Kurach, K., Aplt. v. Truck Ins. Exchange

CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedAugust 18, 2020
Docket12 EAP 2019
StatusPublished

This text of Kurach, K., Aplt. v. Truck Ins. Exchange (Kurach, K., Aplt. v. Truck Ins. Exchange) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kurach, K., Aplt. v. Truck Ins. Exchange, (Pa. 2020).

Opinion

[J-3AB-2020] IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA EASTERN DISTRICT

SAYLOR, C.J., BAER, TODD, DONOHUE, DOUGHERTY, WECHT, MUNDY, JJ.

KONRAD KURACH, : No. 12 EAP 2019 : Appellant : Appeal from the Order of Superior : Court entered on August 24, 2018 at : No. 1726 EDA 2017 reversing the v. : Order of the Court of Common Pleas : of Philadelphia County, Civil : Division, entered on April 21, 2017 TRUCK INSURANCE EXCHANGE, : at No. 00339 July Term, 2015 and : remanding. Appellee : : ARGUED: March 10, 2020 :

MARK WINTERSTEEN, INDIVIDUALLY : No. 13 EAP 2019 AND ON BEHALF OF ALL OTHERS : SIMILARLY SITUATED, : Appeal from the Order of Superior : Court entered on August 24, 2018 at Appellant : No. 1730 EDA 2017 reversing the : Order of the Court of Common Pleas : of Philadelphia County, Civil v. : Division, entered on April 21, 2017 : at No. 03543 July Term, 2015 and : remanding. TRUCK INSURANCE EXCHANGE, : : ARGUED: March 10, 2020 Appellee :

OPINION

JUSTICE TODD DECIDED: August 18, 2020

In these consolidated appeals, we consider the question of whether, under the

terms of the “replacement cost coverage” policies at issue, the insurer was permitted to

withhold from any actual cash value (“ACV”) payment general contractor’s overhead and profit (“GCOP”) expenses, unless and until the insureds undertook repairs of the

damaged property, even though the services of a general contractor were reasonably

likely to be needed to complete the repairs. After careful review, we affirm the order of

the Superior Court, which found the insurer was entitled to withhold such costs.

I. Facts and Procedural History

Appellants Konrad Kurach and Mark Wintersteen (“Policyholders”) each

purchased identical “Farmers Next Generation” insurance policies from Appellee Truck

Insurance Company (“Insurer”), to cover their residential dwellings situated in

Pennsylvania.1 Further, each paid Insurer an additional premium for “replacement cost

coverage.”2 Subsequent to the purchase of these policies, both Policyholders sustained

water damage to their houses in excess of $2,500, and both filed claims with Insurer

under the policies.

The policies provide a “two-step” settlement process governing the manner in

which Insurers would handle property damage claims of this nature, as described in

Section 5 of the policies, the relevant portion of which provides:

5. How We Settle Covered Loss

a. Coverage A (Dwelling) and Coverage B (Separate Structures). We will only settle covered loss or damage on the basis of use as a private residence. (1) Settlement for covered loss or damage to the dwelling or separate structures will be settled at replacement cost,

1 Appellant Wintersteen’s policy became effective November 13, 2013, and Appellant Kurach’s policy went into effect on May 22, 2014. 2 Although the policies at issue in this matter do not explicitly define “replacement cost

coverage,” this type of coverage, as a general matter, “allows recovery for the actual value of property at the time of loss, without deduction for deterioration, obsolescence, and similar depreciation of the property's value.” 12A Couch on Insurance § 176:56; see also Carulli v. Allstate Insurance Company, 462 A.2d 287, 287 (Pa. Super. 1983).

[J-3A-2020 and J-3B-2020] - 2 without deduction for depreciation, for an amount that is reasonably necessary, for the lesser of the repair or replacement of the damaged property, but for no more than the smallest of the following: (i) the applicable stated limit or other limit of insurance under this policy that applies to the damaged or destroyed dwelling or separate structure(s); (ii) the reasonable replacement cost of that specific part of the dwelling or separate structure(s) damaged for equivalent construction with materials of like kind and quality on the residence premises, determined as of the time of loss or damage; (iii) the reasonable amount actually necessarily spent to repair or replace the damage to the dwelling or separate structure(s); or (iv) the loss to the interest of the insured in the property. Reasonably necessary replacement cost does not include damage to property otherwise uninsured or excluded under this policy. When the cost to repair or replace damaged property is more than $2,500, we will pay no more than the actual cash value of the loss until actual repair or replacement is completed. If the dwelling or a separate structure is rebuilt or replaced at a different location, the cost [sic] described in subsection (ii) above are limited to the costs which would have been incurred if the dwelling or separate structure had been built or replaced at its location on the resident’s premises. * * * e. General contractor fees and charges will only be included in the estimated reasonable replacement costs if it is reasonably likely that the services of a general contractor will be required to manage, supervise and coordinate the repairs. However, actual cash value settlements will not include estimated general contractor fees or charges for general contractor’s services unless and until you actually incur and pay such fees and charges, unless the law of your state requires such fees and charges be paid with the actual cash value settlement.

[J-3A-2020 and J-3B-2020] - 3 Truck Insurance Policy (“Policy”) (Exhibit A to Wintersteen Amended Class Action

Complaint, 10/2/15) at 34-35 (R.R. 139a, 141a).3 Furthermore, the policies define “actual

cash value” as

the reasonable replacement cost at time of loss less deduction for depreciation and both economic and functional obsolescence. Policy at 6 (R.R. 111a).

Thus, where, as here, the cost of repairing or replacing a policyholder’s damaged

property exceeds $2,500, Insurer is first required to pay the ACV of the property at the

time of the loss to the policyholder (“step one”). Once the repair or replacement of the

damaged property is commenced, Insurer is then obligated (in “step two”) to pay the

depreciated value of the damaged property and also the expense of hiring a general

contractor,4 “unless the law of [Pennsylvania] requires” payment of GCOP as part of ACV.

It is this latter condition which is the core of the dispute between the parties.

Insurer paid Policyholders’ claims in accordance with this two-step process.

Specifically, after Policyholders utilized their own claims’ experts to prepare estimates of

the costs of repair and replacement of the damaged property, which, given the nature of

3 As noted, the policies at issue are identical. For ease of reference, our citations are to the Wintersteen policy. 4 As indicated, supra, GCOP is an acronym for “general contractor’s overhead and profit.”

As explained more fully by a trade journal of public insurance adjusters: “Overhead expenses represent those costs incurred by a general contractor to operate its business, but are not attributable to any one specific job.” Overhead and Profit: Its Place in a Property Insurance Claim at 2, Adjusting Today (2007), available at https://www.adjustersinternational.com/publications/adjusting-today/overhead-and profit/1. These include such things as administrative expenses attendant to running the general contractor’s business office, licenses and fees, salaries and benefits of office personnel, and advertising. Id. The general contractor’s profit is a percentage of the total cost of construction, and the percentage commonly used in the insurance industry is 20 percent. Id

[J-3A-2020 and J-3B-2020] - 4 the loss, included the services of a general contractor, and Policyholders requested

payment of these estimated costs, Insurer tendered to both Policyholders a “step one”

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Kurach, K., Aplt. v. Truck Ins. Exchange, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kurach-k-aplt-v-truck-ins-exchange-pa-2020.