Debra Batton-Jajuga v. Farm Bureau General Insurance Company of Mi
Debra Batton-Jajuga v. Farm Bureau General Insurance Company of Mi
Opinion
*425 Defendant Farm Bureau General Insurance Company of Michigan (Farm Bureau) insured real property owned by plaintiff Debra Batton-Jajuga, and the property was destroyed in a fire. Batton-Jajuga had indemnification coverage as well as replacement-cost coverage. When she attempted to replace her destroyed property with different property purchased with a land contract, Farm Bureau refused to pay any replacement costs. Farm Bureau claimed that Batton-Jajuga's interest in the new property was less than a fee simple and therefore was not a "complete" replacement.
Farm Bureau breached the insurance agreement by refusing to pay. While a vendee to a land contract does not immediately acquire a full fee simple in the real property, the vendee does become the equitable owner of the property when the contract becomes effective, and this was sufficient under the law and the parties' agreement. Accordingly, we affirm the trial court's grant of summary disposition to plaintiff.
I. BACKGROUND
The relevant facts are not in dispute. Farm Bureau insured Batton-Jajuga's real property located in Monroe, *426 Michigan up to $289,000. The parties' agreement included two types of property coverage: (1) indemnification up to the depreciated value of the property (i.e., the actual cash value); and (2) replacement-cost coverage (i.e., the full cost of repair or replacement above the actual cash value). With respect to replacement-cost coverage, the parties' agreement provided in pertinent part:
5. Loss Settlement. Covered property losses are settled as follows:
* * *
b. Buildings under Coverage A or Coverage B at replacement cost ... subject to the following:
(1) If, at the time of loss, the amount of insurance in this policy on the damaged *353 building is 80% or more of the full replacement cost of the building immediately before the loss, we will pay the cost to repair or replace, after application of deductible and without deduction for depreciation, but not more than the least of the following amounts:
(a) the limit of liability under this policy that applies to the building;
(b) the replacement cost of that part of the building damaged for like construction and use on the same premises; or
(c) the necessary amount actually spent to repair or replace the damaged building.
* * *
(4) We will pay no more than the actual cash value of the damage, unless:
(a) actual repair or replacement is complete; ....
A fire destroyed Batton-Jajuga's property in October 2014. The parties agreed that the replacement-cost value of the loss was $179,811.23, and Farm Bureau promptly paid Batton-Jajuga $93,000 (the actual cash *427 value of the destroyed property minus a $1,000 deductible). After adjusting for an additional $1,085.33 in nonrecoverable depreciation, Farm Bureau held back the remaining $83,725.90 while Batton-Jajuga attempted to identify a replacement property.
In April 2015, Batton-Jajuga located replacement property in Pinckney, Michigan. She purchased the property by land contract for $200,000, with $40,000 paid immediately as a down payment and the remaining balance to be paid with monthly installments over 15 years. While an initial version of the land contract made the sale contingent on Farm Bureau paying replacement costs to Batton-Jajuga, that provision was removed from the final version. The version executed in June 2015 made the sale unconditional and provided that, in the event of default, the vendor had the right to declare a forfeiture of the property and take immediate possession as well as seek payment of any unpaid balance due under the contract. The contract further stated, "The Land Contract can be paid off in full at anytime with no pre-payment penalty."
Several days after she purchased the Pinckney property, Batton-Jajuga submitted a claim with Farm Bureau for the remaining $83,725.90. Given the lack of any prepayment penalty, she suggested that Farm Bureau could pay the remaining amount directly to the vendor to reduce the balance owed on the land contract. Farm Bureau refused, asserting that Batton-Jajuga had "spent nothing to repair or replace the damaged building" and that "[a]cquisition of another property under a land contract does not constitute 'replacement' of the damaged building within the meaning" of the replacement-cost coverage provision. Farm Bureau subsequently clarified that "the documents supplied [by Batton-Jajuga] suggest an expenditure *428 by [her] of $40,000 under the land contract," but otherwise the company maintained that its position remained unchanged.
Batton-Jajuga sued Farm Bureau for breach of contract and sought damages of $83,725.90 as well as additional consequential and incidental damages. She later moved for summary disposition under MCR 2.116(C)(10) and in its response, Farm Bureau likewise sought summary disposition under MCR 2.116(I)(2). The trial court granted Batton-Jajuga summary disposition and awarded her the replacement-cost amount as well as statutory interest and fees, but the trial court denied her any additional damages or contractual attorney fees.
Farm Bureau appealed as of right.
*354 II. ANALYSIS
A. STANDARD OF REVIEW
On appeal, this Court reviews de novo a trial court's ruling on summary disposition. Summary disposition is appropriate under MCR 2.116(C)(10) when, except as to damages, "there is no genuine issue as to any material fact, and the moving party is entitled to judgment or partial judgment as a matter of law." We construe the pleadings, admissions, and other evidence submitted by the parties in the light most favorable to Farm Bureau as the nonmovant.
Latham v. Barton Malow Co.
,
*429
Our duty in interpreting a statute or a contract is to give effect to the intent of the drafter.
Van Buren Co. Ed. Ass'n v. Decatur Pub. Sch.
,
B. FARM BUREAU BREACHED THE INSURANCE AGREEMENT
Farm Bureau makes two arguments on appeal. First, Farm Bureau argues that the property interest conveyed by land contract is not a complete replacement for Batton-Jajuga's fee simple in the destroyed property, and, therefore, she has failed to satisfy the precondition for any replacement-cost recovery under ¶ 5.b(4)(a) of the agreement. Second, Farm Bureau claims that, regardless of the type of property interest conveyed, Batton-Jajuga only spent $46.629.58 (the down payment and several monthly installments) when she made her claim for replacement costs, and because this amount was less than the $93,000 she had *430 already received, she is not entitled to anything more under the replacement-cost measure of ¶ 5.b(1)(c). Both arguments fail.
1. BATTON-JAJUGA ACQUIRED A "COMPLETE" REPLACEMENT
Michigan law expressly permits an insurer to offer replacement-cost coverage for property damaged by fire. Specifically, under MCL 500.2826, an insurer may "reimburse and indemnify the insured" for the amount above the property's actual cash value that is "actually expended to repair, rebuild, or replace" the damaged property, not to exceed the coverage cap. The statute further states, "A fire policy issued pursuant to this section may provide that there shall be no liability by the insurer to pay the amount specified in the policy unless the property damaged is actually repaired, rebuilt, or replaced at the same or another site."
Pursuant to state law, Farm Bureau offered replacement-cost coverage in Michigan
*355
in a form consistent with coverage offered in other states. See, e.g.,
Pierce v. Farm Bureau Mut. Ins. Co.
,
Farm Bureau does not dispute that, in terms of any physical or geographical attribute, the Pinckney property is a full, entire substitute-i.e., a complete replacement-for the damaged Monroe property. Indeed, MCL 500.2827 expressly contemplates that replacement can be made at a location different from that of the insured property. Rather, Farm Bureau argues that the Pinckney property is not a complete replacement because Batton-Jajuga did not obtain a fee simple in the property upon sale, but instead only received equitable title under the land contract. Batton-Jajuga had a fee simple in the Monroe property, but with the Pinckney property, she acquired only equitable title in fee, with legal title remaining with the vendor until the balance is paid. In Farm Bureau's view, ownership under a land contract is a lesser form of ownership, something akin to a lease-with-an-option-to-buy arrangement.
*432 If the relevant question was whether an equitable title is identical in all material respects to a fee simple, then Farm Bureau's position would be unassailable. This is not, however, the relevant question, as it would conflate the term actually used in the contractual provision- complete -with a different term not used in the provision- identical . Instead, we must consider whether Batton-Jajuga's acquisition of the Pinckney property is a full, entire-i.e., complete -substitute for her destroyed Monroe property. And on that question, Batton-Jajuga is on much firmer ground.
As noted, there is no dispute that the Pinckney property is physically and geographically a complete replacement. As to the legal interests in the Pinckney property, as our Supreme Court has explained, upon signing the land contract, "the vendee has, in a real sense, purchased the relevant property."
*356
Graves v. American Acceptance Mtg. Corp. (On Rehearing)
,
*433
The argument advanced here by Farm Bureau was earlier analyzed by the Supreme Court of Iowa in
Pierce
. In that case involving a sister Farm Bureau entity, the parties had entered into an insurance agreement with a replacement-cost coverage provision materially indistinguishable from the one here. The insured had purchased replacement property under a land contract, but the insurer refused to pay, claiming that the land contract had not been executed in time. Before determining whether the timing was even relevant, the Iowa court examined whether the legal interests obtained by the insured constituted a "bona fide replacement" under the insurance agreement. Or, as it framed the question, "[D]id the [insureds] fully or entirely supplant their damaged dwelling with a substitute or equivalent dwelling when they executed the real estate contract with the [vendors]?"
Pierce
,
The answer was
yes
, according to the Iowa court. It recognized that, under the common law, "when the vendee contracts to buy and the vendor to sell, though legal title has not yet passed, in equity the vendee becomes the owner of the land, [and] the vendor of the purchase money."
On the question of whether replacement was complete, Farm Bureau in the present case does not distinguish Pierce other than to point out that it is not binding on Michigan courts and that its sister company essentially agreed with the Iowa court. Based on the latter point, Farm Bureau asserts that the Iowa court *434 "engaged in no discussion or analysis of the issue." This assertion is belied by a number of reasons when performing a plain-language reading of the court's decision, not least of which is the fact that the court's analysis takes up several single-spaced pages in the reporter. Although we agree with Farm Bureau that Pierce is not binding, we do find the Iowa court's analysis to be thoughtful and in line with relevant Michigan law.
Moreover, although we do not find the pertinent language ambiguous, even if we did,
1
we note that Farm Bureau drafted
*357
the agreement and any ambiguity must be read in favor of Batton-Jajuga as the nondrafter.
Wilkie v. Auto-Owners Ins. Co.
,
Nor is this a novel legal issue, one that could not be reasonably anticipated by the drafter. The Pierce decision was issued in 1996 and involved a sister Farm Bureau company, and the Michigan Supreme Court's decision in Graves was issued in 2004. And as for the interests impacted by the sale of real property by land *435 contract, as well as the distinction between legal and equitable titles more generally, it is fair to say that these topics have been the bane of first-year law students for decades. Thus, had Farm Bureau intended that, for a replacement to be complete under its insurance agreement, the insured must obtain both equitable and legal titles at the time of purchase, the insurer could have explicitly said so-and that it did not must be given effect.
Accordingly, informed by
Pierce
and following
Graves
and other Michigan precedent, we conclude that Batton-Jajuga made a complete replacement of her destroyed property when she acquired the Pinckney property by land contract. The land contract was binding and unconditional upon execution, as opposed to a mere option to buy upon the satisfaction of a future condition. Batton-Jajuga gave real consideration to the vendor, both in the form of a $40,000 down payment and an unconditional promise to pay the remaining balance in future monthly installments. Under state law, she obtained equitable title to the property and, thus, she may sell, devise, or encumber the property as she sees fit. She did, "in a real sense, purchase[ ]" the Pinckney property,
Graves
, 469 Mich at 616,
2. BATTON-JAJUGA "ACTUALLY SPENT" THE PURCHASE MONEY BEFORE MAKING A CLAIM FOR REPLACEMENT COSTS
Farm Bureau also argues on appeal that, regardless of whether or not the Pinckney property was a complete replacement, Batton-Jajuga had "actually spent" only $46,629.58 at the time she made her claim, which was less than the amount that Farm Bureau had already paid to her as the actual cash value of the *436 destroyed property. In support, Farm Bureau points to ¶ 5.b(1) of the agreement, which limits any replacement-cost payment to the lesser of (a) the agreement's overall coverage cap ($289,000); (b) the replacement-cost value of the loss ($179,811.23); or (c) "the necessary amount actually spent to repair or replace the damaged building." Under Farm Bureau's reading of provision (c), to be entitled to receive any payment for replacement costs, Batton-Jajuga would have had to have paid out-of-pocket something more than the actual cash value payment she had already received. In essence, according to Farm Bureau, Batton-Jajuga had no compensable replacement costs because her out-of-pocket payment for the Pinckney property was less than what she received as the actual cash value of her destroyed Monroe property. Batton-Jajuga *358 responds that she actually spent $200,000 before she submitted her claim, as that amount was the agreed-upon purchase price for the replacement property.
Under Michigan law, the sale of real property under a land contract "operates as an equitable conversion[.]"
Pittsfield Charter Twp.
,
In its reply brief, Farm Bureau suggests that "it is unclear whether equitable conversion has survived the passage of the land contract mortgage act, MCL 565.356,
et seq.
" Other than briefly alluding to the issue, Farm Bureau has failed to develop it with any rigor and therefore has waived it.
Bruley Trust v. City of Birmingham
,
Therefore, when the land contract became effective, Batton-Jajuga became the equitable owner of the Pinckney property, and the vendor became the equitable owner of the purchase money, $200,000. Under the doctrine of equitable conversion, because the land contract was unconditional and effective, Batton-Jajuga had "actually spent" the $200,000 in purchase money before she made her claim with Farm Bureau. This amount exceeded the replacement-cost value of *438 the loss ($179,811.23), and, thus, Batton-Jajuga was entitled to the lesser replacement-cost value minus the actual-cash-value payment she had already received (i.e., $179,811.23 - $94,000 (actual cash value) - $1,000 (deductible) - $1,085.33 (nonrecoverable depreciation) = $83,725.90).
III. CONCLUSION
When a vendee purchases property under a land contract, the vendee becomes, in a real sense, the owner of that property. While the vendee may not immediately acquire full title in the property, the vendee does acquire equitable title and the remaining legal title is simply held in trust by the vendor. Under the parties' replacement-cost coverage, which required that the insured obtain a complete replacement for the destroyed property, Batton-Jajuga *359 satisfied the requirement when she became the owner of real property under a land contract. Moreover, in equity, she had actually spent the purchase money when the land contract became effective. Accordingly, there is no genuine issue of material fact that Farm Bureau is liable for the unpaid replacement costs as well as applicable statutory fees and interest.
Affirmed. As the prevailing party, plaintiff may tax costs under MCR 7.219.
Murphy, P.J., and M. J. Kelly, J., concurred with Swartzle, J.
The construction of an ambiguous contract is generally a question of fact reserved for the fact-finder.
Klapp v. United Ins. Group Agency, Inc.
,
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Debra BATTON-JAJUGA, Plaintiff-Appellee, v. FARM BUREAU GENERAL INSURANCE COMPANY OF MICHIGAN, Defendant-Appellant.
- Cited By
- 8 cases
- Status
- Published