OPINION
Bоbby Sid Taylor sought this court’s review of a court of appeals’ opinion holding that his bad faith claim against State Farm Mutual Insurance Company (“State Farm”) was barred by the statute of limitations.
See Taylor v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co.,
FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
This is the second appeal to this court arising out of an automobile accident that occurred some nineteen years ago, on April 9, 1977, when Bobby Sid Taylor negligently injured Anne Ring and James Rivers. The facts of that accident are set forth in
Ring v. Taylor,
Taylor was insured by State Farm under a policy carrying a liability limit of $50,000. State Farm designated attorney Hofmann to defend Taylor in the personal injury action. Taylor personally retained attorney Randall, who filed a counterclaim against Ring. Although Ring and Rivers agreed to settle by accepting the policy limit, State Farm refused. The case went to trial, and on March 30, 1981, the jury returned a verdict against Taylor, awarding Rivers and Ring $1.3 million each, and Ring’s husband $21,500 for loss of consortium. These verdicts exceeded Taylor’s liability coverage by more than $2.6 million. Without filing a supersedeas bond or obtaining an order staying execution, State Farm appealed; the court of appeals affirmed the judgment in March 1984, and this court denied review. Id.
While that case was on appeal, Ring attempted to garnish any bad faith claim Taylor might have against State Farm for the latter’s failure tо settle within the policy limits. Because Taylor had not assigned his bad faith action to Ring, the court of appeals dismissed the proceeding and quashed Ring’s writ of garnishment.
Ring v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co.,
On July 17, 1985, Taylor sued State Farm for bad faith based on the excess judgment in favor of Rivers resulting from State Farm’s refusal to settle Rivers’ claim within Taylor’s $50,000 policy limits. On June 17, 1987, a jury returned a verdict in favor of Taylor and against State Farm for $2.1 million compensatory damages and $300,000 in attorneys’ fees. State Farm again appealed, and on September 17,1987, the court of appeals held that Taylor’s claim against State Farm was barred under the terms of a prior release between the parties.
Taylor v. State Farm Mut. Auto Ins. Co.,
No. 1 CA-CV9908 (1991) (mem. dec.).
2
This court vacated that decision on June 10, 1993, holding that “extrinsic evidence supported Taylor’s contention that the release language was not intended to release his bad faith claim,” leaving intact the jury’s verdict in favor of Taylor on the release issue.
Taylor v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co.,
DISCUSSION
A. Are bad faith claims governed by a tort or a contract statute of limitations?
Bad faith actions against insurers usually fall into the category of “first-party” or “third-party” actions, depending on the type of coverage at issue.
Clearwater v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co.,
A cause of action for bad faith refusal to settle was recognized by this court as a valid third-party claim in
Farmers Ins. Exch. v. Henderson,
Although the underlying contract provides the basis for a bad faith action, this court has recognized the insurance carrier’s breach of the duty of good faith as a tort.
Noble v. National Am. Life Ins. Co.,
In
Rawlings,
this court was asked to decide for the first time whether the covenant of good faith and fair dealing in a first-party claim sounded in tort or contract. In constructing the appropriate framework, we noted that the insurance relationship is unique from that of оther contracts because it is “characterized by elements of public interest, adhesion, and fiduciary responsibility.”
in special contractual relationships, when one party intentionally breaches the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing, and when contract rеmedies serve only to encourage such conduct, it is appropriate to permit the damaged party to maintain an action in tort and to recover tort damages.
Id.
at 160,
Taylor acknowledges that,
Rawlings
allowed a first-party bad faith claim to proceed
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in tort but urges that it notes a lack of consensus on the nature of bad faith claims. We recognize the almost even split in jurisdictions regarding which rubric best fits bad faith claims and that bad faith actions contain characteristics of both tort and contract. However, we believe the
Rawlings’
rationale is especially applicable to third-party cases like the one before us because the relationship between the parties, rather than аny express contractual provisions, begets the cause of action.
4
Here, Taylor purchased insurance from State Farm to obtain protection that could exist only if State Farm would in good faith defend any covered claims made against him. By implication, State Farm necessarily had a duty to consider settling.
Henderson, 82
Ariz. at 341,
B. When does a third-party bad faith claim accrue?
The general rule is that a tort claim accrues when a plaintiff knows, or through the exercise of reasonable diligence should know, of the defendant’s wrongful conduct.
Sato v. Van Denburgh,
In
Henderson,
this court examined for the first time the extent of an insurer’s obligation to settle a third-party claim within the policy’s liability limit.
In the present case, the court of appeals misapplied the
Henderson
language. The above quoted language responded to the insurer’s assertion that thе insured had no cause of action until he had in fact paid the judgment. We held only that the insurer could not require the insured to personally pay the underlying judgment to trigger his bad faith action against the insurer.
Henderson, 82
Ariz. at 342,
That is not to say that bad faith accrual is a rare issue. Those jurisdictions that have addressed the issue have held that an insured’s claim for its insurer’s bad faith refus *178 al to settle accrues when the excess judgment in the underlying case becomes final. 5 Neither the court of appeals nor State Farm cites any case to the contrary, and our research has produced none.
Rather, State Farm attempts to exempt Arizona from what aрpears to be the consensus because “[our] bad faith law is based upon the unique relationship between the insured and the insurance company.”
Taylor II,
We believe such a rationale is equally applicable in Arizona, notwithstanding the unique relationship between the insured and insurer expressed in
Rawlings.
The policy underlying thе final judgment rule is clear. First, it is impossible to determine if the insurer acted in bad faith, or the extent of the insured’s damages, until the underlying liability is finally determined.
Lexington Ins. Co. v. Royal Ins. Co.,
As Rivers, amicus in this case, points out, we have used the same rationale to apply a similar accrual date in legal malpractice cases.
Amfac Dist. Corp. v. Miller,
Another policy issue addressed in Amfac involves the impact of the accrual date on the relationship between the lawyer and the client. We adopted the court of appeals’ rationale:
If we were to hold that a cause of action for legal malpractice in litigation accrues at the time of the conduct or initial judgment rather than at the time the damage has become irremedial, a client would constantly be required to second-guess his attorney and would be forced to obtain other legal opinions on the attorney’s handling of the case. Nothing could be more destructive [to] the attorney-client relationship.
Amfac Dist. Corp. v. Miller,
Sound judgment and public policy convince us to follow the final judgment accrual rule. Thus, we hold that a third-party bad faith failure-to-settle claim accrues at the time the underlying action becomes final and non-appealable. Accordingly, Taylor’s bad faith claim against State Farm accrued in 1984, when the excess verdict became final; thus, the 1985 bad faith action was timely filed within the applicable two-year limit.
CONCLUSION
We approve that portion of the court of appeals’ opinion finding that an action for bad faith failure to settle is governed by the two-year statute of limitations period in A.R.S. § 12-542. We vacate that portion of the opinion addressing the claim’s accrual date and hold thаt a third-party bad faith refusal to settle claim does not accrue until such time as the underlying judgment against the insured becomes final or non-appealable. The remaining issues are remanded to the court of appeals for resolution with all appropriate haste considering the many years this case has been before the courts.
This case was argued to and decided by a panel of three justices. See Ariz. Const. Art. VI, § 2.
Notes
. We also granted review to determine if State Farm is estopped from taking а contrary position on the meaning of the policy’s "no action” clause in this appeal, when in a prior appeal it argued
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that the clause precludes adjudication of its liability to Taylor until the underlying judgment had been affirmed on appeal.
Ring v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co.,
. According to the agreement, Taylor released certain claims against State Farm under the policy in exchange for State Farm’s payment of $15,000 to Taylor under his underinsured motorist coverage.
Taylor v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co.,
. The accrual issue was also decided in
Ness,
in which the court of appeals held that the action accrued on the date the insurer intentionally denies the claim.
. Oregon, for example, characterizes a third-party bad faith claim as a tort because it is based on the breach of a fiduciary duty, while the first-party bad faith claim is relegated to the contract arena.
See Employers' Fire Ins. Co. v. Love It Ice Cream Co.,
.
Romano v. American Casualty Co.,
