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[DO NOT PUBLISH]
IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE ELEVENTH CIRCUIT
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No. 18-14772
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D.C. Docket No. 5:15-cv-00475-MTT
GARTH ANDERSON,
individually and on behalf of all those similarly situated,
Plaintiff - Appellant.
versus
AMERICAN FAMILY INSURANCE COMPANY,
Defendant – Appellant.
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Appeal from the United States District Court
for the Middle District of Georgia
________________________
(February 4, 2020)
Before ANDERSON and MARCUS, Circuit Judges, and EBEL, ∗ Circuit Judge.
PER CURIAM:
∗Honorable David M. Ebel, United States Circuit Judge for the Tenth Circuit, sitting
by designation.
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This is an appeal of the latest of a series of putative class actions filed
against home insurers in Georgia. Here, however, the district court did not decide
the plaintiff Garth Anderson’s motion for class certification, and instead granted
the defendant American Family Insurance Company’s (“AFIC”) motion for
summary judgment, concluding that the plaintiff failed to adduce sufficient
evidence showing that he suffered the alleged injuries.
We have had the benefit of oral argument, and have carefully reviewed the
opinion of the district court below, as well as the briefs of the parties and relevant
parts of the record. Because we write only for the benefit of the parties, who are
already familiar with the facts, we mention only such facts as are necessary to
understand our reasoning.
A.
The first issue is whether Anderson has introduced evidence demonstrating
that his property suffered from diminished value due to stigma that is sufficient to
survive AFIC’s summary judgment motion. After a thorough review of the record,
it is clear that Anderson has not adduced such evidence.
Anderson states that his expert, Dr. Kilpatrick, appraised his property and
conducted a diminished value analysis. He submits both a report and a rebuttal
ostensibly supporting this conclusion. Ultimately, we cannot conclude that the
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report and rebuttal sufficiently demonstrate that Anderson’s property suffered from
diminished value due to stigma.
The only places in the pair of reports in which Dr. Kilpatrick states that he
studied Anderson’s property for diminished value due to stigma are ¶¶ 13 and 87
of the Rebuttal. Paragraph 13 states that “I did appraise the Anderson property and
determine that, based on the aggregation of evidence, including my reconciliation
of case studies and the market data obtained from my prior survey, the Anderson
home property suffered a diminution in value of 13%.” Dr. Kilpatrick makes a
similar statement at ¶ 87: “Based on my expertise and experience in the appraisal
field and having appraised impaired properties for over 30 years, I concluded to a
reasonable degree of appraisal certainty that the Anderson property sustained a
diminution in value of approximately 13% as a result of its water loss event at
issue.”
Such statements standing alone are mere conclusions. Dr. Kilpatrick needs
to introduce some basis for making these statements about Anderson’s property.
But the expert report and rebuttal make clear that the opinion expressed in ¶¶ 13
and 87 is based entirely on the effect that similar casualty losses have had on other
properties. Dr. Kilpatrick notes that his 13% diminished value conclusion is
“based on the aggregation of evidence,” including “reconciliation of case studies”
and “my prior survey.” ¶ 13. He states that he has “reviewed the relevant
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literature for effects of [analogous] adverse events” and “analyzed case studies
involving similar adverse events.” ¶ 87. Dr. Kilpatrick “also reviewed a prior
contingent value survey and Respondent[’]s opinions,” and based his conclusion
on his “expertise and experience in the appraisal field.” ¶ 87.
Dr. Kilpatrick only visited Anderson’s property once—on January 24,
2017—and only for the purpose of evaluating its valuation before the water
damage. He did not enter the house, and did not assess the success or lack thereof
that the post-water damage repairs and renovations had on eliminating any stigma
resulting from the loss. Dr. Kilpatrick made it quite clear in his deposition that he
was “valuing the property as if unimpaired” and was attempting to obtain an
estimate of the house’s fair market value pre-water damage. Thus, Dr. Kilpatrick’s
proffered conclusions regarding the 13% impairment in value due to stigma are not
derived from his analysis of the property itself, but from the effect that similar
losses had on different properties.
Paragraph 236 of Dr. Kilpatrick’s report itself acknowledges that the
methodologies described above can only demonstrate the “potential” of a given
property to endure diminished value due to stigma. His report states that the “only
way to determine whether a property has suffered diminution in value, and the
extent of the value diminution, if any, to each property, is to assess the properties
in the before (prior to water damage) and after (post repair to the water damage)
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conditions in accordance with generally accepted appraisal standards . . . .” ¶ 236
(emphasis added). Nowhere does Dr. Kilpatrick state with sufficient detail or
explanation that he conducted this requisite analysis.
Dr. Kilpatrick’s conclusory statements in ¶¶ 13 and 87 that he actually
conducted a diminished value analysis are belied by his admission that he only
evaluated the Anderson property once—a pre-water damage valuation appraisal—
and the absence in either of his submissions of any statement claiming that he
conducted a post-water damage valuation appraisal, which he admits in ¶ 236 is the
only way to determine diminution in value. We therefore agree with the district
court’s statement that Dr. Kilpatrick’s submissions do not contain “any analysis or
discussion suggesting that he even attempted to assess Anderson’s home in its
immediate post-repair condition.”
Dr. Kilpatrick states multiple times that an analysis of diminished value on
account of stigma affecting other properties, as well as a review of the relevant
literature, can only demonstrate the potential of diminished value. And according
to Dr. Kilpatrick’s own testimony – which significantly is the only evidence in the
record which might support a diminished value because of stigma – to show that a
specific property actually did suffer diminished value, an expert must perform a
diminished value appraisal—i.e., assess the property before the water damage and
then after. Dr. Kilpatrick does not say anywhere that he performed such an
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appraisal. We therefore cannot conclude that Dr. Kilpatrick’s report and rebuttal
provide sufficient evidence to create a genuine issue of fact that Anderson’s
property suffered diminished value on account of stigma. Rather, Dr. Kilpatrick’s
opinion that Anderson’s house experienced a 13% diminished value due to stigma
is offered only at the highest level of abstraction, and is wholly conclusory and
without support in the record evidence.
On the other hand, there is strong evidence in the record indicating that
Anderson’s property suffered no diminished value:
• Anderson hired an expert who worked with AFIC’s claims adjuster, thus
ensuring that every possible needed repair was made and paid for;
• Sale of the property occurred only 18 months after the renovations were
completed, and less than 30 days after it was put on the market;
• The water damage was reflected in the seller disclosure forms, and there is
no indication that this fact depressed the eventual sales price;
• No potential buyers expressed concern about the water damage
• Anderson’s realtor touted the repairs as increasing the property’s value;
• The ultimate buyer’s inspection of the house listed other problems, but not
the prior water damage; and
• The property’s sales price reflected appreciation of 45% within four years.
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In light of the foregoing factors, 1 we cannot say that a reasonable jury could
find on this summary judgment evidence that Anderson’s property suffered
diminished value due to stigma. In other words, Anderson has failed to adduce
sufficient evidence to support such a finding. 2
B.
The second issue in this appeal is Anderson’s failure to assess claim. The
district court concluded that because AFIC was able to establish as a matter of law
that the insured’s home did not decrease in value because of stigma, there was no
need for an assessment. The point of an assessment is to determine whether stigma
exists. If there is no stigma, assessing the property at issue is futile, and the
question of whether Anderson is entitled to an assessment is essentially moot.
Anderson directs the Court to both State Farm Mutual Automobile Ins. Co.
v. Mabry, 556 So.2d 114 (G.A. 2001), and Thompson v. State Farm Fire &
1
To the extent that Dr. Kilpatrick’s 13% diminished value figure was derived, as claimed in
Anderson’s reply brief, from his case studies, his contingent value survey, and his reconciliation
of peer-reviewed literature, it is insufficient for the reasons set forth above in the text. To the
extent the 13% figure was derived from Dr. Kilpatrick’s prediction of what the house should
have sold for in August 2016, Dr. Kilpatrick admitted that he failed to consider a “confidence
interval” or margin of error, and therefore his prediction was flawed. His prediction was also
flawed because there is no evidence that he considered the other record evidence suggesting that
the actual sales price in August 2016, might have been reduced for reasons unrelated to stigma –
e.g., Anderson’s desire for a quick sale.
2
Our decision in this regard is based only on the evidence, or lack thereof, in this summary
judgment record. We offer no opinion as to appropriate methods that might be available to prove
diminished value on account of stigma.
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Casualty Co., 264 F. Supp. 3d 1302 (M.D. Ga. 2017), arguing that each case
demonstrates that a failure to assess claim is distinct from a failure to pay claim.
But neither case arose in a posture similar to this case, in which it is clear that there
was no diminished value on account of stigma. The parties dispute whether Mabry
expressly conditions the duty to assess on the plaintiff’s demonstration of the
potentiality of such diminished value. We do not decide that issue today, but it is
clear that when the Georgia Supreme Court permitted the injunction in that case,
there was still such potentiality for stigma. Therefore, Mabry is silent on the issue
of whether a court can or should order an insurance company to assess for
diminished value in a context in which it is clear that there is no diminished value.
Similarly, Thompson does not address whether a failure to assess claim
could survive when it is clear that there is no successful failure to pay claim. To
the contrary, the district court expressly concluded that there were issues of fact as
to the plaintiffs’ failure to pay claim. 264 F. Supp. 3d at 1316-19. It is true that
some language in Thompson appears to facially support Anderson’s position. For
example, the court states that “[w]hether the Thompsons have or have not suffered
diminished value is simply irrelevant to their standing to bring a claim for State
Farm’s failure to assess for a diminished value.” Id. at 1316-17. But it is clear
from context that the court in Thompson was merely explaining the flaws in State
Farm’s contention that Thompson was required to prove diminished value in order
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to receive an injunction requiring State Farm to assess its property—a contention
that the court in Thompson stated “turns Mabry on its head.” Id. at 1317.
Thompson was not making, and could not have made, a statement regarding the
situation presented here: whether a failure to assess claim could succeed when it is
clear as a matter of law that such an assessment would reveal no stigma.
We thus hold that, when a plaintiff raises a failure to assess claim and a
failure to pay claim alleging diminished value on account of stigma, and a
defendant succeeds on a motion for summary judgment with respect to the failure
to pay claim by demonstrating that the plaintiff’s property has not suffered
diminished value, it would be futile to assess the property and the failure to assess
claim is essentially moot.
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the district court is
AFFIRMED.
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