Former Journey's End residents win settlement from insurance company
Jan. 24—Inger Simonsen didn't have a car when she was living in
The trio watched on television as the wind-whipped wildfire advanced through northern
The two homes belonging to to Simonsen and her son, Oliver, and his wife, Carma, survived, but they were uninhabitable. The fire incinerated the park's electrical and gas systems and irreparably contaminated the well supplying water to the community.
A fence went up around the property, and it remained there long after the ruins were hauled away.
"I think we all sort of left our hearts in
"And you don't think in that moment, 'Well, at least we have insurance.' You don't,"
Fortunately, their homes, Oliver's work and their cats all survived. But unlike most of their neighbors whose units were lost but who were then compensated by their insurers, a small group of Journey's End residents including the Simonsens were left in limbo: No place to return and no insurance money to move on.
Foremost declined to provide those tenants with loss payouts that they thought they were owed under their home insurance policies.
Ten of the affected households banded together in a lawsuit filed against Foremost in the
Inger now has a car, a blue Hyundai Elantra that she leased Friday with her settlement proceeds. She lives in
The settlement means more than a car, of course. It means vindication, said Inger, who moved to Journey's End a few years before the fire. She'd come to
"I feel like I've been made whole," she said. "I felt like I had been abused, and the abuser has been held accountable," she said of the settlement.
An attorney for Foremost, which is under the
The resolution was long overdue, said
One of plaintiffs,
"This resolution took more than three years and that never should have happened," Jarvis said. "We shouldn't have had to fight so hard for something the plaintiffs were entitled to from the beginning."
The plaintiffs contended that even though their units weren't destroyed by the Tubbs fire, they were not habitable and were legally off limits for occupation. Their insurance policies covered "total loss" of the dwellings, and the plaintiffs were never able to live at Journey's End again after the fire, their attorneys argued.
The mobile home park was formally closed in
In the prolonged legal fight, Foremost argued that the loss of the homes did not amount to a "physical loss" and as such should not be covered. Plaintiffs were claiming coverage not for damage to their homes but for damage to other people's homes — the 116 that burned in the Tubbs fire — Foremost argued.
Presiding over the case was U.S. District Judge
He saw the ruined mobile home park as integral to the question of habitability of the remaining Journey's End units.
"The fire destroyed that infrastructure, such that the sewage, electricity, water, and gas did not physically run, as it previously had, in the unit itself," Alsup wrote
"These victims have suffered enough," Alsup wrote, "and Foremost has added to this suffering."
The order and the settlement amount to a "pretty big deal," Jarvis said. Not only did the former Journey's End residents fight for more than three years, the case's resolution highlights a legal sea change in interpreting the law as it pertains to coverage of lost homes, he said.
"I know this decision will help our clients and I am hopeful that it will also help other mobile or manufactured homeowners who face this kind of situation moving forward," Jarvis said.
"This is very much a silver lining and very unexpected," Simonsen said.
The settlement helped restore her retirement fund, which she had partially raided to relocate after the fire. She and Oliver are contemplating a move to a tiny home in
While Carma looks forward to her days as a sunbird — living in a warm southern climate in the winter and traveling north in the summer to escape the heat — she ruled out a return to
"I love Wine Country, I love
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