Stаte Auto Property and Casualty Insurance Company sued for a declaratory judgment that it had met its obligations under a fire policy issued to Boardwalk Apartments. Boardwalk counterclaimed for indemnity proceeds. Boardwalk also sued The Sloan Agency (Sloan), the independent insurance agency that secured the policy for Boardwalk.
The district court granted summary judgment to Sloan, ruling it did not havе an expanded agency relationship with Boardwalk. The district court granted partial summary judgment to Boardwalk on its counterclaim against State Auto, ruling Boardwalk has a right to replace one building and repair another building in the apartment complex. State Auto was, however, granted partial summary judgment, based on the district court’s reasoning that Kansas’s Valued Policy Statute did not apply to Boardwalk’s loss, the coinsurance provision did apply to reduce Boardwalk’s recovery, the term “value” in the policy means “actual cash value,” and certain policy provisions (excluding reimbursement for extra costs incurred by the insured to comply with laws or ordinances) were not void against public policy. The district court found that Boardwalk was not entitled to attorney fees under Kаnsas law because State Auto had not yet breached the contract.
Boardwalk appeals. Having jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1291, this court affirms in part and reverses in part.
I.
Boardwalk, a Kansas limited liability company, owned a complex of eight apartment buildings and a storage building in Lawrence, Kansas. Buildings 1 and 4 are the subjects of this litigation. The complex was built in 1963. In 1994, a bank loan appraisal showed a projected replacement cost of $7,560,029. Terrace Management , Services, LLC, manages the complex. The Boardwalk-Terrace management agreement provided that insurance coverage would be procured on an annual basis and in such amounts as acceptable to the owner. Terrace directed Sloan, a Missouri corporation, to procure 100% replacement insurance for the complex. Richard Moseley (Terrace’s president) and David Moseley (his son, and the Sloan agent working on the policy) reviewed the coverage limits annually. Richard Sloan, a principal of Sloan, also was involved with Terrace’s transactions for Boardwalk.
Before the 1996-97 insurance term, Sloan received four pages of the 1994 bank loan aрpraisal, not including the replacement-cost figure. There is no evidence Sloan ever received the .replacement-cost figure. The information provided Sloan did not include square footage of certain areas of the complex (balconies, breezeways and the pool house). Each renewal included a 4 percent inflation increase in the coverаge amount. For years, Terrace, through Sloan, arranged Boardwalk’s insurance from different companies, first acquiring it from State Auto for the 2004-05
On October 7, 2005, fire destroyed Building 1, an apartment building, and partially damaged Building 4, the storage building. The 2005-06 policy provided an aggregate cоverage limit of $7,207,200, with a 4 percent inflation guard. Building l’s value of $2.1 million was reflected only on the Statement of Values. On January 20, 2006, a State Auto adjuster estimated the replacement cost of Building 1 as $4,091,054.78, and the replacement cost for the whole complex as $14,690,321.04.
State Auto argues its maximum exposure to loss for Building 1 is $2,240,124.17 (including demolition, cleanup costs and business interruption), as limited by Kansas’s Valued Policy Law. State Auto paid Boardwalk this amount. Boardwalk asserts it is entitled to the coverage limit for the blanket policy, $7,387,000 (including the 4 percent inflation guard).
In this diversity case, a federal court applies the state law as declared by the legislature or highest court.
Erie R.R. Co. v. Tompkins,
The standard of review for summary judgment is de novo.
Menz v. New Holland N. Am., Inc.,
II.
Boardwаlk appeals the grant of summary judgment to Sloan. Boardwalk and Sloan agree that the insurance agent’s duty is governed by Missouri law, which imposes a general duty on an agent to use reasonable care and diligence.
Hall v. Charlton,
Boardwalk invokes Hall, where an agent assured the insured that an insurance policy covered flights to Alaska. Id. The policy, however, specifically excluded coverage in Alaska. Id. at 7. The agent completed the application for the policy. Id. at 8-9. The application asked if coverage for Alaska was requested. Id. The agent checked “no” in response. Id. The insured received the policy but never read it. Id. at 7-9. The insured said he could not understand insurance policies, so he always sought out someone skilled in the insurance business. Id. at 7, 9. The Missouri court held that under these circumstances (1) the insured’s failure to read was not grounds for estoppel, and (2) it is reasonable for the principal to rely on the insurance agent for negligent failure to procure insurance. Id. at 9.
The
Hall
case is distinguishable. The agent there was the person who completed the application form, marking “no” about
Boardwalk did not review the 2005-06 policy after receiving it. In Missouri, an insured has a duty promptly to examine its policy.
Jenkad Enters., Inc. v. Transp. Ins. Co.,
Missouri requires an insurance broker or agent to perform with reasonable care аnd diligence.
Hall,
Boardwalk tries to distinguish
Manzella,
citing decisions from other states.
See, e.g., Free v. Republic Ins. Co.,
In Missouri, an insurance agent does not have an affirmative duty to advise insureds of their insurance needs.
See Blevins v. State Farm Fire & Cas. Co.,
III.
Boardwalk appeals the decision of the district court granting summary judgment to State Auto on several points.
The parties agree that Kansas law applies to their contract for insurance. They disagree whether the Kansas Valued Policy Law applies. This law provides that if a fire policy insures improvements and “the property shall be wholly destroyed,” the amount of insurance written in the policy shall be taken conclusively to be the value of the property, and the amount of loss. Kan. Stat. Ann. § 40-905.
The parties do not dispute that the policy was a blanket policy for $7.3 million.
See
44 C.J.S.
Insurance
§ 21 (2008) (a blanket policy is written upon a risk as a whole and each item described in the policy is covered by the whole amount of the policy). Boardwalk assеrts it is entitled to the $7.3 million because the Kansas Valued Policy Law provides that for any wholly destroyed part of the complex, the insured amount is the full value of a policy. The Kansas Valued Policy Law has no express exception for blanket policies. However,
Kinzer v. Nat’l Mut. Ins. Co., 88
Kan. 93,
State Auto asserts that its liability is limited to $2.1 million, as listed in the Statement of Value submitted with the 2004 application. The construction and effect of insurance contracts is a matter of law.
Scott v. Keever,
B.
Because the Valued Policy Law does not apply, thе coinsurance provision of the policy does. Coinsurance divides the risk between insurer and insured.
Wenrich v. Employers Mut. Ins. Cos.,
The policy provides that if a coinsurance percentage appears in the declarations, the amount of loss State Auto pays is limited if the full amount of the loss, multiplied by the coinsurance percentage, exceeds the limit of insurance for the property. The declarations page lists the coinsurance percentage as 100 percent. By thе policy, State Auto determines the most it would pay by using four steps specifically set out in the policy, which are based on the “value” of the covered property. “Value” is not defined in this section of the policy. Boardwalk asserts that “value” means, in this section, actual cash value. State Auto counters that the term “value” for coinsurance means replacement cost.
The distriсt court determined that the term “value” in the coinsurance provi
The threshold question is whether this part of the policy is ambiguous. On page 11 of the policy, appears Section E, “Loss Conditions.” Subsection 7 of Section E says:
7. Valuation
We will determine the value of Covered Property in the event of loss or damage as follоws:
a. At actual cash value as of the time of loss or damage----
Also on page 11 of the policy, appears Section F, “Additional Conditions.” Subsection 1 of Section F, entitled “Coinsurance,” details when and how coinsurance applies. Subsection 1 of Section F provides:
1. Coinsurance
If a Coinsurance is shown in the Declarations, the following condition applies.
a. We will not pay the full amount of аny loss if the value of the Covered Property at the time of the loss [,] times the coinsurance percentage shown for it in the Declarations!,] is greater than the Limit of Insurance for the property.
On page 13 of the policy appears Section G, “Optional Coverages.” Subsection 3.a. of Section G provides:
3. Replacement Cost a. Replacement Cost (without deduction for depreciation) replaces Actual Cash Value in the Loss Condition, Valuation of this coverage Form.
The policy does not use the term “replacement cost (without deduction for depreciation)” in the coinsurance provision. Boardwalk asserts this failure makes the contract ambiguous. Boardwalk further argues that if Section F.l. is not ambiguous, the replacement-cost language simрly is not incorporated into the coinsurance provision.
This same coinsurance provision was addressed in
Wenrich.
The
Wenrich
court held that there is no ambiguity in the contract because the replacement cost coverage is “inherently incorporated” into the coinsurance provisions.
Wenrich,
C.
Boardwalk attacks the policy provisions that limit coverage for the cost of repair or replacement in order to comply with an ordinance. Policy subsections E.4.b., E.7.b., and G.3.f. provide that State Auto will not reimburse any replacement cost attributable to enforcement of an ordinance or law. Terms and limitations of an insurance policy are enforceable unless they violate public policy or conflict with statutes.
House v. American Family Mut. Ins. Co.,
The district court determined that most courts distinguish between partial loss and total loss under valued policy statutes.
See
The district court ignored the direct statements in
Unified School
invalidating building-code limitations, whether the loss is total or partial. The
Unified School
case is neither a total-loss nor partial-loss case; the court there observes that “the record does not contain substantial competent evidence to support the trial court’s finding that plaintiff suffered a ‘total loss’ ” and that “the amount of plaintiffs loss cannot be accurately determined”.
Unified School,
Whether or not the case involves total or partial loss, the Unified School court holds that
Id. at 1154 (emphasis added). Directly addressing the building-code limitations, the Unified School court decides that those cases “holding such limitations unenforceable are the more persuasive.” Id.
The district court relied on
Unified School’s
citation of a Missouri appellate case,
Stahlberg,
D.
Boardwalk asserts a claim for vexatious refusal to pay under Missouri law. State Auto responds that Kansas law applies to this claim, stressing that even if Missouri law applies, Boardwalk could not recover because State Auto has not “refused to pay.” The company has paid $2.2 million — which it alleges is more than it owes under the policy.
Boardwalk asserts Missouri law governs this claim, alleging it is the state with the most significant relationship to issues of non-performance of thе insurance contract. Matters regarding the performance of a contract are governed by the law of the place of performance.
Scudder v. Union Nat’l Bank,
The parties agree that Kansas law governs the insurance policy itself. Kansas is the principal location of the insured risk, the state of incorporation of the insured, and its principal place of business. Applying Restatement sections 188 and 193 here, Kansas law governs any dispute about vexatious refusal to pay under this insurance contract. The district court rightly rejected Boardwalk’s claim for vexatious refusal to pay because Missouri law does not apply.
E.
Boardwalk also seeks attorney fees under Kansas Statutes Annotated § 40-908. The district court did not award any fees or retain jurisdiction over this issue. Section 40-908 mandates attorney fees where judgment is rendered against an insurance company on a fire policy covering property in Kansas. Section 40-908 provides that to recover attorney fees the insured must obtain a judgment exceeding the amount tendered by the company before suit. State Auto argues it has already paid $2.2 million, asserting this exceeds its obligation. Boardwalk responds that it stands to recover more than this amount.
State Auto admits that the policy provides replacement coverage. Boardwalk is entitled to reрlacement costs if it elects to replace the property within 180 days of the loss. Replacement is a precondition to recovery here.
See Burchett v. Kan. Mut. Ins. Co.,
Pursuant to section 40-908, fees are granted when recovery exceeds the amount tendered.
See State Farm Fire & Cas. Co. v. Liggett,
IV.
The judgment is affirmed in part, reversed in part, and the case remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
