Lead Opinion
for the Majority:
I. INTRODUCTION
Jоann Enrique appeals from the Superi- or Court’s grant of summary judgment for State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Company in an action brought by Enrique for bad faith denial of uninsured motorist (“UM”) coverage stemming from a 2005 car accident. According to Enrique, the Superior Court erred because disputed issues of material fact existed whether State Farm should be liable for bad faith while handling Enrique’s UM insurance claim. After a careful review of the record on appeal, we agree with the Superior Court that the record does not support a bad faith claim against State-Farm. Accordingly, we affirm the Superior Court’s decision.
II. STATEMENT OF FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
In 2005, an uninsured driver crashed into Enrique’s car by imprоperly turning into her lane. Enrique suffered a fractured rib, trauma to the right knee requiring arthroscopic surgery, trauma to the left knee for which she was a candidate for arthroscopic surgery, abrasions, and soft tissue injuries. Enrique, who was a cafeteria worker, was out of work -for about nine months after the accident. Although she returned to work in a limited capacity in February, 2006, she was only capable of light duty until June 2006.
Enrique retained an attorney to assist with her insurance claim. She exhausted her personal injury protection benefits, and then sought to recover additional money for her injuries and losses through the State Farm UM policy covering her car. The UM policy limits were $100,000. State Farm initially assigned Enrique’s insurance claim to a Delaware adjuster. Due to a high volume of Delaware claims at the time, in August 2006, State Farm reassigned the- claim to- J.R. Roach, an adjuster in West Virginia. . ,
Roach consulted a number of State Farm employees for advice on handling the claim: John Rogin, a Delaware State Farm representative, Paul Gerlitz, the Delaware State Farm team manager, and Roach’s. supervisor, Mary Adkins. After the initial review, in August 2006, Adkins authorized Roach to settle the claim in a range between $17,500 and $22,500. In September 2006, State Farm offered Enrique $17,500 to settle her claim, which she rejected. At the time, Roach valued the claim between $25,000 and $30,000.: Roach had some reservations about this range due to incomplete information about the nature and extent of Enrique’s injuries.
, Throughout the settlement negotiations and the processing of Enrique’s claim, ■State Farm personnel expressed concerns about whether Enrique’s knee injuries were caused by pre-existing conditions. These concerns were based on Enrique’s medical records obtained by State Farm sometime before January 2008. In January 2008, Joan Barker, a State Farm injury claim trainer, questioned- whether Enrique’s knee injuries were pre-existing, based on photographs, MRIs, and other records, and made note of the outstanding causation issues.
The record is unclear about the reasons for the large lapses in time ! during the settlement negotiations. ’ In any event, in January, 2008, Enrique made her first demand for $165,000. In March 2008, Roach contacted Dover attorney Brian McNelis, and sought his opinion on the value of Enrique’s claim. McNelis believed the claim could be worth up to $50,080 if the accident caused Enrique’s knee injuries. State Farm then offered Enrique $25,000 to settle her claim. She rejected the offer and instead continued to demand $165,-000-$65,000 more than the policy limits.
After Enrique’s demand, .in May 2008, the parties agreed to hire a doctor for an independent medical exаmination (“IME”) to examine Enrique and to evaluate her medical condition. Dr. Lawrence Piccioni issued a report on July 23, 2008, and concluded-that “[t]he chondromalaeie changes would definitely pre-exist the injuryof September 26, 2005'and likewise, most likely the meniscus tear would predate the September 26,2005 injury.”
While the parties were waiting for the IME report, in July 2008, Enrique filed suit against State Farm; -She sought UM benefits up to the $100,000 policy limits, as well as punitive damages against State Farm for bad faith by refusing to pay up to those limits. In support of the bad faith claim, Enrique alleged that State Farm refused to compensate her up to the UM policy limits without any reasonable justifi
State Farm retained Delaware attorney Colin Shalk to defend the UM lawsuit. In August 2008, Shalk evaluated the case, including the IME report, and valued Enrique’s claim between $85,000 and $50,000.
As trial apprоached, State Farm offered Enrique another $20,000 to settle the case, for a total of $45,000. Enrique also revised her demand, and as of January 2010, was willing to settle for an additional $65,000, representing a $90,000 demand.
Enrique then pursued her bad faith claim against State Farm, claiming as damages the unpaid $160,000 portion of the jury verdict, prejudgment interest, and punitive damages.
III. STANDARD OF REVIEW
This Court reviews the Superior Court’s summary judgment decision de novo.
IV. ANALYSIS
An insurance policy is a contract between the insurer and the insured.
Courts have disagreed about whether the bad faith cause of action sounds in contract or tort, or both.
Like the Superior Court, we have found no support in the summary judgment record for a bad faith claim against State Farm. At the time Enrique filed her bad faith claim in July 2008, various State Farm employees with claims-handling experience valued her claim between $19,000 to $30,000. State Farm obtained medical
That is the sum and substance of the record before Enrique filed her bad faith claim, in July 2008. Nothing in the pre-suit record supports a bad faith. claim.
Admittedly, Enrique was not limited to the pre-2008 record to support a bad faith claim.
Enrique would have us invoke a hindsight presumption that the failure to offer policy limits or seek remittitur after a
Enrique focuses on several events during State Farm’s claims-handling process in an attempt to demonstrate bad faith. According to Enrique, State Farm failed to obtain medical information it acknowledged it needed to evaluate the claim, rejected Roach’s highest valuation without justification, ignored the IME report, and unjustifiably proceeded as if the knee injury was pre-existing. None of these reasons, individually or collectively, is indicative of bad faith.
In August 2008, Hanson noted that it might be wise to consider an addendum to the IME report. State Farm already had many of Enrique’s medical records, some of which showed pre-existing conditions, but its medical records were inсomplete.
Enrique also points to Roach’s later $62,080 to $94,960 valuation, and claims that State Farm acted in bad faith by “ignoring” it. But isolating one of Roach’s many valuations fails to raise a disputed issue of material fact about State Farm’s good faith for several reasons apparent from the record. Roach first valued Enrique’s claim at betwеen $25,000 and $50,000, and then revised his estimate to a range of $62,080 to $94,960. At other times, he assigned values of $25,000 to $35,000, and $45,000 to $50,000. Roach was also one of many attempting to value Enrique’s claim. Shalk, an attorney experienced in defending insurance claim litigation, estimated the claim was worth between $35,000 and ’ $50,000. Hanson believed that $62,080 to $94,960 was too high, based on the records she examined. Except for Roach at one moment in time, all of the evaluators were under $50,000. Even Enrique offered to settle under policy limits. These disparate valuations, each assigned to the same claim by qualified and experienced individuals, demonstrate the inherently subjective nature of valuirlg Enrique’s' claim. What Enrique has not pointed us to in the record is evidence of bad faith.
Enrique also relies on the IME report, and claims that State Farm ignored Dr. Piccioni’s conclusions. But the IME report did not assign a dollar amount to her injuries. The report is a doctor’s evaluation of Enrique’s medical condition. Equally important, the' IME report made no clear conclusions about the causation issue. Rather, it left room for good faith disagreement. Dr. Piccioni believed that Enrique’s knee problems were aggravated by the accident,
Enrique also contends that the Superior Court erred by not giving more weight to the conclusions in Cohen’s expert report. Cohen, who is an insurance broker in Carmel, New York, who never adjusted claims, and who is not a lawyer, believed that State Farm acted in bad faith under Delaware law. In Cohen’s report and his deposition, he essentially expressed opinions on the law, not the facts.
V. CONCLUSION
Through .this decision, we do not hold that an insured pursing a bаd faith claim against an insurer must come forward with a smoking gun to survive summary judgment. In an appropriate case, inferences from facts can. lead to a triable bad faith claim, .-But here, Enrique prematurely filed, suit claiming bad faith on what could charitably be, described as the thinnest of allegations. Enrique has also not pointed us to post-suit evidence of misconduct by State Farm in handling Enrique’s claim. Without some evidence of bad faith, the Superior Court properly granted summary judgment to State Farm. The judgment of the Superior Court is affirmed.
Notes
. App. to Opening Br. at 194 ("I reviewed the photos of the knees.... There was [an] MRI followed by surgery on the right knee. The operative repоrt showed no tears in the medial meniscus and no tears of the lateral meniscus.").
. Id. at 264
. Id. at 262.
. The State Farm logs show that Shalk initially valued the claim between $35,000 and $50,000, but in a formal letter to Roach in February 2009, Shalk assigned a value between $45,000 and $50,000 to the claim. See id. at 208, 268.
. App. to Opening Br. at 205 ("The described [injuries] were caused by the [motor vehicle accident].”); id. at 209-10 ("I disagree [with the] range of $62,080 to $94,960.... [Dr. Piccioni] specifies in his report that he did not have prior records or x-ray/MRI films to review, and opines the chondromalacic changes pre-exist [the accident].”).
. Id.
. Roach also came up with at least two additional and different valuations after August 2008. See id. at 130-31 ($25,000 to $35,000); id. at 128 ($45,000 to $50,000).
. App. to Answering Br. at 17 ("[Enrique’s demand is] $65,000 nеw money to settle the UM claim. $65,000 + $25,000 paid[.]”).
. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co. v. Enrique,
. Because the bad faith claim was dismissed without prejudice in January 2009 under the terms of the parties’ stipulation, Enrique filed a new action on October 18, 2012.
. Enrique v. State Farm Mut. Auto-Mobile Ins. Co.,
. Id. at *4.
. ConAgra Foods, Inc. v. Lexington Ins. Co.,
. Lank v. Moyed,
. Williams v. Geier,
. Smith v. Del. State Univ.,
. See Connelly v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co.,
. Connelly,
. Nemec v. Shrader,
. See Connelly,
. Tackett,
. See Pickett v. Lloyd’s,
. Tackett,
. This Court’s cases dealing with bad faith insurance claims have expressly authorized punitive damages against insurers, E.g., id. at 266 ("[I]f the denial or delay is wilful or malicious, it may provide the basis for punitive damages.”). We note the doctrinal tension between basing a cause of action in contract and permitting punitive damages, but sеe no occasion in this case to re-visit the issue. Compare Restatement (Second) of Contracts § 355 (1981) ("Punitive damages are not recoverable for a breach of contract unless the conduct constituting the breach is also a tort for which punitive damages are recoverable.”), with Pressman,
.See Pressman,
. Enrique filed her first complaint on July 22, 2008 and Dr. Piccioni issued his IME report on July 23, 2008,
. Tackett,
. The State Farm logs show that Shalk initially valued the claim between $35,000 and $50,000, but in a formal letter to Roach in February 2009, Shalk assigned a value between $45,000 and $50,000 to the claim. App. to Opening Br. at 208; id. at 268.
. App. to Opening Br. at 268-69 ("[Dr. Pic-cioni] thinks that the right knee problems were caused by the accident [and that] she has ‘some’ permanent impairment to the right knee related to the accident. Insofar as the left knee is concerned he said the surgery is medically and necessarily related to the accident 'at this point.’ However he said that at some pоint should she not elect to have the - surgery then the relationship between the accident and the as yet unscheduled surgery would probably no longer be related.”).
. Id. at 269 .(‘Tve simply assumed in evaluating this case that the plaintiff has had one accident related surgery; a rib fracture; residual problems with the' left' leg which both doctors seem to think are related to the accident; and which would merit surgery if she decided to have it now.”).
.See Keefe v. Prudential Prop. & Cas. Ins. Co.,
. Taclcett,
. App. to Opening Br. at 208 (”[W]e do not have a complete prior records set-”).
. See, e.g., Aрp. to Answering Br. at 19 ("I still have questions about this claim since we do not have a complete prior records set (it appears [Enrique] was engaged in [physical therapy] a few months prior to this loss) and I have questions about exactly what [Dr. Pic-cioni] is concluding.”) (Aug. 25, 2008); App. to Opening Br. at 209 (“When we have the necessary [information] (complete prior records including [physical therapy]), we can consider an addendum to IME to address causation/extent of aggravation of chondro-malacia and re-evaluate.”) (Aug. 26, 2008); App. to Answering Br. at 20 (“This will be further [evaluated] when we have a complete copy of the prior records.”) (Mar. 2, 2009).
. App. to Answеring Br. at 6 ("Called [Enrique’s attorney] to [request] copies of her prior records_ ”) (Jan. 31, 2008); id. at 12 ("[Enrique’s attorney] said he'll send the
.App. to Opening Br. at 264 ("[T]he patient, while having degenerative changes in the knees on MRI’s which predated this accident, shows no records of symptomatic treatment prior to the accident[,] and again, they are typical injuries seen when the knees hit the dashboard.”); id. at 265 ("[I]f the patient had elected for surgery of the left knee, since she had been treated for left knee problems and it is still'symptomatic, I would say that it is related to the accident.... ”).
. Id. at 262-63 (degenerative changes in both knees); id. at 264 (“[T]he chondromala-cic changes would definitely pre-exist the injury of September 26, 2005 and likewise, ' most likely the meniscus tear would predate the September 26, 2005 injury. Again, it is not 100 percent certain that there is a meniscus tear.”); id. at 265 ("Certainly the chon-dromalacic changes are preexisting, and it can be construed that the medial meniscus degenerative changes are pre-existing, prior to the injury.”).
. E.g., id. at 150-51:
*516 State Farm Mutual Insurance Company .. acted under a bad faith breach of Enrique's insurance claim. "A bad faith breach of insuranсe claim requires the insurer to have failed in bad faith to investigate or process the claim or to have delayed in its payment obligation. .Bad faith requires the insured to show that the insurer’s denial of benefits was "clearly [sic] without any reasonable justification.” Coleman Dupont Homsey v. Vigilant Ins. Co.,496 F.Supp.2d 433 , 437 (D.Del.2007). Using any test of reasonableness, State Farm denied paying the initial claim', refused two settlement offerings from Enrique, went to trial and lost a jury verdict that was more than two and one half times the policy limit, appealed the verdict and lost the appeal, and continues, as of this writing, to refuse to make proper restitution to Enrique, all in the absence of existing facts or any bona fide dispute. Statе Farm used their economic clout to take advantage of an [sic] Enrique by not providing what they had contractually promised. Such action clearly indicates that State Farm was affirmatively operating with furtive design or ill will.
. See Itek Corp. v. Chicago Aerial Indus., Inc.,
Dissenting Opinion
with whom DANBERG, Judge joins, Dissenting:
The majority hаs stated its position well and clearly. I just come to a different conclusion regarding the singular issue before us, which, is whether there was sufficient evidence in the record from which a jury could rationally find that State Farm had acted in bad. faith in addressing Enrique’s claim.
After the physician who State Farm suggested do an IME found that Enrique’s “condition was caused by the September 26, 2005 accident,” State Farm had an adjuster of its own choosing, J.R. Roach, value Enrique’s claim,
Based on these contentions (and details in the record that support them), Enrique argues that State Farm, whose exposure was capped at $100,000, made a calculated decision to not pay her anything near the policy limits. In support of that, she notes that even Roach’s range was below the policy limits, setting up the insurer to seek a discount off the limits. She also notes that State Farm knew she was unemployed, and was therefore under economic pressure to settle. That the trial attorney and ultimate adjuster who gave the later, much lower valuation in the underlying matter had his own reading of the medical record than did Roach does not mean that there is no genuine issue of material fact. Rather, it raises exactly the kind of credibility question that is for a jury to resolve. That is especially true when the insurer continued to raise other speculative issues of causation that it had an opportunity to explore and appears to have failed to do so. Even if one ignores the reality that the jury verdict was six times the final offer and two-and-a-half times the рolicy limits, the insurer never made an offer at the low range of its own valuation and its final offer was less than half the policy limits. .
Unlike the Majority, I do not find it dispositive that the-rebord suggests that State Farm made some requests for more information to which Enrique arguably did not respond. In the summary judgment context, that one part of the record cannot bear the weight placed upon it, especially because Enrique had cooperated in an IME by a physician of State Farm’s choosing, and because- State Farm never asked for yet another. Nor does State Farm seem to have asked Enrique for a release so that it could procure the recоrds for itself.
Put simply, there is evidence in the record that would support a conclusion that State Farm knew .that Enrique was economically vulnerable and under pressure to settle for that reason, knew that her claim was worth much more than the values they offered her, and.sought to have her accept a compromise that was unfair to her. In reaching the. conclusion that this matter was one for the jury to resolve, I also recognize a reality: Insurers have economic incentives to pressure claimants in immediate need of cash into accepting offers that are tangible but below the policy limits and what is reasonable to compеnsate the claimant fairly for their injuries, and other losses. Whether
It may very well be that a jury, after hearing testimony from State Farm’s adjustors and Enrique’s expert witness — who has opined that State Farm acted in bad faith
. See Am. Ins. Grp. v. Risk Enter. Mgmt. Ltd.,
. See App. to Opening Br. at 264 (Letter from Dr. Lawrence Piccioni to J.R. Roach).
. See Green v. Bloodsworth,
. See App. to Opening Br. at 244-46 (Deposition of Ivan E. Cohen, Apr. 28, 2015).
