Lbm Realty, Llc, d/b/a Summer Place Apartments, an Indiana Corporation v. Hillary Mannia, an Indiana Resident

19 N.E.3d 379, 2014 Ind. App. LEXIS 520, 2014 WL 5461791
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 28, 2014
Docket71A03-1402-PL-66
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 19 N.E.3d 379 (Lbm Realty, Llc, d/b/a Summer Place Apartments, an Indiana Corporation v. Hillary Mannia, an Indiana Resident) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lbm Realty, Llc, d/b/a Summer Place Apartments, an Indiana Corporation v. Hillary Mannia, an Indiana Resident, 19 N.E.3d 379, 2014 Ind. App. LEXIS 520, 2014 WL 5461791 (Ind. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

OPINION

VAIDIK, Chief Judge.

Case Summary

Following a fire in an apartment building owned by LBM Realty LLC d/b/a Summer Place Apartments (LBM), LBM’s insurance company Greater New York Mutual Insurance Company (Insurer) filed an insurance subrogation action in LBM’s name against LBM’s tenant, Hillary Man-nia. Mannia filed for summary judgment, urging the trial court to adopt a no-subro-gation rule—citing Sutton v. Jondahl, 532 P.2d 478 (Okla.Ct.App.1975), and its progeny as support—which would preclude LBM’s complaint against her. The trial court granted summary judgment in favor of Mannia, and LBM now appeals. We find that Indiana law supports a largely case-by-casé approach to subrogation actions by a landlord’s insurer against a tenant and, therefore, does not preclude LBM from pursuing its claims against Mannia, at least with respect to damage to the leased premises. Accordingly, we affirm in part, reverse in part, and remand with instructions.

Facts and Procedural History

In July 2010, a fire—resulting in $743,402.86 in damages—occurred at Summer Place Apartments (the Apartments), an apartment complex in Granger, Indiana, owned by LBM. Appellant’s App. p. 3. Mannia was a tenant in the Apartments, having signed a one-year lease in March 2010. 1 Included within the lease are several relevant lease provisions, which we have condensed and paraphrased below:

• A provision titled “Insurance,” which is silent as to LBM’s obligation to maintain property insurance, but states in bold type: “Owner recommends the Resident obtain renter’s insurance.” This provision also states that in the event the leased premises are totally destroyed by some cause beyond the owner’s control, the lease will terminate as of that date (and to the extent that the premises are only partially destroyed, there will be an abatement in rent).
• A provision titled “Rules,” which incorporates an attached list of “Rules *382 and Regulations” into the lease, the most relevant of which reads as follows:
7. Resident must pay repair costs for all damages to Resident’s Apartment, Apartment Community facilities, and common areas caused by Resident or members of Resident’s household or guests ...
• A “Save Harmless Clause,” which states: “Resident shall indemnify and save harmless Owner from and against any and all claims or actions for damages to persons or property,” including claims in which it is asserted that Owner has been negligent.
• A provision stating that “ ‘Premises’ shall mean only that portion of Owner’s property contained within the interior walls of the dwelling unit described herein.... ”
• Within “Miscellaneous Provisions”:
At the end of the term, Resident shall return the Leased Premises to Owner in the same good condition, reasonable wear and tear excepted. Resident is and shall be responsible and liable for any injury or damage done to the Leased Premises, common areas or any property of Owner caused by [Rjesident, any occupant, or any other person whom Resident permits to be in or about the Leased Premises.
This section also states, “Resident shall permit no waste[ 2 ] of the Leased Premises nor allow the same to be done, but Resident shall take good care of the same ...”

See id. at 5-14.

After the fire at the Apartments, Insurer filed a subrogation action in LBM’s name against Mannia, alleging in its complaint that Mannia was in breach of contract and negligent. Id. at 1-4. Specifically, the complaint states that Mannia breached her contract with LBM in “one or more of the following ways”:

(1) Carelessly and improperly disposed of smoking materials by placing same in a plastic bottle and in close proximity to the vinyl siding on the balcony patio wall of the leased premises; and/or
(2) Carelessly and improperly allowed guests to dispose of smoking materials by placing same in a plastic bottle and in close proximity to the vinyl siding on the balcony patio wall of the leased premises[;] and/or
(3) Otherwise failed to comply with her obligation to return the premises in the same condition as when she moved in, reasonable wear and tear excepted.

Id. at 2. In regard to its negligence claim, LBM repeated (1) and (2) above, and also alleged that Mannia had “otherwise acted carelessly and negligently.” Id. at 3.

Mannia filed a motion to dismiss LBM’s complaint. In her brief in support of the motion, Mannia discussed the three different approaches used by courts around the country to address subrogation claims of landlords’ insurers against negligent tenants. See id. at 25-27. These approaches include:

*383 (1) the no-subrogation (or implied co-insured) approach (i.e., the “Sutton rule”), in which, absent an express agreement to the contrary, a landlord’s insurer is precluded from filing a subro-gation claim against a negligent tenant because the tenant is presumed to be a co-insured under the landlord’s insurance policy; (2) the pro-subrogation approach, in which, absent an express term to the contrary, a landlord’s insurer is allowed to bring a subrogation claim against a negligent tenant; and (3) the case-by-case approach, in which courts determine the availability of subrogation based on the reasonable expectations of the parties under the facts of each case.

See LBM Realty, LLC v. Mannia, 981 N.E.2d 569, 573 (Ind.Ct.App.2012) (internal footnotes omitted). Mannia then argued that the trial court should adopt the first approach—the no-subrogation/implied co-insured rule articulated in the Oklahoma case of Sutton v. Jondahl, 532 P.2d 478, otherwise known as the Sutton rule— and dismiss LBM’s complaint. Id. The trial court agreed—adopting this rule and then applying it—and granted Mannia’s motion to dismiss, concluding that LBM was precluded from pursuing its subrogation claims because Mannia was an “additional insured” under LBM’s insurance policy. Id. at 576.

LBM appealed, and this Court reversed and remanded, without adopting either approach:

Despite the current state of Indiana law that permits insurers to bring a subro-gation claim against a tenant, the trial court did not test LBM’s complaint against the backdrop of the law as it existed. Instead, the trial court adopted the no-subrogation approach, thereby precluding LMB’s claims against Man-nia. It seems that the trial court put the proverbial cart before the horse by first adopting a rule precluding subrogation claims against tenants and then reviewing LBM’s complaint in light of that newly adopted rule.

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19 N.E.3d 379, 2014 Ind. App. LEXIS 520, 2014 WL 5461791, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lbm-realty-llc-dba-summer-place-apartments-an-indiana-corporation-v-indctapp-2014.