Darrell Myers, et al v. Agrilogic Insurance Services,, et al
Filing
OPINION filed : We do not doubt that the district court would have been correct had discovery yielded only the facts before it when it dismissed this claim. But the district court never allowed the Myerses to develop a case. Under these circumstances, we REVERSE the dismissal of the UCSPA claim and REMAND for further proceedings, decision not for publication. Danny J. Boggs, Helene N. White (authoring), and Bernice Bouie Donald, Circuit Judges.
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NOT RECOMMENDED FOR PUBLICATION
File Name: 17a0327n.06
No. 15-5442
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT
DARRELL L. MYERS and LUCAS MYERS,
)
)
Plaintiffs-Appellants,
)
)
v.
)
)
AGRILOGIC INSURANCE SERVICES, LLC, )
and OCCIDENTAL FIRE & CASUALTY )
)
INSURANCE CO. OF NORTH CAROLINA,
)
)
Defendants-Appellees.
FILED
Jun 09, 2017
DEBORAH S. HUNT, Clerk
ON APPEAL FROM THE
UNITED STATES DISTRICT
COURT FOR THE EASTERN
DISTRICT OF KENTUCKY
BEFORE: BOGGS, WHITE, and DONALD, Circuit Judges.
HELENE N. WHITE, Circuit Judge. Darrell and Lucas Myers, Kentucky
farmers, brought this action against AgriLogic Insurance Services, their crop insurer,1
alleging breach of contract and a violation of Kentucky’s Unfair Claims Settlement
Practices Act (UCSPA) after AgriLogic denied corn-crop damage claims. Defendants
removed the case to federal district court and moved to dismiss for failure to state a
claim. The district court construed the motion as one for summary judgment and granted
it, concluding that the contract claim was untimely under the twelve-months-fromoccurrence limitations provision in the insurance contract, and that the Myerses presented
insufficient evidence of malfeasance to satisfy the threshold inquiry for a USPCA claim
1
AgriLogic is the crop-insurance division of Defendant Occidental Fire &
Casualty Insurance Co. of North Carolina, and provides certain administrative services in
conjunction with crop insurance policies underwritten by Occidental. PID 37/Affidavit
of Travis Laine, AgriLogic’s Product Implementation Manager.
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under (UCSPA).
After hearing argument in January 2016, we held this matter in
abeyance pending final disposition of several cases in the Kentucky state courts.2 We
affirm the dismissal of the breach-of-contract claim and reverse on the UCSPA claim.
I.
Paragraph 16 of the parties’ insurance contract sets forth the twelve-month
limitations provision at issue:
You cannot bring suit or action against us unless you have complied with
all of the policy provisions. If you do enter suit against us you must do so
within 12 months of the occurrence causing loss or damage . . . .
PID 50 (Ins. Contract, General Provisions ¶ 16). Paragraph 17 provides:
17. Conformity to Statutes
If any terms of this policy are in conflict with statutes of the state in which
this policy is issued, the policy will conform to such statutes.
PID 50.
Kentucky Revised Statute Annotated § 304.14-370 permits foreign insurers such
as Defendants to limit the time in which an action may be brought against them as long as
it is not less than one year from when a cause of action accrues:
No conditions, stipulations, or agreements in a contract of insurance shall
deprive the courts of this state of jurisdiction of actions against foreign
insurers, or limit the time for commencing actions against such insurers to
a period of less than one (1) year from the time when the cause of action
accrues.
2
We held this matter in abeyance pending the Kentucky Supreme Court’s
disposition of State Farm’s petition for discretionary review in Hensley v. State Farm
Mutual Automobile Insurance Company, 2014-SC-551, which it had held in abeyance
pending final disposition of State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance v. Riggs, 2013-SC555. After the Kentucky Supreme Court decided Riggs on March 17, 2016, 484 S.W.3d
724 (Ky. 2016), it remanded Hensley to the Court of Appeals for reconsideration in light
of Riggs. Hensley was decided on March 3, 2017. 2013-CA-6-MR, 2017 WL 837698
(not to be published).
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§ 304.14-370.
A.
The Myerses’ claims are not clearly delineated. With overlapping arguments,
they challenge both the construction and the enforceability of the limitations provision.
Relying on our statement in Smith v. Allstate Insurance Co., 403 F.3d 401, 405 (6th Cir.
2005), that an otherwise valid limitations provision requiring suit within one year of loss
“may nonetheless be unenforceable if it did not allow the [policyholder] reasonable time
to sue,” the Myerses first contend that repeated errors of AgriLogic’s independent
adjuster precluded their filing a timely action. Relatedly, the Myerses argue that under
the circumstances, they had no reason to believe that their claim would be denied until
the actual denial, that the limitations period should be tolled, and that their cause of
action did not accrue until the claim was denied on May 9, 2013, as only then were they
aggrieved. The district court agreed with Defendants that the twelve-month limitations
provision is valid and enforceable:
[T]he Court considers the impact of the application of the one-year
limitations period in light of the undisputed facts–that (1) the subject claim
arises from wind damage to Plaintiffs’ corn crops on July 25, 2012, (2) the
claim was denied on May 9, 2013, and (3) they filed suit on May 7, 2014.
This matter was filed out of time if the Court calculates the limitations
period from the date of the wind damage, which is the only loss averred in
this action. As the contract’s own terms bar the suit . . . , the Court will
dismiss Plaintiffs’ claim for breach of contract and enter judgment in favor
of Defendants.
PID 133.
The district court also rejected the Myerses’ argument that they did not have a
reasonable time within which to retain counsel and file suit between May 9, 2013, when
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AgriLogic denied their claims, and July 25, 2013, twelve months after their corn crops
were damaged:
Plaintiffs argue that the one month [sic 2 ½ month] period which remained
after the denial of their claim in which to bring suit hardly provided them
with a reasonable time in which to hire counsel, investigate, and file suit,
relying on Dunn v. Gordon Food Servs., 780 F. Supp. 2d 570, 573 (E.D.
Ky. 2013). They suggest that the contractual limitations period should
have been tolled during Defendants’ investigation, but they provide no
legal authority to support this conclusion. Absent some reason to suppose
that Kentucky courts would embrace such a rule, the Court rejects this
argument.
PID 132-33.
B.
We review de novo the district court’s grant of summary judgment, assessing the
evidence, facts, and inferences therefrom in the light most favorable to the nonmoving
party. Bazzi v. City of Dearborn, 658 F.3d 598, 602 (6th Cir. 2011). In this diversity
action, we apply federal procedural law, Hanna v. Plumer, 380 U.S. 460, 465 (1965), and
the substantive law of the forum state, Kentucky, see, e.g., Garden City Osteopathic
Hosp. v. HBE Corp., 55 F.3d 1126, 1130 (6th Cir. 1995).
Under Kentucky law, the elements of a breach-of-contract claim are: (1) the
existence of a valid contract; (2) breach of the contract; and (3) damages or loss caused
by the breach. Metro Louisville/Jefferson City Gov't v. Abma, 326 S.W.3d 1, 8 (Ky. Ct.
App. 2009). Kentucky courts have upheld as valid and enforceable shortened insurancecontract limitations provisions that run from the date of occurrence/damage like the one
at issue here. In Edmondson v. Pennsylvania National Mutual Casualty Insurance Co.,
781 S.W.2d 753, 756 (Ky. 1989), which involved a commercial fire-insurance policy
with a one-year-from-occurrence limitations provision, the Kentucky Supreme Court
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observed, “We have previously recognized the validity of insurance contract provisions
requiring as a condition to sue that the action must be ‘commenced within the time
specified by the policy-contract,’” quoting Stansbury v. Smith, 424 S.W.2d 571, 572 (Ky.
Ct. App. 1968). And in Ashland Finance Co. v. Hartford Accident & Indemnity Co., 474
S.W.2d 364 (Ky. 1971), in which the plaintiff insured procured from the defendant
insurer a blanket bond covering losses from dishonest or fraudulent acts of employees or
from robbery, burglary, or larceny by strangers, the Kentucky Supreme Court noted,
The provision of the bond here in question is clear and unambiguous; it
says that suit must be brought within one year after discovery of the loss.
We can find no valid basis for pronouncing that it does not mean what it
plainly says. And even if fairness were the test we see nothing unfair in
including some no-suit time in the overall period allowed for bringing suit.
Id. at 366.
Years later, this court applied Edmondson and Ashland Finance in Smith v.
Allstate, supra p.3, to the insureds’ action under their homeowner and landlord policies
for breach of contract and bad-faith denial of their fire claim. This court held that a
limitations provision requiring claimants to file suit within one year after the inception of
loss or damage was not inconsistent with § 304.14-370:
Allstate, as might be expected, contends that the Smiths’ cause of action
accrued on the date of the fire. But there is a long line of Kentucky cases
holding in a variety of contexts that a cause of action does not accrue until
the plaintiff has the right to institute and maintain a suit. See Philpot v.
Stacy, 371 S.W.2d 11, 13 (Ky. 1963); Forwood v. City of Louisville, 283
Ky. 208, 140 S.W.2d 1048, 1051 (1940); Carter v. Harlan Hospital
Association, 265 Ky. 452, 97 S.W.2d 9, 10 (1936). And under the
insurance contracts at issue here, the Smiths had no right to sue Allstate
prior to “full compliance with all policy terms.” We understand this to
mean that the Smiths could not sue until they had taken each of the steps
required of them under the policies—furnishing proof-of-loss statements,
e.g., and submitting to examination under oath. If cases such as Philpot,
Forwood, and Carter are controlling in the insurance context, therefore,
the Smiths’ cause of action could not have accrued on the date of the fire.
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We are not persuaded that the Philpot line of cases is controlling here.
None of those cases involved Ky. Rev. St. § 304.14–370, and Kentucky
courts have repeatedly enforced insurance contract provisions under which
the time for suit began to run before the insured had a right to sue.
....
We see nothing unreasonable about an effective limitations period of six
months . . . . Mr. and Mrs. Smith advance two reasons why, in their
submission, the limitations provision would not bar their claim even if the
provision was legally valid. First, the Smiths argue that a limitations
period in an insurance contract should be tolled from the time the insurer
receives notice of a loss until the time it refuses to pay. This argument is
not supported by Kentucky case law. As we have seen, Kentucky’s
highest court, in Ashland Finance and Edmondson, and its intermediate
appellate court, in Webb and Hale, have given effect to limitations periods
expiring one year after the insured’s loss (or discovery of the loss).
Neither these cases nor any other Kentucky case of which we are aware
suggest that the limitations period can be tolled until the denial of the
insured’s claim. Absent some reason to suppose that the Kentucky courts
would embrace such a rule, we must reject the Smiths’ argument.
Smith v. Allstate Ins. Co., 403 F.3d at 405–06.
C.
A deviation from this line of cases involving § 304.14-370 came in the form of
Hensley v. State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Co., No. 2013-CA-006, 2014 WL
3973115 (Ky. Ct. App. Aug. 15, 2014). At issue in Hensley was when an uninsuredmotorist (UIM) claim accrued and whether a cause of action can accrue by agreement,
i.e., as part of an insurance contract, before the cause of action is ripe under the law. The
Hensley court held that the term “accrues” in § 304.14-370, which is undefined in
Kentucky’s Insurance Code, had a distinct and defined meaning under the law in 1970
when the General Assembly enacted § 304.14-370, i.e., that a cause of action accrued
only when each element giving rise to the cause of action had come to fruition; that is, a
cause of action cannot “accrue” by agreement before it ripens under the law. 2014 WL
3973115, at *10-11, motion for discretionary review held in abeyance pending
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disposition of State Farm Auto. Ins. Co. v. Riggs, No. 2013-SC-555. Thus Hensley’s
claim did not accrue until State Farm denied her claim for UIM benefits. Id. at *12
(“[T]he insured’s UIM claim does not accrue at the time of the accident or injury, but
rather at the time the insured and the insurer disagree as to either the applicability or
amount of UIM coverage under the policy.”)
The Kentucky Supreme Court issued State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance
Co. v. Riggs, 484 S.W.3d 724 (Ky. 2016), on March 17, 2016. The issue in Riggs, which
involved an underinsured-motorist-benefits claim, was whether the two-year-from-injury
(or from last basic reparations benefit paid, whichever is later) limitations provision in the
parties’ insurance contract was reasonable. The Kentucky Court of Appeals in a 2-to-1
decision held the contractual-limitations provision unreasonable because it may require
an insured to sue the UIM carrier before knowing whether the tortfeasor is underinsured;
the court determined that the fifteen-year statute of limitations for general contract
actions applied. Id. at 726.
The Supreme Court reversed and reinstated the trial court’s judgment, holding
that the two-year contractual limitations period was reasonable and thus enforceable:
In the instant case, State Farm linked Riggs’s UIM coverage to the tortclaim time limitation found in the [Kentucky Motor Vehicle Reparations
Act] KMVRA, KRS 304.39-230(6). That statute requires a tort action to
“be commenced not later than two (2) years after the injury or death, or
the last basic or added reparation payment made by any reparation obligor,
whichever later occurs.” This is the exact language used by State Farm in
the UIM portion of Riggs’s policy.
We are unable to find this limitation unreasonable. Consistent with the
principles listed above, providing the insured with the same time as a tort
claim (perhaps longer depending on the duration of payments) does not
require an insured to sue his own insurer before filing suit against the
tortfeasor, nor does it require an insured to sue his own insurer before
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discovering whether or not the tort-feasor is in fact an [underinsured]
motorist.
Riggs, 484 S.W.3d at 726–31.
Riggs did not address when a cause of action accrues under § 304.14-370.
D.
Having decided Riggs, the Kentucky Supreme Court remanded Hensley to the
Court of Appeals for further consideration in light of Riggs. On remand, the court held
the two-year contractual-limitation period enforceable, rejected Hensley’s accrual
argument as impliedly rejected in Riggs, and affirmed the trial court’s grant of summary
judgment to State Farm:
In Riggs, supra, our Supreme Court considered the same policy language
at issue in this case. Noting that the insured agreed to the shorter
limitations period set forth in the policy, the Court held that two years
from the date of the accident was not an unreasonably short period of time
for the insurer to require a claim for UIM benefits to be brought by the
insured.
[W]e are not so much concerned with whether a UIM claim
should be labeled a tort claim or a contract claim as
whether State Farm and Riggs have contracted for a UIM
claim limitation that accomplishes the policy and purpose
of UIM coverage in a reasonable way. It is difficult to
condemn State Farm’s provision as unreasonable because,
at its simplest, it encourages the prompt presentation of all
the potential insurance claims relating to a single accident
and forces them to progress through the court system in a
more cohesive way–a way that insurance claims have
proceeded through our court system for decades. This is
not contrary to public policy–in fact, a strong argument
could be made that it benefits the public. State Farm’s
provision provides an insured with “the same rights as he
would have had against an insured third party”–a result that
is not at all unreasonable.
Riggs, 484 S.W.3d at 731.
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We cannot reconcile Hensley’s arguments with the outcome reached by
our Supreme Court in Riggs . . . Therefore, in light of Riggs, supra, we
affirm the Jefferson Circuit Court.
Hensley, 2017 WL 837698, at *2. In a footnote, the Kentucky Court of Appeals stated:
While the arguments in this case centered more directly on accrual, which
we addressed at length in our original opinion, the Supreme Court’s
majority opinion in Riggs suggested by implication that the cause of action
begins to accrue at the time of the accident, a different conclusion than the
majority reached when we first considered this case. We believe any
further consideration of that issue is best addressed by the Supreme Court,
especially since the policy language at issue in this case is the same
language the Supreme Court considered in Riggs.
Id. at *2 n.4.
E.
Albeit unpublished, the Kentucky Court of Appeals’ reversal in Hensley on
remand from the Kentucky Supreme Court weighs strongly in favor of affirming the
district court’s dismissal of the Myerses’ breach-of-contract claim. In particular, we rely
on that court’s determination that Riggs, by implication, forecloses any argument that
accrual may be tolled. Thus, we affirm the district court as to the breach-of-contract
claim.
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II. Claim Under Kentucky’s Unfair Claims Settlement Practices Act3
Defendants’ motion to dismiss asserted that under Smith v. Allstate Insurance Co.,
403 F.3d 401, 405 (6th Cir. 2005), the insurance contract’s twelve-month limitations
provision applied to the UCSPA claim as well, since the claim accrued on the date of loss
and was not tolled. PID 28. The district court determined that it need not address this
argument because the UCSPA claim “fails as a matter of law in light of the undisputed
facts before the Court.” PID 133-34.
We do not doubt that the district court would have been correct had discovery
yielded only the facts before it when it dismissed this claim. But the district court never
allowed the Myerses to develop a case. Under these circumstances, we reverse the
dismissal of the UCSPA claim and remand for further proceedings.
3
The UCSPA, Ky. Rev. Stat. Ann. § 304.12-230, provides in pertinent part:
It is an unfair claims settlement practice for any person to commit or
perform any of the following acts or omissions:
(3) Failing to adopt and implement reasonable standards for the prompt
investigation of claims arising under insurance policies;
....
(5) Failing to affirm or deny coverage of claims within a reasonable time
after proof of loss statements have been completed;
....
(14) Failing to promptly provide a reasonable explanation of the basis in
the insurance policy in relation to the facts or applicable law for denial of
a claim or for the offer of a compromise settlement . . . .
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