Milroy v. Allstate Insurance Co.

2007 OK CIV APP 6, 151 P.3d 922, 2006 Okla. Civ. App. LEXIS 147, 2006 WL 3896755
CourtCourt of Civil Appeals of Oklahoma
DecidedSeptember 19, 2006
Docket102,044
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 2007 OK CIV APP 6 (Milroy v. Allstate Insurance Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Civil Appeals of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Milroy v. Allstate Insurance Co., 2007 OK CIV APP 6, 151 P.3d 922, 2006 Okla. Civ. App. LEXIS 147, 2006 WL 3896755 (Okla. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

JOHN F. FISCHER, Judge.

¶ 1 Plaintiff appeals from the Trial Court’s order granting summary judgment to her automobile liability insurer in her action claiming breach of contract, breach of the duty of good faith and fair dealing and abuse of process. The appeal is assigned to the accelerated docket pursuant to Oklahoma Supreme Court Rule 1.36, 12 O.S. Supp.2002, ch. 15, app. 1. Based on our review of the record on appeal and applicable law, we affirm.

*924 BACKGROUND FACTS

I. The Underlying Personal Injury Action

¶ 2 The summary judgment record reveals the following. On the afternoon of January 20, 1998, Plaintiff Donna Milroy was involved in an automobile collision with a vehicle driven by Barbara Lewis. Milroy rear-ended Lewis’s vehicle as it was stopped at a traffic light. Milroy acknowledged that she was talking on her cell phone at the time of the accident. The investigating officer cited Mil-roy for inattentive driving but found no improper conduct on the part of Lewis.

¶ 3 The collision did not cause major damage to either vehicle, and neither Lewis nor Milroy requested medical treatment at the accident scene. However, later that afternoon, Lewis telephoned an attorney who had represented her in an automobile accident two years earlier, and he advised her to seek medical treatment. In the early evening, Lewis received treatment at a hospital emergency room for neck pain and numbness and tingling in her fingers. Both Milroy and Lewis subsequently sought chiropractic treatment. Coincidentally, they both received treatment at the same chiropractic clinic.

¶ 4 At the time of the accident, Milroy was a named insured under an automobile insurance policy issued by Allstate Insurance Company. The policy had liability limits of $100,000 per person for each occurrence. Lewis retained an attorney to pursue her personal injury claim against Milroy. On August 31,1998, Allstate’s claims representative, Lori Porter, first offered $500 to settle Lewis’s claim during a telephone conversation with Lewis’s attorney. Allstate made this offer before receiving any supporting medical documentation regarding Lewis’s claim for damages. Lewis rejected the settlement offer.

¶ 5 In a letter to Lori Porter dated October 27, 1999, Lewis’s attorney set forth the details of Lewis’s claim for damages. He submitted medical records and an itemization of medical bills totaling $2,599.15. He advised Porter that it was the treating chiropractor’s opinion that Lewis had sustained injuries to the ligaments in her neck and low back that were “permanent [in] nature” and would require “care in the future.” He also advised Porter that his client had authorized him to settle her claim for $8,000. Allstate declined to settle because it believed the offer exceeded the value of Lewis’s claim.

¶ 6 Lewis’s attorney filed a small claims action on her behalf on January 20, 2000, seeking damages in the amount of $4,499.99. On receipt of the suit papers, Lori Porter wrote a letter to Milroy and advised her, among other things: “The suit is being assigned to defense counsel who will be in contact with you. It is your privilege if you wish to have your personal attorney, at your own expense, cooperate with the above assigned counsel in the defense of this lawsuit.”

¶ 7 By letter dated February 2, 2000, attorney Rick Horton 1 advised Milroy that he would be defending the action Lewis had filed against her. The letter stated:

I have been requested by the claims office of Allstate Insurance Company to defend you in the above-entitled lawsuit.
I am a salaried employee of Allstate, selected to handle the defense of lawsuits brought against Allstate insureds such as yourself. Though I am an Allstate employee, I am required to exercise my independent professional judgment so that your interests are fully protected.

Horton cautioned Milroy against discussing the case with anyone other than her personal attorney, Allstate or his office. 2

¶ 8 Upon motion by Horton, the judge in the small claims court transferred the case to the civil docket, 3 and ordered Lewis to file a *925 petition in conformance with the standards of the Oklahoma Pleading Code. When she filed her petition in district court, Lewis did not change the amount of her demand for judgment — it remained at $4,499.99. However, she asserted that the injuries she sustained “resolved with treatment and she was released from care for these injuries on May 13, 1998.” She claimed “no permanent injury or impairment as a result of this collision.” 4 The answer Horton filed on behalf of Milroy alleged the affirmative defenses of (1) unavoidable accident, (2) sudden emergency, (3) pre-existing health problems of Lewis, and (4) reasonableness and necessity of Lewis’s medical treatment.

¶ 9 During the course of the litigation, the parties’ discovery requests included Lewis’s service of interrogatories on Milroy and a request by Milroy that Lewis undergo an independent medical examination. Horton filed an offer to allow judgment to be taken against Milroy, pursuant to 12 O.S.2001 § 1101, in the amount of $625, which sum was the amount of her medical treatment less the charges for chiropractic treatment. Lewis declined the offer. The case proceeded to trial.

¶ 10 Following a two-day trial in April 2001, the jury returned a verdict in favor of Lewis and awarded her damages in the amount of $2,599.15, the exact amount of her medical expenses as set forth in the pre-litigation settlement letter dated October 27, 1999. There was some delay in the filing of judgment, but Allstate issued payment of the judgment on June 27, 2001. The docket sheet indicates that, on Milroy’s behalf, Horton filed a Motion to Settle Journal Entry and Abate Post Judgment Interest on July 13, 2001.

¶ 11 On October 24, 2001, Lewis filed a motion to recover attorney fees in her action in the amount of $12,606.25 and costs in the amount of $989.98 pursuant to section 1757 of the Small Claims Act. However, at the hearing on this motion held November 14, 2001, Lewis’s counsel additionally argued entitlement to fees under 12 O.S.2001 § 2011, claiming that Allstate had protracted the litigation and refused to make a reasonable settlement offer, thus unnecessarily increasing the attorney fees Lewis incurred in pursuing her claim against Milroy. Without advising Horton of his intentions, Lewis’s counsel called Milroy as a witness and questioned her regarding the affirmative defenses Horton raised and his representations to the Trial Court about her inability to be present at one of the scheduled trial dates. 5 Lewis’s counsel arranged Milroy’s appearance at the attorney fee hearing through her personal attorney.

¶ 12 The Trial Court in the personal injury action awarded Lewis a $3,400 prevailing-party attorney fee and costs in the amount of $383.73, but did not consider the alleged section 2011 claim that she attempted to assert for the first time at the attorney fee hearing.

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Bluebook (online)
2007 OK CIV APP 6, 151 P.3d 922, 2006 Okla. Civ. App. LEXIS 147, 2006 WL 3896755, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/milroy-v-allstate-insurance-co-oklacivapp-2006.