WARREN W. EGINTON, Senior District Judge.
This is an action by National Liability & Fire Insurance Co. and Boat America Corporation for declaratory judgment that there is no coverage for either of the insurance claims submitted by defendant John Jablonowski under his Yacht Policy.
Plaintiffs have moved for summary judgment. For the following reasons, plaintiffs' motion will be granted.
Plaintiffs National Liability & Fire Insurance Co. and Boat America Corporation d/b/a Boat Owners Association of the United States issued Yacht Policy No. 3641097-15 to defendant John Jablonowski for his 1962 wooden auxiliary sailboat, PAULA LYNN, with an agreed $90,000 value covering the boat and boating equipment during the period September 18, 2015, to September 18, 2016.
On June 20, 2016, defendant reported Claim No. 1604168 under the Yacht Policy for an alleged electrical fire at the PAULA LYNN shore power cord connection, which cut off electricity to an onboard space heater. This allegedly caused immediate consequential property damage in the form of mold or mildew growth in the boat's interior, for which defendant claims he is due $90,000, with the boat allegedly a total loss.
On September 23, 2016, plaintiffs declined coverage for defendant's first claim and without waiving any rights agreed to pay a $3,000 invoice for cleaning mold and mildew, as an investigative cost.
Three days after that declination (and eight days after the Yacht Policy expired), on September 26, 2016, defendant reported Claim No. 1607652 for alleged vandalism due to an unknown person's sanding of PAULA LYNN's cabin top and V-berth. Defendant claims the vandal's sanding spread mold throughout the boat. Again defendant claims he is due $90,000 because the boat is a constructive total loss.
Without waiving any rights, plaintiffs agreed to consider the new, second claim and to reconsider the first claim in light of defendant's continued allegations.
In accordance with the Yacht Policy at its page 2 ¶ 5, defendant agreed to a pre-litigation examination under oath taken by counsel on October 21, 2016.
By letter dated December 8, 2016, plaintiffs denied defendant's first and second claims and then filed an Amended Complaint for declaratory judgment on December 13, 2016.
Regarding his first claim, for the alleged fire, defendant admits that he never saw any smoke but contends that the fire at the electrical cord connection continued and was ongoing all winter until May 2016.
Defendant did not disclose any expert witnesses regarding the existence of a fire. After looking at the PAULA LYNN shore power cord, the Watertown Fire Chief and the Mystic Fire Marshal, according to defendant, both said, "It was an electrical issue and it caused the burning of the cord, arcing."
Plaintiffs timely disclosed Michael K. Higgins Sr. as their expert fire witness in accordance with Fed. R. Civ. P. 26(a)(2). Defendant did not depose Higgins. In his November 30, 2016, report, Higgins concluded that there was no fire. The report supports plaintiffs' December 8, 2016, denial letter:
Defendant admitted that he had to repeatedly reconnect the shore power cord in order to restore power to the space heater in the saloon.
Although defendant testified that he first inspected and saw physical damage on the shore power cord at the end of May or early June 2016, his wife and son testified damage to the shore power plug was first noticed in the winter of 2016.
Regarding defendant's second claim for vandalism, he admitted no knowledge that the unknown sander intended to cause harm to the boat rather than to clean the mold. Besides sanding, defendant alleges no other acts of vandalism.
A motion for summary judgment will be granted where there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and it is clear that the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.
The burden is on the moving party to demonstrate the absence of any material factual issue genuinely in dispute.
If a nonmoving party has failed to make a sufficient showing on an essential element of his case with respect to which he has the burden of proof, then summary judgment is appropriate.
The Yacht Policy provides:
Plaintiffs argue, based on their uncontroverted expert opinion, that there was no fire. Plaintiffs' expert, who has not been directly challenged by defendant, opines that pyrolysis but no ignition or combustion occurred. Moreover, plaintiffs characterize as implausible defendant's contention that a fire was ongoing within the power cord connection throughout the winter. Plaintiffs assert that because there was no fire, there can be no coverage under the Yacht Policy for "immediate consequential property damage resulting from fire," as the Policy excludes coverage for "any loss caused directly or indirectly by wear and tear, gradual deterioration, mechanical or electrical breakdown, overheating."
Defendant responds that the mold damage was a result of fire damage to the shore power cord, which interrupted the operation of the heaters in the vessel's main cabin. Defendant asserts that the kind of "slow burn" that occurred in the power cord can constitute a fire for legal purposes.
Plaintiff maintains that the existence of a fire is a material fact in dispute. In terms of evidence, plaintiff submits that "[t]here is obvious charring on the side of the boatside plugs, both male and female, which show that there was a fire." Indeed, when determining scope of coverage for loss or damage by fire, "the action of fire in charring, scorching, cracking, smoking or heating may be included though no flame be seen."
Here, defendant did not witness and has no evidence of flame or glow. Moreover, plaintiffs' expert report concludes that there was no combustion.
Higgins' Report p. 2 [ECF No. 1 Ex. 2].
An insurer's status as plaintiff in a declaratory judgment action does not shift the burden of proof away from the insured.
Plaintiffs argue that the mere sanding of the interior cabin does not amount to vandalism, as there is no evidence of willful or malicious destruction.
This Court has addressed the definition of vandalism:
Here, defendant admits that the mystery sander may have been benevolent. Without any direct evidence of malicious intent, it is not reasonable to infer that a prospective vandal would choose to covertly sand the interior cabin as a means to cause harm to the vessel.
Indeed, at his examination under oath, defendant testified regarding the unknown sander as follows:
Plaintiffs contend that the mold or mildew exclusion further supports their denial of coverage. While the mold and mildew exclusion includes exceptions for immediate consequential property damage resulting from fire, explosion, sinking, demasting, collision, and stranding, there is no such exception for vandalism. Therefore, the "insurance does not cover . . . any loss caused directly or indirectly by . . . mold or mildew." Accordingly, summary judgment will be granted in favor of plaintiffs with respect to defendant's vandalism claim.
For the foregoing reasons, plaintiffs' motion for summary judgment is GRANTED. The Clerk is instructed to close this case.