Tidwell Enterprises v. Financial Pacific Ins. Co.

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A fire destroyed a house. The homeowner’s insurer agreed to pay for the damages resulting from the fire, then sued the contractor who installed the fireplace several years earlier, claiming negligence. The contractor tendered defense of the action to its liability insurer, asserting that even though the fire occurred after the relevant policy periods ended, there was a possibility of coverage because the fire may have been the result of ongoing damage to the wood in the chimney during one or more policy periods due to the exposure of that wood to excessive heat from the chimney every time a fire was burned in the fireplace. The issue this case presented for the Court of Appeal’s review was whether, under the standard language of the commercial general liability policy at issue here, did the liability insurer have a duty to defend the contractor? After review of that policy, the Court answered “yes” and reversed the trial court’s judgment that concluded otherwise. View "Tidwell Enterprises v. Financial Pacific Ins. Co." on Justia Law