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Mold Property Owner Triumphs in Battle Over Mold Damange
Wednesday, 27 November 2002

Wednesday, November 27, 2002
Property Owner Triumphs In Battle Over Mold Damage
By SHEILA MUTO
Staff Reporter of THE WALL STREET JOURNAL

Chalk one up for property owners in the battle over coverage of
mold-related damage.

A federal judge in U.S. District Court in Seattle ruled last month that the
property insurance policy for the Alderwood Plaza Shopping Center in
Lynwood, Wash., covers damage caused by mold. According to court documents,
the insurance company had contended, among other things, that the policy
didn't cover the damage caused by the mold because the damage was not
"fortuitous" -- or "caused by sudden discrete events." Instead, the judge
defined "fortuitous" simply as "a loss which could not reasonably be foreseen."

Scott Stickney, a partner at law firm Bullivant Houser Bailey PC, who
represented the defendant, FM Global of Johnston, R.I., says the parties
have settled the matter. The settlement terms are confidential.

Robert Zeavin, a partner at law firm Steefel Levitt & Weiss, who represents
the owner of Alderwood Plaza, the Mission Viejo, Calif.-based estate of
James Campbell, expects this ruling to affect not only future cases
involving mold, but also other cases involving property insurance coverage.
The judge's ruling "will have an important impact on any insurance company
that says it covers only immediate catastrophic loss," says Mr. Zeavin.

"Cases like these and claims by commercial property owners are causing
underwriters to revise their contract language to exclude coverage for
mold," Mr. Zeavin adds. "They're able to do that in a hard insurance market
like we have now."