




2014 VT 115







Town of Ira v. Vermont League of
Cities and Towns (2013-373)
 
2014 VT 115
 
Filed [31-Oct-2014]
 
NOTICE:  This opinion is subject
to motions for reargument under V.R.A.P. 40 as well as formal revision before
publication in the Vermont Reports.  Readers are requested to notify the
Reporter of Decisions by email at: JUD.Reporter@state.vt.us or by mail at: Vermont
Supreme Court, 109 State Street, Montpelier, Vermont 05609-0801, of any errors
in order that corrections may be made before this opinion goes to press.
 
 



2014 VT 115



 



No. 2013-373



 



Town of Ira


Supreme Court




 


 




 


On Appeal from




     v.


Superior Court, Rutland Unit,




 


Civil Division




 


 




Vermont League of Cities and
  Towns–Property and Casualty Intermunicipal Fund, Inc.


March Term, 2014




 


 




 


 




William
  D. Cohen, J.




 



Patrick J. Bernal of Witten, Woolmington, Campbell &
Bernal, P.C., Manchester Center, for
  Plaintiff-Appellee/Cross-Appellant.
 
Kaveh S. Shahi of Clearly Shahi & Aicher, P.C., Rutland,
for Defendant-Appellant/
  Cross-Appellee.
 
 
PRESENT:  Reiber, C.J., Dooley, Skoglund, Robinson and
Crawford, JJ.[1]
 
 
¶ 1.          
DOOLEY, J.   Plaintiff Town of Ira brought this action to recover
from its insurer, Vermont League of Cities and Towns–Property and Casualty
Intermunicipal Fund, Inc. (PACIF), certain losses related to the embezzlement
of town funds by the Town’s former treasurer.  On summary judgment, the trial
court found that the Town was entitled to interest on the embezzled amount up
to the policy limit and that this amount mooted the Town’s claim for audit and
attorney’s fees, as well as insurer’s counterclaims to recoup certain sums
already paid.  It also granted judgment to insurer on the Town’s claim that
insurer acted in bad faith by not paying for all of the items it claimed.  We
affirm.
¶ 2.          
The Town purchased a policy from insurer that included coverage of
losses due to employee embezzlement.  The coverage limit was $500,000.  In
November 2009, an audit revealed to the Town that its long-time elected
treasurer had embezzled over $300,000 in funds from town accounts.  The audit
also reported that the lost interest on the embezzled funds totaled $346,427. 
For these amounts and others, the Town obtained a judgment against the former
treasurer for $1,157,883.  The Town sought the coverage limit of $500,000 from
insurer.  Insurer paid only a part of that amount, essentially reflecting funds
actually taken and not including interest on that amount.  The Town sued in
this action for the difference.  On cross-motions for summary judgment, the trial
court ruled for the Town, holding specifically that the Town could recover lost
interest in addition to the amount embezzled.
¶ 3.          
The insurance policy involved is a fidelity policy, which indemnifies
for certain criminal conduct.  Agreement H, paragraph a, of Section IV of the
policy, labeled as a “commercial blanket bond,”[2]
provides in pertinent part:
The Fund agrees, subject
to limitations, terms and conditions of this Coverage, to indemnify the Named
Member against any loss of money or “other property,” which the Named Member
shall during the term of this Coverage sustain or discover it has sustained
through . . . embezzlement . . . committed
by any one of its officials or Employees, acting alone or in collusion with
others.
 
The Town argues that the “loss of
money”[3]
that it “sustained through embezzlement” includes not only the amount embezzled
but also the “time value of money,” that is, the interest lost because the
money was not available to invest or hold to earn interest.  The insurer argues
that the language covers only the amount actually embezzled, at least for an
insured that is not in the business of investing or lending money.
¶ 4.          
The trial court sided with the Town, noting generally that the policy
language “is at least broad enough to create an ambiguity as to whether
interest . . . [is] covered” and that the ambiguity “must
be construed in favor of coverage.”  The court amplified:
  PACIF’s
interpretation of contract so as to exclude interest the embezzled funds could
have earned from the definition of “loss of money . . . sustained
through . . . embezzlement” is overly restrictive.  It
ignores that prejudgment interest is designed to make a plaintiff
whole. . . .  Interest does that by adequately compensating the
plaintiff for the time value of money, a fundamental economic
concept. . . .  As such, interest[4]
qualifies as a “loss of money . . . sustained through . . . embezzlement”
under the policy.
 
¶ 5.          
In evaluating the trial court decision, we start with the principles
under which we evaluate coverage claims.[5] 
Interpretation of an insurance policy,[6]
like other contracts, involves the resolution of a question of law and,
therefore, our review is plenary and nondeferential.  Coop. Ins. Cos. v.
Woodward, 2012 VT 22, ¶ 8, 191 Vt. 348, 45 A.3d 89.  We give effect to
the plain meaning of the terms of the policy if the meaning is unambiguous.  Id.
¶ 9.  We give policy language a “practical, reasonable, and fair
interpretation consonant with the apparent object and intent of the parties.”  Bradford
Oil Co. v. Stonington Ins. Co., 2011 VT 108, ¶ 10, 190 Vt. 330, 54
A.3d 983 (quotation omitted).  We do, however, construe policy language in
favor of the insured where there is ambiguity.  Id.; Trinder v. Conn.
Attorneys Title Ins. Co., 2011 VT 46, ¶ 11, 189 Vt. 492, 22 A.3d 493. 
Although here we are dealing with a fidelity policy, rather than a liability
policy, we see no reason why these principles should not apply in this instance. 
See 11 S. Plitt et al., Couch on Insurance § 160:19 (3d ed. 2014) (“[B]onds
and contracts which guarantee the fidelity of employees, . . . if
written for profit and in the course of a business undertaken therefor, are
essentially insurance contracts rather than contracts of strict or pure
suretyship, and are to be construed as insurance contracts[.]”); Southside
Motor Co. v. Transamerica Ins. Co., 380 So. 2d 470, 471 (Fla. Dist. Ct.
App. 1980) (applying liberal construction in favor of insured to fidelity
bond).[7] 
 
¶ 6.          
We also start with an understanding of what is at issue.  As discussed
in the early leading case of Bank of Brighton v. Smith, 94 Mass. (12
Allen) 243 (Mass. 1866), there are two types of prejudgment interest involved
in this situation.  The first is interest “from the time of misappropriation of
the funds intrusted to [the employee] . . . as constituting
a part of the damages occasioned by his misconduct.”  Id. at 251.  In
addition, the surety may be liable for a second type of interest—that on the
amount owed under the surety agreement:
If
the surety becomes charged by the default of the
[employee] . . . for the amount of the
[bond] . . . or any portion of it, it is his duty to pay
the same on demand; and if he neglects or refuses, the general
principle . . . applies, and the interest is added by way
of damages for his own default, not as enlarging in any degree his liability
for the misconduct of the [employee].
 
Id. at 252.  The court differentiated
the two types of interest for a reason different from why we do so in this case—there,
to determine whether the coverage limit of the bond applies to each type of
interest.[8] 
Id.; see also Cambridge Trust Co. v. Commercial Union Ins. Co.,
591 N.E.2d 1117, 1121-22 (Mass. App. Ct. 1992) (same).
¶ 7.          
This appeal involves only the first type of interest, with the one
exception being insurer’s challenge that the judgment improperly includes
interest on interest.  Insurer’s main argument is that the policy does not
allow recovery of the first type of interest.  We have not in the past addressed
this question of whether the covered loss incurred by the insured under a
fidelity policy includes interest on the amount of money stolen by an employee,
although courts in many jurisdictions have addressed it and the decisions are
decisively, but not unanimously, in support of the Town’s position.  There
appear to be two primary rationales for this rule.  Two New Jersey Supreme
Court decisions reflect these rationales.  The first decision is Borough of
Totowa v. American Surety Co. of New York, 188 A.2d 586 (N.J. 1963), a similar
case in which a municipal treasurer embezzled funds and the municipality sought
interest on the funds taken from the date of the embezzlement.  In affirming an
award of interest, the court reasoned:
  We think the
surety on an official bond should answer for the same damages for which the
principal obligor is liable.  The surety underwrites the principal’s behavior;
it vouches for him.  The liability of the principal and the surety upon the
bond is in terms one and the same.  We see no reason to interpolate a
limitation confining the surety’s liability to a part of the total wrong of the
principal obligor. 
 
. . .
 
  The loss of use
of the moneys was part and parcel of the injury the unfaithful official
inflicted upon the Borough.  When the surety made it[s] engagement it knew that
if the principal obligor breached the condition of the bond, the ensuing loss would
include the loss of the use of the moneys misappropriated as well as the moneys
themselves.  Unless the Borough receives reimbursement for both principal and
interest, it will not be made whole.  It will suffer a loss in the face of the
surety’s promise that it would not.
 
Id. at 595.  
¶ 8.          
The second decision is Estate of Lash, 776 A.2d 765 (N.J. 2001), which
involved misappropriation of funds by an estate administrator and recovery by
the estate from the issuer of an estate administration bond.  The court characterized
the rule that the surety is liable for the same damages as the fiduciary as a
presumption.  Id. at 770 (“[U]nless there is a bond provision to the
contrary, the surety’s liability is coextensive with the principal’s liability[.]”). 
It held that the lost interest was damages payable under the bond.  Id.
at 774; accord Hack v. Am. Sur. Co., 96 F.2d 939, 946 (7th Cir. 1938)
(“The surety undertook to answer for the default of its
principals . . . .  The measure of its liability is the
liability of the bank’s officers.”); Soc. Security Admin. v. Emp’rs Mut.
Liab. Ins. Co., 199 A.2d 918, 921-22 (Md. 1964); Edmunds-Bouvier Savs.
& Loan Ass’n v. New Amsterdam Cas. Co., 132 A.2d 181, 183-85 (Pa.
1957).  We recognize that fidelity insurance grew out of suretyship law and is
not liability insurance.  For this reason, we are particularly persuaded by the
holding of Estate of Lash that we should presume that the employer’s
recovery from the insurer should be the same as that from the offending
employee but should enforce a contrary provision in the policy if there is
one.  On the point that paying back only the principal does not make the
insured whole, one court noted: “We do not believe that the defendant insurer
is in the habit of keeping its reserves for losses hidden in the bottom of a
sugar jar in the kitchen.  They are put out at interest.”  Bank of
Huntingdon v. Smothers, 626 S.W.2d 267, 271 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1981).
¶ 9.          
The decisions also rely on the breadth of language of the coverage in
the fidelity policy and the rule that in case of ambiguity insurance policy
provisions are interpreted in favor of the insured.  A good example of this
analysis is in American Insurance Co. v. First National Bank, 409 F.2d
1387 (8th Cir. 1969), which involved fraudulent bank loans and the extent of coverage
by a fidelity policy.  In finding that the bank could recover interest on the
amount loaned, the court relied particularly on the policy language, which
indemnified the bank for “ ‘any loss’ sustained in connection with the
transactions covered by the bond.”  Am. Ins. Co., 409  F.2d at 1391. 
The court stated that “when the ordinary rules for construction of contracts
are applied, the indemnity provisions of the bond are sufficiently broad to
authorize payment of interest for loss of use of money.”  Id.
¶ 10.      
It is on the language of the policy that the insurer makes its strongest
argument, relying upon the one modern decision, Empire of Carolina, Inc. v.
Continental Casualty Co., 414 S.E.2d 389 (N.C. Ct. App. 1992), that finds
no policy coverage for interest.  Empire of Carolina is a bank embezzlement
case with policy-coverage language virtually identical to the language in the
policy in this case.  Like the language in the policy before us, the policy in Empire
of Carolina covered loss of money or other property and the coverage
question turned on whether this language included loss of interest.  The court
relied upon the definition of “money” in the policy as “currency, coins, bank
notes and bullion and travelers checks, register checks and money orders held
for sale to the public” and held that, under that definition, interest is not
money.  Id. at 678-79.  In reaching that conclusion, the court held that
the coverage provision was unambiguous.  Id. at 678.  We start with the
construction of the language at issue here.  Putting aside the policy
considerations that lie behind a fair interpretation of the language, we agree
that awarding interest is consistent with the policy language in this case,
certainly if viewed liberally due to ambiguity.  We reject the reasoning of Empire
of Carolina.  The definition of “money” in the policy in that case does not
apply here.[9]
¶ 11.      
Moreover, it is not clear from the explanation in Empire of Carolina
whether the court rejected interest as “money” because the interest never
physically existed or instead because the interest was not in the form listed
in the definition.  Neither rationale is convincing.  The definition does not
address whether the money has to actually exist at the time of the
embezzlement.  The second rationale arbitrarily limits the coverage for no
obvious purpose.  Thus, if a bank officer embezzled from bank deposits without
physically carrying cash, travelers or register checks, or money orders out of
the bank, there would be no coverage for that embezzlement because the
definition does not include deposits and the embezzlement did not involve the
physical forms of “money” specified in the definition.  It is more likely that
the distinction is between money—or something that is de facto money—and other
assets of the Town, such as a vehicle.  Thus, the use of the term “money”
refers to liquidity, not to the form of the asset.[10]
¶ 12.      
At best, the reasoning of Empire of Carolina suggests ambiguity,
which, as we noted above, must be resolved in favor of the insured.  We note from
other reported decisions that fidelity policies often have potential income-exclusion
provisions, which prohibit recovery of “potential income, including but not
limited to interest and dividends, not realized by the insured.”  St. Paul
Fire & Marine Ins. Co. v. Branch Bank & Trust Co., 834 F.2d 416,
417 (4th Cir. 1987).  The failure to include such language in this policy
reinforces our view that the language is at least ambiguous and insurer could
have removed the ambiguity.  See United S. Bank v. Glens Falls Ins. Co.,
548 F. Supp. 355, 357 (M.D. Tenn. 1982); cf. Cambridge Trust Co., 591
N.E.2d at 1121 (stating that fidelity policies frequently contain exclusions
for embezzlement loss “proved only by inventory computation or a profit and
loss computation” and that the absence of such exclusions shows that inventory
computation “is all the more easily acceptable as sufficient”).  Insurer also
disputes the rationales of the majority-rule cases, arguing that the theory
that the Town should be compensated for the loss of use of the money through
interest might apply to a financial institution that holds money to invest it
for profit, but not for another kind of entity.  It further argues that
“damages” are not recoverable under the fidelity-policy language, so it is
irrelevant whether the Town can recover interest from its embezzling employee.
¶ 13.      
We do not accept that the loss of use of the money embezzled should be
recognized only in the case of financial institutions.  Whether the Town would have
invested the interest or used it, its inability to do either has significant
consequences.  A dollar restored today is not likely to purchase what a dollar
would have when the embezzlement occurred.  Not surprisingly, one of the
leading cases on point, Borough of Totowa, involves embezzlement from a
municipality, not a financial institution.  See also City of Scottsbluff v.
S. Sur. Co., 246 N.W. 346, 348 (Neb. 1933).
¶ 14.      
Finally, we are not persuaded by insurer’s emphasis that payments under
the policy are not damages.  The point of fidelity insurance is to restore the
losses caused by the defalcation of the employee.  It is reasonable to look at
what those losses are under the law applicable to the employee’s liability.  See
Estate of Lash, 776 A.2d at 770.  Our law is that where damages are
reasonably certain, prejudgment interest is awarded as a matter of right.  See D’Arc
Turcotte v. Estate of LaRose, 153 Vt. 196, 198-200, 569 A.2d 1086, 1087-88
(1989) (“Plaintiffs who are awarded interest will be made whole; those not awarded
interest will not, contrary to the purpose of compensatory damages.”); Birchwood
Land Co. v. Ormand Bushey & Sons, Inc., 2013 VT 60, ¶ 24, 194 Vt. 478,
82 A.3d 539.  In this case, the damages were calculated by the outside auditor
and easily met the “reasonably certain” standard.[11]
¶ 15.      
Separately, insurer argues that if interest is allowed as an item of
recovery, the Town cannot also receive prejudgment interest on the total amount
owed based on the delay in the insurer’s payment, as the trial court awarded. 
Insurer argues that this would result in interest on interest, or compound
interest, and that result is prohibited by our decision in Greenmoss
Builders, Inc. v. Dun & Bradstreet, Inc., 149 Vt. 365, 370, 543 A.2d
1320, 1323-24 (1988).
¶ 16.      
Greenmoss Builders is not on point.  In that case, the plaintiff
argued that interest on a judgment should be compounded annually.  We concluded
that the controlling statute, 9 V.S.A. § 41a(a), calls for simple interest
without compounding.  Id.  Greenmoss Builders has no relevance
here because the court did not compound either the prejudgment or postjudgment
interest it awarded.  
¶ 17.      
As discussed in Bank of Brighton, we are dealing with two types
of interest, and insurer is arguing that the Town should receive no
interest on its policy liability after demand for payment, however long payment
is delayed.  Such a result would reward payment delay and likely undermine the
Town’s ability to receive full compensation.  The fact that the baseline loss
against which prejudgment interest was calculated includes a component
representing pre-demand interest for loss of use of the embezzled funds in this
case does not mean that the resulting award is invalid compounded “interest on
interest.”  Cf. Quinlan v. Hamel, 143 Vt. 147, 149, 465 A.2d 232, 233
(1983).
¶ 18.      
Insurer also has appealed the trial court’s decision that insurer is
liable for audit costs and attorney’s fees.  As the court noted, however, it
did not have to reach that issue because the interest alone put the Town’s
claim over the $500,000 coverage maximum.  The Town has not disputed this
conclusion.  Accordingly, we do not reach insurer’s appeal on these items.
¶ 19.      
For the same reason, we also do not reach insurer’s argument that the trial
court erred in dismissing its counterclaims, which sought the return of certain
amounts it had paid the Town.  Even if insurer were to prevail on its
counterclaims, the amount owed to the Town, once it includes the interest as we
held above, exceeds the policy limit.  Thus, the counterclaim issues can have
no effect on the Town’s recovery.
¶ 20.      
The Town has filed a cross-appeal arguing that the trial court should
not have dismissed its claim against the insurer for bad-faith denial of its
claim for interest and costs.  The court found that insurer’s claim that the
policy did not cover the interest was “fairly debatable” because the “correct
answer is not immediately obvious and there are no controlling Vermont
decisions on point.”  The Town argues that all of the precedents except one
supported the Town’s position and the one, Empire of Carolina, was not
on point because it was based on a special narrow definition of “money.”
¶ 21.      
Under our decision recognizing first-party bad faith claims against
insurers, such claims require a showing that “(1) the insurance company had no
reasonable basis to deny benefits of the policy, and (2) the company knew or
recklessly disregarded the fact that no reasonable basis existed for denying
the claim.”  Bushey v. Allstate Ins. Co., 164 Vt. 399, 402, 670 A.2d
807, 809 (1995); see also Peerless Ins. Co. v. Frederick, 2004 VT 126,
¶ 13, 177 Vt. 441, 869 A.2d 112; Lauzon v. State Farm Mut. Auto Ins.
Co., 164 Vt. 620, 621, 674 A.2d 1246, 1247 (1995) (mem.).  Under the first
requirement, summary judgment can be awarded to an insurer if the court finds
the insurer’s position was “fairly debatable as a matter of law.”  Bushey,
164 Vt. at 403, 670 A.2d at 810; see also Lauzon, 164 Vt. at 621, 674
A.2d at 1247 (“Because a realistic question regarding the extent of liability
existed, defendant’s actions do not rise to the level of bad faith.”).
¶ 22.      
We agree with the trial court that insurer’s position was fairly
debatable as a matter of law.  As the trial court found, we have not yet decided
this question.[12] 
Although we have found that the decisions from other jurisdictions in favor of the
Town’s position are persuasive, this does not mean that all precedents support
the Town.  See F. English, Annotation, Time From Which Interest Begins to
Run on Fidelity or Public Officer’s Bond, 57 A.L.R.2d 1317, § 2(a), (b)
(1958 & Supp. 2014) (collecting cases holding that interest runs only from
demand).  Although we reject its reasoning, we do not find Empire of
Carolina, the chief case relied upon by insurer, as off-point as the Town
argues.  Analysis by some commentators supports insurer’s position.  See W. Bogaert
& A. Caplan, Computing the Amount of Compensable Loss Under the
Financial Institution Bond, 33 Tort & Ins. L.J. 807, 816-18 (1998); K. Jacobson,
Is Interest Covered by Fidelity and Financial Institution Bonds?, 86
Banking L.J. 692, 696 (1969) (“The clear implication is that ‘loss’ under
Insuring Agreement I does not include damage.  This necessarily excludes any
claim for interest as damages, at least when the underwriter has not acted in
such a way that damages could be assessed against it for its own default.”).
¶ 23.      
Much of the Town’s argument on this question is based on the failure of
insurer to show supporting law for its position in responding to the Town’s
insurance claim.  This evidence goes to the second element of the bad faith
standard as set out in Bushey.  The trial court’s decision is based on
the first element, not the second.
            Affirmed.   
 



 


 


FOR THE COURT:




 


 


 




 


 


 




 


 


 




 


 


Associate
  Justice



 




[1] 
Justice Crawford was present for oral argument, but did not participate in this
decision.
 


[2] 
A blanket bond is actually a contract of indemnity insurance.  See W. Haug, The
Commercial Blanket Bond Annotated 7 (Am. Bar Ass’n 1985).  Although it
started as an individual bond, it is now a form of insurance that provides
fidelity coverage.  Id. at 1.  The term “blanket” is used because the
blanket bond is said to cover all employees like a blanket.  Id. at 4.
 


[3] 
The Town argues primarily that the loss of the return on the money embezzled is
loss of money and not loss of other property.  We have analyzed it as presented
to us.
 


[4] 
The trial court held that the amount of interest should be calculated at the
statutory rate, which is 12%.  See 9 V.S.A. § 41a(a).  Although insurer
has contested whether prejudgment interest should be included in the amount it
is obligated to pay, it has not contested the rate of interest used by the
trial court.  Thus, we do not consider whether use of the statutory rate was
proper.
 


[5] 
The parties have skirmished over who has the burden of persuasion in this
case.  Since the question we must resolve is purely one of law, the placement
of the burden of persuasion is of no significance.
 


[6] 
Although insurer is not an insurance company, it concedes that the rules for
construction of insurance policies apply.


[7] 
We recognize that there is an argument that the rule of construction of
ambiguous terms to favor the insured should not apply to fidelity insurance
because the terms are actually negotiated between insurers and trade associations. 
See M. Fenice & A. Friedman, The Rule of Contra Proferentem and the
Interpretive Impact of Making Changes to Standard Fidelity Bond Forms, 12
Fidelity L.J. 125, 138-43 (2006).  The cases that are consistent with this
argument are generally financial institution bond cases where the history of
such negotiations is clear and transparent.  See id. at 139-42.  We do
not agree that the argument should apply here where there is no claim of such
history of negotiation.
 


[8] 
The trial court in this case awarded interest of the second type—that is, for
the period after the Town’s demand for the payment of the full amount of the
policy limit—and necessarily, because the court awarded recovery up to the
policy limit, the interest of the second type brought the overall recovery
above the policy limit.  Except as noted in the text, this decision is not
contested and is not before us.


[9] 
Section IV of the policy, which contains the coverage involved here, provides a
definition entitled MONEY.  It states: “The term ‘Money’ shall mean currency,
coin, bank notes, uncanceled and precanceled postage and unused postage in
postage meters.”  As in the definition, wherever the word “money” is used in
the coverage text, it is capitalized.  This also is true for other defined
words.  The one exception is in Part 3, Agreement H, paragraph a, the coverage
part for losses sustained through embezzlement under which the Town is
claiming.  This is probably true because this part also covers “other property”
and the definition is unimportant.
 
The Town argued below that the policy contains no
relevant definition of “money” and insurer did not contest this position.  The
trial court therefore concluded that “ ‘loss of money’ is undefined in the
relevant provision of the policy.”  While we can distinguish Empire of
Carolina on this basis, we have addressed the decision directly in the text
and conclude that we are not persuaded by its rationale.
 


[10] 
As we noted above, supra, ¶ 3 n.3, we have analyzed the loss of
interest as loss of “money” and not loss of “other property.”  We note,
however, that other courts have addressed the form in which funds are kept as
“other property” in the face of the argument that the form is not cash.  See Imperial
Ins. Co. v. The Emp’rs Liab. Assurance Corp., 442 F.2d 1197, 1199 (D.C.
Cir. 1970); Paddleford v. Fid. & Cas. Co., 100 F.2d 606, 614 (7th
Cir. 1938), overruled on other grounds by Cont’l Corp. v. Aetna Cas.
& Sur. Co., 892 F.2d 540 (7th Cir. 1989).


[11] 
We are not by this comparison holding that the interest rate is the same in
both instances.


[12] 
Our analysis above covers only the Town’s claim for interest and not its claims
for audit costs and attorney’s fees because the Town’s recovery reaches the
policy coverage limit without these items.  Nevertheless, our conclusion that
the issues were fairly debatable applies equally to the audit costs and
attorney’s fees claims.  The trial court used the same analysis as it used for
interest in concluding that the Town could recover for these items.  The Town
raises no grounds to differentiate them.


