The only issue defendants/appellants raise in this appeal is whether plaintiffs/appellees were entitled to an award of рrejudgment interest on fire damages caused by defendants’ negligence. Plaintiffs cross-appeal claiming that the amount of prejudg-mеnt interest awarded should have been greater. Because the award of prejudgment interest involves a matter of law, our review is
de novo. Employers Mut. Casualty Co. v. McKeon,
On May 9,1990, fire damaged a supermarket and various stores in a Phoenix shopping center. On May 6, 1991, plaintiffs’ counsel sent a letter to defendаnts’ insurance carrier claiming that the fire was due solely to defendants’ negligence and demanded payment of damages totaling $918,000. The letter also stated that “[t]he offer to settle is open until May 21, 1991,” and further advised that “because the damages in this case are liquidatеd, the court will be required to award prejudgment interest as part of any judgment against your insured.” When defendants neither paid nor offered tо pay all or any part of the amount demanded, plaintiffs filed suit. The ease proceeded to trial, with the jury awarding damages of $835,927. 1
Plаintiffs submitted a form of judgment to the court in which they sought prejudgment interest on the jury’s award from the date of loss. Defendants objected on two grоunds: First, that prejudgment interest could not be awarded from the date of loss, only from the date of demand, and second, that plaintiffs’ damages were unliquidated on the date of demand because the amount demanded was greater than the amount awarded. Plaintiffs responded that a demand was unnecessary because the damages were liquidated on the date of loss and, even if they were not, they beсame liquidated when demand was made because the total amount demanded included the damages awarded by the jury. Specificаlly, plaintiffs asserted that even though the total demand of $918,000 was not itemized, it included the following individual damage claims which, when totaled, equal the amount the jury awarded:
Supermarket repair.....$747,602
Western store repair____ 41,901
Drug store repair....... 10,067
Architect fees.......... 36,357
Total..............$835,927
The trial court ruled that the damage claims “remained unliquidated until the [date] actual amounts for cost of rеpair, architectural services and loss of use were provided defendants,” awarding prejudgment interest on each claim from that date to the date of judgment.
Prejudgment interest is awarded as a matter of right on a liquidated claim, whether based on contract or tort.
Fleming v. Pima County,
The record establishes that plaintiffs’ repair costs and architect feеs were ascertainable by accepted standards of valuation. We therefore conclude that plaintiffs’ tort claim against defendants was a liquidated claim entitling plaintiffs to an award of prejudgment interest, notwithstanding the fact that the case had to be tried. As Divisiоn One of this court stated in
Trus Joist Corp. v. Safeco Ins. Co. of America,
[T]he sum is still “liquidated” according to what is believed to be the better view, although the sum is not fixed by agreement and although the facts upon which the claim is based may be disputed, and even though the adversary sucсessfully challenges the amount and succeeds in reducing it.
McCormick, supra, § 54, at 216. Thus, it matters not that defendants disputed plaintiffs’ claim or successfully reduced the amount of damages; plaintiffs are entitled to prejudgment interest from the date it first accrues.
In Arizona, prejudgment interest generally accrues from the date of demand, not from the date of loss as plaintiffs contend in their cross-appeal.
Rawlings v. Apodaca,
Supermarket repair.....5/20/1992
Western store repair ... .3/09/1993
Drug store repair.......3/09/1993
Architect fees..........2/24/1994
Accоrdingly, the court properly awarded plaintiffs prejudgment interest on each damage claim from the date indicated to the date of judgment.
Defendants contend, however, that this result is contrary to our decision in
Marcus.
There we vacated an award of prejudgment interеst on out-of-pocket expenses awarded by a jury because the plaintiff had failed to put the defendants on notice that рayment of those expenses would settle the claim. Relying on this, defendants in the instant ease argue that such settlement notice is neces
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment awarding plaintiffs prejudgment interest from the dates and for the damages set forth therein is affirmed.
Notes
. By stipulation, $51,696.55, plus prejudgment interest on a portion of that amount, was added to the jury award and is uncontested on appeal.
