Crackel v. Allstate

CourtCourt of Appeals of Arizona
DecidedJune 28, 2004
Docket2 CA-CV 2002-0123
StatusPublished

This text of Crackel v. Allstate (Crackel v. Allstate) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Arizona primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Crackel v. Allstate, (Ark. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS STATE OF ARIZONA DIVISION TWO

ERIKA CRACKEL, now known as ERIKA ) GUENTHER, and TAMMIE GUENTHER, ) now known as TAMMIE DRANNAN, ) ) Plaintiffs/Appellants/ ) 2 CA-CV 2002-0123 Cross-Appellees, ) DEPARTMENT B ) v. ) OPINION ) ALLSTATE INSURANCE COMPANY, a ) foreign corporation, ) ) Defendant/Appellee/ ) Cross-Appellant, ) ) and ) ) BLAINE S. GAUB, ) ) Defendant/Appellee. ) )

APPEAL FROM THE SUPERIOR COURT OF PIMA COUNTY

Cause No. C329946

Honorable John M. Quigley, Judge Honorable Gilbert Veliz, Judge

AFFIRMED

Thur & O’Sullivan, P.C. By Calvin C. Thur and Roger O’Sullivan Scottsdale Attorneys for Plaintiffs/ Appellants/Cross-Appellees Steptoe & Johnson LLP By Floyd P. Bienstock, Karl M. Tilleman, Bennett Evan Cooper, and Jason Sanders Phoenix Attorneys for Defendant/ Appellee/Cross-Appellant

Chandler, Tullar, Udall & Redhair By D. B. Udall Tucson Attorneys for Defendant/Appellee

E C K E R S T R O M, Judge.

¶1 We previously issued an opinion in this matter. On the parties’ motions for

reconsideration, however, we vacated our prior opinion and now, in light of certain points raised

in those motions, issue this new opinion in its stead.

¶2 Appellants Erika Guenther and Tammie Drannan sued Allstate Insurance Company

and attorney Blaine Gaub for abuse of process. A jury found Allstate liable and awarded Guenther

and Drannan compensatory but not punitive damages. The jury found in favor of Gaub. On

appeal, Guenther and Drannan argue that the trial court abused its discretion in excluding evidence

of Allstate’s behavior in several other claims, in excluding portions of a judicial order sanctioning

Allstate in the underlying personal injury action Guenther and Drannan had filed against an Allstate

insured, and in denying their request to produce several Allstate claims files. They also argue that

the trial court improperly instructed the jury on the elements of an abuse-of-process claim. Allstate

cross-appeals, asserting that the trial court erred in denying its motion for judgment as a matter of

law (JMOL) and that the jury’s verdict in favor of Gaub necessarily exonerated Allstate as well.

We affirm.

2 Background

¶3 We view the facts and the reasonable inferences therefrom in the light most favorable

to upholding the jury’s verdicts. S Dev. Co. v. Pima Capital Mgmt. Co., 201 Ariz. 10, ¶16, 31

P.3d 123, ¶16 (App. 2001). On November 28, 1995, Drannan and her infant son were passengers

in Guenther’s car. Harvey Hamilton drove a car into the back of Guenther’s car while Guenther

was stopped at a traffic light in Casa Grande. Although Guenther’s car suffered little or no damage

from the collision, she experienced some pain in her neck and shoulder area from the impact.

Drannan, who was six months pregnant, felt a cramping-type pain in her abdominal area and was

urged to go to the emergency room to be evaluated. Both women were examined in a hospital

emergency room and released. Guenther was diagnosed with a whiplash injury to her neck and

spine. The emergency room physician instructed Drannan to see her obstetrician as soon as

possible. Neither Guenther nor Drannan sought, or incurred any costs for, treatment beyond the

initial evaluations the emergency room physician had recommended. Guenther and Drannan filed

a lawsuit against Hamilton in Pinal County Superior Court in February 1997, seeking special

damages of approximately $720 in medical expenses Guenther had incurred and the $890 in medical

expenses Drannan had incurred in addition to unspecified general damages.

¶4 Allstate, Hamilton’s automobile liability insurer, adopted a company policy in

August 1995 concerning minor-impact, soft-tissue (MIST) claims. Under the policy, automobile

accident claims involving property damage of less than $1,000 in which the claimant was

represented by an attorney were to be handled by one claims adjuster. Allstate characterized

Guenther’s and Drannan’s claims as MIST claims and assigned them to adjuster Shirlee Kopin for

processing. Kopin had copies of the medical bills Guenther and Drannan had incurred and knew

3 that Allstate had already “admitted 100 percent negligence” by Hamilton. Kopin nonetheless

instructed Gaub, the attorney Allstate retained to represent Hamilton in the personal injury

litigation, to serve on the plaintiffs a joint offer to confess judgment for a total of $101.1 Kopin

believed the offer was fair because, “based on [her] experience and knowledge of the file, [she]

thought a defense verdict was a real possibility in this case.” Her belief was based in large part

on Allstate’s position that any injury reportedly caused by “a minor impact” was “suspect.”

¶5 Altogether, Allstate expended over $4,500 defending Guenther’s and Drannan’s

claims up to and including preparation for arbitration. Allstate took Guenther’s and Drannan’s

depositions in July 1997 and learned that Guenther, Drannan, and Drannan’s son had been in

another automobile accident about one month before the accident with Hamilton. During their

depositions, both Guenther and Drannan said they were still experiencing occasional discomfort

from the Hamilton accident. Allstate hired a biomechanical expert to determine whether Guenther’s

and Drannan’s reported discomfort could have been caused by the accident with Hamilton.

Although Kopin did not suspect that Guenther and Drannan had been “overtreat[ed]” for their

injuries, and neither Guenther nor Drannan had been treated for their injuries in more than nineteen

months, Allstate nevertheless required Guenther and Drannan to submit to independent medical

examinations (IME) with Dr. John LaWall.

¶6 By October, Kopin believed she had collected enough information to “actually

evaluate[]” Guenther’s and Drannan’s claims. She assessed Allstate’s liability and recommended

1 We question whether this unapportioned joint offer would have been effective to impose sanctions under Rule 68(d), Ariz. R. Civ. P., 16 A.R.S., Pt. 2. See Duke v. Cochise County, 189 Ariz. 35, 40-41, 938 P.2d 84, 89-90 (App. 1996).

4 that Gaub offer Guenther $801 and Drannan $1,001 to settle the claims. Guenther and Drannan

rejected the offer. Guenther did so because, by this stage in the case, the amount offered would not

have “fairly compensated” her lawyer for his work.

¶7 The case proceeded to mandatory arbitration in October. When the arbitrator asked

Gaub what the case was worth, he responded that it was worth “zero” and that Guenther and

Drannan deserved “nothing.” The arbitrator awarded Guenther $2,300 and Drannan $3,400. At

trial in this case, Kopin admitted she had believed the awards were “not . . . bad,” but she had

directed Gaub to appeal them because, in part, she believed arbitration awards generally are higher

than the actual value of claims. Gaub testified at trial that the decision to appeal the arbitration

award could only have been made by Allstate but stated, “Seldom has a plaintiff recovered [from

a jury an award] anywhere near the arbitration award.” Guenther was “frustrated” and Drannan

was apparently “distraught” when Allstate appealed the award.

¶8 After Allstate appealed the award, the parties were ordered to attend a settlement

conference before Judge O’Neil. Based on their conduct, Judge O’Neil found that Hamilton and

Gaub had not participated in the settlement conference in good faith. The court struck Hamilton’s

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