101 Ocean Blvd., LLC v. Foy Insurance Group, Inc. & a. ( 2021 )


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    THE SUPREME COURT OF NEW HAMPSHIRE
    ___________________________
    Hillsborough-northern judicial district
    No. 2019-0067
    101 OCEAN BLVD., LLC
    v.
    FOY INSURANCE GROUP, INC. & a. 1
    Argued: January 9, 2020
    Opinion Issued: March 19, 2021
    Cronin, Bisson & Zalinsky, P.C., of Manchester (John G. Cronin, John F.
    Bisson, and Daniel D. Muller, Jr. on the brief, and Mr. Cronin orally), for the
    plaintiff.
    Upton & Hatfield, LLP, of Portsmouth (Russell F. Hilliard on the brief and
    orally), and of Concord (Nathan C. Midolo on the brief), for defendant Foy
    Insurance Group, Inc.
    HANTZ MARCONI, J. Defendant Foy Insurance Group, Inc. (Foy) appeals
    a verdict rendered after a jury trial in Superior Court (Brown, J.) in favor of the
    plaintiff, 101 Ocean Blvd., LLC (Ocean), finding that Foy was negligent for
    failing to advise Ocean to purchase sufficient insurance coverage to rebuild a
    hotel, damaged in a 2015 fire, in compliance with the current building code
    and awarding damages to Ocean. We affirm.
    1   The other defendant named in the plaintiff’s original complaint is not a party to this appeal.
    I. Facts
    The jury could have found the following facts. Ocean is owned by Albert
    J. Bellemore, Jr., a businessman and real estate developer. In 2006, Ocean
    purchased the Ocean Boulevard hotel in Hampton. The hotel had been
    constructed in the 1920s, and did not conform to contemporary building codes.
    The hotel had a convenience store on the ground level that sold “pretty much
    everything.” The hotel also had a lobby floor, a second floor with an office and
    “a small two-bedroom apartment,” and third and fourth floors with hotel
    rooms.
    Since the early 2000s, Bellemore worked with Foy as his insurance agent
    for several properties. Shortly after purchasing the hotel in 2006, Ocean,
    through Foy, purchased a $1.3 million replacement cost policy for the
    structure. By 2015, Bellemore “had 14 or 15 different [insurance] policies in
    force with Foy.” His annual premiums “were just shy of fifty thousand dollars.”
    In 2011, Bellemore’s primary contact at Foy, Heidi SanSouci, expressed
    concerns about the limits of Ocean’s coverage on the hotel property, and
    recommended that he increase it to approximately $2 million. Bellemore
    declined at that time because of the recession. SanSouci made the same
    recommendation in 2012 and 2013. In 2013, Bellemore took SanSouci’s advice
    and purchased the additional coverage, which she placed with Lloyd’s of
    London.
    Bellemore frequently relied upon SanSouci’s recommendations because
    he did not “know anything about insurance,” he trusted her judgment and
    insurance experience, and he appreciated her attention to detail and good
    service. For instance, in 2013, SanSouci informed Bellemore that there were
    “several coverages” that she “fe[lt] should be addressed” as to the insurance for
    the hotel property. She noted that Ocean lacked flood insurance coverage and
    that the annual premium for such coverage was $2,702. She further observed
    that the current insurance policies did not cover liquor liability and that,
    although alcohol was not consumed inside the hotel convenience store, “the
    exposure for a lawsuit does exist” because it was sold there. She enclosed a
    quote for liquor liability coverage.
    On occasion, Bellemore asked SanSouci to review policies that he had
    obtained from other insurance agents. SanSouci occasionally told Bellemore
    that he should “stay with a different carrier for coverage,” even though doing so
    meant that she would “lose out on some business.” For instance, in a 2015
    e-mail to Bellemore, SanSouci said, “Unfortunately, I have not been able to find
    better pricing for the builder’s risk for above. Although I hate to have you go
    someplace else for this coverage, I think you should move forward with the
    other quote.” In that e-mail, she advised Bellemore “to secure premises liability
    coverage” for that property “so that [he would be] fully covered.”
    2
    In 2014, Lloyd’s of London opted not to renew Ocean’s policy. As a
    result, SanSouci asked Andrea Roux, a wholesale broker of “surplus lines”
    insurance, to find coverage. The “surplus lines” market is not as highly
    regulated as the standard insurance market, and, therefore, insurance
    underwriters have the flexibility to design and sell higher-risk policies than
    they would be able to sell in the standard market. Through the “surplus lines”
    market, Roux was able to find coverage for Ocean with AIX Specialty Insurance
    Company, a subsidiary of The Hanover Insurance Company.
    In April 2014, Ocean purchased a $2 million replacement cost policy. In
    addition to the replacement cost coverage, the AIX policy provided for $10,000
    in law and ordinance insurance coverage. Law and ordinance coverage is
    designed to pay for the increased costs associated with complying with current
    building codes and other laws and ordinances when rebuilding a structure
    after a loss. At no time did Foy recommend that Bellemore purchase additional
    law and ordinance coverage on behalf of Ocean.
    In October 2015, a fire severely damaged the hotel. Bellemore hired an
    engineering firm to estimate the cost of rebuilding the hotel. The firm told
    Bellemore that the cost to replace the existing structure would be
    approximately $1.1 million, and that, in order to rebuild a structure that
    complied with the current building code, it would cost an additional $905,070.
    He decided to demolish the structure rather than rebuild it. After accounting
    for depreciation, Ocean’s insurer paid Ocean $910,141 for the replacement cost
    of the structure — an amount that did not include the additional cost
    necessary to rebuild the structure in compliance with the building code.
    Thereafter, Ocean sued Foy, alleging that, because the parties had a
    “special relationship,” Foy had a duty to inform Ocean that it lacked sufficient
    law and ordinance coverage to pay for reconstruction in compliance with the
    current building code, and that Foy negligently failed to so inform Ocean. See
    Sintros v. Harmon, 
    148 N.H. 478
    , 481-82 (2002) (holding that an insurance
    agent has “an affirmative duty to provide advice regarding the availability or
    sufficiency of insurance coverage” only when an insured justifiably relies upon
    a “special relationship” with the agent). The case was tried to a jury over the
    course of five days in November 2018. At the close of Ocean’s case, Foy moved
    for a directed verdict, which the trial court denied. The jury returned a verdict
    in favor of Ocean and then apportioned 25% fault to Ocean and 75% fault to
    Foy. Foy filed a motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict (JNOV), or
    alternatively, to set aside the jury verdict. The trial court denied the motion,
    and this appeal followed.
    On appeal, Foy argues that the trial court erred by: (1) admitting a
    certain exhibit into evidence; (2) failing to take action in response to Ocean’s
    allegedly improper closing argument; (3) giving the jury certain instructions; (4)
    3
    giving the jury an incorrect special verdict form; and (5) denying Foy’s motions
    for directed verdict and JNOV. We address each argument in turn.
    II. Analysis
    A. Admissibility of Exhibit 27
    On the fourth day of trial, counsel for Ocean cross-examined Foy’s
    expert, Peter Milnes, about “Exhibit 27,” which counsel represented was “a
    commercial lines checklist.” Foy’s counsel objected that he did not “like the
    way [the exhibit] was being presented” during cross-examination of Milnes
    instead of during Ocean’s direct examination of its own expert, Franklin Seigel,
    and on the basis of relevance. The trial court ruled that the exhibit was
    relevant to the issue of whether Foy breached the applicable standard of care.
    Foy’s counsel also objected on the ground that the checklist constituted
    inadmissible hearsay. The trial court determined that the exhibit was not
    being introduced for the truth of what it asserted and, therefore, that its
    admission did not violate the hearsay rule. See N.H. R. Ev. 801(c) (defining
    hearsay as a statement “that . . . the declarant does not make while testifying
    at the current trial or hearing” and that is offered “in evidence to prove the
    truth of the matter asserted in the statement”).
    Milnes testified that the checklist was “a mechanism for discussion” of
    available coverages “if people want to have that,” but he did not agree that the
    checklist “is a good way to go about examining specific coverages.” On redirect
    examination, Milnes testified that the checklist was not something he used and
    that it is not “a requirement of the standard of care for insurance agents to
    maintain such a checklist.”
    Defense counsel also questioned Jeffrey Foy, one of Foy’s owners, about
    the checklist, and he testified that he does not use similar forms with his
    clients because “you always -- you always have to make sure that you let the
    client know that this [is] just an overview, a belief as to what’s included in the
    policy they have. But ultimately, you have to go back to the policy because
    that’s – that’s the contract.” Over defense counsel’s objection, the exhibit was
    admitted as a full exhibit.
    On appeal, Foy argues that Exhibit 27 “was irrelevant, improper hearsay,
    and highly prejudicial.” We review the trial court’s rulings on admissibility of
    evidence under the unsustainable exercise of discretion standard. McLaughlin
    v. Fisher Eng’g, 
    150 N.H. 195
    , 197 (2003). We will not disturb the court’s
    ruling unless a party establishes that it is clearly untenable or unreasonable to
    the prejudice of its case. 
    Id.
     Here, Foy has failed to persuade us that the trial
    court unsustainably exercised its discretion by admitting the exhibit. Based
    upon our review of the record, we find that the trial court had an objective
    4
    basis to determine that Exhibit 27 was relevant, was not improper hearsay,
    and was not “highly prejudicial.”
    B. Ocean’s Closing Argument
    Foy next argues that during Ocean’s closing argument, counsel made
    certain “factually inaccurate and prejudicial statements to the jury,” including:
    As a jury, your voice, through your verdict, is very loud and will be
    certainly heard. As a jury, you have awesome power to change
    behavior. You, as a jury, . . . can change the way insurance
    policies are sold.
    ....
    If sold as replacement cost policies -- and I submit to you that’s a
    misnomer -- who knew that you could buy a two million dollar
    policy, and because of some coinsurance penalty, you could have a
    two million dollar loss and never collect the amount of money that
    you paid for. Who knew? And you sell a replacement cost policy
    that has a limitation of only 10,000 on a two million dollar policy,
    and you can’t replace it for law and ordinance, something that’s
    required. Use your voice and tell the insurance industry not to sell
    these policies under the name of replacement costs if they have co-
    insurance in them. Tell them not to sell them as replacement
    costs if they don’t provide adequate coverage for law and
    ordinance.
    The defense takes the position, so what, we couldn’t get
    [additional law and ordinance insurance coverage] anyway. There
    is no proof of that. Who said [we] couldn’t get it. We heard it from
    Team Insurance, Ms. SanSouci and Mr. Foy and Mr. Milnes, all
    together in the insurance industry. They all did the same thing;
    they speculated.
    Foy contends that Ocean’s closing argument was “highly prejudicial” because
    Ocean improperly appealed “to the passion, prejudice, and sympathy of the
    jury.” Foy asserts that the “misstatements” during Ocean’s closing warrant a
    new trial. See Stachulski v. Apple New England, LLC, 
    171 N.H. 158
    , 171
    (2018) (noting that “arguments that appeal to the emotions or prejudices of
    jurors may be improper when [they] take the form of counsel’s presentation of
    facts which have not been introduced in, or are not fairly inferable from,
    evidence at trial” (quotation omitted)).
    It is well established that a party must make a specific and
    contemporaneous objection during trial to preserve an issue for appellate
    5
    review. Broughton v. Proulx, 
    152 N.H. 549
    , 552 (2005). This requirement
    affords the trial court an opportunity to correct any error it may have made and
    is grounded in common sense and judicial economy. 
    Id.
     With respect to a
    closing argument in a civil jury trial, any objection must be raised either during
    or immediately after the closing argument. Broderick v. Watts, 
    136 N.H. 153
    ,
    167 (1992).
    At trial, Foy failed to object to any of the statements it now characterizes
    as “highly prejudicial.” To the extent that Foy objected to closing argument in
    its post-trial motion for JNOV, its objections were untimely. See Broderick,
    136 N.H. at 167-68 (holding that objection to closing argument raised after the
    trial court finished instructing the jury was not timely raised).
    Because Foy failed to object during or immediately after Ocean’s closing
    argument, our review is for plain error. See Sup. Ct. R. 16-A; see also State v.
    Drown, 
    170 N.H. 788
    , 792 (2018). We use the plain error rule sparingly,
    limiting its application to those circumstances in which a miscarriage of justice
    would otherwise result. Drown, 170 N.H. at 792. For us to find plain error: (1)
    there must be an error; (2) the error must be plain; (3) the error must affect
    substantial rights; and (4) the error must seriously affect the fairness, integrity,
    or public reputation of judicial proceedings. Id.
    The alleged error in this case “must relate to the trial court having not
    taken affirmative steps to intervene in the parties’ litigation.” Id. at 799
    (quotation omitted). In other words, the issue is not whether the trial court
    erroneously allowed Ocean’s counsel to make the challenged statements, but
    rather, due to Foy’s failure to object, whether the trial court erroneously failed
    to “have sua sponte intervened” to strike the statements, give a curative
    instruction, or declare a mistrial. Id.
    “[I]n Drown, we held, under plain error review, that the trial court did not
    err in failing to sua sponte interrupt the State’s closing argument.” State v.
    Labrie, 
    171 N.H. 475
    , 489 (2018); see Drown, 170 N.H. at 801. In doing so, we
    recognized that “[a] decision not to object” during an opposing party’s closing
    argument “may be a trial strategy that should not be intruded upon by the trial
    court in the absence of patently egregious circumstances.” Labrie, 171 N.H. at
    489. We stated that the decision not to object at closing argument may have
    stemmed from a conclusion that the prosecutor’s statements were “nonsensical
    and would be seen as such by the jury, and thus undermine the force of the
    message that the prosecutor was attempting to convey.” Drown, 170 N.H. at
    802.
    Although the alleged misstatements at issue here are not nonsensical,
    “they also were not so egregious as to impose upon the trial court an obligation
    to intervene” sua sponte. Labrie, 171 N.H. at 489. The statements Foy
    contests on appeal would have been cured by the trial court’s jury instructions
    6
    that: (1) the jury “must not decide the facts on the basis of anything said by
    counsel not supported by the evidence”; (2) the jury’s responsibility is to decide
    the facts without “sympathy, prejudice, bias, or favor or fear, for or against
    either party”; (3) the amount of damages the jury may award “must be full, fair,
    and adequate,” and “not be . . . a reward or a prize”; (4) “[i]n order to recover,
    the Plaintiff must prove the Defendant is legally at fault for damages”; (5) “[f]or
    each item of loss of damage the Plaintiff claims, Plaintiff must prove that it is
    more probable than not, one, the Plaintiff has (or will have) such a loss or
    damage, and two, the loss or damage was caused by the legal fault of
    defendant”; and (6) “[t]he purpose of . . . civil law is not to punish anyone but
    to compensate those who have been monetarily injured as a result of the legal
    fault of the Defendant in such amounts as the evidence justifies.” See id. at
    489-90; see also Murray v. Developmental Servs. of Sullivan County, 
    149 N.H. 264
    , 270 (2003) (holding that, although it was improper for the plaintiffs to ask
    the jury to “send a clear message” with its verdicts in closing argument, the
    trial court sustainably exercised its discretion by not giving an immediate
    curative instruction and instead later instructing the jury that it should not
    award a verdict to punish the defendant and that the plaintiffs had to prove the
    defendant caused their injuries); Kelleher v. Marvin Lumber & Cedar Co., 
    152 N.H. 813
    , 837 (2005) (“[T]he jury is presumed to follow the court’s
    instructions.”). Although we do not condone the challenged portions of Ocean’s
    closing argument, under the circumstances of this case, we cannot conclude
    that the trial court’s failure to interrupt Ocean’s closing and/or immediately
    provide additional instructions amounted to a plain error that affected Foy’s
    substantial rights. See Stachulski, 171 N.H. at 172 (concluding that the trial
    court’s “failure to sua sponte strike” certain statements from the opening
    statement and closing argument of the plaintiff’s counsel “was not error, let
    alone plain error”).
    C. Jury Instructions
    Foy challenges the trial court’s jury instructions on: (1) when a “special
    relationship” between an insurance agent and client exists; (2) the need for
    alterations or repairs to a damaged building to conform to state, local, and
    federal laws; and (3) damages. The purpose of jury instructions is to identify
    issues of material fact, and to explain to the jury, in clear and intelligible
    language, the proper standards of law by which it is to resolve them. Halifax-
    American Energy Co. v. Provider Power, LLC, 
    170 N.H. 569
    , 577 (2018). The
    scope and wording of jury instructions are within the sound discretion of the
    trial judge and are evaluated as a reasonable juror would have interpreted
    them. 
    Id. at 577
    . A trial court need not use the exact words of any party’s jury
    instruction request. 
    Id.
     A jury charge is sufficient as a matter of law if it fairly
    presents the case to the jury such that no injustice is done to the legal rights of
    the parties. 
    Id.
     In a civil case, we review jury instructions in context. 
    Id. at 578
    . We will reverse if the charge, taken in its entirety, fails to explain
    7
    adequately the law applicable to the case in such a way that the jury could
    have been misled. Id.
    1. Special Relationship
    The trial court instructed the jury as follows on when a “special
    relationship” between an insurance agent and client arises:
    The general duty of care does not include an affirmative
    obligation to give advice regardless of the availability or sufficiency
    of coverage.
    However, the existence of a “special relationship” between
    the insurance agent and the client may impose upon an insurance
    agent an affirmative duty to provide advice regardless of the
    availability or sufficiency of insurance coverage. An insured . . .
    can demonstrate . . . a “special relationship” by showing that there
    exists something more than the standard insurer-insured
    relationship between the parties. This depends upon the
    particular relationship between the parties and is determined on a
    case-by-case basis. Examples include an express agreement
    between the insured agent and client, a long-established
    relationship or entrustment in which the agent clearly appreciates
    the duty of giving advice, the paying [of] an additional
    compensation apart from the premium payment, and the agent
    holding himself or herself out as a highly-skilled expert coupled
    with reliance by the insured. Also, a “special relationship” between
    the parties may exist when the insured relies upon the agent’s
    offered expert [advice] regarding the question of coverage, or when
    there is a course of dealings over time putting the agent on notice
    that his or her advice is being sought and relied upon. If a “special
    relationship” exists between the parties, the Plaintiff must
    demonstrate not only the existence of the relationship, but also
    that he or she was justified in relying upon the relationship.
    Foy argues that this jury instruction “incorrectly suggested that a special
    relationship could be established without proof of at least one of the Sintros
    factors, and, therefore, misstated the law to the jury.” See Sintros, 148 N.H. at
    481-82. To the contrary, the instruction repeats, nearly verbatim, what we
    said in Sintros. See id. The examples we gave in Sintros of facts or
    circumstances demonstrating a special relationship between an insurance
    agent and a client were just that, examples; they were not an exclusive list of
    factors. Id. at 482. Nor did we hold that, to establish the existence of a special
    relationship, a plaintiff had to prove that its relationship with its insurance
    agent fit one of our examples. See id. at 481-82. Therefore, we conclude that
    8
    the trial court’s “special relationship” instruction was sufficient as a matter of
    law. See Halifax-American, 170 N.H. at 578.
    2. Law and Ordinance
    With respect to law and ordinance coverage, the trial court instructed
    the jury that: (1) “[r]epairs to a substantially damaged building must meet and
    conform to existing State Codes and local and federal laws”; (2) “[a]ll work
    should be in compliance with all applicable State and local building[] [codes]
    and the Life Safety code”; and (3) “[a]lterations including reconstruction and
    during the reconstruction, if existing elements, spaces, or common areas are
    altered, that each such altered element, space, or area should comply with the
    Americans with Disabilities Act.”
    Foy argues this instruction misstated the applicable law “because the
    applicable codes allow municipal officials discretion to modify strict provisions
    of the code, and a local official’s discretionary authority was not properly
    reflected in the instruction.” We disagree.
    To support its contention, Foy asserts that the “Town of Hampton has
    incorporated the State Building Code” and that the State Building Code
    “expressly incorporates” an international building code, which authorizes local
    officials “to grant modifications for individual cases.” However, the State
    Building Code adopts certain international building codes by reference, only
    “as amended by the state building code review board and ratified by the
    legislature.” RSA 155-A:1, IV (Supp. 2020). Foy does not cite any provision of
    the State Building Code that specifically adopts the modification provision
    upon which Foy relies. Indeed, RSA 155-A:2, I, expressly requires that “[a]ll
    buildings, building components, and structures constructed in New Hampshire
    shall comply with the state building code and state fire code.” RSA 155-A:2, I
    (2014) (emphasis added). In addition, RSA 155-A:2, X specifically precludes
    any “state agency, authority, board, or commission” from “vary[ing],
    modify[ing], or waiv[ing] the requirements of the state building code or state fire
    code, unless approved by the state building code review board . . . or the state
    fire marshal.” RSA 155-A:2, X (2014).
    Moreover, although the international building code upon which Foy relies
    empowers “the code official” to grant modifications, the code official may do so
    only after “first find[ing] that [a] special individual reason makes the strict
    letter of [the international] code impractical and the modification is in
    compliance with the intent and purposes of the code, and that such
    modification does not lessen health, accessibility, life and fire safety, or
    structural requirements.” The international code also provides that, although
    “[t]he code official” may “adopt policies and procedures” to “clarify the
    application of [the code’s] provisions,” those “policies and procedures shall not
    9
    have the effect of waiving requirements specifically provided for” in the code.
    (Emphasis added.)
    For all of these reasons, therefore, we are not persuaded that the trial
    court’s instruction regarding the need for repairs to damaged buildings to
    comply with the State Building Code misstated the applicable law or misled the
    jury.
    Foy also contends that the instruction was misleading because it told the
    jury that it had to focus “its analysis on whether . . . Ocean’s repair did or did
    not have to comply with [the code] provisions.” We do not agree that the
    instruction was misleading in this respect. Further, we observe that the
    instruction is consistent with the testimony of the town building inspector that
    “[w]hen there’s substantial damage to a building” requiring that the building
    “be put back together,” the owner is required to “bring [the building] to code.”
    3. Damages
    During the trial, Foy proposed that the trial court instruct the jury that it
    could consider as damages in this case “[t]he reasonable value of the actual
    costs incurred by [Ocean] to comply with the minimum standards of an
    ordinance or law in [the] course of a repair to the property.” Foy explained that
    its proposed instruction used an example “for auto cases.” Foy argued that the
    trial court’s proposed instruction was faulty because it did not identify “what
    the items or loss of damages [the jury is] to consider in reviewing damages.”
    The trial court declined to give Foy’s proposed instruction and instead
    instructed the jury:
    And now a person who claims damages has the burden of
    proving that it is more probable than not that the damage[s] that it
    seeks were caused as a result of the legal fault of the party, and
    must show the extent and the amount of those damages.
    For each item of loss of damage the Plaintiff claims, Plaintiff
    must prove that it is more probable than not, one, the Plaintiff has
    (or will have) such a loss or damage, and two, the loss or damage
    was caused by the legal fault of defendant. If you decide that a
    plaintiff has proven these two matters to be more probable than
    not, you must then decide how much money or damages will fully,
    fairly and adequately compensate the Plaintiff for each of those
    items for loss or damage.
    In the event you should find for the Plaintiff, you must award
    a -- you must award it a fair compensation for the damages
    sustained.
    10
    If you find the Plaintiff is entitled to recover damages, the
    amount thereof must be full, fair, and adequate. It must not be
    cheap or miserly, and should be -- nor should it be a reward or a
    prize. The Plaintiff is entitled to full compensation for the damages
    resulting from Defendant’s legal fault. The purpose of a civil law is
    not to punish anyone but to compensate those who have been
    monetarily injured as a result of the legal fault of the Defendant in
    such amounts as the evidence justifies.
    In determining the amount of damages to allow the Plaintiff,
    you may draw such inferences as are justified by your common
    experience and observations of mankind, from the evidence and
    the nature of the injuries and the results thereof.
    See Carlisle v. Frisbie Mem. Hosp., 
    152 N.H. 762
    , 778 (2005) (observing that
    the trial court gave the jury “a broad instruction on damages,” stating “that the
    damage award should be ‘full, fair and adequate’ and that the award should
    compensate the plaintiff and make her whole”).
    Foy argues that the court erred by not giving its instruction “[b]ased on
    the nature of . . . Ocean’s claim,” which Foy characterizes as a claim under
    Ocean’s insurance policy, rather than the negligence claim Ocean brought. Foy
    contends that “the proper measure of damages” in this case “is the cost
    incurred as a result of a lack of coverage,” and that its “instruction properly
    captured the measure of damages based on Ocean’s policy, and should have
    been given.”
    However, Foy has not preserved this appellate argument for our review.
    Generally, a contemporaneous objection is necessary to preserve a jury
    instruction issue for appellate review. Clark & Lavey Benefits Solutions v.
    Educ. Dev. Ctr., 
    157 N.H. 220
    , 223 (2008). Without a contemporaneous
    objection, the trial court is not afforded the opportunity to correct an error it
    may have made. 
    Id.
     “This long-standing requirement is grounded in common
    sense and judicial economy, and applies equally to civil and criminal matters.”
    
    Id.
     (quotation omitted).
    Foy did not argue in the trial court that the court’s instruction gave the
    wrong measure of damages. Thus, we express no opinion as to the proper
    measure of damages for an insurance agent’s negligence in a case such as this
    one. See 2 Law and Practice of Insurance Coverage Litigation § 27:14, at 27-43
    (David L. Leitner et al., eds., 2005) (observing that, when an insurance agent
    fails to procure certain insurance coverage, “[m]any courts limit recovery to the
    amount that would have been available under the properly procured policy
    minus any unpaid premium,” and that other courts “permit an insured to
    recover all consequential damages, including lost profits, attorney’s fees and
    11
    costs,” reasoning “that an insured is entitled to all damages proximately caused
    by the broker/agent[’]s conduct” (footnotes omitted)).
    D. Special Verdict Form
    The special verdict form asked, among other questions, whether
    the jury found that Foy’s “breach of the applicable standard of reasonable care
    was a substantial factor in bringing about [Ocean’s] alleged damages.” Foy
    argues that the special verdict form was incorrect because it did not also ask
    the jury whether Ocean’s damages would not have occurred without Foy’s
    conduct.
    “A special verdict form must enable the court to determine which party is
    entitled to judgment.” Madeja v. MPB Corp., 
    149 N.H. 371
    , 389 (2003). “[I]t
    cannot be so confusing as to mislead the jury.” 
    Id.
     “We examine the wording
    of the special verdict form, the court’s jury instructions, and the evidence at
    trial to determine whether the special verdict form fairly presented the issues to
    the jury.” 
    Id.
    Under New Hampshire law, “[c]ausation focuses on the mechanical
    sequence of events.” Carignan v. N.H. Int’l Speedway, 
    151 N.H. 409
    , 414
    (2004) (quotation omitted). “Proximate cause involves both cause-in-fact and
    legal cause.” 
    Id.
     (citation omitted). “Cause-in-fact,” also called “but for”
    causation, requires the plaintiff to “produce evidence sufficient to warrant a
    reasonable juror’s conclusion that the causal link between the negligence and
    the injury probably existed.” 
    Id.
     (quotation omitted). “[L]egal cause requires
    the plaintiff to establish that the negligent conduct was a substantial factor in
    bringing about the harm.” 
    Id.
     “The negligent conduct need not be the sole
    cause of the injury; however, to establish proximate cause, the plaintiff must
    prove that the defendant’s conduct caused or contributed to cause the harm.”
    
    Id.
    As Foy concedes, the trial court’s jury instructions properly instructed
    the jury as to Ocean’s burden to prove causation. “We hold that the
    instructions and the special verdict form, when viewed together, were
    sufficiently clear” with respect to Ocean’s burden to prove causation. Madeja,
    149 N.H. at 390. In Madeja, the defendant argued that the special verdict form
    was faulty because it did not include questions about the defendant’s
    affirmative defenses. Id. at 389. We held that the instructions and special
    verdict form, when viewed together, were sufficiently clear as to those defenses
    because the questions on the special verdict form regarding whether the
    defendant was liable for either sexual harassment or retaliation “subsumed
    and incorporated questions regarding the defendant’s affirmative defenses.” Id.
    at 389-90. We explained that having been instructed correctly about the
    defendant’s affirmative defenses, the “jury could not have found the defendant
    12
    liable for either sexual harassment or retaliation if it had concluded that the
    defendant succeeded on its affirmative defenses.” Id. at 390.
    Similarly, here, having been correctly instructed as to Ocean’s burden on
    causation, the jury could not have found Foy’s conduct to be a “substantial
    factor” in bringing about Ocean’s damages if it had not also found that a
    “causal link between the negligence and the injury probably existed.”
    Carignan, 151 N.H. at 414 (quotation omitted). The question about whether
    Foy’s conduct was a “substantial factor” in bringing about Ocean’s damages
    “subsumed and incorporated” the question of whether there was a causal link
    between Foy’s negligence and Ocean’s damages. Madeja, 149 N.H. at 390; see
    Carignan, 151 N.H. at 414.
    E. Motions for Directed Verdict and JNOV
    Finally, Foy asserts that the trial court improperly denied its motions for
    directed verdict and JNOV. “[M]otions for directed verdict and judgment
    notwithstanding the verdict are essentially the same, and they are governed by
    identical standards.” Hall v. Dartmouth Hitchcock Med. Ctr., 
    153 N.H. 388
    ,
    393 (2006). Because motions for JNOV and directed verdict relate to the
    sufficiency of the evidence, they present questions of law, and our standard of
    review is de novo. See Halifax-American, 170 N.H. at 576. A party is entitled
    to a directed verdict or JNOV only when the sole reasonable inference that may
    be drawn from the evidence, which must be viewed in the light most favorable
    to the non-moving party, is so overwhelmingly in favor of the moving party that
    no contrary verdict could stand. See id. (discussing a motion for JNOV);
    Conrad v. N.H. Dep’t of Safety, 
    167 N.H. 59
    , 70 (2014) (discussing a motion for
    directed verdict). “The court cannot weigh the evidence or inquire into the
    credibility of the witnesses, and if the evidence adduced at trial is conflicting,
    or if several reasonable inferences may be drawn, the motion should be
    denied.” Halifax-American, 170 N.H. at 576; see also Conrad, 167 N.H. at 70.
    1. Special Relationship
    Foy contends that no rational trier of fact could have found that Foy and
    Ocean had a “special relationship” because there was no evidence “as to the
    nature of a standard relationship” between an insurance agent and a client, or
    of any of the so-called Sintros factors. Foy’s arguments are based upon a
    misreading of Sintros.
    Although in Sintros we stated that “[a]n insured can demonstrate a
    special relationship by showing that there exists something more than the
    standard insurer-insured relationship,” Sintros, 148 N.H. at 481, we then
    explained what we meant by “something more than the standard insurer-
    insured relationship” by giving examples of when a “special” relationship may
    be deemed to arise. See id. at 481-82. Under Sintros, a standard relationship
    13
    between an insured and an insurance agent is simply one that is not “special.”
    See id.
    Moreover, as previously discussed, in Sintros, we did not give an
    exhaustive list of factors that establish that a relationship between an
    insurance agent and an insured is “special.” See id. at 481-82. Rather, we
    held that whether the relationship between an insurance agent and an insured
    is sufficiently “special” as to impose upon the agent an affirmative duty to
    advise the insured “regarding the availability or sufficiency of insurance
    coverage,” is a fact-dependent inquiry that “is determined on a case-by-case
    basis.” Id. at 481. As we previously explained, the examples we gave in
    Sintros of when a relationship between an insurance agent and an insured may
    be deemed “special” were examples, not a mandated or an exhaustive list of
    factors. Id. at 482.
    Further, even if the jury had been instructed as to the so-called Sintros
    factors, as articulated by Foy, when we view the evidence and all reasonable
    inferences in the light most favorable to Ocean, we conclude that the evidence
    was sufficient for the jury to have found at least one of those factors.
    According to Foy, the so-called Sintros factors include “a long established
    relationship of entrustment in which the agent clearly appreciates the duty of
    giving advice.” Viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to Ocean, the
    jury could have found that Ocean and Foy had a relationship, spanning more
    than a decade, in which Foy’s agent, SanSouci, gave insurance coverage advice
    to Ocean’s principal, Bellemore, upon which Bellemore reasonably relied
    because of SanSouci’s greater expertise, and in which SanSouci appreciated
    her duty to give such advice.
    2. Evidence of Causation
    Foy next asserts that there was insufficient evidence to establish that
    Ocean, “in fact, could have purchased additional law and ordinance coverage.”
    Foy contends that, absent such evidence, Ocean would have suffered damages
    regardless of whether Foy breached its duty, and, therefore, Ocean failed “to
    prove, through admissible evidence, that its claimed damages were legally and
    factually caused by Foy’s breach.” See Carignan, 151 N.H. at 414 (discussing
    cause-in-fact and legal cause). We disagree.
    For the purposes of this discussion, we assume without deciding that, as
    Foy intimates and as the dissent concludes, Ocean was required to show not
    only that additional law and ordinance coverage was generally available in the
    marketplace, but was also specifically available to Ocean. We note that this is
    an issue of first impression that the parties have not fully briefed. Compare
    Emer’s Camper Corral, LLC v. Alderman, 
    943 N.W.2d 513
    , 515 (Wis. 2020)
    (holding that, to establish causation, a plaintiff, claiming that its insurance
    agent was negligent in procuring insurance, had to prove “not just that an
    14
    insurance policy with the requested deductibles was commercially available,
    but also that an insurer would actually write that policy for [the plaintiff] in
    particular”), with Bayly, Martin & Fay v. Pete’s Satire, 
    739 P.2d 239
    , 244 (Colo.
    1987) (en banc) (explaining that, to establish proximate causation, the insured
    “is not required to show that the particular insurance company from which the
    servicing broker or agent procured the [insured’s] policy would have written
    such coverage or that the servicing broker or agent could have obtained such
    coverage from a specific company”).
    Viewing the evidence and all reasonable inferences in the light most
    favorable to Ocean, we conclude that the evidence was sufficient for a rational
    trier of fact to have found that additional law and ordinance coverage was
    generally available in the marketplace and was specifically available to Ocean.
    See Halifax-American, 170 N.H. at 576; Conrad, 167 N.H. at 70.
    Ocean’s expert, Seigel, testified as follows:
    Q With respect to law and ordinance coverage, is that something
    that’s generally available in the surplus markets?
    A Yes. You have to add -- you, generally speaking, have to ask for
    it. It’s not a throw-on by the surplus lines’ market, and neither is
    a throw-on from the admitted market. You still have to ask for it.
    And you have to negotiate it with the carrier, or with the surplus
    lines’ managing general agent.
    Q Is it your opinion that if asked for that law and ordinance
    coverage endorsement would have been available in this case?
    A In my experience, yes. I made . . . a phone call on it to see if a
    particular carrier would write it. And they said that based on the
    $2,000,000 that was already written, they would have reduced that
    limit to the full replacement -- to the replacement cost and just cut
    that limit and provided the difference between a million -- roughly
    1,100,000 for replacement value and used 900,000 as the law and
    ordinance limit.
    Q Is it your experience that you can custom-make policies in the
    surplus lines’ market?
    A Oh, yes, very much so. That’s the whole -- one of the
    advantages of the surplus lines’ market being free of rate and form.
    They can do whatever they want to do.
    Q So, for instance, in this case if you went out and looked for it,
    you could negotiate with a carrier and perhaps get a policy that
    15
    has 1.3 million in building coverage and 700,000 in law and
    ordinance?
    A Yes.
    Q Is it your testimony here today that law and ordinance coverage
    is free and you don’t pay anything extra for it?
    A Well, it’s not free in the sense that -- everything comes with a
    price. So if you divvy up the limit, in other words if you’re going to
    have a $2,000,000 limit on the policy and then add law and
    ordinance coverage for another $1,000,000, you’re going to pay the
    premium for a $1,000,000 of that coverage.
    If you were to have split it, 1,300,000 let’s say of the
    $2,000,000, then the policy premium will drop for that 1,300,000,
    but there’ll be a charge for the other $700,000 for the law and
    ordinance coverage. That’s how it basically works. And then the
    underwriter that I spoke to said he probably would charge $500 or
    so for the endorsement itself, just the fact that he’s adding another
    endorsement to it.
    Q So at the end of the day, you’d still have $2,000,000 in
    coverage, but it would be spread around differently?
    A Yes.
    The jury also had evidence that the direct construction cost to replace the
    building was $1,100,000, not including profit and overhead costs. If profit and
    overhead were included, the direct construction cost to replace the building
    was $1,300,000.
    Viewing this testimony and the reasonable inferences therefrom in the
    light most favorable to Ocean, a rational trier of fact could have found that
    Ocean could have obtained, in the surplus lines market, law and ordinance
    coverage of between $700,000 and $1,000,000 and could have reduced the
    replacement coverage for the building accordingly, so that the total coverage
    would have been $2,000,000. A rational trier of fact could have found, based
    upon Seigel’s testimony, that there would have been little difference between
    what Ocean paid in premiums under its then-current coverage and what it
    would pay in premiums if replacement coverage were reduced to $1,300,000 or
    $1,100,000 and law and ordinance coverage were increased to $700,000 or
    $900,000, other than an endorsement processing fee of $500. A rational trier
    of fact could also have found that replacement costs of $1,300,000 or
    $1,100,000 and law and ordinance coverage of $700,000 or $900,000 would
    16
    have been sufficient to cover the damage Ocean sustained and rebuild the
    structure to current code.
    To the extent that Seigel’s testimony was ambiguous, “[w]e must . . .
    construe the ambiguity in favor of [Ocean].” St-Laurent v. Fiermonti
    Oldsmobile, 
    136 N.H. 70
    , 75 (1992). Because a rational trier of fact could have
    understood Seigel’s testimony to provide the evidentiary link Foy intimates, and
    the dissent concludes, was missing, we affirm the trial court’s denial of Foy’s
    motions for directed verdict and JNOV on this issue.
    Affirmed.
    DONOVAN, J., concurred; HOURAN, J., retired superior court justice,
    specially assigned under RSA 490:3, concurred; BASSETT, J., with whom
    HICKS, J., joined, dissented.
    BASSETT, J., with whom HICKS, J., joins, dissenting. I agree with my
    colleagues in most respects. However, because I conclude that Ocean failed to
    adduce sufficient evidence to enable a reasonable jury to find that Ocean’s loss
    would not have occurred without Foy’s conduct, and because such proof is a
    necessary element of a negligence action, I would reverse the trial court’s denial
    of Foy’s motions for a directed verdict, for judgment notwithstanding the
    verdict, and to set aside the jury verdict. My disagreement with the majority is
    essentially two-fold.
    First, I disagree with the majority when it merely assumes that “Ocean
    was required to show not only that additional law and ordinance coverage was
    generally available in the marketplace, but was also specifically available to
    Ocean.” No assumption is necessary — that is the law in New Hampshire.
    “It is axiomatic that in order to prove actionable negligence, a plaintiff
    must establish that the defendant owed a duty to the plaintiff, breached that
    duty, and that the breach proximately caused the claimed injury.” Carignan v.
    N.H. Int’l Speedway, 
    151 N.H. 409
    , 412 (2004) (quotation omitted). “Causation
    focuses on the mechanical sequence of events. Proximate cause involves both
    cause-in-fact and legal cause.” Id. at 414 (citation omitted). “Cause-in-fact
    requires the plaintiff to show that the injury would not have occurred but for
    the negligent conduct.” Id. The plaintiff “must produce evidence sufficient to
    warrant a reasonable juror’s conclusion that the causal link between the
    negligence and the injury probably existed.” Id. (quotation omitted). “[L]egal
    cause requires the plaintiff to establish that the negligent conduct was a
    substantial factor in bringing about the harm.” Id. “[T]here is no cause of
    action unless and until there has been an injury.” White v. Schnoebelen, 
    91 N.H. 273
    , 274 (1941). “[B]asic tort law prohibits recovery where it cannot be
    shown with reasonable certainty that any damage resulted from the act
    17
    complained of.” Witte v. Desmarais, 
    136 N.H. 178
    , 188 (1992) (quotation and
    brackets omitted).
    Our court has not had occasion to explain how these well-accepted
    principles of proximate cause apply in the context of an insured’s negligence
    claim against an insurance agent. However, as the majority recognizes, we are
    not the first court to consider the issue. I find the reasoning of the Wisconsin
    Supreme Court in Emer’s Camper Corral, LLC v. Alderman, 
    943 N.W.2d 513
    (Wis. 2020), to be persuasive. It is consonant with the law of causation in New
    Hampshire, and illustrative of the proper application of the general causation
    principles in this context.
    In Camper Corral, the plaintiff claimed that its insurance agent was
    negligent because he procured a policy that did not conform to the plaintiff’s
    requested deductible limit. 
    Id. at 515
    . The trial court entered a directed
    verdict in favor of the insurance agent, reasoning that the plaintiff’s “failure to
    introduce evidence that an insurer would have insured the company with the
    deductible limits it thought it had meant that it had not proven a causal link
    between the agent’s negligence and the sustained loss.” 
    Id.
    The Wisconsin Supreme Court granted review and held that, to establish
    causation, the plaintiff must prove “not just that an insurance policy with the
    requested deductibles was commercially available, but also that an insurer
    would actually write that policy for [the plaintiff] in particular.” 
    Id.
     In reaching
    its conclusion, the court observed that commercial availability is a “necessary
    prerequisite” to establishing causation; “[a]fter all, if the insured requests a
    policy that is not available in the market, the insured’s harm comes from its
    unavailability, not from the broker’s failure to obtain what does not exist.” 
    Id. at 519
    . Nonetheless, the court concluded that commercial availability is not
    “sufficient for that causal link,” 
    id.,
     explaining as follows:
    An insurance policy is not a mass-produced good or service
    that is available to the public without regard for the circumstances
    of the prospective purchaser. Instead, the coverage, terms, and
    premium depend on factors specific to the insured company, such
    as, for example, its claims history. So when we say a policy with
    certain deductible limits is “commercially available,” what we mean
    is that somewhere in the market there is an insurance company
    willing to write that policy for a hypothetical company with a
    hypothetical set of insurability factors.
    But just because an insurance company would write a specific
    policy for one company does not mean it would insure all
    companies under the same terms. Consequently, “commercial
    availability” of the policy requested by [the plaintiff] establishes, at
    most, that some company somewhere could get the desired
    18
    deductible limits. It does not answer whether such a policy was
    available to [the plaintiff]. So, if general commercial unavailability
    prevents formation of a causal link between a broker’s negligence
    and an insured’s loss, then it necessarily follows that the policy’s
    unavailability to [the plaintiff] in particular must also prevent
    formation of a causal link. Whether the unavailability is general,
    or instead particular to [the plaintiff], the policy’s unavailability
    exists independently of any negligence on behalf of the broker.
    And if that is so, then the broker’s negligence cannot be a
    substantial factor in producing [the plaintiff’s] loss because it
    would have occurred even if the broker had not been negligent.
    
    Id. at 519-20
     (citations and footnote omitted).
    The court further reasoned that, to accept the plaintiff’s contention that
    a showing of general commercial availability constitutes sufficient proof of
    causation, would be to grant the plaintiff “an evidentiary presumption to help it
    bridge the gap between general and particular availability of the desired
    insurance policy.” 
    Id. at 521
    . After recognizing that it might be difficult for a
    plaintiff to prove that it could have obtained the desired policy, the court stated
    that “[it does] not think the difficulty of a task is a sufficient basis for relieving
    a plaintiff of its duty to prove the essential elements of its claim.” 
    Id.
     The
    court also noted that the alternative approach of placing the burden on the
    agent to prove unavailability “would require proof of a negative.” 
    Id.
     In other
    words, the insurance agent “would have to prove that no insurer in the market
    would insure [the plaintiff] under the requested terms.” 
    Id.
     Accordingly, after
    observing that the plaintiff “has offered no rationale for either relieving it of its
    duty to prove each element of its claim, or requiring [the insurance agent] to
    negate the presumption in favor of causation,” the court concluded that “the
    general principles governing proof of causation do not support [the plaintiff’s]
    ‘commercial availability’ standard.” 
    Id.
    In sum, the court held that, in order to establish the causal link between
    the agent’s negligence and the plaintiff’s loss, a showing of general availability
    is not enough — a plaintiff must also show that insurance coverage is available
    to the plaintiff for the particular risk at issue. See 
    id. at 524-25
    . I agree, and
    would explicitly apply the reasoning of the Wisconsin Supreme Court in this
    case. The majority’s failure to do so distances our court from fundamental
    principles of causation and the burden of proof, such that this decision could
    arguably “allow [a plaintiff] to establish causation without ever proving an
    event sufficient to result in its loss.” 
    Id. at 522
    .
    The majority is also mistaken when it applies the “specific availability”
    standard of causation and concludes that the evidence adduced at trial is
    sufficient to enable a rational trier of fact to find that Foy caused Ocean’s
    injury. Specifically, the majority concludes that the evidence is sufficient to
    19
    establish not only “that additional law and ordinance coverage was generally
    available in the marketplace,” but that such coverage “was specifically available
    to Ocean.” The latter conclusion is based on the incorrect premise that Seigel’s
    testimony supports the following two inferences: First, that, by reducing the
    replacement cost coverage proportionally, “Ocean could have obtained, in the
    surplus lines market, law and ordinance coverage of between $700,000 and
    $1,000,000”; and, second, that there “would have been little difference between
    what Ocean paid in premiums under its then-current coverage and what it
    would pay in premiums if replacement coverage were reduced to $1,300,000 or
    $1,100,000 and law and ordinance coverage were increased to $700,000 or
    $900,000, other than an endorsement processing fee of $500.” The evidence
    simply does not permit a reasonable jury to draw these inferences.
    Although Seigel testified that it might have been possible for Ocean to
    secure $700,000 in law and ordinance coverage, he never opined as to the
    premium for that coverage. No reasonable jury could have understood his
    testimony to support the proposition that the reduction in replacement cost
    coverage would reduce the premium by the same amount that the additional
    law and ordinance coverage would increase the premium. Indeed, Seigel
    acknowledged that law and ordinance coverage is “not free,” that “everything
    comes with a price,” and that “you’re going to pay the premium for [the
    additional law and ordinance] coverage.” Had Seigel been able to opine that the
    premium changes would offset each other — or even offer a rough estimate as
    to how much the additional coverage would have cost — surely he would have
    said so directly. Had he done so, we would have a much different case before
    us. However, in this case, the record reflects that the cost of additional law
    and ordinance coverage in the surplus lines market is risk-sensitive, and could
    vary widely. This is especially so with respect to the hotel, which was difficult
    to insure because of the risks associated with its loss history, age, and
    proximity to the ocean.
    It may be true, as a general proposition, that one can purchase just
    about anything if price is no object — including insurance for almost any risk.
    However, that aphorism has little utility here, because there was no evidence
    that Ocean would have been willing and able to pay the additional premium for
    any given amount of law and ordinance coverage.2 Although Bellemore testified
    that, because of the age of the structure and the fact that it was non-
    conforming, he “would have had to buy” additional law and ordinance coverage
    2 For example, Mark Boland, a division president at The Hanover Insurance Company, testified
    that “if [someone] wanted to pay $900,000 in premium for a million dollar coverage,” he would
    “[a]bsolutely” want to write that coverage. These numbers graphically illustrate why evidence as
    to the amount of the premium is necessary for Ocean to prove causation. In the event that Ocean
    had purchased the additional law and ordinance coverage at this price, it would have paid a total
    of $1.8 million in premiums during 2014 and 2015 for $1 million in law and ordinance coverage.
    20
    if it were available, he made this statement without reference to any
    information as to the cost or availability of any particular amount of coverage.
    Indeed, there was evidence that, over the years, Bellemore was a price-sensitive
    insured, who, on several occasions, after weighing the costs and benefits of
    additional coverage suggested by Foy, rejected Foy’s recommendations to add
    or increase coverage. Accordingly, the mere assertion by Bellemore that Ocean
    would have purchased additional law and ordinance coverage if recommended
    by Foy — regardless of price — is insufficient to bridge the evidentiary gap.
    Given the dearth of evidence as to the likely premium for any particular
    amount of law and ordinance coverage, or whether, at any price point and level
    of coverage, Ocean would have purchased the additional coverage, I conclude
    that the existence of Ocean’s claimed damages is too speculative to support
    recovery. See Desmarais, 136 N.H. at 188; Schnoebelen, 
    91 N.H. at 274
    . This
    conclusion is inescapable, and necessarily follows from the application of long-
    established principles of causation. In order to satisfy its burden, Ocean must
    show both that Foy’s negligent conduct was a substantial factor in causing the
    uninsured loss, and that the loss would not have occurred without Foy’s
    negligent conduct. Carignan, 151 N.H. at 414. Here, if additional law and
    ordinance coverage for the hotel had not been available in the surplus lines
    market, or if Ocean would not have purchased the coverage even if it had been
    available, then Ocean’s injury — the uninsured loss — would have occurred
    regardless of Foy’s conduct. Accordingly, because it cannot be said “with
    reasonable certainty” that Ocean’s injury “resulted from” Foy’s conduct,
    Desmarais, 136 N.H. at 188 (quotations omitted), I would reverse the trial
    court’s denial of Foy’s motions for a directed verdict, for judgment
    notwithstanding the verdict, and to set aside the jury verdict.
    I respectfully dissent.
    21
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 2019-0067

Filed Date: 3/19/2021

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 3/19/2021