Rеliance Insurance Company appeals a judgment entered on a multimillion-dollar jury verdict. The jury found that Reliance acted in bad faith when it withdrew its defense of insured real estate developers in a construction-defect suit brought by a homeowners’ association, and refused to pay the resulting default judgment. We reverse the judgment inasmuch as it permitted the homeowners to recover directly from the insurer without establishing that their claim was covered under the policy. We also reverse the judgment inasmuch as it did not award the amount of the default judgment to the insured developers as damages for Reliance’s bad-faith failure to defend. We affirm the judgment in all other respects.
The Pershing Park Villas Homeowners Association brought suit against real estate developers Harry Bigham, Timothy Penkala, and Joseph John, alleging defects and property damage in the construction of a twelve-unit condominium. The developers tendered the defense of the suit to their property damage insurer, United Pacific Insurance Company. United Pacific’s parent, Reliance Insurance Company, assumed the defense under a reservation of rights. Approximately four months before trial, Reliance withdrew its defense on the ground that the damage in question was not covered under the policy. Though Reliance had obtained a legal opinion from outside counsel to this effect, it did not obtain a declaration of noncoverage from the court.
The developers did not retain new counsel to defend the suit, and the homeowners obtained a default judgment against them for $339,000. Reliance refused to pay the judgment. Faced with the unsatisfied judgment and other debts, the developers petitioned for bankruptcy protection. The developers did not list any unliquidated bad faith claims against Rebanee among the assets disclosed in their bankruptcy schedules. Though it appears that at least one of the developers may have referred to claims against an insurance company in later correspondence with his bankruptcy trustee, the developers’ trustees never expressly abandoned any prebankruptcy claims against Reliance.
Nevertheless, the developers, joined by the homeowners, brought this suit against Reliance for breach of contract, bad faith, and a variety of other torts arising out of Reliance’s failure to defend or indemnify the developers.
The homeowners sought to recover the amount of the default judgment directly from Reliance, contending that they were third-party beneficiaries of the policy under California Insurance Code § 11580(b).
Prior to trial, the district court granted the plaintiffs’ motion for partial summary judgment against Reliance for breach of its duty to defend the developers. But the court continued the motion on the issue of Reliance’s liability for the entire judgment, allowing Rebanee to conduct additional discovery. The plaintiffs later renewed their motion for partial summary judgment, citing internal Reliance documents showing that Reliance knew there was a potential for coverage at the time it withdrеw the defense, and cases holding that an insurer is liable for a judgment even on a noncov-ered claim when it fails to defend in bad faith.
The district court granted the motion for summary judgment and found that Reliance was liable for the entire default judgment as a consequence of its failure to defend the developers. Reliance moved for reconsideration on the ground that the district court had not found that the withdrawal of the defense was tortious. The district court denied the motion, and found that the withdrawal of the defense was wrongful as a matter of law.
On the eve of trial, Reliance submitted a motion styled “Defendants’ Motion In Li-mine No. 1 For Order Requiring Foundation That Plaintiffs Have Standing.” The motion contended that the developers lacked standing to bring claims arising out
Notwithstanding its finding that Reliance acted in bad faith as a matter of law, the district court submitted to the jury the issue of whether Reliance’s conduct breached the covenant of good faith and fair dealing. After a lengthy trial and brief deliberations, the jury found that Reliance had breached a duty оf good faith and fair dealing as to both the developers and the homeowners, and awarded damages totaling $27 million. On Reliance’s motion for a new trial, the plaintiffs agreed to remit all but approximately $5 million of the jury’s award.
Under the reduced award, the homeowners received $175,000 for breach of the covenant of good faith and fair dealing, in addition to the amount of the default judgment that had been awarded to them in the construction-defect suit. The developers received $1,400,000 each for ecоnomic losses caused by Reliance’s bad faith and negligence, and $200,000 each for emotional distress. Unsatisfied with the remitti-tur, Reliance appeals on numerous grounds.
II
As a threshold issue, Reliance renews its challenge to the developers’ standing to bring claims arising out of Reliance’s failure to defend them in the construction-defect suit. Reliance grounds its objection to the developers’ standing on the rule that the bankruptcy estate retains title to pre-bankruptcy causes of action not disclosed to оr abandoned by the bankruptcy trustee. See Stein v. United Artists Corp.,
A
At the most general level, “[the standing] inquiry involves both constitutional limitations on federal-court jurisdiction and prudential limitations on its exercise.” Warth v. Seldin,
Beyond this constitutional core, “the prudential doctrinе of standing has come to encompass ‘several judicially self-imposed limits on the exercise of federal jurisdiction.’ ” Brown Group,
Because issues of constitutional standing are jurisdictional, they must be addressed whenever raised. See Ripplinger v. Collins,
The district court separately addressed what it deemed to be the jurisdictional and nonjurisdictional dimensions of Reliance’s eleventh-hour challenge to the developers’ standing. After noting Reliance’s failure to designate standing as an issue for trial in the pretrial order, the district court ruled:
I think the question [ ] posed by an issue of standing is whether a party has a substantial [stake in a] controversy to make a justiciable matter. I think it is clear thаt the three individual plaintiffs do have a significant stake in the controversy.
The issue [respecting title to the claim] may be one of the capacity to sue rather than standing.... And I think under all the circumstances that have been adduced in this trial, the objections by the defendants to Bigham, Penkala and John proceeding with this litigation [have] been waived.
[EOR 1397] We review de novo whether the developers had a sufficient stake in their claims against Reliance to establish standing under the “case or controversy” requirement of Artiсle III. See American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Comm. v. Thornburgh,
B
The district court was entitled to conclude that the time and manner in which Reliance raised the issue of standing was strategic. We cannot say that the district court clearly erred in excluding any nonjurisdictional issues of standing not designated for trial in the pretrial order. We will reverse the district court’s finding that Rebanee waived the issue of the developers’ standing only if it is a jurisdictional rule that denies a debtor standing to pursue claims that are property of the bankruptcy estate.
The “irreducible constitutional minimum of standing” requires a plaintiff to show injury in fact, causation of that injury by the defendant’s conduct, and redressability of the injury by the requested relief. Steel Co. v. Citizens for a Better Environment,
Reliance claims that lack of title to their claims deprives the developers of constitutional standing to sue. Yet wе have specifically distinguished between constitutional standing and “third-party” standing to bring a claim to which another holds title. In DCD Programs, Ltd. v. Leighton,
Here, too, we find that the elements of constitutional standing are present notwithstanding the possibility that the developers’ claims against Reliance may remain property of their bankruptcy estates.
Ill
The developers’ constitutional standing established, we turn to Reliance’s liability for its withdrawal of their defense. Reliance argues that the district court erred in holding that Reliance’s bad faith rendered it automatically liable without any showing that the default judgment in the construction-defect suit would not have been entered but for Rebance’s wrongful conduct.
A
The general rule is long-settled in California that “an insurer that wrongfully refuses to defend is liable on the judgment against the insured.” Gray v. Zurich Ins. Co.,
It is no defense that the ultimate judgment against the insured is nоt necessarily rendered on a theory within the coverage of the policy. See Gray,
The Gray rule of automatic liability applies equally to judgments entered by default. “When the insurer refuses to defend and the insured does not employ counsel and presents no defense, it can be said the еnsuing default judgment is proximately caused by the insurer’s breach of the duty to defend.” Amato,
Reliance argues that Amato was wrongly decided on this point, and that the California Supreme Court would instead apply the rule in Travelers Ins. Co. v. Lesher,
The rule in Lesher derives from the prima facie element of professional negligence that requires a plaintiff to prove the extent of “actual loss or damage resulting from the professional’s negligence.” Mattco Forge, Inc. v. Arthur Young & Co.,
The distinction is a reasonable one. The insured is relieved of proving the extent of damages in a bad faith action in order to remove the insurer’s incentive to strategically disavow responsibility for the insured’s defense “with everything to gain and nothing to lose.” Gray,
Reliance does not dispute the jury’s well-supported conclusion that it breached the covenant of good faith and fair dealing when it wrongfully withdrew the developers’ defense. Reliance is therefore liable to the developers for the amount of the judgment, and all other damages consequential to it.
B
Reliance is correct that its bad faith refusal to defend the developers does not automatically entitle the homeowners to recover the default judgment from Reliance. The developers were named as insureds; the homeowners were not. A clаimant’s direct action against an insurer “depends on the contract terms of the coverage provisions of insurance policy,” and unlike the insured’s bad faith claim, may not be maintained irrespective of the scope of coverage. Amato,
Although the homeowners were not named as insureds, the district court here permitted the jury to award them damages without determining coverage on a finding that Reliance breached an implied covenant of good faith. But it is unclear how such a covenant would arise between Reliance and the homeowners. “Generally-by definition-the implied covenant runs in favor of the other contracting party, and hence it is generally perceived as axiomatic that a ‘third party claimant’ may not bring an action for breach of the covenant or its duties.” Hand v. Farmers Ins. Exch.,
The district court should, however, have awarded the amount of the default judgment to the developers as damages for Reliance’s breach of its duty to defend them. See Gray,
Reliance challenges the jury’s award of damages to compensate the developers for emotional distress. Reliance argues that California law, which governs this diversity action, permits the developers to recover only for еmotional distress that was severe, substantial, and enduring. Reliance also challenges the size of the emotional distress awards.
IV
A
Though emotional distress must be severe to be actionable by itself, no heightened showing is required to obtain damages for mental suffering that naturally ensues from the commission of a distinct and independent tort. See Gruenberg v. Aetna Ins. Co.,
Nevertheless, in Gilchrist v. Jim Slemons Imports, Inc.,
The California Supreme Court reiterated its Gruenberg holding in Gourley v. State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Co.,
*904 We observed [in Gruenberg ] that damages for emotional distress are compen-sable as incidental damages flowing from the initial breach, not аs a separate cause of action: “[Because] we are concerned with mental distress resulting from a substantial invasion of property interests of the insured and not with the independent tort of intentional infliction of emotional distress, we deem [the requirements of outrageous conduct and severe emotional distress] to be inapplicable.” Thus, once the threshold requirement of economic loss is met, the insured need not show additional loss or injury to recover damages for his mental distress as long as suсh damages were proximately caused by his insurer’s breach of the implied covenant.
Id. at 378 (citation omitted) (quotation altered in original) (quoting Gruenberg,
The California Supreme Court recently denied review in a case where the application of the Gruenberg rule was decisive. In Clayton v. United Services Automobile Association,
California authority subsequent to Gilchrist clearly holds that a plaintiff may recover damages for all emotional distress incident to an insurer’s bad faith denial of coverage, so long as the insurer’s conduct also resulted in substаntial financial loss. There was evidence that the developers suffered substantial financial loss, and they are therefore entitled to recover for the variety of emotional symptoms, including major depression, that resulted from their bankruptcies.
B
Reliance argues that the emotional distress awards are excessive in amount under Merlo v. Standard Life & Accident Insurance Co.,
V
Reliance also challenges the sufficiency of the evidence supporting the damage awards for lost investment opportunities. The trial included testimony from other real estate investors and from experts that the developers could have obtained financing to make profitable investments in repossessed real estate but for their bankruptcy. Reliance maintains, however, that this evidence does not pertain to Joseph John, because John withdrew from his partnership with Penkala
The record does not support Rebance’s contention that John’s counsel conceded an absence of evidence to support an award of economic damages, and urged the jury to award them anyway out of sympathy. To the contrary, John’s counsel argued that the evidence supported of an award economic damages for John. His “concession” consisted of an argument in the alternative that even if the jury found the evidence insufficient to support economic dаmages, it should not deny John an award of damages for emotional distress. [EOR 4758-60]
VI
Finaby, Reliance claims the district court should have granted a new trial under Minneapolis, St. Paul & Sault Ste. Marie Railway v. Moquin,
[t]he fact that a jury may have been outraged by the defendant’s conduct to the point of awarding excessive damages does not prove that its decision on liability was flawed....
Where there is no evidence that pаssion and prejudice affected the babibty finding, remittitur is an appropriate method of reducing an excessive verdict.
Seymour v. Summa Vista Cinema, Inc.,
Though the district court speculated that the jury may have been swayed by passion and prejudice in determining the size of the damage award, it made no finding that passion or prejudice influenced the verdict of babibty. There is no dispute in this case that Rebance’s withdrawal of its insureds’ defense was wrongful. And although Rebanee attempted to portray its actions as an honest mistake, the record overwhelmingly supports the jury’s conclusion that Reliance acted unreasonably and in bad faith. Under Seymour, a remittitur was entirely appropriate.
VII
We reverse the judgment of the district court inasmuch as it awards damages to the homeowners and fails to award the amount of the default judgment to the developers. In all other respects, the judgment of the district court is affirmed. Each party shall bear its own costs on appeal.
AFFIRMED IN PART, REVERSED IN PART, and REMANDED.
Notes
. The. district court had jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1332 because of diversity of citizenship.
.We recently reiterated this view in Young v. City of Simi Valley,
. Our conclusion that debtor standing is ordinarily prudential comports with our decision in Sierra Switchboard Co. v. Westinghouse Elec. Corp.,
. An insurer may, however, raise the defense of noncoverage when it was not possible that the judgment was rendered on a covered the
