Opinion
This appeal revisits the dispute between Dominick and Denise Tomaselli (Tomasellis) and Transamerica Insurance Company. The dispositive issue is whether an insured, after suing his insurer for failure to pay a claim and recovering a judgment, may again sue if the insurer does not immediately pay the judgment. The trial court concluded such a cause of action could not be asserted. We agree and thus affirm.
1. Facts
We summarily state the relevant facts. 1 In the first lawsuit (hereafter action one) Tomasellis sued Transamerica for refusing to pay a claim they made in 1987 on their homeowners policy. In action one, Tomasellis alleged that failure to pay their claim was both a breach of contract and in bad faith. Tomasellis sought, and the jury awarded, compensatory and punitive damages which encompassed damages for both breach of contract and bad faith. *1769 Part of the award in action one was a $260,000 award for breach of contract damages.
After the verdict was entered in action one, Tomasellis demanded that Transamerica either pay their claim (i.e„ the $260,000 portion of the verdict in action one representing contract benefits) or explain why it would not be paid. Respondents refused. Accordingly, on August 26, 1991, Tomasellis filed this lawsuit (hereafter action two), pleading claims for breach of the implied covenant of good faith, bad faith denial of contract, conspiracy, and intentional infliction of emotional distress. The “wrongful conduct” underlying all of these claims was Transamerica’s refusal either to pay the contract portion of the judgment in action one or to explain why it would not be paid. 2
2. The Demurrer
Respondents demurred to the complaint. Their central argument was that there is no claim in tort for failure to pay a judgment, allowing them to prosecute an appeal from an unfavorable judgment without incurring tort liability. Tomasellis argued they were not seeking to recover for failure to pay the judgment. Instead, they argued, the suit was based on failure to pay their claim, and they urged such a suit was maintainable despite the prior judgment because an ongoing duty of good faith survived entry of the judgment in action one.
The trial court sustained the demurrer without leave to amend, reasoning that postverdict conduct regarding the 1987 claim was not actionable. It alternatively ruled that because the appeal was pending in action one, no claim based on postverdict conduct was ripe.
3. Where An Insured Sues for Breach of Contract and Breach of the Implied Covenant of Good Faith Based on Failure to Pay a Claim, a Judgment in Such Lawsuit Merges All Rights Into That Judgment, and Any Further Rights Are on the Judgment Rather Than on the Original Claim
The current lawsuit seeks recovery based on respondents’ failure to pay the same claim which was the subject of action one. Tomasellis essentially argue that an insured, having recovered both contract and tort damages *1770 for failure to pay the original claim, may generate a new and distinct tort claim merely by renewing demand for payment of the same claim previously adjudicated. Tomasellis’ theory is that the postjudgment refusal to pay constitutes a new, distinct and separately actionable “failure to pay the claim.” 3 We disagree.
When a party recovers a judgment for breach of contract, entry of the judgment absolves the defendant of any further contractual obligations, and the judgment for damages replaces the defendant’s duty to perform the contract.
(Coughlin
v.
Blair
(1953)
Here, Tomasellis held the contractual right to be paid on their 1987 claim. 4 The judgment in action one extinguished that contractual right, the judgment entirely replacing it. Thus, upon entry of that judgment Tomasellis had no further contractual right as “insureds” to payment of their claim, but instead acquired such rights as are accorded a judgment creditor.
We thus evaluate whether Tomasellis can assert a claim for bad faith in their new status as judgment creditors. The answer, as provided by
Coleman
v.
Gulf Ins. Group
(1986)
Tomasellis attempt to sidestep Coleman by arguing they are not seeking damages for malicious appeal or for failure to pay the judgment. Instead, they assert, their lawsuit seeks recovery based on a new breach of the obligation of good faith and fair dealing. They identify this “new breach” as the bad faith refusal to pay their claim after judgment was entered in action one. The predicate to this argument is Tomasellis’ contention that Transamerica’s obligation of good faith and fair dealing continued after entry of the judgment, since without such a duty there is nothing to be breached.
We reject Tomasellis’ argument of a “continuing duty,” because the obligation of “good faith” conduct does not exist independent of an express contractual obligation, but must be appurtenant to express contractual duties. In that the express contractual duty no longer exists here, having been merged into the judgment, the auxiliary implied covenant evaporates. In
Racine & Laramie, Ltd.
v.
Department of Parks & Recreation
(1992)
Tomasellis cite no relevant authority to suggest that the insurer’s obligations of good faith survive even though the express contractual duty to pay their claim has been transformed from a contract right into a judgment. Tomasellis’ position appears to be based entirely on language from
White
v.
Western Title Ins. Co.
(1985)
At bottom, Tomasellis argue that good faith obligations can be breached even though there are no surviving express contractual obligations owed by the insurer. In
Love
v.
Fire Ins. Exchange, supra,
4. Tomasellis’ Remaining Claims Also Fail
Tomasellis pleaded a count for intentional infliction of emotional distress. This count adds nothing to their complaint. In
California Physicians’ Service
v.
Superior Court
(1992)
Since Transamerica had no obligation to pay the judgment, its refusal to do so was not actionable, even though Tomasellis may well be distressed by the delays attendant to the appellate process.
Also without merit is Tomasellis’ count for “bad faith denial of contract” (under
Seaman’s Direct Buying Service, Inc.
v.
Standard Oil Co.
(1984)
5. Sanctions Against Tomasellis Are Denied
Respondents request sanctions, arguing Tomasellis’ appeal is frivolous under
In re Marriage of Flaherty, supra,
The second strand of
Flaherty
is objective: Was the appeal so indisputably without merit that any reasonable attorney would agree it was totally devoid of merit?
(In re Marriage of Flaherty, supra,
Sanctions should be used sparingly, and should not be used to deter attorneys from pressing arguable claims.
(In re Marriage of Flaherty, supra,
31 Cal.3d at pp. 650-651.) Since Tomasellis’ appeal presents a question of first impression under
White,
we will deny sanctions.
(In re Marriage of Levingston
(1993)
Disposition
The judgment is affirmed. Respondents’ motion for sanctions is denied. Respondents are entitled to recover costs on appeal.
Work, Acting P. J., and Benke, J., concurred.
Appellants’ petition for review by the Supreme Court was denied September 8, 1994. Mosk, J., was of the opinion that the petition should be granted.
Notes
On appeal from an order sustaining a demurrer without leave to amend, we accept as true all properly pleaded factual allegations
(Blank
v.
Kirwan
(1985)
Respondents to date have not paid the judgment. At the time action two was filed, execution on the judgment had been stayed by court order. Transamerica thereafter timely appealed action one and posted the required bonds to stay execution on that judgment pending appeal.
It is unnecessary to decide the distinct issue of which tort claims might have been viable had action one been limited to a breach of contract claim without joinder of the claim for breach of the implied covenant.
{General Ins. Co.
v.
Mammoth Vista Owners’ Assn.
(1985)
We of course recognize that the obligations owed by an insurer arising from its contract are broader than those ordinarily owed by contracting parties. The failure to pay benefits owed under a policy is both a breach of contract, entitling the insured to contractual damages, and a potentially tortious breach of the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing.
(Gruenberg
v.
Aetna Ins. Co.
(1973)
We recognize that
Coleman
evaluated the issue in a third party context, and declined to decide whether the same rule might apply to first party claimants (41 Cal.3d at pp. 794-795), such as Tomasellis. We nevertheless perceive
Coleman
as controlling.
Coleman
was decided in an era when third parties had “Royal Globe” rights to assert bad faith.
Coleman
specifically
*1771
examined whether a failure to pay a judgment would be actionable as a violation of Insurance Code section 790.03, subdivision (h)(5), which requires an insurer to attempt “in good faith to effectuate prompt, fair, and equitable settlements of claims in which liability has become reasonably clear.”
(Coleman
v.
Gulf Ins. Group, supra,
at p. 795.) Here, Tomasellis’ “bad faith” claim rests on the common law analogue to Insurance Code section 790.03, subdivision(h)(5).
(Kelly
v.
Farmers Ins. Exchange
(1987)
