Cynthiа RAYNOR, Plaintiff-Appellant v. UNITED OF OMAHA LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY, a Nebraska corporation, Defendant-Appellee
No. 14-36090
United States Court of Appeals, Ninth Circuit.
June 6, 2017
1268
Before: ALEX KOZINSKI and WILLIAM A. FLETCHER, Circuit Judges, and JOHN R. TUNHEIM,* Chief District Judge.
* The Honorable John R. Tunheim, Chief United States District Judge for the District of Minnesota, sitting by designation.
For these reasons, I respectfully dissent.
ORDER
Oregon law requires insurance policies to conform with the standard provisions of the Oregon Insurance Code.
In the present case, we are asked to apply an insurance policy that may not conform with the standard limitations period required under Oregon law. The insurer contends that the policy terms must control because the policy has been approved by the Director of the Department of Consumer and Business Services. If the policy terms control, the claims of Plaintiff, the insured, are time-barred. But if we are permitted to apply the State‘s standard provisions despite the Director‘s approval of the pоlicy, Plaintiff‘s suit may go forward if 1) we determine that the standard limitation provision is more favorable than the corresponding provision in her policy, and 2) we determine under the standard provisions that her claim is not time-barred. To determine whether Plaintiff‘s claim is time-barred under the standard provisions, we must interpret the phrаse, “period for which the insurer is liable.” Neither the meaning of this phrase, nor a court‘s authority to apply standard provisions to a Director-approved policy, has been directly addressed by Oregon courts.
The timeliness of Plaintiff‘s suit therefore depends on two important and unresolved issues of Oregon law that are dispositive in this case. We respectfully certify both questions to the Oregon Supreme Court so that we, as well as the Oregon bar, might benefit from an authoritative decision on these issues. We offer first “[a] statement of all facts relevant to the questions certified,” before turning to “[t]he questions of law to be аnswered.”
BACKGROUND
I. Factual and Procedural History
From December 2002 to March 2008, Cynthia Raynor worked as a real estate agent for RE/MAX in Washington State. RE/MAX held, on Raynor‘s behalf, a long-term disability (“LTD“) policy (“Policy“) offered by United of Omaha Life Insurance Company (“Omaha“). The Policy was issued in Oregon and is subject to Oregon law. On March 5, 2008, Raynor left RE/MAX for medical reаsons. She then submitted to Omaha a claim for LTD benefits, which Omaha granted in June.
For the next twenty months, Raynor received monthly disability payments without incident or complaint. However, on February 23, 2010, Omaha mailed Raynor a letter informing her that it was reviewing her eligibility for benefits under a new definition of disability. While Raynor‘s eligibility for initial benefits depended only on whether she could not perform “at least one of the Material Duties of [her] Regular Occupation,” her continued eligibility for benefits after two years depended on whether she was “unable to perform all of
The Policy contains а contractual limitation period of three years from “the date written proof of loss is required.” The Policy does not define “proof of loss.” However, in a section entitled “Proof of Loss Requirements,” the Policy specifies that a claim form must be mailed “within 90 days after the end of [the claimant‘s] Elimination Periоd; or as soon as reasonably possible.” That section further states that if a claimant cannot meet the ninety-day deadline, she must provide the claim form no later than a year after the time proof of loss is required.
The parties filed cross-motions for summary judgment on the question whether the Policy‘s three-year contractual limitation period barred Raynor‘s suit. On December 17, 2014, the United States District Court for the Western District of Washington awarded summary judgment to Omaha. The court examined the terms of the Policy and concluded that written proof of loss was required by May 3, 2010, the deadline for Raynor to submit forms and medical records in connection with her claim for continuing loss under the “any Gainful Occupation” standard. Because Raynor did not bring suit within three years of that date, the district court deemed her suit untimely.
The district court also considered Raynor‘s argument that Oregon‘s standard insurance provisions saved her suit from being time-barred. Raynor argued in thе district court that because language in
II. Discussion
A. Oregon Revised Statutes § 742.021
Oregon law requires that “[i]nsurance policies . . . contain such standard or uniform provisions as are required by the applicable provisions of the Insurance Code.”
Omaha seeks shelter under an exception to the aforementioned rule:
[T]he insurer may at its option substitute for one or more of such [standard or uniform] provisions corresponding provisions of different wording approved by the Director of the Department of Consumer and Business Services which are in each instance not less favorable in any respect to the insured or the beneficiary.
Omaha‘s interpretation is not the only possible interpretation of
The Oregon Supreme Court has not yet had occasion to address this question. Although the Oregon Court of Appeals decid
The Oregon legislature has instructed courts to liberally construe the Insurance Cоde, which “is for the protection of the insurance-buying public,” in favor of insureds.
B. Oregon Revised Statutes § 742.038
If the Oregon Insurance Code‘s limitations period governs a Director-approved policy that contains a less favorable limitations term despite the approval of the Director, we must next ask whether the Policy is less favorable to the insured than the standard provisions. In one respect, the Policy does comply with the Insurance Code. Both the Poliсy and the Insurance Code contain a three-year limitations period that runs from the date written proof of loss is required. But if the Policy and the Insurance Code define “date written proof of loss is required” in different ways, the starting point for the limitations period will differ markedly between the two.
Raynor‘s policy does not explicitly set a date by which written proof of loss is required. The section governing an initial claim of benefits requires that the form containing written proof of loss be mailed “within 90 days after the end of [the claimant‘s] Elimination Period; or as soon as reasonably possible.” There is no corresponding “proof of loss” section for when an applicant applies for continuing coverage after receiving two years of monthly payments.
Section
No Oregon appellate court has defined the phrase “period for which the insurer is liable.” Under one reading, which has been adopted by the majority of courts that have considered the question, the phrase refers to the full period during which the claimant is actually disabled. See Oglesby v. Penn Mut. Life Ins. Co., 877 F.Supp. 872, 886 (D. Del. 1994) (cataloging cases and secоndary sources to conclude that the “general weight of authority on this issue” is that “disability insurance claimant need not submit proof of loss until the termination of the period in which the insured was disabled“). Under this reading of
CONCLUSION
We respectfully certify to the Oregon Supreme Court the following questions of Oregon law:
- If the Director of the Department of Consumer and Business Services approves a contractual limitations provision in an insurance policy under
Oregon Revised Statutes § 742.021 , does the language of the policy always control or do the standard provisions of the Oregon Insurance Code apply if the standard provisions are more favorable than the approved insurance policy provision? - If the Oregon standard provisions do apply, when does “the period for which the insurer was liable” under
Oregon Revised Statutes § 743.429 end?
We respectfully ask the Oregon Supreme Court to exercise its discretionary authority under Oregon‘s Uniform Certification of Questions of Law Act to accept and decide these questions. See
The Clerk will file a certified copy of our Order with the Oregon Supreme Court under
IT IS SO ORDERED.
