This case presents a familiar problem in insurance law. The insured sustained a financial loss for which the policy promised indemnification. The insurer denied coverage, contending without factual support that the insured was responsible for the catastrophe. In the subsequent lawsuit, the insured recovered the proceeds due and also received punitive damages, which it had sought on the theory that the insurer’s breach constituted several independent, wilful torts. The insurer now appeals from this punitive, noncontractual award. We find that the insured did not prove the alleged fraud or the alleged conversion and that Virginia law would not recognize either the tort of bad faith refusal to honor a first-party insurance obligation or an implied private right of action under the state’s unfair insurance practices statute. We therefore reverse that portion of the judgment awarding punitive damages.
I.
In the late evening of October 27 and the early morning of October 28, 1980, a fire completely destroyed the building of the A & E Supply Company, a mining equipment business in Buchanan County, Virginia. Owned and operated by brothers Larry Fletcher and Terry Lee Fletcher, A & E had purchased from the Nationwide Mutual Fire Insurance Company a policy that provided $150,000 in protection for the building and $250,000 in protection for its contents. A & E immediately notified Nationwide of the loss and gave to Nationwide what invoices, receipts, and tax returns had survived the fire. Nationwide examined these documents and investigated the events of October 27-28. On March 12, 1981, Nationwide unreasonably refused to pay A & E, charging that the Fletchers had intentionally set the fire.
Nationwide did not relay its unfounded suspicions to law enforcement authorities for proper investigation, an admitted violation of the Arson Reporting Immunity Act. Va. Code § 27-85.3 et seq. Nationwide did, however, tell the creditors of A & E that the Fletchers had burned the building to collect on their insurance policy. These allegations severely limited the Fletchers’ access to credit while Nationwide’s cancellation of all A & E policies limited the Fletchers’ access to insurance and Nationwide’s refusal to return the A & E documents limited the Fletchers’ access to information. Together the actions prevented resuscitation of the mine supply business and pressured the Fletchers to settle the A & E insurance claim quickly and unfavorably.
Instead, A & E sued Nationwide for breach of the insurance contract, conversion of the business records, acquisition of the records by false pretenses, fraud, slander, trespass, intentional infliction of emotional distress, bad faith dishonor of a first-party insurance obligation, and violation of the Virginia Unfair Insurance Practices Act, Va.Code § 38.1-49
et seq.
1
Because
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Nationwide had- in May 1981 remitted $66,000 on the policy to the co-insured Borg-Warner Acceptance Corporation, the district court held that Nationwide had waived its arson defense, and the court accordingly granted a partial summary judgment of liability on the contract claim.
A & E Supply Co. v. Nationwide Mutual Fire Insurance Co.,
From May 30, 1984 to June 12, 1984, a jury in the Western District of Virginia heard testimony and arguments about the compensatory damages due on the policy and about the punitive damages sought on the basis of Nationwide’s conduct. The jury returned a directed verdict for $32,-069.79 in coverage on the stipulated value of the building and returned a verdict for $188,966.09 in coverage on the contested value of the inventory. The jury also found in special verdicts that Nationwide had converted the business records of A & E, had obtained these records by false pretenses, had committed fraud, had acted in bad faith, and had engaged in unfair trade practices. Finding further that Nationwide had been malicious, the jury granted the request of A & E for $500,000 in punitive damages. 2
Nationwide moved on all counts for a new trial or for judgment notwithstanding the verdiсt. The district court conditionally granted a new trial on the count pertaining to the state unfair trade practices act and granted judgment notwithstanding the verdict on the count alleging fraud. The court denied all of Nationwide’s other motions.
A & E Supply Co. v. Nationwide Mutual Fire Insurance Co.,
II.
Damages for breach of contract in Virginia normally “are limited to the pecuniary loss sustained.”
Kamlar Corporation v. Haley,
It would skew the predictability necessary for stable contractual relations if a breaching party were suddenly subject to the more open and unanticipated duties and damages imposed by the law of tort. Most courts, and certainly Virginia courts, have
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thus not recognized an exception to the general rule of damages, even when the breaching party acts with an alleged malicious .motive. The circumstances surrounding the dissolution of contractual relations are so frequently beset by strain and susрicion that perceptions of improper motive on the part of an opposing party are commonplace. Breach of contract would thus routinely give rise to an action in tort, with its attendant incentive of a punitive award. The Virginia Supreme Court has noted that “the overwhelming weight of authority continues to resist this tendency.”
Kamlar Corp. v. Haley,
The general rule of contractual damages in Virginia admits but one exception. Only if the breach establishes the elements of “an independent, wilful tort,” may it support an award of punitive damages. Id. In this case, the societal interest in the deterrence and punishment of wrongdoing may be imрlicated apart from any breach of contract. Viewed from this perspective, an “independent tort” is one that is factually bound to the contractual breach but whose legal elements are distinct from it.
A & E Supply has sought in this litigation to establish “an independent, wilful tort” on the part of Nationwide and to place itself within the exception. It argues that the jury and the district court correctly identified two such independent wilful torts — conversion and bad faith refusal to pay a first-party insurance claim — and contends that the district court erred in overturning the jury on two others — fraud and violation of the Virginia Unfair Insurance Practices Act. Whilе we sympathize with the plight of plaintiff and agree with the district court that the conduct of Nationwide Mutual Fire Insurance Company was discreditable, we cannot find in the above litany of torts one that both applies to the circumstances of this case and that Virginia law would recognize as an independent basis for the award of punitive damages.
III.
A & E first seeks to uphold the award of punitive damages through proof of the familiar independent, wilful torts of fraud and conversion. Virginia law defines actual fraud as the knowing misrepresentation of a material fact to another person, whose reasonable reliance on the misrepresentation results in damage. .
Packard Norfolk, Inc. v. Miller,
That evidence is absent here. A & E argues that Nationwide’s agent made fraudulent misrepresentations immediately after the fire to Larry Fletcher that “I think we can help you” and that Nationwide might “possibly” pay quickly on the claim. A & E also says that it entrusted its records to Nationwide in the belief that “as quick as they can get these records established, that they would have a settlement, or a partial settlement for us to where we could get back in business quickly.” But such tentative statements to Larry Fletcher, made soon after the fire had ended and the investigation had begun, were more perfunctory reassurances than promises of payment. As the district court noted, A & E could not reasonably have relied on a belief that Nationwide had at this early point made any decision on the claim. Furthermore, the delivery of the A & E documents to Nationwide was rеquired by the insurance contract and did not demonstrate reliance on the insurer’s preliminary expectations of coverage. The district court properly concluded that the evidence failed to substantiate the allegations of fraud.
A slightly different path leads to the same conclusion about the allegations of
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conversion.
4
A & E did prove that Nationwide had, in withholding A & E documents, wrongfully interfered with the company’s rights to its own business records.
Cf. Buckeye National Bank v. Huff & Cook,
Again, the necessary evidence is absent here. A & E has claimed actual damages exclusively through Nationwide’s failure to pay on the insurance contract. Its damages stemmed from this breach of contract, not from the alleged tort оf conversion. The allegations of conversion, furthermore, describe tortious conduct that was extraneous to the breach of contract. Nationwide did not refuse to return the A & E records until April 29, 1981, more than six weeks after Nationwide had formally rejected the insurance claim. The wrongful retention of property was not factually bound to the breach but to the efforts of Nationwide to prove its position in the ensuing litigation. A & E did not request the return of documents until it had initiated suit. It would undermine the rule of Kamlar Corp. v. Haley if subsequent disputes over evidence were to translate into the tort of conversion sufficient to support a punitive damages awаrd in an action for contractual breach. A & E, which recovered its documents under a pre-trial order, has not alleged or proved any other actual damages from the conversion. The award of punitive damages accordingly may not rest on the conversion count.
IV.
A & E also claimed at trial that the requisite support in tort for an award of punitive damages could be found in its right to recover from Nationwide under the Virginia Unfair Insurance Practices Act, Va. Code § 38.1-49
et seq.
Bound by the decision in
Morgan v. American Family Life Assurance Co. of Columbus,
The Virginia legislature enacted its Unfair Insurance Practices Act to define all practices that constitute “unfair or decep *674 tive acts or practices” and to prohibit “the trade practices so defined or determined.” Va. Code § 38.1-49. The legislature based the Act on a model statute drafted by the National Association of Insurance Commissioners, an example that has been followed by many other states. See Comment, Insurers and Third-Party Claimants: The Limits of Duty, 48 U.Chi.L.Rev. 125, 146 n.75 (1981). The Act forbids various insurance practices, including failure in bad faith to settle claims for which liability is reasonably clear. See Va. Code § 38.1-52.-9(6). To enforce these regulations, the statute delegates to the State Corporation Commission the authority to promulgate rules, to investigate insurers, to conduct hearings, and to impose sanctions. Va. Code §§ 38.1-53 to 38.1-56. The Commission, acting largely through the Insurance Commissioner, may order insurers to cease and desist from prohibited practices, may levy penalty fines, and may suspend or revoke insurance licenses. Va. Code §§ 38.1-55 to 38.1-56. The statute guarantees Supreme Court review of final Commission orders, Va. Code § 38.1-56.1, but does not expressly create or preclude a private right of action against insurers who have committed proscribed trade practices. 5
The federal district court in
Morgan v. American Family Life Assurance Co.,
It is clear thаt the Virginia Supreme Court would not read the Unfair Insurance Practices Act to create a private right of action in tort. The Court has long regarded the state legislature as a repository of sovereign powers, whose dispensation must in any context be strictly construed. Describing “the doctrine of implied powers” in
Commonwealth v. County Board of Arlington County,
The disinclination of the Virginia Supreme Court to recognize an entitlement that has not clearly been legislated is also supported here by a due regard for оther provisions that have clearly been legislated.
Cf. National Maritime Union of America v. City of Norfolk,
The measured concord within this program would likely be disrupted by the introduction of state and federal courts as decision-makers affecting only one dimension of interrelated insurance problems. The most casual glance at the action below shows the inconsistencies that would result. The punitive damages awarded by the jury greatly exceeded the penalties provided in the Act. Va. Code §§ 38.1-55 to 38.1-56 (penalty not to exceed $5,000 per violation and $50,000 aggregatе for six-month period). The requirement that frequent commissions of unfair claim settlement practices under Va. Code § 38.1-52.9 exist for a statutory violation appears more consistent with continued regulatory oversight than an individual cause of action. The discordant effects of independent — and often inexpert — supervision of unfair trade practices by the jury encourages acceptance of the explicit statutory remedy as the exclusive statutory remedy. As one commentator has advised, “if the legislature has carefully chosen an enforcement mechanism to accomplish the legislative purpose by accommodating conflicting interests, the integrity of the overall statutory scheme requires restraint in implying private actions.” Note, Implied Causes of Action in the State Courts, 30 Stanford L.Rev. 1243, 1253 (1978).
Our reading of Virginia law accords with the position of several state courts that the model unfair practices legislation proposed by the National Association of Insurance Commissioners, as enacted in those states, does not create a private right of action.
See, e.g., Patterson v. Globe American Casualty Co.,
V.
As a final “independent, wilful tort” on which to predicate punitive damages in accordance with
Kamlar Corp. v. Haley,
All contracting parties owe to each other a duty of good faith in the performance of the agreement.
Restatement (Second) of Contracts
§ 205 (1981). For Nationwide, this duty parallels the insurer’s responsibility under Va. Code § 38.1-52.9(6) to attempt “in good faith to effectuate prompt, fair and equitable settlements of claims in which liability has become reasonably clear.” The doctrinal roots of the obligation are notoriously elusive: one scholar has argued that actions for bad faith sound in “conequitort,” suggesting the interaction among concepts of contract, equity, and tort. Holmеs,
Inductions from a Study of Commercial Good Faith in First-Party Insurance Contracts,
65 Cornell L.Rev. 330, 377 (1977). This case, however, requires us to define the duty within the parameters of Virginia law, for A & E may receive punitive damages if Nationwide’s conduct was tortious but may not receive punitive damages if Nationwide’s conduct was “only a breach of contract inspired by an ulterior motive.”
Kamlar Corp. v. Haley,
We hold that in a first-party Virginia insurance relationship, liability for bad faith conduct is a matter of contract rather than tort law. The obligation arises from the agreement and extends only to situations connected with the agreement.
Cf. Reisen v. Aetna Life and Casualty Co.,
The state law of tort, on the other hand, cannot so easily accommodate an action for bad faith performance in insurance contracts. Because every agreement involves some variation of the duty of good faith, the remedy would quickly expand beyond its original basis. As the Supreme Court of Utah noted in
Beck v. Farmers Insurance Exchange,
Because the suit for bad faith performance is thus in effect an action on the insurance policy, “the provisions of the contract govern the measure of recovery rather than any rules applicable to cases sounding in tort,”
Bickel v. Nationwide Mutual Insurance Co.,
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Permitting consequential damages within the scope of contract law lessens the incentive for an insurer to postpone satisfaction in hopes of pressuring the insured to accept a fraction of his due.
Beck v. Farmers Insurance Exchange,
The definition of an insurer’s responsibility through consequential damages in contract rather than punitive damages in tort is also consistent with the relationship between the first-party claims of A & E and the third-party claims in
Aetna Casualty & Surety Company v. Price,
VI.
Like the implication оf a private right of action under the Unfair Insurance Practices Act, creation of a cause in tort for bad faith refusal to settle an insurance claim carries profound consequences. On the one hand, these two actions may reduce delay and obstruction in recoveries by those insured. On the other, they may deter assertion even of the most legitimate defenses by insurers. These two actions— and the large punitive awards that potentially accompany them — would portend significant changes in standards of insurer conduct and costs of insurance coverage. Whether those effects bode good or ill is not fоr us to say. Virginia, through its courts and legislature, is the one to restructure its insurance industry, not the federal courts through implication of private rights of action under statute and creation of venturesome torts at common law.
Here the insured sued under the policy and recovered its proceeds. The punitive award is another matter. We cannot conclude that a particular instance of conduct on the part of a particular insurer authorizes us to undertake wholesale changes in Virginia insurance law. Examination of the various foundations for the punitive verdict in the law of tort persuades us that it cannot stand. That judgment is therefore
REVERSED.
Notes
. Title 38.1 of the Virginia Code defined the relations of insured and insurer at the time of the coverage denial and the ensuing complaint. Virginia has since repealed Title 38.1 and substituted a new insurance code in Title 38.2 of the Virginia Code, effective July 1, 1986. Under Va.Code § 1-16, this repeal does not “in any way whatever ... affect ... any right accrued, *671 or claim arising before the new law takes effect." Our decision therefore addresses the rights of A & E under Title 38.1.
. A & E had moved under Fed.R.Civ.P. 15(a) to amend its complaint in order to ask for more punitive damages, a request that the district court denied and that A & E now pursues on appeal. We do not address this assignment of error, however, because of our conclusion that A & E was entitled to no punitive damages.
. At the same time, A & E had moved under Fed.R.Civ.P. 60(b)(6) for relief from the judgment preventing recovery of its attorneys’ fees pursuant to Va. Code § 38.1-32.1. The court denied this petition on the reasoning that § 38.1-32.1 applied to an "individual” who is a natural person but did not extend to corporations.
A & E Supply Co. v. Nationwide Mutual Fire Insurance Co.,
. Although the jury returned separate verdicts on conversion and on the acquisition of property by false pretenses, both parties have recognized that the tort of conversion, extending to any wrongful act of procurement, subsumes the allegations of false pretenses. We accordingly treat the two counts together and find that, for the same reason, neither theory may support an award of punitive damages.
. The Act provides at Va. Code § 38.1-57.1 that "no order of the Commission under this article shall in any way relieve or absolve any person affected by such order from any liability under any other laws of this Commonwealth.” This section does not authorize the A & E lawsuit, much as Va. Code § 8.01-221 "does not create any new rights of action but instead preserves any existing right of action that an injured person may have against a wrongdoer who has previously been the subject of statutory penalties for his misconduct.”
Morgan v. American Family Life Assurance Co. of Columbus,
. To be sure, some other states have found an implied cause of action in their versions of the model act.
Klaudt
v.
Flink, 202
Mont. 247,
. We note that the revised Unfair Insurance Practices Act, effective July 1, 1986, provides that "No violation of this section shall of itself be deemed to create any cause of action in favor of any person other than the Commission; but nothing in this subsection shall impair the right of any person to seek redress at law or equity for any conduct for which action may be brought.” Va. Code § 38.2-510(B).
. An insurer’s first-party insurance obligation is its duty to compensate the insured for direct losses within the policy coverage. An insurer’s third-party insurance obligation is its duty to defend the insured against claims by another, injured party and to indemnify the insured for losses sustained through such claims.
. An acknowledgment that the statute creates contractually enforceable duties does not conflict with a determination that the statute creates no private right of action, for contractual interpretation and statutory construction are separate enterprises. The cause of action recognized here may be in many ways different from a cause of action derived in tort from the statute.
