Curt's Trucking Co. v. City of Anchorage

578 P.2d 975, 1978 Alas. LEXIS 516
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedMay 19, 1978
Docket3181
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 578 P.2d 975 (Curt's Trucking Co. v. City of Anchorage) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Curt's Trucking Co. v. City of Anchorage, 578 P.2d 975, 1978 Alas. LEXIS 516 (Ala. 1978).

Opinion

OPINION

RABINOWITZ, Justice.

An overhead telephone cable belonging to the Anchorage Telephone Utility was severed when struck by the raised body of a dump truck operated by Gerald Curt on Minnesota Drive in Anchorage. 1 The Anchorage Telephone Utility is a public utility owned by the City of Anchorage; and City employees repaired the damaged cable. The City then brought an action in superior court alleging that $5,349.23 in damages resulted from the negligence of Gerald R. Curt and Curt’s Trucking Company.

The parties stipulated that Curt’s Trucking 2 was liable for the direct costs of repairing the damaged cable. The direct costs of material and labor amounted to $4,457.72. However, Curt’s Trucking disputed the City’s claim to an additional 20% for “overhead” 3 and the trial in superior court 4 was directed only to that issue.

The City introduced evidence indicating that its 20% overhead figure was derived from two separate sources: (1) general administrative overhead applicable to all reimbursable City services, comprising 13% of the 20% overhead figure, and (2) expenses incurred by the City’s Risk Management Office in processing claims against third parties who damage City property. The superior court concluded that the entire 20% “overhead” charge should be allowed 5 and *977 awarded total damages in the amount of $5,349.23, i. e., $4,457.72 for direct costs of labor, materials and equipment plus $891.54 for indirect costs reflected by the 20% “overhead” figure. Curt’s Trucking Company has appealed, contending that the superior court's award of the 20% “overhead” charge was erroneous.

A trial court’s determination of damages is a finding of fact which will not be disturbed on appeal unless clearly erroneous. 6 However, we will also intervene when the trial court’s award of damages is based on an erroneous application of law. 7 With these standards of review in mind, we turn to Curt’s Trucking Company’s first specification of error.

Curt’s Trucking argues that the 13% charge for administrative expenses applicable to all reimbursable City services was not a proper element of damages because it is too remote or too speculative. Both parties have cited opinions of this court explaining that the general principle underlying the assessment of damages in tort cases is that an injured person is entitled to be placed as nearly as possible in the position he would have occupied had it not been for the defendant’s tort. 8 This principle also applies where the injured party performs the repairs itself. Many courts considering this problem have concluded that indirect expenses are proper items of damage and are not too remote or speculative when the evidence establishes a sufficient connection between the overhead expense and the necessary repairs. 9

In Baltimore and Ohio Railroad Co. v. Commercial Transport, Inc., 273 F.2d 447 (7th Cir. 1960), the court affirmed the inclusion of overhead in a damage award arising out of a collision between plaintiff’s diesel locomotive and defendants’ tractor-trailer. The railroad had applied various overhead percentages to its costs of materials and labor; the specific percentages had been taken from formulas established by 25 major railroads for use, in part, in billing each other for self-repair of their own track or equipment damaged by another railroad. 10 The Seventh Circuit concluded that the reasonable cost of repairs made by the railroad’s own employees should not be limited to the dollar amount actually paid workmen and suppliers because “[s]uch a limitation would ignore the facts of business life.” 11 The court also determined that the percentage formulas were properly submitted to the jury:

On the basis of the facts adduced in the instant case as to the establishment of *978 the percentage formulae contained in the Rules of the General Managers Association, and their long use and continued acceptance in the industry, we are of the opinion that the district court did not err in admitting the testimony and exhibit in question. This evidence was material and relevant in proof of plaintiff’s damages. It is infrequent that damages are measurable with mathematical certainty or that a plaintiff can prove all elements from his own records or experience. The factors here employed and submitted for the jury’s consideration were not designed to produce a profit. Methods accepted in everyday business affairs as fixing fair measures of value are not to be excluded from a jury’s consideration in arriving at damages. 12

Other federal courts have also permitted recovery of properly calculated overhead expenses. 13 In Bultema Dock & Dredge Co. v. Steamship David P. Thompson, 252 F.Supp. 881 (W.D.Mich.1966), plaintiff recovered overhead expenses in connection with repair of its underwater construction project, which had been struck by defendant’s vessel. The district court explained, in part:

Had it been necessary for an outside company to repair the damage, the cost of such repairs would include similar charges. There is no reason to free respondent of these costs simply because the injured party is in a position to make the repairs itself. 14

However, in Crain Brothers, Inc. v. Du-quesne Slag Products Co., 273 F.2d 948, 952-53 (3d Cir. 1959), the Third Circuit explained that the reason a party which performs its own repairs may recover an amount including such overhead elements is that its actual loss would be the full amount charged by the independent contractor, as if it paid that amount out-of-pocket. Thus, where plaintiff has carried out the repairs itself, the losses and expenses actually incurred as a result of the accident should be included in a damage award. Costs which would have been recoverable had plaintiff hired someone else to do the work are a useful indicator of reasonable costs of repair only if plaintiff actually expends such an amount. 15

Although state courts are not unanimous in awarding overhead expenses, 16 many *979

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Bluebook (online)
578 P.2d 975, 1978 Alas. LEXIS 516, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/curts-trucking-co-v-city-of-anchorage-alaska-1978.