33 Carpenters Construction, Inc. v. The Cincinnati Insurance Company

CourtCourt of Appeals of Iowa
DecidedFebruary 6, 2019
Docket17-1979
StatusPublished

This text of 33 Carpenters Construction, Inc. v. The Cincinnati Insurance Company (33 Carpenters Construction, Inc. v. The Cincinnati Insurance Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
33 Carpenters Construction, Inc. v. The Cincinnati Insurance Company, (iowactapp 2019).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA

No. 17-1979 Filed February 6, 2019

33 CARPENTERS CONSTRUCTION, INC., Plaintiff-Appellant/Cross-Appellee,

vs.

THE CINCINNATI INSURANCE COMPANY, Defendant-Appellee/Cross-Appellant. ________________________________________________________________

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Scott County, Henry W. Latham II,

Judge.

Assignee of a casualty insurance policy appeals a summary judgment ruling

finding it was acting as an unlicensed public adjuster. AFFIRMED.

Kyle J. McGinn of McGinn, Springer & Noethe PLC, Council Bluffs, for

appellant.

Catherine M. Lucas and Sean M. O’Brien of Bradshaw, Fowler, Proctor &

Fairgrave, P.C., Des Moines, for appellee.

Heard by Tabor, P.J., and Mullins and Bower, JJ. 2

MULLINS, Judge.

The Cincinnati Insurance Company (Cincinnati) insured a home that was

damaged by a storm. The homeowner granted a post-loss assignment of his

insurance claim to 33 Carpenters Construction, Inc. (33 Carpenters). 33

Carpenters sued Cincinnati claiming breach of the insurance contract and

demanded use of the expedited civil action (ECA) procedures. Cincinnati

counterclaimed for a declaratory judgment that 33 Carpenters was an unlicensed

public adjuster and sought removal from the ECA procedures. The district court

granted summary judgment in favor of Cincinnati on the public-adjuster claim but

denied removal from the ECA procedures. 33 Carpenters appeals and Cincinnati

cross-appeals.

I. Background Facts and Proceedings

In March 2016, a hail and wind storm damaged the home of Gregg

Whigham. Cincinnati insures Whigham’s house. At some unknown point in time,

Whigham and 33 Carpenters, a home-repair contractor, entered into an agreement

for the repair of Whigham’s house. In exchange for repairing the house, 33

Carpenters would receive any proceeds paid by Cincinnati on Whigham’s home-

insurance policy. No copy of this agreement appears in the record. On October

6, Whigham and Tony McClanahan, a representative of 33 Carpenters, phoned

Cincinnati to report the storm damage. McClanahan advised Cincinnati that 33

Carpenters was Whigham’s contractor and would attend the insurance inspection.

On October 10, Whigham and McClanahan signed an “Assignment of Claim

and Benefits” form in which Whigham agreed to sell and transfer his claim and any

cause of action he might have against Cincinnati for the storm damage. The form 3

indicates the type of claim is storm damage and the date of the loss was October

10, 2016. The form allows 33 Carpenters, “in its own name and for its own benefit

[to] prosecute, collect, settle, compromise and grant releases on said claim as it,

in its sole discretion, deems advisable.”

Cincinnati assigned an adjuster who reviewed the claim and prepared an

estimate of the repair costs, and Cincinnati made payment according to that

estimate. In February 2017, 33 Carpenters emailed Cincinnati to request an

estimate for further repairs on the house, including siding and gutters. Cincinnati

responded that it would address any further issues only with Whigham and

scheduled a construction consultant to re-inspect Whigham’s house. 33

Carpenters was in contact with Whigham about the need for further repairs and

attempted numerous times to communicate directly with Cincinnati, including

sending pictures. However, Cincinnati only addressed its communications to

Whigham. 33 Carpenters communicated with Whigham that it needed to

determine “how Cincinnati intends to make you whole,” and it made suggestions

on what it determined were necessary repairs. In its last email exchange, 33

Carpenters sent Cincinnati comparison photos in response to Cincinnati’s stated

intent to have a construction consultant do the same task.

A few days later, 33 Carpenters filed suit against Cincinnati for breach of

contract, alleging Cincinnati failed to pay 33 Carpenters all benefits due and owing

under the Whigham insurance policy. Further, it contended it was entitled to

recover from Cincinnati because of its post-loss assignment of Whigham’s claim

under his insurance policy. 33 Carpenters also filed an election to bring the suit

as an ECA under Iowa Rule of Civil Procedure 1.281. 4

Cincinnati denied the claims and filed affirmative defenses, including that in

obtaining the assignment from Whigham, 33 Carpenters acted as a public adjuster

without a license, in violation of Iowa Code chapter 522C (2017), which rendered

the assignment unenforceable. It also claimed 33 Carpenters did not possess an

insurable interest in the insured premises. Cincinnati brought a counterclaim for

declaratory relief, asking the court to determine and declare the legal effect of the

assignment. 33 Carpenters resisted the counterclaim, and the court scheduled a

jury trial.

Cincinnati filed an application to terminate the ECA procedures, pursuant to

Iowa Rule of Civil Procedure 1.281(1)(g), arguing the rule allows claims to proceed

as an ECA only if the sole relief is a money judgment. It contended that due to its

compulsory counterclaim requesting declaratory relief, the action could not

proceed under rule 1.281. 33 Carpenters resisted, arguing the language of the

rule itself allows Cincinnati’s claim to proceed as an ECA. After a telephonic

hearing, the court denied Cincinnati’s request to terminate the ECA procedures,

finding that the relief sought by Cincinnati in its declaratory judgment action is an

issue in 33 Carpenters’s case and, thus, can be decided by summary judgment or

by a trier of fact.

Cincinnati then filed a motion for summary judgment, claiming 33

Carpenters violated Iowa Code sections 507A.3, 507A.5, and 522C.4 by acting as

an unauthorized public adjuster and its actions of obtaining and enforcing the

assignment of Whigham’s insurance claims were without authority, which rendered

the assignment between 33 Carpenters and Whigham invalid. 33 Carpenters

resisted, contending only the Iowa Insurance Commissioner can enforce the 5

provisions of Iowa Code chapter 522C so Cincinnati could not use it as a defense

to invalidate its assignment with Whigham. Alternatively, 33 Carpenters argued it

obtained a valid post-loss assignment from Whigham, any conduct on its part

before the October 2016 assignment did not violate chapters 507A or 522C, and

any action it undertook after the date of the assignment was on behalf of its own

claim, not on Whigham’s behalf. After a telephonic hearing, the district court

granted Cincinnati’s motion for summary judgment both on 33 Carpenters’s direct

claim and on Cincinnati’s counterclaim based on a violation of chapter 522C. 1 33

Carpenters appeals. Cincinnati cross-appeals the court’s denial to remove the

case from the ECA procedures.

II. Standard of Review

We review an order granting summary judgment for correction of errors at

law. Johnson v. Associated Milk Producers, Inc., 886 N.W.2d 384, 389 (Iowa

2016). “On review, ‘we examine the record before the district court to determine

whether any material fact is in dispute, and if not, whether the district court correctly

applied the law.’” Roll v.

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