Hollaway v. Direct General Insurance Co. of Mississippi

497 S.W.3d 733, 2016 Ky. LEXIS 433, 2016 WL 5245694
CourtKentucky Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 22, 2016
Docket2014-SC-000758-DG
StatusPublished
Cited by45 cases

This text of 497 S.W.3d 733 (Hollaway v. Direct General Insurance Co. of Mississippi) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Kentucky Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hollaway v. Direct General Insurance Co. of Mississippi, 497 S.W.3d 733, 2016 Ky. LEXIS 433, 2016 WL 5245694 (Ky. 2016).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT BY

CHIEF JUSTICE MINTON

In order to prevail on a third-party bad-faith claim under Kentucky’s Unfair Claims Settlement Practices Act, a plaintiff must prove not only the insurer’s unreasonable failure to respond to a legitimate claim to recover policy proceeds but also must produce evidence that the insurer acted recklessly indifferent to the plaintiffs right to recover. The Court of Appeals affirmed the trial court’s summary judgment in favor of the insurer in the present case. On discretionary review, we affirm the decision of the Court of Appeals because we agree that the plaintiff failed to present evidence that could possibly succeed at trial.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND.

This bad-faith insurance dispute began as a low-speed automobile collision in an apartment complex parking lot. The accident involved a vehicle owned and driven by Harry Sykes III and a vehicle owned by Samantha Hollaway and driven by Danny Bartlett. Both parties rely on their own accounts of the series of events leading up to the accident.

According to Hollaway, Bartlett was driving Hollaway’s car, with Hollaway in the passenger seat, and the vehicle was navigating through the parking lot of an apartment complex. They spotted Sykes approximately 20-25 .feet away, backing out of a parking space. In their version of the story, Bartlett stopped- the vehicle to allow Sykes .to continue backing out of the parking spot. But as Sykes backed out, he angled his vehicle toward them and kept coming backward until the rear end of his vehicle hit the front end of Hollaway’s car. And it is Bartlett’s position that he could do nothing to avoid the collision because Sykes had backed out too quickly.

Sykes’s story differs. He claims he was slowly backing out of the parking spot and was preparing to drive forward when Holl-away’s car struck the rear end of his vehicle. He claims that Hollaway’s car—driven by BartletL-just kept coming, traveling in the wrong lane and rounding a nearby curve. Sykes also testified he could not avoid a collision because the vehicle was approaching him too quickly.

Despite the contradictory accounting of the cause of the accident itself, all parties do agree to a number of other facts about the accident. First, Sykes, Bartlett, and Hollaway were all wearing their seatbelts at the time of the accident. No airbags were deployed. Sykes’s car had no visible damage, while Hollaway’s vehicle only sustained $463.62 in property damage to the [735]*735left fender on the driver’s side. Both vehicles were drivable and able to leave the scene without any assistance. And finally, the police were never asked to investigate the accident or the scene.

Following the accident, Hollaway sought medical treatment. She alleges the accident injured her back and hip and forced her to undergo extensive physical therapy. She anticipated that she would exhaust her no-fault insurance benefits in short order. And she claims the injuries allegedly sustained in the accident caused her to lose her job as a nurse’s assistant because she could not physically perform her work responsibilities.

Sykes was insured by Direct General Insurance Company of Mississippi, Inc. for the state-required automobile liability insurance limits of $25,000 per person. Holl-away sought compensation from Direct General for both bodily and property damage as a result of the accident. Direct General investigated the accident and quickly learned of the contradictory accounts 'for how the accident was caused. The record indicates that Direct General may have initially concluded that its insured, Sykes, was liable for the accident, and settled Hollaway’s property damage claim for $463.42. But Hollaway’s bodily injury claim would prove more contentious.

Eventually, Hollaway’s no-fault benefits were exhausted, and she demanded $125,000 in compensation from Direct General (or the policy limits). She provided the insurer with medical records, billing information, and formal documentation of wage loss after leaving her job. Eventually, Direct General offered to settle her claim for $5,000. She rejected this, and again demanded $125,000 compensation for her injuries that were allegedly the result of the accident. Direct General made no eounter-offer and stood by its initial $5,000 offer to settle.

Following the breakdown of settlement negotiations, Hollaway filed suit. She asserted three separate claims: (1) a claim of negligence against Sykes; (2) a claim for underinsured motorist (UIM) benefits against her own insurer, Allstate; and (3) a third-party bad faith claim, against Direct General under the Kentucky Unfair Claims Settlement Practices Act1 on the theory that Direct General had failed to “reasonably evaluate, investigate, and negotiate a settlement of her bodily injury claim.” The first two claims have been settled and dismissed, but the bad-faith investigation claim persists.

At the close of discovery, Direct General moved for summary judgment on the theory that it had not acted in bad faith because it had-the right to insist that Holla-way prove her case that the insurer was liable before it had a duty to offer her any settlement. Direct General pointed to the disputed nature of how the accident was caused, the lack of evidence that the accident caused Hollaway’s injuries, and Holl-away’s preexisting injuries to the same area of her body where she was allegedly injured from the accident. Hollaway rebutted this position by arguing that Direct General paid her $463.42 in property damage and settled her bodily injury claim for $22,500, and that it had failed to “investigate, negotiate, and attempt to settle the claim in a fair and reasonable manner,” as insurers are directed to do under the KUCSPA.2

The trial court ultimately granted summary judgment in favor of Direct General, primarily by finding that a legitimate dispute existed regarding who had been liable for the accident and what injuries to Holl-[736]*736away were caused by the accident. Because liability and causation were legitimately disputed, the trial court ruled that Direct General could not have acted in bad faith as a matter of law.

Hollaway appealed the trial court’s ruling to the Court of Appeals, which affirmed the trial court, albeit eccentrically; It began its analysis by dismissing two sources of evidence, which it claimed Holl-away relied upon: her answers to her interrogatories that were supposedly un-sworn and unsigned, and information from a bad-faith expert witness that the panel determined was insufficient to be considered an affidavit entered to counter Direct General’s motion for summary judgment. The panel then affirmed the lower court’s summary judgment by identifying that an insurer has tort liability for bad faith only if its liability for paying the claim in question was “beyond dispute.”3 The only evidence Hollaway presented in support of her bad faith claim is the $463⅛42 settlement for property damage and the $22,500 settlement for her bodily injury claim from the accident. The panel concluded that in Kentucky, “a settlement is not evidence of legal liability, nor does it qualify as an admission of fault.” So the panel held that liability was not “beyond dispute” and summary judgment in favor of Direct General was proper below.

Hollaway then petitioned this Court for discretionary review.

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497 S.W.3d 733, 2016 Ky. LEXIS 433, 2016 WL 5245694, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hollaway-v-direct-general-insurance-co-of-mississippi-ky-2016.