Ringelman v. Citizens Property Insurance Corp.

228 So. 3d 602, 2017 WL 3795873
CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedSeptember 1, 2017
DocketCase 5D16-260
StatusPublished

This text of 228 So. 3d 602 (Ringelman v. Citizens Property Insurance Corp.) 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.

Bluebook
Ringelman v. Citizens Property Insurance Corp., 228 So. 3d 602, 2017 WL 3795873 (Fla. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

Appellant, Joseph Ringelman, appeals a final judgment entered in his favor following his suit for breach of contract against his insurer, Citizens Property' Insurance Corporation (“Citizens”). Ringelman argues on appeal that the trial court erred by staying execution of the final judgment until he provides Citizens with a signed contract for completion of the necessary subsurface repairs to his home, which was damaged by sinkhole activity. Considering Citizens’s representations during oral argument, we affirm. ■

Citizens issued Ringelman a homeowner’s insurance policy that provided coverage limits of $225,900. The policy included the following provisions concerning sinkhole damage:

SECTION I—PERILS INSURED AGAINST
The following is added to SECTION I— PERILS INSURED AGAINST:
Sinkhole Loss.
1. We insure for direct physical loss to , property covered under Section I caused by the peril of “sinkhole loss,” including-the costs incurred to:
a. Stabilize the land and building; and
b. Repair the.foundation;
In accordance with the recommendations of the professional engineer who verifies the presence of a “sinkhole loss” in compliance with Florida sinkhole testing standards and in consultation with you.
The professional engineer must be selected or approved by us.
,2. This peril does not increase the limit of liability applying to the covered property.
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SECTION I—CONDITIONS
Loss Settlement paragraph 3.b.(5) is added as follows:
(5) In the event of a “sinkhole loss”:
(a) We will pay for “Sinkhole loss,” subject to (e)(ii) below;, up to the applicable Section I—Property Coverage Limit of Liability shown in your Declarations.
(b) We will pay no more than the actual cash value of the damaged property;, not including underpinning or grouting or.any-.other repair tech-ñique performed below the existing foundation of the building, until yon enter- into a contract for the perform? anee of building stabilization or . foundation repairs.
(c) Once you enter into such' contract, we will, pay the amounts necessary to begin and perform such repairs as the work is performed and as the expenses are incurred. ,
(d) We may'at our option, and with your written approval and written approval,, of any lienholder, make payment directly to .the persons selected -by you to perform the land and building .stabilization and foundation repairs.
(e) If repair has begun and the professional engineer selected or approved by. us determines that the repairs will exceed the applicable Limit of Insurance, we- will at our option; either:
(i) Complete the professional engineer’s recommended repairs; or
(ii) Pay the policy limits without a reduction for the repair expenses incurred.

*604 In June 2011, Ringelman notified Citizens that he discovered damage to the floors and walls of his home purportedly-caused by sinkhole activity. At the conclusion of the claims process, Citizens extended coverage for the sinkhole loss, informing Ringelman that it would pay $208,322.36 to stabilize his home after he provided Citizens with a signed contract to complete the subsurface repairs. 1 Ringelman responded by sending Citizens a “Sinkhole Demand Package,” requesting a total of $329,110.56 to effect the stabilization repairs. When negotiations reached an impasse, Ringelman filed suit against Citizens for breach of contract, requesting that the jury determine the amount required to effectuate the repairs. The jury returned a verdict against Citizens, finding that it “breached the policy for below ground damages caused by sinkhole activity.” The jury determined that “the total amount of subsurface repair costs” amounted to $445,000.

Post-trial, Citizens moved for remittitur, reasoning that the jury’s award “exceed[ed] the available insurance coverage by at least $219,000, which does hot include any prior payments for the deductible.” Citizens further argued in opposition to Ringelman’s motion for entry of final judgment that any duty to-pay the claim must be preceded by Ringelman providing it with a signed contract to complete the necessary repairs. Ultimately, the lower court granted Citizens’s motion for remittitur, reducing the verdict “to the insurance policy limits ($225,900), minus the deductible and previous payments.” Ringelman filed a “qualified acceptance of remittitur,” explaining that he “reserv[ed] his right to challenge ... the portion of the order that requires Mr. Ringelman .to enter into a contract to repair the sinkhole-damaged property when the cost of those repairs ... far exceed the policy limits and the amount of the remitted judgment.”

After a hearing at which the parties attempted to agree on the language of the final judgment, Citizens proposed a final judgment that included the following provisions:

(A) The verdict is remitted to subject insurance policy limits ($225,900.00), minus. the deductible and- any previous payments, if any.
(B) The-Plaintiff must use the net proceeds from the remitted monetary final judgment, after consideration of the reasonable attorney’s fees and reasonable litigation costs, to repair the sinkhole-damaged property; unless, Defendant pursuant to the subject policy, chooses to exceed the policy limits in the repair of the property.
(C) Execution of this Final Judgment shall be stayed pending the Plaintiff providing Defendant with signed contracts to complete the stabilization and/or cosmetic repairs at the insured property.
(D) That given the Plaintiff is the prevailing party in this action, he is entitled to an award of his reasonable attorney’s fees, costs, and interest in the matter as lawfully appropriate.
(E) The Court retains jurisdiction to determine the amount of attorney’s fees, costs, and interest that the Plaintiff may recover from Defendant.

Ringelman maintained his position that, because the trial court remitted the verdict to-the policy limit, the proposed final judgment placed him in a precarious position wherein he would have to “enter into a contract to, quote, repair, for a house that *605 can’t be repaired for the $225,000.” The trial court disagreed, entering a final judgment containing the aforementioned provisions requested by Citizens. Ringelman now challenges the portion of the final judgment staying execution until he provides' Citizens with, a signed contract to complete the necessary repairs.

“The issue in this case concerns construction of an insurance policy which is a question of law subject to de novo review.” Wash. Nat’l Ins. Corp.

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Bluebook (online)
228 So. 3d 602, 2017 WL 3795873, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ringelman-v-citizens-property-insurance-corp-fladistctapp-2017.