Chandler v. Commercial Union Ins. Co.

467 So. 2d 244, 1985 Ala. LEXIS 3662
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedMarch 22, 1985
Docket83-1104
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 467 So. 2d 244 (Chandler v. Commercial Union Ins. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chandler v. Commercial Union Ins. Co., 467 So. 2d 244, 1985 Ala. LEXIS 3662 (Ala. 1985).

Opinions

Appeal from a summary judgment in favor of the defendant, Commercial Union Insurance Company, Inc. (Commercial Union), in a bad-faith-refusal-to-pay case brought by plaintiff, B. Keith Chandler d/b/a Keith Chandler Construction Company. We affirm.

The present lawsuit is an outgrowth of a prior action also brought by plaintiff in which plaintiff sought to have reformation of an insurance policy issued by this defendant in order to obtain coverage on plaintiff's truck, which had sustained fire damage.

Chandler, a construction contractor, was engaged in installing water and sewer lines and doing related work in a Madison, Alabama, subdivision. He owned three trucks; however, the truck in question was the one used on this job. This truck, a 1979 Ford LNT dump truck, was purchased for $27,334.70. Plaintiff had a heavy duty rock bed installed on it, costing $54,000.00. He also had the engine and transmission rebuilt. The truck caught fire and was severely damaged while plaintiff was operating it on the job.

Prior to the fire, the plaintiff had obtained insurance coverage on a 1978 Ford F-800 dump truck from Commercial Union. After plaintiff made a claim on his fire loss, Commercial Union denied coverage. That denial led to plaintiff's first action, in which he sought a reformation of the policy and payment under the policy. Commercial Union answered and counterclaimed in that action, asking for a judgment declaring that the destroyed vehicle was not covered under the policy or, in the alternative, asserting that the truck was destroyed intentionally by Chandler himself or at his direction. The circuit court entered a decree reforming the policy to include the burned truck, and the remaining issues were tried to a jury, which awarded Chandler $25,145.00 in damages. No appeal was taken from that judgment. The damages awarded were paid into court and in due course paid to the plaintiff.

Thereafter, plaintiff initiated this present action, alleging one count in bad faith refusal to pay a lawful claim. This complaint was later amended by adding a count in fraud. We reproduce these allegations below:

"COUNT ONE

"1. On or about the 30th day of January, 1981, the plaintiff and the defendant entered into a policy of insurance whereby the defendant insured the plaintiff's motor vehicle for $28,000 for, among other things, damage or loss by accidental fire.

"2. On or about August 13, 1982, while the insurance policy was in full force and effect and after performance of all conditions precedent by the plaintiff, the plaintiff's said vehicle caught fire and was damaged as a result of a mechanical failure.

"3. The defendant, as a result of its bad faith performance or failure to perform *Page 246 the said contract, failed and refused to pay the plaintiff's claim as required by the said policy of insurance.

"4. Plaintiff avers that the said wrongful and bad faith refusal to pay the said claim was malicious, oppressive, fraudulent and libelous.

"5. Although originally the question of the defendant's requirement to perform according to the said contract might have been fairly debatable as a result of the said vehicle being incorrectly described in the said policy, this question was judicially determined by a decree reforming the said contract on or about May 14, 1982, at which time the plaintiff's claim was immediately and obviously payable according to the terms of the reformed contract.

"6. Plaintiff avers that after the decree of reformation, the defendant had actual knowledge of the facts which required the defendant's performance, or the defendant intentionally failed and refused to properly investigate the claim to determine whether there was any lawful basis for the defendant to refuse to perform, and the defendant in bad faith wrongfully refused to pay the plaintiff's claim.

"7. Plaintiff further avers that the only fairly debatable question concerning defendant's right to refuse to perform, if any, was created by the defendant's misconduct, through the fraudulent, willful, and intentional tampering with the insured property after the loss and other evidence so as to create and invent an illusion that the fire which resulted in the loss was deliberately set, when in fact the fire was accidental. But for the defendant's said tampering, no question regarding the defendant's liability exists or has existed since the decree of reformation, and even the illusion of the question created by the defendant's misconduct is in direct conflict with all of the eyewitness testimony concerning the origin of the fire.

"8. The bad faith handling of the plaintiff's claim has caused the plaintiff to suffer extreme hardship in earning a livelihood, has caused him to incur unnecessary legal fees and expenses, has caused him to suffer an added claim against him for accrued interest from the loss payee, has caused him to suffer mental anguish and emotional distress, and has damaged the plaintiff's name and reputation in the community.

"WHEREFORE, plaintiff demands judgment against the defendant in the sum of $1,500,000.00 punitive and compensatory damages plus costs."

"AMENDMENT TO COMPLAINT

"Comes the Plaintiff and amends the complaint by adding the following:

"COUNT TWO

"9. Plaintiff realleges all of the allegations of COUNT ONE as fully as if set out herein.

"10. On or about March 29, 1982, the defendant, through pleadings, impliedly represented to the plaintiff and to the Court that the reason the defendant did not pay the plaintiff's claim for fire loss covered under the defendant's insurance policy was because, inter alia, the defendant had evidence that the plaintiff caused the fire by intentional act.

"11. This representation was false and the defendant knew the representation was false but made the representation with the intention that the plaintiff and the Court rely upon it.

"12. At some time prior to the making of this representation, the defendants did knowingly and fraudulently create false evidence to support the false representation by taking glass fragments to a chemist and representing to the chemist that the fragments came from the scene of the plaintiff's fire loss.

"13. The defendant further concealed [its] fraudulent acts by making the chemist unavailable to the plaintiff's counsel for questioning until October 4, 1982, which was the day of trial on the plaintiff's complaint seeking damages for breach of the insurance contract.

"14. Only upon the taking of the chemist's deposition on or about October *Page 247 4, 1982, did the plaintiff discover, for the first time, that the defendant had fraudulently created evidence in order to support [its] misrepresentation.

"15. The plaintiff was forced to rely upon the misrepresentation in that the plaintiff was unable to discover the fraudulent creation of evidence in time to aver in good faith, prior to the trial, that the defendant had no `fairly debatable question' regarding coverage of the plaintiff's fire loss by the defendant's insurance policy.

"16. The plaintiff was damaged by his reliance upon the misrepresentation in that his attempt to amend his complaint at the trial on the breach of contract was denied by the honorable trial court judge as being untimely. The plaintiff was therefore caused to expend additional court costs and attorneys' fees to bring the instant action in a separate lawsuit.

"17. Plaintiff avers that the misrepresentations of the defendant, and the fraudulent creation of false evidence to support those representations, constitute gross, oppressive, malicious, intentional, and deliberate acts of fraud against the plaintiff.

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Bluebook (online)
467 So. 2d 244, 1985 Ala. LEXIS 3662, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chandler-v-commercial-union-ins-co-ala-1985.