Summary
In Allen Park Theatre Co., Inc. v. Michigan Millers Mutual Insurance Co., 48 Mich.App. 199, 210 N.W.2d 402 (1973), the court addressed a civil authority order provision in the context of certain riot-prevention orders issued following the death of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Following Dr. King's death, several civil disturbances were reported in and around Detroit.
Summary of this case from Kelaher, Connell & Conner, P.C. v. Auto-Owners Ins. Co.Opinion
Docket No. 14757.
Decided June 28, 1973.
Appeal from Oakland, Arthur E. Moore, J. Submitted Division 1 March 12, 1973, at Detroit. (Docket No. 14757.) Decided June 28, 1973.
Complaint by Allen Park Theatre Company, Inc., and others against Michigan Millers Mutual Insurance Company and Michigan Mutual Liability Company to recover for business losses under policies of business-interruption insurance issued by the defendants. Judgment for plaintiffs. Defendants appeal. Affirmed.
David Newman and Gerald Curtis, for plaintiffs.
Denenberg, Tuffley Thorpe, for defendants Michigan Millers Mutual Insurance Company, as to the Americana Theatre only, and Michigan Mutual Liability Company.
I agree that the insurance policy in this case can be read with complete logic to arrive at the result reached by Judge FITZGERALD. I am, however, compelled to say that the result reached in Sloan v Phoenix of Hartford Ins Co, 46 Mich. App. 46 ; 207 N.W.2d 434 (1973), is just as logically possible. Under these circumstances I am compelled to hold with the Sloan Court. If the insurer wanted to be sure that the payment of business-interruption benefits had to be accompanied by physical damage it was its burden to say so unequivocally. Under the authority of Sloan the trial judge is affirmed.
V.J. BRENNAN, J., concurred.
Defendant insurance companies are appealing as of right from a decision permitting plaintiff theatre owners to recover damages for business losses. Plaintiffs were forced to cease operation pursuant to an executive order closing all places of amusement within Wayne County due to the civil disturbance which occurred subsequent to the death of Martin Luther King, Jr. We are asked to examine and interpret the provisions of plaintiffs' insurance policy to determine whether the circuit court's decision awarding damages to plaintiffs should be permitted to stand.
There is no dispute regarding the facts of the case. Defendants issued their standard fire insurance policy to plaintiffs, including extended coverage and business-interruption endorsements. On April 5, 1968, and for some time prior thereto, the plaintiffs were engaged in business as the owners and operators of the theatres described in the original complaint. On that date, following the death of Martin Luther King, Jr., civil disturbance occurred in various areas of metropolitan Detroit, accompanied by vandalism to real and personal property, although there was no damage in, upon or adjacent to the theatres operated by the plaintiffs. Effective 4:30 p.m. on said date, the Governor of the State of Michigan declared that a state of public emergency existed in Wayne County. By Executive Order No. 1968-1, effective Friday, April 5, 1968, at 7:30 p.m., all places of amusement within Wayne County were closed until further notice. The executive order stated, among other things:
"2. No persons shall be allowed on the public streets or thoroughfares in the County of Wayne between the hours of 8:00 o'clock p.m. and 5:00 o'clock a.m., provided, however, that this regulation shall not apply to persons going to and from their normal occupations and to those whom permission has been specifically granted by the Director of the State Police or his duly authorized agent.
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"4. All places of amusement within the County of Wayne are hereby closed until further notice.
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"7. All meetings or assemblies of more than three persons is prohibited unless permission has been granted by the Director of the State Police or his duly authorized agent."
Executive Orders 1968-2 and 1968-3 containing identical provisions were issued simultaneously extending the area in which a state of public emergency existed. These restrictions were relaxed by amended executive orders dated April 10, 1968, permitting places of amusement to open between the hours of midnight and 5 a.m.
The theatres operated by the plaintiffs were customarily open daily from 5:30 p.m. to midnight in addition to weekend matinee performances. During the period of April 5 through April 10, 1968, in compliance with the Governor's proclamations and executive orders, the theatres were closed for a six-day period.
The extended-coverage endorsement, attached to each of the policies involved, states:
"In consideration of the premium for this coverage and subject to the provisions herein and in the policy to which this endorsement is attached, including endorsements thereon, the policy is extended to insure against direct loss by * * * riot * * *.
"Provisions Applicable Only To Riot, Riot Attending A Strike And Civil Commotion: Loss by riot * * * shall include * * * direct loss from pillage and looting occurring during and at the immediate place of a riot * * *.
"Provisions Applicable Only When This Endorsement Is Attached To A Policy Covering Business Interruption, Tuition Fees, Extra Expense, Rent Or Rental Value, Leasehold Interest Or Other Consequential Loss: The term `direct', as applied to loss, means loss, as limited and conditioned in such policy, resulting from direct loss to described property from the peril(s) insured against; and, while the business of the owner or tenant(s) of the described building(s) is interrupted by a strike at the described location, this Company shall not be liable for any loss due to interference by any person(s) with rebuilding, repairing or replacing the property damaged or destroyed or with the resumption or continuation of business." (Emphasis added.)
An additional rider, Business Interruption Form No. 3, provides as follows:
"1. [T]his policy covers only against loss resulting directly from necessary interruption of business caused by damage to or destruction of real or personal property by the peril(s) insured against, during the term of this policy, on premises occupied by the Insured * * * and situated [as herein described].
"2. In the event of such damage or destruction this Company shall be liable for the ACTUAL LOSS SUSTAINED by the Insured resulting directly from such interruption of business * * * for only such length of time as would be required with the exercise of due diligence and dispatch to rebuild, repair or replace such part of the property herein described as has been damaged or destroyed * * *.
"7. Interruption By Civil Authority: This policy is extended to include the actual loss as covered hereunder, during the period of time, not exceeding 2 consecutive weeks, when as a direct result of the peril(s) insured against, access to the premises described is prohibited by order of civil authority." (Emphasis added.)
The Michigan Standard Fire Insurance Policy, lines 11 through 21, provides as follows:
"This Company shall not be liable for loss by fire or other perils insured against in this policy caused, directly or indirectly, by: * * * (h) order of any civil authority except acts of destruction at the time of and for the purpose of preventing the spread of fire, provided that such fire did not originate from any of the perils excluded by this policy." MCLA 500.2832; MSA 24.12832.
The central issue presented in construing the above-mentioned provisions is whether actual damage to or destruction of the insured premises as a direct result of riot is required under the interruption by civil authority clause in order for owners to be reimbursed for losses suffered. Plaintiffs contend the risk insured against is the prohibition of access to insured premises by order of civil authority enacted by reason of the stated perils without any requirement that denial of access be caused by reason of physical damage to the insured's property. Defendants argue that condition precedent to reimbursement under the business-interruption clause is the requirement that there be direct and actual physical damage to or destruction of the property.
Defendants state that the perils insured against appear only on the extended-coverage endorsement. Their obligation to reimburse the insured for losses suffered due to business interruptions by civil authority pursuant to paragraph 7 of the policy must necessarily reference paragraphs 1 and 2. They argue that paragraph 7 merely determines the extent of the coverage permitted under the first two paragraphs. Since paragraph 1 expressly restricts coverage to losses resulting directly from necessary interruption of business caused by damage to or destruction of real or personal property, the absence of damage to or destruction of the premises obviates the requirement that defendant reimburse plaintiffs for business losses. They read paragraphs 1, 2 and 7 to mean the following: Paragraph 1 is the basic insuring provision which specifically requires that the loss suffered result directly from necessary interruption of business caused by damage to or destruction of real or personal property by the perils insured against. Paragraph 2 imposes a limitation on the actual loss directly suffered by restricting the time during which repairs or replacement of damaged property can occur. They require the exercise of due diligence and dispatch. Paragraph 7 extends the time during which repair or replacement can be made by granting an additional period of two weeks in the event of interruption by civil authority.
Plaintiffs understand the policy to read differently. Their interpretation is that the business-interruption form constitutes a separate and independent agreement providing coverage additional to the perils provided in the extended-coverage endorsement. They further assert that interruption by civil authority is an additional peril for which coverage is provided. A distinction is drawn between the physical damage provisions of paragraphs 1 and 2 and paragraph 7, which addresses a wholly different hazard for peril, that being the captioned heading, Interruption by Civil Authority. The absence of any language requiring physical destruction or damage under paragraph 7 should result in reimbursement for damages incurred due to denial of access to the premises. The two-week extension period granted in paragraph 7 is regarded as being both inconsistent and redundant if the requirement of physical damage or destruction is implied since there exists no relationship between that period and the actual time needed to repair or replace the damage. Plaintiffs finally argue that the phraseology of paragraph 7 is ambiguous, and, since it is susceptible to different interpretation, must be resolved against the insurer.
I am unable to agree with the plaintiffs' interpretation of the insurance agreement and would reverse the decision of the circuit court. Addressing first the matter of interpreting the insurance agreement on its face, it appears it was not within the contemplation of the contract to provide business-interruption-insurance coverage to policy holders without damage to or destruction of the premises. The extended-coverage endorsement of the standard policy delineated perils which could result in direct loss to the insured. Direct loss was defined in the endorsement as a "loss limited and conditioned in such policy, resulting from direct loss to described property from the peril(s) insured against". It is agreed that riot was one of the perils insured against.
Also incorporated into the standard policy was an endorsement entitled "Business Interruption Form No. 3". Because the extended-coverage endorsement is applicable only when attached to a policy covering certain other risks (among which includes business interruption), the terms of Form No. 3 must be read in relation to the extended-coverage endorsement. Paragraph 1 covers loss resulting directly from necessary interruption of business caused by damage to or destruction of real or personal property from the perils insured against. Under paragraph 2, if property damage or destruction from the perils results, coverage is limited to actual loss sustained by the insured resulting directly for only such length of time as would be required with the exercise of due diligence and dispatch to rebuild, repair or replace the damaged or destroyed property.
It is at this point that the writer departs from the lower court's reasoning. The trial judge construed paragraph 7 as not requiring physical damage to or destruction of property. This provision states:
"7. Interruption By Civil Authority: This policy is extended to include the actual loss as covered hereunder, during the period of time, not exceeding 2 consecutive weeks, when as a direct result of the peril(s) insured against, access to the premises described is prohibited by order of civil authority." (Emphasis added.)
The court ruled that the requirement of physical damage to or destruction of the insured property was too technical a theory upon which to fulfill the purposes of the parties. Further, it was thought incongruous to deny recovery for business losses where adjacent property was destroyed, yet reimburse the owners of premises who suffered minor dollar damage to property.
I cannot agree with this analysis. The word "direct", as defined earlier, is not susceptible to ambiguous interpretation. "Loss limited and conditioned in such policy, resulting from direct loss to property from the perils insured against" can mean only that direct loss to property must occur as a condition precedent for recovery under the policy.
The apparent unreasonable purpose in denying recovery where adjacent property is hypothetically destroyed yet awarding insurance benefits for minor dollar damage to the insured property escapes me. The fact of the matter is that denial of access to premises without property damage was not one of the risks insured against. What is termed coverage for minor dollar damage (repairable within two weeks) reads as the grant of an extension of time during which those persons designated by the owners are able to make the necessary repairs to insure continuity of operation. This insurance coverage is in no way related to damages, however severe, that may occur to the premises of adjacent property owners.
The writer cannot agree with plaintiffs' contention that the business-interruption rider is a separate and independent agreement without reference to either the standard policy or the extended-coverage endorsement. It is fundamental that insurance policies must be construed as a whole, the intent of the parties being gathered from the four corners of the instrument. Girard Fire Marine Ins Co v Scott, 265 Mich. 293; 251 N.W. 314 (1933). The word "direct" in the extended-coverage endorsement is clearly defined and relates to those losses appearing in the business-interruption rider. The two documents must be read together.
Conceding plaintiffs' interpretation of the business-interruption rider that interruption by civil authority represents a separate peril other than those appearing in the extended-coverage endorsement, one cannot ignore the requirement of damage to or destruction of the insured premises. The words "as covered hereunder" in paragraph 7 refer back to paragraphs 1 and 2 wherein physical damage is a prerequisite for recovery.
The precise question presented in this case has been decided in two recent Michigan Court of Appeals cases. However, I am unable to conclude, as these decisions do, that denial of access to insured premises by order of civil authority can be reimbursed as a business loss where no damage to or destruction of the insured property occurs. Two Caesars Corp v Jefferson Ins Co of N Y, 280 A.2d 305 (DC App, 1971), decided by the District of Columbia Court of Appeals, advances a more compelling argument for denying recovery under circumstances virtually identical to the instant case. A restaurant owner was denied insurance coverage for loss of income from the sale of food and alcoholic beverages resulting from a curfew imposed because of civil disturbances following the assassination of Martin Luther King, Jr. Two Caesars ruled specifically on the absence of language in paragraph 7 requiring physical damage to the premises in stating at 306-307:
Sloan v Phoenix of Hartford Ins Co, 46 Mich. App. 46; 207 N.W.2d 434 (1973); Southlanes Bowl, Inc v The Lumbermen's Mutual Ins Co, 46 Mich. App. 758; 208 N.W.2d 569 (1973).
"Appellant contends, however, and with particular reference to the `Business Interruption' endorsement attached to the policies involved in the case now on appeal that Bros, Inc [v Liberty Mutual Fire Ins Co, 268 A.2d 611 (DC App, 1970)] is distinguishable because there the policy language provided coverage `when, as a direct result of damage to or destruction of property adjacent to the premises herein described,' access to such property is specifically prohibited by order of civil authority. In this connection, appellant says that the language quoted above formed the basis for our ruling in Bros, Inc, supra, and appellant seems to suggest that we attach significance to the fact that no such language is employed in the policies now under consideration.
"We are unable to follow appellant's reasoning. There was no allegation in Bros, Inc, supra, that the `Order of Civil Authority' was predicated upon damage to or destruction of either the premises insured or property adjacent thereto. Consequently, no such consideration could have influenced the court in its decision. What we said in that case, at 613-614, was:
"`Appellant does not allege that the loss from interruption of his business resulted in damage to or destruction of his property. Coverage is therefore not present under the first two of the quoted provisions. As to the final clause, though the loss alleged resulted from the curfew and municipal regulations, these did not prohibit access to the premises because of damage to or destruction of adjacent property.'"
The Two Caesars Court was well aware of the difference in contractual language in the policies, yet maintained its position that physical damage was required as a condition precedent to the right of recoupment of losses sustained due to an order by civil authority.
Plaintiffs next argue that the ambiguity that exists in paragraph 7 of the Business Interruption Rider must be interpreted in favor of the insured. The previous discussion has attached meaning to the provisions involved, and the reasoning need not be reiterated. In support of this interpretation, the case of Cleland Simpson v Firemen's Ins Co of Newark, N J, 392 Pa. 67; 140 A.2d 41 (1958), stands directly on point. The Pennsylvania Supreme Court ruled in favor of an insurance company where business-interruption clauses of an insurance policy were quite similar to those involved in the instant case:
"Thus we see the buildup of the contract. First, the specification of the perils insured against and confining the coverage to direct losses from such perils. Secondly, the change by form no. 3 of the coverage provision * * * (otherwise defined as gross profit) for the direct loss from fire or lightning, but limiting the loss to that caused by destruction or damage by the perils (fire and lightning) insured against. Thirdly, extending this coverage to include a time-limited loss due to prohibition of access to the premises by order of civil authority, but again as a direct result of a peril insured against.
"We can only conclude that the clear language of the policy restricts the loss to that following a direct invasion of the property by fire or another specified peril and the subsequent prohibition by civil authority of access to the properties." 392 Pa. 69, adopting by reference 11 Pa DC 2d 607, 611-612; 140 A.2d 43-44.
I am unable to agree with defendants' contention that access to the insured premises was not prohibited as a direct result of the riot since the premises were not located in those areas damaged or destroyed. Access to the premises was prohibited by order of civil authorities as a direct result of riot or civil commotion. Since the contract was silent as to the question of proper exercise of executive discretion, any ambiguity present in this question should be resolved in favor of the insured. Martin v Ohio Casualty Ins Co, 9 Mich. App. 598; 157 N.W.2d 827 (1968). However, activation of paragraph 7 of the Business Interruption Rider is still dependent upon physical damage to or destruction of the insured premises. The absence of physical damage to the premises in this case renders paragraph 7 inapplicable.
Finally, analysis of the above issue renders moot any discussion of whether defendant insurers are barred by waiver from asserting the failure of plaintiffs to comply with the policy provisions regarding the timely filing of written proofs of loss. Suffice it to say that the Michigan cases are clear in distinguishing between a general agent or adjuster with authority to adjust losses and those agents who lack such express or implied authority. Plaintiffs have ignored authorities cited by defendants and do not persuade this Court that the telephone conversation between plaintiffs and defendants' agent could effectively serve as a waiver of the requirement for filing a proof of loss in the absence of proof that the agent possessed the requisite authority.
I would reverse the decision of the trial court.