The plaintiffs, Roger Bellville and the Estate of Sue Ellen Bellville, obtained a judgment against the Bellvilles’ underin-sured motorist (UIM) carrier, defendant Farm Bureau Mutual Insurance Company, for extracontractual and punitive damages. The State of Iowa intervened on appeal to protect its interest in a statutory share of the punitive damage award.
*472 The Iowa Court of Appeals reversed the judgment, ruling the district court erred in failing to grant Farm Bureau’s motion for directed verdict. This court granted further review. Upon our examination of the record and consideration of the arguments of the parties, we reach the same conclusion as the court of appeals, but for slightly different reasons. Therefore, we vacate the decision of the court of appeals, reverse the district court judgment, and remand for entry of judgment in favor of Farm Bureau.
I. Background, Facts and Proceedings.
On October 9, 1999, Roger Bellville (Bellville) and his wife, Sue Ellen, were involved in a motor vehicle accident with Guy Schueler. Sue Ellen died at the scene; Bellville was unharmed.
At the time of the accident, Schueler had an automobile insurance policy with a liability limit of $50,000. Although this policy provided coverage for his liability arising out of the accident, Schueler owned few other assets. Bellville carried under-insured motorist coverage with Farm Bureau with limits of $300,000.
Eárly in 2000 Bellville’s attorney demanded the limits of the Farm Bureau policy and also requested that Farm Bureau consent to Bellville’s settlement with Schueler for the limits of Schueler’s liability insurance coverage. Negotiations ensued, but Farm Bureau refused to pay Bellville’s reduced demand for a $270,000 payment under the UIM coverage. In addition, Farm Bureau refused to consent to Bellville’s settlement with Schueler, asserting it had no duty to do so.
On April 13, 2000, Bellville sued Farm Bureau to recover under the UIM coverage; he also alleged a tort claim for bad faith. (Although Bellville and the estate are named plaintiffs, we will refer to them jointly as Bellville or the plaintiff in the remainder of this opinion.) Bellville’s contractual claim was tried first, resulting in an award of the full $300,000 in UIM coverage. The bad faith action was then tried to a jury based on two grounds: (1) Farm Bureau’s undervaluation of Bellville’s UIM claim; and (2) Farm Bureau’s refusal to consent to Bellville’s settlement with the underinsured motorist. Farm Bureau’s motion for directed verdict was denied, and the jury returned a verdict in favor of the plaintiff, finding bad faith on both grounds. The jury awarded compensatory and punitive damages. The State then intervened on behalf of the Civil Reparations Trust Fund to claim its share of the punitive damages award pursuant to Iowa Code section 668A.1(2)(6) (2001).
Farm Bureau appealed and the case was transferred to the court of appeals. The court of appeals reversed and remanded, finding the evidence was insufficient to prove Farm Bureau lacked a reasonable basis for its valuation of Bellville’s claim or for refusing to consent to settlement. The court concluded, therefore, that the district court erred in failing to direct a verdict in favor of Farm Bureau.
This court granted Bellville’s application for further review, as well as the Iowa Trial Lawyers Association’s request to file a brief in support of the application. Although multiple issues are raised in the parties’ briefs, we find it necessary to address only one: the sufficiency of the evidence to support a finding of bad faith.
II. Governing Principles of Law.
A.
Standard of review.
Farm Bureau contends the district court erred in failing to grant its motion for directed verdict. A directed verdict for the defendant was required only if there was no substantial evidence to support the elements of the plaintiffs claim.
Thompson
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v. U.S. Fid. & Guar. Co.,
B.
Elements of bad faith claim.
To establish Farm Bureau’s bad faith, the plaintiff was required to prove (1) Farm Bureau had no reasonable basis for denying the plaintiffs claim or for refusing to consent to settlement, and (2) the defendant knew or had reason to know that its denial or refusal was without reasonable basis.
Sampson v. Am. Standard Ins. Co.,
1.
Objective element: lack of reasonable basis.
A reasonable basis exists for denial of policy benefits if the insured’s claim is fairly debatable either on a matter of fact or law.
Sampson,
The fact that the insurer’s position is ultimately found to lack merit is not sufficient by itself to establish the first element of a bad faith claim.
Cent. Life Ins. Co. v. Aetna Cas. & Sur. Co.,
Whether a claim is fairly debatable can generally be decided as a matter of law by the court.
See Thompson,
[A]n insurer is innocent of bad faith as a matter of law ... if the insurer took a position in regard to the claim that reasonable minds could hold. Unless the trial court is prepared to grant a directed verdict to the insured on his claim under the policy and to hold that reasonable minds could not disagree as to the insured’s entitlement to proceeds under the policy, it follows that reasonable minds could disagree about the insured’s entitlement to policy proceeds. Therefore, the insurer should be entitled to a directed verdict in its favor on the insured’s bad faith claim unless the insured is entitled to a directed verdict in his favor on the policy claim.
Stephen S. Ashley,
Bad Faith Actions Liability & Damages
§ 5:04, at 5-17 to 5-18 (2d ed.1997) (also discussing exceptions to this rule, none of which are implicated here) [hereinafter
“Bad Faith Actions
”];
accord Reuter,
2.
Subjective element: knowledge of lack of reasonable basis.
Even when the insurer lacks a reasonable basis for its denial of a claim, liability for bad faith will not attach unless the insurer knew or should have known that the basis for denying its insured’s claim was unreasonable.
Sampson,
III. Refusal to Pay UIM Benefits.
A. Statement of the issue. Bellville’s first claim of bad faith rests on Farm Bureau’s allegedly “unreasonably low offer, deriving from an excessive allocation of fault and an improperly low valuation of death damages.” At the outset, it is necessary to reframe the issue as stated by the plaintiff so our discussion will be consistent with the analytical framework of a bad faith claim as recognized in Iowa. Accordingly, the issue in this first-party bad faith case is not whether Farm Bureau’s offer was “unreasonably low.” The pertinent issue is whether there was no reasonable basis for Farm Bureau’s denial of the plaintiffs demand for a $270,000 payment under the policy. Upon sufficient proof of this element, the remaining issue is whether Farm Bureau had actual or constructive knowledge that its refusal to pay had no reasonable basis. Because we conclude as a matter of law that the defendant had a reasonable basis for not paying the sum demanded by the plaintiff, we discuss only the objective element of the plaintiffs bad faith claim.
B. Summary of evidence. The evidence at trial showed that Farm Bureau refused to pay the plaintiffs demand because it thought the plaintiffs damages had a potential value of only $300,000. In addition, the defendant attributed 30% of the fault to Bellville, which would diminish Bellville’s projected recovery from Schueler. Farm Bureau also factored in Bellville’s $50,000 recovery from Schueler’s liability insurer to further reduce the potential sum recoverable under the UIM coverage.
At trial, the plaintiff introduced expert testimony that the damages sustained by Roger Bellville and the estate of Sue Ellen Bellville as a result of the accident were well over $300,000. The precise figures given by these experts ranged from $600,000 to $1.5 million. As for Bellville’s fault, there were varying opinions. Although all of the plaintiffs experts testified they would have assigned “little or no fault” to Bellville, three of the experts stated that a jury could have assessed as much as 10% fault to Bellville. The fourth expert opined that a jury would have assigned no more than 5% fault to Bellville.
Of course the fact that experts disagreed with Farm Bureau’s valuation of its insured’s claim is insufficient to establish bad faith. Similarly, testimony by these experts that Farm Bureau’s valuation was, in their judgment, “unreasonable” is also inadequate to permit recovery of extracon-tractual damages.
See Chateau Chamberay Homeowners Ass’n,
C. Bellville’s fault. The record shows Farm Bureau relied on several matters revealed in its investigation of the accident to support its position that some fault would likely be assessed to Bellville. A Farm Bureau claims adjuster obtained the report of the investigating officer from the Cedar Rapids police department, which contained written summaries of statements given by Bellville and Schueler *476 to the officer. In addition, the adjuster interviewed Bellville and Schueler herself. Farm Bureau learned the following facts.
The accident occurred on October 9, 1999, when a motorcycle operated by Bell-ville collided with an automobile driven by Schueler at the intersection of Edgewood Road with 0 Avenue NW in Cedar Rapids, Iowa. 0 Avenue tees into Edgewood Road at this point from the east. The intersection, located on the crest of a hill, is controlled by traffic signals. Neither the weather nor the condition of the road surface was a factor in the accident.
At the time of the collision, Bellville was driving northbound on Edgewood Road; his wife, Sue Ellen, was a passenger. Bellville had been traveling in the outside lane, but in the block before the intersection, the traffic in front of him slowed, so he pulled into the inside lane. He was accelerating as he came up the hill towards the traffic light. As Bellville approached the intersection, he saw the traffic light change to yellow, but he did not think he could stop in time without locking up his brakes. So, he decided to proceed through the intersection.
In the same general time frame, Schueler was proceeding southbound on Edge-wood Road. He pulled into the left-turn lane on Edgewood Road to turn east onto 0 Avenue. When the light turned green, Schueler pulled into the intersection, and then stopped in the intersection to let northbound traffic pass before making his turn. When the light changed to yellow, traffic in the northbound, outside lane slowed to stop at the intersection. Schueler, who did not see Bellville’s motorcycle, then proceeded to turn left. Bellville saw Schueler’s car, but was unable to stop his motorcycle. Bellville’s motorcycle struck the right rear quarter panel of the Schueler vehicle just behind the rear tire. The impact occurred in the center of Bellville’s lane of travel. Sue Ellen Bellville died immediately. No witnesses were identified.
The investigating officer who interviewed Bellville on the day of the accident reported the following account of the accident by Bellville:
As they were traveling in the inside lane of traffic nearing the intersection of 0 Avenue, Bellville said that the light controlling Edgewood Road traffic turned yellow. Roger stated he recalls his wife, Sue, saying to him, “The light’s yellow. You aren’t going to get stopped in time.” Roger said there was a car traveling in the lane to the right of him that was able to stop for the light. However, he did not think he would be able to stop in time because in order to stop, he would have to lock up the brakes and didn’t want to risk falling over, so he decided to proceed through the intersection.
He said prior to going through the intersection, he recalls looking toward a car which was stopped on 0 Avenue NW getting ready to turn onto Edgewood Road that was still stopped and not entering into the intersection, so he figured he was OK to proceed through the intersection.
He says when he looked back ahead of him, he then saw a car making a turn onto eastbound 0 Avenue, and he locked up his brakes to try and stop before hitting it, but was unsuccessful and ran into the rear quarter panel of the vehicle.
The officer also took a written statement from Schueler. Schueler told the officer that he had pulled a quarter of the way into the intersection on a green light and had stopped to let northbound traffic pass before he turned left onto 0 Avenue. He stated that northbound traffic approaching the intersection travels “on a down slope to a valley that Edgewood Road runs *477 through.” He said that he “would lose sight of [northbound vehicles] momentarily because when they drive up from the bottom of the valley you cannot see them.” Schueler claimed that when the light turned yellow, he “looked ahead into the northbound Edgewood Road to make sure it was clear so [he] could complete [his] turn.” He “decided to make the turn onto 0 Avenue NW when [he] saw vehicles traveling in the northbound outside lane of traffic on Edgewood Road slowing to stop at 0 Avenue NW.” As indicated earlier, Schueler did not see the motorcycle that hit his car until he felt the impact of the collision.
A later reconstruction of the accident by the police department put Bellville’s speed at the time he applied his brakes at approximately 33 mph. The speed limit on Edgewood Road in this area was 35 mph.
Based on the information revealed by his investigation, the investigating officer concluded in his official report that a “contributing circumstance” to the accident was that Roger Bellville “Ran Traffic Signal.” He concluded there were no “apparent” contributing circumstances related to Schueler’s driving or his vehicle. The officer requested chemical tests of Bellville for alcohol and drugs; he did not request any of Schueler.
Farm Bureau relied on the officer’s investigation, as well as the officer’s conclusions, in evaluating the legal responsibility of Schueler and Bellville for the accident. Bellville contends the insurer was not entitled to rely on the investigating officer’s report or opinions because neither would be admissible in the trial of the personal injury case. (He argues the report was hearsay and the officer’s opinions were impermissible legal conclusions.) Assuming Bellville is correct concerning the admissibility of this evidence, we are not persuaded that the insurance company should not be able to consider it. The inadmissibility of this evidence does not mean it did not have probative value that a reasonable person would rely on.
See Bad Faith Actions
§ 5A:03, at 5A-11 to 5A-12 (stating insurer should be able to rely on evidence having probative value notwithstanding the fact it would be inadmissible in court);
see also Am. Mfrs. Mut. Ins. Co. v. Cupstid,
The plaintiff asserts Farm Bureau’s reliance on the investigating officer’s conclusion that Bellville was at fault was unwarranted for the additional reason that “it is likely a mistake.” One of the plaintiffs experts speculated that the officer had the two drivers confused and had meant to indicate in his report that Schueler had run the traffic signal, not Bellville. Another suggested the officer simply made a mistake. No evidence was introduced, however, that the officer had not accurately stated his opinion as reflected in his report. Moreover, the fact the officer requested alcohol and drug testing of Bell-ville and not of Schueler supported a conclusion that the officer was, in fact, focused on Bellville as a cause of the accident and had not inadvertently or mistakenly indicated on the accident report that Bellville had run the traffic signal.
This court has held that “[a]n insurance company is not obligated to disregard the opinion of its own expert in favor of the insured’s expert’s opinion.”
Morgan,
The testimony of the plaintiffs experts that the company inexcusably and unreasonably failed to conduct an additional, more extensive investigation and analysis of the circumstances of the accident is simply not consistent with Iowa law. In first-party insurance situations, there is “no clearly defined duty of investigation” on an insurer; the insurer “may require the insured to present adequate proof of loss before paying the claim.”
N. Iowa State Bank v. Allied Mut. Ins. Co.,
Bellville’s evidence at trial failed to demonstrate that he brought facts to Farm Bureau’s attention that showed the officer’s report was patently wrong. Rather, Bellville relied on the contention that the circumstances of the accident should have been interpreted more favorably to him. But because the relationship between an insurer and its insured is arms-length with respect to UIM coverage, Farm Bureau was not required to view the facts of the accident in a light most favorable to Bellville.
Compare N. Iowa State Bank,
We conclude as a matter of law that the extent of Bellville’s fault was fairly debatable.
See Szumigala,
D. Damages. As noted earlier, Farm Bureau valued the plaintiffs personal injury claim at $300,000. The actual value of Bellville’s UIM claim' — Schueler’s legal liability to the plaintiff — was established in the contract action between Bell-ville and Farm Bureau. 1 In that trial, a jury determined Bellville had sustained damages of $756,714.95. This figure was broken down as follows: (1) loss of accumulation to the estate: $100,000; (2) loss of support: $150,000; (3) loss of consortium: $500,000; and (4) interest on burial expense: $6,714.95. (The jury also found Bellville was 5% at fault.)
Our analysis of the valuation issue in the bad faith action is assisted by briefly focusing on the components of the plaintiffs damage claim: (1) loss of earnings; (2) loss of support; and (3) loss of consortium. 2 Two of the plaintiffs experts testified that the value of the plaintiffs economic damages — loss of earnings and loss of support-was between $600,000 and $1 million. But Farm Bureau was certainly not acting in bad faith in failing to assess the plaintiffs economic damages at this level. As noted, the actual value of these *480 damage components was only $100,000 for loss of earnings and $150,000 for loss of support. Consequently, the most that could be required of Farm Bureau was that it value the plaintiffs economic damages at $250,000; it certainly had no duty to over value these elements of damage. We turn now to a consideration of the overall value placed on the plaintiffs UIM claim by the parties.
Because Farm Bureau could reasonably attribute 30% fault to Bellville, it was incumbent upon the plaintiff to establish there was no reasonable basis for Farm Bureau to value Bellville’s damages at less than $415,000. Only damages at that level would have warranted a UIM payment of $270,000. 3 We focus on that figure because the bad faith conduct at issue here is Farm Bureau’s refusal to pay the plaintiffs demand for a $270,000 payment under the UIM coverage. Thus, the precise question that must be answered is whether there is sufficient proof that the insurer had no reasonable basis to value its insured’s claim at less than $415,000.
In considering this question, we first address the plaintiffs contention that it was inappropriate for Farm Bureau to consider prior settlements in wrongful death cases in assessing the reasonable value of Bellville’s claim against Schueler. We agree to a point. The measure of liability under the UIM coverage is the tortfeasor’s “legal liability” to the insured. That legal liability is measured by what a jury would award; it is not measured by the amount for which such a case could be settled. Thus, to the extent a specific settlement is affected by factors other than the relative fault of the parties and the anticipated damages, such as limited insurance limits or a coverage question, that settlement figure would not be relevant. Whether the prior settlements upon which Farm Bureau relied were subject to this deficiency is not apparent from the record.
While an insurer cannot necessarily rely on prior settlements to evaluate a UIM claim, neither is an insurer obligated to pay a claim based on the range of jury verdicts rendered in other personal injury cases or based on statistical analyses done by research services, a source cited by the plaintiffs attorneys in their negotiations with Farm Bureau, as well as by the plaintiffs experts in support of their opinions. Jury verdict figures are relevant only insofar as the facts of a particular case are similar to the facts of the case being valued, and even then comparisons are of little predictive value.
Cf. Spaur v. Owens-Corning Fiberglas Corp.,
Similarly, testimony that a reasonable insurer would have paid Bellville’s settlement demand is likewise insufficient to support a finding of bad faith. The tort of bad faith is not established by proof of negligence.
See United Fire & Cas. Co. v. Shelly Funeral Home, Inc.,
Having determined that prior settlements and prior verdicts are generally not helpful and that proof of an erroneous, even negligent, evaluation is not enough, we are left to the valuation testimony of the experts. As one might expect, the plaintiffs experts opined that Bellville’s claims had a value well over $300,000, while the defendant’s experts testified that a death case of this type in Iowa would be valued at less than $300,000.
The discrepancy among the expert opinions simply illustrates the obvious: it is difficult, if not impossible, to determine with any precision how the jury will value such a claim, particularly the loss-of-consortium component.
See Williams v. Hartford Cas. Ins. Co.,
We conclude as a matter of law that a bad faith claim cannot rest on Farm Bureau’s failure to value Bellville’s damages at a level of $415,000.
Cf. Trask v. Iowa Kemper Mut. Ins. Co.,
Given the amounts involved in the case before us, we are convinced the value of the plaintiffs claim was clearly subject to debate.
See Hamburger v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co.,
IV. Refusal to Consent to Insured’s Settlement with Tortfeasor.
The jury also predicated its bad faith finding on Farm Bureau’s refusal to consent to Bellville’s settlement with the underinsured motorist. Farm Bureau argues on appeal that its denial of consent was objectively reasonable because a UIM carrier has no duty to consent to its insured’s settlement with the alleged tortfea-sor. It contends alternatively that even if it is wrong in this assertion, the existence of a duty to consent was fairly debatable. The plaintiff responds that an insurer does have a duty to consent to settlement, and Farm Bureau should have known it had such a duty.
A three-judge panel of the court of appeals held that Farm Bureau had no specific duty to consent to a reasonable settlement, only a general duty of good faith. The court further concluded Bellville had “faded as a matter of law to show any underlying breach of an implied duty of good faith” relating to Farm Bureau’s failure to consent.
A.
Existence of duty to consent.
Farm Bureau’s UIM coverage included the following provision: “There is no coverage ... for any insured who, without our consent, settles with any person or organization who may be liable for bodily injury.” This clause imposes a duty on the insured to obtain the insurer’s consent prior to any
*483
settlement with the tortfeasor.
Grinnell Mut. Reins. Co. v. Recker,
Farm Bureau argues it had no implied duty to consent because under Iowa case law an insured can settle prior to obtaining the insurer’s consent without necessarily forfeiting all benefits under the policy; recovery of benefits is reduced only by the amount otherwise collectible from the party liable. Thus, it asserts, if an insured is confident that the tortfeasor has no collectible assets, as Bellville was here, then no harm will result from the insured’s settlement without consent. In response, the plaintiff contends there is harm to the insured if the UIM carrier has no duty to consent. He claims that realistically no insured would settle with a tortfeasor without the UIM carrier’s consent for fear of losing all or some portion of the UIM benefits. 4
We think the plaintiff has the better argument. Although the eonsent-to-settlement clause places a duty on the insured, the obtaining of consent also bestows a benefit on the insured by facilitating the insured’s settlement with the tortfeasor. Recognition of a duty to consent is also more consistent with our case law on the effect of the consent-to-settlement clause and its breach. The practical result of holding that an insurer has no good faith duty to consent is to shift to the insured the responsibility of ascertaining and evaluating the tortfeasor’s ability to contribute toward payment of the insured’s damages. This result is contrary to current case law under which the insurer bears the burden to establish that its subrogation rights have been harmed by a settlement to which it did not consent. If the insurer has a good faith duty to consent to settlement, it will have to make a determination up-front on the viability of its subrogation claim. If it has a reasonable basis to believe its claim has value, then it may refuse to give consent without being exposed to liability for extracontractual damages. But if the insurer has no reasonable basis to think that it can recover from the tortfeasor personally, then it must give consent to its insured’s settlement with
*484
and release of the tortfeasor.
5
For these reasons, we hold the consent-to-settlement clause not only imposes an express duty on the insured to obtain the insurer’s consent to settlement but also imposes an implied reciprocal duty on the insurer to consent unless it has a reasonable basis for refusing to do so.
Cf. Brunet v. Am. Ins. Co.,
Of course, the mere fact that Farm Bureau was wrong in concluding it had no duty to consent to settlement does not mean it was in bad faith.
See Bad Faith Actions
§ 5:07, at 5-26;
cf. Kohlstedt v. Farm Bureau Mut. Ins. Co.,
B.
Whether existence of duty to consent was fairly debatable.
There are several factors that indicate Farm Bureau had a reasonable basis to assert it had no duty to consent to its insured’s settlement. First, whether a UIM insurer has a good faith duty to consent had not been decided by an Iowa appellate court.
See Colonial Penn Ins. Co. v. First Ins. Co. of Haw., Ltd.,
C. Summary. A UIM insurer has a good faith duty to consent to its insured’s settlement with the tortfeasor when there is no reasonable basis to believe the tort-feasor has any assets or other ability to contribute toward satisfaction of the insurer’s subrogation rights. For purposes of the present case, however, this duty was not so evident that Farm Bureau could not fairly debate whether such a duty existed. Therefore, Farm Bureau had a reasonable basis to refuse to consent to Bellville’s proposed settlement with Schueler. Consequently, the defendant’s refusal to consent cannot support the jury’s verdict finding the defendant in bad faith.
V. Conclusion and Disposition.
The extent of the tortfeasor’s liability for Bellville’s damages and the value of those damages were fairly debatable as a matter of law. Therefore, Farm Bureau’s refusal to pay the plaintiffs settlement demand for UIM benefits was not made in bad faith. In addition, although Farm Bureau was wrong in concluding an insurer has no good faith duty to consent to its insured’s settlement with the tortfeasor, this issue was fairly debatable. Consequently, Farm Bureau was not in bad faith for refusing to give consent to Bellville’s proposed settlement with Schueler.
Because the plaintiffs claims of bad faith have no merit as a matter of law, the trial court erred in failing to direct a verdict in favor of the defendant. As this conclusion requires reversal of the judgment in favor of the plaintiff for both compensatory and punitive damages, we need not address the evidentiary issues raised by Farm Bureau or its challenge to the punitive damage award. Accordingly, we reverse the judgment in favor of the plaintiff and remand for entry of judgment for the defendant.
DECISION OF COURT OF APPEALS VACATED. DISTRICT COURT JUDGMENT REVERSED AND CASE REMANDED.
Notes
. Farm Bureau's policy provided that it would “pay for bodily injury an insured is legally entitled to recover from the owner or operator of an under-insured motor vehicle.” (Emphasis added and original emphasis omitted.)
. We ignore the nominal sum for interest on burial expense, as it appears from the record that this factor did not play a role in the parties' respective valuations of the damage claims.
. The sum of $415,000 was calculated as follows. There are three known factors affecting Farm Bureau’s assessment of its liability. As the plaintiff concedes, Farm Bureau would have been entitled to reduce the plaintiff's total damages by $50,000 for the payment made by Schueler’s liability insurer. In addition, as we have already discussed, Farm Bureau had a reasonable basis to deduct 30% from the damages sustained by Bellville individually to account for his comparative fault. Finally, the highest value Farm Bureau could have been expected to place on the economic damages is $250,000, meaning the balance of any total damage figure must be attributed to loss of consortium, a component subject to reduction for Bellville's comparative fault. Thus, the calculation of damages required to warrant a UIM payment of $270,000 is: $415,000 (consisting of $100,000 loss of earnings, $150,000 loss of support, and $165,000 loss of consortium) minus $94,500 (30% fault on Bellville's damages) minus $50,000 (tort-feasor payment) equals $270,500.
. The chilling effect on settlement of the UIM insurer's refusal of consent is now even more likely in light of our recent decision in
Allied Mutual Insurance Co.
v.
Heiken,
. The other option available to an insurer who is reluctant to consent to its insured's settlement with the tortfeasor is to tender the amount of the proposed settlement to the insured and substitute its payment for that of the tortfeasor, thereby becoming fully subro-gated to any recovery from the tortfeasor.
See Recker,
