Harrell v. Old American Insurance Co.

1991 OK CIV APP 91, 829 P.2d 75, 1991 Okla. Civ. App. LEXIS 128, 1991 WL 333447
CourtCourt of Civil Appeals of Oklahoma
DecidedSeptember 17, 1991
Docket72357
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 1991 OK CIV APP 91 (Harrell v. Old American Insurance Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Civil Appeals of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harrell v. Old American Insurance Co., 1991 OK CIV APP 91, 829 P.2d 75, 1991 Okla. Civ. App. LEXIS 128, 1991 WL 333447 (Okla. Ct. App. 1991).

Opinion

BRIGHTMIRE, Judge.

The holder of a hospital confinement policy brought this action to recover damages for the insurer’s breach of the insurance contract and failure to deal in good faith with its insured.

Judgment was entered for the plaintiff on a jury verdict for both compensatory and punitive damages.

The insurer appeals. We affirm.

I

In 1984, Jessie Harrell, the thirty-seven-year-old plaintiff, bought a hospitalization insurance policy from the defendant, Old American Insurance Company. The contract provided in part that should Harrell suffer a covered loss (hospital confinement), Old American would pay her $30 per day while she was in the hospital. In December 1984, the policy lapsed for nonpayment of the monthly premium, but was soon reinstated effective January 31, 1985.

On April 29, 1985, Harrell walked into the hospital and was admitted for the following elective surgical procedures: Revision of a 1979 gastric stapling operation, a right hernia repair, and a bunionectomy on both of her feet. A presurgical physical examination disclosed that Harrell’s temperature, pulse, blood pressure, and respiration were normal. She was expected to be in the hospital for only five to seven days.

The next day Harrell was taken to surgery where the contemplated procedures *77 were carried out. The operative reports state that the “patient tolerated this procedure well.... and [she was] removed to the Recovery Room in a good condition.”

At first, Harrell’s convalescence was satisfactory. On the second postoperative day, however, she began “spiking” 1 a temperature accompanied by a rapid pulse and respiration rate. Her condition did not immediately improve.

Testing eliminated a suspected pulmonary embolus (arterial obstruction) as the cause, but did disclose that she had an abnormal accumulation of fluid in the left chest cavity and a possible infection below her diaphragm. On May 4,1985, exploratory surgery was carried out and a subphrenic (below the diaphragm) abscess was found and drained. Additional surgeries were necessary on May 21 and June 19, 1985, following which Harrell’s condition began to slowly improve.

The acute postoperative onset of the infection-related sickness required Harrell to be confined in the hospital for some sixty days beyond the five or so days originally anticipated. So, Harrell, while still in the hospital, submitted a claim to Old American for benefits under her hospitalization policy.

Old American’s claims examiner ordered a copy of Harrell’s hospital records. Then without talking to either the treating physicians or Harrell, the claims examiner sent this inquiry to Old American’s medical consultant:

“This insured was hospitalized 042985 to 070285. The policy lapsed 120384 and was reinstated 01-31-85. According to the medical records we have received what do you consider pre-existing and do you believe this entire confinement was medically necessary?”

The response by Dr. Alberg was crisp and laconic: “decline entire confinement as preexisting.”

Consequently, on July 23, 1985, the claims examiner wrote Harrell and informed her that the claim was denied because her “hospitalization was due to a preexisting condition manifested, (prior to December 3, 1984).”

On August 20, 1985, Harrell again wrote the claims examiner saying that she was “just sick” about the denial of her claim and added that she could not “understand how your ‘medical consultant’ could come to such a conclusion.” Harrell asked Old American to reconsider the claim and explained that she was “in desperate need of this money.”

The response was a second rejection letter sent a week later repeating in substance what the examiner had said earlier. It is significant on the issue of bad faith that prior to mailing the letter the record does not disclose that the examiner asked either the company doctor about the medical significance of the sudden sickness that set in on the third postoperative day, or the company counsel about the relevant law, or Harrell about additional facts pertaining to her postoperative complications.

Finally, Harrell wrote Old American yet a third time pleading for a reconsideration of her claim by its “medical staff.”

But it never happened. For after Dr. Alberg gave his initial opinion recommending the denial of the claim, Old American never submitted the claim for reconsideration by Alberg, by any other medical or legal expert, nor, as we said, did it ever attempt to communicate with any of Harrell’s doctors.

Eventually Harrell sued Old American for: (1) Breach of contract, and (2) willful bad faith failure to deal with her.

The case was tried to a jury, which returned a verdict in favor of Harrell and awarded compensatory damages of $1,800 on her breach of contract claim, $40,000 on her bad faith claim, and $250,000 punitive damages.

From this judgment Old American appeals and advances the following assignments of error: (1) The trial court improp *78 erly denied its motion for summary judgment; (2) the bad faith claim and punitive damages request should not have been submitted to the jury; (3) the evidence was insufficient to support actual damages for bad faith; (4) the punitive damages award was excessive; (5) the instructions given were contrary to law; and (6) the punitive damages award violates due process and constitutes an excessive fine.

II

Old American’s first complaint— that the trial court erred in denying its pretrial motion for summary judgment—is summarily rejected for the obvious reason that the propriety of the ruling became moot by virtue of the trial proceedings. 2

III

Old American’s remaining assignments of error relate to Harrell’s bad faith theory of recovery and the adjunctive punitive damages award. They may be summarized and reframed this way: There is no evidence to support a finding that Old American rejected Harrell’s claim in bad faith, or if there is, then both the compensatory and punitive damages awards are excessive, and the punitive damages award is unconstitutional.

In the main the argument is that, although Harrell’s hospital confinement should have lasted no more than seven days for the surgeries she had been admitted for, the postoperative problems she encountered were complications resulting from the operative procedures and therefore Old American could in good faith construe the policy provisions as excluding coverage for the extended hospitalization.

To begin with it is fundamental that when there is doubt about the meaning or interpretation of an insurance policy provision it will be construed in a light most favorable to the insured. 3

Whatever doubts there might have been about the meaning of the material provisions of Old American’s policy were correctly resolved by the trial court as a matter of law in instructions numbered 11 and 12. Instruction No. 11, to which Old American did not object to, informed the jury that:

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Bluebook (online)
1991 OK CIV APP 91, 829 P.2d 75, 1991 Okla. Civ. App. LEXIS 128, 1991 WL 333447, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harrell-v-old-american-insurance-co-oklacivapp-1991.