Carter-Holmes v. Sousa

901 P.2d 932, 136 Or. App. 495, 1995 Ore. App. LEXIS 1193
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedSeptember 6, 1995
Docket9302-00988; CA A83922
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 901 P.2d 932 (Carter-Holmes v. Sousa) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carter-Holmes v. Sousa, 901 P.2d 932, 136 Or. App. 495, 1995 Ore. App. LEXIS 1193 (Or. Ct. App. 1995).

Opinion

HASELTON, J.

Plaintiffs in a legal malpractice action appeal from a directed verdict for defendant. The trial court concluded that plaintiffs’ proof of damage from defendant’s alleged negligence was insufficient as a matter of law. We reverse and remand.

In 1988, plaintiffs asked an insurance agency to help them obtain insurance coverage for a four-plex apartment building they owned in Northeast Portland. They told the agency’s representative that they required insurance for the cost of replacing the building, rather than for its actual cash value. The agency secured coverage with North Pacific Insurance Company. Although the policy’s limits were consistent with cost of replacement coverage, unbeknownst to plaintiffs the policy covered the building only to the extent of its actual cash value.1

In 1989, the building was severely damaged by fire. When plaintiffs contacted North Pacific about filing a claim, they were told that their fire insurance policy did not provide for cost of replacement coverage. Plaintiffs believed that they were entitled to such coverage, and hired defendant attorney to pursue their purported entitlement to cost of replacement benefits.

Defendant submitted a proof of loss form to North Pacific, claiming $285,000 — the estimated cost of repairing the building — as the loss. North Pacific rejected that claim of loss, and sent plaintiffs a check for $82,890.60, which represented the appraised actual cash value of the building, $70,000, plus the cost of debris removal, $12,890.60. Plaintiffs refused to accept that amount.

Under the terms of plaintiffs’ policy, as well as under ORS 742.240,2 plaintiffs were required to file any lawsuit based on the policy within one year of the date of loss, in this case, by August 6, 1990. Defendant did not inform plaintiffs [498]*498of that requirement and did not file a lawsuit against North Pacific seeking replacement cost benefits for plaintiffs’ loss. Approximately two years after the fire, defendant did file a complaint against the insurance agency that brokered plaintiffs’ policy. In the course of mediating that action,3 plaintiffs discovered that the limitations period for bringing a claim against North Pacific had run. By that time, the building had been condemned by the City of Portland. In May 1992, it was demolished.

Plaintiffs brought a legal malpractice action against defendant based on his failure to file a timely action against North Pacific. They alleged that if defendant had pursued their claim for replacement cost benefits promptly, North Pacific would have become legally obligated to pay such benefits for their fire loss. Plaintiffs sought damages of $176,947.08 which, they alleged, represented the difference between the estimated cost of repairing their building and the building’s actual cash value.4

At trial, plaintiffs presented, as evidence of damages, estimates that two construction contractors prepared for North Pacific shortly after the fire. Those estimates set the cost of repairing the building at, respectively, $246,947.08 and $250,311.49. At the close of plaintiffs’ case, defendant moved for a directed verdict, arguing that plaintiffs’ proof of damages was legally insufficient because they had failed to offer evidence that the cash value of the building, if reconstructed, would have been any greater than the amount North Pacific had tendered and acknowledged was due. The trial court agreed, and entered judgment for defendant.

On appeal, plaintiffs readily acknowledge that they did not proffer proof of the “rebuilt cash value” of the four-plex. They contend, however, that that is not the proper measure of damages and that the court erred in testing their proof against that standard. In particular, plaintiffs assert: (1) The proper measure of damages is the cost of putting [499]*499them in the same position that they would have occupied but for defendant’s negligence. (2) If defendant had handled their claim properly, including timely filing their action against North Pacific, their insurance contract would have been reformed to provide for cost of replacement coverage, permitting them to reconstruct the damaged building. (3) Because of defendant’s negligence, plaintiffs were unable to obtain such a remedy from North Pacific. (4) Therefore, defendant is obligated to compensate plaintiffs for the full value of their lost right and remedy, i.e., the value of the payments North Pacific would have been required to make under cost of replacement coverage (minus insurance benefits they otherwise obtained). (5) Because plaintiffs submitted evidence of the cost of replacement, specifically, North Pacific’s own cost of replacement estimates, the trial court erred in ruling that their proof of damages was insufficient.

Defendant raises two related arguments in response. First, defendant contends, plaintiffs’ claim must fail because the type of damage they pleaded and attempted to prove — i. e., the cost of replacing their four-plex — is not legally cognizable. Moreover, defendant argues that, even if cost of replacement might otherwise be an appropriate measure of damage, plaintiffs failed to satisfy the conditions for recovering such damages. In particular, defendant reasons as follows: (1) Even if defendant had timely filed an action to reform plaintiffs’ insurance policy, and plaintiffs had prevailed in that action, they would not have received a lump sum payment for the total projected cost of rebuilding the four-plex. (2) Instead, they would have obtained a judgment reforming the contract to include an obligation to reimburse expenses actually incurred in repairing the building. (3) Because plaintiffs never rebuilt the building and it is now incapable of being rebuilt, they cannot actually incur replacement expenses and, thus, are not entitled to recover damages approximating reimbursement for such expenses.

The parties agree that the measure of damages in a malpractice action arising from the loss of a viable claim is generally the value of the putative “lost judgment.” See Meiselman, Attorney Malpractice: Law and Procedure § 4.2 (1980); 7 Am Jur 2d, “Attorneys at Law,” § 226; Cf. Ridenour v. Lewis, 121 Or App 416, 419, 854 P2d 1005, rev den 317 Or [500]*500583 (1993) (plaintiffs evidence of face value of lost judgment deemed prima facie evidence of amount of damages). They disagree, however, as to the valúe of plaintiffs’ alleged lost reformation judgment.

Defendant argues:

‘ ‘The value of a reformation decree to plaintiffs is the value of a rebuilt fourplex, not the cost of rebuilding it. Indeed, had defendant negligently burned down the fourplex, plaintiffs still would have been allowed to recover from him only the building’s fair market value, not the cost of repairing it.”

That argument, which is derived from cases involving tor-tious property damage,5 fails for two reason. First, it ignores the fundamental nature of plaintiffs’ claim. This is not an action for property damage. It is, instead, an action for malpractice arising from defendant’s failure to pursue a claim pertaining to coverage under an insurance policy.

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

Related

Rowlett v. Fagan
327 P.3d 1 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 2014)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
901 P.2d 932, 136 Or. App. 495, 1995 Ore. App. LEXIS 1193, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carter-holmes-v-sousa-orctapp-1995.