NO. COA13-1096
NORTH CAROLINA COURT OF APPEALS
Filed: 15 April 2014
CURTIS RAY HOLMES,
Plaintiff,
v. Guilford County
No. 12 CVS 10238
NORTH CAROLINA FARM BUREAU MUTUAL
INSURANCE CO., INC.,
Defendant.
Appeal by plaintiff from Order entered 10 July 2013 by
Judge John O. Craig, III, in Superior Court, Guilford County.
Heard in the Court of Appeals 6 February 2014.
Cahoon & Swisher, North & Cooke, by A. Wayland Cooke, for
plaintiff-appellant.
Nelson Levine De Luca & Hamilton, LLC, by David L. Brown
and David G. Harris II, for defendant-appellee.
STROUD, Judge.
Dr. Curtis Holmes (“plaintiff”) appeals from an order
denying his motion for summary judgment and granting summary
judgment in favor of North Carolina Farm Bureau Mutual Insurance
Co., Inc. We affirm.
I. Background
Plaintiff is a dentist and property owner living in
Greensboro. He owns several office buildings in the Greensboro
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area, including one at 5415 Friendly Avenue (“5415 Friendly”)
and one across the street at 5411 Friendly Avenue (“5411
Friendly”). Plaintiff purchased an office-lessor’s insurance
policy from defendant to cover his property. The policy
excludes from coverage any building that has been vacant for
more than 60 consecutive days before a loss, including loss by
theft. The policy defines a vacant building for property owner
policies under section 9(a)(1)(b) of the policy. Under this
section, a building is vacant “when 70% or more of its total
square footage: (i) Is not rented; or (ii) Is not used to
conduct customary operations.” The policy clarifies that
“[w]hen this policy is issued to the owner of a building,
building means the entire building.”
In November 2011, someone stole eight heating and air
conditioning units from outside 5415 Friendly. Plaintiff
informed the police, but the perpetrator was never found.
Plaintiff also made a claim to defendant for the loss under the
office-lessor policy. Defendant refused to cover plaintiff’s
loss because it believed that the vacancy provision of the
policy applied.
Plaintiff filed a complaint in Guilford County Superior
Court alleging breach of the insurance contract and seeking
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recovery in excess of $40,000 for the stolen heating units plus
attorney’s fees and costs. Defendant answered, contending that
plaintiff’s recovery was barred by the vacancy provision of the
insurance contract. Defendant also filed a counterclaim for
declaratory judgment concerning the rights and obligations of
the parties under this policy. The parties conducted discovery
and filed cross-motions for summary judgment. The evidence
forecast by the parties tended to show the following:
5415 Friendly has five separate units: named “A,” “B,” “C,”
“D,” and “G.” Unit A was 1,344 square feet; Unit B was 1,064
square feet; Unit C was either 2,688 or 2,577 square feet1; Unit
D was 2,128 square feet; and Unit G was 1,064 square feet. The
total square footage of 5415 Friendly was thus either 8,288
square feet or 8,177 square feet. As of November 2011, only one
of the five units at 5415 Friendly was rented—Unit A. Units B,
D, and G were all vacant.2 The classification of Unit C was the
primary point of contention at the summary judgment hearing.
The evidence showed that Unit C was not leased in the sixty
days before the theft. However, plaintiff had been allowing one
1
In his deposition, plaintiff stated that Unit C was
approximately 2,688 square feet. In his responses to
defendant’s requests for admission, however, he claimed that
Unit C was 2,577 square feet.
2
The evidence showed that plaintiff used Unit D to store excess
furniture, but he agreed that it should be considered “vacant.”
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of the tenants of 5411 Friendly, two independent real estate
attorneys named Charles McNeil III and Ken Lucas, to use Unit C
as storage for their old files and excess furniture. The
attorneys had a key to Unit C and could have used the entire
space until plaintiff found a regular tenant. Mr. McNeil and Mr.
Lucas kept their files in one 144 square foot room in Unit C.
They did not use two additional 144 square foot rooms which
contained various furniture of uncertain provenance. The rest
of the space was not used.
Mr. McNeil testified that he, Mr. Lucas, or one of their
employees would go to Unit C once or twice a week to store,
retrieve, or review files. He further stated that they would
sometimes sit in one of the chairs in Unit C to review the
stored files, but that they normally only stayed five to ten
minutes. None of them used any of the space on the second floor
of Unit C. Mr. McNeil stated that the storage and review of old
files was a “customary operation” of his law practice.
After reviewing the discovery and hearing arguments from
the parties, the trial court allowed defendant’s motion for
summary judgment, and denied plaintiff’s motion, by order
entered 10 July 2013. Plaintiff filed notice of appeal to this
Court on 31 July 2013.
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II. Summary Judgment
On appeal, plaintiff argues that the trial court erred in
granting summary judgment to defendant and denying his motion
for summary judgment because the undisputed facts showed that
over 30% of 5415 Friendly was either rented or used for
customary operations.
A. Standard of Review
We review a trial court order granting or
denying a summary judgment motion on a de
novo basis, with our examination of the
trial court’s order focused on determining
whether there is a genuine issue of material
fact and whether either party is entitled to
judgment as a matter of law. As part of that
process, we view the evidence in the light
most favorable to the nonmoving party.
Cox v. Roach, ___ N.C. App. ___, ___, 723 S.E.2d 340, 347 (2012)
(citation and quotation marks omitted), disc. rev. denied, 366
N.C. 423, 736 S.E.2d 497 (2013).
B. Analysis
Both parties agree that there are no genuine issues of
material fact. They only disagree on the proper interpretation
of the vacancy provision of the insurance contract. That
provision states:
9. Vacancy
a. Description of Terms
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(1) As used in this Vacancy Condition, the
term building and the term vacant have the
meanings set forth in (1)(a) and (1)(b)
below:
(a) When this policy is issued to a tenant,
and with respect to that tenant’s interest
in Covered Property, building means the unit
or suite rented or leased to the tenant.
Such building is vacant when it does not
contain enough business personal property to
conduct customary operations.
(b) When this policy is issued to the owner
of a building, building means the entire
building. Such building is vacant when 70%
or more of its total square footage:
(i) Is not rented; or
(ii) Is not used to conduct customary
operations.
. . . .
b. Vacancy Provisions
If the building where loss or damage occurs
has been vacant for more than 60 consecutive
days before that loss or damage occurs:
(1) We will not pay for any loss or damage
caused by any of the following even if
they are Covered Causes of Loss:
. . . .
(e) Theft;
Defendant contends that under the definition in subsection
(a)(1)(b), which applies to plaintiff as an owner, if either 30%
or less of the entire covered building is rented, or if 30% or
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less of the building is used to conduct customary operations,
then the building is considered vacant. Under this
interpretation, a building could be 30% rented and have another
30% used for customary operations, but the building would still
be considered vacant. Plaintiff argues, by contrast, that this
provision means that if more than 30% of the building is either
rented or used to conduct customary operations, then it is not
vacant. Under this interpretation, that same building with 30%
rented and 30% used for customary operations would be considered
60% occupied, and therefore not vacant. We conclude that we need
not resolve this issue here because even under plaintiff’s
interpretation of the contract, 5415 Friendly was vacant for
more than sixty days before the theft.
It is uncontested that all of Unit A, 1,344 square feet,
was rented during the relevant period. Unit A constitutes
approximately 16% of the total square footage of the building.
Unit C has been the sole point of contention in this case. There
was no evidence that it was rented at a relevant time.
Therefore, the only question is whether Unit C was used for
“customary operations” and how much of Unit C was so used.
The evidence showed that Mr. McNeil and Mr. Lucas only
stored files in one 144 square foot room of Unit C. The evidence
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did show that Mr. McNeil and Mr. Lucas used that room on a
fairly regular basis, once or twice a week. They would store and
retrieve client files in the room and sometimes sit in the chair
in that room to review the files. Mr. McNeil opined that the
storage and review of these archived files was a part of his
customary operations. Nevertheless, that 144 square foot room
was the only portion of Unit C that they used as part of these
operations. Although there was evidence that some pieces of
furniture were stored in two additional rooms, there was no
evidence that Mr. McNeil and Mr. Lucas ever used those rooms.
Mr. McNeil stated that he was unsure who owned the furniture,
but that he did not think it was his.
Plaintiff argues that we should count the entirety of Unit
C as being “used for customary operations” because one room
within that unit was being used and those using it had
permission to occupy the entire unit. But that interpretation is
contrary to the plain language of the contract.
The court is to interpret a contract
according to the intent of the parties to
the contract, unless such intent is contrary
to law. If the plain language of a contract
is clear, the intention of the parties is
inferred from the words of the contract.
When the language of the contract is clear
and unambiguous, construction of the
agreement is a matter of law for the court,
and the court cannot look beyond the terms
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of the contract to determine the intentions
of the parties.
Williams v. Habul, ___ N.C. App. ___, ___, 724 S.E.2d 104, 111
(citations and quotation marks omitted).
Subsection (b) of the definitional section defines
“building” as the “entire building” and defines “vacancy” in
relation to the total square footage of the building. While
plaintiff contends that not considering all of Unit C “occupied”
is “like being a little bit pregnant,” the plain language of the
contract directs us to consider only the portion of the total
square footage “used to conduct customary operations.”
Therefore, the relevant question under the contract is what
percentage of the total square footage was actually so used, not
what amount could have been used.
Here, only 144 square feet of Unit C were used to conduct
customary operations of Mr. McNeil’s law practice. Combined with
the area of Unit A, which was 1344 square feet, the total square
footage either rented or used to conduct customary operations
was 1488 square feet. Using either measure of the total square
footage—8288 square feet or 8177 square feet—this area does not
exceed 30%.3 We conclude that the uncontested facts show that
3
Using either measure of total square footage, the percentage
rented or used was approximately 18%.
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5415 Friendly was “vacant” for purposes of the insurance
contract for more than 60 days prior to the theft.
As a result, under that contract, plaintiff was not
entitled to compensation for his loss and defendant did not
breach the contract by refusing to pay the $40,000 to replace
the stolen heating units. We hold that there are no genuine
issues of material fact and defendant is entitled to judgment as
a matter of law. Therefore, we affirm the trial court’s order
allowing defendant’s motion for summary judgment and denying
plaintiff’s motion.
III. Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, we hold that the trial court
correctly determined that there are no genuine issues of
material fact and that defendant is entitled to judgment as a
matter of law. Therefore, we affirm the trial court’s order
allowing defendant’s motion for summary judgment.
AFFIRMED.
Judges CALABRIA and DAVIS concur.