Christine Richardson v. Government Employees Insurance Company

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedOctober 3, 2017
Docket48805-1
StatusPublished

This text of Christine Richardson v. Government Employees Insurance Company (Christine Richardson v. Government Employees Insurance Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Christine Richardson v. Government Employees Insurance Company, (Wash. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

Filed Washington State Court of Appeals Division Two

October 3, 2017

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

DIVISION II CHRISTINE RICHARDSON, No. 48805-1-II

Respondent,

v.

GOVERNMENT EMPLOYEES INSURANCE PUBLISHED OPINION COMPANY,

Petitioner.

MELNICK, J. — We granted Government Employees Insurance Company’s (GEICO)

motion for discretionary review of the trial court’s discovery order compelling GEICO to produce

privileged post-litigation1 documents and information regarding Christine Richardson’s

underinsured motorist (UIM) bad faith claim. We conclude that the trial court abused its discretion

by issuing the discovery order because it misapplied the law. We decline to award fees to either

party. We reverse and remand.

FACTS

On February 11, 2010, Richardson suffered multiple injuries after being involved in a

motor vehicle accident. The at-fault driver settled and paid her United Services Automobile

Association (USAA) insurance policy limits of $25,000 to Richardson.

1 “Post-litigation” is a term the parties and the trial court use to describe actions that occurred after Richardson filed her complaint against GEICO on August 19, 2013. We use the term in this opinion as the parties and the trial court used it. 48805-1-II

As a result of the accident, Richardson incurred $38,000 in medical bills. At the time of

the accident, Richardson had an insurance policy with GEICO for $35,000 in personal injury

protection (PIP) coverage, and $50,000 in first-party underinsured motorist (UIM) coverage.

Richardson filed a claim for PIP benefits and submitted her medical bills to GEICO for payment.

GEICO began to pay Richardson’s PIP medical benefits. In July, GEICO required her to submit

to a medical examination. Based on the examination, GEICO continued paying for chiropractic

care for 12 additional weeks, but stopped paying for massage or physical therapy.

When GEICO stopped paying for Richardson’s medical treatment, Richardson retained an

attorney and demanded PIP arbitration. GEICO retained attorney Sharon Dear. In October 2011,

the PIP arbitrator awarded Richardson her PIP policy limit of $35,000.

The following year, Richardson filed a UIM claim with GEICO. In December, GEICO

sent a letter to Richardson stating that it had been waiting for additional medical records to

complete its evaluation of her claim but had not received them. Based on the records it did receive,

GEICO determined that the underlying settlement, which included $25,000 from the at-fault

driver’s policy limits and $35,000 from Richardson’s PIP limits, fully compensated Richardson,

and it denied her UIM coverage.

On August 19, 2013, Richardson filed a complaint against GEICO alleging, among other

claims, bad faith relating to GEICO’s handling of the PIP and UIM claims. She alleged that

GEICO breached its duty to deal in good faith when it arbitrarily and wrongfully denied her claim

for PIP and UIM benefits.

In April 2014, GEICO completed its responses to Richardson’s first set of interrogatories

and requests for productions. It made several objections claiming both attorney-client privilege

and attorney work product. Richardson filed a motion to compel and argued that GEICO waived

2 48805-1-II

the attorney-client privilege. She further argued that her claims file was discoverable. GEICO

moved for a protective order.

On July 16, the trial court entered an order after an in camera review of the documents

GEICO submitted on Richardson’s PIP and UIM claims. It ordered the disclosure of all

documents2 submitted for its review, subject to a protective order. The trial court relied on Cedell

v. Farmers Ins. Co. of Washington, 176 Wn.2d 686, 295 P.3d 239 (2013).

GEICO moved for reconsideration and clarification. The trial court denied the motion.

While it found that GEICO’s attorney was not engaged in claims adjustment work, “[t]he insured

can pierce the attorney-client privilege through an exception such as civil fraud,” which

Richardson asserted in her motion to compel. Clerk’s Papers (CP) at 107. The court determined

that the privilege was waived as to both the PIP and UIM claims because Richardson demonstrated

that “a reasonable person would have a reasonable belief that an act of bad faith has occurred and

after in camera review.” CP at 107. Accordingly, GEICO produced the claims files in their

entirety.

In April 2015, Richardson deposed an employee designated by GEICO to testify on its

behalf. During the deposition, GEICO’s lawyer directed the employee to not answer questions

related to any post-litigation conduct. The parties later conferred on the issue but could not resolve

the dispute.

2 The trial court did allow for redactions of some documents.

3 48805-1-II

In November, Richardson filed a motion to compel answers to her deposition questions.

She also issued a subpoena to depose Dear. GEICO moved to quash Dear’s subpoena, preclude

her deposition, and protect her litigation file3 from discovery. It also moved for a protective order.

The trial court ordered GEICO to produce a copy of Dear’s litigation file for in camera

review and requested supplemental briefing regarding Dear’s litigation file. It ordered GEICO to

provide the court with a list of documents from Dear’s file that were generated after August 19,

2013, and had not previously been submitted for in camera review.

On February 9, 2016, after Richardson filed another motion to compel and GEICO

responded with another motion for a protective order, the trial court ordered GEICO to provide

Richardson with all documents from Dear’s litigation file that the court had most recently reviewed

in camera. It stated that it “will not disturb . . . prior rulings regarding the issue of waiver of

attorney-client privilege.” CP at 611. The court denied GEICO’s subsequent motion for

reconsideration.

On February 25, after Richardson filed a renewed motion to compel discovery, the trial

court entered an order. It stated that no cases in Washington addressed whether a bad faith claim

could be based on an insurance company’s post-litigation conduct. The trial court concluded that,

under certain circumstances, the majority of the states that have decided the issue permit evidence

of post-litigation conduct to be used at trial.

The trial court determined that the weight of Washington authority would “tend toward the

conclusion that an insurance company has an ongoing duty of good faith and fair dealing to its

policy holders, even after a lawsuit has been commenced.” CP at 957. It limited its determination

3 The parties use the term “litigation file” to mean documents, communications, and other information generated by GEICO’s attorney after Richardson filed this lawsuit. We use the same term for this purpose.

4 48805-1-II

to “an ongoing duty to act fairly in evaluating and resolving claims with their insured.” CP at 957.

It did not give Richardson the “authority to carte blanche invade [GEICO]’s work-product and/or

attorney-client privilege.” CP at 957.

The court’s discovery order stated:

ORDERED that [Richardson] may pursue discovery involving activities occurring after August 19, 2013 to present. [Richardson’s] access to this discovery is limited as follows:

1. The responsive discovery must involve one or more employees of GEICO.

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Christine Richardson v. Government Employees Insurance Company, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/christine-richardson-v-government-employees-insurance-company-washctapp-2017.