William Hatcher v. MDOW Insurance Company

903 F.3d 724
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedSeptember 7, 2018
Docket17-2410
StatusPublished

This text of 903 F.3d 724 (William Hatcher v. MDOW Insurance Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
William Hatcher v. MDOW Insurance Company, 903 F.3d 724 (8th Cir. 2018).

Opinion

MELLOY, Circuit Judge.

William Hatcher appeals following an adverse jury verdict on his claim seeking additional insurance benefits for smoke and fire damage at his home. He argues the district court misinterpreted his insurance policy as an actual-cash-value policy rather than a replacement-cost policy. In addition, he raises an evidentiary issue, arguing the district court improperly prevented him from testifying as to the pre-fire, depreciated value of the damaged portions of his home. We conclude his policy was an actual-cash-value policy. We also conclude Mr. Hatcher is not entitled to relief on his evidentiary claim. Mr. Hatcher testified as to a pre-fire depreciation amount, he failed to show that the court admonished the jury to disregard his testimony, he did not otherwise make an offer of proof as to what additional testimony he sought to provide, and he failed to provide a transcript of the final day of trial. We affirm the judgment of the district court.

I.

Mr. Hatcher's home was damaged by smoke and fire in 2015. He and his son had built the home together approximately *726 twenty years prior to the fire. Mr. Hatcher owned and lived in the home during the intervening years. The home had new kitchen appliances at the time of the fire, but many components of the home (furnace, carpet, roof, etc.) were twenty years old. The home suffered severe fire damage in some areas and smoke damage throughout more extensive areas.

Mr. Hatcher maintained casualty insurance for his home with defendant MDOW Insurance Company, renewing annually after initial issuance of the policy in January 2011. Soon after the fire, an adjuster from MDOW arrived at the scene and met with Mr. Hatcher. Mr. Hatcher indicated he wished to remain at the home during reconstruction. In fact, he had already borrowed a camper from his son, placing the camper in a carport at the damaged home. The adjuster agreed to pay a per diem for use of the camper and provided a $5,000.00 advance. Mr. Hatcher and his son commenced making repairs at the home, performing much of the tear-out and demolition work themselves and disposing of materials in a ravine on the property. Less than one month later, the adjuster provided Mr. Hatcher with an additional $1,040.00 for living expenses.

The adjuster initially estimated the actual cash value of damage to Mr. Hatcher's home as $41,550.02. Mr. Hatcher disagreed with the adjuster's estimate and interpretation of the policy. Mr. Hatcher tendered an estimate from his brother (a contractor) for $92,895.00. He also tendered an estimate from a different, unrelated contractor for $97,080.00. In addition, he hired an attorney.

The adjuster then increased his estimate of damages to the home to $63,593.32, acknowledging that certain items he had deemed salvageable should be replaced. In November 2015, MDOW issued two checks to Mr. Hatcher's attorney: $63,593.32, representing MDOW's estimate of the actual-cash-value damages, and $12,556.77 for damage to Mr. Hatcher's personal property. In total, MDOW paid Mr. Hatcher $82,190.09.

The third-party, unrelated contractor performed repairs to Mr. Hatcher's home for the estimate amount tendered by MDOW ($63,593.32). In addition, Mr. Hatcher alleges that he and his son personally performed approximately $20,000 of additional repairs and demolition work. Ultimately, the repairs to Mr. Hatcher's home included some repairs and some upgrades. For example, Mr. Hatcher installed a metal roof (where previously there had been shingles) and hardwood floors (where previously there had been vinyl). He also replaced some twenty-year-old components with new components. But, as already noted, certain other expenses were not included in repair costs paid to the unrelated contractor because Mr. Hatcher and his family provided labor and disposed of damaged materials without charge. Moreover, some damaged components were merely repaired. In receiving the checks and making repairs, Mr. Hatcher did not agree to MDOW's estimate of damages, and MDOW did not make its payment contingent on such assent.

Mr. Hatcher commenced this action, alleging MDOW acted in bad faith. He sought punitive damages as well as additional payment under the policy for his repairs. Mr. Hatcher attached to his complaint the operative policy for 2015. The attached policy included an actual-cash-value endorsement as well as a declarations page identifying the actual-cash-value endorsement as a form attached to the policy. To a large extent, the policy attached to the complaint speaks for itself. The 2015 policy, without looking at the actual-cash-value endorsement, is a hybrid policy. Some categories of harm are covered for replacement cost, and other categories are *727 covered only for actual cash value. The endorsement, however, expressly deletes replacement cost and applies actual cash value to all relevant coverage terms. Disputes in this case relate primarily to what was included in earlier years' versions of the policy and whether changes upon annual renewal were conducted in a manner so as to make the actual-cash-value endorsement in the 2015 policy effective.

Mr. Hatcher filed a motion for partial summary judgment, asking "that the 'actual cash value' endorsement be stricken from the contract, that the Defendant be prohibited from arguing the same to the jury in this case, and for all other fit and proper relief." He attached to his motion an affidavit and a thirty-six-page, purportedly complete copy of the "original" policy. The document he attached included no declarations page and contained no actual-cash-value-endorsement. Because he attached no declarations page to the policy accompanying his affidavit, the attachment, in fact, was merely a basic form policy. It referenced no policy period, failed to identify the insured or the insurer, referenced no limits of liability, identified no premium, and identified no deductibles. In other words, the policy attached to his affidavit was obviously incomplete. Nevertheless, he specifically stated in his affidavit that "[w]hen I purchased insurance for the house, I remember being offered the policy of insurance which is attached to this affidavit at Exhibit 'B'. It had 36 pages." He also stated in his affidavit that "[t]he endorsement must have been added after I agreed to the attached policy ... [and that he] never agreed to change the terms from 'replacement costs' to 'actual cash value.' "

MDOW resisted Mr. Hatcher's motion and filed its own motion for partial summary judgment. In its own motion, MDOW sought a defense judgment on the bad-faith claim, characterizing its own treatment of Mr. Hatcher's insurance claim as involving good-faith disagreements as to policy interpretation and damages amounts. In resisting Mr. Hatcher's motion concerning policy provisions and in presenting its argument concerning policy interpretation as relevant to the bad-faith claim, MDOW attached affidavits, renewal-notice letters, and annual policies.

Each policy that MDOW submitted included a declarations page, and each policy included an actual-cash-value endorsement. For the three policies issued for 2011, 2012, and 2013, the declarations page included a section entitled "Additional Endorsements Attached to Policy." For these three years, the actual-cash-value endorsement was attached but not listed on the declarations page.

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Bluebook (online)
903 F.3d 724, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/william-hatcher-v-mdow-insurance-company-ca8-2018.