Case Information
*1 #25667-rev & rem-JKM
IN THE SUPREME COURT
OF THE
STATE OF SOUTH DAKOTA
* * * *
ZOO PROPERTIES, LLP and
ABERDEEN ZOO, INC.
d/b/a THE ZOO, Plaintiffs and Appellants, v.
MIDWEST FAMILY MUTUAL
INSURANCE COMPANY, Defendant and Appellee.
* * * *
APPEAL FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE FIFTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT BROWN COUNTY, SOUTH DAKOTA * * * *
HONORABLE JACK R. VON WALD
Judge
* * * *
THOMAS P. TONNER of
Tonner, Tobin and King, LLP Attorneys for plaintiffs Aberdeen, South Dakota and appellants.
ERIC R. JOHNSON of
Davenport, Evans, Hurwitz &
Smith, LLP Attorneys for defendant Sioux Falls, South Dakota and appellee.
* * * *
CONSIDERED ON BRIEFS ON JANUARY 10, 2011 OPINION FILED 03/23/11 *2 MEIERHENRY, Justice
[¶1.] Zoo Properties, LLP and Aberdeen Zoo, Inc. (Zoo Properties) filed a claim under its business owner’s insurance policy to cover the expenses to fix a sagging ceiling resulting from cracked joists. A provision in the policy covered damage due to “risks of direct physical loss involving collapse of a building.” The policy provider, Midwest Family Mutual Insurance Co. (Midwest Family Mutual), denied coverage claiming that the policy language only covered total collapse of the building. The parties filed cross motions for summary judgment. The circuit court determined that the policy did not provide coverage. As a result, the circuit court granted summary judgment for Midwest Family Mutual. Zoo Properties appeals, arguing that the policy provides coverage. We reverse and remand for further proceedings.
Facts In March 2009, Zoo Properties became aware that the ceiling joists
between the first and second floors of its building were cracked. Zoo Properties submitted a claim to Midwest Family Mutual under its business owner’s policy to pay for the repair costs. Both parties hired engineers to determine the extent of the damage. The engineers found that the joists were cracked but that the second floor had not collapsed to the ground. One engineer, however, stated that collapse was inevitable and that the building would be unsafe without repair. Midwest Family Mutual denied Zoo Properties’ claim on the basis that
the policy was unambiguous and only covered total collapse of the building. The policy provided coverage for “collapse” as follows:
-1-
d. Collapse
We will pay for loss or damage caused by or resulting from risks of direct physical loss involving collapse of a building or any part of a building caused only by one or more of the following:
. . .
(4) Weight of people or personal property; (5) Weight of rain that collects on a roof; . . .
Collapse does not include settling, cracking , shrinkage, bulging or expansion.
(Emphasis added.) The term “collapse” was not otherwise defined. The circuit court agreed with Midwest Family Mutual and determined
that the policy only covered total collapse of the building, not cracking joists. On appeal, Zoo Properties argues that the circuit court’s interpretation of the policy is incorrect. Zoo Properties claims that the provision is ambiguous and should be construed to cover the cracking joists because they would have eventually caused the ceiling to collapse.
Analysis It is settled that we review the interpretation of insurance contracts de
novo.
Zochert v. Nat’l Farmers Union Prop. & Cas. Co
.,
support, Zoo Properties points to other jurisdictions that have interpreted the exact policy provision at issue here. Zoo Properties asserts that the “majority view recognizes that the definition of collapse does not require the structure to fall to the ground.” Instead, Zoo Properties submits that the policy’s collapse provision is satisfied when there is a “substantial impairment of the structural integrity of the building[.]” Consequently, Zoo Properties contends that an issue of material fact exists whether the building suffered a “substantial impairment” from the cracked joists. In response, Midwest Family Mutual argues that the plain language of
the insurance contract must be read to define “the verb ‘collapse’” as: “1) to break down completely: fall apart in confused disorganization: crumble into insignificance or nothingness; 2) to fall or shrink together abruptly and completely: fall into a jumbled or flattened mass through the force of external pressure: fall in; 3) to cave in, fall in or give way: undergo ruin or destruction by or as if by falling down: become dispersed. . . .” Collapse Definition , Merriam-Webster’s Third New International Dictionary Unabridged, http://www.mwu.eb.com/mwu (last visited Feb. 7, 2011). In applying these definitions, Midwest Family Mutual contends that it is undisputed that the cracked joists did not lead to collapse because the ceiling never fell, rather it merely sagged. Midwest Family Mutual also argues that the *5 policy provision that excludes “cracking” applies to the cracked joists and precludes coverage. As noted by Zoo Properties, other jurisdictions have found the exact
policy language at issue here ambiguous. In
Ocean Winds Council of Co-owners,
Inc. v. Auto-Owner Insurance Co
., the South Carolina Supreme Court accepted a
certified question to “interpret a property insurance policy providing coverage for
‘risks of direct physical loss involving collapse of a building or any part of a
building.’”
the word ‘collapse’ ambiguous[.]”
Id.
The court also noted that the “courts finding
the word [collapse] unambiguous . . . have generally construed it to mean ‘a falling
in, loss of shape, or reduction to flattened form or rubble.’”
Id.
at 307-08 (citing
Am. Concept Ins. Co. v. Jones
,
[¶10.]
The court identified three approaches for interpreting the
term collapse. The first approach requires that the collapse be imminent before
coverage exists.
Id.
(citing
Whispering Creek Condo. Owner Ass’n v. Alaska Nat’l
Ins. Co.
,
Conclusion
[¶13.]
Adopting the moderate first approach “protects the insured without
distorting the purpose of the clause to protect against damage from collapse.”
1.
The imminent collapse standard still recognizes the cracking exclusion
present in the policy. The exclusion provides that “[c]ollapse does not include
settling, cracking, shrinkage, bulging or expansion.” In most instances,
cracking will likely precede imminent and total collapse. But, as a matter of
common sense, the cracking exclusion cannot serve to undermine the
imminent collapse standard when cracking often precedes collapse. The
excluded cracking is of the same nature and magnitude as “shrinkage,
bulging or expansion.”
*8
,
requiring imminent collapse does not require this Court to make a forced
construction of the term in either party’s favor.
See Gloe v. Union Ins. Co.
, 2005
S.D. 30, ¶ 29,
[¶14.] GILBERTSON, Chief Justice, and KONENKAMP, ZINTER, and SEVERSON, Justices, concur.
2.
Bruner and O’Connor’s
treatise recognizes that “[b]roader coverage [of
collapse provisions] is sometimes justified on the grounds that to restrict
policy benefits to instances where the building actually falls down creates an
incentive to forego repairs to avert imminent collapse.” 4 Philip L. Bruner &
Patrick J. O’Connor,
Bruner and O’Connor on Construction Law
§ 11:230
(2010) (citing
Royal Indem. Co. v. Grunberg
,
