Reigstad v. Pilger

316 F. App'x 322
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedMarch 6, 2009
Docket08-60309
StatusUnpublished

This text of 316 F. App'x 322 (Reigstad v. Pilger) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Reigstad v. Pilger, 316 F. App'x 322 (5th Cir. 2009).

Opinion

PER CURIAM: *

Appellants David Pilger and Delta Title and Escrow Company (collectively “Pil-ger”) appeal from a judgment in favor of Gordon and Karen Reigstad (“Reigstads”) arising out of claims for legal malpractice and negligent misrepresentation. The Reigstads alleged that they retained Pilger to handle all aspects of the closing of the purchase of real estate in Ocean Springs, Mississippi, and Pilger negligently failed to secure property insurance coverage on the property, causing the Reigstads to have no insurance to cover the damage to their property from Hurricane Katrina. Pilger also represented to the Reigstads at the closing that the property was insured, when in fact it was not. This diversity case was tried without a jury, and the court 1 entered findings of fact and conclusions of law. For the reasons discussed herein, we affirm.

I. Background

Delta Title and Escrow Company was owned by David Pilger, a lawyer. The Reigstads retained Pilger to represent them on the closing of a property in Ocean Springs, Mississippi. By letter dated August 15, 2005, Pilger wrote to the *324 Reigstads: “Please call us with the name of your Homeowner’s Insurance Agent. We must have proof of coverage prior to closing. We will collect and pay any necessary premiums at closing.” Gordon Reigstad contacted his carrier, USAA, who informed Mr. Reigstad that it did not provide windstorm coverage. USAA referred Mr. Reigstad to The Insurance Barn. Mr. Reigstad contacted The Insurance Barn and spoke with its agent, Kim Rushing. Although Ms. Rushing could not specifically recall what she told Mr. Reigstad, the trial court made a factual finding that Ms. Rushing informed Mr. Reigstad during the call “that his premiums would be collected at closing.”

Ms. Rushing later faxed an instruction sheet directly to Pilger. The instruction sheet stated that “[n]o coverage for windstorm can be put into effect until the signed application and check for the premium is received in our office.” At trial, Pilger acknowledged receipt of the instruction sheet and admitted that he did not inform the Reigstads or their real estate agent of the instructions.

The closing took place on August 24, 2005. The Registads; Nancy Dorroh, the Reigstads’ realtor; David Pilger; and Charlotte Farisse, the seller’s agent, attended the closing. The Reigstads were to deliver to Pilger the purchase price for the property 2 and a sum representing one year’s hazard insurance premium set by The Insurance Barn. Pilger specifically assured the Reigstads that insurance coverage was in place on the home at the closing. Pilger did not dispute that he made the statement to the Reigstads, but he testified that he could not remember specific statements. The Reigstads testified that they would not have gone forward with the closing unless insurance coverage was in place.

On the afternoon of August 24, 2005, Hurricane Katrina was in the news. Pil-ger knew that a storm was pending, but he could not recall any details at the time of the trial. On August 25, 2005, the day after the closing, Pilger sent the Reig-stads’ unsigned application for coverage and check to The Insurance Barn, which received the documents on August 26, 2005. Upon receipt of the package, The Insurance Barn called Pilger, informed him that the application was unsigned, called Mr. Reigstad, and faxed Mr. Reig-stad an application which he signed and returned the same day. By the time The Insurance Barn received the signed policy, it could not bind coverage because Hurricane Katrina had entered the Gulf of Mexico earlier that day.

Hurricane Katrina struck the Mississippi Gulf Coast on August 29, 2005. The Reigstads’ new house was severely damaged by Hurricane Katrina. At the trial, Mr. Reigstad, a civil structural engineer, testified that the house was built on stilts. The base elevation was about fifteen (15) feet, and the water level inside the first level of the house was about four (4) feet. Therefore, approximately nineteen (19) feet of water was in the Reigstads’ yard. The parties stipulated that the Reigstads sustained damages in the amount of $327,000.00. Mr. Reigstad testified that, based on what he saw when he went to the house and how the windows blew out, he estimated that 95% of the damage “was done long before the water got there.”

In their application of windstorm and hail coverage, the Reigstads sought coverage for the house in the amount of $220,000 and coverage for contents in the amount of $25,000. There was a 2% deductible for the coverage. 3 The trial court *325 rejected the Reigstads’ request for the value of the home, stating that “Plaintiffs should not be awarded the value of the home because if insurance had been procured, Plaintiffs would only be entitled to a maximum of $220,000, the policy limits.”

The Reigstads had two written estimates for damages: one estimate for $363,473.08 was based on repairs made to the house, but the estimate does not specify whether wind or water caused the damage; another estimate for $117,391 was based on damages caused specifically by wind damage. In making the damages calculation, the trial court stated as follows:

The Court finds that the Baird estimate (P-14) is the best evidence of wind and/or wind driven rain damage to the home. Baird’s estimate of $117,391.37 should be enhanced by the replacement of the HVAC of $5176 (P-15) to $122,567.37. However, it is clear when the Court compares the estimate (P-14) and the actual receipts (P-15) which Plaintiffs expended, that this estimate (P-14) was not wholly realistic.

The court then stated that the “wind and wind driven water damage to the home prior to any flood damage” was $163,500, half of the stipulated amount of damages of $327,000. The court awarded this amount minus the deductible that would have been due under the policy, $4,400, resulting in an award in the Reigstads’ favor in the amount of $159,100.

The court added the following:

The Court notes that there was no expert testimony presented with regard to the wind versus flood issue. Further, the Court does not have before it the terms of an insurance policy which would have been in place if insurance had been procured. Finally there is very little explicit documentation with regard to the correlations between Baird’s wind damage estimate found in (P-14) and the actual receipts of the Plaintiffs’ (P-15) for repair of the entire dwelling. The Court has attempted to correlate these damages to the best of its ability.

Pilger appealed.

II. Discussion

Pilger does not contest negligence on appeal. Pilger argues, however, that in order to recover damages from Pilger, the Reigstads had to prove that had Pilger not been negligent, they would have had insurance coverage for the specific damages to their property. To do that, Pilger contends that the Reigstads had to produce some evidence of the terms and conditions of the insurance policy that would have been issued to them had Pilger not been negligent.

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Bluebook (online)
316 F. App'x 322, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reigstad-v-pilger-ca5-2009.