Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge SILBERMAN.
Following a personal injury claim filed against Windell Speed by Vernon Gray, a pedestrian Speed hit while driving his car,
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Grain Dealers Mutual Insurance Company breached its duty to settle on behalf of its insured, Speed. In doing so, Grain Dealers exposed itself to liability in excess of Speed’s policy limits for consequential damages resulting from its breach. Speed assigned to Gray Speed’s chose in action against Grain Dealers in exchange for Gray’s release of Speed from liability to pay a default judgment of $334,000 entered against him. The district court awarded Gray $334,000,
I.
This case comes to us primarily on stipulated facts. The district court, however, made certain findings, apparently not in dispute, which supplement the stipulations. In 1985, Grain Dealers Mutual Insurance Company, an Indiana corporation, issued an automobile liability insurance policy to Win-dell Speed, then a North Carolina resident. The contract, mailed to Speed at his North Carolina address, lists a North Carolina agent for Grain Dealers. Subsequently, Speed moved to Washington, D.C. and in August 1985, while driving his ear in Washington, D.C., struck and seriously injured Vernon Gray, a pedestrian. Speed timely reported the accident to Grain Dealers, which referred Speed to its agent in Northern Virginia, R.W. Parker. In September 1985, Gray filed suit against Speed seeking $2 million in damages. The insurance contract included a standard “duty-to-defend clause” obligating the insurer to provide legal counsel to defend or settle on behalf of Speed in the event of a lawsuit arising out of an insured risk. Speed accordingly mailed the complaint to Parker who assured Speed that he would take care of the lawsuit. Gray’s attorney made several attempts to contact Parker and discuss settlement of the case. In a letter dated January 7, 1986, Gray’s attorney offered to settle the case for $25,000 — the policy limit. Parker did not respond to the letter.
In light of Parker’s silence, Gray’s attorney sought and gained a default judgment against Speed at the end of January 1986. The next month, when the district court held a hearing to ascertain Gray’s damages, no one appeared for Speed. After hearing evidence on Gray’s injuries and medical expenses, the court awarded him $334,000. Several months later, in April 1986, Parker sent Gray’s January 7 settlement offer to Grain Dealers.
In June, Speed agreed to assign his claim against the insurance company to Gray in exchange for Gray’s releasing Speed of any obligation to pay the judgment. Shortly thereafter Gray sued Grain Dealers and R.W. Parker to recover the amount of the judgment. After Gray filed his suit against Grain Dealers and Parker, Grain Dealers filed, in its own name, a “motion for relief from judgment” in the previous suit that Gray had filed against Speed. The court granted Gray’s responsive motion to strike Grain Dealers’ motion, on the grounds that Grain Dealers was not a party to that suit, and that the assignment released Speed from any obligation under the suit. In response to the suit filed against it, Grain Dealers asserted that it was only liable under the policy to indemnify Speed and by reason of the assignment, Speed’s liability to Gray — and any liability of Grain Dealers to Speed or Gray — was extinguished. Alternatively, the company claimed it could not be held liable under North Carolina law in excess of its policy limits for only negligence, to which the company had stipulated. On cross motions for summary judgment, the district court awarded Gray the full amount of the default judgment against Grain Dealers, notwithstanding its recognition that the result was “harsh.”
II.
The parties disagree at the outset as to which law, North Carolina or the District of Columbia, governs the case. In a diversity case, we must apply the choice-of-law principles of the forum jurisdiction which, in this case, is the District of Columbia.
Klaxon v. Stentor Electric Mfg. Co.,
With respect to the interpretation of an automobile liability policy, the District adopts the
law of the state which the parties understood was to be the principal location of the insured risk [the auto] during the term of the policy, unless with respect to the particular issue, some other state has a more significant relationship ... to the transaction and the parties, in which event the local law of the other state will be applied.
National Union Fire Ins. Co. v. Binker,
III.
We therefore examine first Grain Dealers’ contention that under North Carolina law, it is not liable in excess of policy limits for ordinary negligence in handling Gray’s claim against Speed. If appellant is correct, then Speed had no claim in excess of policy limits against the company that could have been assigned to Gray, and the assignment would be, at least in part, a nullity.
Although North Carolina law is by no means crystal clear on the point, we think appellee has the better argument. It may well be that in North Carolina, if the insurance company actively assumes the defense of an insured, it is not liable for mere negligence in failing to gain the best settlement for the insured. In that event, a showing of bad faith may be required to recover in excess of policy limits.
Coca-Cola Bottling Co. v. Maryland Casualty Co.,
Still, the Supreme Court of North Carolina and lower courts have described the insurer’s settlement duty as “to act diligently
and
in good faith.”
Alford v. Textile Ins. Co.,
Even assuming it could be liable in excess of policy limits as a result of its behavior, Grain Dealers further argues that it is not liable to Gray because the judgment against Speed was not paid or shown to be payable. Appellant contends that in order to recover against the insurance company, Gray must prove that Speed would have paid the judgment against Gray, otherwise the insurance company is liable for more than its insured’s true damage. Grain Dealers argues that the value of Speed’s claim against the insurance company should be modified by his ability to pay the judgment to Gray. If the modification is not made, then, through the assignment-release, a silk purse has been made out of a sow’s ear. Although no direct evidence was presented by either party as to Speed’s net worth, his earnings, or his intention to attempt to pay the judgment prior to the assignment and release, we could infer from the record that Speed was a man of modest means.
Under circumstances such as this, where the insured has not yet paid any of the judgment, there is a split of authority among the states as to the extent of an insurance company’s liability to the assign-ee of its insured for a claim above the policy limit. The majority of jurisdictions adheres to the judgment rule:
2
“an entry of judgment in excess [of policy limits] alone is sufficient damage to sustain a recovery from an insurer for its breach of duty.”
Carter v. Pioneer Mut. Casualty Co.,
Unfortunately, North Carolina courts have not been obliged to choose which line of authority they prefer. A court of appeals has held that an insurance company was not liable where an insured and a plaintiff (injured party) entered into a consent judgment which, by its terms, provided that it was not enforceable against the insured.
Huffman v. Peerless Ins. Co.,
If the insurer had failed to make these settlements, and judgments for greater amounts had been obtained against its insured; it would ... be liable to [the tortfeasor/insured] for such amounts as the judgments exceeded the amounts for which the insurer could have settled.... The liability imposed on the insurer would not ... be affected or diminished by the question of solvency or insolvency of its insured.
Id.
We note, moreover, that the insurance contract states that Grain Dealers “will pay damages for bodily injury or property damage for which any covered person becomes legally responsible because of an auto accident.” It seems rather clear to us that after the judgment but before the assignment and release, Speed was legally responsible to pay the judgment, whether or not he ever intended to pay. 6 So we conclude under North Carolina law Grain Dealers could be made liable for the whole judgment.
IV.
That brings us to question whether or not the assignment and release were self-contradicting. According to the insurance company, the release nullified the assignment of the claim because the release extinguished the basis for the assignment. If so, that which Speed assigned to Gray was worthless upon transfer. This somewhat metaphysical contention is to be tested first according to D.C. law because it depends on a construction of the agreement reached between the two parties in the District. We note somewhat ruefully that there are no cases in the District squarely on point. However, many other jurisdictions have considered similar trans
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actions and the majority of them have allowed the transfer.
7
A few courts have taken the path urged by the appellant, and have held that a similar transaction was ineffective in passing the claim against the insurance company to the assignee. It is apparent that underlying the construction of the assignment and release made by those courts declining to uphold them is the concern — discussed in the previous portion of the opinion — about collusion between the insured and the assignee.
See, e.g., Freeman v. Schmidt Real Estate & Ins.,
Accordingly, we see no reason why, under D.C. and North Carolina law, we should not construe the assignment and release to give full effect to its terms. After all, if the release of Speed extinguished the claim Speed had against the insurance company simultaneously with the assignment of the claim, that would also be true of that part of the claim Speed had against the insurance company within the policy limits. As appellee points out, appellant’s argument reduces to an absurd conclusion: if the insured were to have paid the judgment in full and obtained a release from the injured party, he would have no right to proceed against the insurer for indemnification. We think appellant’s self-destruct interpretation of the document can only be adopted for policy reasons quite apart from appropriate legal methods of document construc *1134 tion, and therefore the judgment of the district court is
Affirmed.
Notes
. Termination and nonrenewal of the contract is dictated by North Carolina law: "We will refuse to renew or continue this policy only as permitted by the laws of North Carolina." “If the law in effect in North Carolina at the time this policy is issued, renewed or continued: requires ... we will comply_ We will not cancel or nonrenew any types or limits of coverages to the extent that they can be ceded to the North Carolina Reinsurance Facility except for the following reasons: ... You become a nonresident of North Carolina."
. Those states supporting the judgment rule are: Alabama, Arizona, Arkansas, California, Delaware, Florida, Georgia, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maryland, Massachusetts, Minnesota, Missouri, Montana, New Hampshire, New Mexico, Ohio, Oregon, Pennsylvania, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, and Utah. Annotation,
Liability Insurer's Failure to Settle,
. The following states have applied the judgment rule where the insured (or his estate) was insolvent or even bankrupt: California, Florida, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Louisiana, Maryland, Minnesota, Montana, New Mexico, Ohio, South Carolina, and Tennessee;
but see
n. 8. Although not squarely presented with an insolvent or bankrupt insured, courts in Alabama, Delaware, Georgia, Illinois, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Pennsylvania, Texas, and Utah have written dicta indicating that the judgment rule would be followed in those states under such circumstances. Arizona, Arkansas, Kentucky, Missouri, and Oregon endorse the judgment rule without discussing the solvency of the insured. Annotation,
Liability Insurer’s Failure to Settle,
. In any event, even if Speed were to have been found insolvent, Grain Dealers would be disadvantaged by the language of the contract: "Bankruptcy or insolvency of the covered person shall not relieve us of any obligations under this policy.”
. In addition to Michigan, California, Connecticut and New York have endorsed the payment rule noting that where an insured (or his estate) is insolvent or bankrupt no damage is shown to have harmed him. Annotation,
Liability Insurer's Failure to Settle,
1) where the assured pays part of the judgment or is solvent enough to do so at the time *1132 of the excess judgment, the judgment rule applies and he is entitled to the full amount of the excess as his damages; 2) where he was insolvent before the judgment and obtained a bankruptcy discharge after it, he is not damaged and may not recover for it; and 3) where he was insolvent or nearly insolvent prior to the judgment the jury must consider his past, his prospects, and other economic factors and assess his damages.
Levantino v. Insurance Co. of N. Am.,
.
But see Freeman v. Schmidt Real Estate & Ins.,
.
Steedly v. London & Lancashire Ins. Co.,
Covenants not to execute are different than releases, as the legal liability remains in force against those who have covenants, whereas a release represents total freedom from liability. However, courts have used much the same reasoning in upholding covenants/assignments as they have when considering release/assignments.
Bishop v. Crowther,
.
See also Steil v. Florida Physicians’ Ins. Reciprocal,
