Columbia Insurance Company v. Christopher Waymer

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedJune 22, 2021
Docket20-1265
StatusUnpublished

This text of Columbia Insurance Company v. Christopher Waymer (Columbia Insurance Company v. Christopher Waymer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Columbia Insurance Company v. Christopher Waymer, (4th Cir. 2021).

Opinion

UNPUBLISHED

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT

No. 20-1265

COLUMBIA INSURANCE COMPANY,

Plaintiff – Appellee,

v.

CHRISTOPHER KAMIL WAYMER, individually and d/b/a QE Trucking,

Defendant – Appellant,

and

WILLIAM EDMUND REYNOLDS, JR.; ANGELA D. REYNOLDS,

Defendants.

No. 20-1266

Defendants – Appellants,

CHRISTOPHER KAMIL WAYMER, individually and d/b/a QE Trucking, Defendant.

No. 20-1267

CHRISTOPHER KAMIL WAYMER, individually and d/b/a QE Trucking,

Plaintiff – Appellant,

Defendant – Appellee,

JAMES C GREENE COMPANY; O W RAY,

Appeals from the United States District Court for the District of South Carolina, at Charleston. Richard M. Gergel, District Judge. (2:18-cv-02975-RMG; 2:19-cv-00260- RMG)

Argued: March 11, 2021 Decided: June 22, 2021

Before KING, WYNN, and HARRIS, Circuit Judges.

Affirmed by unpublished per curiam opinion.

ARGUED: Kathleen Chewning Barnes, BARNES LAW FIRM, LLC, Hampton, South Carolina; Bert Glenn Utsey, III, CLAWSON FARGNOLI UTSEY, LLC, Charleston, South Carolina, for Appellants. Charles Mitchell Brown, NELSON MULLINS RILEY & SCARBOROUGH, LLP, Columbia, South Carolina, for Appellee. ON BRIEF: Mark B. Tinsley, GOODING & GOODING, PA, Allendale, South Carolina, for Appellants Angela Reynolds and William Edmund Reynolds, Jr. A. Mattison Bogan, Brian P. Crotty, Blake

2 T. Williams, NELSON MULLINS RILEY & SCARBOROUGH, LLP, Columbia, South Carolina, for Appellee.

Unpublished opinions are not binding precedent in this circuit.

3 PER CURIAM:

In these consolidated appeals, we consider an insurance dispute arising out of the

handling of two related personal injury claims. The claimants, William and Angela

Reynolds, were seriously injured in a car accident involving a driver insured by Columbia

Insurance Company (CIC). In the months that followed, the Reynoldses’ attorney made

two time-limited settlement demands on CIC. CIC rebuffed both, explaining that the first

imposed an unreasonable deadline and the second included terms to which it could not

agree. CIC separately offered – and has since paid – the full $1 million limits on its driver’s

insurance policy.

At issue is whether CIC engaged in bad faith insurance practices under South

Carolina law when it rejected the Reynoldses’ settlement demands, rendering it liable for

the full amount of damages arising from the accident. The district court granted summary

judgment to CIC, holding that no reasonable jury could find that CIC violated its state-law

duty to act in good faith toward its insured. For the reasons given by the district court in

its well-reasoned opinion, we now affirm.

I.

A.

On December 16, 2013, William and Angela Reynolds suffered severe injuries

when the car they were driving hit Christopher Waymer’s logging truck. An investigating

officer later determined that Waymer had failed to yield the right of way and so was at

fault.

4 Two weeks later, the Reynoldses, still in the hospital, hired attorney Mark Tinsley

to represent them in their personal injury claims against Waymer. Tinsley quickly began

his investigation, requesting hospital records from the Medical University of South

Carolina (MUSC) to substantiate the Reynoldses’ injuries. In part because MUSC does

not release records until after patient discharge, Tinsley did not receive a first, still-

incomplete set of records for Mr. Reynolds until January 27, 2014, and for Mrs. Reynolds

until February 5, 2014.

In the meantime, Tinsley began to discuss his clients’ claims with representatives

from Columbia Insurance Company (CIC), which insured Waymer’s truck with a $1

million liability policy. On January 9, 2014, Tinsley spoke with CIC’s outside insurance

adjuster, informing him of the severity of his clients’ injuries and indicating that he would

demand the full $1 million policy limits. CIC then assigned an internal claims

administrator to the file and retained an attorney, Jay Saleeby, to represent Waymer. On

January 20, 2014, CIC raised the amount it had set aside for a potential payment to the

Reynoldses – the “reserves” on their claims – to the policy limits of $1 million.

On January 23, 2014, Tinsley made the first of the settlement demands at issue: a

ten-day offer to settle the Reynoldses’ claim for the $1 million policy limits (the “January

Settlement Demand”). At that time, as noted above, Tinsley had yet to begin receiving

partial hospital records for either of the Reynoldses. And Tinsley’s demand letter, while

describing the extent of his clients’ injuries, provided no substantiating medical records or

bills. Instead, it simply asserted that “[t]he value of these claims clearly exceeds the

5 available insurance coverage,” and gave CIC a ten-day deadline for response, after which

the offer would be “irrevocably withdrawn.” J.A. 393.

On January 31, 2014 – roughly halfway through the response period – Saleeby, the

lawyer CIC had hired for Waymer, contacted Tinsley and explained that CIC was “in the

process of gathering information so that there can be a reasonable opportunity to evaluate

[his] clients’ claims.” J.A. 399. At that point, CIC had only Tinsley’s own reports and two

air-ambulance bills, which noted over $60,000 in costs and offered initial impressions of

the Reynoldses’ injuries. At Saleeby’s request, Tinsley sent him signed authorizations so

that Saleeby could seek hospital records on his own. But Tinsley cautioned that the

authorizations were not intended to “waive or extend” the ten-day deadline, nor give CIC

a chance to “merely validate what [Tinsley already had] told the insurance company about

the injuries.” J.A. 404. Again, at that point Tinsley himself was still in the process of

collecting a first round of partial medical records for the Reynoldses. The deadline in the

January Settlement Demand expired without action by CIC.

At the beginning of April 2014, Tinsley’s office forwarded to CIC the Reynoldses’

full hospital records and bills. Those records substantiated medical costs to date of

$407,595.15 for Mr. Reynolds, and $273,638.84 for Mrs. Reynolds. Three weeks later,

CIC offered to pay the full $1 million policy limits.

In mid-May, the Reynoldses – through Tinsley – rejected CIC’s policy-limits offer

and responded with a second demand of their own (the “May Settlement Demand”). In

this second demand, Tinsley alleged that CIC had violated its state-law duty of good faith

and fair dealing toward its insured, Waymer, when it declined to settle the claims against

6 him in January. As a result, Tinsley believed CIC now could be liable to Waymer – and,

by extension, the Reynoldses – under South Carolina’s Tyger River doctrine for all

damages the Reynoldses might recover in a tort suit against him, notwithstanding the limits

of his policy with CIC. See Tyger River Pine Co. v. Md. Cas. Co., 170 S.E. 346, 348 (S.C.

1933).

Tinsley then offered CIC a “final chance” to settle the case – this time, with a fifteen-

day deadline – and proposed two options. Under the first, the parties would skip over any

trial on liability or damages, litigating only whether CIC acted in bad faith when it rejected

the January Settlement Demand. If the jury found bad faith, CIC would pay the Reynoldses

$3.5 million, a figure intended to capture the likely extent of their damages; if the jury

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

Related

Wade v. Emcasco Insurance
483 F.3d 657 (Tenth Circuit, 2007)
Cunningham v. Standard Guar. Ins. Co.
630 So. 2d 179 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1994)
Trotter v. State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Company
377 S.E.2d 343 (Court of Appeals of South Carolina, 1988)
Noonan v. Vermont Mutual Insurance
761 F. Supp. 2d 1330 (M.D. Florida, 2010)
Michael A. Johnson v. Geico General Ins. Co.
318 F. App'x 847 (Eleventh Circuit, 2009)
Tyger River Pine Co. v. Maryland Casualty Co.
170 S.E. 346 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1933)
United States v. Ancient Coin Collectors Guild
899 F.3d 295 (Fourth Circuit, 2018)
Doe v. South Carolina Medical Malpractice Liability Joint Underwriting Ass'n
557 S.E.2d 670 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 2001)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Columbia Insurance Company v. Christopher Waymer, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/columbia-insurance-company-v-christopher-waymer-ca4-2021.