FILED
United States Court of Appeals
Tenth Circuit
PU B L ISH March 9, 2009
Elisabeth A. Shumaker
U N IT E D STA T E S C O U R T O F A PPE A L S Clerk of Court
T E N T H C IR C U IT
M ARKW EST HYDROCARBON,
INC.; M ARKW EST ENERGY
PARTNERS, L.P.; M ARKW EST
ENERGY APPALACHIA, L.L.C.,
Plaintiffs-Appellants ,
v.
No. 08-1186
LIBERTY M UTUAL INSURANCE
COM PANY; BIRM INGHAM FIRE
INSURANCE COM PANY OF
PENNSYLVANIA; ACE AM ERICAN
INSURANCE COM PANY; ARCH
INSURANCE COM PANY,
Defendants-Appellees .
A ppeal from the U nited States D istrict C ourt
for the D istrict of C olorado
(D .C . N o. 1:05-cv-01948-R PM -K L M )
Thomas D. Leland, M essner & Reeves, L.L.C., Denver, CO (Leah E. Capritta,
M essner & Reeves, L.L.C., Denver, CO, and Edward M . Joyce, Heller Ehrman,
L.L.P., New York, NY, with him on the briefs) for Plaintiffs-Appellants.
W illiam A. W ebster (David S. Evinger and Elizabeth D. Le, with him on the
brief) Robins, Kaplan, M iller & Ciresi, L.L.P., Los Angeles, CA, for Defendants-
Appellees.
Before K E L L Y , E B E L , and G O R SU C H , Circuit Judges.
G O R SU C H , Circuit Judge.
An explosion in a natural liquid gas pipeline operated by M arkW est caught
the attention of the U.S. Office of Pipeline Safety. That office ordered M arkW est
to conduct a series of tests on its pipeline, and to repair “integrity threatening
conditions” discovered in the course of those tests. M arkW est filed a claim with
its insurance carriers seeking to recoup certain loses it incurred as a result of the
explosion and its compliance with the government’s mandated tests and repairs.
The insurers denied coverage, and M arkW est filed this suit, seeking declaratory
relief and damages for breach of contract and bad faith breach of insurance
contract. The district court eventually granted summary judgment to the insurers,
and M arkW est now appeals. W e affirm the district court’s decision because the
insurance policy in dispute does not cover costs incurred to maintain the pipeline.
M arkW est leases and operates a 65-mile stretch of natural gas liquids
(“NGL”) pipeline running between M aytown, Kentucky, and Ranger, W est
Virginia.1 The pipeline, which is one segment of a larger system of pipelines
operated by M arkW est and known as the Appalachian Liquids Pipeline System,
was originally built in 1957. It is constructed of four-inch and five-inch diameter
1
As always, we recount the facts in the light most favorable to the
summary-judgment nonmovant, here M arkW est.
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steel pipe, and is separated by flow stations containing a bypass pipe and valve
and four-inch raised stem inlet and outlet valves.
On the morning of November 8, 2004, a bypass valve failed at Flow Station
Four, located near the Rolling Acres subdivision in Ivel, Kentucky. The failure
meant that the valve remained closed, despite its hand wheel showing it to be
open, and pressure built up inside the pipeline behind the valve. Eventually, this
increased pressure caused a release of NGL through a small hole in the pipeline
where the wall had been thinned by corrosion. The escaped NGL caught fire,
resulting in explosions, the destruction of five homes in the subdivision, and a
number of injuries (but no fatalities).
The Office of Pipeline Safety (“OPS”), a division of the U.S. Department
of Transportation charged with ensuring the safe and reliable operation of
pipelines, launched an investigation. Ten days after the accident, on November
18, 2004, the OPS issued an initial Corrective Action Order (“CAO”), requiring
M arkW est “to take the necessary corrective action to protect the public, property,
and the environment from potential hazards associated with a failure involving the
four- and five-inch M aytown Station to Ranger Junction segment (‘the affected
segment’) of [M arkW est’s] Appalachian Liquid Pipeline System running from
near Langley, Kentucky to near South Shore, Kentucky.” App. at 491. The CAO
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stated that “[t]he cause of the failure has not yet been determined,” but went on to
list several preliminary findings, including these:
Preliminary visual inspection indicated the presence of localized external
corrosion around the failure site. Inspectors identified a small hole in the
pipeline at the 6 o’clock position when examining the failure site.
The affected segment was hydrostatically tested in 1957 to a pressure of
2925 psig, according to [M arkW est]. Records supporting the 1957 test
could not be located.
The pipeline has not been subject to internal inspection. However,
[M arkW est] has indicated its intent to perform internal inspection on the
pipeline.
Id. at 492.
The CAO continued with a section entitled “Determination of Necessity for
Corrective Action Order and Right to Hearing.” In it, the OPS described its
reason for issuing the CAO:
After evaluating the foregoing preliminary findings of fact, I find that the
continued operation of the affected segment without corrective measures
would be hazardous to life, property and the environment. Additionally,
after considering the age of the pipe, the proximity of the pipeline to
highways, drinking water sources, and populated areas, the combustible
nature of the products the pipeline transports, the pressure required for
transporting the material, the history of leaks attributed to corrosion on the
pipeline, and the ongoing investigation to determine the cause of the
failure, I find that a failure to expeditiously issue this Order requiring
immediate corrective action would likely result in serious harm to life,
property, or the environment.
...
After receiving and analyzing additional data in the course of this
investigation, OPS may identify other corrective measures that need to be
taken. In that event, [M arkW est] will be notified of any additional
measures required and amendment of this Order will be considered.
-4-
Id. at 493.
The CAO then detailed various corrective actions M arkW est had to take.
These included hydrostatic pressure testing of the affected pipeline segment to
125% of the existing maximum operating pressure. 2 Id. at 494. In addition,
M arkW est had to prepare a plan to address “all known or suspected factors that
caused or contributed to” the accident. Id. at 495. The plan had to include “[t]he
performance of appropriate field testing, inspections, and evaluations to
determine whether and to what extent the condition(s) associated with the failure,
or other integrity threatening trends, are present along the remainder of the
affected segment or elsewhere on any portion of the Appalachian Liquid Pipeline
System constructed with similar methods and material as the affected segment.”
Id. M arkW est was also required to perform “appropriate repairs, pipe
replacement, or other corrective measures fully remediating the integrity
threatening condition(s) associated with the failure everywhere along the pipeline
where such conditions are identified by the evaluation process.” Id.
The OPS issued an amendment to the CAO one day later, in which it made
supplemental comments. An additional finding of fact noted that “[t]he ongoing
investigation of the November 8, 2004 failure . . . has identified a 4-inch raised
2
The test involves pumping liquid through the pipeline at a high pressure
to expose the presence of leaks or weak spots in the line.
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stem valve that may have played a role in the pipeline’s failure.” Id. at 499. In a
paragraph entitled “Determination of Necessity for Corrective Action Order and
Right to Hearing,” the OPS added a phrase observing that “the circumstances
surrounding . . . the way the valve functioned at the time of the failure” was a
factor that led the OPS to “expeditiously issue” the CAO and amendment. Id. at
500. A “Discussion of Amendment” section described in detail preliminary
findings related to the valve failure, and discussed the need for an independent
investigation of the valve “to determine if the valve may not have functioned as
specified and [may] have been a contributing factor in the failure that resulted in
fires, explosions, nine injuries and the destruction of five homes.” Id. at 501. A
later section of the amendment ordered M arkW est to arrange for such an
investigation. Id.
After the OPS issued its CAO and amendment, M arkW est sought a hearing
“in order to clarify and discuss the requirements for a return to operation.” Id. at
505. At the hearing, M arkW est proposed – and was granted – a further
amendment to the CAO that allowed for “alternative equivalent methods of
pipeline integrity testing other than hydrostatic pressure testing.” Id. at 508. In
addition, M arkW est asked for clarification about the meaning of the phrase
“integrity threatening condition.” Id. OPS responded that M arkW est “should not
view ‘integrity threatening condition’ in an overbroad manner. For instance,
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corrosion on the pipeline would be an integrity threatening condition . . . , but the
consideration of this condition need not extend to soil conditions which might be
conducive to corrosion.” Id.
At the time of the accident, M arkW est carried an “all-risk” property
insurance policy with four insurance companies. The policy indemnified
M arkW est against “all risks of direct physical loss or damage occurring during the
period of this policy from any external cause, except as hereinafter excluded.”
App. at 512. Relevant to this lawsuit, the policy explicitly stated that it “does not
insure . . . corrosion.” Id. at 516-17. It further provided that the insurance
companies “shall not be liable for any increase in loss resulting from . . .
[e]nforcement of any ordinance or law regulating the use, construction, repair or
demolition of any property.” Id. at 522. It did, however, have a provision, the
Demolition and Cost of Construction Endorsement (“DICC Endorsement”),
providing up to $5 million in coverage for specific losses resulting from the
enforcement of laws and ordinances regulating the “construction or repair” of
damaged property:
Demolition and Increased Cost of Construction Endorsement
Liability for loss under this Endorsement arising out of one occurrence
shall not exceed $5,000,000.
In the event of loss or damage by an insured peril under this policy that
causes the enforcement of any law or ordinance regulating the construction
or repair [of] damaged facilities, underwriters shall be liable for:
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* * *
C. Increased cost of repair or reconstruction of the damaged and
undamaged facility on the same or another site and limited to the minimum
requirements of such law or ordinance regulating the repair or
reconstruction of the damaged property on the same site. However, the
Company shall not be liable for any increased cost of construction loss
unless the damaged facility is actually rebuilt or replaced.
D. Any increase[] in the Business Interruption and extra expense loss
arising out of the additional time required to comply with state law or
ordinance.
Id. at 522-23.
M arkW est promptly reported the November 8, 2004 accident to its insurers,
and submitted claims for direct losses to property sustained as a result of the
accident, as well as for expenses sustained as a result of compliance with the
CAOs. M arkW est took the position that the latter costs were covered by the
DICC Endorsement. The insurers disagreed and issued a position letter denying
coverage. Regarding M arkW est’s losses caused by the explosion, the insurers
argued that the principal cause of the accident was corrosion and accordingly
M arkW est’s losses were not covered by the policy. Id. at 257-58. Regarding the
expenses M arkW est sustained in complying with the CAOs, the insurers
contended, among other things, that:
[e]ven assuming that the OPS Corrective Action Order is a “law” or
“ordinance,” there would be coverage only if it is regulating the
“construction or repair” of the damaged pipeline. W hile the exclusion
applies to increased time element losses resulting from a law or ordinance
regulating the “use, construction, repair or demolition” of any property, the
Endorsement adds back coverage only for increased time element losses
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resulting from a law or ordinance regulating the “construction or repair” of
damaged property. Thus, absent from the Endorsement is coverage for
increased time element losses resulting from a law or ordinance regulating
the “use” of any property.
...
W hile the Corrective Action Order may have regulated the “use” of the
entire pipeline, it does not appear to have regulated the repair of the
damaged portion of pipeline.
Id. at 260 (emphasis in original). The insurers added another reason for denying
coverage. For coverage to apply under the DICC, they noted, an insured peril
must cause the enforcement of a law or ordinance. Here however, they argued,
the OPS acted out of concern for corrosion in the pipeline, and corrosion is a peril
expressly excluded, not insured, by the terms of M arkW est’s policy. Id. at 260-
61.
In response to the insurer’s position letter, M arkW est filed suit in state
court. The company sought a declaratory judgment against its insurers, as well as
damages for breach of contract and bad faith breach of an insurance contract. The
insurance companies removed the suit to federal court and filed a motion for
summary judgment to dismiss the suit on all claims. In due course, the district
court granted the motion.
W ith respect to M arkW est’s claim for losses arising from the explosion, the
district court disagreed with the insurance companies’ claim that the “undisputed
evidence here proves that the cause of the Ivel incident . . . was corrosion.” Id. at
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374; Dist. Ct. Op. at 3. The court noted M arkW est’s contrary evidence that the
precipitating cause was the valve failure, not corrosion, and stressed that “[t]here
are conflicting expert opinions submitted on this point.” Id. The court
concluded that M arkW est “has shown a triable issue of fact as to whether this loss
would have occurred without the valve failure.” Id. Yet, this did not end the
matter. The district court continued by noting that the covered property losses
from the accident were small; in fact, M arkW est conceded that they were
“substantially less” than the $250,000 deductible under the policy. 3 Id. at 3. In
light of this concession and its grant of summary judgment to the insurers on
M arkW est’s remaining claim for coverage, the district court concluded that it had
no choice but to grant summary judgment to the insurance defendants.
The district court next granted summary judgment to the insurers on
M arkW est’s claim for its costs in complying with the OPS’s various directives.
W hile the accident itself may have been caused by a valve failure, the district
court reasoned, “[t]he Ivel incident was the cause of the OPS order only in the
sense that it gave notice to the OPS that the pipeline had a history of leaks
resulting from corrosion. . . . The only reasonable inference from reading the
three OPS orders is that the investigation and remediation of the 65 mile segment
3
It appears from the record that the explosion inflicted very little damage
to property covered under the policy, and that only a small section of the pipeline
required replacement. See App. at 389, 1512.
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was caused by the evidence of corrosion. The possibility of a valve failure was
not a relevant factor.” Id. at 6-7. Because the court found the cause of the OPS’s
directives to be the product of concerns about corrosion, an excluded peril under
the terms of the policy, the district court held that the insurance companies had no
duty to reimburse M arkW est for its compliance costs. The district court also
granted summary judgment to the insurers on M arkW est’s claim that they denied
coverage in bad faith. This appeal followed.
Before us, M arkW est does not seek to disturb the district court’s grant of
summary judgment with respect to its claims for property losses caused by the
explosion. Instead, M arkW est argues that a reasonable jury could conclude that
the CAO and its amendments were not issued solely out of concern for corrosion,
but rather were issued for a variety of reasons, including concern about
potentially faulty valves elsewhere along the pipeline. Accordingly, M arkW est
continues, its costs of complying with the government’s mandates are
compensable under the terms of its insurance policy. M arkW est also seeks to
resuscitate its bad faith denial claim.
As with any other appeal from a summary judgment disposition, we review
M arkW est’s arguments de novo, viewing the facts and all reasonable inferences
those facts support in the light most favorable to M arkW est. Hinds v.
Sprint/United M gmt. Co., 523 F.3d 1187, 1195 (10th Cir. 2008). W e will affirm a
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grant of summary judgment if but only if the evidence reveals no genuine issue of
material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.
Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(c). The construction of an insurance policy is a matter of law.
Adams-Arapahoe Joint Sch. Dist. No. 28-J v. Continental Ins. Co., 891 F.2d 772,
774 (10th Cir. 1989). W e assess the policy under Colorado law, which the parties
agree governs their diversity contract dispute.
The parties’ dispute centers on the meaning of the DICC Endorsement. The
Endorsement specifies that in the “event of loss or damage by an insured peril
under this policy that causes the enforcement of any law or ordinance regulating
the construction or repair [of] damaged facilities, underwriters shall be liable
for . . . .” App. at 522. As a prerequisite for liability, then, two conditions must
be met: (1) an insured peril must cause the enforcement of (2) a law or ordinance
regulating the construction or repair of damaged facilities. To be sure, if both of
these conditions are satisfied, the DICC Endorsement renders the insurers liable
for “[i]ncreased cost of repair or reconstruction of the damaged and undamaged
facility on the same or another site.” Id. But to reach this recovery M arkW est
must clear both contractual hurdles placed in its way.
The district court granted summary judgment because, in its view,
M arkW est stumbled at the first hurdle. W hile valve failure may have caused the
accident, the court reasoned, it was beyond cavil that the OPS issued the CAOs
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and its amendments out of concern with corrosion in the pipeline. On appeal,
M arkW est replies that these conclusions are logically incongruous. It reasons
that, if a reasonable jury could find that the explosion was caused by valve
failure, and the OPS intervened and issued its CAO and amendments because of
the explosion, surely a reasonable jury could also conclude that the OPS acted out
of concern for valve failures and not simply corrosion.
W hatever the merits of M arkW est’s chain of reasoning – and we do not
pass on it – it fails to get the company home. For M arkW est’s losses to be
covered by the Endorsement, the OPS’s directives at issue still must “regulat[e]
the construction or repair of damaged facilities.” They do not.
Under Colorado law “an insurance policy must be given effect according to
the plain and ordinary meaning of its terms.” Farmers Ins. Exch. v. Dotson, 913
P.2d 27, 30 (Colo. 1996). W e begin, then, by considering whether the CAO and
amendments “regulat[e] the construction or repair of damaged facilities.” The
plain meaning of the word “construction” denotes “forming” or “building.”
Oxford English Dictionary 794 (2d ed. 1989). But the CAO and its amendments
did not require M arkW est to form, build, or “construct” anything. OPS required
only that M arkW est test and take remedial actions to maintain the safety of a
pipeline constructed over a half-century ago, in 1957.
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Neither did the CAO or its amendments require the repair of damaged
facilities. The Endorsement specifies that coverage exists only “[i]n the event of
loss or damage by an insured peril . . . that causes the enforcement of any law or
ordinance regulating the construction or repair [of] damaged facilities . . . .”
M oreover, in defining the extent of the liabilities covered, the Endorsement refers
to the law or ordinances insured against as those “regulating the repair or
reconstruction of the damaged property.” By the contract’s plain terms, then,
only laws or ordinances regulating “property” or “facilities” that have been
damaged by an insured peril are covered. See City of Arvada v. Co.
Intergovernmental Risk Sharing Agency, 988 P.2d 184, 187 (Colo. App. 1999)
(“W ords in an insurance contract cannot be read in isolation, but must be
considered in context . . . .”).
Even assuming that the Ivel accident was caused by an insured peril (a
valve failure), by everyone’s admission the insured peril damaged, at most, only a
small stretch of the pipeline (causing less than $250,000 in damage to that
section). And the CAOs did not seek to tell M arkW est whether and how to repair
this small stretch of pipeline. OPS was hardly concerned with telling M arkW est
how to repair a broken valve stem, or how to repair the broken bits of the pipeline
in Ivel. That was yesterday’s problem; OPS was concerned about preventing
tomorrow’s. So the CAOs did not dictate a minor fix to a specific valve or
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pipeline segment in Ivel, but instead sought to ensure the safe operation, going
forward, of the entire 65-mile pipeline. The agency’s CAOs directed M arkW est
to perform “appropriate field testing, inspections, and evaluations to determine
whether and to what extent the condition(s) associated with the failure, or other
integrity threatening trends, are present along the remainder of the affected
segment or elsewhere on any portion of the [pipeline].” Thus, for example, one
of the largest costs incurred by M arkW est in complying with the CAOs involved
hydrostatically testing the entire pipeline, a procedure done, according to
M arkW est’s own expert, “primarily . . . to determine a safe operating pressure [at
which] the pipeline can be operated.” App. at 1676-77. Because the CAOs
regulated terms for the safe operation of the entire pipeline, and were not aimed at
dictating a fix for the minor damage done to a valve stem or pipeline segment in
Ivel, under the plain and unambiguous terms of the DICC Endorsement
M arkW est’s costs in complying with the CAOs are not covered. 4
Although we need proceed no further to dispose of this case, we note that
our result is additionally supported by an examination of the language and
4
W e suppose one might argue that the costs associated with complying
with the CAOs at the point of the damaged pipeline in Ivel are compensable under
the Endorsement. But M arkW est makes no argument to that effect, perhaps
because, as it conceded before the district court, the costs of fixing that bit of the
pipeline were small and did not meet the policy’s deductible. In any event,
because M arkW est does not make the argument, we do not address it.
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structure of the policy as a whole. See Rocha v. Financial Indem. Corp., 155 P.3d
602, 606 (Colo. App. 2006) (“[A] contract must be construed to ascertain and
effectuate the intent of the parties as determined primarily from the language of
the contract. . . . Further, we examine the language in question not in isolation,
but by looking to the contract as a whole.”) (quotation marks and citations
omitted).
The policy plainly indicates that the parties drafted and agreed to an “all-
risk” insurance policy. See App. at 512 (policy’s “all risks” clause); Aplt. Br. at 5
(“The Policy is an ‘all-risks’ policy . . . .”); Appellee Br. at 2
(“Defendants/Appellees are first-party property insurers who issued an ‘all-risk’
property insurance policy to M arkW est.”). All-risk insurance policies are
designed to “cover[] any fortuitous loss not resulting from an excluded risk or
from fraud by the insured.” Adams-Arapahoe, 891 F.2d at 774 (citing Kane v.
Royal Ins. Co. of Am., 768 P.2d 678, 679 n. 1 (Colo.1989)). “A fortuitous event
. . . is an event which so far as the parties to the contract are aware, is dependent
on chance.” Id. at 775. See also Jane M assey Draper, Coverage Under All-Risk
Insurance, 30 A.L.R.5th 170 (1995) (“[A] fortuitous event [is] one that is
unexpected and not probable, and caused by an external force, that is, not
resulting from an internal characteristic of the property. . . .”).
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To read the policy as covering M arkW est’s costs of complying with safety
regulations would be to convert the parties’ policy against unforeseen fortuities
into a maintenance contract. The insurance companies would be responsible for
M arkW est’s costs in testing the entire stretch of pipeline for any “integrity
threatening conditions” – including normal wear and tear – and then repairing
those conditions. A pipeline operator could run the least-safe, least-modern, and
least well-run pipeline in the country, a pipeline in violation of every regulation
in the books. Yet, under M arkW est’s reading of the contract, if an accident
exposed these problems to the OPS, the insurers would be on the hook for
repairing and modernizing the entire pipeline. Though we do not at all suggest
M arkW est ran its pipeline in this manner, the result it seeks would create strange
incentives indeed, encouraging insureds to tighten their wallets and brush off
their regular maintenance obligations. Construing an all-risk policy in the manner
M arkW est suggests thus would misallocate the ordinary costs of doing business
from the company to the insurer.
The policy before us makes clear that it is susceptible to no such reading –
that it protects against unexpected fortuities but not the upkeep necessary for a
fifty-two year old pipeline to remain safe to operate. It explicitly provides
coverage only for “all risks of direct physical loss or damage . . . from any
external cause,” not normal wear-and-tear. App. at 512. It also excludes from
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coverage “any increase in loss resulting from . . . [e]nforcement of any ordinance
or law regulating the use, construction, repair or demolition of any property.”
App. at 522. So regulators may impose safety standards regarding the “use” of
the pipeline, and M arkW est must absorb the expense of meeting those standards.
Such expenses are the cost of doing business properly internalized by a business,
not the sort of unexpected fortuity all-risk policies are designed to cover. See
Port Auth. of New York & New Jersey v. Affiliated FM Ins. Co., 311 F.3d 226,
236 (3d Cir. 2002) (holding that a claim that an all-risk policy covers cost of
asbestos abatement “would require compensation for repairs caused by the
inevitable deterioration of materials used in the construction of the building . . .
would not comport with the intent of a first-party ‘all-risks’ insurance policy, but
would transform it into a maintenance contract.”); Chattanooga Bank Assocs. v.
Fidelity & Deposit Co. of M aryland, 301 F.Supp.2d 774, 778-80 (E.D. Tenn.
2004) (refusing to read all-risk insurance policy as covering the costs of
remedying code violations discovered after part of a building suffered a fire). 5
5
As a corollary to its principal argument, M arkW est submits that the
district court erred in refusing to admit experts that would opine that the Ivel
incident was the cause of the OPS orders. W e discern no abuse of discretion in
this ruling. The contract was not ambiguous and contained no technical terms,
and thus no “scientific, technical, or other specialized knowledge” would “assist
the trier of fact to understand the evidence or to determine a fact in issue.”
Fed.R.Evid. 702; see also North Am. Specialty Ins. Co. v. M yers, 111 F.3d 1273,
1280-81 (6th Cir. 1997). In any event, as we have held, M arkW est is not covered
(continued...)
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Having concluded that the insurance companies’ denial of coverage was
proper as a matter of law, we must also affirm the district court’s grant of
summary judgment in their favor on M arkW est’s bad faith claim. It is settled law
in Colorado that a bad faith claim must fail if, as is the case here, coverage was
properly denied and the plaintiff’s only claimed damages flowed from the denial
of coverage. See Tynan's Nissan, Inc. v. Am. Hardware M ut. Ins. Co., 917 P.2d
321, 326 (Colo. App. 1995); M .L. Foss, Inc. v. Liberty M ut. Ins. Co., 885 P.2d
284, 286 (Colo. App. 1994), overruled on other grounds by Cyprus Amax
M inerals Co. v. Lexington Ins. Co., 74 P.3d 294 (Colo. 2003); Jarnagin v.
Banker's Life and Cas. Co., 824 P.2d 11, 15 (Colo. App. 1991).
Affirmed.
5
(...continued)
by the policy no matter why the CAO and its amendments were issued; the
proffered expert testimony bears no relevance to, and if received accordingly
could not possibly undo, our holding.
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