ALLSTATE INSURANCE COMPANY, Petitioner,
v.
Arthur Russell SWANSON, As Personal Representative of the Estate of Christina Ann Swanson, Respondent.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, Fifth District.
Alan J. Landerman, Lori J. Caldwell and Fleming Lee, of Rumberger, Kirk, Caldwell, Cabaniss & Burke, A Professional Ass'n, Orlando, for petitioner.
Charles R. Stack, of High, Stack, Lazenby & Palahach, Coral Gables, and R. Keith Williams, of High, Stack, Lazenby, Palahach, Maxwell & Williams, Melbourne, for respondent.
SHARP, Judge.
Allstate Insurance Company seeks certiorari review of an order compelling discovery of its entire claim file, including work product and privileged matters. We have jurisdiction, Fla.R.App.P. 9.030(b)(2)(A), and we issue a writ quashing the discovery order on the grounds that the trial court departed from the essential requirements of law in compelling disclosure of privileged materials.[1]
*498 This matter commenced with a wrongful death action against William and Pamela Lord by Arthur Swanson, as personal representative of his child, Christina, who drowned in a swimming pool while in the care and custody of the Lords. Allstate had issued a homeowner's policy to Homer and Grace Taylor, who owned the premises where the pool is located, but Allstate denied any coverage for the Lords, and refused to defend the wrongful death action against the Lords.
The Lords assigned any cause of action they might have had against Allstate to Swanson. Swanson's present suit against Allstate sought to establish a breach of contract to provide coverage to the Lords, estoppel, and a bad faith claim for failure to settle within the policy limits. However, when the discovery order was entered there was no determination in this suit (or in the prior wrongful death action) that coverage for the Lords existed under Allstate's policy.
In a bad faith suit against an insurance company for failure to settle within the policy limits, a plaintiff may obtain discovery of the insurer's complete original claim file, including work product and privileged matters. See Stone v. Travelers Insurance Company,
Where, as in this case, the issue of coverage is combined with the issue of bad faith, the same result should follow. Swanson, stepping by assignment into the shoes of the claimed insureds, has no more right to discovery in bringing the bad faith claim than did the Lords. This situation is analogous to a "first party" claim for coverage. Until the right of coverage is first established, a plaintiff claiming to be an insured cannot compel disclosure of the insurer's work product and privileged matters in its claims file. See Travelers Insurance Company v. Habelow,
WRIT ISSUED.
DAUKSCH and COWART, JJ., concur.
NOTES
Notes
[1] See Powell v. Wingard,
