Robert Youell and Best One Giant Tire, Inc. v. The Cincinnati Insurance Company a/s/o Greg Dotson
Robert Youell and Best One Giant Tire, Inc. v. The Cincinnati Insurance Company a/s/o Greg Dotson
Opinion
Case Summary
[1] A landlord and a tenant entered into a commercial lease that provided that the landlord would insure the building and the tenant would insure its personal property inside the building. When the property was later damaged by fire, the landlord's insurance covered the loss. The landlord's insurer later filed a subrogation action against the tenant to recover the amount paid. The tenant filed a motion for judgment on the pleadings, arguing that the landlord's agreement to obtain property insurance was an agreement to provide both parties with the benefits of insurance and expressly allocated the risk of loss in case of fire to insurance, thereby barring a subrogation action as a matter of law. The trial court denied the motion, and the tenant now appeals. We reverse and remand.
Facts and Procedural History
[2] In 2013, Greg Dotson ("Landlord") leased a commercial building on West Washington Street in Indianapolis to Robert Youell and Best One Giant Tire, Inc. (referred to collectively as "Tenant"). The Commercial Lease Agreement addressed insurance as follows:
8. Insurance
A. If the Leased Premises or any other party [sic] of the Building is damaged by fire or other casualty resulting from any act or negligence of Tenant or any of Tenant's agents, employees or invitees, rent shall not be diminished or abated while such damages are under repair, and Tenant shall be responsible for the costs of repair not covered by insurance.
B. Landlord shall maintain fire and extended coverage insurance on the Building and the Leased Premises in such amounts as Landlord shall deem appropriate. Tenant shall be responsible, at its expense, for fire and extended coverage insurance on all of its personal property, including removable trade fixtures, located in the Leased Premises.
C. Tenant and Landlord shall, each at its own expense, maintain a policy or policies of comprehensive general liability insurance with respect to the respective activities of each in the Building with the premiums thereon fully paid on or before due date, issued by and binding upon some insurance company approved by Landlord, such insurance to afford minimum protection of not less than $1,000,000 combined single limit coverage of bodily injury, property damage *641 or combination thereof. Landlord shall be listed as an additional insured on Tenant's policy or policies of comprehensive general liability insurance, and Tenant shall provide Landlord with current Certificates of Insurance evidencing Tenant's compliance with this Paragraph. Tenant shall obtain the agreement of Tenant's insurers to notify Landlord that a policy is due to expire at least [ten] (10) days prior to such expiration. Landlord shall not be required to maintain insurance against thefts within the Leased Premises or the Building.
Appellants' App. Vol. II p. 15 (emphasis added). In accordance with the lease, Landlord maintained property insurance on the building through a policy with The Cincinnati Insurance Company (CIC).
[3] On August 8, 2015, a fire occurred at the building. Pursuant to Landlord's insurance policy, CIC paid Landlord $227,653 for damages to the building. In August 2017, CIC, as subrogee of Landlord, filed a complaint against Tenant to recover that amount. CIC attached the Commercial Lease Agreement to its complaint.
[4] Thereafter, Tenant filed a motion for judgment on the pleadings, arguing that CIC had no right to pursue the subrogation claim because Landlord's agreement to provide property insurance was an agreement to provide both parties with the benefits of insurance. The trial court denied Tenant's motion. Appellants' App. Vol. II p. 9.
[5] At Tenant's request, the trial court certified its order for interlocutory appeal, and this Court accepted jurisdiction of the appeal.
Discussion and Decision
[6] Tenant contends that the trial court should have granted its motion for judgment on the pleadings. According to Indiana Trial Rule 12(C), after the pleadings are closed but within such time as not to delay the trial, any party may move for judgment on the pleadings. A written instrument attached to a pleading is considered a part of that pleading. Ind. Trial Rule 10(C). A motion for judgment on the pleadings is typically directed toward a determination of the substantive merits of the controversy.
Mourning v. Allison Transmission, Inc.
,
[7] In addition, a lease is construed in the same manner as any other contract.
T-3 Martinsville, LLC v. US Holding, LLC
,
[8] Tenant asserts that
Morsches Lumber, Inc. v. Probst
,
[A]n agreement to insure is an agreement to provide both parties with the benefits of insurance. Individuals understand that insurance will protect them against the consequences of their own negligence and more than likely assume that if one who is a party to a contract agrees as part of his or its duties to provide insurance, that the insurance will protect both of them regardless of the cause of the loss (excepting, of course, wanton and willful acts). If that were not their intent, each would provide his or its own insurance protection and there would be no need for the contract to place the duty on one of them.
[9] We agree with Tenant that
Morsches Lumber
is controlling here. Like the contract in
Morsches Lumber
, here the Commercial Lease Agreement unambiguously provides that Landlord would insure the building and Tenant would insure its personal property inside the building.
1
Appellants' App. Vol. II p. 33. Landlord and Tenant's agreement to insure was thus an agreement to provide both parties with the benefits of the insurance and expressly allocated the risk of loss in case of fire to insurance.
See
Morsches Lumber
,
[10] Despite Tenant's explicit reliance on
Morsches Lumber
in its brief, CIC does not attempt to distinguish it, or even cite it, in its brief. CIC, however, relies on
LBM Realty, LLC v. Mannia
,
Having considered the range of possible approaches, we conclude that Indiana should hereby adopt the largely case-by-case approach, finding that a tenant's liability to the landlord's insurer for damage-causing negligence depends on the reasonable expectations of the parties to the lease as ascertained from the lease as a whole and any other admissible evidence. Although the case-by-case approach is said to provide less predictability than either the pro- or no-subrogation approaches, we find that this approach best effectuates the intent of the parties by simply enforcing the terms of their lease.
[11] LBM Realty is distinguishable from this case. In LBM Realty , the lease did not require the landlord to maintain property insurance and only recommended that the tenant obtain renter's insurance; as a result, the parties' expectations with respect to liability for damage to the leased premises was unknown. Here, however, the Commercial Lease Agreement unambiguously provides that Landlord would insure the building. Accordingly, the test set forth in LBM Realty does not apply to this case; rather, Morsches Lumber controls. We therefore reverse and remand with instructions for the trial court to grant Tenant's motion for judgment on the pleadings.
[12] Reversed and remanded.
Riley, J., and Kirsch, J., concur.
Landlord asserts that the lease is ambiguous because (1) the lease did not specify the amount of property insurance to be obtained (but rather left it to the discretion of Landlord) and (2) the lease did not explicitly rule out subrogation. But as Tenant points out, the contract in Morsches Lumber neither specified the amount of property insurance to be obtained nor explicitly ruled out subrogation. The lease is not ambiguous for these reasons.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.