Georgia-Pacific Corporation v. Allianz Insurance Company

977 F.2d 459, 1992 WL 289566
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedDecember 2, 1992
Docket92-1635WA
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 977 F.2d 459 (Georgia-Pacific Corporation v. Allianz Insurance Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Georgia-Pacific Corporation v. Allianz Insurance Company, 977 F.2d 459, 1992 WL 289566 (8th Cir. 1992).

Opinion

RICHARD S. ARNOLD, Chief Judge.

Georgia-Pacific brought this action against its insurer, Allianz Insurance Co., after Allianz denied coverage for damage to one of Georgia-Pacific’s Yankee dryers. The jury found the loss was covered and awarded Georgia-Pacific the full amount of its claim, over four million dollars. The District Court 1 denied Allianz’s motion for a new trial and granted Georgia-Pacific’s motion for prejudgment interest, attorneys’ fees, and a twelve per cent, penalty under state law. Allianz appeals.

Georgia-Pacific, which operates industrial facilities throughout the United States, maintained a boiler and machinery policy with Allianz, effective from April 1, 1986, through April 1, 1989. The policy insured Georgia-Pacific against damage to defined “objects” at Georgia-Pacific’s facilities caused by an “accident,” as that term was defined in the policy. The policy also covered business-interruption losses sustained as a result of an accident.

One of the facilities insured under this policy was a pulp and paper mill in Cros-sett, Arkansas. Georgia-Pacific operates four paper-making machines at this facility, each machine containing a Yankee dryer. (The Yankee dryer is a large rotating drum used to dry tissue paper.) On February 15, 1989, Georgia-Pacific discovered a crack in one “head” of Yankee Dryer No. 7. Georgia-Pacific immediately shut down the entire machine, removed the dryer, and stored it. To mitigate its business-interruption loss, Georgia-Pacific refurbished an old dryer, Yankee Dryer No. 6, which had been taken out of service in 1981, and installed it in the paper machine as a temporary substitute. For the permanent replacement, rather than repairing Yankee Dryer No. 7, Georgia-Pacific chose to buy a new dryer with a larger capacity. Georgia-Pacific has received the new dryer, but has not yet installed it.

In July of 1989, Georgia-Pacific filed a claim with Allianz. The claim requested coverage for (1) the cost to remove, repair, and reinstall Yankee Dryer No. 7, including extra expense to expedite the repairs; (2) the cost to refurbish and install Yankee Dryer No. 6; (3) the business-interruption loss sustained from the date of the accident until Dryer No. 6 was refurbished and installed as a replacement; and (4) the estimated business-interruption loss to remove Dryer No. 6 and reinstall the repaired Dryer No. 7. Allianz denied the claim, and Georgia-Pacific brought this action. After the jury awarded Georgia-Pacific all of the damages it requested, Allianz appealed.

The dispute in this case is not whether the policy covers the claim, but how much of the claim is covered. Allianz argues that the cost to reinstall Dryer No. 7 and the cost to expedite the physical repair of Dryer No. 7 are not recoverable, since Dryer No. 7 not only was never repaired, but will never be reinstalled. In addition, Allianz objects to the recovery of the estimated business-interruption loss which would have occurred when No. 6 was being removed and No. 7 was being reinstalled, since, having never been sustained, the loss is not “actual.” We reject Allianz’s arguments and affirm the judgment of the District Court.

I.

Allianz’s first claim is that it is not responsible for the cost to remove Dryer *461 No. 6 and reinstall Dryer No. 7, since this has not and never will occur. Allianz did not, however, appeal the award of damages for the repair of Dryer No. 7, even though Dryer No. 7 has not been and never will be repaired. We hold that the policy covers both of these costs for the same reason. That is, both would have been necessary had Georgia-Pacific chosen to repair, as it was entitled to do under the policy, rather than replace, Dryer No. 7. The fact that the insured chose a more expensive option—to replace the damaged dryer with a new, larger-capacity dryer—does not mean that it cannot recover the cost of the cheaper option allowed by the policy.

For covered losses, which this loss is, the policy provides as follows:

g. Valuation
(1) We will pay you the amount you spend to repair or replace your property directly damaged by an “accident.” Our payment will be the smallest of:
(a) The Limit of Insurance;
(b) The cost at the time of the “accident” to repair the damaged property with property of like kind, capacity, size and quality;
(c) The cost at the time of the “accident” to replace the damaged property on the same site with other property:
(i) Of like kind, capacity, size and quality; and
(ii) Used for the same purpose;
(d) The amount you actually spend that is necessary to repair or replace the damaged property.
* * * * * *
(3) We will not pay you:
(a) ...
(b) For any extra cost if you decide to repair or replace the damaged property with property of a better kind or quality or of larger capacity.

Appellant’s Appendix 62.

The policy makes it clear that Allianz will pay the lesser of repairing or replacing the property. If the insured decides to replace the property with property of a better kind or quality or of a larger capacity, Allianz will not pay for the extra cost. This provision suggests that Allianz at least anticipates such an occurrence. Although Al-lianz will not pay the extra cost in such a situation, it is in no way released from its obligation to pay what it otherwise would be required to pay had the insured not upgraded the property. In the case before us, had Georgia-Pacific not chosen to upgrade its dryer, Allianz would have had to pay all of the costs associated with repairing Dryer No. 7, including removing Dryer No. 6 and reinstalling Dryer No. 7. Allianz also argues that Georgia-Pacific never intended to replace Dryer No. 6 with Dryer No. 7 or any other dryer, but intended No. 6 to function as a permanent replacement. Therefore, reinstallation of Dryer No. 7 never would have occurred. The jury rejected this argument, and its finding is sufficiently supported in the record.

This situation is analogous to that of wrecking a ear. If you wreck your car, you may choose to repair it, replace it, or do neither. The insurer, on the other hand, is generally obligated to pay you either the cost to repair the car or the car’s value, whichever is less. The fact that you decide to replace the car or to ride the bus and do nothing to the car in no way changes the insurer’s duty to pay you. Similarly, in this case, Allianz must pay the cost of repairing and reinstalling Dryer No. 7 even though Georgia-Pacific has chosen instead to replace it.

II.

Allianz next argues that the $57,000 cost to expedite the repairs for Dryer No. 7 is not recoverable, because the expense was never incurred. The policy provides that Allianz will pay “the reasonable extra cost to ... expedite permanent repairs .... ” Uncontradictéd testimony at trial indicated that, had Dryer No. 7 been repaired, it would have been more economical to expedite the manufacturing of the head.

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977 F.2d 459, 1992 WL 289566, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/georgia-pacific-corporation-v-allianz-insurance-company-ca8-1992.