Cedar Bluff Townhome Condominium Association, Inc. v. American Family Mutual Insurance Company ( 2014 )


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  •                               STATE OF MINNESOTA
    IN SUPREME COURT
    A13-0124
    Court of Appeals                                                               Page, J.
    Took no part, Stras, J.
    Cedar Bluff Townhome Condominium
    Association, Inc.,
    Respondent,
    vs.                                                         Filed: December 17, 2014
    Office of Appellate Courts
    American Family Mutual Insurance Company,
    Appellant.
    ________________________
    E. Curtis Roeder, Anthony T. Smith, Alexander M. Jadin, Roeder Smith Jadin, PLLC,
    Bloomington, Minnesota, for respondent.
    Mark R. Bradford, Jeanne H. Unger, Bassford Remele, P.A., Minneapolis, Minnesota, for
    appellant.
    William M. Hart, Katherine A. McBride, Meagher & Geer, P.L.L.P., Minneapolis,
    Minnesota, for amicus curiae Insurance Federation of Minnesota.
    Jenneane L. Jansen, Kris E. Palmer, Erica G. Strohl, Jansen & Palmer, LLC,
    Minneapolis, Minnesota, for amicus curiae Minnesota Association for Justice.
    Adina R. Bergstrom, Brenda M. Sauro, Sauro & Bergstorm, PLLC, Woodbury,
    Minnesota, for amicus curiae Minnesota Association of Public Insurance Adjusters, LLC.
    Beth A. Jenson Prouty, Stephen M. Warner, Arthur, Chapman, Kettering, Smetak &
    Pikala, P.A., Minneapolis, Minnesota, for amicus curiae Property Casualty Insurers
    Association of America.
    Christopher H. Yetka, Barnes & Thornburg, LLP, Minneapolis, Minnesota, for amicus
    curiae United Policyholders.
    1
    ________________________
    SYLLABUS
    The appraisal panel did not err in determining that the replacement of respondent’s
    damaged siding panels with siding of comparable material and quality required
    replacement of all of the siding on respondent’s buildings to achieve a reasonable color
    match.
    Affirmed.
    OPINION
    PAGE, Justice.
    Appellant American Family Mutual Insurance Company (American Family)
    insured property managed by respondent Cedar Bluff Townhome Condominium
    Association (Cedar Bluff).       The insurance policy covered 20 multi-unit residential
    buildings. Cedar Bluff filed a claim with American Family for hail damage to the siding
    on each of the 20 buildings. A dispute arose as to whether the policy language providing
    for the replacement of “damaged property with other property . . . [o]f comparable
    material and quality” requires the replacement of all siding, even undamaged siding, in
    order to provide a color match. Because the appraisal panel properly concluded that
    siding of comparable material and quality required a reasonable color match between the
    damaged and undamaged siding, we affirm the court of appeals’ decision.
    During a hail storm in October 2011, all 20 of Cedar Bluff’s townhome buildings
    sustained some damage. The roofs on all of the buildings needed to be replaced, and at
    least one siding panel on each building sustained damage. Each siding panel is 15 square
    2
    feet in size. Eleven of the 20 buildings had three or fewer damaged panels. The building
    with the most hail damage had 10 damaged panels, and one building had only one
    damaged panel. At the time of the hail storm, the siding was approximately 11 years old,
    and the color of the panels had faded. Replacement panels were available from the same
    manufacturer with the same specifications, but the panels were not available in the same
    color.
    Cedar Bluff submitted a claim under its businessowners’ policy to American
    Family for the hail damage to the property. Under the policy, American Family was
    obligated to pay for “direct physical loss of or damage to Covered Property at the
    premises . . . caused by or resulting from any Covered Cause of Loss.” (Emphasis
    added.) “Covered Property” is broadly defined in the policy as the “[b]uildings, meaning
    the buildings and structures at the premises described in the Declarations.” The policy
    also included a “Loss Payment” clause specifying how American Family would fulfill its
    obligation with respect to a covered loss or damage. Under the Loss Payment clause,
    American Family agreed, at its option, to:
    (1) Pay the value of lost or damaged property;
    (2) Pay the cost of repairing or replacing the lost or damaged property;
    (3) Take all or any part of the [damaged] property at an agreed or appraised
    value; or
    (4) Repair, rebuild or replace the property with other property of like kind
    and quality . . . .
    3
    American Family elected the second payment option under the Loss Payment clause.1
    Moreover, the policy provides that American Family was to “determine the value of
    Covered Property . . . [a]t replacement cost.” Replacement cost is to be determined based
    on the cost to replace “the lost or damaged property with other property . . . [o]f
    comparable material and quality.” (Emphasis added.)
    American Family did not dispute that the hail storm damaged at least one panel of
    siding on all 20 buildings; however, a dispute arose regarding the value of the loss for
    purposes of calculating the replacement cost. According to Cedar Bluff, all of the siding
    on each building had to be replaced because there would be a color mismatch with the
    existing panels if only the damaged siding panels were replaced.          In other words,
    “comparable material and quality” required a color match between the damaged and
    undamaged siding panels. American Family disagreed, claiming that the policy only
    required replacement of the individual panels actually damaged by the hail storm.
    American Family also noted that an exact color match was not possible even if the
    replacement panels were available in the original color because the color of the original
    siding on the buildings had faded over time.       American Family offered to pay for
    1
    American Family chose the second payment option under the Loss Payment
    clause, namely to pay the replacement cost of the damaged property, based on the cost of
    “other property . . . [o]f comparable material and quality.” American Family, however,
    uses the phrase “other property . . . [o]f comparable material and quality” interchangeably
    with the phrase “other property of like kind and quality.” The latter phrase comes from
    the fourth option under the Loss Payment clause, which, although also presenting a
    replacement option, American Family did not elect to use. We therefore focus on the
    meaning of the phrase “other property . . . [o]f comparable material and quality” because
    that is the option that American Family chose to use for this coverage dispute.
    4
    replacement panels that were either slightly darker or slightly lighter in color than the
    original panels.
    Because Cedar Bluff and American Family were unable to agree on the amount of
    the loss, Cedar Bluff demanded an appraisal, as provided for in the policy. After holding
    a hearing, at which it received evidence and heard arguments, and after visiting the site of
    the 20 buildings, the appraisal panel found that the original siding on the buildings could
    be “ ‘matched’ in terms of the same siding being commercially available from the same
    manufacturer and with the same model name, . . . texture, size and installation methods,”
    but “could not be matched in terms of color.” Based on the color difference, the panel
    concluded that “there was not a reasonable match available for the existing siding
    materials.” The panel then issued an award for “a total replacement of the siding” in the
    amount of $361,108 for the replacement cost of property of comparable material and
    quality. In making its award, the appraisal panel acknowledged that American Family’s
    focus on the replacement cost value of the damaged siding panels “would be correct if the
    subject policy did not require such a color match,” but that a color mismatch was “not a
    repair or replacement with comparable materials of like kind and quality.” American
    Family refused to pay the appraisal award because it believed the award was based on the
    appraisal panel’s unauthorized coverage determinations. Cedar Bluff subsequently filed
    an action in district court seeking to confirm the appraisal award. American Family
    counterclaimed, seeking a declaratory judgment that the appraisal panel exceeded its
    authority.
    5
    The district court granted summary judgment to American Family. The court
    concluded that under “the plain language of the policy,” American Family “is not
    required to pay for the cost of replacing property that has not experienced direct physical
    loss or damage” and therefore “is not obligated to pay for the cost of replacing the
    undamaged siding.” In addition, the court held that American Family was “not mandated
    to pay for siding that provides an exact ‘color match’ to the original siding” because “the
    term ‘color match’ is not contained anywhere within the policy.”
    The court of appeals reversed.     Cedar Bluff Townhome Condo. Ass’n v. Am.
    Family Mut. Ins. Co., No. A13-0124, 
    2013 WL 6223454
     (Minn. App. Dec. 2, 2013). The
    court of appeals explained that the appraisal panel “necessarily interpreted the phrases
    ‘replace . . . with other property of like kind and quality’ and ‘replace . . . with other
    property . . . [o]f comparable material and quality,’ ” and that under Quade v. Secura Ins.,
    
    814 N.W.2d 703
    , 706-07 (Minn. 2012), “the appraisal panel had authority to consider the
    meanings of those phrases when determining the amount of loss.” Cedar Bluff, 
    2013 WL 6223454
    , at *3. The court of appeals concluded that “the district court erred by refusing
    to accept the factual determinations of the appraisal award.” Id. at *3. However, the
    court of appeals also held that the question of coverage under the policy was properly
    before the court because under Quade “ ‘an appraiser’s liability determinations are not
    final and conclusive’ and ‘the decision of the appraisers will be subject to review.’ ”
    Cedar Bluff, 
    2013 WL 6223454
    , at *3 (quoting Quade, 814 N.W.2d at 707-08). The
    court of appeals added that the value of the covered property was to be “determined
    based on the cost to replace the ‘damaged property with other property . . . [o]f
    6
    comparable material and quality,’ ” and determined that “a reasonable person could
    understand that ‘comparable material’ means material that is the same color as the
    damaged property.”     Id. at *4.   We granted American Family’s petition for further
    review.
    I.
    Although this is an appeal from a grant of summary judgment, we granted review
    to determine if the appraisal panel properly concluded that American Family’s obligation
    to replace damaged property with property of comparable material and quality required it
    to replace damaged and undamaged property to achieve a color match. This requires us
    to interpret the provisions of the insurance policy. We interpret insurance contracts de
    novo, see Quade v. Secura Ins., 
    814 N.W.2d 703
    , 705 (Minn. 2012) (“The interpretation
    of insurance contracts is a question of law.”), applying general principles of contract law,
    Midwest Family Mut. Ins. Co. v. Wolters, 
    831 N.W.2d 628
    , 636 (Minn. 2013).
    Furthermore, we have held that an appraisal panel “may not construe the [insurance]
    policy or decide whether the insurer should pay.” Quade, 814 N.W.2d at 706; see also 15
    Lee R. Russ & Thomas F. Segalla, Couch on Insurance § 213:44 (3d ed. 1999) (“An
    appraiser can make no legal determinations.”).        However, we have also held that
    “ ‘questions of law or fact, which are involved as mere incidents to a determination of the
    amount of loss or damage,’ are appropriate to resolve in an appraisal in order to ascertain
    the ‘amount of loss.’ ” Quade, 814 N.W.2d at 707 (quoting Itasca Paper Co. v. Niagara
    Fire Ins. Co., 
    175 Minn. 73
    , 79, 
    220 N.W. 425
    , 427 (1928)).
    7
    Here, the appraisal panel awarded $361,108 for the replacement cost value of the
    damaged siding. The policy language required replacement cost to be determined based
    on the cost to replace “the lost or damaged property with other property . . . [o]f
    comparable material and quality.” (Emphasis added.) American Family argues that
    “comparable” means similar, not “identical,” and therefore it was not obligated to replace
    all of the siding panels, including the ones that were undamaged, simply because it was
    unable to replace the damaged siding panels with panels that were an identical color
    match to the originally installed panels. Cedar Bluff argues that “comparable” in this
    context requires a color match; and because American Family could not replace the
    damaged siding panels to provide a color match, it was obligated to replace all of the
    damaged siding panels. Thus, in order to ascertain whether the appraisal panel properly
    awarded a replacement cost value based on the cost of replacing all the siding, we must
    first determine the meaning of “comparable material and quality.”
    When interpreting insurance contracts, the policy must be construed as a whole,
    beginning with the plain and ordinary meaning of the policy’s terms, as well as “what a
    reasonable person in the position of the insured would have understood the words to
    mean.” Midwest Family, 831 N.W.2d at 636 (citation omitted) (internal quotation marks
    omitted).   The word “comparable” means “[s]imilar or equivalent.”         The American
    Heritage Dictionary of the English Language 375 (5th ed. 2011); see also Webster’s
    Third New International Dictionary 461 (1976) (defining “comparable” as “[s]uitable for
    matching, coordinating, or contrasting:      Equivalent, similar”).    American Family
    concedes that the policy requires some degree of color match, noting that it cannot “meet
    8
    its obligation by paying for red siding on an otherwise yellow building” because “[n]o
    reasonable person would conclude that red siding is comparable to yellow siding.” We
    agree. On the other hand, the plain meaning of the phrase “comparable material and
    quality” is material that is suitable for matching. Thus, we conclude that on the spectrum
    of resemblance, “comparable material and quality” requires something less than an
    identical color match, but a reasonable color match nonetheless. This determination is
    consistent with case law in other jurisdictions. See, e.g., Republic Underwriters Ins. Co.
    v. Mex-Tex, Inc., 
    150 S.W.3d 423
    , 425 (Tex. 2004) (interpreting “comparable material
    and quality” to “allow [ ] more leeway” than the term “identical”). Cf. Farmers Auto.
    Ins. Ass’n. v. Union Pac. Ry. Co., 
    756 N.W.2d 461
    , 471 (Wis. Ct. App. 2008) (explaining
    that “ ‘like kind and quality’ ” does not require “brick-by-brick, fixture-by-fixture, or
    window-by-window congruence”).
    Therefore, in accordance with the plain meaning of the policy language, we
    construe the phrase “comparable material and quality” to mean a reasonable color match
    between new and existing siding when replacing damaged siding.
    II.
    Having defined “comparable material and quality,” we turn next to the question of
    whether the appraisal panel interpreted “comparable material and quality” to require an
    exact color match or merely a reasonable color match. Upon weighing the evidence, the
    panel found that “there was not a reasonable match available for the existing siding
    materials but there is a reasonable match for the existing fascia material.” The panel also
    9
    noted that American Family’s $6,800 estimate for the replacement cost value “would be
    correct if the subject policy did not require such a color match.”
    American Family contends that the appraisal panel interpreted the word
    “comparable” to require an “exact color match,” or in essence an identical color match.
    To support its claim, American Family points to one of the appraisers’ statements at the
    August 8, 2011, appraisal hearing:
    And so for me and the panel, what we have to decide is under this policy is
    the association required to accept a slightly lighter or slightly darker
    material. And we could actually issue an opinion that says the loss
    adjustment is correct except to the extent of a matching issue and then issue
    our decision on the matching. And then you guys can go to the district court
    and whether [sic] figure out if this witness’s definition of like, kind and
    quality is the correct one.
    According to American Family, because slightly lighter or slightly darker was not good
    enough in this instance, the panel, therefore, had to conclude that “comparable” meant
    identical.
    We disagree. First, this contention is not supported by the record because neither
    the words “identical color match” nor “exact color match” appear in the appraisal award.
    In contrast, the panel used the words “reasonable match” in the appraisal award. This
    wording suggests that the appraisal panel did not interpret “comparable” to mean
    identical or “exact.” Second, we believe that it was logical for the panel to conclude that
    it “could actually issue an opinion that says the loss adjustment is correct except to the
    extent of a matching issue” because the original siding on the buildings could be matched
    in almost every specification, except color. Model, texture, size, and installation method
    posed no issue in this case—the only issue was color mismatch. Third, we understand
    10
    the panel’s reference to American Family’s estimate being correct “if the subject policy
    did not require such a color match” to denote the panel’s description of a type or degree
    of the color match. In particular, we note that the word “such” precedes the words “a
    color match.”   And, considering the panel’s use of the words “reasonable match”
    throughout the appraisal award, we interpret the above sentence to mean that American
    Family’s estimate would have been correct if the policy did not require a reasonable
    color match. Accordingly, we conclude that the appraisal panel applied the correct legal
    standard.
    III.
    Having concluded that the appraisal panel applied the correct legal standard, we
    now turn to the question of what property must be replaced. American Family argues
    that the policy does not require it to replace the individual siding panels that did not
    sustain direct physical loss or damage from the hail storm. In support of this argument,
    American Family notes that under the policy it agreed to pay for “direct physical loss of
    or damage to Covered Property at the premises . . . caused by or resulting from any
    Covered Cause of Loss.”       The appraisal panel concluded, and American Family
    concedes, that the replacement siding panels could not be matched in terms of color.
    Accordingly, the question to be answered is whether the color mismatch constitutes
    “direct physical loss of or damage to Covered Property.”
    The term “direct physical loss of or damage” is not defined in the policy.
    According to American Family, the term “physical damage” means “a distinct,
    demonstrable, and physical alteration,” and “physical loss” means “those situations where
    11
    an external force has rendered the property unsafe or unusable, even though the property
    remains physically unchanged.”2 Because of the color mismatch resulting from the
    inability to replace the hail-damaged siding panels with siding of “comparable material
    and quality,” the covered property—Cedar Bluff’s “buildings”—has sustained a “distinct,
    demonstrable, and physical alteration.” Thus, we conclude that the covered property
    sustained a covered loss. As a result of the dispute between Cedar Bluff and American
    Family, the appraisal panel was selected to determine the amount of loss. Here, the
    appraisal panel held a hearing at which it considered all of the evidence, heard from
    witnesses, and examined the damaged property in person. Because there is a strong
    public policy in Minnesota favoring appraisals, see Quade, 814 N.W.2d at 707, we give
    deference to the appraisal panel’s factual determination as to the amount of loss. As
    noted previously, the appraisal panel determined the amount of loss to be $361,108.
    Given our deferential standard of review, we conclude that the district court erred when it
    refused to confirm the appraisal panel’s award.3
    2
    Because we conclude that American Family’s arguments fail under its definition
    of the term “physical damage,” we need not independently define that term.
    3
    As a final matter, we note that by order of April 29, 2014, we deferred
    consideration of a motion by Cedar Bluff to strike portions of American Family’s brief.
    More specifically, Cedar Bluff moved to strike certain materials from American Family’s
    appendix, including the transcript from the appraisal and a Minnesota Department of
    Commerce informational article. Cedar Bluff acknowledges, however, that certain pages
    from the transcript are a part of the trial record. To that extent, we deny Cedar Bluff’s
    motion. As to those transcript pages and the Informational Bulletin that are not a part of
    the trial record, they are not properly before us on this appeal, Minn. R. Civ. App. P.
    110.01, and therefore, we grant Cedar Bluff’s motion to strike in part.
    12
    IV.
    Of course, all storm-related property damage claims present their own facts. In
    this particular case, the spot damage to multiple siding panels on multiple buildings,
    along with the appraisal panel’s assessment of the particular color mismatch, applied to
    the policy language at issue, lead to our conclusion that there is coverage. In summary,
    we hold that, under the terms of its insurance policy with American Family, Cedar Bluff
    is entitled to have all of the siding panels on each of its 20 buildings replaced.
    Consequently, we affirm the appraisal panel’s award.
    Affirmed.
    STRAS, J., took no part in the consideration or decision of this case.
    13
    

Document Info

Docket Number: A13-124

Judges: Page, Stras

Filed Date: 12/17/2014

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 11/12/2024