OPINION OF THE COURT
On December 19, 1967, Charles Hinton was seriously injured when the car which he was driving was struck by an automobile operated by Stanton Brannin. Brannin’s liability for Hinton’s grave injuries was so apparent that the Insurance Company of North America (INA) — which covered Brannin for liability to the extent of $50,000 on the accident — established a reserve of $45,000 for the case. On July 30, 1969, during the taking of depositions in the lawsuit that followed, Hinton’s lawyer declared for the record that his client would accept
Pursing recovery of the excess judgment, Hinton obtained the appointment of the instant plaintiff as receiver of Brannin’s assets. In the instant action, the receiver seeks to recover Brannin’s damages for INA’s alleged bad faith failure to settle Hinton’s case within the policy limits. At the trial, evidence adduced on the issue of Brannin’s damages revealed that when the accident occurred he was barely solvent — earning $150 per week — and that his meager assets were, and always have been, insufficient to satisfy the excess judgment. The only significant change in Brannin’s condition in the seven and one-half years which elapsed between the entry of the excess judgment and the current trial was his acquisition of an engineering degree.
During the course of the trial both the court and INA’s attorney were under the impression that Brannin had not filed a petition to discharge the excess judgment in bankruptcy. Nevertheless, INA argued that it should be permitted to raise the issue of a potential bankruptcy discharge before the jury as relevant to Brannin’s claimed damages. This contention was regarded by the court and the plaintiff as an effort to pose a mitigation question to the jury even though mitigation of damages had not been pleaded as an affirmative defense by INA (see CPLR 3018, subd [b]; Davis v Davis,
THE CURRENT MOTION
INA has now moved to set aside the verdict on the ground that it is against the weight of the evidence and excessive, or in the alternative for judgment or for a new trial pursuant to CPLR 5015. Since INA’s attorney’s oral CPLR 4404 motion similar to the first branch of the current motion was denied immediately upon rendition of the verdict, only the alternative requests for relief will be considered here.
INA argues that it recently discovered that Brannin had filed a petition in bankruptcy in the United States District Court for the Western District of New York on January 21, 1977, more than a year before the instant trial. Conceding that the petition was a matter of public record from the date of. its filing in the Western District (where Brannin resided), INA contends it is entitled to judgment as a matter of law because of the filing or, in the alternative, to a new trial upon the grounds of newly discovered evidence and suppression of evidence, fraud and misrepresentation on the part of plaintiffs attorneys. INA’s attorneys assert that they assumed and they are "confident that the court assumed, that the answer to the [bankruptcy] question would have been in the negative. Plaintiffs counsel knew that the answer would have been in the negative [sic], yet they did not reveal that to the court.” Brannin’s bankruptcy schedule lists assets of $1,185 and debts of only $411 owed in 1976 taxes and the $165,400.48 balance due on the judgment. It is not claimed that Brannin was ever discharged in bankruptcy.
INA’S RIGHT TO RELIEF
To merit relief on the ground of newly discovered evidence (CPLR 5015, subd [a], par 2), the movant must show that the evidence is material, that it is not merely cumulative, that it is not of such a nature as would merely impeach the credibility of an adverse witness, that it would probably change the results if a new trial were granted and that the
THE PAYMENT RULE
The earlier and now generally discredited view of damages in bad faith cases was that no damage existed unless the insured has paid and could pay the excess judgment or a portion of it, on the theory that actual pecuniary loss must be
THE JUDGMENT RULE
In most jurisdictions it is not necessary for the insured to allege that he has paid or can pay the excess judgment (see, e.g., Lee v Nationwide Mut. Ins. Co., supra; Wessing v American Ind. Co. of Galveston, Tex.,
THE RULES IN NEW YORK
The judgment rule has been adopted in the First Judicial Department to the extent that actual payment of the excess judgment is held not to be a condition precedent to suit against a bad faith insurer. Thus, "An insurer which has been guilty of bad faith, one which has deliberately shackled its insured with the crippling jeopardy of a large excess judgment, may not insist that the insured must sacrifice his assets and pay the judgment before suit. The very nature of the risk insured against prohibits the imposition of such prerequisite.” (Henegan v Merchants Mut. Ins. Co.,
Where the insured is judgment proof, however, Henegan is not dispositive and the rule to be applied seems obscure, more jurisprudence on the question being available from the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit than from New York courts. In Harris v Standard Acc. & Ins. Co. (297 F2d 627, cert den
The rule in Harris generally has been held applicable only where the insured was insolvent prior to trial (see, e.g., Anderson v St. Paul Mercury Ind. Co., 340 F2d 406; Jessen v O’Daniel,
Nevertheless, Harris still seems to enjoy some favor in this State. It was cited with apparent approval in Henegan for the "proposition that an insured is not damaged by an excess judgment where he was insolvent before the rendition of the judgment and, furthermore, was discharged in bankruptcy from paying the judgment” (Henegan v Merchants Mut. Ins. Co.,
The concurring and dissenting opinions in Gordon contain the only guidance available from the Court of Appeals as to how damages should be evaluated where the assured is judgment proof or impecunious. The Gordon assured’s only asset was the eight-year-old car involved in the accident; he had been a gas station attendant without credit standing in the community, resided in a low rent area and disappeared during the pendency of the litigation. Although the Gordon majority affirmed dismissal of the action without reaching the damage issue, Judge Fuld’s concurrence cited Harris favorably and added that there was (p 441) "no proof that the insured suffered any damage.”
In an opinion written by Judge Breitel, the three Gordon dissenters devoted extensive attention to the damage issue. In their view, where a solvent insured is involved, the damages should be fixed as the amount of the excess judgment, but they also cite to Harris and Bourget for the proposition that an insured suffers no damage by virtue of an uncollectible judgment adding, however, that the rule in the latter situation is "evidently limited to insureds, dead and leaving no assets, or discharged in bankruptcy and insolvent at the time the excess judgment was rendered (see Young v. American Cas. Co.,
Where the assured has meager assets and is unable to pay the judgment, the Pattern Jury rule thus permits the jury to consider the age, economic status, economic prospects, skills, health, and any other matters presently existing which would be reasonably predictive of the insured’s economic future, or that of his estate if it were likely to receive assets or benefactions and to assess the pecuniary and tangible harm done to insured now and in the reasonably anticipated future by the overhanging excess judgment. It may also consider other tangible harms such as the loss of the right to operate motor vehicles or to obtain employment or insurance. The instant jury was charged in accordance with the PJI formulation.
In sum, then, the New York rule is threefold: (1) where the assured pays part of the judgment or is solvent enough to do so at the time of the excess judgment, the judgment rule applies and he is entitled to the full amount of the excess as his damages; (2) where he was insolvent before the judgment and obtained a bankruptcy discharge after it, he is not damaged and may not recover for it; and (3) where he was insolvent or nearly insolvent prior to the judgment the jury must consider his past, his prospects, and other economic factors and assess his damages.
Brannin’s situation fell within the ambit of the third phase of the New York rule: he was not insolvent but his limited assets rendered him nearly so. Under prevailing law, the fact that Brannin filed a petition in bankruptcy did not entitle INA to judgment as a matter of law as claimed. However, the jury, which was told to evaluate Brannin’s damages based upon the factors suggested by the Gordon dissenters and PJI, was not aware of the bankruptcy petition either. Whether the rulings, which excluded mention of bankruptcy or the alleged fraud or misrepresentation by the receiver’s attorneys, were
BANKRUPTCY AS A DEFENSE UNDER THE NEW YORK RULE
In New York no recovery may be had for losses which might have been prevented by reasonable effort and expenditure (Wilmot v State of New York,
Of further relevance to the final issues is the fact that an insurer’s liability for a bad faith failure to settle within the policy limits is ex delicto even though it arises out of a contract (Brown v Guarantee Ins. Co., supra; Southern Fire & Cas. Co. v Norris, supra; see Rutter v King,
From these principles it may be concluded that, while Brannin was under no obligation to render himself a bankrupt in order to limit INA’s liability to him, proof of the bankruptcy petition might have been offered by the receiver in an attempt to establish additional damages. How the exclusion of proof of additional damages, no matter by whom offered, could have prejudiced INA, has not been demonstrated in this record, nor has INA established any reasonable probability that the verdict of the jury would have been altered in its favor had that body been made aware of Brannin’s petition. In the totality of these circumstances and the law applicable to them, it must be concluded that granting the relief sought by INA would do nothing to promote the interests of justice and would constitute a futile exercise of discretion.
The motion is dismissed.
