Insurance bad faith is a
legal
term of art that describes a
tort claim that an insured person may have against an
insurance company for its bad acts.
Under the law of most jurisdictions in the
United
States
, insurance companies owe a
duty of good faith and fair dealing to the persons they insure.
This duty is often referred to as the "implied covenant of good
faith and fair dealing" which automatically exists by operation of
law in every insurance contract. If an insurance company violates
that covenant, the insured person (or "policyholder") may sue the
company on a
tort claim in addition to a
standard breach of
contract claim. The
contract-tort distinction is significant because as a matter of
public policy, punitive or exemplary damages are unavailable for
contract claims, but are available for tort claims. The end result
is that a plaintiff in an insurance bad faith case may be able to
recover an amount
larger than the original face value of
the policy, if the insurance company's conduct was particularly
egregious.
Historical background
Most laws regulating the
insurance
industry in the U.S. are
state-specific.
In 1869,
the Supreme Court of the United
States
held, in Paul v. Virginia,
75 U.S. (8 Wall.) 168, 19 L.Ed. 357 (1869) that United States
Congress did not have authority under its power to regulate
commerce to regulate insurance.
In the 1930s and 1940s, a number of U.S. Supreme Court decisions
broadened the interpretation of the
Commerce Clause in various ways, so that
federal jurisdiction over interstate commerce could be seen as
extending to insurance. In March 1945, the
United States Congress expressly
reaffirmed its support for state-based insurance regulation by
passing the
McCarran-Ferguson
Act (found at 15 U.S.C. §§ 1011-15) which held that no law that
Congress passed should be construed to invalidate, impair or
supersede any law enacted by a State regarding insurance. As a
result, nearly all regulation of insurance continues to take place
at the state level.
Such regulation generally comes in two forms. First, each state has
an "Insurance Code" or some similarly-named statute which attempts
to provide comprehensive regulation of the insurance industry and
of insurance policies, a specialized type of contract. State
insurance codes generally mandate specific procedural requirements
for starting, financing, operating, and winding down insurance
companies, and often require insurers to be overcapitalized
(relative to other companies in the larger financial services
sector) to ensure that they have enough funds to pay claims if the
state is hit by multiple natural and man-made disasters at the same
time. There is usually a Department of Insurance or Division of
Insurance responsible for implementing the state insurance code and
enforcing its provisions in administrative proceedings against
insurers.
Second, judicial interpretation of insurance contracts in disputes
between policyholders and insurers takes place in the context of
the aforementioned insurance-specific statutes as well as general
contract law; the latter still exists only in the form of
judge-made case law in most states. A few states like California
and Georgia have gone farther and attempted to codify all of their
contract law (not just insurance law) into statutory law.
Early insurance contracts were considered to be contracts like any
other, but first English (see
uberrima
fides) and then American courts recognized that insurers occupy
a special role in society by virtue of their express or implied
promise of peace of mind, as well as the severe vulnerability of
insureds at the time they actually make claims (usually after a
terrible loss or disaster). Thus, as a matter of
public policy, courts began to impose special
duties on insurers above and beyond those imposed on ordinary
parties to contracts.
In turn,
the development of the modern cause of action for insurance bad
faith can be traced to two landmark decisions of the Supreme Court of
California
: Comunale v. Traders &
General Ins. Co.,
50
Cal. 2d 654, 328 P.2d 198, 68 A.L.R.2d 883 (1958) (third-party
liability insurance), and
Gruenberg v. Aetna Ins.
Co.,
9
Cal. 3d 566, 108 Cal. Rptr. 480, 510 P.2d 1032 (1973) (first-party fire
insurance). Other state courts began to follow California's lead
and held that a
tort claim exists for
policyholders that can establish bad faith on the part of insurance
carriers. According to Stephen S. Ashley's treatise,
Bad Faith
Actions: Liability and Damages, 2nd ed. (Eagan, MN: Thomson
West, 1997), §§ 2.08 and 2.15, courts in nearly thirty states
recognized the claim by the late 1990s. In nineteen states, state
legislatures became involved and passed legislation that
specifically authorized bad faith claims against insurers.
Bad faith defined
An insurance company has many duties to its policyholders. The
kinds of applicable duties vary depending upon whether the claim is
considered to be "first party" or "third party." A common first
party context is when an insurance company writes insurance on
property that becomes damaged, such as a house or an automobile. In
that case, the company is required to investigate the damage,
determine whether the damage is covered, and pay the proper value
for the damaged property. Bad faith in first party contexts often
involves the insurance carrier's improper investigation and
valuation of the damaged property (or its refusal to even
acknowledge the claim at all). Bad faith can also arise in the
context of first party coverage for personal injury such as
health
insurance or
life insurance, but
those cases tend to be rare. Most of them are preempted by
ERISA.
Third party situations break down into at least two distinct
duties, both of which must be fulfilled in good faith. First, the
insurance carrier usually has a duty to defend a claim (or lawsuit)
even if some or most of the lawsuit is not covered by the insurance
policy. Unless the policy is expressly structured so that defense
costs "eat away" at the policy limits, the default rule is that the
insurer must cover all defense costs regardless of the actual limit
of coverage.
Second, the insurer has a duty of
indemnification, which is the duty to pay a
judgment against the policyholder, up to the limit of coverage, but
only if the
judgment is for a covered
act or omission. As a result, most insurance companies exercise a
great deal of control over
litigation.
Bad faith can occur in either situation—by improperly refusing to
defend a lawsuit or by improperly refusing to pay a judgment or
settlement of a covered lawsuit.
In some jurisdictions, like California, third party coverage also
contains a third duty, the duty to settle a reasonably clear claim
against the policyholder within policy limits, in order to avoid
the risk that the policyholder may be hit with a judgment in excess
of the value of the policy (which a plaintiff might then attempt to
satisfy by writ of execution on the policyholder's assets). If the
insurer breaches in bad faith its duties to defend, indemnify, and
settle, it may be liable for the
entire amount of any
judgment obtained by a plaintiff against the policyholder, even if
that amount is in excess of policy limits. This was the holding of
the landmark
Comunale case.
Bad faith is a fluid concept and is defined primarily by court
decisions in
case law. Examples of bad
faith include undue delay in handling claims, inadequate
investigation, refusal to defend a lawsuit, threats against an
insured, refusing to make a reasonable settlement offer, or making
unreasonable interpretations of an insurance policy.
In some cases, the tort or the governing state statute allows
punitive damages against insurance
companies as a mechanism to prevent future behavior.
In California, the plaintiff in a bad faith action may be able to
recover some of its attorneys' fees
separately and in
addition to the judgment for damages against a defendant insurer,
but
only up to the extent that those fees were incurred in
recovering
tort damages (for breach of the implied
covenant) as opposed to contractual damages (for breach of the
terms of the insurance policy). The allocation of attorneys' fees
between those two categories is usually a question of fact (meaning
it usually goes to the jury).
Assignment or direct action
In some U.S. states, bad faith is even more complicated because
under certain circumstances, a liability insurer may ultimately
find itself in a trial where it is being sued
directly by
the plaintiff who originally sued its insured. This is allowed
through two situations: assignment or direct action. The first
situation is where an insured abandoned in bad faith by its
liability insurer makes a special settlement agreement with the
plaintiff. Sometimes this occurs after trial, where the insured has
valiantly attempted to defend himself or herself by paying for a
lawyer out of pocket, but went to verdict and lost; other times it
occurs before trial and the parties agree to put on an uncontested
show trial that results in a final
verdict and judgment against the insured. Either way, the plaintiff
agrees to not actually execute on the final judgment against the
insured in exchange for an assignment of the assignable components
of the insured's causes of action against its insurer. The second
situation is where the plaintiff obtains a judgment against the
insured, then proceeds directly against the insured's insurer under
a state statute authorizing such a "direct action." These statutes
have been upheld as constitutional by the U.S. Supreme Court.
Lawsuits
Bad faith lawsuits are notorious for resulting in very large awards
of punitive damages. The most famous example in recent memory was
State Farm Mutual
Auto. Ins.
Co. v. Campbell, , in which the U.S.
Supreme Court overturned a jury verdict of $145 million in punitive
damages against
State Farm
Insurance. Bad faith cases may also be rather slow, at least in
the third party context, because they are necessarily dependent
upon the outcome of any underlying litigation. For example, the
underlying lawsuit in the
Campbell case arose from a fatal
car accident in 1981.
References
- Kanne v. Connecticut Gen. Life Ins. Co., 867 F.2d 489
(9th Cir. 1988).
- Cassim v. Allstate Ins. Co., 33
Cal. 4th 780 (2004).
- Essex Ins. Co. v. Five Star Dye House, Inc., 38 Cal. 4th 1252 (2006).
- Watson v. Employers Liability Assurance Corp., .
External links