*345 OPINION
The question before this court is one of first impression in Arizona: Can a surety on a contractor’s performance bond be liable for the tort of bad faith? We answer the question in the affirmative.
FACTS
In March 1978, Mr. and Mrs. Dodge (plaintiffs) contracted with Homes & Son Construction Company, Inc. (Homes) to build a residence in Scottsdale, Arizona. The contract required Homes to obtain a performance bond in the face amount of the contract, $205,903. Fidelity and Deposit Company of Maryland (defеndant), as surety, issued the bond, which provided:
Whenever Contractor [Homes] shall be, and declared by Owner [plaintiffs] to be in default under the Contract, the Owner having performed Owner’s obligations thereunder, the Surety [defendant] may promptly remedy the defаult, or shall promptly
(1) Complete the Contract in accordance with its terms and conditions, or
(2) Obtain a bid or bids for completing the Contract____
Plaintiffs claim that Homes failed to supply labor and materials to complete the project and correct defective workmanshiр and materials in accordance with the contract. Plaintiffs declared Homes in default and made demand upon defendant to remedy the default. Plaintiffs claim that defendant refused to investigate timely plaintiffs’ claim or remedy the default.
Plaintiffs filed suit against Homes and defendant, alleging breach of contract. Pursuant to the construction contract, plaintiffs submitted the claim to arbitration. The arbitrator awarded plaintiffs $9,714, which included $5,000 retained by plaintiffs under the contract. Plaintiffs then filed an amended complaint asking the court to confirm the arbitrator’s award and enter judgment in conformance therewith. The amended complaint also contained claims against defendant for breach of contract and bad faith.
Homes paid $4,714 into court to satisfy the judgment; the claim against it was then dismissed pursuant to a stipulation between Homes and plaintiffs. The trial court then granted defendant’s motion to dismiss plaintiffs’ bad faith claim.
After analyzing the tripartite relationship existing in suretyship contracts, the court of appeals affirmed the trial court’s order, stating:
[G]iven the difference in the relationship created by casualty insurance and surety insurance, we see no compelling public policy reasons tо expand the damages collectible against a surety beyond those traditionally provided for breach of contract.
Dodge v. Fidelity & Deposit Co.,
DISCUSSION
In
Noble v. National American Life Ins. Co.,
We have determined that it is reasonable to conclude that there is a legal duty implied in an insurance contract that the insurance company must act in good faith in dealing with its insured on a claim, and a viоlation of that duty of good faith is a tort.
Plaintiffs’ position is simple: sureties are insurers; insurers are subject to bad faith tort liability; therefore, sureties are subject to bad faith tort liability. The court of appeals rejected this syllogism as “too simplistic.”
Dodge,
1. Are sureties insurers.?
“Surety insurance” is included within the “Kinds of Insurance” listed in article 2 of A.R.S. title 20, ch. 2. Section 20-257(2) *346 includes within its definition of “surety insurance”:
Insurance guaranteeing the performance of contracts, other than insurance policies, and guaranteeing and executing bonds, undertakings and contracts of suretyship.
Additionally, A.R.S. § 20-106(B)(2) provides that “transaction of an insurance business in this state” includes:
The making of or proposing to make, as guarantor оr surety, any contract of guaranty or suretyship as a vocation and not merely incidental to any other legitimate business or activity of the guarantor or surety.
As defined by § 20-104, “ ‘Insurer’ includes every person engaged in the business of making contracts of insurance.” See also A.R.S. § 20-210 (setting minimum required capital for different kinds of insurance, including surety insurance); A.R.S. § 20-1532 (establishing venue of actions against surety insurers).
Our statutes thus make clear our legislature’s intent to include sureties within the coverage of the insurance statutes.
See Watson v. Welton,
We recognize liability insurance is not identical in every respect with surety-ship. But we are not concerned with the differences between suretyship and liar bility insurance. We are concerned with whether the Legislature included surety-ship among the classes of businesses it intended to regulate under the Insurance Code. It clearly did so.
General Ins. Co. v. Mammoth Vista Owners Ass’n,
2. Surety’s duty to act in good faith.
As insurers, sureties have the same duty to act in good faith that we recognized in
Noble
and
Rawlings v. Apodaca,
The purpose of the construction performance bond required by plaintiffs’ contract with Homes was not for plaintiffs’ commercial advantagе, but to protect plaintiffs from calamity—Homes’ default on the contract. A contractor’s default has the potential for creating great financial and personal hardship to a homeowner. Surety insurance .is obtained with the hope of avoiding such hardships. Imposing tort damages on a surety who in bad faith refuses to pay a valid claim will deter such conduct. As the court stated in
Wallis v. Superior Court,
In the first place, [contract damages] offer no motivation whatsoever for the insurer not to breach. If the only damages an insurer will have to pay upon a judgment of breach are the amounts that it would have owed under the policy plus interest, it has every interest in retaining the money, earning the higher rates of interest on the outside market, and hoping eventually to force the insured into a *347 settlement for less than the policy amount.
(Emphasis in original.) In
Noble
we noted that “[t]he whole purpose of insurance is defeated if an insurance company can refuse or fail, without justification, to pay a valid claim.”
Similar policy considerations were determinative in
Suver v. Personal Service Ins. Co.,
These differences are not so pronounced as to require the creation of a cause of action in one case and its denial in the other. Precisely the same policy arguments and rationale hold true in both settings. In both cases there is a great disparity of financial resources. Additionally, issuers of financial responsibility bonds are companies clearly affected with a public interest. Moreovеr, to insulate the issuer of a financial responsibility bond from liability for the deliberate refusal to pay its obligations arising from the bond is to encourage the routine denial of payment of claims for as long as possible. This court should not providе an incentive to act in bad faith.
Defendant does not dispute that a surety owes a duty to the obligee on a performance bond. However, defendant contends that a surety agreement requires the surety to divide its loyalty between the рrincipal and the obligee. For example, a surety may lose its right to reimbursement from the principal if the surety knowingly prejudices any defenses the principal may have against the obligee. See Restatement of Security § 108(5) (1941).
We do not dispute that a surety has an enforсeable obligation of good faith toward its principal.
See Cushman v. National Surety Corp.,
Elaborating on the basis for an insurer’s liability in Rawlings, we stated:
To be liable for tort damages, [the insurer] need only to havе intended its act or omission, lacking a founded belief that such conduct was permitted by the policy.
The founded belief is absent when the insurer either knows that its position is groundless or when it fails to undertake an investigation adequate to determine whеther its position is tenable.
[T]he surety often finds it difficult to decide whether to accede to the demands of the claimant [obligee] or abide by the position desired by the principal. Notwithstanding this difficulty, the surety is in a position of having accepted a premium in exchange for its promise to pay or perform in case of specified events____ Additionally, it makes its promise with full knowledge that at times it will possibly be called upon to perform when it can do so only at some risk of losing its recovery rights against or inviting suits from its [principal]. Given the nature of a corporate surety’s business, and its knowledge of the inherent risk it entails, it can have no real confidence that a “middle man” plea on its part ... will find a favorable reception with the court.
*348 Brumley, Duty of a Shielded Surety to Investigate, 17 Forum 266, 280 (1981).
3. Defendant’s motion to dismiss.
In Noble, we quoted language from the Wisconsin Supreme Court concerning the sufficiency of a claim of bad faith:
The tort of bad faith cаn be alleged only if the facts pleaded would, on the basis of an objective standard, show the absence of a reasonable basis for denying the claim, i.e., would a reasonable insurer under the circumstances have denied or delayed payment of the claim under the facts and circumstances.
CONCLUSION
We hold that a surety has a duty to act in good faith in responding to its obligee’s claims that the principal has defaulted. Breach of this duty entitles the obligee to maintain a tort action and recover tort damages. We vacate the court of appeals’ opinion and reverse the superior court’s dismissаl of plaintiffs’ claim. We remand this case to the superior court for proceedings consistent with this opinion.
ATTORNEYS’ FEES
In
Sparks v. Republic Nat’l Life Ins. Co.,
