Helen Y. Smith v. Keystone Mutual Insurance Co.

579 S.W.3d 275
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 25, 2019
DocketED106603
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 579 S.W.3d 275 (Helen Y. Smith v. Keystone Mutual Insurance Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Helen Y. Smith v. Keystone Mutual Insurance Co., 579 S.W.3d 275 (Mo. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

In the Missouri Court of Appeals Eastern District DIVISION ONE

HELEN Y. SMITH, ) No. ED106603 ) Respondent, ) Appeal from the Circuit Court ) of the City of St. Louis vs. ) ) Honorable Steven R. Ohmer KEYSTONE MUTUAL INSURANCE CO., ) ) Appellant. ) FILED: June 25, 2019

Keystone Mutual Insurance Co. (“Keystone”) appeals from the trial court’s judgment,

following a jury trial in which Keystone was the defendant insurance company in an action

brought by Helen Y. Smith, the widow of a deceased patient of Dr. Wallace Berkowitz, who had

been insured by Keystone for a time. We reverse the trial court’s judgment and remand with

instructions.

I. Background

Dr. Berkowitz, an ear, nose, and throat physician, applied for insurance with Keystone,

which focuses its business on insuring physicians in a small number of low-risk specialties, such

as ear, nose, and throat physicians. In 2009, Keystone agreed to insure him and his private

practice for 2010, and the policy was renewed in 2011. A dispute later arose between the parties,

which culminated in the parties entering into an agreement in March 2011, which, among other

things, mutually rescinded the insurance policy and waived all of Dr. Berkowitz’s and his private practice’s claims against Keystone (the “Agreement”). The facts of this Agreement will be

discussed in greater detail during the discussion of the points below.

Helen Smith (“Smith”), widow of Johnnie Ray Smith, the deceased patient of Dr.

Wallace Berkowitz, filed a wrongful death lawsuit against Dr. Berkowitz in 2010. A jury

entered a verdict in favor of Smith in February 2013, awarding $1 million plus interest, which

was reduced later to $680,000 with taxable costs and interest. Dr. Berkowitz filed for

bankruptcy and received discharge in August 2016, which freed him from the obligation to pay

the wrongful death judgment and hindered Smith’s ability to collect from him. While Dr.

Berkowitz was still in bankruptcy, Smith filed a petition against Keystone on May 9, 2014.

Smith asserted six claims, including equitable garnishment under Section 379.200, RSMo. 1,

fraud, bad faith, civil conspiracy, vexatious refusal to pay, and punitive damages.

On May 31, 2016, Dr. Berkowitz purported to assign all claims he had against Keystone

to Smith. In return, Dr. Berkowitz received the right to 10 percent of Smith’s recovery from

Keystone. 2 On June 20, 2016, Smith moved for leave to file a First Amended Petition against

Keystone, and Dr. Berkowitz and his practice joined in. The motion was granted and the First

Amended Petition asserted five counts: Smith asserted equitable garnishment under Section

379.200, RSMo., and Smith and Dr. Berkowitz asserted the remaining claims of bad faith, fraud,

vexatious refusal to pay, and punitive damages. Keystone answered and asserted a counterclaim

with three counts: two counts requesting a declaratory judgment that Policy No. 09-056 was

void ab initio and that the insurance policy was properly rescinded under the Agreement between

Dr. Berkowitz and Keystone; and third, seeking a rescission to the extent that the policy was not

already rescinded.

1 All statutory citations are to RSMo. 2000 as updated, unless otherwise indicated. 2 This provision is not in the assignment, but both Smith’s counsel and Dr. Berkowitz acknowledge its existence. 2 The trial court entered partial summary judgment in favor of Keystone with respect to

Counts I, III, IV, and V of the First Amended Petition. The court held on Count I that “plaintiff

Smith may not maintain an equitable garnishment action” under Section 383.035.4. On Count II,

the “bad faith refusal to pay” claim, the trial court explained:

[I]t is patent from the record herein that Keystone had reasonable grounds to believe that Berkowitz had breach[ed] the insurance contract by concealing material information in his Application. There is nothing in the record to suggest that Keystone’s conduct in this matter was based on any motive other than the belief that Berkowitz had made material misrepresentations concerning his claims history. Until the rescission agreement was signed, Keystone had supplied counsel and was defending the Smith claim. Further, there is no evidence on this record that Smith ever made a [settlement] demand on Berkowitz prior to the rescission agreement. Under the circumstances, the tort claim of “bad faith refusal to settle” is not viable.

On Count III, the trial court affirmed a prior ruling that Smith had failed to state a claim

under Section 428.024 “because Keystone is not a debtor subject to the statute.” The court also

concluded that Section 375.144 “does not provide a private right of action for Plaintiffs’ fraud

claim.”

For the vexatious refusal to pay claim, the trial court agreed that the relevant statutes are

“inapplicable to Keystone.” The court held that “the record here shows beyond dispute that

Keystone had a reasonable cause or excuse to refuse to pay the Berkowitz judgment.” That

“excuse is that Berkowitz had apparently concealed or misrepresented his claims history in the

Application, and the uncertainty of the application of Section 379.195 to Keystone meant that

Keystone had a legitimate basis to seek rescission of its policy.” In dismissing Smith’s request

for punitive damages, the court noted that Keystone’s conduct “was far from outrageous.”

The court, however, held that Count II of the First Amended Petition stated a claim for

breach of an insurance contract, agreeing with Keystone that the breach of contract claim was

governed by the five-year statute of limitations in Section 516.120. The court acknowledged that

Dr. Berkowitz was “on notice that Keystone would refuse to perform its agreement when 3 presented with the rescission agreement” in March 2011, while the First Amended Petition,

reflecting the assignment, was filed on June 20, 2016, more than five years later. The court

concluded, however, that the assigned claim related back to the original petition filed by only

Smith on May 9, 2014.

After this ruling, Smith sought leave to amend again and file a new three-count petition

with new tort claims and alleging duress in connection with Dr. Berkowitz’s execution of the

settlement Agreement. The court granted this request as to Count I (breach of contract) only and

denied Smith leave to assert additional claims, stating that the only viable claim is the breach of

the duty to defend, which turns on the validity of the rescission Agreement, with no tort liability

in this action.

Keystone moved for summary judgment based on the settlement Agreement and

challenged Dr. Berkowitz’s alleged duress. On November 29, 2017, the trial court entered

partial summary judgment in favor of Keystone, holding that “the defense of duress is not viable

on this record.” Immediately before trial, Smith filed her Third Amended Petition asserting a

single count, based on Dr. Berkowitz’s assigned claim, for breach of his insurance contract.

Other than incorrectly re-alleging that Dr. Berkowitz signed the settlement Agreement under

duress, Smith asserted no other reason as to why it was not enforceable.

A five-day trial took place in January 2018, during which time Keystone moved for a

directed verdict at both the close of Smith’s evidence and at the close of all the evidence. Both

were denied. Keystone proposed jury instructions and a verdict form with respect to its

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