OPINION OF THE COURT
Over the course of nearly six years, defendant Terrance Stradford cooperated only sporadically with his professional liability insurer, plaintiff Continental Casualty Company, in the defense
I.
In October 1998, defendants Hector Gunaratne and his wife, Rose, and Sumanadasa Perera, as parent and natural guardian of Prashan Perera, separately commenced dental malpractice actions against Stradford. A professional liability policy that Continental issued to Stradford was in effect at that time. The policy required Stradford to notify his insurer of the Gunaratne and Perera actions, gave Continental the right to defend him in those actions, and obligated the insured to “fully cooperate” in the company’s litigation and settlement efforts. This cooperation clause explicitly required Stradford’s attendance at hearings and trials, as well as his assistance in the securing and giving of evidence and obtaining the attendance of witnesses.
About a month after the underlying malpractice actions were initiated, Stradford notified Continental. Thereafter, Continental’s employees and counsel whom the company retained to defend Stradford sought to obtain defendants’ treatment records and other materials from him, solicit his views on potential expert witnesses, schedule depositions and meetings, and discuss potential settlements. These many requests took the form of largely unanswered correspondence and telephone calls to Stradford’s home and office, and failed visits by defense counsel to Stradford’s office pursuant to prearranged meetings. Stradford ignored the vast majority of Continental’s requests or otherwise refused to cooperate with the company. In response, Continental repeatedly warned Stradford that his noncooperative conduct could jeopardize his coverage. These warnings, however, went unheeded.
Nevertheless, at various times, Stradford indicated an awareness of his duty to cooperate and expressed his willingness to do so. For example, Stradford made multiple promises to provide the requested documents, which he claimed were located on his boat or at his residence. Further, although Stradford’s deposi
During that call, Stradford asked for new counsel in both underlying actions, claiming that he had lost confidence in his present attorney’s ability to zealously defend him due to the attorney’s actions in another malpractice action brought against him. Continental agreed to the request, Stradford’s attorney moved to be relieved, and Supreme Court marked all cases pending against Stradford off-calendar, pending the substitution of new counsel. Despite calls and a letter from his new counsel, Stradford never executed the necessary form to effect the requested substitution.
On July 8, 2004, Continental mailed Stradford two detailed letters—one each for Gunaratne and Perera. In the main, the letters set forth his history of noncompliance, evasion and broken commitments. They also demanded that Stradford schedule a meeting with his newly-retained counsel for a date on or before August 13, warned that further noncooperation “may imperil” his coverage, and, given adverse expert findings regarding Stradford’s care of defendants, recommended that he consent to settlement of both actions. On August 11, both letters were returned to Continental as “Unclaimed.” Approximately two months later, on October 13, 2004, Continental’s outside counsel sent a disclaimer letter to Stradford. Two days after its disclaimer was issued, Continental commenced the present action, seeking a declaratory judgment that it had no duty to defend or indemnify Stradford in the Gunaratne and Perera actions.
The decision-making process that Continental employed prior to disclaiming and bringing this action was described in the deposition testimony of Thomas Morelli, who by July 8, 2004 was the Continental employee responsible for Gunaratne and Perera. According to him, the “normal protocol” involved a recommendation by him to his director, who would then make a recommendation to Continental’s in-house coverage counsel. In addi
Continental’s decision to disclaim was bolstered by a declaratory judgment issued on June 1, 2004 in two other malpractice actions then pending against Stradford, O’Halloran and Shields. There, the court held that Stradford’s failure to respond to multiple letters seeking his cooperation and his absence on trial dates constituted sufficient grounds for a disclaimer of coverage.
In the present action, Continental moved for summary judgment on its declaratory judgment claim that Stradford’s noncooperation had terminated the company’s contractual obligation to him.
In a 3-2 decision, the Appellate Division reversed. All members of the panel concluded that Continental had carried its burden of establishing Stradford’s noncooperation. The majority held, however, that Continental’s approximately two-month delay in disclaiming—measured from August 11, 2004 (the date its final letters were returned unclaimed)—was unreasonable as a matter of law. The dissent disagreed, reasoning that Continental’s need to carefully analyze Stradford’s conduct and to consult with counsel to ensure that the company had discharged its “heavy burden” of attempting to bring about his cooperation prior to disclaiming supported the conclusion that Continental’s delay was “explained and . . . reasonable under the circumstances” (
Plaintiff appeals from the order of reversal based on a dual dissent on a question of law. We now modify by denying defendants’ cross motion for summary judgment.
On this appeal, defendants do not dispute the lower courts’ conclusions that Continental was entitled to disclaim due to Stradford’s noncooperation. According to them, the timeliness of that disclaimer is the sole issue before us. We now turn to that single issue.
Even if an insurer possesses a valid basis to disclaim for noncooperation, it must still issue its disclaimer within a reasonable time (see 14 Couch on Insurance 3d § 199:69). When construing Insurance Law § 3420 (d), which requires an insurer to issue a written disclaimer of coverage for death or bodily injuries arising out of accidents “as soon as is reasonably possible,” we have made clear that timeliness almost always presents a factual question, requiring an assessment of all relevant circumstances surrounding a particular disclaimer (First Fin. Ins. Co. v Jeteo Contr. Corp.,
Fixing the time from which an insurer’s obligation to disclaim runs is difficult. That period begins when an insurer first becomes aware of the ground for its disclaimer (see First Fin. Ins. Co.,
The Appellate Division majority acknowledged that even after June 1, 2004, when Continental received a declaratory judgment that it was entitled to disclaim coverage in the O’Halloran and Shields actions, the carrier “was continuing to pursue its heavy burden” of attempting to bring about Stradford’s compliance in the two actions relevant here (see
Contrary to the Appellate Division, however, we conclude that a question of fact remains regarding the amount of time required for Continental to complete its evaluation of Stradford’s conduct in the two underlying actions. In this case, the reasonableness of an approximately two-month delay to analyze the pattern of obstructive conduct that permeated the insurer’s relationship with its insured for almost six years presents a question of fact that precludes entry of summary judgment for
Accordingly, the order of the Appellate Division should be modified, without costs, by denying the cross motion of defendants Gunaratne and Perera for summary judgment and, as so modified, affirmed.
Chief Judge Kaye and Judges Graffeo, Read, Smith, Pigott and Jones concur.
Order modified, etc.
Notes
. Because defendant Stradford has never appeared in this action, use of the term “defendants” in this opinion only refers to defendants Gunaratne and Perera.
. Stradford’s deposition in Perera was rescheduled at least twice due to his failure to appear. Although there is no indication in this record that he was deposed in that action, defendants’ counsel swore in an affirmation that he possessed a transcript showing that such deposition did occur.
. In April and May of 2005, Supreme Court entered judgments awarding defendants damages of $116,200 and $50,000, respectively, against Stradford.
. Continental argues that Insurance Law § 3420 (d)’s timeliness standard is inapplicable here. Because that argument was not presented to the courts below, we decline to consider it (see Sega v State of New York,
