Lakewood Manufacturing Company v. The Home Insurance Company of New York

422 F.2d 796
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedApril 3, 1970
Docket19413
StatusPublished

This text of 422 F.2d 796 (Lakewood Manufacturing Company v. The Home Insurance Company of New York) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lakewood Manufacturing Company v. The Home Insurance Company of New York, 422 F.2d 796 (6th Cir. 1970).

Opinion

COMBS, Circuit Judge.

The plant of Lakewood Manufacturing Company at Westlake, Ohio, was damaged by fire on October 3, 1961. Lakewood was insured under twelve separate policies of business interruption insurance written by the defendant insurance companies. The parties were unable to agree on the amount of business interruption loss resulting from the fire and, in March, 1963, the dispute was submitted to appraisal in accordance with a provision of the policies. On April 10, 1963, Lakewood filed separate suits on all twelve policies in the Common Pleas Court for Cuyahoga County, Ohio. The defendant companies caused eleven of the suits to be removed to the United States District Court for the Northern District of Ohio. The defendant in the twelfth suit is an Ohio corporation and that case was not removed. It is said in briefs that it is still pending in Common Pleas Court.

By appraisal award submitted on September 25, 1964, the umpire and one of the appraisers agreed that Lakewood’s business interruption loss resulting from the fire was $152,177.11 plus $30,996.00 in expediting expenses. The .total award was $183,173.11.

The eleven separate suits were consolidated in district court and, on the companies’ motion, the issue of validity of the appraisal award was tried separately to the court. The court held .that the appraisal award of September 24, 1964, was “void and not a bar to the maintenance of these actions by plaintiff.” Evidence on the amount of loss was later heard by the district judge and Lakewood’s recovery under the policies was fixed at $277,787.00. This is a consolidated appeal by the insurance companies from the district court’s judgment.

Lakewood manufactures a variety of machine parts primarily for sale to a few large customers. During the period here involved, the bulk of Lakewood’s production consisted of pinsetter parts for its principal customer, the Brunswick Corporation. Parts were also manufactured for Otis Elevator Company and Cadillac Motor Company.

The fire started in the paint room and from there spread to the office, the tool room (used for maintenance and repair of production equipment), and the tool crib (the storage area for daily supplies). Because of the fire damage these facilities were relocated in other parts of the plant. Little damage was done to the actual production area or to machinery, and operations were resumed within forty-eight hours after the fire. But, operations admittedly were hampered during the succeeding .three months’ period — October through December, 1961 — by reason of the fire damage. The effect of the fire on operations after that period is vigorously contested, primarily because on January 9, 1962, a strike occurred at Brunswick which lasted until April 6, 1962. During the course of the strike, shipments to and payments from Brunswick were drastically reduced although Lakewood apparently was not precluded from producing Brunswick parts and adding them to inventory in anticipation of future demands.

*798 The insurance policies provide that, in the event of damage to or destruction of real or personal property by a peril insured against, the insurance company is liable

“[F]or the Actual Loss Sustained by the insured resulting directly from such interruption of business, * * * for only such length of time as would be required with the exercise of due diligence and dispatch to rebuild, repair or replace such part of the property herein described as has been damaged or destroyed * * * ”
It is stated in the appraisal award: “The umpire finds that the period from October 3, 1961 to May 2, 1962 was a reasonable time in which to rebuild the building and ,to move and relocate the machinery and equipment which had to be reconstructed and replaced on account of the fire on October 3, 1961, but must also recognize and find that the strike at Brunswick was the principal cause of the decrease of .the sales value of production of Lakewood from January 9, 1962, and that this fact must be taken into consideration in the determination of the actual cash value of the loss sustained by Lakewood.”

The appraisal team arrived at the amount of .the award by using the potential production and actual profit figures submitted by Lakewood’s appraiser for the period from the date of the fire to May 2, 1962. These figures were prorated, however, from the date of the fire to January 9, 1962, allowing a net profit rate of ten per cent. The effect of this computation was to terminate the period of business interruption loss on January 9, 1962, the date of the Brunswick strike.

The initial question, and we think the decisive one, is whether the district court erroneously set aside the appraisal award.

Generally, a court will not interfere with an appraisal award but, to the contrary, will indulge in every reasonable presumption to sustain it in the absence of fraud, mistake, or misfeasance. A court will not substitute its judgment for that of the appraisers or set aside an award for inadequacy or excessiveness unless it is so palpably wrong as to indicate corruption or bias on the part of the appraisers. 44 Am.Jur.2d Insurance § 1719 (1969).

The law of Ohio, applicable here, is essentially in line with the general rule. In Ohio fraud or manifest mistake is a proper legal basis upon which to set aside an appraisal award. Baltimore & Ohio RR v. Stankard, 56 Ohio St. 224, 46 N.E. 577 (1897). To constitute manifest mistake, the mistake must be of such character that the arbitrator or appraiser would have corrected it had it been called to his attention; a mistake of judgment is not manifest mistake. Pfleger v. Renner, 13 Ohio App. 96 (1920). See Bates v. Pennsylvania RR, Ohio App., 33 N.E.2d 678, 26 Ohio L.Abst. 144 (App.1937).

The district court’s rationale in setting aside the appraisal award is as follows:

“If the actual loss sustained by plaintiff by reason of interruption of business caused by the fire had ended on January 9, 1962, an express finding of that fact should have been made by the umpire, and no determination of a fixed rebuilding period extending beyond that date would have been necessary. By reason of the fact that the only expressed time period found by the umpire was the reasonable rebuilding period, it is the Court’s conclusion that the award must be construed as finding a period of business interruption as a result of the fire extending from October 3, 1961 to May 2, 1962, subject to the fact that the strike at Brunswick had to be considered in determining plaintiff’s actual loss sustained.
*•> * * * * *
“Had the umpire made a firm finding that the period of interruption caused by the fire ended on January 9, 1962 and that there was no actual loss sustained thereafter, that would *799 present a question of judgment which would not be subject to review by this Court. The award, as this Court believes it must be properly construed, having adopted the theory that the disruption of the plaintiff’s manufacturing facilities as a result of the fire extended to May 2, 1962 and then having failed to consider that fact in arriving at the ultimate conclusion, is subject to being set aside by this Court.”

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Related

Aetna Casualty & Surety Co. v. American Surety Co.
64 F.2d 577 (Fourth Circuit, 1933)
Pfleger v. Renner
13 Ohio App. 96 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 1920)
Bates v. Pennsylvania Rd
33 N.E.2d 678 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 1937)

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Bluebook (online)
422 F.2d 796, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lakewood-manufacturing-company-v-the-home-insurance-company-of-new-york-ca6-1970.