The opinion of the court was delivered by
Plaintiff Leslie Bowers obtained a judgment against defendant Camden Eire Insurance Association for $9,000, plus interest, representing the excess over the limit of coverage of his liability policy of a judgment against him in an automobile accident suit. The Appellate Division reversed, 93 N. J. Super. 302 (App. Div. 1967), and this Court granted certification, 49 N. J. 20 (1967).
Prior to May 21, 1961, the Association had issued an automobile liability insurance policy to Bowers. By its terms, the Association agreed to pay on his behalf all sums which he became “legally liable to pay as damages” because of bodily injuries suffered by any person in an accident arising out of the operation of the insured vehicle, up to a limit of $20,000. The policy reserved to the insurer the right to “make such investigation, negotiation and settlement of any [covered] claim or suit as it * * * [deemed] expedient.”
On May 21, 1961, in the daylight hours, plaintiff Bowers was involved in an accident while driving his automobile on Clinton Street in Clayton, Hew Jersey, The car came into
Clinton Street is a residential area. Bowers was familiar with it and knew that children played along and in the street. The accident happened in front of the Seagrave boy’s home located on the right side of the street in the direction in which Bowers’ car was proceeding. As he approached the Seagrave home, he had a clear view of the lawn in front of it, the sidewalk and the grass plot between the sidewalk and the curb and the street.
After the accident, Bowers immediately notified his insurer, and it undertook the investigation of the circumstances and the Seagrave child’s injuries. At this time it was Bowers’ view that he had not been guilty of negligent driving which caused the mishap. Thereafter, a suit was brought against him in the Superior Court, Law Division, to recover damages for the child’s injuries and for the consequential losses sustained by his father. In accordance with its policy obligation, the Association undertook the defense thereof.
The investigation had revealed that the child’s injuries were serious. After examining the various medical and hospital reports, the attorney who was engaged by the insurer to defend the suit concluded that if the trial resulted in a verdict for the plaintiff, it would probably exceed the policy limit of $20,000. As he put it in the present case, “to me, it was a very serious case on the injury end.” Therefore, in accordance with the Association’s practice in such cases, he wrote Bowers calling attention to the serious nature of the
The record is unclear on the matter of settlement prior to trial. Plaintiff’s attorney had no clear recollection of submitting any settlement demand. The insurer’s attorney testified that he offered $12,000 or $14,000, probably $14,000, but the offer was neither accepted nor was any counter-proposal made. The complaint in the present action, however, alleges that prior to trial of the damage suit, the Seagraves’ attorney offered to settle their claims for the policy limit, $20,000. The answer of the insurer admits that fact. In any event, the case proceeded to trial.
. At the trial, the evidence of Bowers’ negligence was purely circumstantial. The jury found it sufficient, however, and returned a verdict of $20,000 for'the infant and $9,000 for his father’s consequential losses. After the verdicts were returned; defense counsel discussed the matter with Bowers, who indicated he still felt he was not responsible for the accident. During this conversation, when advised of his right of-appeal, Bowers indicated that he favored such an appeal.
Thereafter, defense counsel first sought-a new trial. The grounds urged were that as a matter of law the facts proved were insufficient to justify, verdicts for the plaintiffs, and that the verdicts were contrary to the weight of the evidence. After hearing argument, the trial court denied the motion. At the time the motion was argued, and before a- decision was rendered, the Seagraves’ attorney told the court and-defense counsel that if the insurance carrier would pay its limit of $20,000, he would recommend that his clients accept it in settlement of- the $29,000 judgments. Later that day, this $20,000 offer of settlement was repeated by letter to Bowers’ insurer-provided attorney. The offer was conditioned upon termination of the litigation. This letter, which was admitted in evidence in-the suit on the policy over defend
Bowers testified in the present action that this letter was the first notice he had that the Seagraves would take $20,000 in payment of the $29,000 judgments. He said also that if he had known that fact after the verdict against him he would not have indicated to trial counsel that he favored an appeal. In any event, he engaged a personal attorney, as the Association had suggested, and after consultation they decided the appeal should not be prosecuted. A letter was then written to the insurer’s attorney informing him that in light of the offer of settlement, Bowers no longer favored an appeal. The view was expressed also that there was no reasonable probability of success on appeal. Therefore, the Association was requested to make the settlement and advised that good faith required it to take such action. The letter concluded with notice that failure of the appeal would result in a suit by Bowers against the insurer for the excess of the judgment over the policy limits.
It appears also that in addition to this letter, the matter was discussed by the two attorneys. In the discussion, Bowers’
Following the affirmance, the Association paid its $20,000 insurance limit on the judgments. Shortly thereafter, Bowers instituted the present suit on the policy to recover the $9,000 excess plus accrued interest. The claim as submitted to the jury was predicated upon the charge that the insurer’s refusal to accept the offer to settle the judgments for $20,000 had violated its duty to exercise good faith in the settlement of claims and judgments against Bowers. On that narrow issue the jury found against defendant and returned a verdict in favor of the insured for $9,000, plus interest. The appeal now before us involves that issue alone. Bowers does not assert that the Association was negligent in investigating the automobile accident, or in the preparation for the trial of the case. Nor does he charge that any duty toward him was violated because of the failure to effect settlement with the Seagraves prior to or during that trial.
As indicated above, under the liability policy issued to Bowers, the Association reserved control of the settlement of claims against him that were within its coverage. In
Radio Taxi Service, Inc. v, Lincoln Mut. Ins. Co.,
31
N. J. 299
(1960), this Court laid down the general rule that such
Good faith is a broad concept. Whether it was adhered to by the carrier must depend upon the circumstances of the particular case. A decision not to settle must be a thoroughly honest, intelligent and objective one. It must be a realistic one when tested by the necessarily assumed expertise of the company. In cases like the present one, where the insurer recognizes the probability that an adverse verdict at the trial will exceed the limit of its policy, the boundaries of good faith become more compressed in favor of the insured. This potential exposure to a judgment for which he is only partly protected makes it obvious that ordinarily the interests of the insurer and the insured come into conflict whenever a settlement demand is presented which is within the limit of the coverage.
When it is probable that an adverse verdict will exceed the policy limit, the propriety of an insurer’s refusal to accept a settlement offer which is within the coverage requires a resolution of conflicting interests. In our judgment, in view of the duty of the insurer to act in good faith, the resolution can lead to but one fair result: both interests can be served justly only if the insurer treats any settlement offer as if it had full coverage for whatever verdict might be recovered, regardless of policy limits, and makes its decision
Por example, in Murach v. Massachusetts Bonding & Ins. Co., 339 Mass. 184, 158 N. E. 2d 338 (1959) it was said that to mitigate the danger that the insurer will favor its own interests to the exclusion of the insured’s, good faith requires it to decide whether to settle a claim within the limits of the policy or to try the case as if no policy limit were applicable to the claim.
So too, in American Fidelity & Cas Co. v. L. C. Jones Trucking Co., 321 P. 2d 685, 687 (Old. 1957) the court declared the proper rule to be “that both parties’ interests must be given the same faithful consideration. The fairest method of balancing the interests is for the insurer to treat the claim as if the insurer alone were liable for the entire amount.” To the same effect see Kaudern v. Allstate Ins Co., 277 F. Supp. 83 (D. N. J. 1967); Crisci v. Security Ins. Co., Cal., 58 Cal. Rptr. 13, 426 P. 2d 173 (1967); Kinder v. Western Pioneer Ins. Co., 231 Cal. App. 2d 894, 42 Cal. Rptr. 394 (Dist. Ct. App. 1965); Davy v. Public Nat’l Ins. Co., 181 Cal. App. 2d 387, 5 Cal. Rptr. 488 (Dist. Ct. App. 1960).
As we have said, there is no charge here of lack of good faith in failing to settle the Seagraves’ claims before or during trial. The complaint relates to defendant’s action in taking and prosecuting an appeal from the over-the-policy-limit judgments when a settlement could have been made on payment of the limit, and either refraining from an appeal, or withdrawing the appeal before the adverse determination in the Appellate Division. As we have noted above, the sole issue submitted to the jury was whether that action constituted a good faith discharge of its duty toward Bowers.
It seems obvious that application of the good faith test must be more exacting at the appeal stage of the proceedings than before or during trial.
Hazelrigg v. American Fidelity & Casualty Co.,
241
F. 2d
871
(10th Cir.
1957). Since settlement could have been 'made at that time for the policy
The trial judge’s denial, in the automobile case, of the motion for judgment for defendant because in his opinion negligence sufficiently appeared to support a jury Verdict, the jury’s finding that Bowers’ negligence was a proximate cause of the accident, and the trial judge’s later denial of a new trial after a thorough review of the evidence, were new and significant factors that could not be ignored by the insurer. These factors, capped by the Seagraves’ offer to settle for the policy limit to avoid the appeal, added stronger acid to the test of good faith. At this point certainly the carrier could not be partial in any way to its own interest. The insured had the right to assume that the duty to protect him would not be subordinated in the slightest because of the prospect that an unsuccessful appeal would cost no more than the proposed settlement. This meant that a decision to appeal could not spring from optimism unrelated to the realities of the situation. In our judgment, in circumstances such as existed in the present case, where the insurer alone can profit from a refusal to settle, the facts must point to the probability of a reversal. If such a likelihood does not appear, good faith can be demonstrated only by making the proposed settlement. What, then, is the consequence if the offer of settlement is refused and the appeal is lost, and the insured subsequently sues the insurer to recover the excess portion of the judgment P If the evidence is such as to create any reasonable basis for disagreement among reasonable minds as to whether the insurer discharged its duty of good faith, the question must be submitted to the jury or fact finder for determination.
Defense counsel characterizes the damage suit as an unusual one because Bowers’ negligence in the operation of his car had to be shown circumstantially. But courts and members of the bar, especially those with some expertise in
We are thoroughly satisfied that sufficient inferences of Bowers’ negligence arose from the circumstances appearing in the record to require submission of the question to the jury. The position of the car in the street at the impact, the location of the child’s body with respect to the rear of the car, the probability that the child was in the street as Bowers approached, and the absence of any substantial obstruction to vision all serve to justify a jury finding that the incident would not have occurred had Bowers been making reasonably effective use of his powers of observation. Eurther, we agree with the trial judge’s refusal to reverse himself and set aside the verdicts of the jury for the infant and his father. Consideration of the motion to set aside the judgments involved an even more deliberate evaluation of the facts adduced at the trial because of the cases presented by defense counsel in support of his contention that under the law there was no jury question. Incidentally, substantially the same cases, none of which was directly in point factually, were relied upon in the subsequent appeal to the Appellate Division.
The reported opinions of our courts over many years demonstrate that the instances are rare in negligence cases when an appellate tribunal reverses a trial court’s finding that the evidence was sufficient to support a jury verdict. That fact is well known to the trial bar, as the expert witness for the plaintiff testified here. Defendant’s expert, who was trial counsel in the negligence case and who had handled "over a
Defendant’s witnesses gave three reasons for the decision to appeal: (1) Bowers’ feeling before and during the trial, and after the adverse verdict, that he was not at fault for the child’s injuries; (2) an infant was involved in the case and there was no guaranty that the trial court would approve a settlement of $20,000 since it would probably mean a reduction of the injury judgment; and (3) on the facts adduced at the trial, the law was “unclear” as to whether sufficient evidence of negligence had been introduced to make a jury question, and, as they saw the law, there was a reasonable basis for an appeal with a “probability of success.” Whether good faith was exercised in refusing to settle by paying the policy limit requires a general consideration of these reasons.
As to (1), it must be remembered that Bowers is a layman. His feeling of non-liability after the accident, and even after the adverse verdict and before the appeal, was of minor importance when the defendant was called upon to decide whether,
as a matter of
law, the facts of the accident, as they were developed at the trial, pointed to the probability of reversal of the judgments. The view of a layman untrained in the law is a weak reed for an insurer to lean on. Moreover, it is obvious that before trial of the negligence ease,
The Seagraves’ attorney who tried the negligence case was called as an expert witness by Bowers in the present case. He had a great many years of experience in the trial of such eases. His letter, written to the insurer’s attorney after denial of the motion for a new trial and offering to take $30,000 in settlement of the judgments, was admitted in evidence. The letter contained his opinion that no appeal could be undertaken successfully, and that if the insurer was not willing to pay the policy limit immediately and “unreasonably gambles” on the result of an appeal, it could be held liable for the excess over the limit. The Appellate Division declared that this letter should not have been admitted in evidence. It was within the trial court’s discretion to admit the first part of the letter containing the offer to settle for $30,000. Most of the opinion portion could have
The effect of these two letters was to set out in bold relief.the nature of the risk defendant would be taking if it persisted in pressing the appeal. Such action thereafter was entirely on its own; even defendant’s unrealistic assertion of reliance upon the original view of non-liability expressed by its layman-insured now ’ provided no real support for the projected appeal.
Reason (2) is frivolous. The suggestion is that settlement was not made' because an infant was involved and there was no guaranty that a court would approve whatever distribution of the $20,000 settlement might bé proposed as between the father and>child. Defendant made no inquiry of the trial court or any other court with regard to approval of a $20,000 settlement on any basis of distribution. Moreover, if- a court was advised that Seagraves’’ attorney’s credit report on Bowers indicated doubtful financial ability to pay the' additional $9,000 'of the judgments, we consider it highly-unlikely that approval of the settlement would have been withheld. '
The last reason is argued more assertively by defendant,
i. e.,
that the -law Was unclear - oh whether the facts proved at the -Seagraves-Bbwefs trial were-sufficient to create’
Substantial evidence was presented at the trial that the chance of a reversal of the judgments was minimal. The suggestion by the attorney who took the appeal for the insurance company was that the Appellate Division opinion was “per curiam” because “no judge wanted to actually take the responsibility for putting his name” on it, shows little appreciation of the work of the judges or of their judicial integrity. The correct view was expressed by the attorney who defended the appeal; the opinion was a short per curiam because its merits warranted no more.
Under all the circumstances shown by the record here, the reasons advanced for the appeal strike us as excuses rather than reasons. Since the proposed settlement required payment of the full policy limit, on the face of things, defendant had nothing to lose by prosecuting an appeal, even if unsuccessful. (It should be recalled, however, that defendant made no counter-proposal to the settlement offer of $20,000. Who can say at this time whether the Seagraves’ attorney would have accepted somewhat less than $20,000, if tendered?) We-find it difficult to believe that if the policy had been for an unlimited amount defendant would have acted the way it did. . The inferences are strong that in making the decision
Eor the reasons set forth, we are satisfied the trial court was correct in submitting to the jury the issue of defendant’s good faith in refusing to accept the offer to settle the judgments against Bowers for the amount of the policy limit. Since no other contention raised by defendant demonstrates prejudicial trial error, the verdict in favor of Bowers must be regarded as sound. Accordingly the judgment of the Appellate Division is reversed and the judgment of the trial court is reinstated.
For reversal — Chief Justice Weintratjb and Justices Jacobs, Erancis, Proctor, Goldmann, Schettino and Haneman—7.
For affirmance—None.
