Lead Opinion
OPINION OF THE COURT
This is an appeal from a judgment which granted defendant Aetna’s motion to dismiss the complaint upon the ground that it was barred by the twelve month suit limitation clause contained in the Pennsylvania statutory fire insurance policy. 40 P.S. § 636(2). Leone v. Aetna Life & Cas. Co.,
Plaintiff’s verified complaint was filed in the Philadelphia Court of Common Pleas on November 16, 1977. Following removal to the district court, Aetna, without filing an answer, moved to dismiss for failure to stаte a claim upon which relief could be granted pursuant to Rule 12(b)(6), Fed.R.Civ.P.
The complaint seeks recovery on a fire policy. It alleges that on April 30, 1976, Aetna issued to plaintiff’s assignor a two month binder of insurance with fire coverage in the amount of $150,000. On May 15, 1976, fire damage was incurred in the amount of $128,043.14. Aetna was duly notified and on June 22, 1976 proofs of loss were filed. Aetna investigated the loss, and, on Nоvember 30,1976, in writing, notified plaintiff “that there is no claim which is compensable under the terms and conditions of the policy of insurance which you have made claim under.”
It is essential to emphasize at the outset that we are dealing with a judgment entered on the face of the complaint without affidavits and without discovery. It is the settled rule that “a complaint should not be dismissed for failure to statе a claim unless it appears beyond doubt that the plaintiff can prove no set of facts in support of his claim which would entitle him to relief.” Conley v. Gibson,
The comрlaint, in paragraph twelve thereof, states the following:
*568 On or about October 12, 1976, Defendant, by its duly authorized agent, did advise Plaintiff and Plaintiff’s agent that Defendant was continuing to investigate the cause of said loss, because Defendant had reason to believe that the loss incurred was caused by the wilfull (sic) act of Plaintiff, which allegation Plaintiff then and there denied, but which Defendant continued therеafter to allege, despite continued denial by Plaintiff.
The primary reliance of the district court was upon Lardas v. Underwriters Insurance Co.,
In Diamon, the court reversed a grant of summary judgment in favor of an insuror which had been based upon the twelve month suit limitation clause of the Pennsylvania standard fire insurance policy. 40 P.S. § 636(2). Diamon involved two bases upon which the insured there was given an opportunity to avoid the impact of the limitation clause. We find that one of those theories is applicable to this complaint as we read it.
In Diamon, the insured was prosecuted at the insuror’s instance for filing a false proof of loss. The precise contention was that the insured had removed furniture from his home before the fire, but had claimed dеstruction of the furniture as a loss thereafter. Following conviction, the insured dug up burned remnants of the furniture and was granted a new trial. The district attorney was then given leave to enter a nolle prosequi. The insured waited until the end of the five year criminal statute of limitations and then brought suit on his fire policy-
The Superior Court held that the insu-ror’s mistaken charge of criminal liability tolled or suspended the twelve month suit limitation сlause. The court was unable to say on the record before it whether events had transpired that would again start the running of the limitation period. That issue was left for exploration upon remand.
The question arises whether, under Diamon, an insuror’s good faith but erroneous charge of criminal conduct will suffice to toll the limitation period when there is no initiation of a criminal proceeding. On this issue we come to the conсlusion that a good faith charge of criminal conduct will not toll the limitation period unless a criminal action is begun. We base this upon the Diamon Court’s handling of Abolin v. Farmers American Mutual Fire Insurance Co.,
The most that the [insured] could show was that five or six months after the fire, and months before the limitation in the policy became effective, when the [insured] asked whether the company was going to pay his claim he was told by the managers that they had not decided whether they would pay him or arrest him, apparently for being concerned in the burning of the insured property. There was certainly nothing in this statement that was by way of inducement to withhold bringing suit, or that evidence any intention on the part of the company to waive this provision of the contract.
Diamon, supra,
Following the above quotation from Abo-lin, the Diamon Court states:
It is apparent from this statement that if the company had told the insured that it had decided to have him arrested, and if in fact (as here) he had been arrested, there would have been such an “inducement to withhold bringing suit” as would have suspended the limitation clause.
Diamon, supra,
Thus far we have reviewed only the facts and legal discussion contained in Parts I and II A and B of the Diamon opinion. The matter of the good faith of the insuror’s accusation is not touched upon in those sec
Part III of the Diamon opinion, however, affords a potential basis upon which plaintiff may avoid Aetna’s assertion of the suit limitation clause. In this part of the opinion the Court, citing among other cases, Bowers v. Camden Fire Insurance Association,
Notes
. A Rule 12(b)(6) motion may be advanced on the ground that thе complaint on its face shows that the claim is barred by the applicable statute of limitations. This in no way ameliorates the duty of the court to read the complaint with the required liberality. See Hanna v. United States Veterans Admin. Hosp.,
. The Diamon Court also cites Simons v. Safety Mut. Fire Ins. Co.,
. The Pennsylvania Superior Court recently has noted the essentially factual nature of waiver and estoppel arguments when used as a basis for tolling a suit limitation clause. Brooks v. St. Paul Ins. Co., Pa.Super.,
. It is contended here that under the interpretation given it in Diamon, Brakeman v. Potomac Ins. Co.,
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting:
I do not believe that the Diamon case, which is the sole basis for the majority’s decision to reverse the judgment of the district court, accurately represents Pennsylvania law. Moreover, even if Diamon were a correct statement of Pennsylvania law, appellant’s complaint does not make sufficient allegations to come within the Diamon rule. Accordingly, I dissent.
I
This Court is, of course, not obligated in a diversity case to adopt the most recent decision of a lower state court as the law of the state, irrespective of whether that decision is consistent with earlier rulings of the state supreme court. Instead, as we noted in National Surety Corp. v. Midland Bank,
At issue in this case is the effect to be given a statutorily mandated
This suit limitation clause has been examined by the Pennsylvania Supreme Court in Lardas v. Underwriters Insurance Co.,
Despite the seemingly unequivocal language of these cases, however, the supreme court has recognized that failure to bring a suit to compel payment of fire insurance benefits within one year of loss does not per se prevent judicial consideration of the suit. In Lardas, the court reached the merits of an insured’s claim that the insurer had waived its right to rely on the suit limitation provision, or was estopped from doing so. See
It is essential to note, however, that the supreme court read these exceptions to the twelve month limit provision very narrowly. Thus, the insured’s claims of waiver and еstoppel were denied in Lardas because the insurers “did not in any manner mislead [insured] about the possibility of settlement,”
In short, Lardas and General State Authority do not stand for the broad principle apparently adopted by the majority that the statutory suit limitation clause may be ignored whenever the insurer fails to act in good faith. Instead, these eases hold only that a court, in order to prevent injustice, need not strictly observe the clause when “conduct or action on the part of the insurer is responsible for the insured’s failure to comply in time." Id. at 168,
As the majority points out, Diamon relied on two alternative theories to allow the plaintiff-insured in that case to avoid the impact of the suit limitation provision. The first theory, purportedly based on principles of estoppel,
The second theory advanced in Diamon to circumvent the suit limitation clause, and used by the majority here, is in two parts. First, the superior court recognized that under Pennsylvania and common law, an insurer owes a duty of good faith and fair dealing to its insured. Second, relying on a California decision, Gruenberg v. Aetna Insurance Co.,
The essence of Lardas and General State Authority is that an insured can excuse his failure to file suit within one year of loss only when “the insurer is responsible for the insured’s failure to comply in time.” General State Authority,
The equitable underpinning which makes the Lardas/General State Authority estop-pel rule a necessary exception to the twelve month suit limitation clause is glaringly absent with regard to the Diamon “good faith” test. If the insurer, whether or not acting in good faith, denies an insured’s claim and there is sufficient time left for the insured to comply with the one year limit, the insured, far from being induced not to sue, will be motivated to file suit promptly.
Thus, under Pennsylvania law as I read it, the one year suit limitation provision is binding unless the insurer is responsible for the insured’s failure to comply with it. Here, even if the majority correctly reads into Leone’s complaint the allegation that Aetna’s denial of his claim was made in bad faith,
II
Even if the Diamon “good faith” test were an accurate statement of Pennsylvania law, I would still be unable to join the majority’s opinion. The majority reads an allegation of a bad faith denial of Leone’s claim into paragraph twelve of Leone’s complaint, which provides:
On or about October 12, 1976, Defendant, by its duly authorized agent, did advise Plaintiff and Plaintiff’s agent that -Defendant was continuing to investigate the cause of said loss, because Defendant had reason to believe that the loss incurred was caused by the wilfull (sic) act of Plaintiff, which allegation Plaintiff then and there denied, but which Defendant continued thereafter to allege, despite continued deniаl by Plaintiff.
I agree with the majority that the Conley test governs our examination of the complaint, and that we must give the complaint a “liberal reading.” But Conley does not stand for the principle that a federal court must deny a rule 12(b)(6) motion to dismiss whenever it can imagine a set of allegations — plainly not contained in the complaint — which would entitle the plaintiff to relief if proved at trial. Instead, the rule is that “the complaint must contain either direct allegations on every material point necessary to sustain a recovery . . . , or contain allegations from which an inference fairly may be drawn that evidence on these material points will be introduced at trial.” 5 C. Wright & A. Miller, Federal Practice and Procedure § 1216, at 122-23; see id. § 1357, at 602.
On its face, paragraph twelve stated only that Aetna denied Leone’s claim on the ground thаt the loss resulted from Leone’s willful act. Necessarily implicit in this allegation is that Leone did not in fact cause the fire, and that Aetna was therefore wrong in refusing to make payment. But I do not believe that the language of the paragraph is subject to the inference not only that Leone was blameless, but that Aetna knew he was not responsible, or conducted an investigation of thе fire that was so reckless as to put its good faith at issue. Thus, even if the Diamon good faith test is the law of Pennsylvania, which I doubt, I cannot read Leone’s complaint as making
. Pa.Stat.Ann. tit. 40, § 636(2), lines 157-61 (1971).
. The court in Diamon distinguished the concepts of waiver and estoppel.
. Leone does not allege in his complaint that he was actually arrested, but only that Aetna denied his claim on the ground that Leone caused the fire. In Abolin v. Farmers American Mutual Fire Ins. Co.,
. The Diamon court also implied that an insured’s failure to comply with the suit limitation clause would be excused even if the insured’s decision to deny his claim was based on a good faith but negligent investigation.
. In Lardas, the supreme court held that estop-pel was not demonstrated when the plaintiff had five months to file a timely suit after he and the insurer terminated negotiations for a settlement.
. On appeal, Leone contends that Brakeman v. Potomac Ins. Co.,
. But see part II infra.
