In November 2012, McKennon Law Group achieved a 7 figure settlement in an insurance bad faith and insurance fraud case against several defendants, including Hartford Life Insurance Company, on behalf of a business owner who was sold a 412(i) retirement plan.
Following the August 2009 Station Fire, the lawsuits of over 1,440 policyholders filed against Fire Insurance Exchange (“FIE”) and related insurers were consolidated into one case – Henderson v. Farmers Group, Inc., __ Cal.App.4th __, 2012 Cal. App. LEXIS 1108 (October 24, 2012). In this case, the California Court of Appeal, Second Appellate District, issued an interesting opinion addressing several important issues.
In the consolidated lawsuit, the policyholders alleged that FIE improperly denied their claims by asserting either that: (1) the policyholders did not submit sworn proof of loss as required by the fire insurance policies, or (2) that the policyholders submitted delayed notice of loss. The policyholders asserted causes of action for breach of contract, breach of the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing (bad faith) and unfair business practices under section 17200. Given the large number of policyholders, five plaintiffs were selected as representative of the other policyholders and had their claims litigated, while the lawsuits of the other policyholders were stayed.
FIE moved for summary adjudication against the five representative plaintiffs, asserting, among other things, that submission of proof of loss is a condition precedent to coverage under the policy, and the failure to submit proof of loss in a timely manner meant the policyholders did not meet their own contractual obligations. While the trial court granted summary adjudication to FIE, the California Court of Appeal reversed.
For the policyholders whose claims were denied based on a failure to meet the policies’ proof of loss deadline – usually within 60 days of a request by FIE – the Court of Appeal ruled that California’s notice-prejudice rule applied. Under the rule, an insurer cannot avoid liability for an untimely claim, unless the insurer shows it suffered “substantial prejudice” from the claimant’s failure to provide timely notice and proof loss. The Court explained:
There is ample reason to apply the “notice-prejudice” rule here. California has a strong public policy against “technical forfeitures.” (Bollinger v. National Fire Ins. Co. (1944) 25 Cal.2d 399, 405.) Since forfeitures are not favored, “‘conditions in a contract, will if possible be construed to avoid forfeiture. [Citations.] This is particularly true of insurance contracts. [Citation.] [¶] And where . . . the condition is express and cannot be avoided by construction, the court may, in a proper case, excuse compliance with it or give equitable relief against its enforcement.’” (Root v. American Equity Specialty Ins. Co. (2005) 130 Cal.App.4th 926, 942, quoting O’Morrow v. Borad (1946) 27 Cal.2d 794, 800.) FIE’s employees testified that they waited for the insured to submit a proof of loss only where FIE’s hygienist recommended cleaning, i.e., when its investigation determined the insured had sustained a specific measure of damage and cleanup costs would be greater than the deductible. A reasonable trier of fact might infer that the insureds’ failure to provide a sworn proof of loss in such cases was a technical forfeiture that FIE used to avoid paying for cleanup costs when its hygienists recommended that course of action after testing samples from the property.
The Court further explained that “the notice-prejudice rule avoids an absurd result that would follow were courts to require absolute compliance with the proof of loss condition.” Reviewing the available facts, the Court of Appeal found that FIE failed to establish “substantial prejudice,” and indeed noted that even FIE’s person most knowledgeable testified that FIE relied upon the conclusions of expert hygienists hired to determine the level of char each house suffered, not the proof of loss, in preparing the damage estimates.
For the policyholders whose claims were denied because of delayed notice, the Court determined that FIE did show that it was prejudiced by the delayed notice because the condition of the property at the time the claim was made was substantially different from its condition when the loss occurred. However, summary adjudication was still reversed because FIE failed to raise the delayed notice until the lawsuit. In the letter denying the claim of the representative plaintiff that provided delayed notice, FIE’s denial was based on the grounds that “there were insufficient levels of smoke, ash, and/or soot present in the home,” and that it was reserving any available defenses. While FIE argued that the reservation language in the letter meant that it could raise the delayed notice defense to justify its denial decision, the Court of Appeal disagreed. Specifically, the Court held that under Insurance Code section 554, a failure to “promptly and specifically object to a delay in the presentation of notice” means that further objections based on delay are waived. The Court further noted that:
“The law is established that where an insurance company denies liability under a policy which it has issued, it waives any claim that the notice provisions of the policy have not been complied with.” (Comunale v. Traders & General Ins. Co. (1953) 116 Cal.App.2d 198, 202-203.) The rationale for this rule is “that an insurer cannot deny all liability, and at the same time be permitted to stand on a provision inserted in the policy for its benefit. . . . [W]here the insurer denie[d] all liability under the policy, the insured is misled into believing it would be futile to perform any affirmative obligation under the policy. In other words, the insurer is deemed to have waived the insured’s failure to perform because the nonperformance is attributable to the insurer’s conduct. [Citation.] Thus, the cases in which a notice or proof of loss provision has been deemed waived by the insurer usually involve an insured lulled by the insurer’s silence into believing it had complied with the policy notice and/or proof of loss provisions. Consistent with this rule, section 554 operates to deem an insurer’s belated objection to an untimely notice of claim or proof of loss waived if not promptly called to the attention of the insured. . . . [S]ection 554 prevents an insurer from lulling the insured into believing that notice and proof of loss are unnecessary.” (Insua v. Scottsdale Ins. Co. (2002) 104 Cal.App.4th 737, 742–743, fns. omitted.)
Finally, the California Court of Appeal affirmed the trial court’s summary adjudication ruling in favor of the insurer regarding alter ego and other vicarious liability theories, but reversed the trial court’s summary adjudication ruling on the causes of action for breach of contract, breach of the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing, and unfair competition under Business & Professions Code section 17200 et seq. With regard to the latter claim, the Court found that Moradi-Shalal v. Fireman’s Fund Insurance Companies, 46 Cal. 3d 287 (1988), did not bar a UCL cause of action based on an insurer’s bad faith, even if the same conduct might also constitute a violation of the Unfair Insurance Practices Act (which can only be enforced by the California Insurance Commissioner). With this, the lawsuit will be remanded back to the trial court, although we expect that the California Supreme Court’s upcoming opinion in Zhang v. Superior Court, 178 Cal. App. 4th 1801 (2009) could result in a rehearing of the section 17200 cause of action.
The Thursday November 1, 2012 edition of the Los Angeles Daily Journal featured Robert McKennon and Reid Winthrop’s front-page article entitled: “Insurance Agents Key to Insurer Liability.” In it, Mr. McKennon and Mr. Winthrop discuss how agents can be the key to rendering insurers liable for policy coverage. The article discusses the difference between “brokers” and “agents,” including “dual agents,” and discusses when and how to make the case that a “broker” is really an “agent” for purposes of imputing liability to an insurance company. The article also discusses how to respond to an insurer’s argument that the policy terms control and the insured has a duty to read the policy. The article is posted below with the permission of the Daily Journal.
We recently wrote about a policyholder friendly opinion by the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals that seemingly held that an insurer’s duty of good faith and fair dealing, which is implied in every contract of insurance, may be violated by the insurer’s failure to attempt to effectuate a settlement within policy limits after liability of its insured has become reasonably clear, even without a policy limits settlement demand. In other words, the court held that a demand within policy limits was not an element of a bad faith failure to settle claim. The Ninth Circuit, on October 5, 2012, issued an amended opinion deleting this language and leaving open the questions: 1) whether the duty to settle can be breached absent a settlement demand from the third party claimant; and 2) whether the genuine dispute doctrine can be applied in third-party cases.
California appellate courts have been clear that an insurer can be held liable for bad faith or for a judgment in excess of policy limits (i.e., open up policy limits) when there is an offer to settle an excess claim made within policy limits or when a settlement offer is made in excess of policy limits and the policyholder is willing and able to pay the excess. See Merritt v. Reserve Ins. Co., 34 Cal. App. 3d 858, 873 (1973)(“When a claimant offers to settle an excess claim within policy limits a conflict of interest immediately arises between carrier and assured. In such circumstances the carrier is required to evaluate the settlement offer in good faith, and good faith requires it to consider the interests of the assured equally with its own or, as some of the cases have said, to evaluate the settlement offer as though the carrier itself were liable for the full amount of the claim. If the carrier rejects the offer to settle within policy limits without having made an honest, intelligent, and knowledgeable evaluation of the offer on its merits, then the carrier has acted in bad faith and may become liable to its assured for consequential damages caused by its bad faith rejection.”) see also Coe v. State Farm, 66 Cal. App. 3d at 981, 995-996 (1977) (“[u]nder the controlling authorities actionable ‘bad faith’ arises, not from an insurance carrier’s obligation ‘to settle,’ but from unwarranted failure to accept a reasonable settlement offer.”)
The Ninth Circuit, in its amended opinion in Du v. Allstate Insurance Company et al., __ F.3d __ (9th Cir. 2012) U.S. App. LEXIS 20889 (apparently done to avoid an en banc hearing), deleted the policy holder friendly language regarding an insurer’s duty to settle, and replaced it with a discussion of current California law that states that an insurer cannot be held liable under a bad faith failure to settle claim in the absence of a demand within policy limits. Thus, what once was a case – at least for a few months – being hailed as a victory for policy holders, has done very little to change the landscape of bad faith duty to settle cases. The decision simply cited long standing authority that has held an insurer cannot be liable for bad faith failure to settle claim in the absence of a demand within policy limits, and then decided that the question needed not be answered for purposes of this case.
The Ninth Circuit similarly chose not to decide the question of whether the genuine dispute doctrine applies to third-party cases. The court found that the ultimate issue – whether the trial court gave a proper jury instruction that the jury could consider the insurer’s failure to effectuate a settlement in determining whether the insurer breached the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing – did not require the expansive discussion of the issues found in its earlier opinion. However, it is likely that what was once a very policyholder friendly decision is no longer.
McKennon Law Group PC founding partner Robert J. McKennon was named in the Business Edition 2012 Thomson Reuters/Super Lawyers annual list of the nation’s top attorneys in business practice areas.
Insurance Commissioner Dave Jones last week announced that Governor Jerry Brown has signed AB 1747, authored by Assembly Member Mike Feuer (D-Los Angeles). The bill was strongly supported by Commissioner Jones and the California Department of Insurance and provides important consumer safeguards for life insurance policyholders. AB 1747, which will be effective January 1, 2013, adds new Sections 10113.71 and 10113.72 to the Insurance Code and will apply to every individual and group life insurance policy issued or delivered in California after January 1, 2013.
AB 1747 will require that every life insurance policy issued or delivered in this state contain a provision for a grace period of not less than 60 days from the premium due date and that the policy remains in force during the 60-day grace period. The law will also require an insurer to give the applicant for an individual life insurance policy the right to designate at least one person, in addition to the applicant, to receive notice of lapse or termination of a policy for nonpayment of premium. The law will require an insurer to provide each applicant with a form, as specified, to make the designation and to notify the policy owner annually of the right to change the designation. The law will also prohibit a notice of pending lapse and termination from being effective unless mailed by the insurer to the named policy owner, a named designee for an individual life insurance policy, and a known assignee or other person having an interest in the individual life insurance policy at least 30 days prior to the effective date of termination if termination is for nonpayment of premium.
The new statutes will read as follows:
The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
SECTION 1. Section 10113.71 is added to the Insurance Code, to read:
10113.71. (a) Every life insurance policy issued or delivered in this
state shall contain a provision for a grace period of not less than 60 days
from the premium due date. The 60-day grace period shall not run
concurrently with the period of paid coverage. The provision shall provide
that the policy shall remain in force during the grace period.
(b) (1) A notice of pending lapse and termination of a life insurance
policy shall not be effective unless mailed by the insurer to the named policy
owner, a designee named pursuant to Section 10113.72 for an individual
life insurance policy, and a known assignee or other person having an interest
in the individual life insurance policy, at least 30 days prior to the effective
date of termination if termination is for nonpayment of premium.
(2) This subdivision shall not apply to nonrenewal.
(3) Notice shall be given to the policy owner and to the designee by
first-class United States mail within 30 days after a premium is due and
unpaid. However, notices made to assignees pursuant to this section may
be done electronically with consent of the assignee.
(c) For purposes of this section, a life insurance policy includes, but is
not limited to, an individual life insurance policy and a group life insurance
policy, except where otherwise provided.
SEC. 2. Section 10113.72 is added to the Insurance Code, to read:
10113.72. (a) An individual life insurance policy shall not be issued or
delivered in this state until the applicant has been given the right to designate
at least one person, in addition to the applicant, to receive notice of lapse
or termination of a policy for nonpayment of premium. The insurer shall
provide each applicant with a form to make the designation. That form shall
provide the opportunity for the applicant to submit the name, address, and
telephone number of at least one person, in addition to the applicant, who
is to receive notice of lapse or termination of the policy for nonpayment of
premium.
(b) The insurer shall notify the policy owner annually of the right to
change the written designation or designate one or more persons. The policy
owner may change the designation more often if he or she chooses to do
so.
(c) No individual life insurance policy shall lapse or be terminated for
nonpayment of premium unless the insurer, at least 30 days prior to the
effective date of the lapse or termination, gives notice to the policy owner
and to the person or persons designated pursuant to subdivision (a), at the
address provided by the policy owner for purposes of receiving notice of
lapse or termination. Notice shall be given by first-class United States mail
within 30 days after a premium is due and unpaid.
SEC. 3. Section 10173.2 of the Insurance Code is amended to read:
10173.2. When a policy of life insurance is, after the effective date of
this section, assigned in writing as security for an indebtedness, the insurer
shall, in any case in which it has received written notice of the name and
address of the assignee, mail to the assignee a written notice, postage prepaid
and addressed to the assignee’s address filed with the insurer, not less than
30 days prior to the final lapse of the policy, each time the policy owner
has failed or refused to transmit a premium payment to the insurer before
the commencement of the policy’s grace period or before the notice is
mailed. The insurer shall give that notice to the assignee in the proper case
while the assignment remains in effect, unless the assignee has notified the
insurer in writing that the notice is waived. The insurer shall be permitted
to charge the policy owner directly or against the policy the reasonable cost
of complying with this section, but in no event to exceed two dollars and
fifty cents ($2.50) for each notice.
As used in this section, “final lapse of the policy” means the date after
which the policy will not be reinstated by the insurer without requiring
evidence of insurability or written application.
As the Insurance Commissioner has noted, under existing law, individuals can easily lose the critical protection of life insurance if a single premium is accidentally missed, even if they have been paying premiums on time for many years. Furthermore, if an insured individual loses coverage and wants it reinstated, he or she may then have to undergo a new physical exam and be underwritten again, risking a significantly more expensive, possibly unaffordable premium if his or her health has changed in the years since purchasing the policy. Worse yet, they will not qualify for coverage at all under the insurers’ standards in place for reinstating coverage because of health changes. Over the years, we have observed that insurers have improperly lapsed life insurance policies without complying with existing law and even in situations where they have complied with the law, insurance company agents have not properly notified/warned policyholders of the impending lapse. Our office has been involved in a significant amount of litigation with insurers and their agents over improper life insurance policy lapses (last week one of the cases settled for just under $500,000). We expect that this law will make significant strides in reducing the amount of litigation over this issue.