OPINION AND ORDER
This diversity action raises several novel and interesting insurance law issues. It arises from an insured’s allegation that its insurer both failed to defend it from claims of breach and to indemnify it for a settlement within the policy’s aggregate limit. The insured also has sued the insurer’s claims administrator. The relationships of *267 the parties gives the case the interesting twist: the insurer is a captive of the insured and the claims administrator is also one of the reinsurers under the policy. The claims administrator has moved to dismiss all counts against it (Counts IV through VI). The questions before the Court are whether an independent claims administrator can be liable to an insured for bad faith claims handling (Count IV), tortious interference with contractual relations (Count V), or negligence (Count VI). For the reasons set forth below, the Court finds that the insured can maintain the bad faith and tortious interference claims, but not the negligence claim.
I. BACKGROUND
Under the familiar Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6) rubric, the Court accepts as true the factual allegations in the complaint and draws all reasonable inferences in the plaintiffs’ favor.
Educadores Puertorriquenos en Accion v. Hernandez,
Robertson Stephens, Inc. (“RSI”) is an investment and securities firm that is wholly owned by Robertson Stephens Groups, Inc. (“RSGI”), a holding company. Bank of America Corporation is successor-in-interest to FleetBoston Financial Corporation (collectively, “Fleet” or “Plaintiffs”), and wholly owns RSGI. FFG Insurance Co., Ltd. (“FFG”) was, 1 at all times relevant to this case, a captive insurance company (“captive”) of Fleet. 2 Federal Insurance Company (“Federal” or “Defendant”) is FFG’s claims administrator and, by a separate agreement, one of the rein-surers of coverage. 3
Three documents define the relationships among the parties to this dispute. The first is the “Combined Risk Protection Program” (the “Policy”), which is a primary insurance policy FFG issued to its owner, Fleet. The Policy provides coverage to Fleet and its subsidiaries, including RSI, against certain losses. For example, § 6, entitled “Employment Practices Liability,” requires FFG to “pay on behalf of the Insureds all Loss for which the Insured becomes legally obligated to pay on account of any Claim first made against the Insured during the Policy Period,” (Policy § 6-1), and to “defend against any Claim covered by this Policy.” (Id. § 6-6.) Coverage, however, was subject to a *268 lengthy list of exclusions, (id. § 6-3), and required that “the Insureds shall, as a condition precedent to exercising their rights under this Policy, give to the Company written notice of any Claim made against any of them for a Wrongful Act after any Insured determines it is reasonably possible that Loss on account of such Claim will meet or exceed $5,000,000.” (Id. § 6-7.) The Policy maintains a $100 million aggregate limit, with a $10 million per-loss/claim retention amount.
The second is the “Claims Administration Agreement” (“Administration Agreement”) between FFG and Federal. The Administration Agreement delegates to Federal the authority “to receive, review and evaluate any Claims” brought under the Policy, (Administration Agreement § 2(A)), and “to interpret [Policy] language, make [Policy] coverage decisions, and to settle covered Claims for any amount up to the [Policy] limits.” (Id. § 2(C).) Although Federal’s authority “to deny, negotiate, adjust or settle” claims was contingent on FFG’s express written permission, (id. § 2(A)), seemingly conflicting language indicates that “[a]ll decisions with respect to the ultimate disposition of a Claim ... shall be made by [Federal].” (Id. § 2E.) In the end analysis, however, FFG is “solely liable for the payments of all Claim amounts.” (Id. § 6(3).)
The third and final document is a “Certificate of Facultative Casualty Reinsurance” (“Reinsurance Agreement”) that Federal entered into with FFG. Under the terms of the Reinsurance Agreement, Federal became (in addition to the claims administrator under the Administration Agreement) one of the reinsurers of coverage under the Policy, obligated to provide a quota share of 30% of the $100 million reinsurance limit of liability. 4
The events that put these documents in play began in July 2002 when RSI announced that it would cease its broker-dealer operations and begin winding down. Eleven months later, several RSI executives served on Fleet a written demand, enclosing a draft civil complaint seeking damages, indemnity, and penalties arising from RSI and Fleet’s alleged breach of their employment agreements, and a draft demand for arbitration of their claims. Shortly thereafter, Fleet filed a claim with FFG, requesting defense and indemnification for itself and RSI. Fleet also forwarded to FFG a copy of the demand letter, draft civil complaint, and draft arbitration demand.
When neither Federal nor FFG responded to their claim, Plaintiffs began to negotiate a settlement with the aggrieved RSI executives in September 2003. Negotiations continued into December 2003, when Federal, mistakenly relying on a scrivener’s error in the Policy, informed Fleet orally that its claims were not covered. Soon thereafter, Plaintiffs reached a settlement within the aggregate limit of the Policy, telling FFG on January 9, 2004. Federal finally responded in writing to Fleet’s claim on February 24, 2004, acknowledging apologetically that the executives’ claims were covered and asserting that it would further investigate the claims and possible defenses. However, because FFG did not reimburse Plaintiffs for defense costs or the settlement payment, Plaintiffs filed this action. Federal then *269 moved to dismiss, pursuant to Rule 12(b)(6).
II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
If the allegations in the complaint, under any theory, are sufficient to state a cause of action, this Court must deny the motion to dismiss.
Vartanian v. Monsanto Co.,
III. CHOICE OF LAW
Before the viability of Plaintiffs’ claims may be addressed, the Court must first resolve the parties’ choice-of-law dispute. Federal makes a pitch for the application of California law, arguing that “the alleged ‘injury’ to RSI and/or Fleet resulting from Federal’s alleged conduct occurred either in California, where RSI is located, or Rhode Island, where Fleet is located.” More to the point, Federal claims that the application of California law is dispositive because California courts do not recognize Plaintiffs causes of action. Rhode Island courts have not addressed these questions, so Federal wishes, quite understandably, to avoid its uncertain waters. However, .because Federal believes that the ultimate resolution of the case would be identical under the law of either state, Federal contends that the Court need not determine which law applies.
See Fratus v. Republic
W.
Ins. Co.,
As a preliminary matter, Federal’s suggestion that this Court should bypass the choice-of-law question must be rejected. The principle that a court may eschew a choice of law is grounded in the pragmatic notion that federal courts, sitting in diversity, should do no more than is necessary to decide a case.
See, e.g., Pediatricians, Inc. v. Provident Life & Accident Ins. Co.,
To determine what law governs Plaintiffs’ tort claims, this Court employs Rhode Island’s choice-of-law principles.
See Fashion House,
An examination of these factors compels the Court to apply Rhode Island law. The insured, Fleet, was incorporated in Rhode Island, which was at all relevant times its principal place of business and corporate home; RSI was incorporated in Massachusetts, and its principal place of business (at least at one time) was in California, 5 but all the communications surrounding the insurance claim — the subject of the present dispute — occurred in Fleet’s Rhode Island office. Without question, Rhode Island has a substantial interest in protecting its resident insureds from injuries that occur within its borders. Because this interest outweighs any that California can bring to bear, the Court finds that the law of Rhode Island should apply.
IV. DISCUSSION
A. Bad Faith, Claims Handling
Federal directs its first salvo against Plaintiffs’ allegation that Federal violated its duty of good faith to review, analyze, and act on any and all claims by delaying its response and refusing to defend. Federal argues that R.I. Gen. Laws § 9-1-33(a), the authority Plaintiffs invoke in the complaint, only authorizes claims against the insurer that actually issued the policy in question, in this case, FFG. Plaintiffs respond by pointing out that the Unfair Claims Settlement Practices Act, R.I. Gen. Laws § 27-9.1-2(3), includes administrators in its definition of insurers. Nevertheless, Plaintiffs argue in the alternative that they may still proceed against Federal under the common law tort of bad faith.
A plain reading of § 9-l-33(a), entitled “Insurer’s bad faith refusal to pay a claim made under any insurance policy,” reveals that this statutory cause of action is restricted to insurers that actually issue the policies to insureds. The statute in pertinent part provides:
Notwithstanding any law to the contrary, an insured under any insurance policy as set out in the general laws or otherwise may bring an action against the insurer issuing the policy when it is alleged the insurer wrongfully and in bad faith refused to pay or settle a claim made pursuant to the provisions of the policy, or otherwise wrongfully and in bad faith refused to timely perform its obligations under the contract of insurance.
§ 9-1-33(a) (emphasis added). Although the Rhode Island Supreme Court has not addressed this question directly, it has balked at attempts to broaden § 9-1-33(a)’s cause of action beyond what the statute explicitly provides.
See, e.g., Richard v. Blue Cross & Blue Shield,
604 A.2d
*271
1260, 1262 (R.I.1992) (holding that healthcare provider was not an insurer within the meaning of § 9-1-33);
LeFranc v. Amica Mut Ins. Co.,
It is true that § 27-9.1-2(3) defines “insurer” as, among other things, “adjusters and third party administrators,” at least as the term is used in Rhode Island’s Unfair Claims Settlement Practices Act.
See also
R.I. Gen. Laws § 27-29-2(4) (similarly defining “insurer” within the strictures of unfair competition); R.I. Gen. Laws § 27-61-2(6) (same, but under Rhode Island’s Unfair Discrimination Against Subjects of Abuse in Life Insurance Act). This seems odd in light of § 9-1-33(a)’s language because third-party administrators, by definition, do not issue primary insurance policies (at least to the insured under the policy they are administrating). Insofar as § 27-9.1-2(3) conflicts with § 9-1-33(a), however, it is not for this Court, sitting in diversity, to rectify that conflict. Rather, this Court is bound to Rhode Island’s long-applied “canon of statutory interpretation which gives effect to all of a statute’s provisions, with no sentence, clause or word construed as unmeaning or surplus-age.”
Ruggiero v. City of Providence,
Notwithstanding this conclusion, Plaintiffs argue that they can proceed against Federal at common law; specifically, on a claim for bad faith enunciated in
Bibeault v. Hanover Ins. Co.,
Federal touts
Borden v. The Paul Revere Life Ins. Co.,
Federal’s second argument is more quickly dispatched. Although Plaintiffs cite only § 9-l-33(a) in Count IV of the complaint, and make no express reference to its common law counterpart, the allegations themselves tell a story of bad faith that cannot be ignored in light of the liberal (and practical) construction that the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure demand. And as a practical matter, even if this count were dismissed, Plaintiffs would simply refile with a new caption, putting the case right back where it started.
See
Fed. R.Civ.P. 8(f) (district courts are to construe pleadings so “as to do substantial justice”);
Dopp v. HTP, Corp.,
The question then becomes whether Plaintiffs nevertheless can succeed on their common law claim.
Bibeault
yields little in the way of guidance as the opinion does not comment one way or the other on the potential liability of an insurer’s independent administrator. On this score, Federal makes far too much of the
Bibeault
Court’s citation to
Gruenberg v. Aetna Ins. Co.,
Federal’s more intriguing argument is that, because the common law tort of bad faith is based upon an insured’s contractual relationship with its insurer, “there can be no cause of action for an insurer’s badfaith refusal to pay a claim until the insured first establishes that the insurer breached its duty under the contract of insurance.”
Bartlett v. John Hancock Mut. Life Ins. Co.,
Several analogous cases outside of this jurisdiction indicate that this is the better reasoned approach.
In
Wolf v. Prudential Ins. Co. of Am.
As payment for administering the plans, Prudential [the administrator] received a percentage of the premiums paid to the Annuity Board for participant coverage. As losses decreased, Prudential’s share of the premiums increased. Additionally, under the stop-loss provision of its agreements with the Board, when losses reached a certain level, Prudential shared the risk with the Board; when losses got even higher, Prudential underwrote the entire risk.
Id.
at 798. On these facts, the Tenth Circuit opined that the administrator was hardly the “stranger” to the insurance contract that it purported to be. Instead, the Tenth Circuit predicted (correctly) that the Oklahoma Supreme Court would, under similar circumstances, agree.
See Wathor v. Mut. Assurance Adm’rs, Inc.,
*274
More recently, in
Cary v. United of Omaha Life Ins. Co.,
The circumstances at bar present an even stronger case for requiring an administrator in Federal’s position to handle claims in good faith. FFG, a captive, entered into the Administration Agreement with Federal, to whom it delegated the primary control of the claims-handling process. This included the authority “to receive, review and evaluate any Claims” brought under the Policy, (Administration Agreement § 2(A)), and “to interpret [Policy] language, make [Policy] coverage decisions, and to settle covered Claims for any amount up to the [Policy] limits.”
(Id.
§ 2(C).) In a sense, FFG “controlled” Federal’s authority by requiring express written authority before Federal could deny, negotiate, adjust, or settle a claim,
(id.
§ 2(A)), but the “ultimate disposition” of claims was nevertheless Federal’s call to make.
(Id.
§ 2(E));
see Dellaira v. Farmers Ins. Exch.,
It goes without saying that this case differs from those cases, relied upon by Federal, that involve insurance adjusters with little to moderate control over the claims-handling process and no financial incentive to deny or limit claims.
See, e.g., Gruenberg,
B. Tortious Interference with Contractual Relations
Federal next attacks, on the basis of “legal impossibility,” the allegation that it intentionally and wrongfully interfered with the insurance contract between Fleet and FFG. Federal explains that, when an agent acts within the scope of its authority, the agent and its principal are considered the “same entity.”
Cf. DeBreceni v. Graf Bros. Leasing, Inc.,
However correct in the abstract, Federal’s argument fails because Plaintiffs have not conceded that Federal acted within the scope of its authority in handling (or mishandling) their claims; in fact, Plaintiffs allege the opposite. Federal harps on ¶ 25 of the complaint, which alleges the following: “[a]t all relevant times [Federal] acted as the agent of FFG in handling and otherwise administering the claims brought by Fleet under the Insurance Policy.” Read in the light most favorable to Plaintiffs, however, this alleges nothing more than Federal’s status as an agent of FFG. The preceding allegation in ¶ 24, repeated and realleged under Count V in ¶83, supports this construction. After briefly discussing Federal’s obligations under the Reinsurance Agreement, ¶ 24 alleges that “[Federal] breached its duties under the Claims Administration Agreement because it was acting in its interests as a reinsurer, attempting to avoid coverage, rather than as a neutral, objective claims handler.” Moreover, in ¶ 84, Plaintiffs allege that Federal “put its own interest ahead of those” of FFG, and, in ¶¶ 85-87, that Federal failed adequately to inform FFG of the status of Plaintiffs’ claim.
These allegations are sufficient to undercut Federal’s premise. In a somewhat different context, the Rhode Island Supreme Court appears to have adopted this view. In
Jolicoeur Furniture Co., Inc. v. Baldelli
Jolicoeur
contemplates that an insurance administrator could, under appropriate circumstances, illicitly interfere with the contract of its principal. Like any other agent, an administrator could accomplish this feat by acting beyond the scope of its authority.
See Kennett v. Marquis,
C. Negligence
As its final argument, Federal contends that independent administrators do not owe insureds a duty of reasonable care, and therefore cannot be sued in negligence. Federal chiefly relies on
Cardente v. Maggiacomo Ins. Agency, Inc.,
A quintessential element of Rhode Island tort law is that “[a] defendant cannot be liable under a negligence theory unless the defendant owes a duty to the plaintiff.”
Benaski v. Weinberg,
Federal’s reliance on
Cárdente
(at least at this juncture) is misplaced for reasons previously discussed. The insureds in
Cárdente
operated lumberyards at various locations in Rhode Island and, for several years, had procured coverage through insurance agents, who delivered the policies and received the premiums on behalf of the carriers.
Forte Bros.
requires more discussion. There, defendant National Amusements, Inc. (“National”) hired plaintiff Forte Bros., Inc. (“Forte”) to perform excavation and grading work for the construction of a movie theater.
By recognizing an independent duty in tort,
Forte Bros,
represents an exception to the general rule propounded in Car-
*278
dente. Kennett,
But Rhode Island courts have been reluctant to extend
Forte Bros,
beyond the ehainlink fences of a construction site.
8
See, e.g., Kennett,
Rhode Island’s subsequent adoption of the economic-loss rule, which gen
*279
erally precludes the recovery of purely financial or economic losses in negligence, further distances the holding in
Forte Bros,
from this case. The court’s opinion in
Burman
is instructive on this point. In
Burman,
an investment company purchased a recently-erected commercial office building through a written purchase- and-sales agreement with no express warranties concerning its condition.
The Justices responded in the negative. The court began by recognizing that “the duty that sellers owe to subsequent purchasers is established primarily through contracts between the parties who theoretically reach an arms-length agreement on the sale price that reflects the true value of the land.”
Id.
at 517 (quoting
Hydro-Mfg., Inc. v. Kayser-Roth Corp.,
Burman’s
logic carries over to the present case. To procure insurance coverage, Fleet, a sophisticated corporate entity, entered into a complicated insurance arrangement with its captive FFG, which it controlled. Fleet was in a position of strength to define the scope of its coverage by negotiating for favorable (or at least acceptable) terms, to which both parties became bound in the Policy. Fleet could thus (and did) protect itself in contract from the financial consequences of certain events, such as the settlement costs associated with the underlying employment dispute in this case.
9
A dispute arising out of a claim for coverage (a purely economic loss) would then be governed by the Policy and its accompanying implied obligations of good faith and fair dealing.
See Bur-man,
The majority of jurisdictions that have visited this question have concluded similarly, although these cases typically involve adjusters with a lesser degree of control over the claims-handling process than displayed in the case at bar.
See, e.g., Hamill v. Pawtucket Mut. Ins. Co.,
This writer is not entirely unsympathetic to Plaintiffs’ call to augment in law the obligations of independent administrators like Federal, but Rhode Island precedents and the majority approach must stay the Court’s hand.
11
The Rhode Island Supreme Court is perfectly capable of pioneering new frontiers in the law of
*281
negligence on its own, and is in a better position to do so. This Court remains mindful that, as a federal court sitting in diversity, its “function is not to formulate a tenet which [it], as [a] free agent[], might think wise, but to ascertain, as best [it] can, the rule that the state’s highest tribunal would likely follow.”
Kathios v. Gen. Motors Corp.,
V. CONCLUSION
For all the foregoing reasons, Federal’s Motion to Dismiss is GRANTED in part and DENIED in part. Count VI (negligence) is DISMISSED; Count IV (bad faith claims handling) and Count V (tor-tious interference with contractual relations) state claims upon which relief can be granted.
It is so ordered.
Notes
. Bullfinch Indemnity Company, Inc. is a named defendant and successor-in-interest to FFG, but is not implicated directly in this motion. For ease of reference, the Court shall refer to FFG exclusively.
. A captive is a wholly-owned subsidiary that insures some or all of the risks of its parent, and, generally, is not otherwise involved in the insurance business. Parents create and insure through captives often to avail themselves of a tax deduction for the amount of premiums paid, which they would not be able to deduct if they simply self-insured, for example. See generally 3 Couch on Insurance § 39:2 (Lee R. Russ ed., 3d ed.2006).
.The complaint also named as defendants The Chubb Corporation ("Chubb”) and Chubb & Son, Inc. ("Chubb & Son”). However, based on the representation that neither Chubb (Federal's parent) nor Chubb & Son (an unincorporated division of Federal) is party to the agreements at issue in this case, the parties entered into a tolling agreement, in December 2005, dismissing without prejudice all claims against them.
. Captives typically buy reinsurance as a risk-spreading mechanism.
See In re Petition of the Bd. of Dirs. of Hopewell Int’l Ins., Ltd.,
. RSI's principal place of business is not entirely clear. Paragraph 3 of the complaint names San Francisco, but Plaintiffs’ opposition memorandum notes that RSI had ceased doing business in California by the time of the underlying employment dispute and, more importantly, the subsequent insurance claim spawning from that dispute. Federal takes issue with the absence of such an allegation in the complaint. To the extent that a factual dispute over RSI's principal place of business exists in the first place, it does not preclude a choice of law at this stage because the alleged "injury” occurred in Rhode Island — the most important factor in Rhode Island’s interest-weighing approach.
. Other courts have reached the same result under principles of joint venture.
See Albert H. Wohlers & Co. v. Bartgis,
. The opinion does not specify whether the transferred and subsequently damaged "contents” were lumber or some other material.
. Interestingly, this reluctance appears to extend even within the construction context.
See Lutz Eng’g Co., Inc. v. Indus. Louvers, Inc.,
. This sets the present case apart from
Rousseau,
. It is unclear whether, under Rhode Island law, the economic-loss rule would extend to service providers, such as insurers and their agents. Some jurisdictions have held that it does not.
See, e.g., Ins. Co. of N. Am. v. Cease Elec. Inc.,
. Plaintiffs are not without redress, however, for they may proceed against Federal on their claims of bad faith and tortious interference, as previously discussed. Of course, these findings are not consolation prizes in light of the Court’s holding with respect to negligence, but reminders that Federal’s status as *281 an independent administrator alone does not insulate it from all species of direct liability.
