Cont'l Cas. Co. v. Sycamore Springs Homeowners Assoc., No. 10-3261 (7th Cir. 2011)
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A developer built a subdivision in a floodplain. The developer and buyers knew that the land is low-lying and prone to flooding. The developer constructed levees, floodwalls, retention ponds, and a stormwater holding system. The company that handled construction and sale of buildings in Parcel D had the developer fill one of the retention ponds, so that it could build additional homes; it also constructed duplexes where the developer had planned single-family housing. In 2003 several homes were inundated when a retention pond overflowed. In a state court suit, the company settled with homeowners for$335,000; homeowners agreed to take $35,000 from the company and seek the rest from its insurer. A federal court concluded that the company's insurance policy did not apply, reasoning that homeowners had not suffered "property damage" as defined by the policy because the state court complaint sought changes to curtail future loss. The Seventh Circuit affirmed, noting that neither party had asked the court to apportion the settlement between losses and improvements and that it was too late to do so.
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