In the summer of 1998, the home of Mr. & Mrs. Tritschler was damaged by rain. They filed a claim under their homeowners policy from Allstate Insurance, and Allstate hired a general contractor – we’ll call it “XYZ Construction” – to perform the needed repairs. XYZ Construction provided to Allstate a written estimate that totaled about $44,000, an amount that included a 10% profit and 10% overhead charges for XYZ.
The Tritschlers assigned payment of their insurance proceeds to XYZ, and XYZ began work to repair the home. However, before the repairs were completed, the Tritschlers became dissatisfied with the quality of the work. After XYZ left the job, the Tritschlers informed Allstate that they planned to make the remaining repairs themselves.
When Allstate offered to “cash out” the repair claim, the Tritschlers accepted. Without investigating whether XYZ’s work was truly substandard, Allstate paid XYZ $26,200 for the work it had performed. In addition, Allstate paid the Tritschlers $11,500 – an amount equal to the difference between XYZ’s estimate and the amount paid to XYZ, less the overhead and profit charges contained in the estimate. Allstate’s $11,500 payment to the Tritschlers was accompanied by a letter that stated, “If you decide to use a general contractor, please submit signed contract or paid bill and [Allstate] will reimburse the contractor overhead and profit.”
After the house was repaired, the Tritschlers submitted to Allstate an actual cash value proof of loss and a demand for $36,000. That amount included $8,000 for general contractor’s overhead and profit, even though the Tritschlers did not use a general contractor.
In reimbursing the Tritschlers, Allstate paid the entire amount of the claim, plus $5,000 (based on Allstate’s estimate of remaining repairs), but deducted the overhead and profit portion of the claim.
LAWSUIT
The Tritschlers sued Allstate, claiming that Allstate had breached its contract by failing to pay the general contractor’s overhead and profit. There were other allegations as well – concerning alleged bad faith, collaboration with XYZ to make substandard repairs, etc., and a claim for punitive damages – but much of the attention focused on whether the Tritschlers’ decision not to use a general contractor excused Allstate from paying the overhead and profit portion of the claim. (XYZ was also named in the suit, but the claims against the contractor were not pertinent to the central theme of this article.)
In Superior Court, Allstate filed a motion for summary judgment on all elements of the Tritschlers’ complaint. The trial court granted Allstate’s motion, and the Tritschlers appealed.
APPEAL
The Tritschlers argued, in Superior Court and again in their appeal, that the actual cash value coverage (as provided in their policy under a subsection [b]) included the contractor’s overhead and profit, and, thus, they were entitled to receive those amounts regardless of whether they used a general contractor.
Allstate countered that the provision cited by the Tritschlers applied only to insureds who choose not to repair their properties. Allstate repeated its successful trial court argument that, since the Tritschlers did repair their property, Allstate was obliged to pay only for coverage pertaining to the building structure reimbursement provision (a subsection [c]) of the policy, which provided not for contractor overhead and profit but, rather, “the amount actually and necessarily spent” to repair or replace the damaged property.
FINDINGS
The Court of Appeals did not view this issue with the same degree of clarity as did the trial judge in granting Allstate’s motion for summary judgment:
“[T]he trial court erred in finding as a matter of law that Tritschler was not entitled to receive the actual cash value under subsection (b) and that his claim was governed solely by subsection (c). Nevertheless, we may still uphold the trial court’s grant of summary judgment to Allstate on the issue of contractor fees if it is correct for any reason.”
The Court then sought to determine whether the “actual cash value” in the Allstate policy included general contractor overhead and profit when no contractor is used. The Court noted that, while an endorsement attached to the policy defined “actual cash value” as “the current cost to repair or replace covered property with new material of like kind and quality less a deduction for physical deterioration and depreciation, including obsolescence,” the policy did not specify how Allstate calculated the “cost to repair or replace covered property” or whether the value included contractor overhead and profit fees.
Finding no binding judicial precedent in Arizona, the Court looked to other states for persuasive guidance.
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