Lead Opinion
Thе issue in this case concerns the scope of replacement cost insurance coverage under the applicable provisions of the 2008 Florida Statutes. In Trinidad v. Florida Peninsula Insurance Co.,
For the reasons more fully explained below, we hold that an insurer’s required
FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
Trinidad filed a claim with his homeowner’s insurance company, Florida Peninsula, for fire damage that occurred to his Miami home on February 11, 2008. Florida Peninsula admitted coverage pursuant to Trinidad’s replacement cost policy and made a payment on the claim for completion of the repairs, even though Trinidad did not make repairs to the home or hire a general contractor to undertake the repairs. Florida Peninsula’s payment, while including other costs that would be necessary to make the repairs, did not, however, include an amount for a general contractor’s overhead and profit. Florida Peninsula asserted that it was entitled to withhold payment of overhead and profit until Trinidad actually incurred those particular expenses in repairing or contracting to repair the home.
Overhead and profit are costs included in repair estimates and paid to contractors pursuant to contracts for repairs. Specifically, overhead includes “fixed costs to run the contractоr’s business, such as salaries, rent, utilities, and licenses,” and profit “is the amount the contractor expects to earn for his services.” Trinidad,
Trinidad’s insurance contract with Florida Peninsula is a replacement cost policy. The relevant policy language provides that Florida Peninsula will pay for covered losses as follows:
[A]t replacement cost without deduction for depreciation, subject to the following:
(1) If, at the time of loss, the amount of insurance in this policy on the damaged building is 80% or more of the full replacement cost of the building immediately before the loss, we will pay the cost to repair or replace, after apрlication of deductible and without deduction for depreciation, but not more than the least of the following amounts:
(a) The limit of liability under this policy that applies to the building;
(b) The replacement cost of that part of the building damaged for like construction and use on the same premises; or
(c) The necessary amount actually spent to repair or replace the damaged building.
Trinidad appealed to the Third District, which affirmed the trial court’s summary judgment in favor of Florida Peninsula and held that “[t]he pokey’s unambiguous terms require Trinidad to either hire a contractor who charges for overhead and profit or to incur expenses for overhead and profit before Florida Peninsula is required to pay for such costs.” Trinidad,
The Third District reasoned that the policy “unambiguously рrovides that Florida Peninsula pay replacement costs or the costs Trinidad actually incurs or which he demonstrates he is likely to incur.” Id. at 503-04. Explaining that “[n]ot all repairs require the services of a general contractor,” the Third District concluded that under the terms of the policy, Florida Peninsula was required to pay only costs actually spent or costs Trinidad became contractually obligated to spend to repair the damage to his home. Id. at 504.
In addition, the Third District rejected Trinidad’s assertion that section 627.7011(3), Florida Statutes (2008), which required the insurer to pay “replacement costs without reservation or holdback of any depreciation in value, whether or not the insured replaces or repairs the dwelling,” altered its analysis. Trinidad,
• ANALYSIS
This case presents a question of insurance policy interpretation and statutory сonstruction. Because these are pure questions of law, this Court’s review is de novo. See Auto-Owners Ins. Co. v. Pozzi Window Co.,
We turn first to a discussion of replacement cost insurance and explain why we conclude that overhead and profit are considered replacement costs. We then address the effect of the applicable statute and the applicable policy language.
I. Replacement Cost Insurance
“Replacement cost insurance is designed to cover the difference between what property is actually worth and what it would cost to rebuild or repair that property.” State Farm Fire & Cas. Co. v. Patrick,
In contrast to a replacement cost policy, actual cash value is generally defined as “fair market value” or “[replacement cost minus normal depreciation,” where depreciation is defined as a “decline in an asset’s value because of use, wear, obsolescence, or age.” Black’s Law Dictionary 506, 1690 (9th ed. 2009); see also Goff,
In Goff the Second District concluded that overhead and profit are included in the scope of an actual cash value policy “where the insured is reasonably likely to need a general contractor for repairs.” Id. The Second District correctly determined, in essence, that overhead and profit are like all other costs of a repair, such as labor and materials, the insured is reasonably likely to incur. See id. at 689-90 (citing Branch v. Farmers Ins. Co.,
In contrast, in a replacement cost policy, an insurer’s ability to depreciate is not relevant because replacement cost insurance is insurance on a property’s depreciation. See Patrick,
Because replacement cost insurance provides coverage based on the cost to repair or replace the damaged structure on the same premises, we conclude that overhead and profit necessarily must be included within the scope of a replacement cost policy where it is reasonably likely a general contractor would be needed for the repairs. Accordingly, overhead and profit are a necessary component of replacement costs, just as they are for actual cash value, because replacement cost insurance is intended to compensate the insured for what it would cost to repair or replace the damaged property.
Thus, we conclude that overhead and profit are included in the replacement cost of a covered loss when the insured is reasonably likely to need a general contractor for the repairs. We now determine if the applicable statute or policy permitted Florida Peninsula to withhold payment of those particular replacement cоsts until Trinidad actually incurred them. To answer this question, we first consider whether section 627.7011 provides authority to an insurer for not requiring payment of overhead and profit because those costs were not actually incurred.
II. Section 627.7011
When construing a statute, this Court attempts to give effect to the Legislature’s intent, looking first to the actual language used in the statute and its plain meaning. See Daniels,
The 2008 version of section 627.7011, the applicable statutory provision for the period of time during which Trinidad incurred his loss, provided in relevant part as follows:
(3) In the event of a loss for which a dwelling or personal property is insured on the basis of replacement costs, the insurer shall pay the replacement cost without reservation or holdback of any depreciation in value, whether or not the insured replaces or repairs the dwelling or property.
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(6) This section does not prohibit an insurer from limiting its liability under a policy or endorsement providing that loss will be adjusted on the basis of replacement costs to the lesser of:
(a) The limit of liability shown on the policy declarations page;
(b) The reasonable and necessary cost to repair the damaged, destroyed, or stolen covered property; or
(c) The reasonable and necessary cost to replace the damaged, destroyed, or stolen covered property.
§ 627.7011, Fla. Stat. (2008) (emphasis added).
We conclude that the Third District’s statutory constructiоn analysis was flawed. For property “insured on the basis of replacement costs,” section 627.7011(3) has two primary objectives. First, the statute requires insurers to pay the replacement cost of a covered loss irrespective of whether the insured actually repairs or replaces the damaged property. Second, the statute requires that depreciation not be withheld pending the actual repair. In other words, pursuant to section 627.7011(3), it is immaterial in a replacement cost policy whether the damaged structure is replaced or repaired; that factor simply does not affect the statutory mandate as it would if payments were being made on an actual cash value basis.
Instead, the statute requires the insurer in all cases to pay the replacement costs of the covered loss, which, as we have explained, means what it would cost the insured to rebuild or repair the property if the insured decides to do so. Because we have concluded that overhead and profit are replacement costs where the insured is reasonably likely to need a general contractor for the repairs, it is clear that, as with other replacement costs, section 627.7011(3) does not permit an insurer to withhold overhead and profit pending actual repair.
Requiring the insurer to pay overhead and profit regardless of whether the insured actually repairs the property is also consistent with section 627.7011(6), which provides that the insurer may limit its liability to the “reasonable and necessary cost” to repair or replace the damaged property. It is generally accepted that courts are required to “give full effect to all statutory provisions and construe related statutory provisions in harmony with one another.” Heart of Adoptions, Inc. v. J.A.,
Accordingly, if the insured is unlikely to incur overhead and profit, section 627.7011(6) would allow the insurer to withhold payment of those costs consistent with section 627.7011(3) because they are not “reasonable and necessary” to the repair. See § 627.7011(6), Fla. Stat. (2008). This logically follows because, if the insured is not reasonably likely to incur overhead and profit in repairing the damaged property, then overhead and profit are not replacement costs of the insured’s covered loss. On the other hand, if overhead and profit are going to be “reasonable and necessary” to the repair, section 627.7011(3) would mandate their payment as replacement costs.
Further, if overhead and profit were not included in the scope of replacement cost insurance where it is reasonably likely the insured will incur those costs, then no other repair costs, such as labor and materials, would be considered replacement costs. Simply put, overhead and profit are no different thаn any other costs of a repair that the insured is reasonably likely to incur, all of which are considered replacement costs and are not actually incurred until the repair is made — a requirement not imposed by section 627.7011. Such an interpretation of replacement cost insurance — that is, excluding all costs until they are actually incurred — would in actuality render the coverage meaningless.
We therefore hold that the Third District erred in concluding that section 627.7011 does not require the insurer to include overhead and profit in a payment based on replacement costs simply because overhead and profit have not been incurred. We turn next to a discussion of the applicable insurance policy and the Third District’s construction of that policy, which is the second argument advanced by Trinidad in support of his position on appeal.
III. The Policy
“In interpreting an insurance contract, we are bound by the plain meaning of the contract’s text.” State Farm, Mut. Auto. Ins. Co. v. Menendez,
Trinidad’s homeowner’s insurance policy with Florida Peninsula provides that Florida Peninsula will pay for covered losses, such as the loss at issue in this case, as follows:
[A]t replacement cost without deduction for depreciation, subject to the following:
(1) If, at the time of loss, the amount of insurance in this policy on the damaged building is 80% or more of the full replacement cost of the building immediately before the loss, we will pay the cost to repair or replace, after application of deductible and without deduction for depreciation, but not more than the least of the following amounts:
(a) The limit of liability under this policy that applies to the building;
*442 (b) The replacement cost of that part of the building damaged for like construction and use on the same premises; or
(c) The necessary amount actually spent to repair or replace the damaged building.
In its decision, the Third District held that the policy, which “governs the outcome of this case,” was unambiguous and excluded payment for overhead and profit unless those expenses were either incurred by the insured or reflected in a contract that binds the insured. Trinidad,
Despite the Third District’s reliance on the “actually spent” language in subsection (l)(c) of the loss settlement provision in Trinidad’s policy, Florida Peninsula’s payment in this case was made pursuant to subsection (l)(b) of the policy — rather than subsection (l)(c) — because Trinidad did not actually spend any money to repair or replace the damaged property. Florida Peninsula has itself acknowledged that its payment to Trinidad was made pursuant to this provision, stating in its brief filed in this Court that subsection (l)(b) of the policy, which governs payment of replacement costs when no repairs have been made, is the determinative policy provision, whereas subsection (l)(c) is an alternative method of calculating the payment amount when the insured has actually undertaken repairs.
In fact, Florida Peninsula paid Trinidad other costs for the repair even though, as with overhead аnd profit, Trinidad also did not actually spend any money for those costs. Indeed, if subsection (l)(c) of the policy, which requires payment only for the “necessary amount actually spent” on the repairs, was the applicable provision, Florida Peninsula would not have been required to pay Trinidad anything because Trinidad did not actually spend anything on repairs. An interpretation of the policy that permitted such an outcome would be contrary to section 627.7011, which requires payment of replacement costs regardless of whether the insured replaces or repairs the property, and would therefore be unenforceablе. See Kaklamanos,
Subsection (l)(b) of the policy is thus the relevant provision, and it requires Florida Peninsula to pay “[t]he replacement cost of that part of the building damaged for like construction and use on the same premises.” Accordingly, the unambiguous terms of the policy state that Florida Peninsula will pay the replacement costs of the damaged property. Because the replacement costs of the covered loss include overhead and profit where the insured is reasonably likely to need a general contractor for repairs, the plain language of the policy clearly requires Florida Peninsula to pay overhead and profit if the insured is reasonably likely to need a general contractor. Neither the policy nor the 2008 version of the applicable Florida statute, as we have explained, permitted withholding any component of the replacement costs until the insured actually incurred expenses for the repairs.
Finally, we address and reject the Third District’s reliance on Goff to determine that overhead and profit were not neces
In Goff
The result approved by the Third District — where overhead and profit are included in actual cash value but not in replacement cost insurance — is contrary tо the coverage each type of insurance is designed to provide. As we have explained, actual cash value is defined as replacement cost minus depreciation. If overhead and profit are part of actual cash value, then those costs necessarily must be part of replacement cost insurance because replacement cost insurance encompasses actual cash value. While overhead and profit may, like other costs, be depreciable, as the Second District concluded in Goff
Because the insurance policy in this case provides that Florida Peninsula will pay “[t]he replacement cost of that part of the building damaged for like construction and use on the same premises,” Florida Peninsula was required by the policy’s unambiguous terms to include overhead and profit in its payment for Trinidad’s covered loss, assuming Trinidad establishes that he is reasonably likely to need a general contractor for the repairs. Accordingly, we hold that the Third District еrred in concluding, based on the policy, that Florida Peninsula was not required to pay Trinidad overhead and profit because Trinidad had not actually incurred those costs.
CONCLUSION
For the reasons set forth above, we hold that replacement cost insurance includes overhead and profit where the insured is reasonably likely to need a general contractor for repairs. We therefore conclude that the Third District erred in determining both that the 2008 version of section 627.7011 and the insurance policy itself permitted Florida Peninsula to withhold payment of overhead and profit because Trinidad had not actually incurred those costs. Accоrdingly, we quash the Third District’s decision and direct that this case be remanded to the trial court to determine, consistent with this opinion, whether Trinidad is reasonably likely to need a general contractor for the repairs that encompass his covered loss.
It is so ordered.
Notes
. The 2008 version of section 627.7011 is the applicable version in this case because that is the version of the statute that was in effect when Trinidad incurred his loss. Section 627.7011, however, has since been amended, most recently in 2011. See ch.2011-39, § 19, Laws of Fla. Our analysis in this case therefore applies only to the version of the statute in effect in 2008.
. United Policyholders, a nonprofit organizаtion that provides information and advocates for insurance consumers, filed an amicus curiae brief in support of Trinidad.
. Although the 2008 version of the statute is the relevant version governing our analysis in this case, section 627.7011 has since been amended to provide that the insurer must pay "at least the actual cash value of the insured loss, less any applicable deductible,” except in
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
Because Trinidad v. Florida Peninsula Insurance Co.,
The express and direct conflict our constitution requires does not exist here. Here, the alleged conflict case, Goff, involves different facts and answers a different legal question than the decision on review. In Goff, the Second District examined an insurance policy that required the insurer to pay its insured “actual cash value at the time of loss.”
In contrast, the decision on review, Trinidad, involves neither an actual cash value policy nor the depreciability of overhead and profit. Instead, in Trinidad, the Third District examined a replacement cost policy that allowed the insurer to pay the lesser of several costs following a loss, including “[t]he necessary amount actually spent to repair or replaсe the damaged building.”
Instead of recognizing the differences in the decisions, the majority appears to extrapolate conflict between them based on how it would interpret Goff in light of the different set of facts in Trinidad. Specifically, relying on Black’s Law Dictionary’s definition of “actual cash value,” the majority notes that a replacement cost policy — generally—is a superior product designed to provide greater benefits to the insured than an actual cash value policy. Majority op. at 438. Since the actual cash value payment in Goff included overhead and profit, the majority concludes that Goff also requires payment made under a replacement cost policy (like the policy in Trinidad) to include overhead and profit if the insured is reasonably likely to need a general contractor for the repairs. Majority op. at 438, 442-43. However, as explained above, this is not what Goff held. Goff held that a portion of the paid overhead and profit could be withheld as depreciation in making the actual cash value payment required by the specific insurance policy in that case.
Simply put, express and direct conflict is a consequence of plain language, not judicial construction. Because the Third District said nothing in Trinidad that expressly and directly conflicts with the Second District’s legally and factually distinguishable decision in Goff, I would find that review was improvidently granted and discharge this case for lack of jurisdiction. Therefore, I respectfully dissent.
CANADY, J., concurs.
