American Family Insurance Company v. Almassud

CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Georgia
DecidedSeptember 4, 2019
Docket1:16-cv-04023
StatusUnknown

This text of American Family Insurance Company v. Almassud (American Family Insurance Company v. Almassud) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
American Family Insurance Company v. Almassud, (N.D. Ga. 2019).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT NORTHERN DISTRICT OF GEORGIA ATLANTA DIVISION

AMERICAN FAMILY INSURANCE COMPANY, Plaintiff, CIVIL ACTION NO. v. 1:16-CV-04023-RWS ABDULMOHSEN ALMASSUD, et al., Defendants.

ORDER In 2012, Defendant Abdulmohsen Almassud was driving near Cumming, Georgia, when his Jeep veered into oncoming traffic and struck a vehicle driven by Luisa Cruz Mezquital. As a result, Cruz’s hand was severely injured. She filed a state court personal injury suit against Almassud, which went to trial and resulted in a jury verdict exceeding $30 million. The Georgia Court of Appeals has since overturned that verdict, however, and the case is en route to being re-tried. In the meantime, American Family Insurance Company (“AmFam”), the company that insured Almassud’s Jeep, filed this declaratory judgment action seeking clarity about its obligations to Almassud in the underlying case. Broadly, AmFam alleges that Almassud’s policy is void or rescindable because he failed to cooperate with AmFam in defending the underlying case and provided AmFam with false and incomplete information during the application process. Presently before the Court are three motions for summary judgment: two filed by Almassud [265 & 267] and one by AmFam [284]. Also before the Court is AmFam’s Motion for Sanctions

against Almassud [285]. After reviewing the record, the Court enters the following Order. Background

I. Factual Background Defendant Abdulmohsen Almassud owns a 1995 Jeep Wrangler that has been modified. The Jeep, for instance, has an after-market lift kit, winch, larger- than-stock tires, and a rebuilt axle. Nearly a decade ago, AmFam sold a policy to

Almassud for his Jeep. It provided up to $100,000 in liability insurance per person for bodily injuries. During the application process, an AmFam agent took information from

Almassud. Among other things, the application asked how the Jeep would be used. Out of the available options, Almassud selected “to/from work.” Almassud also responded “no” to a question asking whether the Jeep “is customized or altered including alternate fuel.” AmFam’s agent ultimately signed the application, recommending that AmFam issue coverage. In doing so, the agent certified, “I personally have seen the vehicle and recommend it.” The parties disagree over whether Almassud, himself, ever signed the application. But either way, AmFam issued the policy, and it took effect on

September 20, 2009. Several years later, Almassud was involved in an accident. According to Almassud, the Jeep’s steering failed, causing it to veer across the center line and

into oncoming traffic. The Jeep struck a vehicle driven by Defendant Luisa Cruz Mezquital. The accident left Almassud’s Jeep totaled and Cruz severely injured. Almassud promptly reported the incident to AmFam. Then, AmFam took possession of the Jeep to inspect it and assess the damage. AmFam initially valued

the damage to the Jeep at $6,029.14. But after Almassud submitted receipts for aftermarket items that had been installed, AmFam increased the value. AmFam also concluded that Almassud was not responsible for the accident.

Instead, AmFam suspected that fault lay with Oh’s Auto Center, where Almassud had the steering kit in his Jeep replaced eight days before the accident. Unbeknownst to AmFam, however—and supposedly key to its analysis— Almassud had also taken the Jeep to Sears Auto Center two hours after he left Oh’s. And at Sears, Almassud had an alignment performed, as well as a “complete steering, suspension evaluation.” The parties dispute certain details surrounding AmFam’s investigation of the accident but agree on the general progression of things. The day after the accident,

Almassud gave a recorded statement. AmFam asked Almassud what the “purpose of [his] trip” was and where he was “going” to and “coming from.” Almassud responded, “We went to the mountains and we were coming back.” AmFam also

asked Almassud whether “any recent repair work” had been done to the vehicle. Almassud said “yes,” then explained that he had the steering kit and the drag links “replaced at a shop” and said he would provide those receipts to AmFam. Finally, AmFam gave Almassud an opportunity to state anything not already discussed.

Almassud, in response, mentioned that a tow truck driver at the accident scene noticed a pin missing from the steering column, which the driver believed let a bolt come loose and caused Almassud to lose control of the Jeep. AmFam later had an

engineer examine the Jeep who agreed with this theory, noting he was “confident that the steering draft coming loose from pitman arm was not a result of the accident but is what caused the insured to loose [sic] steering.” Based on its investigation, AmFam concluded that it was Oh’s installation of

the steering kit that caused the accident, not Almassud. AmFam therefore rejected three demands for policy limits from Cruz. As a result, Cruz filed suit against Almassud in the State Court of Fulton County. Pursuant to the insurance policy, AmFam retained an attorney, Jim Taylor, to defend Almassud. As is common, AmFam also had its own lawyers involved.

Early in the litigation, the firm representing AmFam asked Almassud for “Any maintenance records and documents showing any customizations/modifications done on the Jeep.” Almassud responded with a lengthy email that included

receipts for parts he had purchased for the Jeep as far back as November 2008. Meanwhile, discovery was underway in the underlying litigation. Of note, in one interrogatory, Cruz asked Almassud, “When did you make the last inspection of the [Jeep]?” Almassud responded that he last inspected the Jeep on

October 13, 2012, after Oh’s performed the steering kit installation. In another interrogatory, Cruz inquired about Almassud’s activities leading up to the accident. Almassud said he went to Blairsville “to go off-roading.”

Some months later, Almassud sat for a deposition, and Cruz’s counsel followed up on these responses. As for the inspection, Almassud explained that he personally looked at Oh’s work and “didn’t see anything obvious,” just that the parts were installed and greased but “that’s [as] far as [he] went.” Cruz’s counsel

also asked what Almassud meant when he said he had gone “off-roading.” Almassud testified, among other things, that the terrain he had driven on was “just unpaved” and that he did not have any pictures of the Jeep off-road. Eventually, the underlying case went to trial. During her case-in-chief, Cruz called Almassud for purposes of cross-examination. Cruz’s counsel elicited

testimony from Almassud about his off-roading activities, and his answers largely tracked those from his deposition. Cruz’s counsel, however, proceeded to introduce a number of documents in an attempt to impeach Almassud. Those

documents showed that Almassud had, in fact, used the Jeep to drive on more rugged terrains than he previously disclosed. After the exchange, the trial judge took up the issue outside the jury’s presence, and Cruz’s counsel accused Almassud of perjury. Ultimately, the judge

adjourned the proceedings for the day to allow Almassud to consult a criminal attorney. According to Almassud, both his lawyer, Jim Taylor, and AmFam’s lawyer represented criminal defendants.

The following day, Almassud re-took the stand. But he refused to answer Cruz’s questions, instead pleading the Fifth. Also that day, AmFam gave Almassud a letter advising him that AmFam would continue to provide a defense “subject to a full and complete reservation of rights.” According to the letter, AmFam was prejudiced because Almassud had “failed to cooperate” in its investigation and defense. Ultimately, the case went to the jury.

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