Last week in Grebow v. Mercury Ins. Co., 2015 Cal. App. LEXIS 948, 2015 WL 6166610 (Cal.App., Oct. 26, 2015), a unanimous panel of California’s intermediate level appellate court rejected arguments that expenses incurred to prevent the collapse of a portion of the policyholders’ house were covered as mitigation. The court held that the policy provision requiring an insured to protect the property from further damage was not analogous to a sue and labor provision and did not apply until after a loss that already occurred because to hold otherwise would effectively convert the contract of insurance into a maintenance agreement.
The insureds owned a house in Tarzana. In early 2013, concerned over recurring watermarks, they had a general contractor and a structural engineer inspect the rear deck on the home. The consultants found severe decay from corrosion in steel beams beneath the structure in an area concealed by the deck floor, and they advised the policyholders that the upper portion of the house was in danger of falling. The insureds immediately took steps to remediate the home, and they ultimately spent $91,000 in doing so. Read more ›