Orkin Exterminating Company, Inc. v. DelGuidice
This text of 790 So. 2d 1158 (Orkin Exterminating Company, Inc. v. DelGuidice) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
ORKIN EXTERMINATING COMPANY, INC., Appellant,
v.
Christopher DeLGUIDICE, Appellee.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, Fifth District.
Douglas B. Brown and Daniel J. Gerber of Rumberger, Kirk & Caldwell, Orlando, for Appellant.
*1159 David Oliver, John A. Boudet and Michelle M. Perez-Sotolongo of Greenberg Traurig, P.A., Orlando, for Appellee.
PLEUS, J.
Orkin Exterminating Company appeals a judgment awarding Christopher DelGuidice $300,000 in his breach of contract action against Orkin. Two years after DelGuidice completed his 10,000 square foot $1.3 million dollar home, DelGuidice purchased from Orkin a termite protection plan. The termite protection plan has, in addition to the promise to repair termite damage, the promise to retreat to prevent or control a re-infestation. The contract between Orkin and DelGuidice is essentially a guarantee, renewable by DelGuidice, that for as long as he pays the annual premium, Orkin will:
AT NO EXTRA COST, re-treat when required to prevent or control a re-infestation of subterranean termites and repair new damage to the structure and contents caused by Subterranean Termites, provided it is established that such new damage was caused by Subterranean Termites after the date of initial treatment, and that at the time of discovery of the new damage, the damaged areas are infested with live Subterranean Termites.
The breach of this guarantee and the jury award to DelGuidice of "stigma," or diminution in value, damages of $300,000 is the subject of this appeal.
Orkin maintains that the jury should not have considered a loss in market value arising from the stigma of having a home with an extensive history of termites because the parties' contract specifies that the exclusive remedy for a breach of the contract is retreatment and repair. Orkin points out that by the date of trial, in addition to providing seventeen apparently unsuccessful retreatments, it had paid DelGuidice over $78,000 for repairs to his home. Orkin concedes that it may have made mistakes in treating the DelGuidice home, but it stresses that DelGuidice's remedy under the parties' contract, as for any existing or future damage, and for any existing or future infestations, is to keep paying the renewal premium and, in return, Orkin will be obligated to continue retreatment if and when necessary to prevent or control re-infestations and to repair damages caused by new termite activity. Because stigma damages are not contemplated by the terms of the parties' contract, we reverse.
Diminution in value damages, or stigma damages, not otherwise provided for in a contract can be awarded in Florida on a breach of contract theory only in limited circumstances. Diminution in value damages are appropriate when the remedy of repair or replacement is impracticable. A prime example would involve substantial economic waste. In Grossman Holdings Ltd. v. Hourihan, 414 So.2d 1037 (Fla. 1982), the Florida Supreme Court adopted subsection 346(1)(a) of the Restatement (First) of Contracts (1932) with respect to breaches of construction contracts. The court, in addition to adopting and quoting this subsection in its opinion, quoted the comment on subsection 346(1)(a). The comment to the subsection states:
The purpose of money damages is to put the injured party in as good a position as that in which full performance would have put him; but this does not mean that he is to be put in the same specific physical position. Satisfaction for his harm is made either by giving him a sum of money sufficient to produce the physical product contracted for or by giving him the exchange value that that product would have had if it had been constructed. In very many cases it makes little difference whether the measure *1160 of recovery is based upon the value of the promised product as a whole or upon the cost of procuring and constructing it piecemeal. There are numerous cases, however, in which the value of the finished product is much less than the cost of producing it after the breach has occurred. Sometimes defects in a complete structure cannot be physically remedied without tearing down and rebuilding, at a cost that would be imprudent and unreasonable. The law does not require damages to be measured by a method requiring such economic waste. If no such waste is involved, the cost of remedying the defect is the amount awarded as compensation for failure to render the promised performance.
Id. at 1039 (emphasis added). In United States Steel Corp. v. J.C. Benefield, 352 So.2d 892, 894 (Fla. 2d DCA 1977), the second district succinctly summarized this law limiting a damages award by stating, "the general rule appears to be that the cost of restoration will not be awarded if it is more than the diminution in market value."
The purpose of providing an alternative method of computing damages on the basis of diminution in value (the difference between the value of that which was provided and the value of what should have been provided) is to prevent economic waste and to prevent, as well, potential windfalls to plaintiffs. If a plaintiff can be made whole by being compensated by a repair, the law generally does not allow an additional windfall type of recovery for any diminution in value which occurs beyond the cost of repair. On the other hand, if the diminution in value is less than the cost of repair, diminution in value becomes the standard because, to repair in such a circumstance would amount to economic waste. Applying these principles to the instant case, the diminution in value damages of $300,000 could have properly been presented to the jury if competent substantial evidence had been presented that the cost to repair existing termite damage and the cost of providing effective termite eradication procedures would have constituted economic waste. In other words, had evidence been presented that the cost of repair was substantially greater than the diminution in value, diminution in value would have been the proper standard to apply.
While DelGuidice maintains that the termites could not be eradicated without having his house torn down, DelGuidice's termite expert at trial, Dr. Roger Gold, did not in any way suggest that such a drastic procedure was necessary to solve the termite problem or for that matter, that modifications to the structure and repair of the structure would approach anything near $300,000. Asked if he believed termites would visit the house again next year as they had the past seven years, Dr. Gold simply testified, "there's a high probability that on schedule [next year] that there will be a swarm of termites in that home." On the specific question of solving the termite problem without tearing the house down, the following exchange took place between Dr. Gold and an attorney for Orkin:
Q. So then you agree that there are ways to solve the termite problems without totally destroying the house.
A. Without totally destroying the house.
Q. In fact, it's your opinion that by further studying the home, maybe opening up some of the walls minimally, you believe you can stop the termites from coming into the home. Don't you believe that?
A. I have no idea whether I can stop the termites from coming into the home by opening up a few areas in that house. *1161
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790 So. 2d 1158, 31 Envtl. L. Rep. (Envtl. Law Inst.) 20880, 2001 Fla. App. LEXIS 9692, 2001 WL 786785, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/orkin-exterminating-company-inc-v-delguidice-fladistctapp-2001.