Fox et al v. Starr Indemnity & Liability Company
Filing
21
ORDER granting in part and denying in part 13 --motion to dismiss; striking the misrepresentation allegation in paragraph 23(k), the "general business practice" allegation in paragraph 26, and the punitive-damagesrequest in paragraph 27(d); denying as moot 4 --motion to dismiss. Signed by Judge Steven D. Merryday on 4/28/2017. (BK)
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
MIDDLE DISTRICT OF FLORIDA
TAMPA DIVISION
FRED FOX, et al.,
Plaintiffs,
v.
CASE NO. 8:16-cv-3254-T-23MAP
STARR INDEMNITY &
LIABILITY COMPANY,
Defendant.
____________________________________/
ORDER
On April 19, 2014, a vagrant torched a building owned by Robert and Fred
Fox. The Foxes submitted a claim to Starr Indemnity & Liability Company, which
insured the building for “fire loss.” (Doc. 2 at 41–90, the insurance policy)
Dissatisfied with Starr’s handling of the claim and Starr’s purported tardiness in
tendering $1,057,192.56 (the building’s estimated damage, according to the Foxes’
contractor), on September 9, 2014, Fred Fox filed a “Civil Remedy Notice” with the
Florida Department of Financial Services. (Doc. 2 at 93–95) In a response to the
department, Starr argues that Fred’s notice fails to identify with specificity the
Florida law allegedly violated by Starr and fails to identify with specificity the policy
term allegedly breached by Starr. (Doc. 2 at 96–97)
The parties disagreed about the amount of the loss. In accord with the policy’s
appraisal provision (Doc. 2 at 62), each party selected an appraiser, and the two
appraisers selected an umpire. (Doc. 2 at ¶ 14) On May 12, 2016, the appraisal
panel awarded the Foxes $930,041.36 for the building’s damage, and Starr paid the
award. Alleging that Starr delayed payment in bad faith, the Foxes sue (Doc. 12)
Starr under Section 624.155, Florida Statutes. For the second time, Starr moves
(Doc. 13) to dismiss the bad-faith claim for the failure to state a claim for relief and
for the lack of particularity in the fraud allegation.
DISCUSSION
1. The civil remedy notice
Identifying several purported defects in the civil remedy notice, Starr alleges
that the failure to submit a “valid” civil remedy notice requires dismissal of the
action.1 First, Starr argues that Robert’s claim requires dismissal because Robert
failed to submit a civil remedy notice. Section 624.155(3)(a) requires an insured to
submit a civil remedy notice as a condition precedent to a bad-faith claim. The
notice includes a blank space to identify the complainant and another to identify the
insured. (Doc. 1 at 98) Fred’s responses fail to mention Robert, but the “narrative”
part of the notice states that “[t]his claim involves the insureds, Fred J. Fox and
Robert A. Fox’s (commercial) property.” (Doc. 1 at 100) The Foxes argue that the
inclusion of Robert’s name in the “narrative” section satisfies Section 624.155(3)(a).
1
If indisputably authentic and “central” to the plaintiff’s claim, a document attached to the
complaint can contribute to resolution of the motion to dismiss. Horsley v. Feldt, 304 F.3d 1125, 1134
(11th Cir. 2002) (internal citations omitted). Indisputably authentic and a condition precedent to
suing for bad faith, the notice is “central” to the plaintiff’s claim and warrants consideration in
resolving the motion to dismiss.
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Second, Starr argues that the notice fails to comply with Section
624.155(3)(b)(3), which requires an insured to state “[t]he name of any individual
involved in the violation.” A prompt on the first page of the notice requests that the
insured “identify the person or persons representing the insurer who are most
responsible for/knowledgeable of the facts giving rise to the allegations in this
notice.” (Doc. 1 at 98) Although Fred wrote that the notice is “against” “Starr
Liability & Indemnity Company,” Fred declined to identify a natural person
“involved in the violation.” The Foxes respond that Starr “fails to cite any authority
where a bad faith case was barred solely because a [notice] failed to state the name of
any individual involved in the violations.” (Doc. 17 at 12) Also, the Foxes argue
that they “did not have direct dealings with [Starr] and did not know the names of
[Starr’s] employees who were responsible for the claim.” (Doc. 17 at 13)
Neither party scrutinizes the statute’s text, perhaps because an examination of
the text contributes more to confusion than to clarity. As the parties recognize,
“any” might mean that an insured must identify at least one “individual involved in
the violation” or that an insured must identify every “individual involved in the
violation.” See Garner’s Dictionary of Legal Usage at 65–66 (“Any may be either
singular or plural.”). And the parties apparently disagree about the meaning of
“individual.” Without citation to authority, Starr assumes that “individual” means a
“natural person.” Unable to resolve the disagreement, Garner’s Dictionary of Legal
Usage observes:
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[I]ndividual was formerly thought to be a newfangled barbarism as a
noun substituting for man, woman, or person. Certainly, those more
specific terms are generally preferred over individual, but this word
should no longer be stigmatized. Still, individual is best confined to
contexts in which the writer intends to distinguish the single
(noncorporate) person from the group or crowd.
Garner’s Dictionary of Legal Usage at 448 (italics omitted). More helpful, Black’s Law
Dictionary defines “individual” as “of or relating to a single person or thing, as
opposed to a group.” Black’s Law Dictionary at 789 (8th ed. 2002). In this instance,
Starr Liability & Insurance Company is a unique entity — the only Starr Liability &
Insurance Company. Finally, the statute requires identifying an individual “involved
in” the violation. “Involved in” lacks meaning, so the notice prompts an insured to
identify “the person or persons representing the insured who are most responsible
for/knowledgeable of the facts giving rise to the allegations.” (Doc. 1 at 98)
Third, Starr argues that the notice fails to comply with Section
624.155(3)(b)(4), which requires that the Foxes “shall state with specificity . . .
[r]eference to specific policy language that is relevant to the violation, if any.” To
identify the terms allegedly breached, the notice includes this list:
-Building coverage
-Business income coverage
-All coverage provided by endorsement or rider
-The declarations page
-Loss payment or settlement provision
-Duties in event of loss policy provision
-The insurance policy’s definition section
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-The insurance policy’s exclusion of coverage provisions
-All insurance policy provisions that provide coverage to the insured.
(Doc. 1 at 99) The policy’s table of contents (Doc. 1 at 46) contains neither a section
titled “building coverage” nor a section titled “business income coverage,” and no
section in the notice duplicates a section in the policy. As Starr correctly states, the
list “is not specific at all. Nor is it ‘policy language.’ It is a list of whole sections
found in most, if not all, property insurance contracts.” (Doc. 13 at 15) In response,
the Foxes argue that the statute “states to ‘reference’ specific policy language[,] not to
quote, and [the Foxes] did indeed reference all portions of the policy that applied to
the situation.” (Doc. 17 at 14)
Not a model of careful legislative drafting, Section 624.155(3)(b)(4) uses
“specific” or a variant twice, perhaps suggesting that an insured must provide twice
the detail of a singularly specific notice. But as the Foxes observe, the statute
requires “reference,” not quoting. The American Heritage Dictionary defines
“reference” as “a mention or an occurrence.” If the statute contained no specificity
requirement, the Foxes’ casual “reference” to the entire insurance policy undoubtedly
would suffice. But the Legislature included “specific” or a variant not once but twice
in the statute. The notice lists “whole sections found in most, if not all, property
insurance contracts.” (Doc. 13 at 15) As Starr argues persuasively, the notice
appears to lack specificity.
Also, the Foxes argue that “the clear language of the statute attests to the
possibility that it may be impossible to reference any specific, relevant language from
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the policy agreement.” (Doc. 17 at 14) The statute requires identification of
“specific policy language that is relevant to the violation, if any.” Because “if any”
modifies “violation” rather than “policy language,” the Foxes’ “clear language”
argument is unpersuasive. Under the statute’s “clear” language, an insured may
complain about an insurer’s “bad faith” absent a violation of law or of contract, an
absurd result.
The Foxes argue that the notice “was sufficient to notify [Starr] of the claim
practice violations and provide the insurer an opportunity to cure.” (Doc. 17 at 15)
Under the statute, sufficiency means “specificity.” But QBE Ins. Corp. v. Chalfonte
Condo. Apartment Ass’n, Inc., 94 So. 3d 541 (Fla. 2012), appears to hold that an insurer
need not comply “strictly” with an unambiguous statutory requirement. In QBE, the
insured alleged a violation of Section 627.701(4)(a), which requires that “[a]ny policy
that contains a separate hurricane deductible must” include in 18-point font a
statutorily-mandated statement. QBE’s insurance policy concededly failed to comply
with Section 627.701(4)(a). QBE cites with approval Prida v. Transamerica Ins. Finance
Corp., 651 So. 2d 763 (3d DCA 1995) (per curiam). In Prida, the plaintiff argued that
the insurance company’s notice of cancellation lacked effect because Section 627.848
requires that an insurance company “shall” use a font no smaller than 12 points, and
the insurance company’s notice of cancellation used a 9.5-point font. Except for
observing that Section 627.848 provides no consequence for an insurer’s violation of
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the statute, Prida proffers no explanation for holding that the insurer need not comply
with the statute. And QBE states:
The instant case is more like Prida than Roberts [which granted
summary judgment for a plaintiff because the defendant’s insurance
policy failed to comply strictly with a statutory requirement] in several
important ways. First, QBE substantially complied with the notice
requirements, as did the insurance company in Prida. Second, the
hurricane deductible notice statute had never included a penalty
provision as the coinsurance statute in Roberts did. . . Finally,
Chalfonte did not assert that it received no notice of the hurricane
deductible provision, which was clearly noted on the front page of the
policy, but only that the font size and one of the words in the notice
did not comply with the statutory requirement.
94 So. 3d at 553–54. Although ambiguity abounds in Section 624.155(3)(b), the
Foxes’ notice appears to comply “substantially” with the statute. The “narrative”
section of notice explains the Foxes’ concern about Starr’s conduct. Under QBE and
Prida, the Foxes’ “substantial” compliance with the statutory requirement appears to
suffice.
2. Breach of contract
Starr argues that QBE requires the dismissal with prejudice of this action. In
QBE, Chalfonte submitted a claim for property damage to QBE after Hurricane
Wilma struck Florida in 2005. 94 So. 3d at 543. In addition to alleging a font-size
violation under Section 627.701(4)(a), Chalfonte sued QBE for breach of contract
and breach of the insurance policy’s “implied warranty of good faith and fair
dealing.” 94 So. 3d at 544. A jury found QBE liable for breach of contract and
breach of the implied duty of good faith.
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On appeal, QBE argued that Florida common law recognizes no implied duty
of good faith owed by an insurer to an insured, and the Eleventh Circuit certified the
question to the Florida Supreme Court. QBE explains that Florida common law
“recognize[s] an implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing in every contract”
and that the covenant protects the “reasonable expectations of the contracting parties
in light of [the parties’] express agreement.” 94 So. 3d at 548 (internal citations
omitted). And QBE states that a party cannot prevail on a claim for breach of the
implied duty of good faith if “application of the [duty] would contravene the express
terms of the agreement” or if the plaintiff asserts no claim for “breach of an express
term of the agreement.” 94 So. 3d at 548 (internal citations omitted). Despite stating
that Florida contract law recognizes an implied duty of good faith in “every”
contract, QBE holds that an insured cannot sue an insurer at common law for breach
of the implied duty of good faith. 94 So. 3d at 548.
Although QBE primarily discusses the existence (or not) of a first-party bad
faith claim at common law, QBE states that the Florida Supreme Court “has
repeatedly described the statutory bad-faith action [under Section 624.155(1)(b)] with
reference to the duty of good faith and fair dealing.” 94 So. 3d at 948. And as
explained above, QBE states that the Florida courts refuse to apply the implied duty
of good faith if application of the duty “contravene[s] the express terms of the
agreement” or if the plaintiff asserts no claim for breach of an express contract term.
94 So. 3d at 548 (internal citations omitted). Starr infers from QBE’s mention of the
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statutory bad-faith action that a statutory bad-faith action fails if application of the
bad-faith claim contravenes a contract term or if the plaintiff alleges no breach of an
express term. According to Starr, this action warrants dismissal because the
“application” of the Foxes’ statutory bad-faith claim contravenes the appraisal
provision and because the Foxes fail to identify an express term allegedly breached.
(Doc. 13 at 9–10)
QBE’s mention of the statutory bad-faith claim provides little guidance. But
three District Courts of Appeal decisions issued after QBE hold that an insured can
succeed on a first-party bad-faith claim even though the insurer timely paid an
appraisal award in accord with a policy term. In Trafalgar at Greenacres, Ltd. v. Zurich
Am. Ins. Co., 100 So. 3d 1155 (Fla. 4th DCA 2012) (Bloom, J.), the plaintiff sued the
defendant insurance company for breaching the insurance contract by failing to pay
money owed under the policy. 100 So. 3d at 1156. The defendant invoked the
policy’s appraisal provision, paid the appraisal award, and successfully moved for
summary judgment on the breach-of-contract claim. The plaintiff amended the
complaint to sue for bad faith, but the trial court dismissed the bad-faith claim
because the insurer prevailed on the breach-of-contract claim.
Reversing the trial court, Trafalgar states that a determination of the “actual
extent of the insured’s loss” must precede a bad-faith claim and cites Blanchard v. State
Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co., 575 So. 2d 1289 (Fla. 1991). In Blanchard, an uninsured
motorist struck the plaintiff’s car and permanently injured the plaintiff, who
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successfully sued the motorist in state court for negligence. State Farm insured the
plaintiff for up to $200,000 for harm caused by an uninsured motorist, and the trial
court entered judgment against State Farm for the policy limit and against the
uninsured motorist for the excess judgment. After the conclusion of the action, the
plaintiff sued State Farm in federal court for failing to settle the uninsured-motorist
claim in good faith. The district court dismissed the bad-faith claim because the
plaintiff “split his cause of action” by failing to assert the bad-faith claim in the
state-court action. On certification from the Eleventh Circuit, Blanchard holds that an
“insured’s underlying first-party action for insurance benefits against the insurer
necessarily must be resolved favorably to the insured before” the insured can sue for
bad faith. 575 So. 2d at 1291. Also, Blanchard states that “a determination of the
existence of liability on the part of the uninsured tortfeasor and [a determination of]
the extent of the plaintiff’s damages” must precede a bad-faith claim. 575 So. 2d
at 1289.
Starr argues that Blanchard’s statements (for example, that a determination of
liability must precede the bad-faith claim) require the Foxes to succeed on a
breach-of-contract claim against Starr before the Foxes can state a claim against Starr
for first-party bad faith. But Trafalgar holds that a plaintiff need not obtain a
“determination of the existence of liability” through a trial. 100 So. 3d at 1157–58.
Rather, an “arbitration award establishing the validity of an insured’s claim satisfies”
Blanchard’s requirements. 100 So. 3d at 1158 (citing Dadeland Depot, Inc. v. St. Paul
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Fire & Marine Ins. Co., 945 So. 2d 1216 (Fla. 2006)). And Trafalgar “see[s] no
meaningful distinction between an arbitration award and the appraisal award . . . for
the purpose of deciding whether the underlying action was resolved favorably to the
insured.” 100 So. 3d at 1158.
Hunt v. State Farm Florida Ins. Co., 112 So. 3d 547 (Fla. 2d DCA 2013)
(LaRose, J.), and Cammarata v. State Farm Florida Ins. Co., 152 So. 3d 606
(Fla. 4th DCA 2014) (per curiam) (en banc), adopt Trafalgar’s holding. Although
Blanchard states that an the insured must obtain the favorable resolution of a
breach-of-contract claim before the insured can sue for bad faith, Cammarata
attributes that statement to Blanchard’s “procedural context.” 152 So. 2d at 610.
Cammarata holds that “the parties’ settlement via the appraisal process, which
determined the existence of liability and the extent of the insured’s damages,”
satisfies Blanchard’s requirements. 152 So. 2d at 612. Absent a persuasive indication
that the Florida Supreme Court requires that success on a breach-of-contract claim
precede the bad-faith claim, a district court in a diversity action must follow the
decisions of the District Courts of Appeal. McMahan v. Toto, 311 F.3d 1077, 1080
(11th Cir. 2007). Under Trafalgar, Hunt, and Cammarata, a plaintiff insured need not
allege success on a breach-of-contract claim to sue the defendant insurer for bad
faith.2 Rather, an appraisal award satisfies Blanchard’s requirement that the plaintiff
2
Specially concurring, Judge Gerber explains in Cammarata that binding precedent
“compel[s]” the conclusion that an appraisal award satisfies the requirement that a determination of
liability and a determination of the plaintiff’s damages precede the bad-faith claim. Judge Gerber
(continued...)
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obtain a determination of liability and a determination of damages before suing for
bad faith. Trafalgar, 100 So. 3d at 1158; Hunt, 112 So. 3d at 549; Cammarata,
152 So. 3d at 612–13. And although interesting, QBE’s mention of the statutory
bad-faith action fails to compel the conclusion that a plaintiff must allege an express
term allegedly breached or that a purported conflict between the insurance policy and
the application of bad faith requires dismissal of the bad-faith claim.
3. The fraud allegation
Starr argues that paragraph 23(k) of the complaint fails to comply with
Rule 9(b), which requires pleading fraud with particularity. The paragraph alleges
Starr’s “misrepresentation and/or omission of pertinent facts relating to the
coverages and/or facts of the loss at issue.” Although paragraph 24 of the complaint
details Starr’s purported failure to handle the claim in accord with Florida law and to
timely pay the claim, the paragraph fails to identify (either generally or with
particularity) a misrepresentation. The Foxes argue that the notice provides
sufficient detail about Starr’s purported misrepresentations. (Doc. 17 at 15–16) But
under Rule 10(c), the notice is not part of the pleading. Also, the notice omits
mention of a purported misrepresentation.
2
(...continued)
opines that “the record [in Cammarata] indicates that the insurer merely exercised its rights under the
contract’s agreed-upon dispute resolution process of appraisal. The insurer’s exposure should be at
an end.” Cammarata, 152 So. 3d at 614 (Gerber, J., specially concurring) (citing Hill v. State Farm
Florida Ins. Co., 35 So. 3d 956 (Fla. 2d DCA 2010) (Altenbernd, J.)).
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4. Punitive damages
Section 624.155(5) permits punitive damages if the insurer violates Florida law
“with such frequency as to indicate a general business practice.” Also, the insurer
must violate the law either “wilfully, wanton[ly], and malicious[ly],” or with
“reckless disregard for the insured’s rights.” The Foxes concede that the complaint
fails to allege facts that show the frequency of Starr’s purported violations. (Doc. 17
at 16) Because no facts support the request for punitive damages, the request
warrants striking under Rule 12(f).
The Foxes request leave to amend the complaint “to set forth the pattern and
practice of similar actions in market conduct studies and other insurance
investigations.” (Doc. 17 at 16) The request warrants denial.
CONCLUSION
The motion (Doc. 13) to dismiss the amended complaint is
GRANTED-IN-PART and DENIED-IN-PART. The notice, which explains the
Foxes’ dissatisfaction with Starr’s handling of the claim, appears to comply
“substantially” with Section 624.155(3)(b)’s requirements. Under Trafalgar, Hunt,
and Cammarata, an appraisal award meets Blanchard’s requirement that a
determination of liability and a determination of the plaintiffs’ damages precede a
bad-faith claim under Section 624.155(1)(b). Because insufficient facts support the
allegations that Starr “misrepresented” a fact and that Starr violates Florida law as a
“general business practice,” the misrepresentation allegation in paragraph 23(k), the
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“general business practice” allegation in paragraph 26, and the punitive-damages
request in paragraph 27(d) are STRICKEN. The motion (Doc. 4) to dismiss the
original complaint is DENIED AS MOOT.
ORDERED in Tampa, Florida, on April 28, 2017.
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