[J-3AB-2020]
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
EASTERN DISTRICT
SAYLOR, C.J., BAER, TODD, DONOHUE, DOUGHERTY, WECHT, MUNDY, JJ.
KONRAD KURACH, : No. 12 EAP 2019
:
Appellant : Appeal from the Order of Superior
: Court entered on August 24, 2018 at
: No. 1726 EDA 2017 reversing the
v. : Order of the Court of Common Pleas
: of Philadelphia County, Civil
: Division, entered on April 21, 2017
TRUCK INSURANCE EXCHANGE, : at No. 00339 July Term, 2015 and
: remanding.
Appellee :
: ARGUED: March 10, 2020
:
MARK WINTERSTEEN, INDIVIDUALLY : No. 13 EAP 2019
AND ON BEHALF OF ALL OTHERS :
SIMILARLY SITUATED, : Appeal from the Order of Superior
: Court entered on August 24, 2018 at
Appellant : No. 1730 EDA 2017 reversing the
: Order of the Court of Common Pleas
: of Philadelphia County, Civil
v. : Division, entered on April 21, 2017
: at No. 03543 July Term, 2015 and
: remanding.
TRUCK INSURANCE EXCHANGE, :
: ARGUED: March 10, 2020
Appellee :
OPINION
JUSTICE TODD DECIDED: August 18, 2020
In these consolidated appeals, we consider the question of whether, under the
terms of the “replacement cost coverage” policies at issue, the insurer was permitted to
withhold from any actual cash value (“ACV”) payment general contractor’s overhead and
profit (“GCOP”) expenses, unless and until the insureds undertook repairs of the
damaged property, even though the services of a general contractor were reasonably
likely to be needed to complete the repairs. After careful review, we affirm the order of
the Superior Court, which found the insurer was entitled to withhold such costs.
I. Facts and Procedural History
Appellants Konrad Kurach and Mark Wintersteen (“Policyholders”) each
purchased identical “Farmers Next Generation” insurance policies from Appellee Truck
Insurance Company (“Insurer”), to cover their residential dwellings situated in
Pennsylvania.1 Further, each paid Insurer an additional premium for “replacement cost
coverage.”2 Subsequent to the purchase of these policies, both Policyholders sustained
water damage to their houses in excess of $2,500, and both filed claims with Insurer
under the policies.
The policies provide a “two-step” settlement process governing the manner in
which Insurers would handle property damage claims of this nature, as described in
Section 5 of the policies, the relevant portion of which provides:
5. How We Settle Covered Loss
a. Coverage A (Dwelling) and Coverage B (Separate
Structures). We will only settle covered loss or damage on the
basis of use as a private residence.
(1) Settlement for covered loss or damage to the dwelling
or separate structures will be settled at replacement cost,
1 Appellant Wintersteen’s policy became effective November 13, 2013, and Appellant
Kurach’s policy went into effect on May 22, 2014.
2 Although the policies at issue in this matter do not explicitly define “replacement cost
coverage,” this type of coverage, as a general matter, “allows recovery for the actual value
of property at the time of loss, without deduction for deterioration, obsolescence, and
similar depreciation of the property's value.” 12A Couch on Insurance § 176:56; see also
Carulli v. Allstate Insurance Company, 462 A.2d 287, 287 (Pa. Super. 1983).
[J-3A-2020 and J-3B-2020] - 2
without deduction for depreciation, for an amount that is
reasonably necessary, for the lesser of the repair or
replacement of the damaged property, but for no more
than the smallest of the following:
(i) the applicable stated limit or other limit of insurance
under this policy that applies to the damaged or
destroyed dwelling or separate structure(s);
(ii) the reasonable replacement cost of that specific
part of the dwelling or separate structure(s) damaged
for equivalent construction with materials of like kind
and quality on the residence premises, determined as
of the time of loss or damage;
(iii) the reasonable amount actually necessarily spent
to repair or replace the damage to the dwelling or
separate structure(s); or
(iv) the loss to the interest of the insured in the property.
Reasonably necessary replacement cost does not include
damage to property otherwise uninsured or excluded under
this policy.
When the cost to repair or replace damaged property is more
than $2,500, we will pay no more than the actual cash value
of the loss until actual repair or replacement is completed. If
the dwelling or a separate structure is rebuilt or replaced at a
different location, the cost [sic] described in subsection (ii)
above are limited to the costs which would have been incurred
if the dwelling or separate structure had been built or replaced
at its location on the resident’s premises.
* * *
e. General contractor fees and charges will only be included
in the estimated reasonable replacement costs if it is
reasonably likely that the services of a general contractor will
be required to manage, supervise and coordinate the repairs.
However, actual cash value settlements will not include
estimated general contractor fees or charges for general
contractor’s services unless and until you actually incur and
pay such fees and charges, unless the law of your state
requires such fees and charges be paid with the actual cash
value settlement.
[J-3A-2020 and J-3B-2020] - 3
Truck Insurance Policy (“Policy”) (Exhibit A to Wintersteen Amended Class Action
Complaint, 10/2/15) at 34-35 (R.R. 139a, 141a).3 Furthermore, the policies define “actual
cash value” as
the reasonable replacement cost at time of loss less
deduction for depreciation and both economic and functional
obsolescence.
Policy at 6 (R.R. 111a).
Thus, where, as here, the cost of repairing or replacing a policyholder’s damaged
property exceeds $2,500, Insurer is first required to pay the ACV of the property at the
time of the loss to the policyholder (“step one”). Once the repair or replacement of the
damaged property is commenced, Insurer is then obligated (in “step two”) to pay the
depreciated value of the damaged property and also the expense of hiring a general
contractor,4 “unless the law of [Pennsylvania] requires” payment of GCOP as part of ACV.
It is this latter condition which is the core of the dispute between the parties.
Insurer paid Policyholders’ claims in accordance with this two-step process.
Specifically, after Policyholders utilized their own claims’ experts to prepare estimates of
the costs of repair and replacement of the damaged property, which, given the nature of
3 As noted, the policies at issue are identical. For ease of reference, our citations are to
the Wintersteen policy.
4 As indicated, supra, GCOP is an acronym for “general contractor’s overhead and profit.”
As explained more fully by a trade journal of public insurance adjusters: “Overhead
expenses represent those costs incurred by a general contractor to operate its business,
but are not attributable to any one specific job.” Overhead and Profit: Its Place in a
Property Insurance Claim at 2, Adjusting Today (2007), available at
https://www.adjustersinternational.com/publications/adjusting-today/overhead-and
profit/1. These include such things as administrative expenses attendant to running the
general contractor’s business office, licenses and fees, salaries and benefits of office
personnel, and advertising. Id. The general contractor’s profit is a percentage of the total
cost of construction, and the percentage commonly used in the insurance industry is 20
percent. Id
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the loss, included the services of a general contractor, and Policyholders requested
payment of these estimated costs, Insurer tendered to both Policyholders a “step one”
payment for the ACV of the damaged property. This payment did not include an amount
for depreciation of the property, nor did it include any amount for GCOP, even though
Insurer conceded, and does not now dispute, that the services of a general contractor
would be reasonably necessary for the completion of the repairs.
Policyholders each challenged Insurer’s failure to include GCOP in its ACV
payment, but Insurer took the position that, under the policies, it was entitled to withhold
GCOP until such time as Policyholders actually made the repairs to the property. Both
Policyholders ultimately accepted the ACV settlement amount tendered by Insurer, but
reserved their right to pursue available legal remedies. Ultimately, neither Policyholder
carried out any repairs.
Both Policyholders filed individual suits against Insurer in the Court of Common
Pleas of Philadelphia County alleging, inter alia, breach of contract for Insurer’s failure to
include GCOP as part of its ACV payment, which Policyholders contended was required
under the terms of the policies.5 The trial court, by the Honorable Ramy I. Djerassi,
consolidated both actions. Thereafter, the parties filed cross-motions for summary
judgment requesting that the trial court determine whether Insurer was permitted under
5 Policyholders also alleged that Insurers’ failure to include GCOP as part of their ACV
payments constituted a violation of Pennsylvania’s “bad faith” statute governing resolution
of insurance claims, 42 Pa.C.S. § 8371. Appellant Kurach’s suit also sought certification
as a class action on behalf of all property owners who were issued policies by Insurer
providing replacement cost coverage, and who had property damage claims for which
Insurer refused to include GCOP in their ACV settlements. These claims and request for
certification are not before us.
[J-3A-2020 and J-3B-2020] - 5
the terms of the policies to withhold GCOP from ACV payments, even where, as here, it
was indisputable that the services of a general contractor would be reasonably necessary.
Before the trial court, Insurer argued that, under Section 5(e) of the policies, it was
permitted to withhold payment of GCOP from ACV payments until the time repairs were
actually made and Policyholders incurred the costs of retaining a general contractor. For
their part, Policyholders contended that the language of the policies was ambiguous in
this regard, given that “its unclear use of the term ‘replacement cost’ as a component of
‘actual cash value’ is contrary to Pennsylvania law and unenforceable.” Trial Court
Opinion, 4/20/17, at 9.
In resolving this question, the trial court noted that Insurer’s policies defined ACV
as a “function of ‘replacement cost’.” Id. at 8. Hence, the court considered cases from the
Superior Court which had determined whether GCOP must be included in ACV “step-
one” payments under other replacement cost insurance policies. See id. at 9-11
(discussing Gilderman v. State Farm, 649 A.2d 941, 945 (Pa. Super. 1994) (holding that,
when insurer agreed to pay ACV of damaged property under policy until actual repairs
and replacement were completed, but did not define the term, ACV must be construed to
mean, as it had been traditionally interpreted, as reasonable replacement costs, less
depreciation; thus, insurer was not authorized by the policy to automatically withhold 20
percent of the ACV payment for GCOP when the use of a general contractor was
“reasonably likely” for the repairs), and Mee v. Safeco, 908 A.2d 344, 345 (Pa. Super.
2006) (where policy defined ACV as “the cost of repairing the damage, less reasonable
deduction for wear and tear, deterioration and obsolescence,” insurer was not permitted
to withhold GCOP from an ACV payment, given that repair was of such a nature that the
[J-3A-2020 and J-3B-2020] - 6
use of a general contractor was reasonably likely, and whether or not one was actually
hired was immaterial)).
The trial court observed that the policies in question utilized the same definition of
ACV as the policies in Gilderman and Mee, in that they define this term as replacement
cost less depreciation. The court reasoned that a determination of ACV necessarily then
first requires a determination of the term replacement cost, which, as noted above, is not
defined in the policies. However, the court concluded that the Superior Court’s decisions
in Gilderman and Mee “include GCOP as necessary components of ‘replacement cost’.”
Trial Court Opinion, 4/20/17, at 11. The court interpreted those decisions as requiring
insurers to include GCOP in ACV settlements, in accordance with what it perceived as
the “majority rule” based on its review of cases from other jurisdictions, because, in its
view, “higher premiums for [r]eplacement [c]ost policies justify consumer expectations
that actual cash value really means replacement value minus depreciation.” Id.
The court rejected Insurer’s claim that the specific language it included in Section
5(e) required a different result. The court found that the language requiring Insurer to pay
GCOP as part of an ACV settlement only if “the law of your state requires” was ambiguous
and unenforceable, given that a lay purchaser of such insurance cannot reasonably be
expected to understand whether or not such payment is required under Pennsylvania law.
Id. at 12 (quoting Policy at 35). The trial court found the notion that a person buying
homeowner’s insurance would need legal assistance to understand this provision
“troublesome.” Id.
Moreover, in the trial court’s view, the policies apply their definition of ACV —
reasonable replacement cost minus depreciation — inconsistently by functionally
[J-3A-2020 and J-3B-2020] - 7
requiring withholding of GCOP in addition to depreciation when computing ACV, which it
deemed contrary to the expectations of the policyholder. The trial court found that this
policy language operated to “confuse [Insurer’s policyholders], purposely or not, on what
[Insurer] really means by its terms ‘actual cash value’ and ‘replacement cost.’” Id. at 15.
The court also concluded that the portion of Section 5(e) which obligates Insurer
to pay GCOP as part of ACV if the law of the policyholder’s state requires was “contingent
and ambiguous on its face.” Id. It thus held that “Pennsylvania law requires estimated
[GCOP] to be included in ‘actual cash value’ payments when the use of a general
contractor is reasonably likely to be necessary to repair damage to a home.” Id. at 16.
Consequently, the trial court granted Policyholders’ motion for summary judgment as to
this issue.6
Insurer took a consolidated appeal to the Superior Court, which reversed in a
unanimous unpublished memorandum opinion authored by Judge Jack Panella.7 Kurach
v. Truck Exchange, 1726 and 1730 EDA 2017 (Pa. Super. filed Aug. 24, 2018). That
tribunal distinguished Gilderman on the basis that the policy at issue in that case did not
define ACV, and, thus, the Gilderman court defined the term in accordance with the intent
of the parties. The court observed that, by contrast, the policies in the case at bar do
contain a definition of ACV, and it viewed this definition as consistent with Gilderman in
that it defines ACV as replacement value less depreciation, the definition adopted in that
case.
6 The court deferred ruling on Policyholders’ bad faith claims and request for class
certification.
7 Judge Judith Olson and P.J.E. Correale Stevens joined the opinion.
[J-3A-2020 and J-3B-2020] - 8
The court noted that the definition in the instant policies adds additional restrictive
terms, however, limiting payment of GCOP unless and until the policyholder retains a
general contractor and commences repairs. The court observed that, in Kane v. State
Farm Fire & Casualty Co., 841 A.2d 1038 (Pa. Super. 2003), it held that explicit policy
language can supersede definitions established by case law; thus, the panel found that
the more specific definition of ACV in the policies at issue controlled over the general
definition of ACV established by Gilderman. Although acknowledging that the policies
require GCOP to be paid as part of an ACV settlement if the law of Pennsylvania so
required, the panel found that Policyholders “have not identified any case that sets forth
a public policy that actual cash settlement value must include GCOP.” Kurach, 1726 and
1730 EDA 2017, at 9. Hence, the Superior Court reversed the trial court’s entry of
summary judgment, and remanded the matter to the trial court for further proceedings.
Policyholders filed a consolidated petition for allowance of appeal with our Court,
and we granted review to consider the following issue:
Did the Superior Court err as a matter of law in finding that the
limitation of payment of General Contractors Overhead and
Profit from actual cash value in a replacement cost policy,
although violative of binding precedent, was nonetheless valid
and enforceable?
Kurach v. Truck Insurance Exchange, 211 A.3d 1252 (Pa. 2019) (order).
II. Arguments of the Parties
Before our Court, Policyholders argue that it is accepted industry practice, and
mandated by Pennsylvania caselaw – specifically, Gilderman and Mee – that GCOP must
be included as part of ACV under policies such as theirs, whenever it is determined that
the services of a general contractor are likely to be necessary in order to effectuate the
[J-3A-2020 and J-3B-2020] - 9
repair of a damaged property. However, in Policyholders’ view, by refusing to pay GCOP
until repairs are commenced, Insurer has created an incentive for homeowners not to
make repairs, as they must advance the cost of GCOP necessary to retain the services
of a general contractor in order to get the repair process started. Policyholders contend
this will unjustly increase the profitability of Insurer since it does not have to pay the full
value of the claim contracted for when the policyholder elects not to proceed to conduct
repairs. Moreover, Policyholders aver that, if insureds are made to advance the cost of
GCOP prior to commencing repairs, more policyholders will elect not to have the repairs
done. They contend that this, in turn, will relieve Insurer of the obligation to pay
depreciation costs and result in additional profits for the Insurer at the expense of the
premium-paying customer.
Policyholders contend that there is a well established procedure for handling
property loss claims under replacement value policies. First, ACV of the damaged
property is determined by estimating the replacement cost — i.e., the cost of replacing or
repairing the property in order to return it to its pre-damaged condition. Second, the cost
of depreciation is withheld in acknowledgment of the reality that the condition of the
premises changed over time. However, paying GCOP is intended to facilitate the
homeowner’s ability to repair the property. Policyholders argue that, consistent with an
insurer’s duty of good faith and fair dealing, the insurer is obligated to pay the property
owner a sufficient amount so as not to deter them from making the repairs.
According to Policyholders, under a two-step policy, once repairs are completed,
the depreciation amount is repaid to the homeowner to make them whole since the
property, as fully repaired, must now be viewed as having a present-day “brand new”
[J-3A-2020 and J-3B-2020] - 10
value as of the time of repair and, thus, as depreciation free. Policyholders maintain that
what Insurer has done by withholding payment of GCOP from ACV is contrary to industry
practice as it does not fully compensate the homeowner for the damage to their property
and, therefore, does not accurately reflect the homeowner’s full cost to replace the
damaged property which he has contracted to receive.
Policyholders assert that Gilderman established that GCOP is to be included as
part of computing ACV by recognizing it as an integral part of the “replacement costs” in
all instances where, as here, the services of a general contractor are reasonably likely to
be necessary. Policyholders aver that this principle remains good law as recognized by
the Superior Court’s subsequent decision in Mee.
Policyholders additionally highlight that when the legislature enacted the
Pennsylvania Insurance Code, and included 40 P.S. § 6368 governing what standard
provisions must be included in a contract for fire insurance, it used the term “actual cash
value” in describing the minimum requirements of such policies without elaboration;
hence, Policyholders reason that, because the legislature was aware of Gilderman when
it enacted this statute, it effectively approved of that decision’s definition of ACV because
it did not provide an alternate definition in the statute.
Policyholders further note that the Pennsylvania Insurance Department has
prepared a guide to assist consumers in understanding homeowner’s insurance
coverage, and this guide defines “Replacement Cost” as “the amount to replace or rebuild
your home or repair damages with materials of a similar kind and quality without deducting
8This statute mandates provisions which all insurance policies protecting “against loss
by fire, lightning or removal” must contain. 40 P.S. § 636.
[J-3A-2020 and J-3B-2020] - 11
for depreciation,” and defines “actual cash value” as “the replacement cost minus any
depreciation.” Policyholders Brief at 32. Policyholders propound that these definitions
are consistent with Gilderman and recognize GCOP as a necessary component of the
amount a homeowner will need to be reimbursed for a loss in the event the services of a
general contractor are needed, precluding the withholding of GCOP.
At the very least, Policyholders argue that the policies are ambiguous because
they are structured in a misleading and unclear fashion so as to bury Insurer’s true intent.
Policyholders point out that, while one section of the policy unconditionally promises to
pay ACV, another provision makes the homeowner’s receipt of this benefit conditional on
the homeowner undertaking repairs and, in effect, eliminates the benefit, or, at a
minimum, discourages reliance on it. Policyholders contend that these two clauses – one
promising full reimbursement of replacement costs, and the other conditioning full
reimbursement on the performance of repairs – are irreconcilable. Any such
inconsistency or conflict in policy provisions, they contend, must be resolved against
Insurer. Policyholders proffer that promising a benefit and then illegally withholding it in
this fashion is the very essence of insurer bad faith.
Policyholders also contend that insurance contracts such as these violate the
public policy of this Commonwealth, which favors payments to policyholders so that
damaged properties can be repaired, and that Insurer’s approach discourages repairs by
withholding funds necessary to commence the repair process.9
9 Amicus briefs on behalf of Policyholders have been filed by the Pennsylvania
Association of Justice (“PAJ”) and United Policy Holders (“UPH”), a not-for-profit
consumer advocacy organization focused on insurance matters.
[J-3A-2020 and J-3B-2020] - 12
PAJ’s brief closely tracks the arguments of Policyholders; however, it additionally
highlights that the claims adjustment process in Pennsylvania is standardized and
computer programs calculate replacement cost. These programs assign a value for labor,
materials, depreciation, and GCOP. The point of this calculation is to ascertain what the
homeowner needs to begin repairs by enlisting the services of a contractor. PAJ
acknowledges that depreciation is routinely withheld from replacement costs to determine
ACV, but contends this is because depreciation becomes a factor only if the structure is
ultimately repaired or rebuilt, as the property must then be regarded as new and
undepreciated. The value of the property at the time of the loss is, by contrast,
depreciated, so its true value must account for the depreciation. However, from PAJ’s
perspective, before the repair or replacement begins, the homeowner is still entitled to
reasonable replacement cost less depreciation, as that amount accurately reflects the
cost of rebuilding or repairing, which is what the homeowner contracted for. Further, PAJ
asserts this amount must include GCOP, which never depreciates and is an omnipresent
expense.
In its brief, UPH contends that Insurer was obligated to pay replacement costs,
which included GCOP under these policies, because the policy specifically states that
Insurer must pay such fees if the law of the state requires it. In its view, after Gilderman
and Mee, when ACV is used in an insurance policy in Pennsylvania, that term is
understood to include GCOP. UPH avers that this position finds support from courts in
the federal Sixth and Eleventh Circuits, as well as state court decisions from New York,
Texas, Indiana, and Florida. Further, UPH points to interpretive guidelines issued by
insurance departments in Colorado, Florida, and Texas which indicate that GCOP must
always be included in a calculation of ACV under these types of policies.
UPH also highlights what it considers to be the fundamental unfairness of a
contrary interpretation, citing as an example a situation where a newly-built home covered
by a replacement cost policy is destroyed by fire, and the owner elects not to rebuild. In
such a circumstance, there is no depreciation to withhold from ACV as the home is brand
new; however, if the insurer is permitted to withhold GCOP from the ACV settlement it
tenders to the policyholder, which becomes the final insurance payout since the owner
elected not to rebuild, then the homeowner will not receive the full benefit of what he or
she has contracted and paid for, which is replacement costs that include payment of
GCOP.
In addition, UPH also avers that the practice of including GCOP in a calculation of
reasonable replacement costs is well established in the insurance industry, and cites in
support textbooks and trade publications endorsing this proposition.
It also argues that public policy favors this interpretation, noting that it promotes
stability and continuity in society by allowing individuals to recover from staggering, life-
altering losses and move forward with their lives. Thus, in its view, public policy strongly
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Insurer responds by first denying the existence of any uniform system in
Pennsylvania regarding the administration of homeowner’s insurance claims, and proffers
that the only system is that which was established by the terms of the policies. Insurer
claims that many policyholders over the years have unsuccessfully challenged the right
of insurers to withhold certain costs and expenses from ACV payments. Insurer notes
that, in Farber v. Perkiomen, 85 A.2d 779 (Pa. 1952), our Court construed a single-step
insurance policy – which promised ACV in the event of a loss – as not entitling the insurer
to withhold from that amount the cost of depreciation. However, Insurer notes that our
Court also left open the prospect that insurers could write policy terms which did allow for
withholding depreciation from ACV. Insurer contends this is precisely what insurers
subsequently did, with the adoption of two-step policies that withhold depreciation from
“step one” payments for ACV, until repair or replacement of the damaged property is
made. According to Insurer, such policies have been held to be enforceable in cases
such as Kane. Thus, Insurer contends that its policy provision withholding GCOP is
equally enforceable.
Insurer decries the lack of record evidence to support Policyholders’ claim that the
withholding of GCOP would be a deterrent for an insured to begin repairs. Insurer notes
that, in Appellant Kurach’s case, the amount of GCOP it withheld was $2,685.08, about
supports interpretations of insurance policies in accord with the settled expectations of
policyholders relying on them. UPH proffers that a contrary interpretation would permit
insurers to pay less than the benefit promised by withholding GCOP, and that this would,
in effect, result in policyholders purchasing illusory coverage — something the law should
not countenance.
[J-3A-2020 and J-3B-2020] - 14
17% of the total replacement costs. Insurer adds that, in other decisions, courts have
upheld the withholding of depreciation payments in far larger amounts.
Further, Insurer rejects Policyholders’ reliance on Gilderman and Mee. It highlights
that the policies in question in those cases, unlike the policies at issue in the instant
appeal, were silent as to a policyholder’s entitlement to payment of GCOP as part of ACV.
Likewise, Insurer disputes Policyholders’ reliance on 40 P.S. § 636. It observes
that Section 636 addresses fire insurance policies, not the so-called “all-risk” policies
issued to Policyholders. Also, Insurer points out that Section 636 was adopted in 1962,
not in response to Gilderman or Mee, and it concerns a one-step policy, not the two-step
policies which it contends are prevalent today.
Insurer also rejects Policyholders’ argument that the Insurance Department’s
consumer guide has any bearing on this case, as it is a general guide explaining terms
commonly appearing in many policies, but it also cautions that the user should read his
or her own specific policy to understand its terms.
In addition, Insurer claims that these policies do not contravene any public policy
of the Commonwealth given that, in its view, Gilderman and Mee do not control the
disposition of this question, and because there is no clearly recognized legal requirement,
in caselaw or statute, that GCOP must be paid as part of an ACV settlement.
Regarding Policyholders’ contention that the policy language is ambiguous,
Insurer claims that that issue is not fairly subsumed within our Court’s allocatur grant,
which dealt only with the question of whether this policy language is valid and enforceable
in light of Gilderman and Mee. To the extent that our Court does consider it fairly
subsumed, Insurer denies that its policy is ambiguous or confusing; instead, it claims that
[J-3A-2020 and J-3B-2020] - 15
that the Superior Court properly found that this language “‘clearly and obviously’ explains
that payment of GCOP is conditioned on the insured incurring that expense in the course
of making covered repairs.” Insurer Brief at 54 (quoting Kurach, 1726 and 1730 EDA
2017, at 9). Consequently, Insurer maintains that the policy should be enforced as
written.10
III. Analysis
In interpreting the relevant provisions of the insurance policies at issue in this
appeal, we are guided by the polestar principle that insurance policies are contracts
between an insurer and a policyholder. Gallagher v. Geico Indemnity Company, 201 A.3d.
131, 137 (Pa. 2013). Thus, we apply traditional principles of contract interpretation in
ascertaining the meaning of the terms used therein. Id. This requires our Court to
effectuate the intent of the contracting parties as reflected by the written language of the
insurance policies. American and Foreign Insurance Company v. Jerry’s Sport Center, 2
A.3d 526, 540 (Pa. 2010). In this regard, the language of the policy must be considered
10 A joint amicus brief in support of Insurer was filed by the Insurance Federation of
Pennsylvania, the American Property Casualty Insurance Association, and National
Association of Mutual Insurance Companies. Amici largely align with the arguments of
Insurer, contending that the Superior Court decision should be upheld because the policy
language is clear: a policyholder is not entitled to the receipt of GCOP until he or she
actually starts rebuilding or repairing, when these fees are actually incurred.
These amici also reject the contention that a contrary interpretation of the policies
at issue is against public policy, stressing that it is up to the legislature to make public
policy, not courts. Thus, decisions like Gilderman and Mee, decisions from other
jurisdictions, and guidance bulletins from other state insurance departments do not
establish a dominant public policy that can override the clear language of the policies in
question, as those decisions and guidance only apply to policies which are silent about
GCOP, and these policies are not.
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in its entirety. Pennsylvania National Mutual Casualty Insurance v. St. John, 106 A.3d 1,
14 (Pa. 2014).
If policy terms are clear and unambiguous, then we will give those terms their plain
and ordinary meaning, unless they violate a clearly established public policy. AAA Mid-
Atlantic Insurance Company v. Ryan, 84 A.3d 626, 633-34 (Pa. 2014). Conversely, when
a provision of a policy is ambiguous, the policy provision is to be construed in favor of the
policyholder and against the insurer, as the insurer drafted the policy and selected the
language which was used therein. Prudential Property & Casualty Insurance Company
v. Sartno, 903 A.2d 1170, 1177 (Pa. 2006). Policy terms are ambiguous “if they are
subject to more than one reasonable interpretation when applied to a particular set of
facts.” Madison Construction Company v. Harleysville Mutual Insurance Company, 735
A.2d 100, 106 (Pa. 1999).11
In the case sub judice, as recounted above, the relevant provisions of the policies
are the definition of ACV, and Section 5(e), the latter of which establishes the timing of
payment of depreciation costs and GCOP. Both of these provisions must be read
11 Inasmuch as these cases establish that the interpretation of insurance policy terms
necessarily depends on an assessment of whether those terms are plain or ambiguous,
we reject Insurer’s contention that the question of whether the provisions of the policies
at issue in this case are ambiguous is somehow beyond the scope of our grant of
allocatur. Additionally, the question of whether a particular contract provision is
ambiguous is a matter of law, Kripp v. Kripp, 849 A.2d 1159, 1164 n.5 (Pa. 2004);
therefore, as with all such questions of law, we are not bound by the lower courts’
determinations. United National Insurance Company v. J.H. Refractories, 688 A.2d 120,
124 n.4 (Pa. 1995). In this regard, we cannot agree with the suggestion of the dissent
that, in performing our ambiguity analysis, we are required to defer to the conclusions of
the lower courts, or the claims of the parties. See Concurring and Dissenting Opinion
(Wecht, J.) at 8 (“The reasonable disagreement among the lower courts and the parties
that brought us here is evidence that Policyholders could not have known what” the law
of Pennsylvania required.); id. at 7 (“[T]he fact that the Court has been called upon to
decide this issue in this case means that the Policy was ambiguous for Policyholders.”).
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together and each given effect. Pennsylvania National Mutual Casualty Insurance, supra.
The policies first define the “step one” ACV payment as the “reasonable replacement cost
at time of loss less deduction for depreciation and both economic and functional
obsolescence.” Policy at 6. Section 5(e) then imposes additional restrictions on whether
and when GCOP will be paid to the policyholder — namely, it obligates Insurer to make
such payment to the policyholder only when he “actually incur[s] and pay[s] such fees
and charges, unless the law of your state requires that such fees and charges be paid
with the actual cash value settlement.” Id. at 35.
Thus, the policies, by their plain terms, guarantee that the policyholder will be paid
the ACV of the damaged property at the time of the loss; however, it also specifies that
payment of GCOP is conditional in that such payment will not be made unless and until
the policyholder actually incurs such costs by commencing the repair process, “unless
the law of [Pennsylvania] requires” GCOP to be included in the payment of ACV.
Critically, our review of Pennsylvania law does not support Policyholders’ contention that
it mandates that GCOP be included in ACV for every claim made under a replacement
cost policy, as we discern no such requirement in statute, regulation, or caselaw.12
12 We reject Policyholders’ contention that 40 P.S. § 636 imposes such a requirement, as
that statutory provision mandates the coverage which must be included in fire insurance
policies. As Insurer contends, this section is inapplicable to all-risk policies of the type at
issue in this case. See 40 P.S. § 636(3) (holding that the mandatory provisions of policies
of fire insurance “shall not apply to . . . policies of an all-risk type.”).
Likewise, the homeowners insurance guide issued by the Pennsylvania
Department of Insurance, which explains to consumers the general nature of insurance
policies offering replacement cost coverage, is merely a general explanation of the
relevant insurance principles a consumer may encounter when purchasing such a policy.
See Your Guide to Homeowners Insurance, Pennsylvania Department of Insurance
(Exhibit Q to Wintersteen Motion for Summary Judgment) (R.R. 1232a-1247a). As such,
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Although, as detailed above, Policyholders contend that the Superior Court’s
decisions in Gilderman and Mee require GCOP to be automatically included as a
component of ACV, our reading of those decisions belies that assertion. In those cases,
the replacement cost policies under consideration allowed only the depreciated value of
the damaged property to be withheld from ACV. See Gilderman, 649 A.2d at 942; Mee,
908 A.2d at 345. The policies were otherwise silent as to whether GCOP could be
withheld from ACV. Thus, in ruling on whether the insurers therein could withhold GCOP
from the challenged ACV settlements, the Superior Court addressed whether, in the
absence of contrary policy language, such costs were customarily included in ACV,
whenever the policyholder could reasonably be expected to incur such costs in repairing
or replacing the damaged property – and it concluded that they were. See Gilderman,
649 A.2d at 944-45; Mee, 908 A.2d at 350. However, in each case, the Superior Court
was merely interpreting the language of the specific policies before it, and did not purport
to hold that GCOP must always be included in ACV payments.
Consequently, those decisions must be read in light of the unique policy language
at issue. They cannot be construed as establishing a general mandate that ACV includes
GCOP. See generally City of Pittsburgh v. W.C.A.B., 67 A.3d 1194, 1206 (Pa. 2013)
(emphasizing the general axiom that the holding of a particular case “must
be read against its facts and the issues actually joined”).In particular, Gilderman and
Mee do not control where there is specific policy language which conditions the timing of
GCOP payments on the policyholder undertaking actual repairs of the damaged property.
it does not have the binding legal force of a duly promulgated regulation by the
Department.
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Critically, the policies in the case at bar, unlike those at issue in Gilderman and
Mee, explicitly condition payment of GCOP on the policyholder actually incurring such
costs upon the commencement of repairs.13 Given that the law of Pennsylvania does not
otherwise require payment of GCOP before repairs begin, we hold that, because
Policyholders did not undertake such repairs, under the terms of their policies, Insurer
was permitted to withhold GCOP from its ACV – “step one” – payments. We therefore
affirm the order of the Superior Court.
Order affirmed.
Chief Justice Saylor and Justices Baer and Donohue join the opinion.
Justice Wecht files a concurring and dissenting opinion.
Justice Mundy files a concurring and dissenting opinion in which Justice Dougherty
joins.
13 Public policy challenges were not raised in Gilderman or Mee; rather, the analysis in
those decisions rested wholly on principles of contractual interpretation. Hence, contrary
to Policyholders’ assertions, those cases do not establish a public policy precluding the
GCOP provisions as found in Policyholders’ policies. Moreover, as our Court has recently
reminded, “a challenger who asserts that clear and unambiguous contract provisions . . .
are void as against public policy carries a heavy burden of proof. This is because public
policy ‘is more than a vague goal which may be used to circumvent the plain meaning of
the contract.’” Sayles v. Allstate Ins. Co., 219 A.3d 1110, 1122-23 (Pa. 2019). Our Court
has delineated specific guiding principles under which a particular provision of an
insurance policy will contravene public policy. See Safe Auto Insurance Company v.
Guillermo, 214 A.3d 1257, 1262 (Pa. 2019) (reiterating that invalidation of an insurance
contract on public policy grounds is justified where the contract violates a “dominant public
policy” as evidenced by “long governmental practice or statutory enactments, or . . .
obvious ethical or moral standards”). Policyholders have not carried this burden in that
they have not established that the insurance contract provisions at issue conflict with a
long governmental practice, a statutory enactment, or obvious ethical or moral standards.
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