LIBERTY MUTUAL INSURANCE COMPANY and Norma J. Peele, Appellants,
v.
Colleen M. STEADMAN, Appellee.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, Second District.
*593 Steven L. Brannock and Sarah C. Pellenbarg of Holland and Knight LLP, Tampa, and Chris N. Kolos and Christopher Annunziato of Holland and Knight LLP, Orlando, for Appellants.
Matthew D. Valdes, P.A., Orlando, for Appellee.
KELLY, Judge.
This case is before us оn remand from the Florida Supreme Court. In Liberty Mutual Insurance Co. v. Steadman,
*594 At issue is whether Liberty Mutual and Peele are immune from suit by virtue of the workers' compensation immunity afforded in chaрter 440, Florida Statutes (2002), the Workers' Compensation Act (the Act). In our prior opinion, we concluded that Steadman had not alleged any wrongdoing independent of the claims-handling process, and more specifically, that her claim was based entirely on Liberty Mutual's nine-month delay in authorizing lung transplant surgery that the Judge of Compensation Claims (JCC) had previously directed it to authorize. Because Steadman's claim did not fall within any exception to the statutory immunity afforded a carrier under the Act, we concluded that the trial court should have dismissed her complaint. See Liberty Mutual,
In Aguilera II, the court recognized the continued viability of "cases holding that the mere delay of payments or simple bad faith in handling workers' compensation claims are not actionable torts, and that employees are not рermitted to transform such simple delays into actionable torts cognizable in the circuit court."
The district court erred in utilizing the yardstick by which it measured the sufficiency of Aguilera's complaint with regard to whether his allegations stated a viable common law cause of action for an intentional tort against the insurance carrier. The Third District should not have limited itself to considering whether Aguilera's allegations involved wrongdoing totally separatе and independent of the workers' compensation claim process itself. Pursuant to Sibley [v. Adjustco, Inc.,596 So.2d 1048 (Fla.1992) ], if an insurance carrier engages in outrageous actions and conduct that constitutes an intentionаl tortious act while processing the claim beyond mere short delays in payment and simple bad faith, the carrier is not cloaked with a shield of immunity flowing from the workers' compensation provisions.
Id. аt 93-94 (citation omitted). Thus, we conclude that to determine whether the trial court correctly rejected Liberty Mutual and Peele's claims of immunity, our inquiry should be directed to whether Steadman's complаint states a cause of action for intentional infliction of emotional distress.
In Metropolitan Life Insurance Co. v. McCarson,
Steadman's complaint lists an assortment of acts she contends were "intentional and outrageous," but the primary foсus of her complaint is that Liberty Mutual and Peele delayed authorizing a double lung transplant even after the JCC had ordered Liberty Mutual to pay for it. Steadman alleges that Peele and Liberty Mutual's aсtions were "predicated on the fact that [Steadman] would die from her condition in a short time and the problem would go away" and that Peele and Liberty Mutual knew based on physician testimony that Steadman was not expected to survive until the following year. Steadman contends that based on that knowledge, Liberty Mutual intentionally denied and delayed payment for treatment in an effort to spеed up her demise, to induce stress that it knew would be detrimental to her health, and to inflict emotional distress. Steadman alleges she suffered severe emotional distress and that the distress caused her рhysical condition to deteriorate.
The real issue in this case is not whether Steadman's complaint contains all the elements of a claim for intentional infliction of emotional distressit doesbut whether the "pleaded facts . . . ascend, or perhaps descend, to a level permitting us to say that the benchmarks enunciated in Metropolitan have been met." Ponton,
f. The extreme and outrageous character of the conduct may arise from the actor's knowledge that thе other is peculiarly susceptible to emotional distress, by reason of some physical or mental condition or peculiarity. The conduct may become heartless, flagrant, and outragеous when the actor proceeds in the face of such knowledge, where it would not be so if he did not know. It must be emphasized again, however, that major outrage is essential to the tort; and the mеre fact that the actor knows that the other will regard the conduct as insulting, *596 or will have his feelings hurt, is not enough.
Viewed in isolation, the conduct Steadman has alleged with respect to the lung transplant is not so outrageous that it qualifies as "`atrocious, and utterly intolerable in a civilized community.'" See Metropolitan,
Accordingly, we conclude that the conduct alleged in Steadman's complaint is "`so outrageous in character, and so extreme in degree, as to go beyond all possible bounds of decency'" and thus meets the standard adopted in Metropolitan,
Affirmed.
CANADY and WALLACE, JJ., Concur.
NOTES
Notes
[1] Because we are reviewing an order on a motion to dismiss, our standard of review is, of course, de novo. Wishnatzki v. Coffman Const., Inc.,
