Tuesday, January 13, 2009

Washington DC Water and Sewer Back up Claims

Washington DC's water and sewer utility has put out the following notice:

We're reviewing our claims program as it relates to water main breaks and sewer back ups. Our current policy is we generally do not pay for cleanup costs or damages that result from sewer backups or main breaks. We seek to determine the cause of the backup, if we had prior notice of a problem and whether we failed to timely fix the problem before WASA can consider payment of any claims. The property owner is also required to maintain and remove any clog in the sewer service line that extends from the building to the main sewer line.

Stringfellow Decision

On January 5, 2009, the California Court of Appeal issued its long-awaited decision in the Stringfellow insurance coverage case. The court held that a policyholder facing long-term property damage or personal injury claims may be entitled to indemnity under all years of insurance policies that were in effect while the damage took place. State of California v. Continental Ins. Co., 09 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 161. The court also disapproved precedents in California and elsewhere that have limited policyholders to collecting only one year's policy limits for continuing injury claims.
This landmark decision, which is likely to influence courts around the country, potentially multiplies the amount of insurance that policyholders can use to pay for claims under standard general liability policies. It is especially significant for policyholders (such as manufacturing, chemical, pharmaceutical, construction, and waste disposal companies) that routinely face claims for progressive property damage or personal injuries that might have started years ago.
The case started in 1993, when the State of California sought indemnity from its insurers for its estimated $700 million cost to clean up industrial waste near the Stringfellow acid pits in Riverside County, California. The State demanded coverage up to the combined limits of all its liability policies that were in effect during all the years when the contamination took place and continued to migrate offsite. Following an earlier Court of Appeal decision in FMC Corp. v. Plaisted & Cos., 61 Cal. App. 4th 1132 (1998), the trial court finally ruled in 2004 that the State could not "stack" or combine its successive years of policy limits as it sought to do, but instead had to pick one year's policies and demand payment under them. This ruling meant that the State could not collect more than the maximum ($48 million) in insurance limits it had purchased in any one policy year.
The Court of Appeal reversed the trial court's ruling on the "stacking" issue, and held that the State could collect the combined limits of all policies in effect when the contamination occurred and while it continued to migrate offsite. Noting that the standard language in each of the State's liability policies promised to pay "all sums" for any "occurrence" that caused property damage or bodily injury during the policy period, the court held that each policy had an independent contractual liability to pay regardless of whether the State had purchased similar policies in other years that might also be obligated to pay. In so holding, the court disapproved of FMC and other "anti-stacking" cases, in which courts have ignored the literal language of the standard liability policies and tried to impose limits on the number of policies under which an insured can collect.