IAG paid $41,000 for damage to the driveway.
The court agreed with EQC's expert witnesses who said that the house was built on solid ground not affected by the landslide.
"The damage to the Goodiers' home and garage did not occur as a result of the natural landslip and is not 'natural disaster damage'," the decision said.
Over the weekend of 20 and 21 June 2015, a one in 85-year weather event brought torrential rain and floods to Whanganui, resulting in as many as 200 landslips including one at the Goodiers' property on Shakespeare Road.
It washed away a huge chunk of their driveway and the lower slopes beneath it, including retaining walls.
On 30 June, the Whanganui District Council red-stickered the building and required the Goodiers to leave the property because their house was considered dangerous and uninhabitable.
The Goodiers argued that the landslip, which claimed land within eight metres of their house, damaged the garage and house as well as taking away land.
Argument in the High Court focussed on whether this was the case or not.
The Goodiers' counsel Grant Shand presented evidence from 24 lay witnesses - including the couple and their son Louis - who compared the condition of the house before and after the slip, presenting a long list of defects.
A structural engineer and building inspector for the Goodiers argued the landslide had caused sloping of the lounge floor, the warping of walls and doorframes, and that the garage slab had cracked because of it, among other faults.
The Goodiers' structural engineer proposed "vibration theory" as evidence that the landslide had damaged the home but had to accept under cross-examination "he was not an expert engineering geologist or a geotechnical engineer, and ultimately could not provide an explanation as to how or what caused" the damage claimed.
The family did not call a geotechnical expert witness.
Counsel for EQC and IAG said in the absence of any specialist geotechnical or engineering geologist evidence identifying how the landslide had caused the damage, the Goodiers had not proved their case.
Their specialist geotechnical evidence said the house itself was built on stiff and stable soil structures.
"This is because the house site was excavated into competent ground which remained unaffected by the landslip," the decision said.
Justice Cull noted in the decision that the insurers' provided the only geotechnical evidence and "it was not substantively or effectively challenged".
"I reject Mr Csiba's "vibration theory" as a mechanism for the cause of damage. Mr Csiba, as he concedes, is not a geotechnical engineer and his theory was advanced without any reasoning or supporting engineering data or research."
The experts agreed soils under the southwest corner of the garage had slumped, but the insurers witnesses argued a pile there had not been supporting the garage anyhow. Similarly, they said a pile below the lounge has settled independently from the slip, causing the sloping there.
They said damage to the house was for the most part historical, which reflected the complexity of the three-level design, with its split-level floors, and that a beam supporting the upper floors was deformed and the building had inadequate lateral bracing.
In her summary, Justice Cull found the damage to the Goodiers' home and garage did not occur as a result of the natural landslip and was not "natural disaster damage".
Justice Cull said EQC and IAG had no further liability other than that which they had already accepted.
The Goodiers, their counsel Grant Shand and EQC have been asked for comment.
The family are yet to comment on the decision.
- RNZ