Indiana Insurance v. Carnegie Construction, Inc.

661 N.E.2d 776, 104 Ohio App. 3d 219, 1995 Ohio App. LEXIS 2264
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 31, 1995
Docket94-CA-6
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 661 N.E.2d 776 (Indiana Insurance v. Carnegie Construction, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Indiana Insurance v. Carnegie Construction, Inc., 661 N.E.2d 776, 104 Ohio App. 3d 219, 1995 Ohio App. LEXIS 2264 (Ohio Ct. App. 1995).

Opinion

Frederick N. Young, Judge.

Carnegie Construction Company (“Carnegie”) appeals from an order entered on a counterclaim for declaratory judgment it brought against the Indiana Insurance Company (“Indiana”). Indiana initiated this action by bringing subrogated claims against Carnegie alleging negligence and breach of contract in the construction of a school building for the West Liberty-Salem Board of Education (“the Board”). Carnegie responded by seeking a declaration that Indiana could not bring a subrogated claim against it because it was an insured of Indiana, or alternatively, because the Board and Carnegie agreed to make Carnegie an insured of Indiana. The trial court denied Carnegie the declaration it sought, holding that neither the insurance policy the Board purchased from Indiana, nor the construction contract between the Board and Carnegie, operated to bar Indiana from bringing its subrogated claims, because “Indiana Insurance Company is not an insurer of Defendant, Carnegie Construction Co., Inc.”

In May 1987, Carnegie and the Board contracted for the construction of a new school building on State Route 68, in Urbana, Ohio. Under the General Conditions of the construction contract, Carnegie was “responsible for * * * [t]he safety and good condition of all work and materials embraced in or affected by [its] contract, until the completion of [its] contract as an entirety.” Instructions to Bidders and General Conditions, Article 18(a)(2). To this end, Carnegie agreed to “be responsible for all precautions as may be necessary to fully protect *221 [its] work both during its execution and until its final acceptance, in default of which [Carnegie would] be held responsible for all damage incurred.” Id., Article 18(b).

Following this language is an additional provision requiring both Carnegie and the Board to obtain insurance for the project. Carnegie agreed to “maintain insurance to protect [it] and the Owner from claims for personal injury, direct or derivative, including death, or claims for property damage, resulting from operations under this contract, by [it]self, [its] subcontractor, or anyone directly or indirectly employed by them.” Id., Article 18(j)(a)(1). The Board agreed to procure a builder’s risk policy to protect “the State of Ohio, the Contractor, and the West Liberty-Salem Local School District Board of Education from loss incurred by theft, fire, lightning, extended coverage, vandalism, and malicious mischief in the full amount of the contract.” Id., Article 18(j)(b)(1). Indiana provided a builder’s risk policy for the Board; Westfield Insurance Company provided Carnegie with liability insurance. The Board presented Carnegie with a certificate of insurance to evidence builder’s risk coverage, as the construction contract required, and work commenced.

By December 1987, the erection of masonry walls was underway. On December 15, they were toppled by gale force winds. The Board promptly made a claim for the loss under the Indiana builder’s risk policy. After conducting some investigation, Indiana agreed that the cause of the loss was the December 15 windstorm, and because the project was property insured, and windstorm a peril insured against in the builder’s risk policy, Indiana paid the Board $279,668.36.

Indiana subsequently continued its investigation into the cause of the loss, and concluded that Carnegie’s failure to properly protect its work by bracing the walls while they were under construction left the walls vulnerable to damage from high winds. Indiana then filed suit against Carnegie, asserting that it was subrogated to the Board’s potential claims against Carnegie for negligence and breach of contract.

In its answer, Carnegie raised its own relationship to Indiana as an affirmative defense to the action, averring that an insurance company cannot bring a subrogated claim against its intended insured. The trial court, in the first part of a bifurcated trial, determined that Carnegie was not an insured party under the builder’s risk policy the Board had with Indiana, and that Indiana could therefore sue Carnegie.

Carnegie immediately appealed from this adverse judgment. We dismissed that appeal as premature in Indiana Ins. Co. v. Carnegie Constr., Inc. (1993), 91 Ohio App.3d 286, 632 N.E.2d 579, holding that although the court’s determination of this threshold issue might in fact represent an independent judicial inquiry, it was not entered in a special proceeding as defined in Polikoff v. Adam (1993), 67 *222 Ohio St.3d 100, 616 N.E.2d 213, and therefore did not meet the finality requirements of R.C. 2505.02.

The trial court remedies this deficiency by permitting Carnegie to amend its answer to include a counterclaim for declaratory judgment on the insurance coverage issue. A declaratory judgment is a special proceeding. Gen. Acc. Ins. Co. v. Ins. Co. of N. Am. (1989), 44 Ohio St.3d 17, 22, 540 N.E.2d 266, 271-272. The court then issued the same judgment it had issued before, adding a Civ.R. 54(B) certification that there is no just reason to delay an appeal. A resolution of this issue may obviate trial on the pending claims for negligence and breach of contract. Accordingly, we agree with the trial court that an immediate appeal will serve the interests of sound judicial administration at the trial court level. Wisintainer v. Elcen Power Strut Co. (1993), 67 Ohio St.3d 352, 355, 617 N.E.2d 1136, 1138-1139; Hausman v. Dayton (Dec. 22, 1993), Montgomery App. No. 13647, unreported, 1993 WL 541649. We conclude that this matter is ripe for review.

Carnegie assigns one error:

“The trial court erred in finding Indiana Insurance Company has a right of subrogation against Carnegie Construction, Inc. for recovery of damages paid to West Liberty-Salem Local School District Board of Education.”

This assignment raises two arguments: that no right of subrogation exists against Carnegie because Carnegie is an insured of Indiana, or alternatively, that no right of subrogation exists because the Board contractually waived its right to seek recovery from Carnegie for certain kinds of damage to the project. We find the latter argument dispositive of the matter, and so discuss it first.

Indiana premised its subrogated claims against Carnegie on Carnegie’s alleged failure to brace or to otherwise shore up the masonry walls to make them good against high winds, which, it alleges, was both negligence and a breach of the construction contract between Carnegie and the Board. Carnegie contends that these claims cannot be brought, because the Board and Carnegie contractually agreed to insure themselves from any loss arising from windstorm damage, even if that loss was facilitated by the negligence of one or the other of them. Carnegie argues that because the Board could not bring such claims against Carnegie in its own right, Indiana, whose rights cannot be superior to those of the Board, also cannot bring them. We agree.

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661 N.E.2d 776, 104 Ohio App. 3d 219, 1995 Ohio App. LEXIS 2264, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/indiana-insurance-v-carnegie-construction-inc-ohioctapp-1995.