Filed: Nov. 08, 2018
Latest Update: Mar. 03, 2020
Summary: NOT PRECEDENTIAL UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT _ No. 17-3477 _ FREDERICK MUTUAL INSURANCE CO., Appellant v. DONALD HALL, INDIVIDUALLY AND TRADING AS HALLSTONE, INC.; MARIA A. HALL, INDIVIDUALLY AND TRADING AS HALLSTONE, INC.; HALLSTONE, INC.; R. LEE HULKO; BRADLEY B. FAIR _ On Appeal from the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania (D.C. Civ. No. 2-15-cv-03354) Honorable J. Curtis Joyner, District Judge _ Submitted under Third Circuit LAR 34.1
Summary: NOT PRECEDENTIAL UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT _ No. 17-3477 _ FREDERICK MUTUAL INSURANCE CO., Appellant v. DONALD HALL, INDIVIDUALLY AND TRADING AS HALLSTONE, INC.; MARIA A. HALL, INDIVIDUALLY AND TRADING AS HALLSTONE, INC.; HALLSTONE, INC.; R. LEE HULKO; BRADLEY B. FAIR _ On Appeal from the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania (D.C. Civ. No. 2-15-cv-03354) Honorable J. Curtis Joyner, District Judge _ Submitted under Third Circuit LAR 34.1(..
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NOT PRECEDENTIAL
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT
______________
No. 17-3477
______________
FREDERICK MUTUAL INSURANCE CO.,
Appellant
v.
DONALD HALL, INDIVIDUALLY AND TRADING
AS HALLSTONE, INC.; MARIA A. HALL,
INDIVIDUALLY AND TRADING AS HALLSTONE, INC.;
HALLSTONE, INC.; R. LEE HULKO; BRADLEY B. FAIR
______________
On Appeal from the United States District Court
for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania
(D.C. Civ. No. 2-15-cv-03354)
Honorable J. Curtis Joyner, District Judge
______________
Submitted under Third Circuit LAR 34.1(a)
November 5, 2018
BEFORE: HARDIMAN, KRAUSE, and GREENBERG, Circuit Judges
(Filed: November 8, 2018)
______________
OPINION*
______________
____________________
*This disposition is not an opinion of the full court and pursuant to I.O.P. 5.7 does not
constitute binding precedent.
GREENBERG, Circuit Judge.
I. INTRODUCTION
Plaintiff-Appellant Frederick Mutual Insurance Company (“Frederick”) has filed
this appeal in a declaratory judgment action in which it sought to have the District Court
declare that it did not have the duty to defend and indemnify Defendant-Appellee
Hallstone, Inc. (“Hallstone”) under an insurance policy that Frederick issued to Hallstone
in a state court action against Hallstone. After holding a bench trial, the Court entered
judgment for Hallstone, finding that the policy obligated Frederick to defend Hallstone in
the state court action. We will reverse.
II. FACTUAL BACKGROUND
We rely on the District Court’s findings of fact during its bench trial. Defendant-
Appellees Donald and Marie Hall formed Hallstone to provide stone masonry work for
residential premises. On the advice of a builder, Donald Hall (“Hall”), a principal in
Hallstone, approached the Fraser Insurance Agency (“Fraser”) to obtain an insurance
policy to provide in Hall’s words “maximum,” “soup to nuts” coverage for Hallstone.
Fraser obtained a liability policy from Frederick for Hallstone. Hall and Frederick did
not have direct contact and Hall never asked for or received a copy of the policy
Frederick issued.
Beginning in or around March 2006, Defendant-Appellees R. Lee Hulko and
Bradley B. Fair (“the Customers”) contracted with Hallstone to provide custom stone
masonry work for their home. This project obviously was a substantial undertaking as it
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took several years to complete and the Customers paid nearly $300,000 for the project.
In April 2014, the Customers discovered that some of the stone masonry work that
Hallstone had undertaken had been damaged and required substantial repairs ultimately
costing $352,294. The Customers attributed the damage to what they regarded was
Hallstone’s substandard and defective work and consequently they filed a state court
action in Pennsylvania against Hallstone alleging breach of warranty, negligence, and
related statutory claims.
While defending Hallstone in the state court action, Frederick filed this declaratory
judgment action in the District Court, seeking a determination that it did not have a duty
under its policy to defend and indemnify Hallstone for its defective workmanship.
Frederick filed a motion for summary judgment but the Court denied the motion as it
found that there was a question of fact on the question of whether Hall received a copy of
the insurance policy from Frederick. At the ensuing bench trial, the Court found that the
insurance policy unambiguously excluded faulty workmanship coverage. But the Court
also found that Hall believed the policy provided coverage ‘“if something was done
inadvertently’, or if his business did something and someone made a claim against his
business that he might be liable for,” Frederick Mut. Ins. Co. v. Hall, No. 15-3354,
2017
WL 4883157, at *2 (E.D. Pa. Oct. 30, 2017), and that Frederick never provided Hall with
a copy of the policy to contradict his belief.
Id. at *10. The Court’s ultimate finding was
that Hallstone had a reasonable expectation of workmanship coverage, and, accordingly,
it entered judgment for Hallstone.
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III. DISCUSSION
The District Court had diversity of citizenship jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. §
1332(a). We have jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1291. We review the Court’s findings
of fact for clear error, and review its conclusions of law de novo. See Clientron Corp. v.
Devon IT, Inc.,
894 F.3d 568, 575-76 (3d Cir. 2018). This matter is governed by
Pennsylvania law.
In reaching its decision, the District Court found that the insurance policy
unambiguously excluded coverage for the faulty workmanship claims the Customers
made in the underlying state court action, a conclusion with which we concur. That
finding should have been the end of the Court’s inquiry.
It is well-settled that when policy language is unambiguous, we give effect
to that language. It is also well-settled that the focus of any inquiry
regarding issues of coverage under an insurance policy is the reasonable
expectations of the insured. An insured, however, may not complain that
its reasonable expectations have been frustrated when the applicable policy
limitations are clear and unambiguous.
Millers Capital Ins. Co. v. Gambone Bros. Dev. Co.,
941 A.2d 706, 717 (Pa. Super. Ct.
2007) (citations omitted). “[G]enerally, courts cannot invoke the reasonable expectation
doctrine to create an ambiguity where the policy itself is unambiguous.” Matcon
Diamond, Inc. v. Penn Nat’l Ins. Co.,
815 A.2d 1109, 1114 (Pa. Super. Ct. 2003).
Having found the policy unambiguous, the Court should have entered judgment for
Frederick.
Nevertheless, the District Court, relying heavily on Tonkovic v. State Farm Mut.
Auto. Ins. Co.,
521 A.2d 920 (Pa. 1987), held that the facts of this case warranted the
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application of the reasonable expectation doctrine. In Tonkovic, an insured specifically
had sought to obtain disability insurance from an insurance company that would cover his
mortgage payments in the event he was disabled in an accident, even if he was entitled to
workmen’s compensation benefits by reason of his injury.
Id. at 921. Yet,
notwithstanding the circumstance that he made his intentions clear to the insurance agent
and in his insurance application, the company issued him a policy that excluded disability
payments when workmen’s compensation was available to an insured as a result of an
accident.
Id. at 922. Although the agent contended Tonkovic had received a copy of the
policy that unambiguously contained the exclusion, substantial evidence was presented at
trial that he did not receive a copy of the policy.
Id. Finding the company liable, the
Pennsylvania Supreme Court held that there was
a crucial distinction between cases where one applies for a specific type of
coverage and the insurer unilaterally limits that coverage, resulting in a
policy quite different from what the insured requested, and cases where the
insured received precisely the coverage that he requested but failed to read
the policy to discover clauses that are the usual incident of the coverage
applied for. When the insurer elects to issue a policy differing from what
the insured requested and paid for, there is clearly a duty to advise the
insured of the changes so made. The burden is not on the insured to read the
policy to discover such changes, or not read it at his peril.
Id. at 925.
In contrast, Hall did not apply for the specific type of insurance coverage he now
claims that he expected as he asked in general terms for “soup to nuts” coverage though a
broad term that was not specific. Thus, Frederick could regard Hall’s application for
insurance as seeking a general liability insurance policy. However, “[a] liability policy
does not provide a guarantee of the policyholder’s workmanship.” Standard Venetian
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Blind Co. v. Am. Empire Ins. Co.,
469 A.2d 563, 567 (Pa. 1983) (Hutchinson, J.,
concurring). “Such a guarantee is not within its coverage. I do not believe a businessman
of ordinary intelligence could reasonably expect to obtain a defense against and
indemnity for the cost of properly performing his contract or replacing his failed product
under a liability policy.”
Id. (citing Selected Risks Ins. Co. v. Bruno,
718 F.2d 67 (3d
Cir. 1983)).
A businessman purchases a liability insurance policy to transfer the risk and
cost of unexpected and unintended happenings (occurrences) to his
insurance company. The company agrees to assume that risk for a
calculated premium. The company does not, however, provide a guarantee
of the businessman's workmanship or his products for that premium and
typically protects itself against such claims by excluding coverage for
property in the care, custody or control of the insured or property as to
which the insured for any purpose is exercising control or by language . . . .
There is usually some form of insurance available to cover injury to or
destruction of the excluded property at a higher premium which is
commensurate with the risk. The exclusion is to eliminate securing the
same coverage under a liability policy at cheaper rates.
Id. at 571 (internal quotation marks omitted) (quoting F.D. Cooke, Jr., Care Custody or
Control Exclusions, 1959 Ins. L.J. 7, 10, (1959).
In Venetian Blind, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court rejected the insured’s
argument that it neither was made aware of nor understood the exclusion of workmanship
coverage from its policy, as it found that “the lack of knowledge or understanding of a
clearly drafted exclusion clause in a written contract of insurance executed by both
parties does not render the clause unenforceable.”
Id. at 564. Although Hall argues that
he never received a copy of the policy, a contention that we accept, and therefore he was
unaware of the exclusion, this circumstance does not change the fact that he was seeking
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general liability insurance. At no point did he specify that he desired the more costly
workmanship insurance. As the court held in Matcon, an insured’s failure to request or
bargain for a particular coverage precludes a court from finding that the insured expected
such coverage, whether or not the insured received a copy of the
policy. 815 A.2d at
1115.
Even if we agreed with the District Court’s invocation of the reasonable
expectation doctrine, Pennsylvania case law makes clear that the Court’s application of
the doctrine was flawed. As we have held under Pennsylvania law, “[o]nly objectively
reasonable expectations are protected[.]” Selected
Risk, 718 F.2d at 71. Hall’s claim that
he expected Hallstone’s “maximum,” “soup to nuts” liability policy to include
workmanship coverage is no more reasonable than if a purchaser of auto insurance
expected his policy to cover repairs if his car breaks down, even if he asked for “soup to
nuts” coverage. See
id. (holding that the insured was not reasonable to expect his basic
homeowner’s insurance policy to provide coverage for intentional criminal acts). It is
simply not the kind of coverage insurance agents and insurance companies expect to
provide unless the insured explicitly requests such coverage.
If we were to allow an insured to override the plain language of a policy
limitation anytime he or she was dissatisfied with the limitation by simply
invoking the reasonable expectations doctrine, the language of insurance
policies would cease to have meaning and, as a consequence, insurers
would be unable to project risk. The inability to project risk would
dissuade insurers from doing business in the Commonwealth and the net
result would be an increase in premiums for consumers. We refuse to set
such a deleterious sequence of events into motion.
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Millers, 941 A.2d at 717-18. Accordingly, we will reverse the District Court’s judgment
entered on October 30, 2017, for Hallstone, and will remand the matter to that Court to
enter judgment for Frederick. See 28 U.S.C. § 2106.
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