Insurance Claims And Expert Testimony

Fortunately, most insurance claims do not require expert testimony.  If expert testimony is needed, here is a 2023 opinion from the United States Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals which needs to be known.  The opinion is styled, Cody Horton v. Allstate Vehicle And Property Insurance Company.
Horton reported a claim to Allstate for hail and wind damage to Horton’s metal roof arising from a storm in 2019. However, Horton’s homeowner insurance policy excludes “cosmetic damage caused by hail to the surface of a metal roof…”  After investigating and concluding that the damage was only cosmetic, Allstate denied coverage.  Horton then sued Allstate for breach of contract.
Allstate filed two motions relevant to this appeal: (1) a motion to exclude the expert testimony of Horton’s expert witness, David Wilson, a licensed and independent insurance adjuster; and (2) a motion for summary judgment based, inter alia, on the cosmetic damage exclusion.
In its first motion, Allstate argued that Wilson’s expert report was deficient under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 26 and under Federal Rule of Evidence 702, because Wilson’s expert report lacked sufficient analysis.  The Court ultimately barred Wilson from testifying on several of the topics in his expert report but did not address whether Wilson could offer his expert opinion as to whether the damage to the roof was functional or cosmetic.
In its second motion, Allstate moved for summary judgment.  Relevant here, Allstate did not contest that Horton’s roof suffered hail damage; it argued that the damage to the roof was excluded as cosmetic damage.  Horton, however, argued that there was a disputed question of fact on whether the damage was functional or cosmetic.
The district court granted summary judgment for Allstate based on the cosmetic damage exclusion.  It reasoned that Allstate had produced evidence showing that the roof damage was cosmetic, and that Horton did not submit “any competent summary judgment evidence that raises an issue of fact that the damage was not cosmetic.”  But the court overlooked, or chose not to address, Wilson’s deposition testimony.
The district court excluded: (1) testimony on “the policy provisions” at play, with the exception of testimony that wind and hail are covered perils; (2) testimony on “how one determines whether a roof has been damaged by wind or hail;” and (3) testimony on whether the roof “was even damaged by wind or hail.”
The court’s exclusions do not address whether Wilson could testify to his expert observations that the damage was functional.  Policy provisions, methods for discerning damage, and the cause of damage itself are irrelevant to that end.  It should be noted that Wilson’s deposition occurred after Allstate moved to exclude Wilson’s prior testimony, and Allstate never amended its motion to reflect this deposition.  In short, the judge’s exclusions did not bar Wilson’s expert testimony that the damage to the roof was functional.
Because the district court’s exclusions did not bar Wilson’s functional-damage opinion, it constitutes competent summary judgment evidence.  As such, this evidence creates a classic “battle of the experts,” which presents a question for the jury.  The district court did not address this evidence and for that reason, summary judgment on the cosmetic damage exclusion was improper and the case will be remanded for the district court’s further consideration.
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