Cecere v. Harquail
This text of 104 A.D.2d 6 (Cecere v. Harquail) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
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OPINION OF THE COURT
In Allanson v Cummings (81 AD2d 16) we held that where the owner of a vehicle totally destroyed in an accident is unable to obtain a suitable replacement immediately, he may recover damages for loss of use measured by the “reasonable rental value of a substitute vehicle for a reasonable period of time until a replacement can be made” (Allanson v Cummings, supra, p 21). In so doing we followed precedents in a growing number of jurisdictions allowing recovery in such situations (see n 1, infra). The question here is whether an owner can recover for the period between the date of the accident and the time when the defendant’s insurer notifies the plaintiff that it finds the loss to be total, upon the ground that until that time the plaintiff is “unable to obtain a replacement vehicle within the meaning of Allanson v. Cummings [supra]”. We hold that he may not.
[7]*7The proof in this nonjury trial was as follows. On January 8, 1981, an automobile owned by plaintiff Linda Cecere and driven by plaintiff John Cecere was totally destroyed in a collision with a vehicle driven by defendant Harquail and rented from defendant Avis Rent-A-Car System (Avis). (That the accident was due entirely to Harquail’s negligence is not now in dispute.) On that same day, the body shop to which the Cecere vehicle had been towed completed an estimate form stating: “It will cost more to fix car than it is worth.” The next day, John Cecere rented a substitute vehicle. The Ceceres’ insurance representative sent a copy of the estimate form to Avis on January 12, 1981. Neither Avis nor its insurer responded until March 23, 1981, when the insurer notified John Cecere that Avis approved settlement of $4,065 for the value of the automobile but refused to pay the rental cost of the substitute vehicle. On receipt of this notice, John Cecere, who had made no attempt to purchase a replacement, returned the rental car.
The court awarded the stipulated amount for the value of the vehicle and $2,900.14, the actual cost of rental of the substitute vehicle from January 9, 1981 until March 23, 1981, stating: “The court finds that plaintiff was unable to obtain a replacement vehicle within the meaning of Allanson v Cummings [supra] until he was aware that defendant agreed that the loss was total and what cash settlement he could expect.” There should be a reversal.
In Allanson v Cummings (supra) this court declined to follow the ancient common-law rule that, although the owner of a damaged chattel may recover for loss of its use during the time required for repairs, he may not recover if the chattel is destroyed (see, generally, Dennis v Ford Motor Co., 332 F Supp 901, 905, affd 471 F2d 733; Reis v Long Is. R. R. Co., 88 App Div 611; 7C Warren, Negligence [1982 ed], ch 18, § 1.01; Fuchsberg, 10 Encyclopedia of NY Law, Damages, § 875). The rule, based on the assumption that because the owner can replace the destroyed chattel immediately he suffers no loss beyond its value, “presupposes the existence of a broad market with frequent trading in articles of an identical character with the property lost” (7C Warren, Negligence [1982 ed], ch 18, § 1.02, p 34). In Allanson, we noted that in today’s market immediate replacement of a vehicle is not always possible and observed that where, due to market conditions, the owner cannot immediately replace a destroyed vehicle, he has been deprived not only of its value but of its use. We saw no reason for the common-law distinction permitting recovery if the owner’s car is damaged and must be fixed but not if it is crushed beyond repair and must [8]*8be replaced. In either case, whether it be for the time the car is in the shop or the time it takes to find a suitable replacement in the marketplace,1 the owner has been deprived of the use of his vehicle.
The court here has misapplied Allanson (supra) in making the extent of plaintiffs’ damages for loss of use dependent not upon objective proof of availability of a suitable replacement in light of market conditions but upon such factors as the insurer’s delay in inspecting and placing a value on the vehicle and plaintiffs’ resultant financial inability to replace it. The burden of establishing all elements of their damages, including the fact that the car was a total loss, is on plaintiffs — not on defendant or its insurer. While defendant or the insurance company may obtain an appraisal of plaintiffs’ vehicle and make an offer of settlement, they are not obliged to do so. Accordingly, damages cannot be predicated on such irrelevant considerations as what settlement the plaintiffs might expect or the defendant’s insurer’s inaction or lack of cooperation.2
[9]*9The judgment should be modified by striking the award of $2,900.14 for loss of use of the destroyed vehicle and otherwise affirmed.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
104 A.D.2d 6, 481 N.Y.S.2d 533, 1984 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 20198, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cecere-v-harquail-nyappdiv-1984.