Roberts v. Hail Unlimited, Div. of Intern. Bus.

358 N.W.2d 776
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 4, 1984
DocketCiv. 10682
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 358 N.W.2d 776 (Roberts v. Hail Unlimited, Div. of Intern. Bus.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Roberts v. Hail Unlimited, Div. of Intern. Bus., 358 N.W.2d 776 (N.D. 1984).

Opinion

GIERKE, Justice.

Hail Unlimited appeals from a judgment entered on a jury verdict with respect to the issue of damages. 1

Randy Roberts, a/k/a Randall Roberts [Roberts], brought an action against Hail Unlimited, a division of International Business & Mercantile Re-Assurance Co., a corporation, claiming a breach of the hail insurance contract which he executed with Hail Unlimited on May 17, 1982. Roberts contends that Hail Unlimited never offered him, as the contract provided, the actual amount of hail loss that he suffered. Trial was had to a jury on February 14, 1984, and the jury determined, through a special verdict, that Roberts’s hail loss amounted to $43,974.45. The district court then entered judgment against Hail Unlimited in the amount of $43,974.45, together with interest of $3,643.16 and costs of $173.00, for a total of $47,790.61. On March 5, 1984, the district court denied Hail Unlimited’s motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict or, in the alternative, for a new trial. Hail Unlimited filed a notice of appeal on April 16, 1984. We affirm.

Roberts, a Stutsman County grain farmer, purchased a crop hail insurance policy from Hail Unlimited. Through this policy, Roberts insured a total of nine fields of barley, durum, and wheat against hail damage in an amount not exceeding $150 per acre. Roberts claimed that Fields 1, 2, 3, 4, *778 5, 6, and 8 received hail damage as a result of a hail storm which occurred on the evening of June 13, 1982. Roberts claimed no loss on Field 7 or Field 9. The following is a breakdown of the type of crops and the number of acres on which Roberts received hail damage:

FTF.T.D CROP ACRES
1. Barley 60
2. Durum 80
3. Durum 146
4. Wheat 65
5. Wheat .143
6. Wheat 142
8. Durum 94

On the morning after the hailstorm, Roberts and his mother went to his farm, located 20 miles southwest of Jamestown, to inspect his fields for hail damage. Roberts reported the loss to Ron Venjohn, an agent with Hail Unlimited. On June 15, 1982, Venjohn and two adjusters, Henry Sehroe-der and Dan Bachmeier, visited Roberts, looked briefly at the damaged fields, and took a count of the plants per ten-foot strip of crop on each field. The adjusters noted that they would be back in a couple of weeks to make a better determination of the actual loss. Roberts contends that an adjustment could have been made at that time.

On July 6, 1982, Schroeder and Venjohn visited the Roberts farm to estimate the loss on Field # 1, and concluded that the loss was 25 percent. No settlement was made at that time with respect to Field # 1.

Roberts requested another adjuster, and on July 15, 1982, Ken Becker was sent to the Roberts farm. Hail Unlimited instructed Becker to check the condition of Roberts’s fields and come to some kind of settlement. Roberts and Becker discussed the percentage of loss on the barley crop, Field # 1. Becker determined that the wheat and durum were not mature enough to calculate a loss at that time, so he returned on August 9.

On August 9, Roberts settled with Becker for a 25 percent loss on Field # 1, the barley crop. The 25 percent loss was based on an estimated yield of 42 bushels per acre compared to Roberts’s actual yield. On that same day, they discussed the losses on the durum and wheat crops on Fields 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, and 8. At trial, Becker testified that he and Roberts agreed to settle the wheat and durum loss after harvest, using the same method for computing the loss as Becker used for the barley crop. Becker testified that he called Roberts on September 9, 1982, at which time Roberts furnished him with his actual yields on the wheat and durum crops. On September 14, 1982, Roberts prepared and served a summons and complaint on Hail Unlimited. On September 25, Roberts met with Walt Streifel, company field supervisor, and Richard Palmer. At that time Roberts presented the calculations he had made as to the percentages of crop loss.

On September 28, three adjusters — Walt Streifel, Ted Lettenmaier, and Charles Luna — arrived at the Roberts farm to inspect the damaged wheat and durum fields. The fields were inspected and counts were made once again of the plants per ten-foot strip of crop. Roberts was given a Proof of Loss statement to sign. The Proof of Loss, prepared by Charles Luna, was based on a combination of several factors: plant stubble counts, kernel counts, and an estimated yield of 42 bushels per acre absent hail damage.

Roberts refused to sign the Proof of Loss statement, claiming that the amounts stated therein were inadequate. He proceeded with the suit against Hail Unlimited for what he contended was the actual loss and for breach of contract.

At trial, Roberts presented his calculations on the percentages of loss. Roberts arrived at the percentages of loss by comparing the plant count on each field with an average count of 249 plants per ten-foot strip on Field #7, the field with no hail damage. For example, two plant counts which were taken on Field # 2 averaged 117 plants per ten-foot strip. That figure was divided by 249, the average count on Field #7, and then subtracted from 100% for a loss of 53.3%. This percentage was multiplied times $150, the amount of insurance coverage per field, to arrive at $99.79 *779 per acre loss. The per-acre loss figure was multiplied by the number of acres in Field # 2, which was 80, to reach a total loss of $6,396.00. Roberts’s computations, which appear in his amended complaint, and which were testified to at trial, are, in pertinent part:

“2. S'/üNE'/i 19-138-65 — 80 acres Durum 53.3% loss x $150 = $79.95 loss per acre or $ 6,396.00
“3. NW'A 17-138-65 — 146 acres Durum 60.8% loss X $150 = $91.20 loss per acre or $13,315.20
“4. SW'A 17-138-65 — 65 acres Wheat 47.5% loss X $150 = $71.25 loss per acre or $ 4,631.25
“5. SW‘/4 20-138-65 — 143 acres Wheat 55.4% loss x $150 = $83.10 loss per acre or $11,883.30
“6. SE1/) 20-138-65 142 acres Wheat “41.1% loss X $150 = $61.65 loss per acre or $ 8,754.30
NW/i 20-138-65 — 94 Durum 58.1% loss X 150 = Í loss per acre or .15 $ 8,192.10

, In addition to Roberts’s testimony, the jury heard evidence from three area farmers as to their observation of Roberts’s crops after the hailstorm and evidence concerning the average yields in the Stutsman County area and various factors which affect crop yields.

Hail Unlimited introduced testimony on how it calculated the amounts contained in the Proof of Loss statement. Hail Unlimited based its calculation on an estimated yield of 42 bushels per acre absent hail damage as compared to Roberts’s actual yield, which figures also took into account the number of kernels in a head and the number of plants per ten-foot strip of crop.

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Bluebook (online)
358 N.W.2d 776, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roberts-v-hail-unlimited-div-of-intern-bus-nd-1984.