Case Information
*1 Before COX, BLACK and RONEY, Circuit Judges.
PER CURIAM:
This is an appeal from a decision of the district court in
Talat Enterprises, Inc., v. Aetna Cas. & Sur.
Co.,
Magistrate Judge James G. Glazebrook, sitting as the district court by consent of the parties, had granted summary judgment to the defendant Aetna on the ground that when it paid all of the amounts that were owed under the terms of the insurance policy within 60 days of receiving a notice of a bad faith claim, it had corrected "the circumstances giving rise to the" bad faith claim, so that no action lay for bad-faith non-contractual damages. We certified the question as to whether, in addition to contractual damages, an insurance company had to pay "bad faith" damages in order to escape liability under the policy under § 624.155(2)(a) & (d), Fla. Stat.(1995)(as a condition precedent to suit, claimant must give sixty days written notice of the good faith violation to the insurer and the Department of Insurance. "No action shall lie if, within 60 days after filing notice, the damages are paid or the circumstances giving rise to the violation are corrected.")
We certified the following question to the Supreme Court of Florida: If an insured suffered extra-contractual damages prior to giving its insurer written notice of a bad *2 faith violation and the insurer paid all contractual damages, but none of the extra-contractual damages, within sixty days after the written notice was filed, has the insurer paid "the damages" or corrected "the circumstances giving rise to the violation," as those terms are contemplated by Florida Statute § 624.155(2)(d), thereby precluding the insured's first-party bad faith action to recover the extra-contractual damages.
The Florida Supreme Court has now answered the certified question in the affirmative, concluding
that the "statutory cause of action for extra-contractual damages simply never comes into existence until
expiration of the sixty-day window without the payment of the damages owed under the contract."
Talat
Enterprises, Inc., v. Aetna Cas. & Sur. Co.,
In an extensive opinion, the Court said: "We find United States Magistrate Judge Glazebrook's analysis of this issue to be correct." Thus, the summary judgment for Aetna, based on that analysis, is
AFFIRMED.
