In
its recent decision in Spirtas Co. v.
Nautilus Ins. Co., 2013 U.S. App. LEXIS 10031 (8th Cir. May 20,
2013), the United States Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit, applying
Missouri law, had occasion to consider application of a general liability
policy’s business risk exclusions to the insured’s faulty workmanship.
The
insured, Spirtas, was hired to demolish the Seneca Bridge in Illinois. The
demolition plan called for explosives to be detonated on the bridge that would
allow for the span to fall in one piece into the river below. Once in the river, workers would cut the span
into pieces and remove them by crane. It
was expected that the river portion of the work would take sixteen hours in
total, during which time barge traffic on the river would have to be
halted. The explosives, however, did not
detonate as planned. Among other things,
the span did not fall into the river in a single piece. Spirtas was required to employ divers to
identify portions of the bridge and remove them from the river. Ultimately, the entire process took
significantly longer than anticipated at a far greater cost than
anticipated. Spirtas sought recovery of
those extra costs from Nautilus, its general liability insurer.
Nautilus
disclaimed coverage for these costs, relying on its policy’s business risk
exclusions, including exclusion j(5) applicable to “property damage” to “[t]hat
particular part of real property on which you or any contractors or
subcontractors working directly or indirectly on your behalf are performing
operations, if the ‘property damage’ arises out of those operations.” Spirtas argued that its operations were
performed on the bridge, not the river, so that any costs relating to work in
the river would not be subject to the exclusion. The Eighth Circuit rejected Spirtas’
characterization of its work, explaining:
Here, however, the work was being performed on both the bridge
and the river. According to the plan, the bridge span was supposed to fall into
the river. That happened, albeit in a disorganized manner, when the charges
detonated. At all times the work occurred on the river and the bridge … Therefore, both the bridge and river were the "particular part of real
property" on which Spirtas's operations occurred.
While Nautilus’ policy
contained a specific exception to the j(5) exclusion for mistaken demolition of
property, the court concluded that this exception applied only to instances
where Spirtas demolished the wrong property, not when its planned demolition of
intended property was performed negligently.
The court also considered the
application of exclusion j(6) applicable to “property damage” to [“t]hat
particular part of any property that must be restored, repaired or replaced
because ‘your work’ was incorrectly performed on it.” The court summarily agreed that this
exclusion applied since Spirtas’ claim involved correction of demolition work
to the bridge and river that was incorrectly performed in the first
instance.
Finally, the court agreed
that coverage was precluded based on exclusion (m) of the Nautilus policy
applicable to:
"Property
damage" to "impaired property" or property that has not been
physically injured, arising out of:
(1)
A defect, deficiency, inadequacy, or dangerous condition in 'your product' or
'your work'; or
(2)
A delay or failure by you or anyone acting on your behalf to perform a contract
or agreement in accordance with its terms.
The court agreed that
Spirtas’ work encompassed not only the bridge itself, but also the river since
a significant portion of Spirtas’ work was intended to be performed in the
river. As such, the court concluded that
the bridge and the river qualified as “impaired property” to which the
exclusion applied.
I guess court has took good decision depending on the condition.
ReplyDeletefixed term annuity