Policy Wording Must Limit Appraisal to Quantum Only
Post 4917
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Defendant State Farm Fire and Casualty Company (“State Farm”) issued a homeowners insurance policy to Plaintiff Sharon Marie Rogers (“Rogers”). This policy was in effect on the loss date of March 25, 2023. State Farm determined the amount of loss to be $3,490.68, which was less than Rogers’ deductible. Rogers retained a public adjuster, Insurance Adjusting Services West Penn; West Penn determined the amount of loss to be $214,871.20.
Plaintiff moved the Court to Compel Appraisal to resolve the dispute over the amount of loss and Stay Litigation. In Sharon Marie Rogers v. State Farm Fire and Casualty Co., No. 1:24-cv-148, United States District Court, S.D. Ohio, Western Division (October 11, 2024) the court resolved the dispute over the need for and scope of appraisal.
BACKGROUND
West Penn demanded appraisal on behalf of the insured. Trial counsel repeated the demand for appraisal. Rogers’ Complaint against State Farm was filed the next day, to avoid the one year private limitation of action provision of the policy.
LAW & ANALYSIS
The purpose of an appraisal is to provide a plain, speedy, inexpensive and just determination of the extent of the loss. The appraisal provisions are an integral part of the body of each policy precisely the same as every other paragraph and are enforceable in Ohio as any other bargained-for contractual right. The parties agree that: a storm is a covered cause of loss; and the March 25, 2023 storm caused loss to Rogers’ dwelling.
State Farm refused to honor Rogers’ demand for appraisal for two reasons.
She did not comply with the condition precedent to provide to State Farm (at least ten days prior) “written, itemized documentation of a specific dispute as to the amount of the loss, identifying separately each item being disputed. Instead, Rogers only provided an estimate from a public adjuster, which references the global monetary estimate for the combined interior and exterior damages, and fails to specifically identify what items, if any, are being disputed.
State Farm contended that the amount of loss to be determined by appraisal includes only the pricing of the repairs it deems are covered, not the damages that Rogers, relying on West Penn’s estimate, thinks should be covered.
Included as part of the demand for appraisal was its 197 line-item repair estimate. A Claim Specialist promptly responded on behalf of State Farm a week later. State Farm’s response was that items in the West Penn estimate included items that present a question of coverage under the policy and that appraisal cannot be used to resolve disputes regarding coverage provided by the contract. Therefore, appraisal would not be appropriate as outlined above; the appraisers and umpire have no authority to decide questions of coverage.
Nowhere did State Farm’s agent state that Rogers’ documentation was lacking under the policy. In fact, Claim Specialist McKenzie noted that West Penn’s estimate “establishe[d] the dispute for this claim.” The USDC concluded that State Farm may not reverse course after litigation was filed.
THE LIMITATIONS IMPOSED ON APPRAISERS
Parties sometimes agree to a policy that prohibits appraisers from answering causation question when setting the amount of loss but when the appraisal clause says nothing about causation, Ohio courts’ construction of amount of loss controls.
State Farm contended that the appraisal clause addresses causation in that it prohibits the appraisers (and the umpire) from deciding “any other questions of fact.”
The USDC disagreed.
State Farm, the drafter of the policy, included specific language about questions of “law” and questions of “coverage” if it had intended to include questions of “causation” it could (and should) have done so. The USDC concluded that to allow a catch-all phrase to incorporate causation is at odds with Ohio case law to date and, equally important, undermines the purpose behind appraisal.
CONCLUSION
Plaintiff’s Motion to Compel Appraisalwas granted.
Defendant was ordered to proceed with the appraisal process as set forth in the policy, at the soonest time possible. The appraisals should separately calculate and identify disputed costs-to include both exterior and interior damage-so the Court can either include or exclude them once it has determined whether the policy provides coverage for them.
The civil action was stayed until a full appraisal occurs.
The history of the appraisal clause in fire and homeowners policies have limited the appraisers to establish only the quantum of a loss and were not authorized to determine coverage issues, without language in the policy stating so in the policy wording. The USDC in this case, applying Ohio law, requires that the policy wording must include language in the policy that the appraisers may not consider causation. The detailed report the court requires from the appraisers and umpire will allow it to make decisions about coverage for each item of value and loss the appraisers reach.
(c) 2024 Barry Zalma & ClaimSchool, Inc.
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About Barry Zalma
An insurance coverage and claims handling author, consultant and expert witness with more than 48 years of practical and court room experience.