649 N.E.2d 871 | Ohio Ct. App. | 1994
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *735 On December 21, 1987, Outdoor Outfitters, Inc., plaintiff-appellant ("Outdoor Outfitters" or "insured"), filed an action against Fireman's Fund Insurance Company, defendant-appellee ("Fireman's Fund" or "insurer"), for breach of a fire insurance contract based on the insured's claims of property loss and business-interruption loss and for the tort of bad faith in the denial of the claim.
On February 16, 1987, Outdoor Outfitters' Cincinnati store was completely destroyed by fire. Outdoor Outfitters was insured by Fireman's Fund for loss of property (inventory, stock, and fixtures) and for interruption of business. In a separate criminal case, the president of Outdoor Outfitters and the manager of the Cincinnati store were tried for arson but were acquitted. Nevertheless, Fireman's Fund denied coverage in this civil action, relying on the defense of arson.
Following a jury trial, a verdict was returned in favor of Fireman's Fund on the bad-faith claim and in favor of Outdoor Outfitters on the issue of coverage. Outdoor Outfitters was awarded damages of $514,617.03 for property loss and $175,000 for business-interruption loss.
After judgment, Outdoor Outfitters timely filed a motion for prejudgment interest. Following a hearing, the trial court denied this motion. Outdoor Outfitters appeals from the denial of its motion for prejudgment interest. In its sole assignment of error, Outdoor Outfitters argues that the trial court erred in *736 overruling its motion for prejudgment interest on the jury verdict. For the reasons that follow, we reverse the trial court's decision.
Because there was some confusion on this point at the motion hearing, we note at the outset that the statute applicable to this case is R.C.
Under current Ohio law, if the amount of a debt is clear and certain, the prevailing party is generally entitled to interest from the date the sum became due and owing. Nursing Staff ofCincinnati, Inc. v. Sherman (1984),
The term "liquidated claim" means one that can be determined with exactness by agreement of the parties or by the application of definite rules of law. Yin v. Amino Products Co. (1943),
It is also true, and significant to this case, that a mere denial that one is liable for a debt will not make a claim unliquidated and defeat a claim for prejudgment interest.Braverman, supra,
Outdoor Outfitters argues that, because Fireman's Fund never disputed the amounts of its losses and did not present alternative valuations for the property and business-interruption losses, electing only to cross-examine Outdoor Outfitters' experts and to rely on the arson defense to defeat the claims, the amount of *737 its losses is undisputed and therefore liquidated. It also argues that because the jury awarded it the exact amount of losses it asked for, which was the same as that submitted in its proofs of loss, the claims are liquidated.
By their very nature, fire losses such as these are ordinarily unliquidated, in that the amount cannot be determined with simple mathematical calculations. Royal Crown Plastics,Inc. v. Motorists Mut. Ins. Co. (1976),
The pertinent sections of the policy in this case are the loss-adjustment provisions, particularly the loss-payments provisions.1 Under the contract, when a fire loss occurs, the insured must notify the insurer of the loss. There is no dispute that Outdoor Outfitters complied with this provision in a timely fashion. The next duty of the insured is to submit proofs of loss in an acceptable and timely manner. In this case, Outdoor Outfitters submitted its proof of loss for property damage on May 26, 1987, in the amount of $514,617.03. On September 4, 1987, a proof of loss for business interruption was submitted in the amount of $175,000.2 At this point these claims were clearly unliquidated.
Under the terms of the policy, a loss would become due and payable within thirty or sixty days (depending on whether the general or specific policy provision is applicable) from the time the company accepted the statement of loss or after a figure had been fixed by the appraisal process. In the event of a disagreement as to the amount of the loss, either party could invoke the appraisal process which provided for a procedure to fix the amount of loss using a panel of three appraisers.
Once Outdoor Outfitters presented its proofs of loss, Fireman's Fund had several choices. First, it could have accepted coverage for the loss and accepted the amount of losses presented. Second, it could have accepted coverage for the loss but challenged the amount of losses claimed. Its final choice would have been to deny coverage for the loss but accept or reject the amount of loss. In all three instances, however, we hold that Fireman's Fund had to respond to the figures submitted by Outdoor Outfitters by accepting or rejecting those figures.
What happened in this case is that on October 30, 1987, Fireman's Fund denied liability, meaning coverage, for the loss. Rather than dispute the amounts *738
of loss offered by Outdoor Outfitters and deny coverage, it chose only to contest coverage for the loss. Fireman's Fund argues that, because it never accepted the amount of the loss and because there was never an appraisal, the loss never became payable under the terms of the policy and, therefore, the claim remained unliquidated. We disagree with this interpretation. We believe the only fair reading of the policy is to require the insurer to notify the insured about whether or not it accepted the amount of the losses. See, by analogy, from another area of insurance law, McDonald v. Republic-Franklin Ins. Co. (1989),
Therefore, because Fireman's Fund never disputed the figures offered by Outdoor Outfitters in its proofs of loss and never participated in the appraisal process, but instead made the decision to rely solely on its denial of coverage through its arson defense, we hold that the amount of losses presented by Outdoor Outfitters was deemed accepted by Fireman's Fund. CompareRoyal Crown Plastics, supra (insurer denied a fire-loss claim because of alleged arson, but participated in the appraisal process, thus fixing the value of the loss from the date of appraisal), and DiStacio v. Westfield Ins. Co. (Aug. 26, 1985), Butler App. No. CA84-10-120, unreported, 1985 WL 7712 (insurer rejected the statement of loss and denied the claim). As a result of the choice made by Fireman's Fund solely to contest liability, these claims became liquidated on the date coverage was denied.3
Accordingly, we reverse the decision of the trial court and remand this case with instructions to enter judgment for Outdoor Outfitters on the jury's verdict, together with simple interest at ten percent per annum from October 30, 1987, until the judgment is paid.
Judgment reversedand cause remanded.
SHANNON, P.J., and GORMAN, J., concur.