Oates v. Progressive Insurance Co., Unpublished Decision (7-20-2001)
This text of Oates v. Progressive Insurance Co., Unpublished Decision (7-20-2001) (Oates v. Progressive Insurance Co., Unpublished Decision (7-20-2001)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law.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.
Opinion
Appellant had a judgment against Joseph Heeter ("Heeter") in the amount of $1,600 for unpaid rent. Heeter's motorcycle was stolen on October 31, 1998. The motorcycle was insured by appellee. Heeter reported the theft to appellee on November 1, 1998, and on that same date, appellee created a reserve of $7,405 regarding the loss. On December 16, 1998, appellant sent appellee an "Affidavit and Order and Notice of Garnishment of Property other than Wages" ("notice of garnishment"). On December 23, 1998, appellee responded that it had no money, property, or credits of Heeter in its possession.
On February 3, 1999, appellee reached an agreement with Heeter as to the value of his stolen motorcycle and subsequently compensated him for his loss.1 On March 5, 1999, appellant filed a complaint against appellee, alleging that at the time he filed his notice of garnishment, appellee was holding Heeter's property in the form of the reserve funds it had set aside in response to the claim he filed. The matter initially went to arbitration, and the arbitrator awarded appellant $1,650. Appellee appealed the award to the trial court, where the matter was heard by the trial court on February 22, 2000. In a February 24, 2000 judgment entry, the trial court reversed the arbitrator's award.
Appellant has filed a timely appeal and raises the following assignment of error:
"The trial court's decision which denied appellant's garnishment of a judgment-debtor's insurance reserve funds is contrary to law."
Appellant's assignment of error and the brief he submitted to this court are premised on his assumption that the reserve that appellee established for appellant's claim was Heeter's property. We disagree.
At trial, Gary Traicoff ("Traicoff"),2 an actuary employed by appellee, testified as to the nature of insurance reserves. He testified that in establishing a reserve for a motorcycle theft, it is the practice of appellee to attempt to determine the total amount of money needed to pay all of the motorcycle thefts in the country for which appellee has liability, then divide the total dollar amount of its motorcycle theft reserve by the total number of pending claims. Traicoff further testified that approximately 35 percent of all claims that have some reserve attached to them end up closing without a payment.
In short, the $7,405 figure arrived at as the reserve for Heeter's claim did not represent a figure specific to his possible recovery; rather, appellee had established a reserve of $7,405 for every policyholder in the country making a motorcycle theft claim at that time. By establishing the reserve, appellee had not made a determination that Heeter would be entitled to recover any portion of that $7,405. If no determination had been made that Heeter was entitled to recover on his claim, appellee could not have been holding his property at that time.
Kandy Walker ("Walker"), a claims investigator employed by appellee, testified that she received the paperwork concerning appellant's notice of garnishment on December 22, 1998. At that time, the investigation into the theft of Heeter's motorcycle was still in progress. (Appellee did not compute the value of Heeter's motorcycle until January 8, 1999.) On December 23, 1998, Walker completed the notice of garnishment, stating that appellee did not hold any of Heeter's property, and then returned it to appellant.
R.C.
____________________________ JUDGE DONALD R. FORD
NADER, J., GRENDELL, J., concur.
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