Glassman v. Safeco Ins. Co. of Am.

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 28, 2023
DocketH049825
StatusPublished

This text of Glassman v. Safeco Ins. Co. of Am. (Glassman v. Safeco Ins. Co. of Am.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Glassman v. Safeco Ins. Co. of Am., (Cal. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

Filed 4/28/23 CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

SIXTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

SHERRY A. GLASSMAN, H049825 (Santa Clara County Super. Ct. Plaintiff and Appellant, No. 21CV383782)

v.

SAFECO INSURANCE COMPANY OF AMERICA,

Defendant and Respondent.

Civil Code section 3291 1 addresses prejudgment interest in actions for personal injuries. It expressly incorporates the provisions of Code of Civil Procedure section 998 (CCP section 998), adding interest from the date of the offer as a recoverable item, claimed as a cost as opposed to an element of damages, if a plaintiff makes a CCP section 998 offer that the defendant does not accept, and the plaintiff ultimately obtains a more favorable judgment. (Steinfeld v. Foote-Goldman Proctologic Medical Group, Inc. (1997) 60 Cal.App.4th 13, 18 (Steinfeld).) In Pilimai v. Farmers Insurance Exchange Co. (2006) 39 Cal.4th 133 (Pilimai), the California Supreme Court held that

1Except as otherwise noted, further unspecified statutory references are to the Civil Code. uninsured motorist (UIM) 2 proceedings are not actions for personal injury sounding in tort to which section 3291 applies and that such proceedings are instead in the nature of an action in contract arising out of a policy of insurance. Thus, section 3291, incorporating the cost-shifting mechanisms of CCP section 998 and applying them to prejudgment interest in personal- injury actions from the date of the offer, does not apply in a UIM proceeding. In this case, appellant Sherry A. Glassman prevailed in a UIM arbitration against respondent Safeco Insurance of America. The arbitration agreement was contained in a Safeco umbrella policy that provided excess UIM benefits, over and above those afforded by Glassman’s concurrent Safeco auto-liability policy. Glassman had sustained significant bystander emotional-distress damages during the policy period after witnessing her mother’s fatal injuries when an underinsured driver hit them both while they were walking together in a crosswalk. The arbitrator’s award, later confirmed by the superior court, determined that Glassman’s compensable damages resulting from the accident exceeded the required threshold to entitle her to the umbrella-policy excess UIM limits of $1 million. Before the arbitration

2 UIM coverage provided in an auto-liability insurance policy and proceedings related thereto are addressed by Insurance Code sections 11580.2–11580.5, the Uninsured Motorist Act. They apply to both uninsured and underinsured motorist coverage in that Insurance Code section 11580.2, subdivision (p)(2) “requires auto insurance policies to provide underinsured motorist coverage for motorists whose liability insurance is less than the limits carried on the injured motorist’s plan.” (Storm v. Standard Fire Ins. Co. (2020) 52 Cal.App.5th 636, 643 (Storm); McIsaac v. Foremost Ins. Co. Grand Rapids, Michigan (2021) 64 Cal.App.5th 418, 420, fn. 1 (McIsaac); see also Ins. Code, § 11580.2, subd. (n) [“Underinsured motorist coverage shall be offered with limits equal to the limits of liability for the insured’s uninsured motorist limits in the underlying policy, and may be offered with limits in excess of the uninsured motorist coverage”].)

2 hearing and award, Glassman had issued to Safeco a CCP section 998 offer in the amount of $999,999.99, one cent less than the policy limits. Safeco did not accept the offer, on which Glassman prevailed when the arbitrator later ruled she was entitled to the full $1 million umbrella-policy limits. After Glassman petitioned the trial court to confirm the arbitration award, she also sought prejudgment interest under section 3287, subdivision (a) (§ 3287(a)) from the date of her CCP section 998 offer. This subdivision provides a right to prejudgment interest when a person “is entitled to recover damages certain, or capable of being made certain by calculation” (section 3287(a)), and the right to recover is vested in the person on a particular day. Unlike section 3291, which Glassman initially invoked, it contains no reference to CCP section 998. Thus, under section 3287(a), a liquidated damage claim triggers the entitlement to prejudgment interest not as a cost, as it is treated under section 3291 if a plaintiff prevails on a CCP section 998 offer, but as a form of additional compensatory damages. For a plaintiff to obtain prejudgment interest under section 3287(a), the defendant must have known or have been able to calculate from reasonably available information the amount of the plaintiff’s liquidated claim owed as of a particular day. (Collins v. City of Los Angeles (2012) 205 Cal.App.4th 140, 150–151 (Collins); Cassinos v. Union Oil Co. (1993) 14 Cal.App.4th 1770, 1789 (Cassinos).) The trial court here denied Glassman’s request for prejudgment interest under section 3287(a), concluding that the amount of her policy- limits claim for excess UIM benefits was not certain or capable of being made certain and this uncertainty was not fixed by Glassman’s CCP section 998 policy-limits offer. On appeal from the ensuing judgment confirming the arbitration award, she challenges only the court’s denial of prejudgment interest under section 3287(a). She urges, as she did below, that to promote

3 settlement and fair treatment of an insured by an insurer, an insured’s prevailing CCP section 998 offer in a UIM proceeding effectively liquidates the insured’s claim in the amount and as of the date of the offer under section 3287(a), mandating an award of prejudgment interest. We reject this contention, concluding that neither section 3287(a) nor CCP section 998, taken separately or together, so provide. Glassman further contends that her CCP section 998 offer in this case did, in fact, establish both the sum certain and the date certain of her underlying claim to the $1 million policy limits for purposes of awarding her prejudgment interest from the date of her offer under section 3287(a), and that Safeco knew or had reasonable access to sufficient information about her special damages alone at that point to make their recoverable amount from Safeco—the umbrella-policy limits—certain. But, as is clear from the record, when the trial court denied Glassman’s request for prejudgment interest under section 3287(a), lacking within the realm of its consideration was evidence of Safeco’s knowledge that Glassman’s economic losses or special damages resulting from the accident—her hard costs—in fact already exceeded the umbrella-policy limits when her CCP section 998 offer was made, or an evidentiary showing that this information was then reasonably available to Safeco. Finally, we reject as forfeited Glassman’s newly articulated and alternative claim to prejudgment interest under section 3287 from the date of the arbitration award. We accordingly affirm the judgment.

4 STATEMENT OF THE CASE I. The Accident 3 “On January 22, 2015, . . . [Glassman] and her mother . . . were leaving a hospital” where [Glassman]’s father was staying after having suffered a heart attack. “[Glassman] and her mother . . . were crossing the street . . . when an SUV . . . failed to yield and struck both of them.” “[Glassman] recalls she was hit first and then her mother[,] . . . [who] was dragged and pulled up into the SUV’s wheel well, causing her to suffer mortal injuries.” After hitting them, “the SUV did not stop so [Glassman] ran after it pounding on the vehicle to get the driver’s attention. [Glassman then] went to her mother[,] who was face down on the ground” and bleeding. “Her [mother’s] leg was in a very bizarre position[,] which looked unnatural; eventually it was discovered her pelvis was crushed[,] so the leg was not connected to the rest of her body. [Glassman] held her mother’s hand and squeezed her mother’s fingers while her mother was whimpering.

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