By the Court,
Appellant Mildred Powell filed an insurance claim with respondent Liberty Mutual Fire Insurance Company to cover damage to her house. Liberty Mutual denied the claim, stating that the damage was excluded under the earth movement exclusion in Powell’s insurance policy. Powell then filed a complaint against Liberty Mutual in the district court. The district court eventually granted Liberty Mutual’s motion for partial summary judgment, concluding that the earth movement exclusion of the Liberty Mutual policy excluded coverage of the damage.
We must determine whether the earth movement exclusion in Powell’s insurance policy with Liberty Mutual is enforceable to exclude coverage of the damage to Powell’s house and whether the district court erred in granting summary judgment in favor of Liberty Mutual. First, because the earth movement exclusion is ambiguous, we must construe it against Liberty Mutual. Second, we consider whether
Schroeder
v.
State Farm Fire and Casualty
Co.,
FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
Powell owns a house in Northwest Reno and has a homeowner’s insurance policy through Liberty Mutual. The policy has an earth movement exclusion, which states in pertinent part:
We do not insure for loss caused directly or indirectly by any of the following. Such loss is excluded regardless of any other cause or event contributing concurrently or in any sequence to the loss. 1 ' 1 . . . Earth movement, meaning earthquake including land shock waves or tremors before, during or after a volcanic eruption; landslide, mine subsidence; mudflow; earth sinking, rising or shifting.
In July 2005, a water pipe in Powell’s house exploded, flooding the dirt sub-basement. Powell made a claim to Liberty Mutual because her house had suffered a shift in the foundation and had suffered extensive cracking and separation in the wall and ceiling in the area of the entryway, kitchen, and two bedrooms. She attributed this damage to the burst water pipe.
An expert chosen by Powell and hired by Liberty Mutual inspected the house and concluded that “after many years of relative foundation stability, [the house] is currently being affected by the expansion of supporting clay soils. This expansion, while likely present in lesser degrees in the past, has been severely aggravated by the intrusion of a significant amount of water a short time ago . . . .” Liberty Mutual denied Powell’s claim, citing the earth movement exclusion in her policy. Powell asked Liberty Mutual to reconsider the claim, and it denied that request. Then, Powell hired two professors of civil engineering at the University of Nevada, Reno, to inspect the house, and these professors concluded that there was “no evidence of earth movement, subsidence, mudflow, earth sinking!,] rising or shifting,” concluding that “the structural cracking in the house was caused by swelling of foundation clay facilitated by the access to water resulting from the water damage.” Powell requested Liberty Mutual to reconsider her claim again, and Liberty Mutual denied the request.
After her requests for reconsideration were denied, Powell filed suit against Liberty Mutual in the Second Judicial District Court of Nevada, alleging breach of contract, breach of the duty of good faith and fair dealing, and breach of the Nevada Unfair Claims Settlement Practices Act. 2 Liberty Mutual filed a motion for partial summary judgment on the breach-of-contract and breach-of-the-duty-of-good-faith-and-fair-dealing claims. The district court granted the motion on the bad faith claim in part, but denied it on the breach of contract claim, finding that there were genuine issues of material fact as to what caused the damage to Powell’s house.
Subsequently, both Liberty Mutual and Powell hired their own experts to inspect the house in preparation for trial, and both experts prepared reports. Liberty Mutual’s expert opined that while the plumbing leak “may have contributed to the foundation settlement and associated distress to the residence!,] water from other sources, such as landscape irrigation, ponding adjacent to the foundation of the residence, and rainfall and snowfall, also contributed to the infiltration of moisture into the soil underlying the foundations of the residence.” The expert thus concluded that “the magnitude of water infiltration and extent of resultant damage from the reported leak could not be evaluated.” Powell’s expert concluded that while some “lesser foundation movement” may have occurred throughout the life of the house, it was the “sudden wetting of the foundation soils from the water line rupture that resulted in the high level of damage now present.”
Based on these expert’s conclusions that the earth below Powell’s house moved and was either the direct or indirect cause of the damage, Liberty Mutual submitted its renewed motion for partial summary judgment on the breach of contract claim. The district court, relying on Schroeder, granted this motion after finding that the policy explicitly excluded coverage for any damage caused directly or indirectly by soil movement. The district court then dis missed the remaining claim of breach of the Nevada Unfair Claims Settlement Practices Act based on the two summary judgment orders. Powell appealed.
DISCUSSION
In this case, the parties’ arguments revolve around the breach of contract claim
I. Standard of review
The interpretation of an insurance policy presents a legal question, which we review de novo.
Farmers Ins. Exch. v. Neal,
II. Because the earth movement exclusion is ambiguous and must be interpreted against Liberty Mutual, the district court erred in granting Liberty Mutual summary judgment
Powell contends that the district court erred by deciding that the earth movement exclusion applied here. We agree and conclude that not only is the earth movement exclusion ambiguous and must be interpreted against Liberty Mutual, but also, if Liberty Mutual had intended for the earth movement exclusion to exclude damage caused by soil movement from a ruptured pipe, then it would have had to clearly include that in the earth movement definition and show that the earth movement exclusion unmistakably applied to the damage here. Thus, the district court erred in granting Liberty Mutual summary judgment.
If a provision in an insurance contract is unambiguous, a court will interpret and enforce it according to the plain and ordinary meaning of its terms.
Neal,
A. The earth movement exclusion is ambiguous
Earth movement exclusions were historically included in insurance policies to
“the reason for the insertion of the exclusionary clause ... in all risk insurance policies is to relieve the insurer from occasional major disasters which are almost impossible to predict and thus to insure against. There are earthquakes or floods which cause a major catastrophe and wreak damage to everyone in a large area rather than an individual policyholder. When such happens, the very basis upon which insurance companies operate is said to be destroyed. When damage is so widespread no longer can insurance companies spread the risk and offset a few or the average percentage of losses by many premiums.’ ’
Id. at 35 (alteration in original).
In considering earth movement exclusions, other jurisdictions have concluded that there is often an ambiguity as to what type of damage earth movement exclusions apply because such exclusions typically only list naturally occurring events in their definitions of what constitutes earth movement, but earth movement can be caused by unnatural events as well.
See Sentinel Associates v. American Mfrs. Mut. Ins.,
The earth movement exclusion in Liberty Mutual's insurance policy lists mine subsidence, 5 and earth sinking, rising, and shifting as examples of earth movement. Because mine subsidence is caused by human intervention from previous years, 6 and a generalized reference to earth sinking, rising, and shifting without clarifying the cause for such sinking, rising, or shifting could include both natural and human-caused events, not all of the examples listed are naturally occurring events. Therefore, the earth movement exclusion in the Liberty Mutual policy is even less clear than most earth movement exclusions regarding what is excluded because earth movement exclusions have historically applied to natural catastrophic events, but the Liberty Mutual policy includes a list of examples of mostly naturally occurring events as well as possibly human-caused events. Thus, the Liberty Mutual policy is ambiguous as to what precisely earth movement is when it is not a type of widespread, calamitous event.
Liberty Mutual argues that the settling clause would exempt coverage here. However, the district court based its decision on the earth movement exclusion, not the settling clause. Further, the ambiguity in the earth movement exclusion is not clarified by the language in the settling clause. Other jurisdictions have interpreted similar settling clauses that exclude damage caused by settling, shrinking, bulging, or expansion of soils as referring to gradual, natural processes that cause damage.
See Boston Co. Real Estate Counsel v. Home Ins. Co.,
B. If an insurance company wishes to deny coverage under an exclusion in the insurance policy, it must show that the exclusion clearly applies to the damage
Because ambiguities in insurance policies must be interpreted against the insurer, if an insurer wishes to exclude coverage by virtue of an exclusion in its policy, it must (1) write the exclusion in obvious and unambiguous language in the policy, (2) establish that the interpretation excluding covering under the exclusion is the only interpretation of the exclusion that could fairly be made, and (3) establish that the exclusion clearly applies to this particular case.
See Alamia v. Nationwide Mut. Fire Ins. Co.,
If Liberty Mutual had wished to exclude damage sustained as a result of soil movement from a burst pipe under its earth movement exclusion, it should have drafted a more explicit exclusion. Some insurance policies have clarified exactly what is excluded by their earth movement exclusion. These policies specify that earth movement can be due to either natural or unnatural causes.
See Alamia,
Because the Liberty Mutual policy does not include clear and unambiguous language, subject to only one interpretation, that clearly excludes the damage here, Liberty Mutual is unable to deny coverage of the claim if the district court determines that the claim stems from damage caused by soil movement as a direct result of the ruptured pipe. Thus, we conclude the district court erred in granting Liberty Mutual summary judgment. 7
in. The district court erred by relying on Schroeder v. State Farm Fire and Casualty Company
Powell contends that the district court erred by relying on
Schroeder,
In
Schroeder,
a pipe ruptured, saturating the soil with water and causing the soil to settle, which ultimately damaged a building
We do not insure under any coverage for any loss which would not have occurred in the absence of one or more of the following excluded events. We do not insure for such loss re gardless of: (a) the cause of the excluded event; or (b) other causes of the loss; or (c) whether other causes acted concurrently or in any sequence with the excluded event to produce the loss:
b. earth movement, meaning the sinking, rising, shifting, expanding or contracting of earth, all whether combined with water or not. Earth movement includes but is not limited to earthquake, landslide, erosion, and subsidence but does not include sinkhole collapse ....
Id. at 560. Schroeder concluded that earth movement can include non-natural events, and that no matter what the cause, if earth movement is involved, coverage is denied. Id.
The district court granted Liberty Mutual summary judgment under the rationale that there was no reason to depart from the holding in Schroeder, especially because the facts were similar to those in
Schroeder.
However, the earth movement exclusion in
Schroeder
is distinguishable from the earth movement exclusion in Powell’s policy. First, the policy in
Schroeder
was drafted differently than the policy here, and many courts have concluded that certain damage is excluded under earth movement exclusions in policies similar to the one in
Schroeder. See,
e.g.,
Chase,
The conclusions reached by the court in Schroeder were based on the specific language of the policy at issue in that case. Simply because the damage to Powell’s house might be excluded under the Schroeder policy does not mean it is excluded under the Liberty Mutual policy at issue in this case. Thus, we conclude the district court erred in relying on Schroeder.
CONCLUSION
In summary, we reverse the order of the district court concluding that (1) whether soil movement caused by a ruptured pipe is included in the scope of the earth movement exclusion is ambigú ous, thus the exclusion must be interpreted against Liberty Mutual; (2) the district court erred in granting Liberty Mutual summary judgment on the breach of contract claim; and (3) the district court erred in relying on Schroeder because it is factually distinguishable. As such, in the interests of justice, we also reverse the district court’s dismissal of the Nevada Unfair Claims Settlement Practices Act claim as it was based on the summary judgment of the breach of contract claim. Accordingly, we reverse the judgment of the district court and remand this matter for proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Cherry and Pickering, JL, concur.
Notes
This lead-in clause is commonly referred to as an anti-concurrent clause, which is meant to exclude damage caused by an excluded peril even when covered perils also contributed to the damage.
See Alamia v. Nationwide Mut. Fire Ins. Co.,
Nevada’s Unfair Claims Settlement Practices Act has been preempted as it applies to employee benefit plans only.
Brandner v. UNUM Life Ins. Co. of America,
Powell also challenges the dismissal of her NRS 686A.310 claim. Powell failed to present any argument on her NRS 686A.310 claim in her opening brief. Issues not raised in an appellant’s opening brief are deemed waived.
See Bongiovi v. Sullivan,
Powell did not challenge the partial summary judgment on the breach-of-good-faith-and-fair-dealing claim. Thus, we only reverse the summary judgment of the breach of contract claim and the dismissal of the NRS 686A.310 claim.
Ejusdem generis is “[a] canon of construction that when a general word or phrase follows a list of specific persons or things, the general word or phrase will be interpreted to include only persons or things of the same type as those listed.” Black’s Law Dictionary 535 (7th ed. 1999).
“[M]ine subsidence is the lowering of strata overlying a . . . mine, including the land surface, caused by the extraction of underground [minerals].”
Keystone Bituminous Coal Ass’n
v.
DeBenedictis,
See Peters,
Powell also argued in the. alternative that even if the earth movement exclusion was unambiguous, there was a genuine issue of material fact concerning what the proximate cause of the damage was. As we conclude that the district court erred in granting Liberty Mutual summary judgment because the earth movement exclusion was ambiguous, we do not address Powell’s alternative argument.
