In Anytime Restoration Companies of Florida, Inc. v. Residents Property Insurance coverage Corp., 1 Florida’s Third District Courtroom of Attraction delivered a powerful reminder: carriers can not artificially reclassify injury to restrict protection when the coverage language says in any other case.
After a car crashed into a house, damaging an iron fence hooked up to the dwelling, the insurer denied protection, arguing that the injury fell underneath Protection B (Different Constructions) and that Protection B was excluded underneath the coverage. The trial courtroom agreed—however the appellate courtroom reversed.
The core dispute within the attraction arises out of various interpretations of two very clear coverage provisions separating “dwelling” and “different buildings” coverages. The topic coverage gives, partly, as follows:
A. Protection A – Dwelling
1. We cowl:
a. The dwelling on the ‘residence premises’ proven within the Declarations, together with buildings hooked up to the dwelling; andb. Supplies and provides situated on or subsequent to the ‘residence premises’ used to assemble, alter or restore the dwelling or different buildings on the ‘residence premises.’
This protection is restricted to the ‘principal constructing’ for the peril of ‘catastrophic floor cowl collapse.’
B. Protection B – Different Constructions
1. We cowl, different buildings on the ‘residence premises’ set aside from the dwelling by clear house. This consists of buildings linked to the dwelling by solely a fence, utility line, or related connection.
Along with the crucial coverage language above, the courtroom held:
We discover there is no such thing as a real dispute of fabric truth on this document that the fence is an iron fence that’s hooked up to the dwelling . . . By its plain language, subsequently, the coverage establishes that ‘buildings hooked up to the dwelling,’ such because the fence right here, are coated underneath Protection A. See Taurus Holdings, Inc., 913 So. 2nd at 532 (‘[I]nsurance contracts should be construed in accordance with the plain language of the coverage.’); Castillo, 829 So. 2nd at 244 (‘If the language employed within the coverage is evident and unambiguous, there is no such thing as a event for building or the train of a selection of interpretations.’) (quotation omitted).
Whereas insurers proceed to advance more and more strained interpretations of coverage language to disclaim or restrict protection, the argument introduced here’s a prime instance. Residents contended that the fence certified as an “different construction” as a result of it was allegedly “linked to the dwelling by solely a fence.” The Third District squarely rejected this reasoning, explaining:
Opposite to this assertion, the fence is NOT a construction ‘linked to the dwelling by solely a fence’—the linked construction IS a fence. Importantly, there is no such thing as a real problem of fabric truth on this document that the iron fence is hooked up to the dwelling. Certainly, it’s a ‘construction[ ] hooked up to the dwelling,’ which falls squarely underneath Protection A.
When a coverage makes the clear distinction between Protection A (the dwelling, together with buildings hooked up to the dwelling) and Protection B (different buildings set aside from the dwelling by clear house), a construction bodily hooked up to the dwelling similar to a fence, pool enclosure, pavers, and so forth. could very nicely be handled in a coverage and by courts as Protection A no matter how a provider tries to categorize it to restrict and/or deny protection.
This holding reinforces a elementary precept typically missed all through the lifetime of a declare: when a coverage clearly distinguishes between Protection A (the dwelling, together with buildings hooked up to it) and Protection B (buildings set aside from the dwelling by clear house), that distinction should be honored. The insurance coverage contract should be honored. Constructions bodily hooked up to the dwelling—similar to fences, pool enclosures, or related—can’t be recharacterized to suit inside Protection B merely to limit protection, particularly when the Coverage unequivocally states in any other case. Courts will look to the coverage and the precise relationship of the construction to the dwelling, not the insurer’s post-loss characterization.
Quote of the Day:
“The reality is incontrovertible. Malice could assault it, ignorance could deride it, however in the long run, there it’s.” — Winston Churchill
1 Anytime Restoration Companies of Fla., Inc. v. Residents Prop. Ins. Corp., 405 So. 3d 462 (Fla. 3d DCA 2025).
