In this appeal from a judgment for damages based on a claim for negligence, we must decide if the district court, properly overruled a motion for directed verdict on a claim for the costs of repair to damaged property predicated on stipulated evidence of the parties. We find the district court should have granted the motion for directed verdict, but not without further considering Ag Partners’ request to reopen the evidence. As a result, we remand the case for a new trial conditioned on a finding by the district court the trial record should be reopened to permit the introduction of additional evidence of damage. We affirm the decision of the court of appeals in part, vacate in part, and remand the case to the district court for a conditional new trial.
I. Background Facts and Proceedings.
In January of 2001, two empty grain cars owned by Chicago Central & Pacific Railroad (CCP) derailed at Ag Partners’ elevator facility in Fonda, Iowa. The derailed cars struck the steel supports of a grain loading structure, called a “loadout tower,” located adjacent to the train tracks. The loadout tower is an essential component of an elevator operation .because it permits the grain from the. elevator to be loaded onto the train cars. The accident caused damage to the loadout tower and to a conveyer used in the loading operation. 1 Ag Partners had rebuilt parts of the grain loading structure a year prior to the accident to upgrade its operation and improve its business. Following the accident, Ag Partners rebuilt the load-out a second time and sued CCP in January of 2003 for the losses it incurred. These losses included the cost of repairing the loadout, and trucking expenses for transporting the remaining grain to another elevator.
Ag Partners alleged negligence and trespass as theories of recovery in its lawsuit. CCP denied the claims - and raised affirmative defenses, including contract and license defenses that could relieve CCP of liability. CCP also claimed Ag
Prior to the jury trial, the parties stipulated to the repair and trucking costs. The stipulation between the parties stated:
That the fair and reasonable cost.to repair the damages to the loadout and conveyer caused by the derailment of 1/14/01 is $290,176.00.
That the fair and reasonable cost for trucking services [to] transport grain from Fonda to Albert City after the derailment of 1/14/01 was $62,481.51. Defendant does not agree that these charges were necessary or incurred because of the derailment.
Defendant continues to deny that it was negligent in causing the derailment or that it is responsible for these damages.
Ag Partners’ attorney read this stipulation at trial as part of its evidence.
At the close of all the evidence, counsel for CCP made a motion for a directed verdict. It claimed Ag Partners failed to prove “the value of the loadout so as to compare the cost of repairing the loadout.” CCP asserted proof of the value of the property repaired is a separate component to the recovery of damages based orTthe cost of repair, and the stipulation did not cover the value of the property. 2
Ag Partners responded by claiming the stipulation was sufficient to establish its claim for damages. Alternatively, Ag Partners sought to reopen its evidence to submit evidence of value. Counsel for Ag Partners stated:
I think the costs of repair for a brand new loadout and conveyer system that was done approximately one year earlier, which is the testimony, under Iowa law is sufficient. If this was an issue it certainly could have been raised much earlier. The stipulation is more than just it was fair and reasonable, it was fair and reasonable and caused by the derailment and I think we’ve met our burden of proof and if there is any consideration I would simply then ask to reopen, I’ll come bring Bill Lyster back and he can put it into evidence.
The trial court held the stipulation of the fair and reasonable costs of repair did not require further evidence that the value of the property prior to the repairs exceeded the cost of the repairs. The trial court considered the “fair and reasonable” language of the stipulation to mean the parties agreed it was reasonable to make the repairs. Consequently, the trial court overruled the motion for directed verdict, and did not further address Ag Partners’ request to reopen the record to present evidence of the value of the property prior to the accident.
The jury subsequently returned a verdict finding both parties at fault. It determined CCP was seventy percent at fault and Ag Partners was thirty percent at
After the negligence trial the parties presented their- contractual arguments and other defenses to the -court in a second proceeding. The court found CCP failed to establish its defenses. As a result, the district court entered judgment in favor of Ag Partners. It awarded Ag Partners seventy percent of $352,657.51, or $246,860.25.
CCP appealed. It claimed the trial court erred by rejecting its contract and license defenses, as well as its claim that Ag Partners violated the terms of a lease. It also claimed the trial court erred in denying an application for leave to file a counterclaim. Finally, CCP claimed the trial court committed error during the course of the negligence trial by allowing evidence of a subsequent remedial measure by CCP following the derailment, and by failing to direct a verdict in its favor on the claim for repair costs in the absence of evidence of the value of the property. We transferred the case to the court of appeals.
The court of appeals rejected all the claims raised by CCP except one. It found the district court erred by failing to direct a verdict on the claim for the repair costs because Ag Partners had not produced sufficient evidence to show the pre-accident value of the property. Consequently, the court of appeals affirmed the judgment entered by the district court for the trucking costs but reversed the judgment for the repair costs.
We granted Ag Partners’ application for further review of the decision by the court of appeals that reversed the judgment on Ag Partners’ claim for repair costs. CCP did not seek further review.
II. Issues for Review.
“On further review, we can review any or all of the issues raised on appeal or limit our review to just those issues brought to our attention by the application for further review.”
Anderson v. State,
III. Standard of Review.
“We review the denial of a motion for directed verdict for errors at law.”
Rife v. D.T. Corner, Inc.,
IV. Discussion.
It is a general rule of Iowa law that damage for repairs to property is the fair and reasonable cost of repair “not to exceed the value of the property immediately prior to the loss or damage.”
State v. Urbanek,
In order for a plaintiff to recover damages for repair costs, the general rule requires the plaintiff to prove the fair and reasonable value of repair costs do not exceed the value of the property prior to the accident.
3
This general rule imposes two elements of proof that normally must be met as a prerequisite to recovery.
Ur-banek,
In this case, the stipulation was limited to the fair and reasonable cost of repairing the loadout. Thus, it was an agreement by the parties the $290,176.00 in repair costs was not unreasonable or excessive.
See Hendricks,
In
Urbanek,
we made it clear that both components of cost to repair damages were necessary to recover.
The stipulation in this case failed to address the pre-accident value of the property. Moreover, the other evidence presented during the negligence trial failed to establish the value of the property prior to the accident, and no exceptions to the general rule were asserted or established by the evidence. 5 Accordingly, we agree with the court of appeals that Ag Partners failed to meet its burden to submit sufficient evidence of damages for the cost of repairs to be submitted to the jury.
Ag Partners responds that any trial court error was harmless because it introduced ample evidence of the pre-accident value of the property at the second trial. We recognize error committed by a trial court in overruling a motion for directed verdict made at the close of a plaintiffs case-in-chief can be cured by introducing additional evidence to support submission of the issue to the jury prior to the close of all the evidence in the case.
See Pressley v. Stone,
We also reject Ag Partners’ argument that Iowa Rule of Appellate Procedure 6.26 requires this case to be remanded. 6 This rule applies only when “the granting of the motion would have terminated the case in favor of the appellant.” Iowa R.App. P. 6.26. Here, the case would not have terminated in favor of CCP because the motion for directed verdict only related to Ag Partners’ claim for loadout damages. Ag Partners still would have recovered damages for its trucking expenses.
Ultimately, we agree with the court of appeals that Ag Partners failed to establish proof of the pre-accident value of the structure. However, we disagree that the remedy on appeal is to dismiss the damage claim, and we therefore vacate the decision made by our court of appeals to enter judgment in favor of CCP regarding the loadout damages. When a party has failed to introduce sufficient evidence at trial on an element of a claim as revealed by a motion for directed verdict made by an opposing party at the close of the evidence, the district court has discretion to grant a motion by a party to reopen its case to supply the -missing evidence.
Bangs v. Maple Hills Ltd.,
In this case, the district court never had an opportunity to exercise its discretion to permit Ag Partners to reopen its case because it incorrectly found the stipulation was legally sufficient. Thus, the effect of a dismissal of the claim for repairs on appeal based upon the incorrect ruling by the trial court would be to direct the verdict without permitting the trial court to further consider the request by Ag Partners to submit additional evidence. A party should not have a claim dismissed for insufficient evidence without the court ruling on the party’s request to reopen the case. Accordingly, we conclude the claim for repair costs should be remanded to the district court to determine if Ag Partners’ request to reopen should be granted in light of our law regarding such a decision.
See id.
(“ ‘No rigid or fixed formula can or should be employed to determine when a motion to reopen is proper since the trial court, which has a feel for the case, can best determine what is necessary and appropriate to achieve substantial justice.’ ” (quoting 75 Am.Jur.2d
Trial
§ 386, at 583));
State v. Teeters,
V. Conclusion.
We vacate the decision of the court of appeals that remanded the case for an entry of judgment in favor of CCP regarding the loadout damages. We otherwise affirm the decision of the court of appeals, and remand the case to the district court for a conditional new trial and further proceedings consistent with this opinion. The conditional new trial shall be limited to the issue of damages for the cost of repair to the loadout.
DECISION OF COURT OF APPEALS AFFIRMED IN PART, VACATED IN PART, AND CASE REMANDED TO THE DISTRICT COURT FOR FURTHER PROCEEDINGS.
Notes
. We will refer to the damaged loadout and conveyer as the "loadout.”
. CCP did not alert Ag Partners of its objections to the sufficiency of the stipulation of damages to support an award of damages based on the cost of repairs until the motion for directed verdict. This motion was not made until the close of all the evidence at trial pursuant to an agreement by the parties the motion would be “deemed as having been made at the close of the plaintiff's case.” Until that time, Ag Partners, as well as the trial court, assumed the stipulation of damages was sufficient to support an award of damages. In fact, the trial court instructed the jury to use the stipulated amount of the repair cost in determining damages for the repairs to the loadout without objection by CCP.
. In determining the pre-accident value of property under the cost-of-repair rule, we recognize “the sum [of] all ... the parts” is the proper measure.
See Hendricks,
. It should be noted the fair and reasonable costs of repair, even though “fair and reasonable,” can sometimes exceed the pre-accident value of the property. Thus, we reject Ag Partners’ contention “fair and reasonable” meant it did not exceed the pre-accident value of the property.
. In
Urbanek,
we discussed the type of evidence that can be introduced to help establish the value of property in those cases where the value may be difficult to establish.
. Iowa Rule of Appellate Procedure 6.26 provides in relevant part:
When a judgment is reversed for error in overruling a motion for directed verdict, ... and the granting of the motion would have terminated the case in favor of appellant, the appellate court may enter or direct the district court to enter final judgment as if such motion had been initially sustained; provided that if it appears from the record that the material facts relating thereto were not fully developed at the trial or if in the opinion of the appellate court the ends of justice will be served thereby, a new trial shall be awarded of such issue or of the whole case.
. Under special circumstances, we may remand cases in the interest of justice for a new trial when there has been a failure of proof by
