MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
Plаintiff Jay Vanderloop, a Colorado resident, commenced this negligence and bad faith action against the defendant Progressive Casualty Insurance Company (Progressive), an Ohio corporation. Asserting that the plaintiff’s claims and action are time barred, the defendant has moved for summary judgment. Plaintiff has responded by opposing the motion.
The parties hаve fully briefed the issues and oral argument would not materially facilitate decision. Diversity jurisdiction exists under 28 U.S.C. § 1332.
I. Facts.
In July 1983, Vanderloop was involved in a ear accident with Freeland H. Mattison. Vanderlоop was insured by Progressive, but the policy, as modified by Colorado law, provided only $25,000 coverage.
Mattison later commenced a negligence action in state court against Vanderloop. In June 1984, Mattison’s attorney demanded that Progressive pay its policy limits. Progressive refused.
In a letter to his client mailed February 1, 1985, Progressive’s attorney Thomas J. Barton vаlued Mattison’s claim at $10,000 to $20,000. (Plaintiff’s brief, Ex. 3). In April 1986, Progressive filed an offer of judgment for $4,000. Id., Ex. 5. In 1986, about four weeks before trial, Barton reevaluated the claim, this time assigning it a value of $18,000. Id., Ex. 4.
At trial, the court dirеcted a verdict for the plaintiff Mattison on liability. On January 7, 1987, the jury returned a verdict against Vanderloop for $150,000. Progressive paid the $25,000 owed under its policy into the court’s registry, and immediatеly filed an appeal. On December 1, 1988, the Colorado Court of Appeals affirmed.
Plaintiff commenced this action on January 31, 1990, asserting that Progressive’s bad faith in failing to settle the stаte court action exposed him to an excess liability judgment.
II. Analysis.
Summary judgment is proper if the pleadings, depositions and affidavits, if any, demonstrate that there is no genuine issue of materiаl fact and that the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.
Celotex Corp. v. Catrett,
Plaintiff’s negligence and bad faith claims, both sounding in tort, are governed by Colo.Rev.Stat. § 13-80-102(l)(a),
1
The key question here is when the bad faith claim ripened into a viable cause of action to start the stаtute of limitations’ running. Citing various communications between Mattison and Vanderloop, (see defendant’s brief, p. 6-7), Progressive asserts that the plaintiff had actual knowledge of his bad faith claim as early as May 19, 1987, and no later than June 20 that year. Because this lawsuit was not commenced until January 31, 1990, Progressive argues, the action is barred by Colorado’s two year statute governing torts. Id.
Plаintiff counters that the bad faith action did not accrue until December 1, 1988, the day the Colorado Court of Appeals rendered final judgment in the underlying negligence case, and that suit was timеly filed less than two years later.
In
Torrez v. State Farm Mutual Automobile Ins. Co.,
Defendant in the subsequent bad faith suit assertеd that the claim was time barred because the alleged wrongful conduct — failure to settle within policy limits— had occurred before the verdict in the state trial was rendered and morе than four years prior to the date the bad faith action was commenced. Id. at 1202.
The Tenth Circuit rejected the defense argument, however, holding that the action had not accruеd, and the applicable four-year New Mexico statute of limitations had not commenced running:
“until the [trial court’s] judgment was final____ Only then could [the defendant’s] right against State Farm for exposing the [defendant’s] estate to excess liability be perfected and assigned. It was only then that the excess liability was established.” Torrez,705 F.2d at 1202 (citing Ginn v. State Farm Automobile Ins. Co.,417 F.2d 119 , 122 (5th Cir.1969)).
Citing
Farmers Group, Inc. v. Trimble,
While the deсlaratory judgment action was pending, the underlying negligence action was settled. The district court thereafter dismissed the insured’s counterclaims in the declaratory judgment action for fаilure to state a claim. Id. at 1139. The Colorado Court of Appeals reversed, and the insurer appealed.
The sole question before the Colorado Supreme Court was “whether evidence of intentional conduct is necessary to establish the tort of bad faith breach of an insurance contract.”
Id.
at 1139. Affirming the Court of Appeals’ decision, the Colоrado Supreme Court stated that “the standard applicable to establish the tort of bad faith remains one of reasonableness under the circumstances.”
Id.
at 1142. Consistent with that standard, the Court rejected the insurer’s contention that absent actual exposure of an insured to a judgment in excess of policy limits, there can be no
Contrary to Progressive’s assertion here,
Torrez,
Here the state trial court entered its judgment in the underlying negligence action on January 7, 1987. Progressive immediаtely appealed. While the plaintiff may have been aware in January 1987 that he potentially might have a bad faith claim against Progressive, it is obvious that he did not then know whether in fact he had sufferеd or would suffer any tort injury entitling him to damages. The Tenth Circuit’s holding in Torrez that a final judgment establishing an insured’s liability for an amount in excess of coverage constitutes the accrual date of a bad fаith action predicated on the insurer’s failure to settle the underlying tort action governs this case.
That view reflects the basic elements necessary to state any tort claim: (1) а duty, (2) breach of the duty, and (3) injury caused by the breach. When, as here, the economic injury alleged is the actual imposition of an excess liability judgment on the insured, the harm or damages еlement of the bad faith tort claim necessarily remains uncertain and speculative until final judgment on appeal either establishes that exposure or dissolves any liability. The tort simply is not complete until the plaintiff’s injury is established.
Under Colo.Rev.Stat. § 13-80-102, the plaintiff’s right to proceed against Progressive accrued when the injury became known. On December 1, 1988, the Colorado Court of Apрeals rendered final judgment on the underlying negligence action thus establishing the instant plaintiff’s liability for a judgment exceeding coverage. Progressive defies both law and logic in arguing that this bad faith action should have been brought earlier. Plaintiff could not earlier have asserted, within the bounds of Fed.R.Civ.P. 11, that Progressive’s conduct had created a justiciable controversy by actually exposing him to an excess liability judgment.
I conclude that, under the circumstances here presented, the action asserting insurance company bad faith failure to settle resulting in an excess liability judgment against the insured accrued when excess liability ultimately was established. I further conclude that excess liability was not established, and the controlling statute of limitatiоns therefore did not commence running, until judgment on appeal became final. It follows that the instant action accrued on December 1, 1988, and was timely filed less than two years later on January 31, 1990.
Accordingly, IT IS ORDERED that:
(1) the defendant’s motion for summary judgment is denied; and
(2) the parties and their counsel are ordered to meet and confer within eleven days of this order in a good faith attemрt to settle the case without further litigation, expense or delay. The parties shall report to this court in writing within fifteen days of this order, stating the results of their settlement negotiations and whether a settlement conference before a Magistrate Judge, or some other alternative dispute resolution proceeding, would facilitate settlement.
Notes
. Plaintiff asserts that a six-year limitations period, in effect prior to 1986, is applicable. (Plaintiffs brief, p. 5). Because I conclude that the
