Concrete cases crumble in Connecticut

Connecticut essentially ends insurance coverage in disintegrating concrete cases — except in the most extreme instances.

In Karas v. Liberty Ins. Corp., the insureds alleged that the carrier breached the collapse provisions of their policy by declining to compensate them for the purported collapse of their basement walls. (Photo: Shutterstock)

While acknowledging the “seriousness of the crumbling foundations problem” and the “gravity of the problem” for many Connecticut homeowners, the Connecticut Supreme Court has issued a decision essentially foreclosing insurance coverage for that damage — except in the most extreme cases.

What lies beneath

In 2010, Steven and Gail Karas purchased a home in Vernon, a small town in Connecticut named after George Washington’s Mount Vernon estate that also happens to be home to the New England Civil War Museum.

The Karas’ home was built in 1984. As the court explained, the couple was among hundreds of homeowners in northeastern Connecticut whose foundations were constructed using concrete manufactured by J.J. Mottes Concrete Company. According to a study commissioned by the state of Connecticut and conducted by the Department of Consumer Protection, the stone aggregate used in Mottes concrete between 1983 and 2010 contained significant amounts of pyrrhotite, a ferrous mineral that oxidizes in the presence of water and oxygen to form expansive secondary minerals that crack and destabilize the concrete, resulting in its premature deterioration.

In October 2013, the Karases discovered that their basement walls were cracking and crumbling. On November 15, 2013, they submitted a claim to their homeowners’ insurance carrier, Liberty Insurance Corp.

Liberty denied the claim, and the Karases sued. The insureds alleged that Liberty breached the collapse provisions of their policy by declining to compensate them for the purported collapse of their basement walls. The Karases also alleged a breach of the covenant of good faith and fair dealing as well as violations of the Connecticut Unfair Insurance Practices Act (“CUIPA”) and the Connecticut Unfair Trade Practices Act (“CUTPA”).

The Karases asserted that they were entitled to payment under their policy because the deterioration of the concrete within their basement walls constituted hidden decay that substantially impaired the walls’ structural integrity, as defined by the Connecticut Supreme Court in Beach v. Middlesex Mutual Assurance Co., 532 A.2d 1297 (Conn. 1987).

Applicable case law

The case reached the Connecticut Supreme Court, which considered the following questions:

Is “substantial impairment of structural integrity” the applicable standard for “collapse” under the policy in question?

If the answer to question one is yes, then what constitutes “substantial impairment of structural integrity” for purposes of the policy?

Under Connecticut law, [does] the [term] “foundation” … in a [homeowners’] insurance policy unambiguously include basement walls? If not, and if [that term is] ambiguous, should extrinsic evidence as to the meaning of “foundation” . . . be considered?

The Connecticut Supreme Court first held that Beach’s substantial impairment standard applied to the collapse provision of the Karases’ homeowners’ insurance policy. Next, it ruled that the “substantial impairment of structural integrity” standard required proof that the home was in imminent danger of falling down. Third, the court concluded that the term “foundation” unambiguously encompassed the home’s basement walls.

The court explained that the issue it addressed in Beach was whether a house that was still standing but “in imminent danger of falling over” could nevertheless be deemed to be in a state of collapse for purposes of a homeowners’ insurance policy that excluded losses resulting from “settling, cracking, shrinkage, bulging or expansion” unless a “collapse of a building… not otherwise excluded ensue[d]…” The court said that because of the factual context in which the Beaches’ claim of coverage was made, it had no reason to consider whether a building that was not in any imminent danger of falling over also could be found to be in a state of collapse under the same insurance policy.

The court added that, in light of the facts of Beach and the cases it relied on in adopting the substantial impairment standard, a requirement that the building “must be in imminent danger of falling down” was implicit in its holding in Beach.

It also agreed with the following explication set forth by the Washington Supreme Court in Queen Anne Park Homeowners Ass’n v. State Farm Fire & Casualty Co., 352 P.3d 790 (Wash. 2015): “[C]ollapse” must mean something more than mere “settling, cracking, shrinking, bulging or expansion.”

The Connecticut Supreme Court said that to conclude otherwise would not only nullify the exclusion contained in the Liberty policy for losses related to “settling, cracking, shrinkage, bulging or expansion” but would strip the term “collapse” of its “natural and ordinary meaning.”

Deconstructing construction

The court therefore disagreed with the Karases that Beach supported the view that the substantial impairment standard could be satisfied “merely by evidence that a building will eventually fall down,” even if it was “in no present danger of doing so,” and likely could be “safely occupied for years, if not decades, into the future.”

Therefore, the court held, to meet the substantial impairment standard, an insured whose home had not “actually collapsed” must present evidence demonstrating that the home nevertheless was “in imminent danger of such a collapse.” The court noted that whether this evidence satisfied the standard in any particular case necessarily would depend on the “specific facts of the case and the strength and credibility of the expert testimony adduced by the insured and the insurer.”

Finally, the court rejected the Karases’ contention that the coverage exclusion in the Liberty policy for the collapse of the home’s “foundation” did not include the basement walls of their home but, rather, only meant the footings beneath the basement walls.

The court concluded that the term “foundation” in the Karases’ homeowners’ insurance policy “unambiguously” included their basement walls and that the collapse provision in their policy applied to any foundation located on their property, including the one beneath their house.

The case is Karas v. Liberty Ins. Corp., No. SC 20149 (Conn. Nov. 12, 2019).

Steven A. Meyerowitz (smeyerowitz@meyerowitzcommunications.com) is the founder and president of Meyerowitz Communications Inc., a law firm marketing communications consulting company, and director of the Insurance Coverage Law Center.

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