Loveday v. Essential Heating Cooling Refrigeration, 08ca4 (9-15-2008)

2008 Ohio 4756
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 15, 2008
DocketNo. 08CA4.
StatusUnpublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 2008 Ohio 4756 (Loveday v. Essential Heating Cooling Refrigeration, 08ca4 (9-15-2008)) 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
Loveday v. Essential Heating Cooling Refrigeration, 08ca4 (9-15-2008), 2008 Ohio 4756 (Ohio Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

DECISION AND JUDGMENT ENTRY
{¶ 1} After her home suffered water damage, Phyllis Loveday hired her paramour to perform the repairs. She claims the insurance company's adjustor promised to supervise the repairs and make sure they were done properly. Upon subsequently discovering asbestos contamination in the work area, she sued her former boyfriend, the adjustor, and the Cincinnati Insurance Company.

{¶ 2} Now Loveday appeals the trial court's decision granting summary judgment to Cincinnati Insurance Company and argues that Cincinnati's motion, which focused largely upon its duties under the insurance policy, "missed the point" and thus failed to address her promissory estoppel claim. She contends the basis of her claim is that Cincinnati's adjuster made assurances and *Page 2 representations to her concerning his oversight and the quality of work performed on her flooded basement and that Cincinnati is therefore responsible, under an agency theory, for the faulty repairs that caused asbestos damage to her home. While Cincinnati's motion did not expressly refer to Loveday's "promissory estoppel" claim, it does demonstrate the lack of a genuine issue of material fact concerning whether the repairs caused asbestos damage, and thus, whether the adjustor's representations caused her to suffer any injury. Because Loveday then failed to meet her reciprocal burden to set forth specific facts beyond the conclusory allegations in her Complaint on this issue, summary judgment on her claim was proper.

I. The Facts
{¶ 3} Loveday owns a very old Victorian home that is insured by Cincinnati. In December 2002, she presented a loss claim for water damage to her home after an outside spigot froze and burst causing her basement to flood. Kevin Wechter, an insurance adjustor for Cincinnati, handled the claim. Loveday hired David Smith, who owns Essential Heating, Cooling, Refrigeration, Inc. ("Essential Heating and Cooling"), to repair the damages, including repairing and/or replacing the boiler, boiler burner, and the hot water tank. At the time, Smith was her boyfriend and was also acting under a power of attorney for her. According to Wechter, he issued checks to Loveday totaling $12,896.44 for this claim. The next month, Smith reported another loss after a pipe in the upstairs bathroom burst causing water to leak through the floor and resulting in some flooding in the basement. For this claim, Wechter paid out a total of $28,000.21 *Page 3 to Loveday. Loveday again hired Smith, who still had her power of attorney, to do the work. In December 2003, Loveday requested Wechter to reopen her claim because Smith "disturbed" asbestos insulation when he installed a new boiler. Cincinnati denied her request because there was no evidence that flooding had caused the damage to the pipes and because Cincinnati was not responsible for the workmanship of the person she chose to do the work.

{¶ 4} Loveday filed this action against Smith, Essential Heating and Cooling, Cincinnati, and Wechter.1 In her Complaint, Loveday alleged that she was very ill in 2002 and was not living in her home at the time the pipes burst; she was incapacitated and had previously executed a general power of attorney giving Smith legal authority to act on her behalf. She hired Smith to repair the damage to the home, and Cincinnati agreed to cover the loss. She also alleged that Wechter led her to believe that he had inspected the premises and approved the contractor, i.e., Smith. She alleged that she was unable to personally supervise the repairs because she was living outside the home and that Wechter made several assurances to her that he was making trips to her home to monitor the repair work and that he "would take of her." Specifically, she alleged that both "individual Defendants" assured her that the boiler could be replaced without disturbing the asbestos casing around her furnace and that "she relied upon the Defendants to her detriment." She claimed that after returning to her home in 2004, she discovered that Smith's repair work was inadequate; the furnace boiler was improperly replaced, and the asbestos casing around the surrounding pipes was "disturbed" causing her to suffer from exposure to the asbestos. *Page 4

{¶ 5} In the third count of Loveday's Complaint, she incorporated all of her previous factual allegations and then set forth her claims against Wechter and Cincinnati. She alleged that Cincinnati agreed to cover the loss, including the proper replacement of the furnace boiler. She alleged that Smith, who was "approved" by Wechter and paid by Cincinnati, failed to provide adequate repairs and return the home to its state prior to the loss. Finally, she alleged that Wechter did not "take care of" either her or her home. She then prayed for judgment against Cincinnati and Wechter for "breach of contract and wrongful denial of insurance." She did not expressly assert a promissory estoppel claim.

{¶ 6} Cincinnati and Wechter filed a joint motion for summary judgment and supported the motion with the deposition testimony of Loveday and Smith, as well as the affidavits of Wechter and Anthony F. Baumgard, an engineer who inspected Loveday's basement.2 Loveday filed a response and presented her own affidavit and the affidavit of Winston Saunders, an "expert" in the filed of asbestos contamination and removal. In its reply memorandum, Cincinnati *Page 5 moved to strike Saunders' affidavit because Loveday had been uncooperative in producing him for a deposition and/or presenting a curriculum vitae. In its decision, the trial court ordered Saunders' affidavit stricken and granted judgment in favor of Cincinnati and Wechter.3 The trial court did not give the basis for its decision granting judgment in Cincinnati's favor. Loveday now appeals.

II. Assignment of Error
{¶ 7} Loveday raises the following assignment of error:

I. THE LOWER COURT ERRED BY GRANTING DEFENDANTS/APPELLEES' MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT SINCE THERE REMAINED MATERIAL ISSUES OF FACT FOR THE TRIER OF FACT TO DETERMINE.

III. Standard of Review
{¶ 8} In reviewing a summary judgment, the lower court and the appellate court utilize the same standard; we review the judgment independently and without deference to the trial court's determination.Doe v. Shaffer, 90 Ohio St.3d 388, 390, 2000-Ohio-186, 738 N.E.2d 1243,1245. Summary judgment is appropriate only when: (1) there is no genuine issue of material fact; (2) reasonable minds can come to but one conclusion when viewing the evidence in favor of the nonmoving party, and that conclusion is adverse to the nonmoving party; and (3) the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Id. See alsoBostic v. Connor (1988), 37 Ohio St.3d 144, 146, 524 N.E.2d 881, and Civ. R. 56(C).

{¶ 9}

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Bluebook (online)
2008 Ohio 4756, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/loveday-v-essential-heating-cooling-refrigeration-08ca4-9-15-2008-ohioctapp-2008.