Pursuant to Ind.Appellate Rule 65(D), this
Memorandum Decision shall not be
regarded as precedent or cited before any May 09 2013, 9:13 am
court except for the purpose of establishing
the defense of res judicata, collateral
estoppel, or the law of the case.
ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANTS: ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEES:
JENNIFER L. GRAHAM RICK D. MEILS
Indianapolis, Indiana JOHN W. MERVILDE
Meils Thompson Dietz & Berish
Indianapolis, Indiana
IN THE
COURT OF APPEALS OF INDIANA
LP XXIV, LLC d/b/a/ LAS PALMAS )
APARTMENT HOMES and )
SLS MANAGEMENT, INC., )
)
Appellants-Plaintiffs, )
)
vs. ) No. 49A04-1207-PL-340
)
AMERICAN FAMILY MUTUAL INSURANCE )
COMPANY and CARL LONG, )
)
Appellees-Defendants. )
APPEAL FROM THE MARION SUPERIOR COURT
The Honorable Theodore M. Sosin, Judge
Cause No. 49D02-0701-PL-151
May 9, 2013
MEMORANDUM DECISION - NOT FOR PUBLICATION
FRIEDLANDER, Judge
LP XXIV, LLC d/b/a Las Palmas Apartment Homes (Las Palmas) and SLS
Management, Inc. (SLS) appeal after a jury trial from a defense verdict in favor of American
Family Insurance (AFI) and Carl Long. Las Palmas and SLS present the following restated,
dispositive issue for our review: Did the trial court err by denying Las Palmas and SLS’s
motion for summary judgment on the issue of agency? 1
We affirm.
Although this matter proceeded through a completed jury trial, this is an appeal from
the trial court’s ruling on cross-motions for summary judgment, among other motions and
requests. The following facts were designated by the parties for a ruling on summary
judgment. SLS is a property management company formed sometime in 1996 or 1997. In
2006, SLS, which had many employees, was the property manager for Las Palmas. Las
Palmas was owned by LP XXIV, LLC, and is located in Indianapolis, Indiana. Long, who
was an SLS employee, was the on-site property manager for Las Palmas in April 2006. Long
was hired by Val Sklarov, who was the president of SLS in 2006, and who personally
interviewed Long.
Tara Adams-Hanson, an SLS employee with authorization to do so, sent Long his job
offer by what was known as a position offering letter. Long’s duties were described in the
letter to “include but are not limited to: hiring, firing, full management of 614 unit housing
1
AFI presents an additional issue regarding the trial court’s order denying AFI’s motion for summary
judgment on the issue of ratification. Because of the dispositive nature of the issue we address, we do not
reach this alternative argument.
2
complex located at 3636 Mission Drive commonly known as Las Palmas Apartment Homes,
and 24 hour on call for emergency purposes.” Appellees’s Appendix at 120.
During April 2006, two storms occurred that gave rise to two separately filed
insurance claims due to the resulting storm damage at Las Palmas. After notifying SLS and
at the direction of SLS, Long submitted the first claim in April 2006, based on damage
caused by a wind storm. AFI, Las Palmas’s insurer, appointed its employee, Vickie Herring,
to be the adjustor for the claim. Las Palmas selected Stephen Gregory d/b/a Viper
Construction Services (Viper) to make the necessary repairs related to the April storms.
Long asked Herring to pay the contractors, more specifically, Viper, and Ian Brown
d/b/a Brown Roofing Co. a/k/a Brown Roofing, Inc. (Brown Roofing), directly with respect
to the first storm claim. Herring prepared a letter dated April 19, 2006, as an authorization
for direct payment. Herring needed a signed authorization letter from an authorized
representative of the insured in order to facilitate payments directly to the contractors in lieu
of the insured. Long did not sign the letter, but obtained a signed authorization from Sklarov
instructing AFI to make direct payments to Viper. That authorization provided as follows:
As representative of SLS Management Company Inc. I hereby authorize
American Family Insurance to make all claim payments directed to Brown
Roofing Co and Viper Construction for all repairs necessary as a result of the
above captioned loss. This authorization is valid only for those storm damages
sustained on 4/02/2006. This authorization may be revoked at our discretion
with written notice to your company.
Appellees’ Appendix at 153.
Herring testified in pertinent part about the authorization for direct payment to Viper
during her deposition as follows:
3
Q: Can you identify that [Exhibit 4]?
A: That is the authorization for direct pay?
Q: Okay, and that was signed by Mr. Sklarov, correct?
A: That is correct.
....
Q: Do you know who created the letter?
A: I did.
Q: You wrote that letter from top to bottom, didn’t you?
A: I did.
Q: The only thing Mr. Sklarov had to do with that letter was that he signed it,
is that correct?
A: I didn’t know who he was at the time, so I gave it to [Long].
Q: And you gave it to [Long] because you told [Long] that you needed
authorization to pay the contractors directly, is that correct?
A: Yes.
Q: And you did not accept [Long’s] authorization to pay the contractors
directly, did you?
A: I would have if he signed this, yes.
Q: Okay, so when someone else signed this, you became immediately aware
that someone else had that authority, isn’t that correct?
A: No, I saw where someone else signed it.
Q: Okay, well, why did you—
A: Why would I not question his signature any more than I would question
[Long’s]?
Q: Well, I think it says that he’s the president of the company.
A: I can say I’m president of a company, it doesn’t mean it’s so.
Q: Fine, but [] Long didn’t sign that authorization, did he?
A: No.
Q: And did that lead you to believe that [] Long did not have authority to
direct the payments?
A: [] Long could have been on vacation and someone else signed for him, I
don’t get into what someone’s hierarchy is, I don’t know. I was dealing with
[Long], I gave it to [Long], [Long] gave it back to me and it had [Sklarov’s]
signature.
Q: Okay, but when he gave it back to you and it had [Sklarov’s] signature on
it, you knew that [Sklarov] was the president of [SLS]?
A: I knew that [Sklarov] presented himself as president.
Q: Did you assume that that was a higher position in the company than
property manager?
A: Did I assume?
Q: Yes.
A: If he says he’s president, I think president’s higher than manager.
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Q: Okay, so as between [] Long and [] Sklarov, as far as you knew—and
you’re right, you know, he might’ve just written that on there just like [Long]
might’ve said he was property manager. Between those two you knew that []
Sklarov had more authority for SLS [] than [] Long did?
A: I cannot tell you what—I did not know who had what authority and I don’t
know what authority he gave [Long] or didn’t give [Long].
....
Q: So are you telling me you recommended to [] Long that the payment not be
made directly to the contractor?
A: That’s exactly what I recommended.
Q: And did he insist that it be made directly to the contractor?
A: My response to him upon his request was [] I have never worked with these
contractors before, I don’t know who they are, I can’t tell you anything about
them. If you make this request and payments are [made] directly to the
contractor, then you lose all control of how this project plays out, and if you
authorize that to happen and things start going bad, it’s not [AFI]’s fault at that
point because we have—I am telling you upfront that that’s not something
personally that I would do, but if you want to direct me that way, that’s your
business as a representative of the company.
....
Q: Okay, Now, again, you met with [] Long who was listed as the contact
person and the only contact person on the first notice of loss, that’s, what
FNOL?
A: Yes.
Q: Okay. Do you know how he got to be listed as the contact person?
A: I don’t know.
Q: He asked you to pay the contractors direct[ly] and you told him you’d need
authorization, correct?
A: Yes.
....
Appellants’ Appendix at 38-40.
In late July, Long called in the claim for the second storm, a hail storm, which
occurred on April 14, 2006. Long told Herring to handle the claim in the same manner as she
had handled the first claim. Herring testified in pertinent part about this in her deposition as
follows:
Q: Okay. Now as far as the second claim was concerned, there’s not a copy of
that letter in any of the claim files.
5
A: No, because it was a verbal—
Q: A verbal—
A: --authorization.
Q: From Sklarov?
A: From [Long], the property manager.
Q: But you know [Long] didn’t sign that, so he didn’t have the authority,
right?
A: Just because he didn’t sign it, you don’t have to conclude that he did not
have the authority to sign it.
Q: Okay, but I’m really confused now because you said he told you to handle
it [the second claim] the same way you handled the first claim—
A: Right.
Q: --and on the first claim you had someone sign an authorization to pay the
contractors directly, so either you didn’t follow [Long’s] instruction to handle
the claim the same way you did the first time or you did and you say you didn’t
send a letter, so you did not follow [Long’s] instruction to handle the second
claim the same way you handled the first claim.
A: I think you’re incorrect.
Q: Okay, where is the authorization that would show me that you handled the
second claim the same way you handled the first claim?
A: When we were referring to “handling the claim in the same way” we were
referring to how the work was to be done, that they were going to go off my
estimate, that the contractors were going to continue to get paid direct[ly]
because everything was ---or the contractor at that point, because there was
only one, that everything was moving along and that they wanted to continue
that process the way it had been going once that claim process started rolling.
Q: So is it your sworn testimony today that you did not attempt to obtain
authority from the president of SLS to make any of the payments on the second
storm?
A: It is my testimony that I took the word of the property manager whom I had
dealt with at this point for several months and the president had never told me
to deal with anyone differently, so it is my testimony that no involvement from
that time that Mr.—I don’t know how to pronounce his last name, [Sklarov],
on April the 20th to the time that the second claim was reported, that never at
any time did he tell me that [Long] did not have the authority to direct the
claim. So with [Long] being the contact person, [Long] being the one that I
always dealt with, [Sklarov] being aware of this claim, this first claim,
knowing that I’m dealing directly with [Long] there was no indication that I
should ever be dealing with anyone but [Long]. So when [Long] verbally
directs me to make payment the same way on the second set of claims as we
were doing on the first set of claims, there would be no reason for me to
question that.
6
....
A: No I did not make that attempt.
Q: Now, I believe that that letter limits direct payment to the contractors to the
storm that occurred on April 2nd, 2006, is that correct?
A: The written authorization, yes.
Q: Yes. Okay, and the written authorization that you wrote and that you
required be signed, correct?
A: I requested that he sign this.
....
Q: You said “Have someone sign this.”
A: “I need this signed” is what I said.
Q: Because you needed authorization to do that?
A: Yes, I wanted authorization to do that. We pay direct[ly] to contractors,
that’s not an unusual thing.
Q: Without authorization you do it?
....
A: Anyone with the insured’s permission, yes.
Q: Oh, okay, so the insured would have to give someone else authority to act
on their behalf in that regard?
A: “I want you to deal with my mother” or “I want you to deal with my
father,” “I want you to deal with my son,” we do that, we accommodate their
requests.
Q: Does that letter say in it anywhere on this claim “I want you to deal with []
Long”?
A: It doesn’t say you don’t either, I mean [Sklarov] never told me that he
didn’t.
Id. at 143-44.
The contract Long signed for Viper’s services as the “authorized representative” of
Las Palmas on July 27, 2006, with regard to the first storm claim provided in pertinent part as
follows:
3. Payment: In consideration of Contractor’s performance of these services,
Contractor agrees to Accept the Insurance Estimate as Fair and Comprehensive
and will not Bill, Charge, or otherwise Encumber Las Palmas Apartments for
any additional costs, above the Insurance Estimate, for Labor, Materials,
Transportation or any other Direct or Indirect Cost of the Project without prior
written approval (Purchase Order). Contractor will be paid by the Insurance
Company directly as in previous Projects, and will communicate with the
7
authorized representative for both the Insurance Company and Las Palmas
Apartments on all milestones and inspections.
Id. at 154.
Long signed an affidavit in which he stated there was no written or oral agreement
limiting his authority as the apartment manager at Las Palmas, that he had the authority to
submit claim notices to Las Palmas’s insurance company, and did so regarding the claims at
issue in this case. Long further stated that Sklarov was aware that Long had submitted the
claims, and that he forwarded to Sklarov a signed copy of the contract Long had entered into
with Viper. Additionally, Long stated that Sklarov had made at least two walk-throughs of
the apartment buildings to review the repair work being completed by Viper.
Long’s affidavit contains the following additional averments:
17. At one point, Sklarov received a check from [AFI] made payable only to
Las Palmas, as opposed to previous checks which were payable to both Las
Palmas and Viper, for the work Viper was performing at Las Palmas.
18. After receiving this check, Sklarov told me that he thought that he could
get free decking, new gutters and down spouts from Viper even though these
items were not included in the Contract.
19. One day Sklarov’s office sent to me via facsimile a document to sign
which stated that I agreed to retroactively limit my authority to act on Las
Palmas’ behalf.
20. The statement detailed in paragraph 18 and the document sent to me as
explained in paragraph 19 above caused me to seriously question whether I
wanted to continue working for Sklarov.
21. I refused to sign the document referenced in paragraph 19 and resigned my
position as apartment manager with Las Palmas.
Id. at 132-33.
8
Herring’s affidavit included her statement that she discussed the issue of payments for
the claims with Sklarov by telephone on September 8, 2006. She indicated that at no time
during their conversation did Sklarov tell her that Long had no authority to arrange for the
direct payment of the contractors performing the repairs. He did request that no future
payments be made to the contractors.
On January 7, 2007, Las Palmas, SLS, and Kidz Real Estate Group, LLC (Kidz), filed
a complaint against Gregory, d/b/a Viper, Ian Brown, d/b/a Brown Roofing, Long, and AFI,
alleging various theories of recovery based upon the failure to complete repairs at Las
Palmas. Las Palmas successfully obtained a default judgment against Viper, based upon the
allegations in the original complaint. 2 After the filing of further pleadings, Kidz was
dismissed as a plaintiff in the action. The trial court heard argument on the parties’ motions
in limine and cross motions for summary judgment. On April 27, 2012, the trial court issued
its order, a part of which is at the heart of this appeal, which reads in relevant part as follows:
3.) Defendant’s Second Motion for Summary Judgment is Granted as to the
issue of criminal conversion, all Kidz Real Estate claims, and any claims based
upon inherent authority. The Court Denies Defendant’s Motion for Summary
Judgment as to [the] issue of agency arising out of actual or apparent authority,
as material issues of fact remain regarding the nature and scope of Carl Long’s
authority to act on behalf of the remaining Plaintiffs, LP XXIV and SLS
Management, Inc. The Court further Denies Defendant’s Motion for Summary
Judgment based upon ratification and the issue of theft coverage, until such a
time as there is a jury determination on the issue of employee theft.
4.) Plaintiff’s Motion for Summary Judgment on the issue of agency is also
Denied, as the issues of fact that preclude Defendant’s Motion for Summary
2
The efforts to proceed on this default judgment or to set this judgment aside are relevant only to the issue of
ratification, which we do not reach in this opinion.
9
Judgment on the issue of agency also preclude Plaintiff’s Motion on the same
issue.
Id. at 28-29 (emphasis in original). After the completion of a five-day jury trial, the matter
concluded with a defense verdict. The trial court denied the motion to correct error filed by
Las Palmas, and this appeal ensued.
Our appellate review in this situation has been described as follows:
As a general rule, an order denying summary judgment is not a final
appealable judgment. Such a denial does not irretrievably dispose of one or
more issues between the parties; neither does it determine nor foreclose the
rights of the parties. Rather, the denial of a motion for summary judgment
merely places the parties’ rights in abeyance pending ultimate determination by
the trier of fact. Thus a party who seeks review of denial of a motion for
summary judgment must do so ordinarily by way of interlocutory appeal in
accordance with Ind. Appellate Rule 4(B)(6). However once final judgment
has been entered following trial, the ultimate determination of the trier of fact
upon the merits of the claim has taken place, and the interlocutory nature of the
denial of summary judgment terminates. As a result, a party who fails to bring
an interlocutory appeal from the denial of a motion for summary judgment may
nevertheless pursue appellate review after the entry of final judgment. In
accordance with this approach, this court has long addressed appeals from
denials of motions for summary judgment following entry of a final judgment
or order. Accordingly, we conclude that the denial of a motion for summary
judgment is reviewable on appeal following a final judgment entered after trial
on the merits.
....
On appeal from the denial of a motion for summary judgment, we apply the
same standard applicable in the trial court. We must determine whether the
record reveals a genuine issue of material fact and whether the trial court
correctly applied the law. Any doubt as to a fact, or an inference to be drawn,
is resolved in favor of the non-moving party. Even if the trial court believes
that the non-moving party will be unsuccessful at trial, summary judgment
should not be entered where material facts conflict or where conflicting
inferences are possible. In like fashion we use the same standard of review as
the trial court in determining the propriety of judgment on the evidence. When
the trial court considers a motion for judgment on the evidence, it must view
10
the evidence in a light most favorable to the non-moving party. Judgment may
be entered only if there is no substantial evidence or reasonable inference to be
drawn therefrom to support an essential element of the claim.
Keith v. Mendus, 661 N.E.2d 26, 35-36 (Ind. Ct. App. 1996) (internal citations omitted).
The parties contended that each was entitled to summary judgment on the issue of
agency. “‘Agency is a relationship resulting from the manifestation of consent by one party
to another that the latter will act as an agent for the former.’” Demming v. Underwood, 943
N.E.2d 878, 884 (Ind. Ct. App. 2011) (quoting Smith v. Brown, 778 N.E.2d 490, 495 (Ind. Ct.
App. 2002)). An actual agency relationship is established by showing the following three
elements: (1) Manifestation of consent by the principal, (2) acceptance of authority by the
agent, and (3) control exerted by the principal over the agent. Douglas v. Monroe, 743
N.E.2d 1181 (Ind. Ct. App. 2001). Circumstantial evidence may be used to prove these
elements, and there is no requirement that the agent’s authority to act be conveyed in writing.
Dep’t of Treasury v. Ice Serv., Inc., 220 Ind. 64, 41 N.E.2d 201 (1942). Whether an agency
relationship exists is generally a question of fact, but if the evidence is undisputed, summary
judgment may be appropriate. Douglas v. Monroe, 743 N.E.2d 1181.
We have stated the following about our Supreme Court’s acknowledgement of three
classifications of authority that exist when a person is acting as another’s agent:
In determining whether a person is acting as an agent, the court has recognized
three classifications of authority: (1) actual authority; (2) apparent authority;
and (3) inherent authority. Actual authority is created by written or spoken
words or other conduct of the principal which, reasonably interpreted, causes
the agent to believe that the principal desires him so to act on the principal’s
account. Apparent authority refers to a third party’s reasonable belief that the
principal has authorized the acts of its agent; it arises from the principal’s
indirect or direct manifestations to a third party and not from the
11
representations or acts of the agent. Inherent authority, which is grounded in
neither the principal’s conduct toward the agent nor the principal’s
representation to a third party[ ] but rather in the very status of the agent[,] . . .
originates from the customary authority of a person in the particular type of
agency relationship. [T]he acts of an agent with inherent authority only bind
the principal where (1) the acts done are those which usually accompany or are
incidental to transactions which the agent is authorized to conduct if, although
they are forbidden by the principal, (2) the other party reasonably believes that
the agent is authorized to do them, and (3) the other party has no notice that he
is not so authorized.
Quality Foods, Inc. v. Holloway Assocs. Prof’l Eng’rs & Land Surveyors, Inc., 852 N.E.2d
27, 31-32 (Ind. Ct. App. 2006).
In the present case, the trial court granted AFI’s motion for summary judgment on the
issue of inherent authority and that ruling is not before us on review. The denial of summary
judgment on the issue of actual and apparent authority is before us. Based upon the language
of the case law and designated evidence set forth above, we cannot say that the trial court
erred by denying both cross-motions for summary judgment as to those issues.
There were genuine issues of material fact related to the nature and scope of Long’s
ability to act on behalf of SLS and Las Palmas. The record citations above are indicative of
the unresolved inferences to be drawn from SLS’s, more specifically, Sklarov’s, actions or
inaction with regard to the two insurance claims and how they were pursued. Resolution of
those issues depended in large part on a determination of the credibility of the witnesses,
which is a task for the trier of fact, and not appropriate in the summary judgment context.
See Beta Steel v. Rust, 830 N.E.2d 62, 68 (Ind. Ct. App. 2005) (“[w]e also give no deference
to a trial court’s ability to weigh evidence and judge witness credibility, because no such
weighing or judging is permitted when considering a summary judgment motion”).
12
Judgment affirmed.
NAJAM, J., and BRADFORD, J., concur.
13