At issue here is the adequacy of an insured’s notice to her underinsurer of a proposed or tentative settlement which would prevent the accrual of the underin-surer’s right of subrogation. The district court ruled that the insured had forfeited her rights under the underinsured motorist coverage of her automobile insurance policy, and the court of appeals affirmed. We reverse.
On May 21, 1982 Eleanor Baumann was injured in a collision with a vehicle operated by Carol Ann Weierke under circumstances which left little doubt of Weierke’s liability. On December 14, 1983, about 16 months after she had commenced an action against Weierke, Baumann’s then lawyer wrote to the claims manager of American Family Insurance Group, saying that it had “become apparent that the underinsured motorist coverage will be resorted to due to the extensive damages as a result of the accident.” The letter notified American Family of the institution of the action against Weierke and of the demand for her liability insurance limits:
This is to notify you that a summons and complaint was served on the defendant Carol Ann Weierke on August 18, 1982, and we enclose a copy. She was insured in State Farm Insurance Companies and we are informed by Mr. Ronald D. Sampson, Field Claims Specialist, that her policy contained limits of 25/100,000. We have made a demand for the policy limit of $25,000 and we enclose a copy of that letter of demand.
Please inform us if there is any other information that you will require in connection with the underinsured motorist coverage.
The attached demand letter contains a reference to an earlier telephone conversation with the State Farm field claims specialist and includes a detailed description of Mrs. Baumann’s injuries, medical expenses, and wage loss. Enclosed with the letter were reports of her primary attending physician, her orthopedic surgeon, and her prosthodontist. Also attached was a copy of the report of the physician who had examined Mrs. Baumann on behalf of American Family; its inclusion intimates that Mrs. Baumann’s injuries were not minor.
American Family made no response. Two weeks later, on December 28, 1983, State Farm tendered its policy limits, but although the draft was held and was not negotiated until sometime in February 1984 when the Baumanns released Weierke from liability, neither Baumann nor her counsel
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gave American Family written notice of the tender until November 5, 1984. Counsel’s letter of that date indicates both that American Family had been earlier advised of the settlement and that there had been some prior negotiations for settlement of the underinsured motorist claim. Bau-mann brought an action against American Family, and American Family interposed a general denial together with an allegation that the complaint failed to state a claim upon which relief could be granted. More than three years elapsed before there was any significant activity in the matter. Following the death of Baumann’s counsel, her new lawyer expressed a preference for arbitration. At American Family's suggestion the parties entered into a stipulation for dismissal of the pending action and American Family immediately named an arbitrator. A few months after dismissal of the insured’s action American Family successfully moved to quash arbitration. The court of appeals affirmed.
American Family Mut. Ins. Co. v. Baumann,
An insurer’s right of subrogation is an equitable right long recognized in Minnesota.
E.g., Bacich v. Homeland Ins. Co. of America,
The question before us, then, is whether the insured’s letter of December 14, 1983, afforded the underinsurer suitable opportunity to protect its interest. We believe that it did, Certainly, the letter did not inform American Family that the insured and State Farm, the tortfeasor’s insurer, had entered into a settlement agreement contingent upon American Family’s decision whether to preserve its potential right of subrogation by substituting its draft for that of State Farm. The letter does, however, notify American Family not only that the insured considers the tort-feasor’s liability insurance inadequate to fully compensate her for her injuries and that she will resort to her underinsured motorist coverage to make up the shortfall but also that the insured has made a demand for payment of the tortfeasor’s policy limits of $25,000, making quite clear her intention to settle her action against the tortfeasor if her demand was met.
We are not unaware that a demand for the limits of the tortfeasor’s liability insurance is frequently interjected into settlement negotiations, but the demand letter attached to the insured’s letter of December 14, 1983 refers to an earlier conversation and suggests that both parties recognize that liability is not a significant factor in their negotiations and that the settlement would turn on damages. In short, this was not a pro forma demand for the payment of policy limits but a demand in *926 tended to command the serious consideration of the tortfeasor’s insurer. That it succeeded is evidenced by the prompt issuance of State Farm’s draft in the amount of its policy limits.
Apparently the insured’s lawyer was under the impression that the letter met the notice requirement of Schmidt. Why else would he have delayed negotiating State Farm’s draft until more than six weeks after the notification of December 14,1983. Apparently American Family, too, considered that letter adequate notice of an intended settlement with the tortfeasor, perhaps because American Family had paid more than $18,000 in basic economic loss benefits and it had in its file the report of a physician who had examined Mrs. Bau-mann on its behalf (a copy of which the insured had included in its demand letter to State Farm). American Family attempted to negotiate a settlement of the claim for benefits pursuant to the underinsured motorist coverage, making an offer and requesting a counteroffer — all without any mention of inadequate notice of the settlement with the tortfeasor. Even when the insured initiated an action on the policy, American Family did not plead the affirmative defense of forfeiture by reason of release of the tortfeasor without notice. 1 Almost four more years elapsed before the subject of forfeiture was broached.
American Family excuses its failure to raise the question of forfeiture before it moved to quash arbitration in September of 1988 by asserting that American Family could not be expected to foresee the later decisions of the court of appeals in
Klang v. American Family Ins. Group,
American Family commends to us the decisions of the court of appeals in
Klang
(lack of notice results in forfeiture),
Historically this court has exhibited considerable reluctance to declare a forfeiture of insurance benefits as a consequence of the insured’s breach of the policy provisions absent a showing that the insurer has *927 been prejudiced thereby. 2 American Family has never suggested that it has been prejudiced in any way by its inability to enforce subrogation against this tortfeasor. Even though the insured did not notify American Family of State Farm’s tender of its policy limits, the information she provided and her request that American Family advise her if it required additional information, coupled with the information already in American Family’s possession, imposed on American Family the obligation to respond — if only to tell its insured that if she released the tortfeasor without giving American Family 30 days’ written notice of any settlement agreement she might make with State Farm, she would be deemed to have forfeited any entitlement to underin-sured motorist benefits. The 30-day notice requirement set out in Schmidt was not intended as a technical snare for unwary insureds.
Henceforth, the notice required of the insured shall be 30 days’ written notice of a settlement agreement which is contingent upon the decision of the injured complainants’ underinsurer whether to preserve its potential right of subrogation either by paying underinsured motorist benefits or by substituting its draft for that of the tortfeasor’s liability insurer. The notice shall identify the insured, the tort-feasor and the tortfeasor’s insurer and shall disclose the limits of the tortfeasor’s automobile liability insurance and the agreed upon amount of the settlement. Absent the required 30-day written notice, release of the tortfeasor shall be deemed prejudicial to the underinsurer. That presumption of prejudice shall be rebuttable, but the burden of demonstrating by a preponderance of the evidence the absence of prejudice shall be borne by the insured. An insured’s failure to sustain that burden of proving a lack of prejudice to the insurer shall result in forfeiture.
Reversed.
Notes
. American Family’s answer included an allegation that the complaint failed to state a claim on which relief could be granted. While that allegation was sufficient to raise the policy requirement that the underinsured motorist claim be arbitrated, it was not sufficient to preserve the affirmative defense of forfeiture. Minn.R.Civ.P. 8.03.
.
See, e.g., Ryan
v.
ITT Life Insurance Corp.,
