Butler v. The Travelers Home

CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedMay 12, 2021
Docket2020-001285
StatusPublished

This text of Butler v. The Travelers Home (Butler v. The Travelers Home) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Butler v. The Travelers Home, (S.C. 2021).

Opinion

THE STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA In The Supreme Court

Miriam Butler, individually, and Evelyn Stewart, in her capacity as personal representative of Joseph Stewart, and both on behalf of others similarly situated,

Plaintiffs,

v.

The Travelers Home and Marine Insurance Company, and The Standard Fire Insurance Company,

Defendants.

Appellate Case No. 2020-001285

CERTIFIED QUESTION

ON CERTIFICATION FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF SOUTH CAROLINA J. Michelle Childs, United States District Judge

Opinion No. 28026 Heard March 24, 2021 – Filed May 12, 2021

CERTIFIED QUESTION ANSWERED

T. Joseph Snodgrass, Larson King, LLP, of St. Paul, MN; David Eugene Massey and Summer C. Tompkins, Law Offices of David E. Massey Trial Lawyers, of Columbia; Erik D. Peterson, Mehr, Fairbanks & Peterson Trial Lawyers, PLLC, of Lexington, KY; J. Brandon McWherter, McWherter Scott Bobbitt PLC, of Franklin, TN, all for Plaintiffs.

Stephen E. Goldman and Wystan M. Ackerman, Robinson & Cole LLP, of Hartford, CT; William P. Davis, Baker, Ravenel & Bender, LLP, of Columbia, all for Defendants.

Reynolds H. Blakenship Jr., Yarborough Applegate LLC, of Charleston; Christopher E. Roberts, Butsch Roberts & Associates LLC, of Clayton, MO, both for Amicus Curiae United Policyholders.

Thomas C. Salane and R. Hawthorne Barrett, Turner Padget Graham & Laney, P.A., of Columbia, for Amici Curiae American Property Casualty Insurance Association and National Association of Mutual Insurance Companies.

JUSTICE FEW: The United States District Court for the District of South Carolina certified the following question to this Court pursuant to Rule 244 of the South Carolina Appellate Court Rules:

When a homeowner's insurance policy does not define the term "actual cash value," may an insurer depreciate the cost of labor in determining the "actual cash value" of a covered loss when the estimated cost to repair or replace the damaged property includes both materials and embedded labor components?

We answer the certified question "yes."

These are two cases filed in one action in federal district court. The cases arose after the homes of Miriam Butler and Joseph Stewart1 were damaged in separate fires. Butler and Stewart each purchased a homeowner's insurance policy from one of the

1 Joseph Stewart passed away. His daughter Evelyn Stewart filed this lawsuit as personal representative of his estate. defendants, both of whom are subsidiaries of The Travelers Companies, Inc. The parties refer to the defendants as "Travelers."

The insurance policies are not in the record before us. From the portions of the policies quoted by the district court and the parties, we know the respective policies provide replacement cost value coverage to repair or replace damaged portions of their homes. However, both policies provide that in the event the insured chooses not to immediately repair or replace the damaged property, the insured will receive payment for actual cash value instead of replacement cost value. The parties and the district court, as is apparently common in the insurance industry, refer to replacement cost value and actual cash value as "RCV" and "ACV."

Butler and Stewart elected not to immediately repair or replace their damaged property. Each thus elected not to receive replacement cost but instead to receive a cash payment for the ACV of the damaged property. As the district court stated, "Plaintiffs do not allege they actually repaired the covered damage, and instead seek relief solely based on the calculation of the ACV payment."

The certified question addresses whether Travelers properly calculated the ACV payments Travelers offered to Butler and Stewart to settle their property damage claims. As far as we can tell, neither policy requires Travelers to use a specific method for calculating such an offer. Generally, insurers use one or a combination of three methods for calculating ACV. See 5 Jeffrey E. Thomas et al., NEW APPLEMAN ON INSURANCE LAW LIBRARY EDITION § 47.04[1] (2020) ("Case law recognizes three general categories for measuring 'actual cash value': (1) market value, (2) replacement cost less depreciation and (3) the 'broad evidence' rule." (citing Elberon Bathing Co., Inc. v. Ambassador Ins. Co., Inc., 389 A.2d 439, 444 (N.J. 1978))). As Travelers states in its brief, "One of the well-established methods used for estimating ACV involves estimating the replacement cost value (RCV) of the damage and then subtracting depreciation." To calculate ACV in these two cases, Travelers chose to use the "replacement cost less depreciation" method. According to Butler and Stewart, "Travelers did not and has not calculated any portion of Plaintiffs' losses by appraisal or fair market value."

Specifically, therefore, the question before us is whether—when using the "replacement cost less depreciation" method to calculate the offer it will make to its insured—Travelers may "depreciate" the labor component of the cost of repair or replacement. Our first task in answering the question is to understand what Travelers means by "depreciate." We begin that task by defining the terms RCV and ACV. RCV is clear; it is simply the amount of money it would take to pay a contractor to repair or replace the damaged structure, including cost for materials and labor. ACV also has clear meaning when considered in the abstract. It is the amount of money a willing buyer would pay, and a willing seller would accept, in a transaction with no unnatural constraints. ACV must account for changes in the value of a structure over time. Thus, ACV is what the structure was worth at the time it was damaged. Both RCV and ACV are terms we readily understand in their abstract sense.

Next, we consider how the terms are applied in a specific situation. For RCV, it is simple and straightforward. To calculate RCV, one determines the extent of the damage and solicits bids to have the damage repaired or replaced. The amount of RCV is thus determined by the market and is readily ascertainable, whether it is determined by the value of the low bid, the average of bids, or the otherwise most favorable bid.

ACV, on the other hand, is difficult to determine in a specific situation. While we understand ACV in the abstract, we are left scratching our heads when we consider how Travelers—or anyone—would calculate what it "actually" is.2 The reason is there is normally no market for aged and partially deteriorated portions of homes. A fifteen-year-old roof, for example, is not available for purchase in the market, nor is there any market on which to sell one. Thus, the ACV of damage to a portion of a home—in most instances3—is a fiction, and it is not possible to precisely ascertain ACV.

2 Butler and Stewart attach significance to statements this Court previously made supposedly defining ACV in a different context. See S.C. Elec. & Gas Co. v. Aetna Ins. Co., 238 S.C. 248, 262, 120 S.E.2d 111, 118 (1961) (referencing "the cost of materials," which we said "would be depreciable," and "[$]41,881.00, representing cost of winding and installation," which we said "would not be depreciable"). While it is true we used the phrase "actual cash value" in the discussion in which those statements were made, the statements actually refer to a value more similar to RCV. See 238 S.C.

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