McManis v. San Diego Postal Credit Union

61 Cal. App. 4th 547, 71 Cal. Rptr. 2d 617, 98 Daily Journal DAR 1512, 98 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 1096, 1998 Cal. App. LEXIS 110
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 11, 1998
DocketD024647
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 61 Cal. App. 4th 547 (McManis v. San Diego Postal Credit Union) 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
McManis v. San Diego Postal Credit Union, 61 Cal. App. 4th 547, 71 Cal. Rptr. 2d 617, 98 Daily Journal DAR 1512, 98 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 1096, 1998 Cal. App. LEXIS 110 (Cal. Ct. App. 1998).

Opinion

Opinion

HALLER, J.

The San Diego Postal Credit Union (Credit Union) loaned Lourdes G. McManis money to purchase an automobile. At the same time, *550 Credit Union sold Lourdes a disability credit insurance policy issued by Life Investors Insurance Company (Life Investors). After making her loan and insurance payments for three years, McManis became disabled and was unable to continue making the payments on her loan. McManis filed a disability claim with Life Investors and, while the claim was pending, Credit Union repossessed her vehicle. As a result of the repossession, McManis allegedly suffered emotional distress and property damage.

McManis sued Credit Union and Life Investors. Thereafter, Life Investors paid McManis’s disability claim in full and Credit Union returned her vehicle. McManis later amended her complaint to add the company that repossessed the vehicle, San Diego Auto Recovery, Inc. (Auto Recovery), as a Doe defendant. Defendants moved for summary judgment. McManis opposed the summary judgment and moved to amend the complaint. After permitting McManis to file supplemental papers, the court granted summary judgment and denied the motion to amend.

McManis appeals. In the published portion of this opinion, we hold the summary judgment was improper as to Credit Union because the parties’ loan agreement permitted the credit union to repossess only if “permitted by law” and the credit union did not show it complied with applicable law governing credit disability insurance. (Civ. Code, § 1812.400 et seq.) In the unpublished portion of the opinion, we determine the court properly granted summary judgment as to Life Investors and Auto Recovery, and conclude the court did not abuse its discretion in denying McManis’s motion to amend. Since Credit Union is no longer a prevailing party, we need not reach Credit Union’s cross-appeal that the court erred in denying its request for attorney fees.

Factual and Procedural Background

Viewing the summary judgment record in the light most favorable to McManis, the evidence before the trial court established the following.

In July 1990, McManis, a postal employee, applied for a $9,665 loan from Credit Union to buy a used vehicle. McManis agreed to make bimonthly payments for four years until July 1994. In connection with the loan application, Credit Union asked McManis whether she wanted to buy credit insurance issued by Life Investors that would protect her if she became disabled and was unable to make her loan payments. McManis agreed to purchase the disability insurance policy and checked the appropriate box on the loan agreement form. After Credit Union approved the loan, McManis granted Credit Union a security interest in the vehicle. During the next three *551 years, McManis’s payments on the loan and on the disability insurance policy were automatically deducted from her payroll account.

At the end of 1992, McManis became pregnant. On June 24, 1993, a doctor diagnosed McManis with preterm labor and said she should not return to work. On that date, McManis called Credit Union and said she was going to be disabled for at least two months and that she needed to file an application for disability benefits for the car loan. The Credit Union employee told McManis she would have to wait until she was “off work” for 30 days. The employee said “ ‘[o]nce you have 30 days completed, call us back, and then we’ll take care of it.’ ” McManis responded “ ‘Can I call them so they can send me the form so I can get started on this?’ ” The employee answered “ ‘No, you have to wait 30 days, and then we’ll take care of it.’ ” When McManis expressed concern, the Credit Union employee said, “ ‘Don’t worry about it. If you get behind in your payments and your name comes up in the computer, it will show that you have a claim, and you won’t have a problem. There will be no problems.’ ”

Thirty days later, on July 24, McManis called the Credit Union to request disability benefits. In response, Credit Union faxed Life Investors a notice that McManis had reported a total disability. The notice stated that McManis’s reported disability began on June 24, 1993.

About one week later, McManis received a claim form from Life Investors. The claim form contained three parts: the employee’s statement, the employer’s statement, and the doctor’s statement. On August 3, McManis completed the employee’s portion and sent the claim form to her employer.

On August 13, McManis made the last payment on her loan. On August 20, McManis delivered her baby. Approximately 10 days later, on August 30, McManis’s Credit Union loan went into default. 2

Within one or two weeks, Credit Union’s collection officer, Joel Blouin, began making phone calls to McManis, notifying her the loan was delinquent. McManis told Blouin she had a claim pending with the disability insurer. Blouin responded “ ‘We don’t care. You have to pay us.’ ” In an effort to avoid the repossession, McManis retained a bankruptcy attorney and, on September 17, filed for chapter 7 bankruptcy.

For reasons not entirely clear in the record, McManis’s disability claim form remained with McManis’s employer (the United States Postal Service). *552 Although McManis had sent the claim form to the postal service’s personnel manager in early August, the manager did not act upon it for several months because she was apparently waiting to know when McManis was returning to work. On October 7, the manager finally completed the claim form and returned it to McManis. One or two weeks later, McManis forwarded the claim form to her doctor at Kaiser-Permanente Medical Care, Dr. Richard Block. On October 28, Dr. Block completed the doctor’s statement portion and sent the form to the Life Investors claims office.

On November 4, the Life Investors claims office (located in Atlanta, Georgia) received the claim form. In the claim form, Dr. Block confirmed McManis was “continuously” and “totally” disabled from June 24, 1993, through “six weeks post partum.” Dr. Block said he began treating McManis on July 16, 1993.

Eleven days later, on November 15, McManis called Life Investors and spoke with the person handling her claim, Joseph Clark. McManis asked Clark about the status of her claim. Clark said he was “working on it.”

The next day, on November 16, Clark wrote a letter to McManis stating that before he could process the claim he needed written verification that McManis had been under a physician’s care for three weeks before she saw Dr. Block (from June 24, 1993, through July 16, 1993). Clark, however, did not question the information showing McManis was totally disabled from July 16 through “six weeks post-partum.” Clark enclosed a form to be completed by McManis’s doctor. The letter concluded “After we have received this information, we will be pleased to give your claim our prompt attention.” On that same date, Clark informed Credit Union that McManis had returned her claim form and Life Investors had requested the additional medical information.

On about November 20, McManis received Clark’s letter. McManis telephoned Clark and told him it was important that her claim be paid because Credit Union was threatening to take her car.

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61 Cal. App. 4th 547, 71 Cal. Rptr. 2d 617, 98 Daily Journal DAR 1512, 98 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 1096, 1998 Cal. App. LEXIS 110, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcmanis-v-san-diego-postal-credit-union-calctapp-1998.