Plaintiff, MacNair, owned the immovable property located at 526-528 Belleville Street, New Orleans, Louisiana 70114 which she insured through Chubb. MacNair lived on one side of her home and rented out the other side. On August 29, 2021, Hurricane Ida caused severe damage to MacNair’s property including the roof, all elevations and all rooms in the interior. MacNair immediately reported the claim to Chubb.
Chubb, through its agents, sent adjuster, Mike Weaver (hereinafter referred to as “Weaver”), to the property to inspect the home for damages. Weaver took photos of MacNair’s property during his inspection. Despite the open and obvious damages, Weaver’s estimate totaled $13,988.97 (RCV) and $13,048.27 (ACV). After the $5,820.00 deductible, the amount for repairs totaled $7,228.27. As part of his adjustment of MacNair’s claim, Weaver eventually issued a report and estimate. Nonetheless, Chubb refused to reinspect the property, despite MacNair’s numerous requests.
Plaintiff alleged she continued to contact Chubb and Minuteman; eventually, she and the tenant moved out. She retained an attorney in November 2021 and sought a reinspection, among other things. Believing her home to be quickly deteriorating, despite a tarp on the roof, Plaintiff hired 911 Restoration to perform gutting and water mitigation services at the home. 911 Restoration took some 116 photographs of the damages before commencing work. Between December 22, 2021, and March 9, 2022, 911 Restoration performed mitigation and gutting services.
MacNair invoked appraisal. Chubb responded through its attorney that it would participate in appraisal, but after the appraisers conducted a joint inspection in May 2022, Chubb withdrew from the appraisal process and requested MacNair’s examination under oath. MacNair filed her petition for damages against Chubb on January 9, 2023.
Both parties later filed motions to exclude each other’s expert testimony.
Industrial Hygiene Expert Witness
George F. Coto is a Senior Industrial Hygienist at EFI Global, Inc. Coto’s expertise is water and mold damage assessment, asbestos investigation and management, environmental site assessments, and industrial hygiene assessments.
He holds a Bachelor of Science in Environmental Science with a Minor in Chemistry from McNeese State University. Coto has worked as an environmental consultant for the past twenty-two (22) years, conducting environmental and personnel exposure assessments for state governments, insurance carriers, and private industry.
Appraisal and Valuation Expert Witness
Jeremy Belk has been a Louisiana-licensed adjuster since 2005. He has completed adjustments and appraisals for carriers, clients, and attorneys since 2005 in the state of Louisiana as well as other states. Since 2017 Belk has worked daily claims for various carriers, both residential and commercial. He is I.I.C.R.C. WTR certified (#70143683). He has also completed adjustments for various third-party administrators and carriers during this period in the states of Arkansas, Colorado, Georgia, Florida, Illinois, Indiana, Minnesota, Mississippi, Nebraska, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, and Utah. These included fires, floods, hail, tornadoes, and hurricanes claims.
Discussion by the Court
Plaintiff filed a motion to exclude the testimony of George Coto, an expert witness to be called by Defendant Chubb European Group, SE. In response, Defendant submitted a motion to exclude the testimony of Jeremy Belk, an expert witness to be called by Plaintiff. Both parties subsequently filed responses opposing each other’s motions.
A. Plaintiff’s Motion to Exclude George Coto
The purpose of Coto’s Report, produced in January 2024, is “to determine if the assessment and remediation conducted [by 911 Restoration] was reasonable and appropriate according to industry guidelines and standards and would support the work performed by 911 Restoration at the residence.”
Plaintiff contended Coto’s testimony should be excluded as unreliable. She asserted Chubb limited Coto’s access to relevant information to obtain a skewed report by not providing him with their own independent adjuster’s report and the 132 photographs he had produced, as well as other information Coto admitted would have been relevant, such as interviews with witnesses who had first-hand knowledge of the damages.
Plaintiff also asserted Chubb was given information that 911 Restoration had performed its mitigation work based solely on the inspection and the photographs of Glenn Willis, which she asserted was not true. Plaintiff next asserted that Coto had omitted a reference to wind-driven rain resulting from hurricane and tropical storms in his definition of Category 3 water infiltration. Thus, she contended that Coto’s report makes it appear that such infiltration can occur only from flooding due to rising water from rivers and streams and seawater or groundwater, when it can also arise from wind-driven rain.
The Court held that Plaintiff’s challenge to the admissibility of Coto’s report and testimony is based on her belief that Coto should have considered other evidence and failed to do so, suggesting he may have been restricted intentionally by Chubb. The Court believed that her concerns regarding the evidence upon which Coto’s opinions are based can be addressed through cross-examination and the presentation of countervailing expert testimony.
B. Defendant’s Motion to Exclude Jeremy Belk
According to Defendant, one year after Hurricane Ida had struck New Orleans, after Plaintiff had devised architectural plans to convert her double to a single, and after she had gutted the property, Plaintiff’s attorney contacted Jeremy Belk, a claims adjuster, to inspect the property and “to review the documents they sent [him] and give an assessment on the damages and write an estimate to go back as a single and a double.”
Belk’s inspection occurred in November of 2022, according to Defendant, and his report, dated December 18, 2023, provides an estimate to convert the property to a single, which had already commenced, and an estimate to return it to a double. Belk’s report necessarily included total interior renovations of the property because it had already been gutted to the studs. Both estimates were of replacement costs rather than actual cash value, as required under the policy. Nothing in Belk’s report, Chubb asserted, attempted to connect the rebuild to damage from the hurricane.
Defendant asserted that Belk’s opinions are unreliable, not based on a reliable methodology, and will not assist the jury. Defendant argued that the estimates are only of replacement value and do not account for depreciation and that Belk’s opinions as to converting the property to a single are based on what others told him, mainly Plaintiff.
The Court held that Defendant’s assertions of unreliability in Belk’s methodology are more properly attacks on the weight to give his opinions, based as they are on evidence and materials provided by others. The Court also held that Belk’s testimony as an adjuster is not scientific in nature. In other words, Belk’s testimony is related to his area of expertise.
Held
- The Court denied Plaintiff’s motion to exclude Defendant’s industrial hygiene expert witness George Coto.
- The Court also denied Defendant’s motion to exclude Plaintiff’s appraisal and valuation expert witness, Jeremy Belk.
Key Takeaway:
- So long as the expert’s testimony is restricted to his area of expertise, “questions relating to the bases and sources of an expert’s opinion affect the weight to be assigned to that opinion rather than its admissibility and should be left for the jury’s consideration.”
- Plaintiff’s concerns regarding the evidence upon which Coto’s opinions are based can be addressed through cross-examination and the presentation of countervailing expert testimony.
Case Details:
Case Caption: | Macnair V. Chubb European Group Se |
Docket Number: | 2:23cv761 |
Court: | United States District Court for the Eastern District of Louisiana |
Order Date: | September 27, 2024 |
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