Case Information
*1 FOR PUBLICATION
ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT: ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE, Shambaugh & Son, L.P.: JONATHAN H. NUSBAUM
Beers Mallers Backs & Salin, LLP BRIAN P. CLIFFORD Fort Wayne, Indiana MICHAEL L. JAMES
Faegre Baker Daniels, LLP Fort Wayne, Indiana ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE, Hamilton Hunter Builders, Inc.: JAMES J. SHEA TIMOTHY W. DEGROOTE ANDREW S. WILLIAMS Hunt Suedhoff Kalamaros, LLP Fort Wayne, Indiana IN THE
COURT OF APPEALS OF INDIANA
ALLEN COUNTY PUBLIC LIBRARY, )
) Appellant, ) ) vs. ) No. 02A04-1302-PL-78
) SHAMBAUGH & SON, L.P., )
HAMILTON HUNTER BUILDERS, INC., )
W.A. SHEETS & SONS, INC., and, )
MSKTD & ASSOCIATES, INC., )
) Appellees. ) APPEAL FROM THE ALLEN SUPERIOR COURT The Honorable Nancy Eshcoff Boyer, Judge Cause No. 02D01-1002-PL-26 *2 January 28, 2014
OPINION ON REHEARING - FOR PUBLICATION
BARNES, Judge
Shambaugh & Son, L.P., Hamilton Hunter Builders, Inc., W.A. Sheets & Sons, Inc., and MSKTD & Associates, Inc., (collectively “the Defendants”) petition for rehearing following our decision in Allen County Public Library v. Shambaugh & Son, L.P. et al., 997 N.E.2d 48 (Ind. Ct. App. 2013). [1] We grant rehearing to acknowledge and address some of the Defendants’ rehearing arguments, but we reaffirm our original decision in all respects.
To summarize, this case concerns an effort by the Allen County Public Library (“the Library”) to recoup from the Defendants the costs of cleaning up diesel fuel that leaked from underground pipes that were installed by the Defendants as part of a project to expand and renovate the main Library branch building. The Library collected $5,000 from Great American Insurance Group toward the cleanup costs under a “Builders Risk Plus” insurance policy the Library took out specifically for the renovation and addition project. App. p. 360. However, the Library alleges that the total cost of remediating the diesel fuel has already exceeded $490,000 and will continue to increase. The Defendants assert that the Library could only look to the $5,000 in pollution cleanup coverage from Great American to cover the remediation costs.
*3 In our original opinion, we analyzed whether the Library had waived any right to seek payment from the Defendants under the following provision, Section 11.3.7, found in the standard American Institute of Architects (“AIA”) construction contract entered into by the parties:
Waivers of Subrogation. The Owner and Contractor waive all rights against each other and against the Construction Manager, Architect, Owner’s other Contractors and own forces described in Article 6, if any, and the subcontractors, sub- subcontractors, consultants, agents and employees of any of them, for damages caused by fire or other perils to the extent covered by property insurance obtained pursuant to this Paragraph 11.3 or other property insurance applicable to the Work, except such rights as the Owner and Contractor may have to the proceeds of such insurance held by the Owner as fiduciary . . . .
Id. at 317. Relying primarily upon Midwestern Indemnity Company v. Systems Builders,
Inc.,
Shambaugh,
On rehearing, one of the contentions raised by the Defendants is that, in fact, only “Work” property was damaged by the diesel fuel leak and, in fact, no “non-Work” property was damaged or contaminated and, therefore, the wavier of subrogation provision of Section 11.3.7 of the contract applied to bar the Library’s claims. This argument was not made in the Defendants’ original briefs, even though one of the Library’s main arguments was that the fuel leak did in fact damage “non-Work” property. See Appellant’s Br. pp. 12-14. Indeed, the Defendants did not make this argument before the trial court, either. It is a cardinal rule of appellate procedure that a party cannot raise an argument for the first time in a rehearing petition. See, e.g., Clark County Drainage Bd. v. Isgrigg, 966 N.E.2d 678, 679-80 (Ind. Ct. App. 2012).
In any event, we did review the record citations provided by the Defendants with
respect to the argument that no “non-Work” property was contaminated by the diesel fuel.
Without going into great detail, given that the Defendants did not make this argument in
their original briefs, it is our opinion that there is at a minimum an outstanding genuine
issue of fact as to the scope of the diesel fuel contamination and whether it exceeded the
boundaries of “the Work” the Defendants were contracted to perform. The scope of
contamination is unclear in the present record, and as summary judgment movants it was
the Defendants’ burden to establish that no “non-Work” property was contaminated. See
Haegert v. McMullan,
The second argument made on rehearing that we address is that the Midwestern case upon which we relied represents a “minority view” interpretation of the AIA contract’s waiver of subrogation provision and that we should instead adopt the “majority view” interpretation. Again, as with the “Work” versus “non-Work” issue, none of the Defendants made any argument in their original appellate briefs that Midwestern was incorrectly decided, despite the Library’s heavy reliance upon the case in its brief. Instead, the Defendants attempted to argue that Midwestern was distinguishable from the present
case or, in fact, was supportive of their position. That is the argument we considered and rejected in our original opinion. The Defendants now argue that we should abandon Midwestern—too little, too late, the issue is waived.
We conclude that, even if we were to follow the so-called “majority view” in this
case, the Defendants still would be unsuccessful. To reiterate, Midwestern held that
Section 11.3.7 of the AIA contract “is limited to the work performed under the contract”
and, therefore, if a contractor causes damage to property other than “the Work” to be
performed under the contract, the property owner (or its insurer through subrogation) may
seek recovery from the contractor for that damage, regardless of whether the damage was
covered by insurance. Midwestern,
In virtually every single one of the “majority view” cases cited by the Defendants,
a property owner relied upon pre-existing property insurance to satisfy its obligation to
procure insurance for a construction project under the AIA standard contract, which
insurance covered both “non-Work” and “Work” property, a contractor caused damage to
“non-Work” property, the property insurer paid the property owner for the loss, and the
property insurer then sought subrogation from the contractor. See ASIC II Ltd. V.
Stonhard, Inc.,
Ct. App. 2012). The Lloyd’s Underwriters case, for example, specifically observed that the property owner had chosen not to purchase a “builder’s risk” policy with coverage limited to “the Work” and further stated, “We caution that there may have been a different result had Owner procured a specific policy, such as a ‘builder’s risk’ policy the protection *7 of which was limited to the Work itself, rather than having relied on appellants’ ‘all-risk’ policy to cover the Work.” Lloyd’s Underwriters, 32 Cal. Rptr.2d at 146 n.4. The Minnesota Supreme Court also explained the distinction between “builder’s risk” insurance and pre-existing property insurance when discussing the subrogation provisions of the AIA contract:
The owner has the option of purchasing an all-risk policy specifically to cover the “work” or can rely on any existing property insurance which would cover the “work.” However, the waiver clause creates the “work” and “nonwork” distinction based upon the owner’s decision to purchase a new policy or to rely upon an existing one. The owner agrees to waive the right to sue for damages done only to the “work” if it purchases a separate all-risk policy specifically to cover the “work.” But if the owner relies on an existing policy which is so broad that it covers both “work” and “nonwork” property, it waives the right to sue for all damages done as long as that damage is covered by the policy.
A.C.C.T.,
The Defendants also argue that in Mu Chapter of Sigma Pi Fraternity v. Northeast
Construction Services,
With the above observations, we reaffirm our original opinion in all respects.
CRONE, J., and PYLE, J., concur.
Notes
[1] Shambaugh and Hamilton Hunter have each filed separate rehearing petitions. W.A. Sheets and MSKTD have filed notices of joinder in Shambaugh’s rehearing petition.
[2] In Iowa, unlike in Indiana, unpublished decisions may be cited as authority so long as they are readily accessible electronically, though they are not controlling upon other Iowa courts. See Iowa Court R. 6.904(2)(c).
