Opinion
Plaintiff, respondent and cross-appellant William C. Miller (hereinafter respondent) commenced this action against defendant, appellant and cross-respondent National American Life Insurance Company of California (hereinafter appellant) in the Superior Court of the City and County of San Francisco. The complaint set forth two causes of action: breach of a contract of disability insurance, and fraud in inducing respondent to enter the contract. The complaint sought compensatory and punitive damages.
Following a jury trial judgment was entered in favor of respondent for $9,203.34 general damages and $125,000 punitive damages. Appellant moved for judgment notwithstanding the verdict and a new trial. The court denied the motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict, but conditionally granted the motion for new trial on the issue of punitive damages unless respondent would remit $85,000 of the punitive damage award. Respondent filed the remittitur, which stated that “said waiver, which is unconditional for the purpose of entry of judgment, shall be without prejudice to plaintiff’s raising all legal issues growing out of the trial and post-trial proceedings herein in any appeal that may be taken from the judgment.” Appellant appealed from the judgment and the order denying the motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict. Respondent filed a notice of cross-appeal “from the order conditionally granting defendant’s motion for a new trial.”
*336 Although appellant’s notice of appeal purports to be from the entire judgment, appellant has limited its appeal to the issues of fraud and punitive damages, 1 and respondent has cross-appealed as to the reduction of punitive damages.
I
Appellant contends that the evidence is insufficient to support the verdict of fraud and the award of punitive damages. Respondent pleaded (and instructions were given upon) two causes of action: breach of contract, and fraud in the inducement of the contract. The complaint sought both compensatory and punitive damages.
The applicable statute governing punitive damages is Civil Code section 3294: “In an action for the breach of an obligation not arising from contract, where the defendant has been guilty of oppression, fraud, or malice, express or implied, the plaintiff, in addition to the actual damages, may recover damages for the sake of example and by way of punishing the defendant.” Punitive damages are not available in an action based solely upon breach of a contractual obligation, even where the breach is intentional, wilful, or in bad faith.
(Crogan
v.
Metz,
Respondent’s claim of fraud, though incident to the contract, is in tort, and will support a punitive damage award upon proper proof.
(Kuchta
v.
Allied Builders Corp.,
Appellant has attacked the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain the jury’s finding of fraud, which is implicit in its award of punitive damages. 3 Appellant contends that the evidence is insufficient in two regards: the element of misrepresentation, and the element of intent to defraud at the time representations were made.
The principles governing appellate review of the sufficiency of evidence to support the verdict have been stated as follows: “(1) all conflicts must be resolved for the respondent and all legitimate and reasonable inferences indulged in to uphold the verdict where possible; (2) the appellate court’s power begins and ends with a determination as to whether there is any substantial evidence, contradicted or uncontradicted, which will support the jury’s conclusion; and (3) when two or more inferences can be reasonably deduced from the facts, the reviewing court is without power to substitute its deductions for those of the trial court.”
(Estate of Gelonese,
The court instructed the jury that two representations by appellant were alleged by respondent: “(a) that it would pay plaintiff’s monthly mortgage payments in the event that plaintiff was totally disabled from performing his occupation as a painter said payments to be made for a period up to a maximum of twelve months, and (b) that defendant would pay plaintiff’s monthly mortgage payments in the event that the plaintiff was totally disabled from performing an occupation or employment for which he was reasonably qualified by reason of his station in life, his education, training, and experience for an additional period up to a maximum of 48 months.”
*338 Appellant asserts that these representations, admittedly contained only in the insurance policy and not in any communications to the respondent prior to his entering into the contract, are insufficient as a matter of law. Without citation of authority, appellant asserts that representations in the contract itself will not support a finding of fraud; rather, it claims that specific false communications distinct from and prior to the agreement are required.
The contention is without merit. It is well settled that a “promise made with no intention of performing is actionable fraud where the other party relies upon it as an inducement to enter into an agreement.”
(Brockway
v.
Heilman,
Appellant’s second contention is that there was no evidence that it intended not to honor its contractual promises at the time the agreement was entered. “The law is established in California that, since direct proof of fraudulent intent is often an impossibility, because the real intent of the parties and the facts of a fraudulent transaction are peculiarly in the knowledge of those sought to be charged with fraud, proof indicative of fraud may come by inference from circumstances surrounding the transaction, the relationship, and interest of the parties.”
(Taylor
v.
Osborne-Fitzpatrick Fin. Co.,
In the instant case there was sufficient evidence concerning appellant’s conduct to support such an inference. The policy involved was one of the two most commonly used by appellant. The doctor’s certificate on the claim form read: “How long was or will patient be continuously disabled (unable to work)? From_19_through_19--” Claims examiners were instructed that it was company policy to read the word “through” in its claims forms as “to,” indicating termination of disability, even though there were no instructions on the form to so indicate to the attending physician. 5 Benefits were terminated automatically in this fashion, without inquiry as to the'doctor’s intended meaning.
Moreover, appellant relied on its own interpretation of the physician’s subsequent statement, again without communicating with the doctor in spite of its own admitted uncertainty (evidenced by the testimony and actions of the claims examiner, who was forced to seek assistance from his superior). The wording of the questions, the policy of interpretation without warning or guidance to the attending physician, and the failure to consult the doctor as to an acknowledged uncertainty all lend support to the inference of an intent not to live up to the promised coverage. As stated in
Wetherbee:
“Under these circumstances, it is obvious that defendant’s eagerness to seize upon the admission by plaintiff’s doctor as a ground for cancellation of plaintiff’s benefits furnishes ample support for a finding that it never intended to fulfill either the representations in its letter of August 1958 or the terms of the two policies.” (
*340 II
Appellant also contends that two portions of the instructions as to fraud were erroneous and prejudicial. The court refused the proffered fraud instructions of both parties and gave its own version.
Appellant first attacks paragraph two of the instructions. The court instructed that plaintiff’s claim for misrepresentation and fraud had six essential elements; the first element being that certain misrepresentations (naming them) were made.. The second and contested paragraph read as follows: “That at the time said representations were made they were false in that defendant’s true intention was to deny the payment of the benefits lawfully due plaintiff under the policy without reasonable cause for such denial which intention defendant concealed from plaintiff.” (Italics added.)
Appellant’s assertion that this language permitted the jury to infer intent to defraud upon a finding of negligence (i.e., that appellant’s denial of the claim was merely without reasonable cause) is without merit. The instruction plainly required the jury to find that appellant intended at the time it entered the contract to deny claims without reasonable cause for denial. Although (as appellant notes) mere denial without reasonable cause is itself insufficient to establish fraud, preexisting intent to so act is fraudulent intent.
A similar rationale answers appellant’s other specification of error. Paragraph 4 reads as follows: “That plaintiff was induced to pay premiums on the insurance policy in justifiable reliance upon the good faith interpretation of the terms in the policy and plaintiff was deceived by the said representations of defendant.” (Italics added.)
Appellant contends that this language permitted the jury to base a punitive damage award on a finding of violation of the duty of good faith. The paragraph, however, concerns justifiable reliance by the insured upon the inherent obligation of the insurer to act fairly and in good faith. (Cases delineating this duty have been noted earlier, and appellant does not contest its existence.)
The instructions must be read as a whole. (4 Witkin, Cal. Procedure (2d ed. 1971) Trial, § 244, p. 3057.) In view of the correct instructions concerning fraudulent intent it is apparent that this paragraph merely describes respondent’s reliance on the obverse of that intent. Respondent *341 was justified in relying upon the inherent promise of good faith performance and appellant, in planning not to live up to its contractual obligations, did not intend to fulfill that promise. The challenged statement was neither erroneous nor misleading.
III
Respondent has cross-appealed from the order conditionally granting appellant’s motion for a new trial, and thus from that portion of the judgment entered pursuant to the remittitur. Respondent contends that the reasons specified by the trial court in granting the motion are inadequate.
Preliminarily, we must determine whether respondent has waived the right to cross-appeal by his acceptance of the remittitur. This precise issue is unsettled in this state.
Pease
v.
Beech Aircraft Corp.,
Defendant challenged the right of plaintiffs to appeal. The court, in discussing the issue, quoted from a Wisconsin case permitting such an appeal by remitting plaintiffs when the opposing party has appealed.
(Plesko
v.
City of Milwaukee,
However, Pease did not resolve the issue directly. Although the court held that plaintiffs could not appeal from the order, it apparently based this conclusion on the factual observation that plaintiffs had not challenged the adequacy of the award, but only the sufficiency of the judge’s specifications under Code of Civil Procedure section 657. The appellate court found the judge’s reasons satisfactory under the statute, and ruled that plaintiffs had no “right to appeal.” (38 Cal.App.3d at pp. 468-470.)
*342
However, this factually based conclusion begs the question, for if plaintiffs had
waived
the right to appeal, the appellate court could not even consider the sufficiency of the trial judge’s reasons for granting the conditional order. Thus, we must analyze the point left undecided by
Pease.
“The common-law rule, followed until recently almost without exception, is that a party who, in lieu of being required to undergo a new trial, consents to a remittitur of a jury verdict deemed excessive by the trial judge has made an election and is thereby precluded on appeal from complaining of the amount of the judgment awarded him. Under this rule, a party voluntarily accepting the-reduction of damages awarded him binds himself to that relief, whether or not he accepts the same under protest.”
(Jangula
v.
Klocek,
Three cases decided by the California Courts of Appeal prior to
Templeton
adopted this common law rule. In
Roth
v.
Shell Oil Co.,
In
Fairfield
v.
American Photocopy Equip. Co.,
Both of these cases cited
Conlin
v.
Southern Pacific R. R. Co.,
In
Templeton Feed & Grain
v.
Ralston Purina Co.,-supra,
the Supreme Court held that acceptance of a remittitur as to compensatory damages did not prevent a party from appealing as to the
severable
issue of punitive damages. Moreover, the court expressly disapproved
Conlin, Fairfield
and
Roth.
(
It is settled in this state that a party cannot accept the benefits of a judgment, in whole or in part, and then attack it by appeal.
(Mathys
v.
Turner,
However, when plaintiff accepts a remittitur and
defendant
appeals, the case is in a different posture. The court in
Templeton,
though not ruling on this precise matter, did note the Wisconsin rule allowing a remitting plaintiff to appeal the issue of damages when the defendant has first appealed from the judgment. (
Two other courts cited the same reasons in adopting the
Plesko
rule, allowing the remitting party to appeal but only when the defendant first appeals from the judgment.
(Jangula
v.
Klocek, supra,
The practical rationale of
Plesko
and its companion cases from other states is most persuasive, particularly in light of the observation in
Templeton
that: “Indeed, in a case such as the instant one in which defendant appeals from the judgment, the remitting plaintiff not only faces continued litigation at the appellate and, perhaps, trial stages, a result he may have sought to avoid by his consent, but also ordinarily does not enjoy, pending determination of the appeal, the fruits of the judgment awarded him. Under such circumstances no possibility arises that the plaintiff may retain the benefits of the judgment and obtain still
*345
another recovery in a new trial following an unqualified reversal or avoid detriments incidental to the earlier judgment. (Cf.
Preluzsky
v.
Pacific Coop. Cafeteria Co., supra,
IV
Respondent contends that the trial court’s reasons for conditionally granting the new trial are without support in the record. The new trial motion is addressed to the sound discretion of the trial judge. In ruling on it, he is vested with authority to disbelieve witnesses and reweigh the evidence. On appeal, all presumptions are in favor of the order as against the verdict, and the appellate court will reverse only if a manifest and unmistakable abuse of discretion is shown.
(Schroeder
v.
Auto Driveaway Co., supra,
In its order conditionally granting a new trial on the issue of punitive damages, the court below stated as its ground that the sum awarded was “grossly excessive and that the jury clearly should have rendered a different verdict as to the amount of punitive damages.” The court enumerated three reasons in support of this ground: appellant’s conduct was not so grossly outrageous as other cases in which similar awards of punitive damages were sustained; the award was excessive in view of appellant’s financial position; and the jury had been influenced by an incident during trial, wherein a recess was called when the plaintiff suffered an attack of angina pectoris and had to be treated by a doctor in the courtroom. Respondent attacks each of these reasons on separate bases.
Code of Civil Procedure section 657 provides that where an order granting a new trial is made on the ground of excessive damages (subd. 5) on appeal “it shall be conclusively presumed that said order as to such ground was made only for the reasons specified in said order or said specification of reasons, and such order shall be reversed as to such ground only if there is no substantial basis in the record
for any of such
reasons.” (Italics added.) Thus, if any one of the reasons stated by the trial court is supported by the record, we must affirm the order. (Cf.
*346
Silberg
v.
California Life Ins. Co.,
Although there was some disagreement as to what portion of the jury witnessed the incident, respondent does not dispute the adequacy of the third reason specified by the trial court; indeed, he admits that “the incident was affecting and might have justified a motion for mistrial.” However, he asserts that appellant deliberately waived the point. Respondent cites two statements by his own counsel, alleging that appellant’s counsel admitted this strategy, as evidence that appellant’s waiver was intentional.
The trial court could properly have construed appellant’s inaction as a waiver, and might have denied the new trial motion.
(Horn
v.
Atchison, T. & S. F. Ry. Co.,
The court below thus acted within its discretion in conditionally granting the new trial on the ground of excessive punitive damages for the third reason stated. We need not reach the other two reasons specified in support of the order.
The judgment is affirmed. The order denying motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict is affirmed. The order conditionally granting a motion for new trial is affirmed. Each party to bear their own costs on appeal.
Rattigan, J., and Christian, J., concurred.
Notes
Appellant has paid respondent the sum awarded as compensatory damages.
Respondent did not plead, nor was the jury instructed as to, tortious breach of the insurer’s duty to deal fairly and in good faith with the insured, which has been the basis of punitive damage awards in other recent cases.
(Cain
v.
State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co.,
Respondent has taken the position on appeal that a finding of either fraud or oppression would support the punitive damage award. This argument is erroneous, because the only tort pleaded and instructed upon was fraud and unless that tort was established no exemplary damages were permitted regardless of any showing of oppression.
Appellant asserts that such a rule would place the risk on the insurer that an erroneous denial of coverage would give rise to an inference of fraud. However, in order to, prove fraud the insured must show that the insurer did not intend to fulfill its representations as to coverage at the time the contract was entered into; mere denial of coverage of course will not suffice.
Appellant’s procedure required monthly proof of disability. A claims examiner testified that the disability was considered continuing if the doctor used words such as “continuing” or “unknown” after the word “through,” but he acknowledged that there were no such instructions imparted to the physician. Moreover, respondent’s doctor testified that similar forms used in State Disability Insurance claims specifically instructed physicians not to use such indefinite terms.
In limiting a prior decision to this specific situation, the Wisconsin court in
Plesko
reached this same result. (19 Wis.2d at pp. 220-221 [
