Aetna Casualty & Surety Company (Aet-na) appeals from a judgment in favor of the plaintiff Emil Salamey for breach of a contract for fire insurance. On appeal, Aetna argues thаt the District Court erred in excluding certain evidence of motive and in awarding excessive damages for lost profits. We find that the trial court committed no error, and affirm.
Emil Salаmey owned a convenience store in Bay City, Michigan, which was destroyed by fire in September 1980. Salamey had fire insurance coverage for the store from the defendаnt Aetna. In January 1981, Aetna denied Salamey's claim on the grounds that he had set the fire or caused it to be set and that he had committed fraud in submitting his claim. Salamey brought this action аgainst Aetna for breach of contract.
At trial, neither party disputed that the fire was intentionally set. Aetna attempted to show that Salamey had an economic motive to set the fire by introducing expert testimony that the store was losing money. Aetna also showed that Salamey and his father had received interest-free loans due on demand from his uncles to purchase the store, and theorized that one uncle, Jaafer Khalil, had demanded repayment of his loan. Salamey in response offered еvidence that he had raised the profit margin so that the store was making money, and that Khalil had not called in the loan.
The insurance contract included coveragе for business interruption following a fire. Under the clause, the insured would receive compensation for business losses during the time required to resume normal business operations, nоt exceeding the time required to rebuild, replace or repair the insured property or in any case twelve months. The parties agreed that with due diligence Salamey’s store could have been rebuilt in two and a half months. ■
The court instructed the jury, over Aet-na’s objection, that if Aetna’s failure to pay Salamey’s claim caused his inability to return to business, they could award damages for lost profits beyond two and a half months and up to the time of trial. The jury found in favor of Salamey and awarded a verdict of $160,000 for lоss of the building, $100,000 for loss of its contents, $13,500 for loss of profits for two and a half months after the fire, and $240,960 for additional loss of profits (or $7,530 per month). Aetna then filed this appeal.
Aetna argued, first, that the District Court erred in excluding evidence that the name of the insured and the assumed name of a convenience store in Saginaw had been changed in summer оf 1981 from Mohammad Salamey (Emil’s father) to Jaafer Khalil. This evidence was proposed originally to impeach Salamey’s testimony that he owned the store in Saginaw and wаs excluded under Fed.R.Evid. 608(b) as an attempt to attack credibility by using extrinsic evidence to show a specific instance of conduct.
Aetna now argues that the evidencе should have been admitted as direct evidence of Salamey’s motive to burn the insured property. Under Aetna’s theory, Salamey burned his store in Bay City for the insurance benefits in order to repay the money he had borrowed from Khalil, who had been laid off from his job. When Aetna refused to pay Salamey’s claim, his father gave the store in Saginaw to Khalil as payment, according to Aetna. This theory is entirely speculative, however. The proffered evidence that Emil’s father changed the ownership of his store in Saginaw tends to prove nothing material about the fire in Emil’s store in Bay City. Since the evidence was not probative of a significant fact in the instant case, the District Court correсtly excluded it under Fed.R. Evid. 402 as irrelevant.
Aetna also argues that the trial court erred in allowing the jury to award as damages compensation for lost profits beyond the two and a half months required for rebuilding. Aetna urges that the business interruption clause should be enforced according to its terms, which limit the recovery to income lost during the period theoretically required for rebuilding the
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premises.
See Beautytuft, Inc. v. Factory Insurance Association,
This claim for lost profits is separate from the claims to enforce the insurance contract. “The policy limits restrict the amount the insurer may have to pay in the performance of the contract, not the damages that are recoverable for its breach.”
Lawton v. Great Southwest Fire Insurance Co.,
A contract to insure against fire loss is a commercial contract, and damages for its brеach are “generally limited to the monetary value of the contract.”
Parmet Homes, Inc. v. Republic Insurance Co.,
In Parmet Homes, the Michigan Court of Appeals held that the plaintiff could not receive as consequential damages profits lost when, because the insurance company denied fire loss benefits to the insured, the insured was unable to participate in a planned venture with a third party. The court reasoned:
It is always true that nonpayment of insurance benefits will result in reduction of capital. However, it is also true that indemnity insurers do not contend [sic] to underwrite the claimant’s future financial transactions by agreeing to pay an established amount for fire losses. In cases where loss of profits has been awarded, the loss resulted directly from the nonperformance of the contract between the parties, not from the failure of another venture unknown to the defendant. See, Lorenz [Supply Co. v. American Standard, Inc.,100 Mich. App. 600 ,] 611-612 [300 N.W.2d 335 (1980) ], and cases cited therеin. Unless the parties are both aware that a breach will affect a specific collateral enterprise, it cannot be said that the loss of profits from the other venture is within the contemplation of the parties.
*878 Finally, we note that Salamey has requested this Court to amend the judgment of the District Court to include loss of earnings at a rate of $7,530 per month until the judgment is рaid, plus two and a half months for rebuilding the store. Salamey has not shown that he requested this type of award at trial; his pretrial statement describes loss of business earnings as “prоrated to the time of the trial.” Moreover, Salamey did not appeal from the judgment. Under these circumstances, we cannot consider his request.
We therefore affirm the judgment of the District Court.
Notes
. Only a few courts have specifically held that the owner of a business may recover lost profits as consequential damages for breach of contract by an insurance company in failing to pay a claim.
See Asher v. Reliance Ins. Co.,
