Bradley Baldwin, As Assignee of Tommi C. Hummel and Travor Hummel v. The Standard Fire Insurance Company

CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 21, 2025
Docket25S-CT-00033
StatusPublished

This text of Bradley Baldwin, As Assignee of Tommi C. Hummel and Travor Hummel v. The Standard Fire Insurance Company (Bradley Baldwin, As Assignee of Tommi C. Hummel and Travor Hummel v. The Standard Fire Insurance Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bradley Baldwin, As Assignee of Tommi C. Hummel and Travor Hummel v. The Standard Fire Insurance Company, (Ind. 2025).

Opinion

FILED Oct 21 2025, 11:37 am

CLERK Indiana Supreme Court Court of Appeals and Tax Court

IN THE

Indiana Supreme Court Supreme Court Case No. 25S-CT-33

Bradley Baldwin, Individually and as Assignee of Tommi C. Hummel and Travor Hummel, Appellant-Defendant and Counter-Claimant,

and

Bradley Baldwin, Individually and as Assignee of Jess M. Smith, III, of Tom Scott & Associates, P.C., as Spe- cial Personal Representative of the Estate of Jill L. McCarty, Deceased, Appellant-Defendant and Counter-Claimant,

–v–

The Standard Fire Insurance Company, Appellee-Plaintiff and Counter-Defendant,

Tommi C. Hummel, Travor Hummel, Jill L. McCarty, John M. Hopkins, State Farm Mutual Insurance Com- pany, and Department of Child Services Indiana Child Support Bureau, Other Defendants below. Argued: April 24, 2025 | Decided: October 21, 2025

Appeal from the Marshall County Circuit Court No. 50C01-1901-CT-3 The Honorable Curtis D. Palmer, Judge

On Petition to Transfer from the Indiana Court of Appeals No. 23A-CT-2728

Opinion by Justice Slaughter Chief Justice Rush and Justices Massa and Molter concur. Justice Goff concurs in part and dissents in part with separate opinion.

Slaughter, Justice.

When insurance coverage is insufficient to satisfy multiple claimants, insurers face a dilemma. An insurer can seek individual settlements, but this approach risks exhausting policy limits before satisfying all claimants. Another option is to refrain from individual settlements in hopes of attain- ing a global settlement, but this approach may fail and expose the insured to increased personal liability. Either option creates risks for the insured and thus exposes the insurer to a later claim that it breached its duty of good faith and fair dealing to its insured, or even that it acted in bad faith.

Here, the insurer facing this dilemma filed an interpleader action nam- ing all known claimants. The insurer deposited the policy limits with the trial court and continued to defend its insured against all claims. We hold that this choice did not breach the insurer’s duty of good faith and fair dealing to its insured and did not amount to bad faith.

I

A

In June 2018, Tommi Hummel crashed into a vehicle driven by Bradley Baldwin. The resulting injuries were severe. An ambulance took Baldwin

Indiana Supreme Court | Case No. 25S-CT-33 | October 21, 2025 Page 2 of 16 to a local hospital; Hummel and one of her passengers, John Hopkins, were both airlifted to a different hospital. A second passenger in Hum- mel’s vehicle, Jill McCarty, fled the scene apparently unharmed.

Hummel had an automobile insurance policy with Standard Fire Insur- ance Company. The policy provided bodily injury liability coverage of up to $50,000 per person, capped at $100,000 per accident. Standard Fire’s post-accident investigation determined that Hummel faced claims from three potential claimants: her own two passengers, Hopkins and McCarty; and the driver of the other vehicle, Baldwin. As part of its investigation, Standard Fire reached out to all interested persons to gather information. All except McCarty responded and worked with Standard Fire.

Just three months after the accident, Baldwin sued Tommi and her hus- band, Travor Hummel, for injuries resulting from Tommi’s alleged negli- gence, prompting Standard Fire to hire counsel to defend the Hummels as their policy required. Though Baldwin also sued the vehicle’s other pas- sengers, Hopkins and McCarty, our opinion today concerns only the claims arising out of Baldwin’s lawsuit against the Hummels.

Two months after suing the Hummels, Baldwin made a “time-limited settlement demand” for the $50,000 per-person policy limit. The demand would expire twenty days after Standard Fire received it. Standard Fire, which controlled all settlement decisions under the policy, rejected Bald- win’s demand after concluding that both Baldwin’s and Hopkin’s claims were “certain” to “exceed[] the $50,000 limit.” As the Hummels’ retained counsel explained to them, the concern with accepting Baldwin’s settle- ment demand was the premature “exhaustion of the $100,000 policy lim- its”. Their counsel noted that if Standard Fire “pays the total limits” on Baldwin’s claim and the expected claim from Hopkins, the Hummels would “potentially have uninsured exposure for any claim asserted by Jill McCarthy [sic] based upon the exhaustion of the policy limits coverage.”

A month after rejecting Baldwin’s settlement demand, Standard Fire filed an interpleader action with the trial court naming Baldwin, Hopkins, and McCarty as interested parties to the insurance policy’s proceeds. In- terpleader “is a remedial device that allows parties to be joined in an ac- tion where there is uncertainty as to which of multiple claimants a party

Indiana Supreme Court | Case No. 25S-CT-33 | October 21, 2025 Page 3 of 16 may be liable.” First Chicago Ins. Co. v. Collins, 141 N.E.3d 54, 64 (Ind. Ct. App. 2020) (citing Ind. Trial Rule 22(A) (interpleader)). Standard Fire de- termined that interpleader was “the best option” because it “will be the best way to protect” the Hummels. The Hummels’ retained counsel ex- plained Standard Fire’s reasoning to Baldwin’s counsel: Of the three “po- tential claimants” against the Hummels, Standard Fire concluded, “at least two . . . could exceed policy limits”, so it believed interpleader offered the best path forward.

In its interpleader filings, Standard Fire admitted that it was liable to pay the $100,000 policy limit but said it was “uncertain as to which party or parties is entitled to receive all or any part” of the $100,000. Standard Fire deposited $100,000 with the trial-court clerk and asked the court to is- sue a declaratory judgment that Standard Fire had performed all its duties under the policy. The court accepted Standard Fire’s interpleader action but did not issue the requested declaration. The court eventually ordered $50,000 to be released to Baldwin and $50,000 to Hopkins and the Indiana Department of Child Services for past-due child support.

Meanwhile, as the trial date approached in Baldwin’s suit against the Hummels, Baldwin upped the ante by demanding $700,000 to settle all his claims against them. Standard Fire declined. But the Hummels, without obtaining Standard Fire’s required consent under the policy, agreed to set- tle with Baldwin for the full $700,000 demand. The Hummels assigned to Baldwin any claims they might have against Standard Fire in exchange for Baldwin’s agreement not to enforce his judgment against them. Further, the Hummels would be entitled to the lesser of $20,000 or ten percent of any future judgment Baldwin obtained against Standard Fire.

B

Based on his assignment, Baldwin filed amended counterclaims against Standard Fire in the interpleader action. Baldwin alleged that by rejecting his initial settlement demand for $50,000, the insurance policy’s per-per- son limit, Standard Fire breached its duty of good faith and fair dealing to the Hummels. Baldwin also alleged that Standard Fire acted in bad faith toward the Hummels and should pay punitive damages.

Indiana Supreme Court | Case No. 25S-CT-33 | October 21, 2025 Page 4 of 16 Standard Fire moved for partial summary judgment on these claims. It argued that rejecting Baldwin’s settlement demand and filing the inter- pleader action were reasonable efforts to protect the Hummels’ interests given multiple potential claims against their policy. Baldwin disagreed, contending that Standard Fire’s rejection of his $50,000 settlement demand followed by the interpleader action placed its own interests above the Hummels’. As purported evidence of bad faith, Baldwin obtained an affi- davit from an expert witness, a professor of insurance and risk manage- ment.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Allen v. Great American Reserve Insurance Co.
766 N.E.2d 1157 (Indiana Supreme Court, 2002)
Texas Farmers Insurance Co. v. Soriano
881 S.W.2d 312 (Texas Supreme Court, 1994)
Mahan v. American Standard Insurance Co.
862 N.E.2d 669 (Indiana Court of Appeals, 2007)
Johnston v. State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance
667 N.E.2d 802 (Indiana Court of Appeals, 1996)
Bud Wolf Chevrolet, Inc. v. Robertson
519 N.E.2d 135 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1988)
Erie Insurance v. Hickman Ex Rel. Smith
622 N.E.2d 515 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1993)
Vernon Fire & Casualty Insurance Co. v. Sharp
349 N.E.2d 173 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1976)
Indianapolis Newspapers v. Indiana State Lottery Commission
739 N.E.2d 144 (Indiana Court of Appeals, 2000)
Menefee v. Schurr
751 N.E.2d 757 (Indiana Court of Appeals, 2001)
La Rotunda v. Royal Globe Insurance Co.
408 N.E.2d 928 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1980)
McReynolds v. American Commerce Insurance
235 P.3d 278 (Court of Appeals of Arizona, 2010)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Bradley Baldwin, As Assignee of Tommi C. Hummel and Travor Hummel v. The Standard Fire Insurance Company, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bradley-baldwin-as-assignee-of-tommi-c-hummel-and-travor-hummel-v-the-ind-2025.