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Minnesota Diminished Value Claims — The Complete Guide.

Minnesota explicitly follows Restatement (Second) of Torts § 928. O'Connor v. Schwartz (Minn. 1975) and Hart v. North Side Firestone Dealer (Minn. 1951) confirm Minnesota's early commitment to the rule. The 6-year SOL under Minn. Stat. § 541.05 is among the longest. Pure comparative negligence — recovery reduced but never barred. $15,000 conciliation court limit (one of the highest).

Recovery
Third-Party Only
Statute of Limitations
6 Years
Small Claims Limit
$15,000
Negligence Rule
Pure Comparative

Minnesota's Restatement § 928 Framework.

Minnesota explicitly adopted Restatement of Torts § 928 (1939), later updated to Restatement (Second) of Torts § 928 (1965). The Minnesota Supreme Court in O'Connor v. Schwartz, 304 Minn. 155, 158, 229 N.W.2d 511, 513 (1975), confirmed Minnesota's commitment to the Restatement framework. Hart v. North Side Firestone Dealer, Inc., 235 Minn. 96, 98, 49 N.W.2d 587, 588 (1951), noted Minnesota's earlier commitment to the same rule. Rinkel v. Lee's Plumbing & Heating Co., 257 Minn. 14, 20 (1959), refined the framework: "If the repairs have not fully restored the property, the owner is entitled to the remaining diminution in value so long as the total damages awarded do not exceed" the lesser of the two measures.

Minnesota stacks several claimant-friendly features: 6-year SOL (Minn. Stat. § 541.05), pure comparative negligence (Minn. Stat. § 604.01), $15,000 conciliation court limit (Minn. Gen. R. Prac. 504), and a strong Insurance Department (Minn. Stat. § 72A.201) regulating unfair claims practices. The combination makes Minnesota one of the more favorable DV states despite no UMPD coverage for DV.

Minnesota's claimant stack
Restatement § 928 (long-recognized) + 6-year SOL + Pure comparative negligence + $15,000 conciliation court limit. Few states stack all four advantages.

Minnesota Authority: 75 Years of Restatement § 928

Minnesota DV law rests on a line of decisions adopting and refining Restatement § 928, plus a 6-year SOL and forgiving comparative negligence rule.

O'Connor v. Schwartz, 304 Minn. 155, 229 N.W.2d 511 (1975)
Minnesota Supreme Court adopts Restatement of Torts § 928.
The Minnesota Supreme Court in O'Connor v. Schwartz confirmed Minnesota's adoption of Restatement of Torts § 928 (1939) — "the difference between the value of the chattel before the harm and the value after the harm or, at the plaintiff's election, the reasonable cost of repair or restoration where feasible, with due allowance for any difference between the original value and the value after repairs." Hart v. North Side Firestone Dealer (Minn. 1951) noted Minnesota's earlier commitment to the same rule.
✓ Cite O'Connor v. Schwartz and Restatement § 928. Both elements recoverable: repair cost + residual diminution.
Rinkel v. Lee's Plumbing & Heating Co., 257 Minn. 14, 99 N.W.2d 779 (1959)
Refinement: residual diminution recoverable subject to gross-diminution cap.
The Minnesota Supreme Court in Rinkel refined the Restatement § 928 framework by holding that "if the repairs have not fully restored the property, the owner is entitled to the remaining diminution in value so long as the total damages awarded do not exceed" the lesser of the two measures (repair cost or diminution before repair). Rinkel places a cap on combined recovery to prevent windfalls.
✓ Both elements recoverable but capped at gross-diminution. Plan demand accordingly.
Minn. Stat. § 541.05 (Statute of Limitations)
Six-year SOL — among the longest in the country.
Minnesota's SOL for tort actions involving property damage is six years under Minn. Stat. § 541.05. This matches Wisconsin, New Jersey, and Maine as among the longest in the country. The long window gives Minnesota claimants meaningful strategic flexibility for negotiation and any necessary litigation.
✓ 6-year SOL gives strategic flexibility. Use it for thorough negotiation.
Minn. Stat. § 604.01 (Pure Comparative Negligence)
Pure comparative — recovery reduced but never barred.
Minnesota applies pure comparative negligence under Minn. Stat. § 604.01. Recovery is reduced proportionally to fault but never barred entirely (unlike modified comparative states with 50% or 51% bars). A claimant 70% at fault still recovers 30% of DV. This makes Minnesota one of the most fault-forgiving DV jurisdictions, alongside Missouri, California, and Arizona.
✓ Pure comparative is consumer-friendly. Even majority-fault accidents support partial Minnesota DV recovery.

Minnesota Insurers Use 17c — Restatement § 928 Doesn't.

Minnesota's controlling standard from O'Connor, Hart, and Rinkel is the Restatement § 928 framework — market-based, both-elements, with a gross-diminution cap. The 17c formula's mechanical multipliers don't match this. Major Minnesota insurers default to 17c. A demand letter quoting O'Connor and Restatement § 928's exact language puts the claim on solid Minnesota Supreme Court footing.

Run 17c first to anticipate the insurer's initial offer, then quantify the gap to Restatement § 928's market-based standard:

17c Formula Calculator
Run the 17c formula that most major auto insurers use to evaluate diminished value claims. Compare it against actual market-based loss.
17c Formula Result
$0
What the insurer will offer
Market-Based DV
$0
What you're actually owed
Note: Industry-standard formula not adopted by any state DOI.
Get a Defensible Market-Based Appraisal — $149.99

Filing a Diminished Value Claim in Minnesota.

Minnesota's framework gives DV claimants strong substantive rights and accessible procedure. Restatement § 928 controls. 6-year SOL gives time. Pure comparative negligence is forgiving.

  1. Document liability. Minnesota's pure comparative negligence under Minn. Stat. § 604.01 is forgiving — recovery reduced but never barred. Police report, witnesses, dashcam.
  2. Complete repairs. Minnesota DV is calculated post-repair per O'Connor. Document repairs comprehensively to support both elements: repair cost AND residual diminution.
  3. Establish pre-accident market value. Minnesota-market comparables — Minneapolis, Saint Paul, Rochester, Duluth, Bloomington, St. Cloud. Twin Cities metro produces strong comparable data.
  4. Document post-repair value. Two written dealer trade-in offers post-repair plus comparable sales of similar Minnesota vehicles with accident-history Carfax. Discount typically runs 12-22%.
  5. Prepare a USPAP-compliant appraisal. The appraisal cites O'Connor v. Schwartz, references Restatement (Second) of Torts § 928, addresses Rinkel's gross-diminution cap, and uses Minnesota-market comparables.
  6. Send a demand letter. Quote O'Connor and Restatement § 928's exact language. Reference Minn. Stat. § 541.05's 6-year window. Send certified mail.
  7. Allow 30 days for response. Minnesota insurers familiar with the Restatement framework typically respond within 14-30 days.
  8. File a Minnesota Department of Commerce complaint. mn.gov/commerce handles complaints. Minnesota's strong unfair claims practices statute (Minn. Stat. § 72A.201) creates regulatory leverage.
  9. Conciliation court for $15,000 or less. Minnesota conciliation court (small claims) handles claims up to $15,000 — one of the higher caps in the country. Filing fees are modest.
  10. District court for larger claims. Above $15,000, district court handles the case with full procedure. Minnesota's 6-year SOL allows time for full litigation if needed.
Minnesota's $15,000 conciliation court is meaningfully accessible
Most Minnesota DV claims fit comfortably within the $15,000 conciliation court limit — among the highest in the country. Combined with the 6-year SOL, Minnesota DV claimants rarely face procedural pressure.

Minnesota DV Questions

Can I recover diminished value in Minnesota?
Yes, third-party only. O'Connor v. Schwartz, 304 Minn. 155 (1975), confirms Minnesota's adoption of Restatement (Second) of Torts § 928 — both repair cost AND residual diminution recoverable, subject to a gross-diminution cap under Rinkel.
What is Minnesota's statute of limitations?
Six years from the date of the accident under Minn. Stat. § 541.05. Among the longest SOLs in the country.
Does Minnesota UMPD cover DV?
No. Minnesota standard auto policies don't cover first-party DV. Pursue third-party recovery against the at-fault driver's liability insurer.
What is Minnesota's small claims limit?
$15,000 in conciliation court — among the highest in the country. Filing fees are modest.
What if I'm partially at fault?
Minnesota applies pure comparative negligence under Minn. Stat. § 604.01. Recovery is reduced by your fault percentage but never barred. A claimant 70% at fault still recovers 30% of DV.
Will a Minnesota DV claim raise my insurance rates?
No. Third-party claims are filed against the at-fault driver's insurer; they don't affect your policy.

Restatement § 928. 75 Years of Authority.

Minnesota's adoption of Restatement § 928 plus 6-year SOL plus pure comparative negligence makes the state one of the most claimant-friendly DV jurisdictions. A USPAP-compliant appraisal citing O'Connor unlocks recovery.

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