Kinder v. Western Pioneer Insurance

231 Cal. App. 2d 894, 42 Cal. Rptr. 394, 1965 Cal. App. LEXIS 1579
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 28, 1965
DocketCiv. 21415
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 231 Cal. App. 2d 894 (Kinder v. Western Pioneer Insurance) 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
Kinder v. Western Pioneer Insurance, 231 Cal. App. 2d 894, 42 Cal. Rptr. 394, 1965 Cal. App. LEXIS 1579 (Cal. Ct. App. 1965).

Opinion

DEVINE, J.

An insurance carrier appeals from a judgment in favor of its insured’s assignee. The judgment is in amount $20,000, plus certain interest. This is the excess of the $30,000 judgment rendered against the insured in a personal injury action, over the $10,000 policy limit. The judgment is based on alleged bad faith in refusing to accept offers of settlement. As is common in this kind of case, the assignee of the insured was the plaintiff in the personal injury case.

The Accident

On July 9, 1959, about 3:50 p.m., respondent Kinder and Scoggins, the insured, were involved in a four-car collision on the Eastshore Freeway. Kinder was driving in the extreme lefthand lane of a four-lane northbound area. Scoggins was driving behind him in the same lane. The vehicle ahead of Kinder stopped, and Kinder was able to stop. Scoggins collided with the rear of respondent’s ear. No skid marks were left by Scoggins’ car. Kinder’s car left 24 feet of skid marks forward from the point- of impact, as found from debris, and 57 feet diagonally across the dividing line into the southbound *897 area. The impact apparently propelled Kinder’s ear over the dividing line and into the path of the oncoming traffic in the southbound area, where it collided with a third car, that of George Gasparieh. The Gasparich car was pushed over into the lane to its right and collided with another car, driven by John Postana.

As a result of the collision, Mary Gasparich, the mother of George Gasparich, and a passenger in his car, was killed ; George Gasparieh, Postana and respondent sustained personal injuries. Respondent’s injuries were serious, consisting of shattered right hip, destruction of hip socket, lacerations of right forearm with severance of fourth and fifth finger nerves, broken sternum, rib fractures, and whiplash injury to neck. He had a wage loss of $3,824.

A few more facts about the accident will appear in the discussion of the acts, conversations and deliberations of parties and witnesses.

The Personal Injury Lawsuit and Settlement Negotiations

1. In General

Respondent filed suit for personal injuries against Scoggins in Alameda County Superior Court. Gasparich sued Kinder and Scoggins, and Postana also sued Scoggins.

Scoggins’ insurance coverage with appellant was $10,000 and $20,000. Appellant set up reserves for the four claims arising out of the above described injuries, as follows: for respondent, $7,500; for Postana, $4,000; for the death of Mary Gasparich, $3,500; for George Gasparich, $1,000. These reserves were never changed.

On October 25, 1960, 16 days before the trial, respondent offered to settle for $9,500 but stated that the offer would remain only until October 28, 1960. The letter contained a warning about the exercise of good faith by the insurer. The demand was repeated in a letter of November 4,1960. Counsel for appellant replied that they were willing to negotiate. However, the highest authorization prior to trial was $4,500. Immediately prior to trial, appellant’s counsel wrote to the company saying it was still his opinion that the company should pay up to $9,500, and that if judgment were awarded, it could very well exceed the policy limits. During the trial, Kinder’s attorney offered to settle for $8,000. The company offered $7,500. After the verdict of $30,000 had been rendered, the company paid the limit of its policy, $10,000, to *898 Kinder. Thereafter, Scoggins assigned his claim, based on bad faith, to Kinder.

2. Kinder.

It was admitted by the claims manager for appellant that Kinder made a “very, very good impression” as a witness, far better than the impression made by Scoggins. There was no doubt whatever that Kinder had been rear-ended by Scoggins. He had lost consciousness and did not remember the head-on accident which followed the rear-end collision.

3. Scoggins.

It was recognized by appellant’s claims manager that Scoggins was a man of below average intelligence, and by appellant’s counsel that he was a man of low intelligence, that he would not make a good witness, and that he would be impeached by contradictory pretrial statements. Scoggins did not know whether he had struck Kinder’s vehicle or not. He believed that he had been struck by a ear coming in the other direction. This was contrary to all of the evidence in the ease, and appellant makes no attempt to support this important statement by its insured. A highway patrol officer recommended that Scoggins be prosecuted on a misdemeanor charge, but the district attorney’s office declined to prosecute.

Scoggins, a janitor, had no property with which to pay any part of the judgment which was rendered against him. When the action against him was commenced, he spoke to a lawyer who told him he did not need counsel because his insurance company had as good an attorney as he could get. Later, the insurance company’s counsel sent Scoggins an “excess letter” telling him of his right to obtain his own attorney for his interest over the policy limits. Scoggins thought he did not receive any such letter and, anyway, did not remember getting it. He said that the carrier’s counsel told him again about an attorney of his own, but at that time the trial was almost over. During the trial the company’s attorney told Scoggins that there was an offer to settle for $8,500, that the company had offered $7,500, and that the company might offer a little more. Scoggins said nothing to the lawyer because he “figured he knowed what he was doing.” Scoggins testified that he would have said what he wanted to do “if I had my say before.” The trial judge admitted, and then struck, evidence that about three months after the accident the company cancelled or refused to renew Scoggins’ policy.

*899 4. Attorney at the Personal Injury Trial.

The attorney retained by the company (who is not counsel in the present litigation) had handled a large volume of defense work. He reported to the company that Kinder’s injuries were substantial and that a verdict would probably run from $10,000 to $25,000. He recommended that, if necessary, the company should pay up to $9,500, with an initial offer in the area of $7,500. Although Scoggins had said that a vehicle, presumably Kinder’s, had swerved in front of him, the attorney seems to have placed no reliance on this statement because he testified that he has no recollection of having presented it in the injury ease. In fact, he had attempted to show that a car going in the opposite direction had changed lanes, and that this was the cause of confusion to Scoggins. The attorney wrote to the company that he had expected Scoggins to be substantially impeached, and that this actually had happened when Scoggins was called under section 2055 of the Code of Civil Procedure. A few days before the trial of the injury case, the attorney reported to the company that he had nothing to indicate that the plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence. He testified that he had believed the company had “a chance.”

5. Appellant’s Claims Manager.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
231 Cal. App. 2d 894, 42 Cal. Rptr. 394, 1965 Cal. App. LEXIS 1579, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kinder-v-western-pioneer-insurance-calctapp-1965.