Opinion
— Consistent with all of the out-of-state authorities which have considered the issue, in this case we hold an insured homeowner may recover the replacement cost of fire damage to an insured home by purchasing another home at another location. Accordingly, we reverse the judgment entered in favor of the defendant insurer.
Factual and Procedural Summary
The facts which give rise to this appeal are, in all material respects, undisputed. In November 1989 plaintiffs and appellants William Conway
On March 11, 1990, the house was damaged by fire. Although the house could have been repaired, Conway decided not to make any repairs because Conway believed it made more economic sense to develop the Daisy Avenue parcel in conjunction with development of an adjacent parcel Conway owned. Instead of repairing the damage on Daisy Avenue, within three months of the fire Conway paid $230,000 for another single-family home on Ebony Avenue in Imperial Beach.
Following the fire Conway and Farmers submitted the amount of the fire loss to a panel of appraisers. The appraisers found the replacement cost of the fire loss was $90,721 but the actual cash value of the property destroyed ^was $76,279.44. Thereafter Farmers paid Conway $76,279.44.
On March 8, 1991, Conway filed a declaratory relief action against Farmers. Conway’s complaint alleged Farmers was obligated to pay the replacement value of the loss, rather than the actual cash value.
Sitting without a jury, the trial court found in favor of Farmers. The trial court reasoned that because the Daisy Avenue house could have been repaired, Conway was not entitled to the replacement cost of the loss. Judgment was entered in favor of Farmers and Conway filed a timely notice of appeal.
Discussion
The policy Farmers issued to Conway promises that in the event of a fire at the insured premises, Farmers will pay for: “c. Buildings under Coverage A or B at replacement cost without deduction for depreciation, subject to the following: [K] (1) If at the time of loss the amount of insurance in tiiis policy on the damaged building is 80% or more of the full replacement cost of the building immediately prior to the loss, we will pay the cost of repair or replacement, without deduction for depreciation, but not exceeding the smallest of the following amounts: [SO (a) the limit of liability under this policy applying to the building; [¶] (b) the replacement cost of that part of the building damaged for equivalent construction and use on the same premises; or [1] (c) the amount actually and necessarily spent to repair or
The parties vigorously dispute the meaning of the terms “replace” and “replacement” in paragraphs c.(l)(c) and c.(4). Farmers argues that when a building may be repaired, these terms require that any replacement of damaged property occur at the same location as the damaged building. Conway argues the policy places no restriction on where an insured may replace a damaged building.
In resolving this conflict we begin by noting there is no reported California case which discusses whether the replacement cost of a fire loss may be recovered where the insured decides to replace a damaged building by purchasing another building at a different location. However Conway’s interpretation of the Farmers policy is supported by all of the out-of-state authorities which have considered the issue. (See, e.g.,
S and S Tobacco
v.
Greater New York Mut.
(1992)
The court in
Hess
explained the genesis of the replacement cost provisions of fire policies: “Traditional coverage was for the actual or fair cash value of the property. The owner was indemnified fully by payment of the fair cash value, in effect the market value, which is what the owner lost if the insured building was destroyed. [Citation.] [][] However, it was recognized that an owner might not be made whole because of the increased cost to repair or to rebuild. Thus, replacement cost coverage became available. ‘Replacement cost coverages ... go beyond the concept of indemnity and simply recognize that even expected deterioration of property is a risk which may be insured against.’ ”
(Hess, supra,
Significantly the policy in
Hess
contained standard limitations on the recovery of replacement costs identical to the ones in Farmers’s policy. Although writing in the context of a dispute over whether the recovery of
“Finally, the third limitation of liability strengthens the requirement that liability of the company does not exist until repair or replacement is made. The purpose of this limitation is to limit recovery to the amount the insured spent on repair or replacement as yet another measure of the loss liability of the insurer. This third valuation method is intended to disallow an insured from recovering, in replacement cost proceeds, any amount other than that actually expended.’ [Citation].”
1
(Hess, supra,
We believe the result reached by the out-of-state authorities is the same one required under principles of contract interpretation established by our Supreme Court. In
AIU Ins. Co.
v.
Superior Court
(1990)
In summarizing these rules the court in
Bank of the West
v.
Superior Court
(1992)
In applying these principles to the instant dispute, we find no support for Farmers’s interpretation. First, we note the ordinary and popular sense of the policy provisions does not clearly and explicitly include the restrictions on payment of replacement value which Farmers suggests. The dictionary definition of “replace” is: “1: to place again: restore to a former place, position, or condition 2: to take the place of: serve as a substitute for or successor of: Succeed, Supplant 3: to put in place of: provide a substitute or successor for 4: to fill the place of: supply an equivalent for.” (Webster’s New Internal. Dict. (3d ed. 1968) p. 1925.)
The dictionary definition does not draw any distinction between what can be repaired and what cannot be repaired. More importantly, although the term replace certainly includes rebuilding on the same premises, the term
In the absence of a clear and explicit meaning, we turn to what Farmers believed its insured would understand were the restrictions on recovery of replacement cost.
(AIU Ins. Co.
v.
Superior Court, supra,
Because the ordinary and popular use of “replace” includes the purchase of a replacement dwelling at another location and no other provision of the policy alerts the insured to a narrower limitation on payment of replacement costs, Farmers’s argument brings us to the rule which requires that ambiguities are to be resolved in favor of the insured. (AIU Ins. Co.v. Superior Court, supra, 51 Cal.3d at pp. 822-823.) Under this rule of construction we reach the same result as the other courts which have considered the issue: the insured’s purchase of a replacement dwelling at another location did not prevent recovery of the replacement cost of the insured loss.
Aside from Conway’s failure to repair the house at Daisy Avenue, no other defense to payment of the replacement cost of Conway’s loss appears on the record; thus the judgment entered in favor of Farmers must be reversed. Accordingly, the judgment is reversed and remanded for further
Froehlich, J., and Nares, J., concurred.
Notes
The interpretation adopted by the court in Hess was taken from Jordan, What Price Rebuilding? (Spring 1990) 19 The Brief 17, 19-20.
