Cumberland Ins. Grp. v. Del. Power
Citation | 226 Md.App. 691,130 A.3d 1183 |
Decision Date | 01 February 2016 |
Docket Number | No. 72, Sept. Term, 2015.,72, Sept. Term, 2015. |
Parties | CUMBERLAND INSURANCE GROUP v. DELMARVA POWER, d/b/a Delmarva Power & Light Co. |
Court | Court of Special Appeals of Maryland |
226 Md.App. 691
130 A.3d 1183
CUMBERLAND INSURANCE GROUP
v.
DELMARVA POWER, d/b/a Delmarva Power & Light Co.
No. 72, Sept. Term, 2015.
Court of Special Appeals of Maryland.
Feb. 1, 2016.
Philip A. Davolos (de Luca Levine, LLC, Blue Bell, PA), on the brief, for Appellant.
Lisa C. McLaughlin (Phillips, Goldman & Spence PA, Wilmington, DE), on the brief, for Appellee.
Panel: HOTTEN, BERGER, and NAZARIAN,* JJ.
NAZARIAN, J.
David Wickwire's house in Hurlock, Maryland sustained major damage from a fire. His homeowner's insurer, Cumberland Insurance Group ("Cumberland"), paid his claim, and came to believe that the fire was caused by faulty wiring in the house's electric meter box. Cumberland seeks subrogation from Delmarva Power ("Delmarva"), Mr. Wickwire's electric company, but the Circuit Court for Dorchester County granted Delmarva's motion for summary judgment on the ground that Cumberland destroyed the fire scene, which deprived Delmarva of the opportunity to investigate or defend the claim. Cumberland appeals, and we affirm.
I. BACKGROUND
Mr. Wickwire insured his home with Cumberland, and Delmarva provided his electric service. A fire broke out at the house on the morning of May 5, 2013, and local fire department personnel responded and put out the fire. Delmarva also responded by sending a lineman, Jeff Willoughby, to disconnect the power supply to the house, evidently at the request of the fire department. Mr. Willoughby did not serve in any investigative capacity that day1 ; his job was to "make things safe"—i.e., to "[m]ake sure the wire was dead going to the house"—so he "[w]ent to the transformer, figured out
which wire went
to that house, [and] disconnected it in the transformer ..."
Thomas Harr, a Senior Deputy State Fire Marshal, investigated the fire, and noted significant smoke and water damage throughout the interior of the house. The worst fire damage was in the utility room: "[t]he ceiling was down and the remains of the rafters were exposed. The roof was consumed above this room extending up to the peak. The wires in this are[a] suffered heavy fire damage." The Fire Marshal concluded that the fire originated in the meter box. He based his conclusion on burn patterns, witness statements, and the heavy fire damage to the meter box (which showed that the contact lugs in the box were loose at the point where they connected with the wire). He removed the meter and meter box from the scene.
Cumberland retained a fire cause and origin expert, Timothy Hattwick, who inspected the property on May 8, 2013, three days after the fire. He walked through the house and took pictures, but he did not take any evidence from the scene.2 He reasoned from what he saw "that the fire had moved in from the exterior[, and at] that point combining that knowledge or that observation with what I observed on the exterior, I refocused my examination on the exterior as the area of origin." Mr. Hattwick concluded that the fire "originated in the area of the meter." He contacted Fire Marshal Harr and asked him to return to the scene to bring with him the remains of the meter. The Fire Marshal was unavailable, but the two spoke about the investigation. On May 24, 2013, Cumberland's electrical engineering expert, Michael Wald, also inspected the house and examined the remains of the meter and meter box (or, as he put it, a "paper bag with remains of electrical devices in it").
As the Cumberland investigation proceeded, it does not appear that Delmarva sent any personnel to inspect the
property. Nonetheless Cumberland got an estimate for demolition of the property and issued a check to Mr. Wickwire on May 30, 2013, that appeared to include the cost of demolition. The house and its contents were demolished on July 3, 2013. We will discuss in greater detail below what Delmarva knew, and when Delmarva knew anything, about its potential liability and the eventual destruction of the scene. Delmarva concedes in its brief that "Delmarva knew about the fire on May 5, 2013, and knew as early as May 29, 2013 that a claim may at some point be made against it." Beyond that, though, the parties dispute when, if at all, Cumberland notified Delmarva about the fact that the house was to be demolished, and that question underlay Delmarva's motion for summary judgment (the "Motion").
Delmarva filed the Motion in December 2014. Delmarva argued, among other things, that Cumberland destroyed the fire scene and irreversibly crippled Delmarva's ability to mount a meaningful defense. The trial court held a hearing on January 22, 2015; we will detail the dialogue below, but it will suffice for now that the court ruled from the bench after argument and granted the Motion:
We're here on a motion in limine and a motion to compel and a motion for summary judgment. After reviewing the motions, the exhibits attached thereto and the—considering the arguments of Counsel there is—the Court is going to grant the motion for summary judgment. Specifically without addressing all of the various arguments the argument that the Court is going to grant
summary judgment on ... the destruction of the house.
The Court finds that based on the factors in Clumpt v. Krongberg, [sic3 ] which talk[s] about an act of destruction, discoverability of the evidence, an intent to destroy the evidence an occurrence of the act at a time when the filing of a lawsuit is fairly perceived as imminent that [Delmarva] in this case will not have the opportunity or did not have the
opportunity to adequately prepare a defense. Their experts did not have an opportunity to review or to examine the house. [Cumberland's] position of we preserved what we thought caused the fire and took a bunch of pictures I'm not persuaded that that actually is fair to [Delmarva] in the preparation and their experts' preparation of their case.
Further I don't find that there was—that in effect what was a constructive notice argument to [Delmarva] carries weight especially in light of the fact that the demolition had commenced not even sixty days after the fire. If we were six months out maybe my feelings would be different, but I think due to the close nature I think due to the fact that there was no correspondence provided that actually in effect what I would say put [Delmarva] on the clock as to the fact that demolition was contemplated within a soon to be time period. And that, you know, there was correspondence that put them on notice I guess in effect that at some point litigation was being contemplated or that liability was contemplated which is one of the factors. So there was the idea that a lawsuit was imminent but no effort to preserve the evidence that the other side would need to be able to review to have a fair trial and a fair proceeding.
So for those reasons the Court grants the motion for summary judgment in favor of Delmarva Power.
(Emphasis added.)
The court entered a written order on January 22, 2015. Cumberland moved for reconsideration on January 30, 2015, and the trial court denied the motion on March 6, 2015. Cumberland filed a timely notice of appeal.
II. DISCUSSION
The doctrine of spoliation4 is grounded in fairness and symmetry. Stated
simply, a party should not be allowed to
support its claims or defenses with physical evidence that it has destroyed to the detriment of its opponent. In this case, Cumberland controlled the fire scene and informed Delmarva for the purpose of pursuing its subrogation claim, but never told Delmarva of the fire scene's impending destruction. And as a practical matter, this prevented Delmarva (and, perhaps more to the point, its experts) from assessing the causes of the fire first-hand. Cumberland says, correctly, that it preserved the meter box, which was the culprit in its view. But this case is not just about the meter box—it's about the cause of the fire, and specifically whether the cause, whatever it was, was attributable to Delmarva. And the destruction of the scene deprived Delmarva of the opportunity to test Cumberland's hypothesis or establish the possibility that the fire was caused by anything else.5
A. Standard Of Review.
Delmarva moved for summary judgment on a variety of grounds, and the circuit court granted the motion as a discovery sanction, so we review its decision through that lens. See Erie Insurance Exch. v. Davenport Insulation, Inc., 659 F.Supp.2d 701, 702 (D.Md.2009) (granting summary judgment based on spoliation and dismissing case). We are bound by a trial court's factual...
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