Heather Bourg and Susan Bourg v. Safeway Insurance Company of Louisiana and Chris Martinez

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 5, 2020
Docket2019CA0270
StatusUnknown

This text of Heather Bourg and Susan Bourg v. Safeway Insurance Company of Louisiana and Chris Martinez (Heather Bourg and Susan Bourg v. Safeway Insurance Company of Louisiana and Chris Martinez) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Heather Bourg and Susan Bourg v. Safeway Insurance Company of Louisiana and Chris Martinez, (La. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

STATE OF LOUISIANA

COURT OF APPEAL

00 FIRST CIRCUIT 1-

p, 2019 CA 0270 lid' HEATHER BOURG AND SUSAN BOURG

VERSUS

SAFEWAY INSURANCE COMPANY OF LOUISIANA AND CHRIS MARTINEZ

JUDGMENT RENDERED: MAR 0 5 2020

Appealed from the

Thirty -Second Judicial District Court In and for the Parish of Terrebonne • State of Louisiana Docket Number 181, 671 • Division B

The Honorable John R. Walker, Jr., Judge Presiding

Michael W. Landry ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANTS Angelique P. Provenzano- Walgamotte DEFENDANTS— Safeway

Tracy L. Oakley Insurance Company of Louisiana W. Brett Cain and Chris Martinez Lafayette, Louisiana

Holli K. Yandle Assistant Attorney General Lafayette, Louisiana

Dexter A. Gary ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE

Danny J. Lirette PLAINTIFF— Susan Bourg Houma, Louisiana

BEFORE: MCCLENDON, WELCH, AND HOLDRIDGE, JJ.

Gil

PMC I &)% us PIIMJ I A4! 0 WELCH, J.

In this motor vehicle collision case, the defendants seek review of a

summary judgment granted in favor of the plaintiff, finding the insurer in breach of

its duty of good faith and fair dealing; subject to the penalties and attorney' s fees

provisions of La. R.S. 22: 1892; and awarding the plaintiff $22, 862. 47, plus costs

and interest on her third -party property damage claim. For the following reasons,

we reverse and remand.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

On January 4, 2018, plaintiffs Heather Bourg (" Heather") and Susan Bourg

Ms. Bourg") filed a petition for damages against defendants Chris Martinez and

Safeway Insurance Company of Louisiana (" Safeway"). According to the

allegations of the petition, on October 21, 2017, the 2015 Chevrolet Silverado

operated by Mr. Martinez rear-ended the 2016 Hyundai Sonata operated by

Heather and owned by Ms. Bourg. On the date of that accident, Mr. Martinez had

a policy of automobile liability insurance with Safeway, which provided coverage

for the accident.' Heather claimed that as a result of the accident, which was

caused solely by the negligence of Mr. Martinez, she suffered personal injuries and

sought to recover general and special damages.

Ms. Bourg also raised a property damage claim, alleging entitlement to

statutory penalties and attorney' s fees for Safeway' s alleged breach of the insurer' s

duty of good faith and fair dealing. She claimed that Safeway failed to make an

offer to settle her property damage claim by paying to repair her vehicle in

accordance with La. R.S. 22: 1892, which provides that when a vehicle sustains

property damage in a crash, the insurer has thirty days to adjust the claim and make

a written offer to settle the matter. Ms. Bourg alleged that she provided

1 The policy, No. 2361851 -LA -PP -004, had liability limits of $15, 000. 00 per person/$ 30, 000.00 per accident.

2 satisfactory written proof of loss and demand to Safeway, but that Safeway

arbitrarily, capriciously, or without probable cause failed or refused to make a

timely reasonable offer to settle her property damage claim.' While Safeway

offered to settle her claim by totaling her vehicle, she argued that the offer was

unreasonable, and therefore arbitrary, capricious, and without probable cause,

because her vehicle was not a " total loss" as evidenced by the facts and defined by

the law.

The plaintiffs also filed an amended petition for damages, wherein Ms.

Bourg alleged that she sustained additional damages, including the cost of renting a

vehicle and the diminished value of her vehicle.

In response to the plaintiffs' petition, the defendants generally denied the

allegations and admitted only that a collision had occurred involving the vehicles

operated by Heather and Mr. Martinez and that Safeway had issued a policy of

automobile liability insurance to Mr. Martinez that was in full force and effect on

the date of the accident. In addition, Safeway asserted that it fulfilled all of its

duties to Ms. Bourg, including those imposed by La. R.S. 22: 1892, with regard to

her property damage claim.

Thereafter, Ms. Bourg' filed a motion for summary judgment against

Safeway on the issue of Safeway' s alleged breach of the insurer' s duty of good

faith and fair dealing and her entitlement to penalties and attorney' s fees under La.

R.S. 22: 1892. Ms. Bourg alleged that she made a written demand on Safeway to

have her vehicle repaired on December 14, 2017. Despite her demand, she

2 Ms. Bourg alleged that Safeway failed to fairly and promptly adjust her property damage claim within sixty days. That tracks the language of La. R. S. 22: 1973( B)( 5), not the thirty -day time limit provided for in the statute cited in her petition, La. R. S. 22: 1892. As will be discussed herein, there is a close relationship between the conduct described in La. R.S. 22: 1892( A)(4) and B)( 1) and La. R. S. 22: 1973( B)( 5). See Theriot v. Midland Risk Ins. Co., 95- 2895 ( La. 5/ 20/ 97), 694 So. 2d 184, 192 n. 14.

3 Heather did not join Ms. Bourg in the filing of the motion for summary judgment. The trial court later dismissed all of Heather' s claims against the defendants prior to the summary judgment hearing, in a judgment signed on July 26, 2018.

3 claimed that Safeway did not and has not paid to have her vehicle repaired.' Ms.

Bourg conceded that Safeway offered to settle her claim by declaring the vehicle a

total loss and retaining the vehicle. She argued that Safeway' s offer was

unreasonable, and therefore arbitrary, capricious, and without probable cause,

based on the facts and applicable law.

Ms. Bourg claimed that Safeway provided her with a repair estimate on

October 25, 2017, showing the cost to repair her vehicle was $ 7, 670. 65. On

November 1, 2017, Safeway made a written settlement offer for the pre -accident

fair market value of her vehicle, in the amount of $ 12, 726. 00, with Safeway

retaining the salvage. Ms. Bourg argued that Louisiana jurisprudence provides that

only when the cost to repair a vehicle exceeds the pre -accident value of a vehicle

can an adjuster declare it a " total loss." Ms. Bourg contended that Safeway

insisted on totaling her vehicle, even though its own estimate of the cost to repair

the vehicle was less than its pre -accident valuation of the vehicle. Ms. Bourg

further argued that Safeway ignored the requirement under La. R.S. 32: 702( 14)

that the cost of repair must be equal to or more than seventy- five percent ( 75%) of

the value assigned by the National Automobile Dealers Association (" NADA")

Guide, before a vehicle can be declared a total loss. Ms. Bourg pointed out that

Safeway' s own repair cost estimate showed that the repair cost was less than

seventy- five percent ( 75%) of the value assigned by the NADA Guide, as well as

less than seventy- five percent ( 75%) of its own valuation. Ms. Bourg averred that

here the cost to repair her vehicle only approached sixty- seven percent ( 67%) of

the fair market value.

4 The actual cost to repair Ms. Bourg' s vehicle was $ 8, 514. 48, which she pursued through her own liability insurer. She maintained that her own insurance is a collateral source to which the defendants are not entitled, citing Rogers v. Graves, 2006- 0648 ( La. App. 1St Cir. 2/ 21/ 07), 959 So. 2d 990, 993, writ denied, 2007- 0939 ( La. 6/ 22/ 07), 959 So.

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Heather Bourg and Susan Bourg v. Safeway Insurance Company of Louisiana and Chris Martinez, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/heather-bourg-and-susan-bourg-v-safeway-insurance-company-of-louisiana-and-lactapp-2020.