Osborne v. Chapman

574 N.W.2d 64, 1998 Minn. LEXIS 39, 1998 WL 30435
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedJanuary 28, 1998
DocketC0-96-2216
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 574 N.W.2d 64 (Osborne v. Chapman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Osborne v. Chapman, 574 N.W.2d 64, 1998 Minn. LEXIS 39, 1998 WL 30435 (Mich. 1998).

Opinion

OPINION

TOMLJANOVICH, Justice.

This case presents the question of whether a negligent tenant is impliedly a “eo-insured” under an insurance policy held by the landlord which provides coverage for lost rents and, if so, whether such coverage bars an action by the landlord against the tenant for the lost rents. We also must consider whether the negligent tenant is liable for attorney fees incurred by the landlord in pursuing a claim against the insurer.

Appellants Randy and Carolyn Osborne decided to lease their Moorhead home on a trial basis. Respondent Richard Chapman agreed to rent the home from the Osbornes at a rate of $600 per month. 1 The lease specified a term beginning July 15,1992, and ending June 15,1993. 2

Chapman and his family moved into the home in late June 1992 and lived there until November 15, 1992, when the home was heavily damaged by fire. Chapman, who admits that his negligence caused the fire, paid no rent to the Osbornes from December 1992 onward.

Sometime around the signing of the lease, Randy Osborne and Chapman agreed to approach their respective insurance agents to arrange for appropriate coverage, although they apparently did not discuss the specifics or put the agreement in writing. Chapman procured a tenant’s policy. Osborne testified that he asked his insurance agent whether his existing homeowner’s policy (an “HO-3”) would provide adequate coverage if the home were rented out, and the agent assured him that it did. The Osbornes’ insurer, MSI, disputes that Osborne informed the agent of his plans to lease the home.

In fact, under MSI’s underwriting rules, the homeowner’s policy should have been changed to a “DP-3” fire policy once the Osbornes were no longer residing in the home. Had the fire policy been offered to the Osbornes, they would have had to pay an additional premium for lost rent coverage. However, Coverage' D of the Osbornes’ homeowner’s policy (“Loss of Use”) guaranteed compensation for “the fair rental value of that part of the ‘residence premises’ rented to others or held for rental by [the insured,] less any expenses that do not continue while the premises is [sic ] not fit to live in.”

Immediately after the fire, the Osbornes notified MSI that the house had been damaged and that they had lost some personal property in the fire. MSI, in turn, notified Chapman’s insurer of the loss. In February or March 1993, the Osbornes sought payment from MSI for lost rents pursuant to Coverage D of the homeowner’s policy; however, MSI denied the claim. MSI based its decision “primarily on * * * the lease,” which obligated Chapman to pay rent through the lease term if he were responsible for the damage that made the house uninhabitable. Secondarily, MSI rejected the claim because the home was not a “residence premises” as defined by the policy, since the Osbornes were not living there. 3

*66 The Osbornes met with more success on their Coverage A (dwelling) and C (personal property) claims, although progress was slow. According to MSI, it offered to settle the Coverage A claim in late February, but the Osbornes insisted upon resolving the coverage issues as a “package.” Over the next four months, the Osbornes and representatives of MSI held meetings and exchanged letters. After MSI and the Osbornes finally reached an understanding regarding the A and C coverages, the major structural work on the home began in late June 1993.

By November 1993, the home was once again fully habitable.' Both Randy Osborne and MSI claim adjuster Ralph Matthiesen testified that the repair of the home took one year from the time of the fire not because the damage was so extensive, but because of disputes between and among the insurers and the Osbornes as to the estimates, whether or whose coverage applied to various items of damage, and how particular items should be repaired or replaced. Not surprisingly, each blamed the other for the delay. Once the repairs were complete, the Os-bornes put the home on the market, and it sold in early January 1994.

In October 1995, the Osbornes sued Chapman and his wife on breach of contract and negligence theories and the Osbornes’ insurance agent for negligent misrepresentation. The Osbornes amended their complaint in March 1996 to include a claim against MSI for failure to settle. Only the claims against Chapman proceeded to trial. 4 After a bench trial, the district court held that Chapman was liable to the Osbornes for loss of use equalling $7200 (twelve months’ rent at $600 per month) and for their lost time, attorney fees, and other expenses (totalling $7376.44) incurred in pursuing their claims against MSI, plus interest but less $200, the amount of Chapman’s security deposit. The district court also denied Chapman’s motion for a new trial or judgment notwithstanding the verdict.

The court of appeals reversed as to both items of damage. Osborne v. Chapman, 562 N.W.2d 1, 4 (Minn.App.1997). First, the court determined that Coverage D of the Osbornes’ homeowner’s policy, the loss of use provision, applied to cover the lost rents. Id. at 3-4. The court further held that “in the absence of an express agreement between the landlord and the tenant regarding the provision of insurance coverage, a tenant is a co-insured with the landlord for the purpose of shielding the tenant from liability for insured losses.” Id. at 3. Because Chapman was the Osbornes’ “co-insured,” the court concluded, the Osbornes could not sue Chapman for the lost rents. Id. at 3^1

In addition, the court of appeals reversed the award of attorney fees on two grounds. First, the court of appeals held that the third-party litigation rule applies only to cases in which the expenditures result from the commission of an intentional tort. Id. at 4. Second, the court held that the attorney fees and other expenditures incurred by the Osbornes were proximately caused not by Chapman’s negligence, but by MSI’s breach of its insurance contract with the Osbornes. Id.

This court granted review, and we now reverse in part.

I.

Holding that a tenant is a “co-insured” under an insurance policy held by the landlord, the court of appeals concluded that the Osbornes could not sue Chapman. Id. at 3-4. In reaching this conclusion, the court relied upon its earlier decision in United Fire & Casualty Co. v. Bruggeman, 505 N.W.2d 87 (Minn.App.1993), pet. for rev. denied (Minn., Oct. 19, 1993).

The Bruggeman court held that an insurance company had no right of subrogation against a negligent tenant for payments it made to the landlord to cover damage to the structure because the landlord and tenant were “co-insureds” under the landlord’s fire *67 policy. Bruggeman, 505 N.W.2d at 89. The court adopted the position articulated in Sutton v. Jondahl:

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Bluebook (online)
574 N.W.2d 64, 1998 Minn. LEXIS 39, 1998 WL 30435, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/osborne-v-chapman-minn-1998.