STEVEN D. MERRYDAY, District Judge.
An error in a syllogism, otherwise a venerable tool of logic, can assume many forms. In some forms, the faulty syllogism offends the reader immediately, even before the reader identifies precisely the flaw in a premise, because the reader instantly recognizes the flaw in the conclusion. For example:
Why is this syllogism producing an obviously erroneous conclusion? Because the syllogism suffers from the "fallacy of equivocation," by which a single term ("nothing" in this example), used in each premise, acquires from the different context in each premise a different meaning — and because a flawed premise yields a false conclusion. Although logical rigor in a syllogism demands that "nothing" mean the same thing in each premise in the syllogism, the first "nothing" means "no other coffee among all available coffee" or "no beverage among all morning beverages" or the like, but the second "nothing" means "having no coffee at all" or "having no morning beverage at all" or the like. The first contemplates all coffee, any other coffee; the second contemplates no coffee, the absence of coffee. Although this false syllogism appears superficially to permit a sound deduction about coffee, the conclusion is plainly erroneous. Important to remember is that in no sense is this flawed syllogism — this flawed premise and this flawed conclusion — "ambiguous." Erroneous, certainly; confusing, perhaps; but ambiguous, never. On the contrary, the syllogism is unambiguously flawed, and the conclusion is unambiguously wrong.
This syllogism is similarly flawed:
The conclusion is unambiguously wrong, also. Why? Because every criminal trial is a criminal action but not every criminal action is a criminal trial. Again, as always, using the same word or phrase ("criminal action") in a different sense in each premise
The dispute in this action turns ultimately on the validity of a syllogism:
An elaboration will follow, but note that every building is a structure but not every structure is a building. "Building" and "structure" are not terms fully interchangeable without risk of a changed meaning and without risk of a flawed conclusion — without risk of an error.
By cross-motions for summary judgment, the plaintiffs and Liberty Mutual Fire Insurance Company dispute the extent of coverage under a clause in a property insurance contract that covers "structural damage to the building, including the foundation, caused by sinkhole activity." The plaintiffs insist that "structural damage to the building" means "any damage to the building," a construction that depends on the truth of the proposition that all "building damage" is "structural damage." Liberty Mutual counters that the modifier "structural" conveys a distinguishing meaning and, accordingly, meaningfully modifies the phrase "damage to the building" and that "structural damage to the building" means "damage to the structural integrity of the building."
Both Section 627.706, Florida Statutes (2010), and the insurance policy, effective November 1, 2010, state:
Construing the words "structural damage," several state circuit courts in central Florida (the venue for most sinkhole claims) have assessed the meaning of the term "structural damage" in isolation and not as part of the larger clause "structural damage to the building." Specifically, each court has abruptly extracted the phrase "structural damage" from the governing context — "structural damage to the building" — and has considered the words "structural damage" in stark (and deceptive) isolation. Each court has assumed the phrase "structural damage" to mean "damage to the structure" and assumed further that, because a "building" is a "structure," the phrase "damage to the structure" must mean "damage to the building," including any minor or cosmetic damage to the building.
Also, several United States district courts have construed the words "structural damage."
This interpretation of "structural damage" as "damage to the structure" merely restates the issue without resolving the issue, which is, "What is meant by `structure' or `structural' in the context of the pertinent statute and the applicable insurance contract — in the context of the phrase `structural damage to the building'?"
In the manner of Ayres, several of the federal decisions cite Bissell and the other central Florida circuit court decisions and reason that (1) because "structural damage" means "damage to the structure" and (2) because a "building" is a "structure," therefore (3) "structural damage," means "damage to the building." By citing Bissell and the other central Florida circuit court decisions, the federal decisions appear to interpret "structural damage" to mean "any damage to the building." The withdrawal of "structural damage" from the governing and defining context of "structural damage to the building" enables this misconstruction of both statute and contract.
If not otherwise defined, a common word carries the word's plain, ordinary, and obvious meaning. State v. Burris, 875 So.2d 408, 410 (Fla.2004); State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co. v. Sestile, 821 So.2d 1244, 1245-46 (Fla. 2d DCA 2002). A common word — and "structure" or "structural" is a common word — often conveys many meanings, each meaning dependent on the context. Because a common word often conveys more than one "common" meaning, the context governs which common or plain meaning attaches to the word or phrase:
Antonin Scalia & Bryan A. Garner, Reading Law: The Interpretation of Legal Texts 70 (2012) (internal citation omitted); accord Miele v. Prudential-Bache Sec., Inc., 656 So.2d 470, 472 (Fla.1995); City of Tampa v. Thatcher Glass Corp., 445 So.2d 578, 579-80 (Fla.1984); Southern Bell Tel. & Telegraph Co. v. D'Alemberte, 39 Fla. 25, 21 So. 570, 572 (1897).
In approaching a definition of the phrase "structural damage," the available legal precedent from central Florida lifts "structural damage" from the governing context and construes the now-isolated phrase "structural damage" by adopting a simple and seductive, but flawed, syllogism: "structural damage" means "damage to the structure"; a building is a structure; therefore, "damage to the structure" means "damage to the building."
However, the statement "a building is a structure" is more uniformly correct than the statement "a structure is a building" because one cannot imagine a building that is not a structure, but one instantly can imagine a structure that is not a building (a bridge is a structure but not a building, a fence is a structure but not a building, the bond between atoms in a molecule is a structure — a chemical structure — but not a chemical building, erected structural steel is a structure but not a building). In other words, "every building is a structure" (which is true) is not the equivalent of the statement "every structure is a building" (which is false). Although Ayres and the other cases treat "structure" and "building" as perfectly interchangeable, analysis falsifies the equivalence. The words "structure" and "building" are not freely interchangeable without risk of a changed meaning.
Despite the danger of interchanging words not freely interchangeable and thereby changing meaning, the applicable decisions, state and federal, follow Bissell and Ayres without disagreement, elaboration,
To summarize, this order at the outset posits that the plaintiffs' argument necessarily fails because the plaintiffs' argument depends upon the soundness of this flawed syllogism:
The second premise is defective in the sense that the premise is insufficient to warrant the conclusion. The stated conclusion requires the premise, "A structure is a building" or "every structure is a building," which is demonstrably false. In other words, for the above syllogism to hold true, a "structure" must always be a "building" without regard to the sense in which the word "structure" appears. In this syllogism, the words "structure" and "building" are not freely interchangeable without risk of a changed meaning.
In the syllogism that controls the present action, the premise is defective and the conclusion is wrong because the structures that are not also a building, include — decisively for the present action — the "structure" within a building that supports the building, that bears the load of the building, and that provides the building durability and integrity as a building — that provides "structural" integrity. A surprising but tenacious semantic confusion between "building" and "structure" plagues the history of the present issue, but the syllogism above exposes the confusion and invites the simple remedy of sound construction.
Unsurprisingly, a bountiful array of authority establishes that the frequently used term "structural damage," assessed correctly, is uniformly understood to denote damage to the structural integrity of a building. Amend v. McCabe, 664 So.2d 1183 (La.1995), considers a phrase in a "buy-sell agreement" concerning "structural damage caused by wood destroying pests." The Louisiana Supreme Court finds that "structural damage" means "damage to the structural integrity of the home, not merely superficial damage to non-load bearing parts of the home. Otherwise, the word `structural' would have no meaning in the contract and could have been omitted all together." 664 So.2d at 1189 n. 9. Robertson v. Odom, 296 S.W.3d 151 (Tex.Ct.App.2009), involves a property statute that requires a seller to disclose
296 S.W.3d at 157-58. Robertson holds that "repairs to the cabinets, sink, bathroom fixtures, and drywall" are not "structural repairs." 296 S.W.3d at 158; accord Aetna Cas. & Sur. Co. v. Ocean Acc. & Guar. Corp., 386 F.2d 413, 415 (3d Cir. 1967) (replacing "a cooling system, although perhaps a major undertaking, is not a structural alteration within the accepted meaning of the term"); 112 West 34th St. Assocs., LLC v. 112-1400 Trade Properties, LLC, 95 A.D.3d 529, 944 N.Y.S.2d 68 (N.Y.App.Div.2012) (replacing both a non-load-bearing wall and a masonry facade on a twenty-six-story office building is not a "structural alteration"); 1231 Euclid Homeowners Ass'n v. State Farm Fire & Cas. Co., 135 Cal.App.4th 1008, 1012, 37 Cal.Rptr.3d 795 (2006) ("Within a few days after the earthquake, a structural engineer retained by HOA's management company found no structural damage to the building, but did discover a number of stucco and plaster cracks in the walls and ceilings."); Smith v. Town of Normal, 238 Ill.App.3d 944, 178 Ill.Dec. 933, 605 N.E.2d 727 (1992) (repairing a stud in a load-bearing wall and replacing a ceiling joist are "structural alterations"); Mossman v. City of Columbus, 234 Neb. 78, 449 N.W.2d 214 (1989) (noting the city's definition of "structural alteration" as "any change in the supporting members of a building, such as bearing walls, columns, beams or girders"); In re Cohoes Indus. Terminal, Inc., 78 B.R. 681, 707 (Bankr.S.D.N.Y.1987) ("Structural elements include, but are not limited to, exterior load bearing walls, the foundation[,] and the subflooring.... Nonstructural repairs include, but are not limited to, fire escapes, painting, sprinklers, a wall radiator, and sills and trim."); Hardy v. Montgomery Ward & Co., 131 Ill.App.2d 1038, 267 N.E.2d 748, 751 (1971) ("Plaster is simply not a structural component of a ceiling or wall."); Spinelli v. Golda, 6 N.J. 68, 77 A.2d 233, 237 (1951) (replacing a plate-glass window is not a "structural repair"); S.P. Dunham & Co. v. 26 East State St. Realty Co., 134 N.J. Eq. 237, 35 A.2d 40, 48 (N.J.Ch.1943) (cutting three openings in a non-load-bearing wall to permit ingress and egress is not a "structural change").
These decisions — and many others from other jurisdictions — are consistent with plain meaning, with the dictates of syntax, and with the Florida Existing Building Code's definition of "structural," "any part,
In 1981, the Florida Legislature adopted Section 627.706, Florida Statutes, which requires each authorized property insurer in Florida to provide coverage for "sinkhole loss." As adopted in 1981, Section 627.706 defined (1) "loss" as "structural damage to the building" and (2) "sinkhole loss" as "actual physical damage to the property ... arising out of or caused by sudden settlement or collapse of the earth supporting such property only when such settlement or collapse results from subterranean voids created by the action of water on a limestone or similar rock formation." Section 627.706(2) provided that "[c]ontents coverage shall apply only if there is structural damage to the building." The 1981 statute included no definition of "structural damage."
Finding a "dramatic increase" in sinkhole damage claims, the Legislature in 2005 removed the definition of the word "loss" and substituted the definition of the phrase "sinkhole loss," defined as "structural damage to the building, including the foundation, caused by sinkhole activity." Ch. 2005-111, §§ 17, 18, Laws of Fla. According to Chapter 2011-39, Section 21, Laws of Florida, "In 2005, the Legislature revised [Sections] 627.706-627.7074, Florida Statutes, to adopt certain geological or technical terms; to increase reliance on objective, scientific testing requirements; and generally to reduce the number of sinkhole claims and related disputes arising under prior law." Consequently, the 2005 amendment changed the definition of "sinkhole loss" from "actual physical damage to the property" to "structural damage to the building, including the foundation." Why? "To reduce the number of sinkhole claims." Like the 1981 statute, the 2005 amendment included no definition of "structural damage," which remained undefined in the statute until 2011.
After Bissell and the other central Florida circuit courts held that "structural damage" meant "damage to the structure," the Legislature in 2011 and for the first time adopted a statutory definition of "structural damage." Ch. 2011-39, § 22, Laws of Fla. Effective May 17, 2011, Section 627.706(2)(k)'s definition features terms employed by architects and engineers to identify damage that threatens the structural soundness of the building and the safety of the building's occupants:
Section 627.706(2) announces that the statutory definition applies when "structural damage" is "used in connection with any policy providing coverage for ... sinkhole losses." The 2011 amendment's five-part definition attempts to resolve the legislature's "concern[] about the impact the growing number and the severity of sinkhole insurance claims had on Citizens Property Insurance Corporation and the private insurance market." Bay Farms Corp., 835 F.Supp.2d at 1232 (describing the statutory history). Accordingly, Chapter 2011-39, Section 21, Laws of Florida, states:
Apparent from this legislative finding of fact and statement of legislative purpose, the legislature in 2011 sought to abrogate the central Florida circuit courts' unfounded interpretation of "structural damage" and to "clarif[y]" certain definitions to effectuate the 2005 amendment's "intended reduction of sinkhole claims and disputes." Ch. 2011-39, § 21, Laws of Fla.
Additionally, a complete and careful reading of the statutes governing sinkhole claims confirms (1) that the legislature intended the "plain meaning" of the phrase "structural damage" in the unambiguous statutory clause "structural damage to the building" to confine the required coverage for sinkhole damage to damage that impairs the structural integrity of the building and (2) that the word "structure" denotes the parts and material that ensure the building's stability.
Upon receipt of a claim for a sinkhole loss, an insurer must initially inspect the premises to determine "if there has been physical damage to the structure." § 627.707(2), Fla. Stat. (2010). After the initial inspection, the insurer must hire a professional engineer to inspect the property and test for a sinkhole. Under Section 627.7073, Florida Statutes (2010), sinkhole loss is "verified" if the engineer determines that "the cause of the actual physical and structural damage is sinkhole activity." Section 627.7073, Florida Statutes (2010), requires the engineer to issue a written report, even if the engineer eliminates sinkhole activity as "the cause of damage to the structure." If paying a claim for sinkhole loss, the insurer must file a copy of the report with the clerk of the court for recording. § 627.7073(2)(a), Fla. Stat. (2010). If sinkhole loss "is verified," the insurer must "pay to stabilize the land and the building and repair the foundation" in accord with the engineer's recommendation. If required by the policy, the insurer must "pay for other repairs to the structure." § 627.707(5)(a), Fla. Stat. (2010).
If denying a claim, the insurer must inform the insured of the right to proceed under Section 627.7074 to a non-binding "neutral evaluation" before a "neutral evaluator," an engineer "who has completed a course of study in alternative dispute resolution." If the matter remains unresolved after the neutral evaluation, the evaluator must prepare a report rendering an opinion about whether sinkhole loss is "verified." If opining that sinkhole loss is "verified," the report must contain the evaluator's opinion about "the need for and estimated costs of stabilizing the land and any covered structures or buildings and other appropriate remediation or structural repairs." § 627.7074(12), Fla. Stat. (2010).
Second, Section 627.706(1), Florida Statutes (2010),
Apparent from the statute's expressly identifying three components — a foundation, a structure, and a building — "structure" means something different from "building" (just like "foundation" means something different from "building").
In paragraph 61 of the counterclaim for declaratory judgment, "Liberty Mutual contends that the policy does not provide coverage for any sinkhole loss where the property has not suffered structural damage." In paragraph 62 of the counterclaim, Liberty Mutual asserts entitlement to "a declaration that the above referenced provision of the policy provides no coverage for the damage claimed by Plaintiffs to the real property located at 8154 Shalom Drive, Spring Hill, Florida, unless that loss includes structural damage, and that the term includes, at minimum, damage that impairs the structural integrity of the building."
Liberty Mutual's motion for summary judgment is
Also, in the motion for summary judgment (Doc. 16) Liberty Mutual requests a declaration that the definition of "structural damage" that determines the coverage available to the plaintiffs in this action includes the May 17, 2011, statutory amendment to Section 627.706, which amendment provides a five-part definition of "structural damage." Although a resolution of the plaintiffs' claims might require a determination of the applicability of the 2011 amendment,
New Hampshire Indem. Co. v. Scott, 910 F.Supp.2d 1341, 1344-45 (M.D.Fla.2012). No ambiguity appears in the phrase "structural damage to the building."
Changing "structural damage" to "damage to the structure," much less to "damage to the building," employs an interpretive mechanism heavily laden with risk, although disarmingly simple in appearance.