Jeffrey Pye v. Fidlty Natl Prop & Cslty Ins ( 2015 )


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  •      Case: 14-40135   Document: 00513262839    Page: 1   Date Filed: 11/06/2015
    IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT
    United States Court of Appeals
    No. 14-40135
    Fifth Circuit
    FILED
    November 6, 2015
    Lyle W. Cayce
    BRIAN LOWERY, et al,                                                   Clerk
    Plaintiffs,
    v.
    FIDELITY NATIONAL PROPERTY AND CASUALTY INSURANCE
    COMPANY, a corporation,
    Defendant
    ---------------------------------------------------
    JEFFREY M. PYE; THERESA PYE,
    Plaintiffs - Appellees Cross-Appellants
    v.
    FIDELITY NATIONAL PROPERTY AND CASUALTY INSURANCE
    COMPANY, a corporation,
    Defendant - Appellant Cross-Appellee
    Appeals from the United States District Court
    for the Southern District of Texas
    Before JOLLY, HIGGINSON, and COSTA, Circuit Judges.
    COSTA, Circuit Judge:
    Case: 14-40135    Document: 00513262839    Page: 2   Date Filed: 11/06/2015
    Along with countless other structures on Galveston Island, Jeffrey and
    Theresa Pye’s home was left in shambles after Hurricane Ike. Although they
    received some compensation from both their flood and wind insurers, they
    brought this suit seeking additional coverage under the flood policy. After a
    bench trial, the court denied the Pyes’ claim for additional building coverage
    on the ground that the total recovery they had already received from insurers
    exceeded their total loss. As for contents coverage, the court awarded $2,500
    for some car parts damaged in the storm. Both sides appeal. Concluding that
    federal common law governing the National Flood Insurance Program
    recognizes the rule against double recovery, we affirm the ruling that the Pyes
    are not entitled to additional building coverage. But we vacate the personal
    property award to the Pyes as they now concede it was in error.
    I.
    Jeffrey and Theresa Pye owned a two-unit residential building in
    Galveston. In 2007, an appraiser estimated the market value to be $195,000.
    They lived in one of the units and rented the other. The building was insured
    against floods by Fidelity National Property and Casualty Insurance Co.,
    which participates in the National Flood Insurance Program.         Under the
    Program, FEMA allows private insurers to issue government-backed flood
    insurance using FEMA’s Standard Flood Insurance Policies (SFIPs). The Pyes
    had a SFIP issued by Fidelity with policy limits of $205,400 for building
    coverage and $50,000 for contents coverage, and $1,000 deductibles for each.
    A separate policy issued by the Texas Windstorm Insurance Association
    insured against wind damage.
    Hurricane Ike severely damaged the Pyes’ property when it made
    landfall in September 2008. They sought coverage from their wind insurer, and
    eventually brought suit and settled for $66,765.84, plus attorneys’ fees and
    expenses. The Pyes also made claims on their flood policy. Fidelity’s adjuster
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    inspected the damage and prepared a proof of loss—“a policyholder’s statement
    of the amount of money being requested, signed to and sworn to by the
    policyholder with documentation to support the amount requested” 1—that the
    Pyes signed. Fidelity paid $76,968.23 for building damage and $30,367.49 for
    contents damage. The payment excluded damaged car parts valued at $2,500.
    The Pyes felt shortchanged. Their lawyer commissioned a new estimate
    by Halley Lovato, who determined that the flood damage to their house
    amounted to $175,180. The lawyer then prepared a new proof of loss that
    claimed the policy limit (over $250,000), despite Lovato’s much lower estimate.
    Fidelity rejected the claim. In 2010, the Pyes sold their property, unrepaired,
    for $58,000.
    The Pyes filed this suit against Fidelity in 2011. Fidelity hired John
    Crawford to prepare a new damage assessment. He measured the actual cash
    value of the flood damage at $147,340.01—significantly more than what
    Fidelity initially paid.
    The parties consented to have the case tried by a magistrate judge and
    it proceeded to a bench trial. Fidelity argued that the Pyes’ proof of loss was
    invalid because the amount claimed (the full policy limit) was not supported
    by Lovato’s estimate, and thus the company could not be held liable. The court
    rejected this argument, holding that the Pyes were not responsible for their
    lawyer’s “unauthorized” overstatement of their claim, and that the proof of loss
    need not exactly match the submitted documentation in order to be valid. It
    therefore considered the proof of loss to be for the lower amount supported by
    the supporting documentation in the form of the Lovato estimate.
    1  See FEMA,         Proof   of    Loss,   https://www.fema.gov/media-library/assets/
    documents/9343.
    3
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    Once it resolved the proof of loss issue, the court determined the actual
    cash value of the flood damage. It found the estimate Crawford did for Fidelity,
    at a value of $147,340.01, to be more credible than Lovato’s. It then applied
    Texas’s “one satisfaction rule,” which bars plaintiffs from recovering twice for
    the same injury; the Pyes, the court held, could not recover more than the total
    damage to their home collected from both their wind and flood policies. It
    determined that the $143,734.07 the Pyes had already received for building
    damage—the $66,765.84 settlement from their wind insurer 2 and the
    $76,968.23 that Fidelity had already paid for building damage—plus the
    $58,000 received from the sale of the property exceeded the pre-Ike market
    value of $195,000.00. The court thus awarded nothing for building damage.
    With little discussion, however, it awarded $2,500 for car parts damaged in the
    flood. The parties filed cross appeals.
    II.
    “The standard of review for a bench trial is well established: findings of
    fact are reviewed for clear error and legal issues are reviewed de novo.” One
    Beacon Ins. Co. v. Crowley Marine Servs., Inc., 
    648 F.3d 258
    , 262 (5th Cir.
    2011).
    III.
    Fidelity argues that the $2,500 judgment for damaged car parts should
    be reversed because the policy does not cover “[s]elf-propelled vehicles or
    machines, including their parts and equipment.” 44 C.F.R. pt. 61, app. A(1)
    (SFIP) Art. IV(5). 3 Because the Pyes concede this was error, we reverse that
    award. We therefore need not address the other challenge Fidelity raises to
    2  The court held that because the wind insurer’s settlement did not allocate the funds
    between building damage and personal property damage, Fidelity was presumptively
    entitled to offset the entire amount. The Pyes do not challenge this holding on appeal.
    3 The terms of policies issued under the National Flood Insurance Program are set
    forth in the Code of Federal Regulations.
    4
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    the contents award: that the mismatch between the amount sought in the proof
    of claim and the estimate provided as supporting documentation renders the
    proof of claim invalid.
    IV.
    The only contested issue is thus the Pyes’ appeal of the ruling denying
    them additional coverage for damage to their building. The Pyes argue that
    the trial court erred in applying Texas’s “one satisfaction rule” to reduce the
    Pyes’ award by amounts they already received from Fidelity, their wind
    insurer, and from the sale of their property. Both parties agree it was error to
    apply Texas law.          Federal common law, not state law, governs the
    interpretation of the SFIP. SFIP Art. IX; Hanover Bldg. Materials, Inc. v.
    Guiffrida, 
    748 F.2d 1011
    , 1013 (5th Cir. 1984) (“When [SFIP coverage] disputes
    arise, they are resolved under federal law by drawing upon standard insurance
    law principles.” (internal citation and quotation omitted)). Fidelity argues,
    however, that federal common law likewise limits the Pyes’ coverage total
    recovery from both of their insurers to the total value of their loss.
    We agree. “[T]he reference to federal common law in the SFIP directs
    courts to employ standard insurance principles when deciding coverage issues
    under the policy.” Wright v. Allstate Ins. Co., 
    500 F.3d 390
    , 394 (5th Cir. 2007)
    (emphasis omitted). The rule applied by the magistrate judge is one such
    “standard insurance principle.” “One satisfaction rule” is, however, a label
    rarely used outside of Texas law or in the insurance context; courts and
    treatises more commonly refer to a bar on “double recovery.” See, e.g., Bradley
    v. Allstate Ins. Co., 
    620 F.3d 509
    , 521–22 (5th Cir. 2010) (discussing Louisiana’s
    law against “double recovery”); AAA Mid-Atl. Ins. Co. v. Ryan, 
    84 A.3d 626
    , 634
    (Pa. 2014) (recognizing a “long-standing prohibition” on “double recovery” for
    the same injury); Robichaux v. Nationwide Mut. Fire Ins. Co., 
    81 So. 3d 1030
    ,
    1038 (Miss. 2011) (stating that “double recovery for the same harm is not
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    permissible”); 12 COUCH ON INSURANCE § 175:6 (discussing when the issue of
    “double recovery” arises). The rule flows from the principle that “[p]roperty
    insurance creates a contract of indemnity.” 
    Id. § 175:5.
    “The fundamental
    principle of a property insurance contract is to indemnify the owner against
    loss, that is to place him or her in the same position in which he would have
    been had no accident occurred.” 
    Bradley, 620 F.3d at 521
    (internal quotation,
    citation, and punctuation omitted). Thus “both the extent and the limitation
    of recovery is found in the concept of making good the loss which the insured
    has sustained.” 12 COUCH ON INSURANCE § 175:5; see also 2 ALLAN D. WINDT,
    INSURANCE CLAIMS & DISPUTES § 10:1 (6th ed.) (“The total amount that an
    insured recovers under all applicable insurance policies cannot exceed the
    amount of the loss.”). We thus hold that the standard principle of property
    insurance barring double recovery applies to SFIP coverage.
    The Pyes argue that even if the bar applies generally, it is inapplicable
    here because the wind and flood policies are contracts that cover mutually
    exclusive risks. They cite our reasoning in GE Capital Commercial, Inc. v.
    Worthington National Bank, 
    754 F.3d 297
    (5th Cir. 2014), a case applying
    Texas law. In that case, the recipient of a fraudulent transfer sought a credit
    for another party’s settlement of a breach of contract suit arising out of the
    same transaction. 
    Id. at 300–02.
    We denied the credit, holding that Texas’s
    one-satisfaction rule is “limited to cases in which a plaintiff settles with an
    alleged joint tortfeasor.” 
    Id. at 308.
    That conclusion, however, involved the
    application of Texas’s one-satisfaction rule when “one claim sounds in contract
    and the other in tort,” and thus the settling and nonsettling parties “do not
    share a common theory of legal liability.” 
    Id. at 305
    n.6. We noted that
    “whether Texas’s one-satisfaction rule precludes multiple recoveries for the
    same injury under different insurance contracts” is a “distinct” question,
    because in such cases “the settling and non[]settling parties share[] the alleged
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    same contractual liability.” 
    Id. We expressed
    no conclusion on that latter
    question.
    Furthermore, we have rejected an argument nearly identical to the Pyes’
    in a case applying Louisiana law. The homeowners in Bradley v. Allstate Ins.
    Co., 
    620 F.3d 509
    , 523 (5th Cir. 2010), argued that “the mutually exclusive
    nature of the wind and flood policies” precluded their insurer’s entitlement to
    an offset. We noted that the dispute was fundamentally about “who receives
    the potential windfall from an overpayment,” the insurer or the insured. 
    Id. at 524.
    We ruled in favor of the insurer:
    [T]he district court first evaluates whether the insured has already
    been fully compensated by payments under wind and flood
    insurance. If the court concludes that the homeowners’ insurer is
    not liable for further payments to the insured because additional
    payments would result in a double recovery, then the homeowners’
    insurer effectively receives the benefit of the overpayment by the
    flood insurance.
    
    Id. We noted,
    however, that principles of subrogation mean that “the benefit
    will not necessarily serve to enrich the insurer.” 
    Id. Although Bradley
    was a diversity case applying Louisiana law, we see
    no indication that its application of Louisiana’s statutory bar on double
    recovery to policies covering mutually exclusive risks is inconsistent with the
    general insurance law principles that inform federal common law. We thus
    hold that the Pyes are not entitled to a double recovery—that is, their total
    coverage for all types of damage resulting from the storm cannot exceed their
    total losses resulting from that storm—notwithstanding the fact that the
    insurance policies cover different risks to the same property.
    Finally, the Pyes contend that the court misapplied the double recovery
    rule by using the pre-Ike fair market value of their home, as opposed to the
    actual cash value of their house, as the limit on their recovery. The SFIP
    entitled the Pyes only to an “actual cash value loss settlement” because their
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    house included two units. See SFIP Art. VII(V)(4)(b)–(c) (actual cash value
    settlement applies to two-family dwellings and units not used exclusively for
    single-family dwelling purposes). “Actual cash value” is defined in the SFIP as
    “[t]he cost to replace an insured item of property at the time of loss, less the
    value of its physical depreciation.” SFIP Art. II(B)(2). In assessing the flood
    damage to the property at $147,340.01, the district court properly used such a
    replacement cost minus depreciation calculation, the one submitted by
    Crawford.
    No calculation was presented, however, using that methodology for the
    entirety of the loss (that is, the loss attributable to both wind and flood
    damage). In determining the limit for double recovery, the district court thus
    accepted the only evidence of total loss before it: the $195,000 market value
    figure from the 2007 appraisal. The Pyes contend this was error in light of
    Bradley, which reversed a grant of summary judgment in favor of the insurer
    that relied solely on the market value of the house in applying the double
    recovery 
    bar. 620 F.3d at 520
    –23, 528. Because Louisiana law provides that
    “[a]ctual cash value is not necessarily synonymous with market value at the
    time of the loss” and the insureds had presented an alternative estimate of
    total loss based on the cost of rebuilding rather than market value, the district
    court “incorrectly held that there was no evidence suggesting the Bradleys had
    uncompensated losses.” 
    Id. at 520–23.
    Unlike in Bradley, the trial court here
    made a factual determination of total loss after trial in applying the double
    recovery bar. And the Pyes presented no competing figure of total loss based
    on replacement cost. See 
    id. at 523.
    Even if the double recovery bar should be
    calculated in this case using replacement cost minus depreciation, we therefore
    are not convinced that the evidence of fair market value would be irrelevant to
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    that calculation. 4 
    Id. at 520
    (“Actual cash value is not necessarily synonymous
    with market value at the time of loss.” (emphasis added)).
    But there is a more fundamental point from Bradley that makes it
    unnecessary for us to decide if market value is admissible, even if not
    controlling, evidence of an actual cash value determination that uses a
    replacement cost minus depreciation methodology.                   Bradley appropriately
    treated the question of the proper measure of recovery under a policy, which is
    controlled by policy language when defined in the contract as it is here, 5 as
    distinct from the question of how the bar on double recovery is applied. 
    Id. at 520
    –23 (treating the “actual cash value” due under the policy as a separate
    question than “measure of loss for purposes of determining double recovery”).
    Because double recovery is itself a common law insurance principle, those
    background principles of insurance law govern the proper measure for
    calculating it. 
    Id. at 522
    (using actual cash value, defined as replacement cost
    minus depreciation, for the cap on total recovery because Louisiana law uses
    that measure when no repairs have occurred). Indeed, it would pose problems
    to merely transfer the measure of recovery as defined in one policy into the
    “double recovery” calculation of total loss because the multiple policies
    providing coverage may use different methodologies. In this case, for example,
    the record does not indicate how recovery under the wind policy is valued. The
    SFIP’s definition of actual cash value as replacement cost minus depreciation
    thus does not control how the cap on total recovery should be calculated. Nor
    4 Indeed, the Pyes did not challenge admission of the 2007 appraisal on relevancy
    grounds, arguing only that it was hearsay. They renew that hearsay objection on appeal, but
    we find no error in the trial court overruling it.
    5 The homeowner’s policy in Bradley did not define actual cash value, so the court
    applied Louisiana law’s definition of “reproduction cost less 
    depreciation.” 620 F.3d at 520
    .
    As noted above, the SFIP policy at issue in this case provides that definition in the contract.
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    does Bradley’s use of that same standard as it was derived solely from
    Louisiana law. 
    Id. So how
    should the total loss amount be calculated when applying the
    double recovery bar under federal common law?            In a number of states
    (including the largest one in this circuit) fair market value is not just
    considered an indicator of actual cash value, it is considered the leading
    indicator. 12 COUCH ON INSURANCE § 175:24 (“[T]here is a priority of rules to
    determine actual cash value as follows, (1) where market value is easily
    determined, actual cash value is market value . . . .”); J.A. Tyler, Annotation,
    Test or criterion of “actual cash value” under insurance policy insuring to the
    extent of actual cash value at time of loss, 
    61 A.L.R. 2d 711
    § 3 (noting that
    although market value is the prevailing measure of damages to personal
    property, some courts also use it for real property when a “damaged or
    destroyed building has a market value”); Ghoman v. N.H. Ins. Co., 159 F.
    Supp.2d 928, 934 (N.D. Tex. 2001) (“Under Texas law, the term ‘actual cash
    value’ is synonymous with ‘fair market value.’” (citing cases)). In other states,
    fair market value is at least a factor to be considered under the increasingly
    applied “broad evidence rule.” Tyler, 
    61 A.L.R. 2d 711
    § 7[c] (“In recent years,
    there has been a tendency on the part of a substantial number of courts to
    reject reproduction or replacement cost, or market value, as the sole test or
    criteria of the actual cash value of buildings. These courts have relied upon
    what might be termed the broad evidence rule.”) That rule recognizes that
    “any evidence logically tending to the formation of a correct estimate of the
    value of the destroyed or damaged property might be considered by the trier of
    facts in determining ‘actual cash value’ at the time of loss.” 
    Id. at §
    5; see also
    J&H Auto Trim Co. v. Bellefonte Ins. Co., 
    677 F.2d 1365
    , 1369 (11th Cir. 1982)
    (applying broad evidence rule for assessing actual cash value under Florida
    law); Elberon Bathing Co. v. Ambassador Ins. Co., 
    389 A.2d 439
    , 443–45 (N.J.
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    1978) (same applying New Jersey law); Wis. Screw Co. v. Fireman’s Fund Ins.
    Co., 
    297 F.2d 697
    , 699–700 (7th Cir. 1962) (same applying Wisconsin law);
    McAnarney v. Newark Fire Ins. Co., 
    159 N.E. 902
    , 903–04 (N.Y. 1928) (early
    leading case adopting the broad evidence rule when fire destroyed breweries
    that no longer had significant economic use because of Prohibition).
    The broad admissibility rule makes sense. In a well-functioning market,
    any difference between the fair market value of a residential property and its
    replacement cost minus depreciation should be minimal. See 
    McAnarney, 159 N.E. at 903
    (recognizing that “[v]alue ascertained by market price is
    necessarily expressive of a suitable deduction for depreciation” in explaining
    why deducting depreciation from market value would result in a double
    deduction). Otherwise, supernormal profits could be obtained by constructing
    new homes in the area. In such cases, the broad evidence rule thus allows the
    factfinder to weigh the competing calculations and determine which is most
    credible for the particular case. And in other situations, when the lack of a
    robust market or market failures makes one or more methods of calculation
    difficult, the broad evidence rule provides flexibility. See 
    id. at 904
    (identifying
    situations when market value may not be ascertained). Because so many
    states would allow consideration of market value as either the leading measure
    of loss or, under the broad evidence rule, a permissible measure, we conclude
    that the federal common law governing flood policies at least allows for
    consideration of market value in determining the total loss amount for double
    recovery purposes. See, e.g., 
    Wright, 500 F.3d at 394
    (stating that federal
    common law governing federal flood policies is informed by “standard
    insurance principles”); see also Manning v. Hayes, 
    212 F.3d 866
    , 874 (5th Cir.
    2000) (affirming that federal common law may be determined by reference to
    analogous state law, so long as such principles are consistent with federal
    policy (citing cases)).
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    As the fair market value of $195,000 was the only evidence of total loss
    submitted at trial, the district court did not err in concluding that the money
    the Pyes had already received in excess of $200,000 precluded any additional
    recovery for building damage. We will thus not disturb the judgment entered
    against the Pyes on their claim for additional building coverage.
    The judgment is AFFIRMED in part and REVERSED in part. We
    RENDER a take-nothing judgment in Fidelity’s favor.
    12