Opinion
Summary
An independent adjuster engaged by an insurer owes no duty of care to the claimant insured, with whom the adjuster has no contract. The adjuster is not *251 liable in tort to the insured for alleged negligent claims handling which causes only economic loss.
Facts and Proceedings in Trial Court
The relevant facts, which appear from appellant Luis Sanchez’s first amended complaint, and from a status conference memorandum judicially noticed in the trial court, are as follows: Sanchez was engaged in business, transporting commercial machinery, under the fictitious business name LA Machinery Moving. Sanсhez purchased cargo insurance issued by an underwriter at Lloyd’s of London. A commercial dryer was damaged while Sanchez was moving it to Los Angeles. Sanchez made a claim on the cargo policy for repair of the dryer. The damage was capable of rеpair in one week’s time, at a cost of $12,000. Sanchez advised that immediate repairs were needed because the dryer’s purchaser, Five Star Dye House, was suffering business loss. Lloyd’s engaged respondent Lindsey Morden Claims Services, a claims adjuster, to investigate and adjust the loss. Three months passed before the claim was paid and the repairs completed. As a result, the dryer’s purchaser sued and in July 1996 obtained a judgment against Sanchez for $1,325,000.
Sanchez then sued Lloyds for breach of the cargo policy. Sanchez also sought recovery against Morden, on a negligence theory.
Morden demurred, arguing that it had no contract with Sanchez and owed him no duty of care.
The trial court sustained Morden’s demurrer without leave to amend. Sanchez appealed.
Discussion
Whether a duty of care is owed is a legal question, decided by the court.
(Bily
v.
Arthur Young & Co.
(1992)
An early enumeration of the policy concerns governing whether a duty of care should be imposed appears in
Biakanja
v.
Irving, supra,
In the much more recent Bily the Supreme Court conducted an expanded policy analysis. Bily involved a claim against auditors by investors who allegedly purchased stock relying on negligently prepared financial reports. The court held that the auditors owed no duty of care to the investors.
Consistent with
Biakanja,
the
Bily
court first examined the relationship betwеen the defendant auditors’ conduct and the injury, and the blameworthiness of the auditors’ conduct. The court noted that auditors’ clients exert extensive control over both preparation and dissemination of financial reports, and that audit reports entail discretionаry exercises of judgment. Despite these limits on auditor responsibility for the content of financial reports, auditor liability for negligence could be serious: “Although the auditor’s role in the financial reporting process is secondary and the subject of complex profеssional judgment, the liability it faces in a negligence suit by a third party is primary and personal and can be massive.”
(Bily
v.
Arthur Young & Co., supra,
This disproportion between fault and injury, in the court’s view, militated against imposing a duty of care owed from auditors to investors.
Bily also weighed the benefits and costs of a duty оn auditors, concluding that a duty was unlikely to enhance deterrence of auditor mistakes, and probably would cause auditors to withdraw their services from some market segments and to increase their charges for services in other segments. The court concluded that the сosts of imposing a duty outweighed the benefits. (Bily v. Arthur Young & Co., supra, 3 Cal.4th at pp. 404-405.)
The court also stressed the unreliability of foreseeability, in isolation, as a grounds for imposing a duty, especially where the injury is “intangible” rather than physical. (Bily v. Arthur Young & Co., supra, 3 Cal.4th at pp. 398-399.)
Finally, the court cautioned about the limits of judicial policymaking competency, stating: “In view of the nature of the problem, we refrain from
*253
endorsing a broad and amorphous rule of potentially unlimited liability that has been endorsed by only a small minority of decided cases. As we recently stated: ‘In the absence of clear legislative direction . . . wе are unwilling to engage in complex economic regulation under the guise of judicial decision-mating.’ [Citation.].” (
The considerations paramount in Bily likewise argue against imposing a duty of care owed by insurer-retained adjusters 1 to claimants.
Like the auditors, the insurer-retained adjuster is subject to the control of its clients, and must make discretionary judgment calls. The insurer, not the adjuster, has the ultimate power to grant or deny coverage, and to pay the claim, delay paying it, or deny it. Further, while the insurer’s potential liability is circumscribed by the policy limits, and the other conditions, limits and exclusions of the poliсy, the adjuster has no contract with the insured and would face liability without the chance to limit its exposure by contract. Thus the adjuster’s role in the claims process is “secondary,” yet imposing a duty of care could expose him to liability greater than faced by his principаl the insurer.
Imposing a duty also would subject the adjuster to conflicting loyalties. Insurers and insureds often disagree as to coverage or the amount of loss. An adjuster cannot argue both sides of such disputes, any more than a lawyer can represent opposite sides in a lawsuit. An adjuster owes a duty to the insurer who engaged him. A new duty to the insured would conflict with that duty, and interfere with its faithful performance. This is poor policy. (Gay v.
Broder
(1980)
Further, as in Bily, the costs of imposing a duty of care would outweigh the potential benefits.
The deterrent effect of imposing a duty on adjusters is questionable. Adjusters already are deterred from neglect by exposure to liability to the *254 insurer who engaged them, for breach of contract or indemnity. Only some modest additional deterrence, at most, could be expected from imposing a new duty owed directly to insureds.
Imposing a duty also might benefit insureds by providing another source of recovery for injuries caused by negligent claims handling or investigation. However, in most cases this would be redundant, since the insurer also would be liable for unreasonable investigation or claims handling. Thus making the adjuster directly liable to the insured would, again, confer only a marginal additional benefit.
Weighing against these modest potential benefits of imposing a duty would be several substantial costs.
Insurance is a highly uncertain and risky endeavor, because it requires accurate predictions about the occurrence and cost of future events. Insurers are .able to define and limit the risks, and to set premium levels commensurate with the risks, using complex and nuanced contracts (policies). By contrast, adjusters hired by insurers have no contract with insureds, and thus no ability to define or circumscribe their potential risks or liabilities to insureds. If adjusters faced negligence liability to insureds, market forces would tend to drive adjusting activities in-house, where they could be shielded with contractual exclusions, disclaimers, and limitations. Thus, imposing a duty would reducе, perhaps severely, the offering of independent adjuster services. Yet widespread market acceptance has shown these services to be useful and desirable.
Those adjusters continuing to operate independently despite imposition of a new duty оf care would attempt to buy insurance against this liability, or create their own cash reserves, adding these costs to their charges, and passing them on to the insurers who used the adjusters’ services. These insurers, in turn, would add the cost to the premiums charged to insureds. The insureds thus would end up рaying more for insurance without obtaining more value because, as noted above, adjuster liability would provide only a redundant source of the recovery usually available from the insurer.
Imposing a duty would significantly depart from existing law. Until now no California case has held insurers’ adjusters liable to insureds for negligence. Indeed, negligence is not among the theories of recovery generally available against
insurers
(See Croskey et al., Cal. Practice Guide: Insurance Litigation 2 (The Rutter Group 1998) 12:818, 11:205, pp. 12C-6, 11-48 to 11-49, rev. #1, 1996), and further, California courts have refused tо extend
*255
liability for
bad faith,
the predominant insurer tort, to agents and employees of the insurer.
(Egan
v.
Mutual of Omaha Ins. Co.
(1979)
Adjusters doubtless have relied on the existing state of the law, taking no prudent steps to protect against negligence liability. A new rule wоuld defeat their reasonable expectations. While consistency and predictability are not the sole objects of the law, they are important legal values which enable persons and businesses to confidently and productively plan their affairs.
Further, large litigation or transactional costs, and considerable uncertainty, probably would flow from imposition of a new duty. The nature and extent of insurer duties to insureds has been a prolific source of litigation, despite the best efforts of insurers to eliminate litigation-generating issues by drafting complex, flexible, precise policies. Adjuster liability would be an empty slate, upon which the courts would have to write a whole new body of “adjuster liability” law. They would have to do so without the aid of contracts devised by knowledgeable and imaginative private parties to give structure to the risks. Years surely would pass before the new law of “adjuster liability” was to any extent fleshed out and a degree of certainty restored.
In summary, the policy analysis mandated under Biakanja and Bily militates against imposing in California a new duty of care owed by insurer-retained adjusters to insureds.
Our conclusion is also cоnsistent with the general law of agency. An adjuster is an agent hired by a principal, the insurer, to investigate a claim. Agents are not liable to third parties for economic loss: “An agent’s mere failure to perform a duty owed to his principal may render him liable to third persons whо rely on his undertaking where there is physical damage to person or property. (See Rest.2d, Agency, § 354, and Appendix, Rep. Note, p. 587.) But where the effect is merely to cause economic loss, the law does not yet recognize liability to a third person, exceрt where a duty is created by statute. [Citation.]” (2 Witkin, Summary of Cal. Law (9th ed. 1987) Agency and Employment, § 149, pp. 144-145, italics added.)
*256
Our decision is consistent with the majority of cases in other states, which hold that an independent adjuster hired by the insurer owes no duty of care to the insured.
(Velastequi
v.
Exchange Ins. Co.
(1986)
Sanchez relies on cases from Alabama
(Baldwin Mut. Ins. Co.
v.
Brantley
(Ala. 1987)
Thus there is no cogent persuasive authority from other jurisdictions to support imposing a duty.
In addition to the Alaska and Alabama cases, Sanchez relies on several California cases which held that an adjuster could be liable under Insurance Code section 790.03, subdivision (h) for economic injury caused by delay in claim proсessing. However, as appellant concedes, the Supreme Court later held that
no private right of action
lies under that section, thus abrogating the decisions Sanchez relies on.
(Moradi-Shalal
v.
Fireman’s Fund Ins. Companies
(1988)
*257 Disposition
The judgment of the trial court is affirmed. Respondent shall recover its costs on appeal.
Lillie, P. J., and Woods, J., concurred.
Appellant’s petition for review by the Supreme Court was denied July 28, 1999.
Notes
We do not in this opinion address the duties of so-called “public adjusters,” who are retained by insureds or claimants.
