Rex and Brenda ALLEMAND, husband and wife, Respondents,
v.
STATE FARM INSURANCE COMPANIES, аlso known as State Farm General Insurance Company; and State Farm Fire & Casualty Company, Appellants.
Court of Appeals of Washington, Division 3.
Steven M. Cronin, Attorney at Law, Spokane, WA, for Appellant.
Douglas Warr Nicholson, Cone Gilreath Law Offices, Ellensburg, WA, for Respondent.
KORSMO, J.
¶ 1 This case revisits the recurring prоblem of fire-loss house repairs that must account for changes in building codes since the house was originally constructed, an issue that stretches back across Washington law for nine decades. We conclude that the limitation on lоsses resulting from building code upgrades in this homeowners' policy was effective under longstanding precedent and reverse the trial court's contrary judgment.
FACTS
¶ 2 Respondents Rex and Brenda Allemand owned a house in Kittitas that was severely damaged by fire on June 20, 2007. *112 Repair costs were estimated at $50,676.95. The house was built in 1940 and its foundation, crawlspace, and electrical wiring did not comply with modern building codes. Due to those deficiencies, the city would not issue permits for the repairs. Instead, the building had to be razed.
¶ 3 It cost the Allemands $96,669.56 to replace the house under modern building requirements. Their State Farm homeowners' policy provided a maximum of $89,866 under Coverage A to repair or replace the homе "with similar construction." The policy also excluded "increased costs resulting from enforcement of any ordinance or law" including "construction repair or demolition" from coverage except as provided by optional Coverage OL. That optional coverage provided an additional sum, equal to 10 percent of the policy maximum, for costs resulting from building code enforcement. The Allemands had purchased Coverage OL.
¶ 4 State Farm рaid the Allemands $59,663.55, consisting of the estimated repair costs from the fire plus the maximum OL coverage for the code updates. The Allemands then filed an action for declaratory judgment and damages, arguing that State Farm was required tо pay the maximum under both Coverage A and Coverage OL.[1]
¶ 5 The trial court agreed, reasoning that the Coverage OL limits for building code upgrades did not limit the amount available under Coverage A. It awarded the Allemands an additional $37,001 under the рolicy and directed State Farm to pay for their attorney fees as well. State Farm then timely appealed to this court.
ANALYSIS
¶ 6 The case turns on the meaning of the insurance policy. Well settled rules govern our review.
¶ 7 Interpretаtion of an insurance policy is a question of law reviewed de novo. Woo v. Fireman's Fund Ins. Co.,
¶ 8 The question of whether insurance coverage extends to costs necessary to bring a remodeled/rebuilt home into compliance with modern building codes has been discussed in a series of cases. Not surprisingly, the parties can each find some support for their position in existing case law.
¶ 9 The Allemands rely upon the earliest of the modern Washington cases, Starczewski v. Unigard Insurance Group,
¶ 10 Division One revisited the issue in Roberts v. Allied Group Insurance Co.,
¶ 11 Gouin involved a house damaged by fire in Seattle. Id. at 200,
The requirements of the city went far beyond this. They required the foundations of the building to be entirely reconstructed and of different materials from that originally used; they required the upper parts of the building to be finished in a different manner than that in which it was originally finished; in fine, they required a practically new and more costly building. This, we cannot conclude, was with the contemplation of the contract.
Id. at 209,
¶ 12 In light of Gouin, the Roberts court summarily rejected the homeowner's attempt to apply Starczewski to the "like construction" language used in that policy.
¶ 13 Division Two of this court likewise refused to apply Starczewski in Dombrosky v. Farmers Insurance Co. of Washington,
¶ 14 This division visited the issue in DePhelps v. Safeco Insurance Co. of America,
¶ 15 The parties understandably draw their battle lines among the modern foursome of cases, with the Allemands using Starczewski and DePhelps, while State Farm relies upon Roberts and Dombrosky. As all of those cases show, the ultimate controlling language is that found in the policy. The Coverage A language states in part that
a. We will pay the cost to repair or replace with similar construction and for the same use on the premises . . . subject to the following:
. . . .
(4) we will not pay for increased costs resulting from enforcement of any ordinance or law regulating the construction, repair or demolition of a building or other structure, except as provided under Option OLBuilding Ordinance or Law Coverage.
Clerk's Papers (CP) at 23.
¶ 16 The Option OL coverage provides in part:
1. Coverage Provided.
The total limit of insurance provided by this Building Ordinance or Law provision will not exceed an amount equal to the Option OL percentage shown in the Declarations of the Coverage A limit shown in the Declarations at the time of the loss. . . . This is an additional amount of insurance and applies only to the dwelling.
2. Damaged Portions of Dwelling.
When the dwelling covered under COVERAGE ADWELLING is damaged by a Loss Insured we will pay for the increased cost to repair or rebuild the physically damaged portion of the dwelling caused by the enforcement of a building, zoning or land use ordinance or law if the enforcement is directly caused by the same Loss Insured and the requirement is in effect at the timе the Loss Insured occurs.
CP at 24.
¶ 17 The policy at issue here covers "similar construction" and is the same as the "like" construction at issue in Gouin and Roberts and the "equivalent" construction in DePhelps and Dombrosky. Thus, the Coverage A component of this policy does not include building code upgrades as the pоlicy in Starczewski did. Instead, Coverage A of the policy expressly indicates that it does cover building code upgrades caused by the same loss only under the optional OL coverage[2] and to the extent provided in that coverage. Thаt makes this case somewhat closer factually to DePhelps in that there is explicit coverage for code upgrades. Unlike that case, however, the policy here expressly limits the code upgrade coverage to 10 рercent of the policy maximum.
¶ 18 In light of the foregoing authority, the policy language is clear and this court is not in a position to find it ambiguous. Quadrant Corp.,
¶ 19 The Allemands also argue that the Option OL coverage is ambiguous because it makes reference to the policy limits shown in the "Declarations," but the coveragе limits page is not entitled "Declarations" nor is that word used on the page. Any confusion they may have hadand there has been no factual finding on that pointdoes not create an *115 ambiguity. They were aware from Option OL that the coverage was limited. They were also aware from the cover page, even if they did not know what a "Declarations" was, what the limits were. Even if there was subjective confusion on this point, there was no ambiguity. The cover page, hоwever denominated, expressly stated the limits of both Coverage A and Option OL. There was no ambiguity.
¶ 20 The judgment is reversed.
WE CONCUR: KULIK, C.J., and SIDDOWAY, J.
NOTES
Notes
[1] The Allemands also alleged that they were underinsured. The trial court dismissed that claim with prejudice. The Allemands did not cross appeal the dismissal.
[2] This provision recognizes the efficient proximate cause rule; the Allemands' argument that the policy conflicts with that rule is without merit. The policy actually applies the rule and covers building code upgrades that are required when repairing a covered loss.
