P.A., Fort Lauderdale, FL, for Petitioners.
Evan J. Langbein of Langbein & Langbein, P.A., Aventura, FL; Richard A. Friend, Miami, FL; and Joel S. Perwin of Podhurst, Orseck, Josefsberg, Eaton, Meadow, Olin & Perwin, P.A., Miami, FL, for Respondent.
WELLS, J.
We have for review the decision in Home Emergency Services, Inc. v. Humana Worker's Compensation,
Humana Worker's Compensation Services (Humana), is the insurer of Home Emergency Services, Inc. (HES) under a two-part insurance policy. Part One of the policy, entitled "Workers Compensation Insurance," provides that Humana will pay benefits required of HES by the workers' compensation law and will defend any claim against HES for such benefits. Part Two of the policy, entitled "Employers Liability Insurance," states in part:
A. How This Insurance Applies
This employers liability insurance applies to bodily injury by accident or bodily injury by disease. Bodily injury includes resulting death.
While this policy was in effect, an employee of HES, Alberto Milian, was injured when he fell from a ladder during the course of his employment. Milian received workers' compensation benefits, which were paid pursuant to Part One of HES's policy. HES then agreed to maintain the ladder in its possession for Milian, who intended to pursue a claim against the ladder's manufacturer and distributor. The ladder was subsequently misplaced or destroyed. When Milian later filed suit against the manufacturer and distributor for product liability, he also sued HES for negligent spoliation of evidence. Milian's complaint contained two counts against HES, one alleging that HES breached a contractual duty to maintain the evidence and a second alleging breach of a statutory duty. The complaint averred that the contractual duty arose from HES's agreement to maintain the ladder, while the statutory duty arose from section 440.39(7), Florida Statutes (1995), which imposes a duty on an employer to cooperate with an employee in the prosecution of claims and potential claims against third-party tortfeasors. See General Cinema Beverages of Miami, Inc. v. Mortimer,
Upon receipt of Milian's complaint, HES requested coverage and defense from Humana pursuant to Part Two of its policy, the employers liability insurance portion. Taking the position that the policy did not cover claims for spoliation of evidence, Humana filed a petition for declaratory relief against HES to establish its coverage obligations. Thereafter, Humana and HES each filed motions for summary judgment. *780 The trial court granted summary judgment in favor of Humana, concluding that Milian's spoliation claim against HES was not a "bodily injury" claim covered by the policy.
HES appealed to the Third District, which reversed and held that the spoliation claim was covered by Part Two of the policy. Home Emergency Services,
In addition to relying upon the Lincoln analysis, the Third District certified conflict between its decision in Home Emergency Services and the Fourth District's decision in Norris v. Colony Insurance Co.,
Humana sought discretionary review by this Court on the basis of the certified conflict between the Third and Fourth District's decisions. Humana urges this Court to adopt the holding in Norris and conclude that a spoliation claim does not fall within the plain language of bodily injury coverage because such claims seek damages other than for bodily injury by accident. HES counters that the policy language does not require that the bodily injury be the only contributing cause of the insured's potential liability or that the damages claimed be of a particular type. Noting that Milian will only prevail in his spoliation claim against HES if he proves the viability of the underlying claim for bodily injury, HES argues that if Milian prevails in the spoliation claim it will be "because of" the underlying bodily injury, coupled with the loss of the ladder.
*781 We agree with Humana that the plain language of this policy does not provide coverage for a claim of negligent spoliation of evidence. To determine whether there is coverage, as our threshold examination we must construe Section A of Part Two, the provision that explains "How This Insurance Applies." In this examination we are bound by rules of construction which we have long applied, the foremost of which is that insurance contracts must be construed in accordance with their plain language. See Auto-Owners Ins. Co. v. Anderson,
Negligent spoliation of evidence is a tort claim based on a defendant's breach of a duty to preserve evidence. The damage that flows from such a breach is the resulting inability to prove a cause of action. Milian's spoliation claim seeks compensation not for the bodily injury he sustained in falling from the ladder but, rather, for his loss of a probable expectancy of recovery in the underlying suit.
We therefore hold that this policy applying to "bodily injury by accident" does not provide coverage for claims against an insured for negligent spoliation of evidence. Our holding here is consistent with the Fourth District decision in Norris as well as decisions of other jurisdictions. See Johnson v. Evan Hall Sugar Coop., Inc.,
It is so ordered.
ANSTEAD, C.J., and PARIENTE, LEWIS, QUINCE, CANTERO, and BELL, JJ., concur.
NOTES
Notes
[1] The Third District reversed the summary judgment, however, and remanded for entry of judgment in favor of Lincoln on the basis of an applicable exclusion within the Lincoln policy. Lincoln,
