Mary Bottini v. GEICO

859 F.3d 987, 2017 WL 2589986, 2017 U.S. App. LEXIS 10636
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit
DecidedJune 15, 2017
Docket15-12266 Argument Calendar
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 859 F.3d 987 (Mary Bottini v. GEICO) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mary Bottini v. GEICO, 859 F.3d 987, 2017 WL 2589986, 2017 U.S. App. LEXIS 10636 (11th Cir. 2017).

Opinion

TJOFLAT, Circuit Judge:

In this § 1292(b) interlocutory appeal, we consider a narrow issue concerning claims against uninsured/underinsured motorist (“UM”) insurance 1 providers under Florida law. Florida, by statute, imposes a duty on insurers to settle their policyholders’ claims in good faith. Fla. Stat. § 624.155. If a UM insurer fails to settle a legitimate claim within the statutory time limit, its policyholder may obtain, through two lawsuits, two sets of damages: one for breach of contract up to the policy maximum and another for bad faith for the full amount of the policyholder’s injury (“statutory damages”). 2 Here, the parties dis *989 agree about whether the Court in this bad-faith case is bound by the state court jury’s determination of damages in the underlying UM breach-of-contract action.

During the pendency of this appeal — but prior to oral argument — the Florida Supreme Court held that the determination of damages in a UM contract case is binding in a subsequent bad-faith case. Frid-man v. Safeco Ins. Co. of III., 185 So.3d 1214, 1216 (Fla. 2016). Critical to this appeal, however, Fridman contained a caveat that the parties have a right to appellate review of the statutory-damages determination before it becomes binding in the subsequent bad-faith case. Id. at 1226. We conclude that the defendant, GEICO, did not receive appellate review of the statutory-damages determination in the parties’ underlying breach-of-contract case. Therefore, that damages determination does not bind the parties in this bad-faith case. We thus reverse the District Court’s order granting partial summary judgment on the binding effect of the verdict in the Circuit Court’s breach-of-contract case, and hold that the parties must again litigate statutory damages.

I.

This case began tragically. On March 3, 2007 at around 12:10 AM, Gerard Bottini was traveling on 1-75 in Hillsborough County, Florida. A car ahead of him caught fire and began emitting smoke, obscuring his view of the road. As a result, he lost control of his vehicle, which left the roadway, rolled over, and ejected him. He died later that day from his injuries.

The vehicle Mr. Bottini was driving was insured by a GEICO policy that provided $50,000' of UM coverage. The car that caught fire was underinsured for purposes of Fla. Stat. § 627.727. After Mr. Bottini’s death, Mary Bottini, his wife, became the personal representative of Mr. Bottini’s estate. In the months following the crash, Ms. Bottini’s lawyer sent two letters to GEICO demanding payment of the policy maximum because Mr. Bottini was not at fault, and GEICO had possession of crash reports supporting that conclusion. GEICO denied the requests, stating that it was still conducting its own investigation to determine whether Mr. Bottini was at fault for the accident, which would render the coverage inapplicable.

On August 8, 2007, 104 days after Ms. Bottini’s lawyer sent her first letter to GEICO and 158 days after the crash, she filed a Civil Remedy Notice of Insurer Violation (“CRN”) with the Florida Department of Financial Services. Filing the CRN is a statutory prerequisite to filing a bad-faith claim against an insurer. Fla. Stat. § 624.155(3). As required by § 624.155(3)(b)(l), Ms. Bottini’s CRN listed the statutory provisions that she alleged GEICO was violating by failing to honor her claim. 3 GEICO responded to *990 Ms. Bottini’s CRN on October 5, 2007, stating that its investigation had led it to conclude that smoke from the vehicle in front of Gerard Bottini did not cause him to lose control of his vehicle, it had not acted in bad faith, and it would “continue to make every attempt to resolve this claim amicably.” About two weeks later, in an apparent change of heart, GEICO sent Ms. Bottini’s lawyer a check for the full $50,000, including with it a complete release of liability for any related claims. 4 Ms. Bottini rejected the release of liability and returned the check.

In April 2008, Ms. Bottini sued GEICO in the Circuit Court for Hillsborough County, Florida seeking benefits under the UM policy. GEICO defended on the basis that Mr. Bottini was negligent in driving his vehicle and such negligence was either the sole or contributing cause of the accident. Ms. Bottini countered that the vehicle that caught fire ahead of Mr. Bottini was maintained and operated negligently, and that negligence caused the crash, not any breach of duty committed by Mr. Bot-tini.

The case was tried to a jury, and the jury found for Ms. Bottini. It decided that Mr. Bottini was not negligent, that both the operator and owner of the smoking vehicle were negligent, and that GEICO was therefore liable. The jury also decided the full extent of damages arising from the aceident — $103,552 to' the estate; $14,522,478 to Ms. Bottini for loss of support, services, companionship, and pain and suffering; and around $5,400,000 to each of Mr. Bottini’s three children for loss of support and services, parental companionship, instruction and guidance, and pain and suffering. In total, the jury found damages amounting to $30,872,266.

Following the verdict, GEICO filed motions for new trial and remittitur, but those were denied. It then filed a motion in the Circuit Court to limit the judgment to the $50,000 policy maximum, and that motion was granted. Thus, after reciting the jury’s $30,872,266 damages verdict and assessing setoffs, 5 the Court entered a final judgment for $50,000.

GEICO appealed the judgment to the Second District Court of Appeal. It sought a new trial on several grounds, three of which were pertinent to the computation of damages. It argued that Ms. Bottini’s counsel impermissibly attacked the character of the driver of the vehicle that caught fire, that Ms. Bottini’s counsel made a highly inflammatory closing argument, and that $30,000,000 in damages was excessive and against the “manifest weight of the evidence.” GEICO also contended that the judgment clearly reflected a “punitive component” as a result of “prejudicial and improperly admitted evidence and argument.”

*991 The Second District affirmed the judgment in a short per curiam opinion that reads in its entirety as follows:

Geico General Insurance Company raised five issues in this appeal. We conclude that none of the issues warrants reversal. We note that Geico’s arguments include claims of error that impacted the amount of damages determined by the jury. The jury verdict found that the Estate’s damages were $30,872,266. But the judgment amount entered by the trial court against Geico is $50,000, based on the applicable insurance policy limits.

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Bluebook (online)
859 F.3d 987, 2017 WL 2589986, 2017 U.S. App. LEXIS 10636, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mary-bottini-v-geico-ca11-2017.