Baldwin Mutual Insurance Co. v. Edwards

63 So. 3d 1268, 2010 Ala. LEXIS 219, 2010 WL 4777544
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedNovember 24, 2010
Docket1090957
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 63 So. 3d 1268 (Baldwin Mutual Insurance Co. v. Edwards) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Baldwin Mutual Insurance Co. v. Edwards, 63 So. 3d 1268, 2010 Ala. LEXIS 219, 2010 WL 4777544 (Ala. 2010).

Opinion

LYONS, Justice.

Baldwin Mutual Insurance Company, Inc. (“Baldwin Mutual”), appeals from the Mobile Circuit Court’s certification of a class action against it. We reverse and remand.

*1269 Factual Background and Procedural History

Dean Edwards sued Baldwin Mutual on July 12, 2007, asserting a breaeh-of-eon-tract claim. Specifically, Edwards stated that, in August 2005, his house was damaged by Hurricane Katrina and that Baldwin Mutual was his homeowner’s insurer at the time. Edwards alleged that, under his homeowner’s policy with Baldwin Mutual, he was entitled to recover the “actual cash value” of his loss, which the policy defined, in relevant part, as “the amount it would cost to repair or replace [the] covered property.” Edwards " maintained that, as part of “actual cash value” he says was due under his policy as a result of his loss, he was entitled to receive an additional 20% of the costs of material and labor, a sum, Edwards alleged, typically charged by contractors for overhead and profit. Edwards alleged that Baldwin Mutual breached its policy by failing to include that 20% for contractor overhead and profit in calculating the “actual cash value” of his loss.

Edwards also sought to represent a proposed class of plaintiffs under Rule 32(b)(3), Ala. R. Civ. P. In his complaint, Edwards defined the class as including:

“1) All current and former Baldwin Mutual ... insureds ...;
“2) who are citizens of the State of Alabama;
“3) who in the six years preceding the date of filing of this complaint suffered a covered loss to property situated within the State of Alabama;
“4) whose loss estimate or property loss worksheet prepared by the defendant or its agents indicates the repair of damage by three or more trades;
“5) whose loss was settled on an actual cash value basis; and
“6) whose actual cash value payment did not include an amount for general contractor overhead and profit equal to 20% of the underlying cost of repair.”

(Emphasis added.) On July 30, 2009, Edwards moved the trial court to certify the class. On August 19, 2009, Edwards and Baldwin Mutual jointly moved the trial court for a hearing regarding the certification of the class defined above.

The trial court held an evidentiary hearing on the class-certification question on October 15, 2009. At that hearing, Edwards presented evidence as to the damage to his house caused both by Hurricane Katrina in August 2005 and by Hurricane Ivan in September 2004. Edwards represented that the class definition was broad enough to include claims based on damage caused by Hurricane Ivan and that he intended to amend his complaint to state a breach-of-contract claim against Baldwin Mutual arising from its payment of a loss for damage to Edwards’s house sustained during Hurricane Ivan.

Counsel for Baldwin Mutual presented evidence at the hearing indicating that Baldwin Mutual had not, in fact, paid Edwards’s loss resulting from Hurricane Katrina on an “actual cash value” basis, but, instead, pursuant to Edwards’s policy, had paid his claim based on the “replacement cost” of the damaged property. Accordingly, Baldwin Mutual argued that Edwards was not a part of the class he sought to certify. Baldwin Mutual also argued that the class definition should be limited because, it says, as written, the definition included claims by putative class members who had already litigated or settled their claims with Baldwin Mutual. Edwards’s counsel acknowledged at the hearing that he needed to “tinker with the class definition.” The trial court instructed Edwards’s counsel to settle on a class definition and present it to the court in a *1270 brief supporting his motion for class certification. The trial court allowed Baldwin Mutual time to file a response brief opposing class certification and Edwards time to reply with a subsequent filing.

On November 6, 2009, Edwards filed a brief in support of his motion for class certification in which he asked the trial court to certify the following class:

“1) All current and former Baldwin Mutual ... insureds;
“2) who are citizens of the State of Alabama;
“3) who in the six years preceding July 12, 2007 suffered a covered loss to property situated within the State of Alabama;
“4) where the damage estimate for such loss prepared by Baldwin Mutual ... indicated repairs by three or more trades;
“5) where the loss payment did not include any amount for the cost of hiring a general contractor (i.e., ‘general contractor overhead and profit’).
“Insureds whose claims are based on the following losses are excluded from the class:
“1) Any loss which is currently in litigation or been the subject of a final judgment, or for which Baldwin Mutual[’s] ... liability has been otherwise previously released or adjudicated;
“2) Any loss for which Baldwin Mutual made payment directly to R & R Mobile Home Services or another third party for the repair of a loss.”

The class defined by Edwards in his November 6, 2009, brief adds certain exclusions as discussed at the hearing; it also omits from the class definition the requirement that class members’ losses have been paid “on an actual cash value basis.”

In its response brief, Baldwin Mutual argued that, in deleting the requirement that the losses of putative class members have been paid based on actual cash value, the revised class definition impermissibly expanded the class beyond that as to which the trial court had received evidence at the class-certification hearing. Specifically, Baldwin Mutual argued that certification of the new class would violate the procedural requirements of § 6-5-641, Ala.Code 1975; that Baldwin Mutual would be substantially prejudiced by the post-hearing expansion of the class; that the evidence presented at the October 15, 2009, hearing did not address loss payments other than those based, on actual cash value; and that certification of the new class “would deny Baldwin Mutual the opportunity for a meaningful hearing on class certification and prevent [the trial court] from conducting the requisite ‘rigorous analysis’ on [Edwards’s] requested class. Ala.Code [1975], § 6-5-641.”

Edwards responded, arguing that the revised class definition was substantively appropriate for class certification. Edwards subsequently moved to amend his complaint to include an individual claim against Baldwin Mutual arising from the loss Edwards suffered as a result of Hurricane Ivan and to include the class definition as revised in Edwards’s November 6, 2009, brief. Baldwin Mutual objected to Edwards’s motion to amend, arguing again that the revised class definition impermis-sibly expanded the class, that it was prejudiced by the expansion, that it was denied a meaningful opportunity to challenge the revised class, and that certification of the revised class would not satisfy the requirements of § 6-5-641.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Baldwin Mutual Insurance Co. v. McCain
176 So. 3d 1195 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 2015)
NATIONAL SECURITY FIRE & CASUALTY COMPANY v. Maurice DeWITT
85 So. 3d 355 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 2011)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
63 So. 3d 1268, 2010 Ala. LEXIS 219, 2010 WL 4777544, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baldwin-mutual-insurance-co-v-edwards-ala-2010.