Nardelli v. Metropolitan Group Property & Casualty Insurance

277 P.3d 789, 230 Ariz. 592, 634 Ariz. Adv. Rep. 11, 2012 WL 1514671, 2012 Ariz. App. LEXIS 65
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arizona
DecidedMay 1, 2012
Docket1 CA-CV 10-0350
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 277 P.3d 789 (Nardelli v. Metropolitan Group Property & Casualty Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Arizona primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nardelli v. Metropolitan Group Property & Casualty Insurance, 277 P.3d 789, 230 Ariz. 592, 634 Ariz. Adv. Rep. 11, 2012 WL 1514671, 2012 Ariz. App. LEXIS 65 (Ark. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinions

OPINION

NORRIS, Judge.

¶ 1 This appeal and cross appeal arise out of a lawsuit filed by Plaintiffs/Appellants/Cross-Appellees, Kenneth and Tammy Nardelli (“the Nardellis”), against Defendants/Appellees/Cross-Appellants, Metropolitan Group Property and Casualty Insurance Company and Metropolitan Property and Casualty Insurance Company (collectively “Met-Life”), for breach of the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing. After a jury awarded the Nardellis $155,000 in compensatory damages and $55 million in punitive damages, the superior court upheld the jury’s award of compensatory damages, but reduced the punitive damages to $620,000.

¶ 2 In their appeal, the Nardellis principally argue the superior court should not have reduced the punitive damages, and in its cross-appeal, MetLife principally argues the evidence does not support bad-faith liability or punitive damages. Alternatively, it argues we should reduce the superior court’s punitive damages award even further.

¶ 3 We agree with the Nardellis sufficient evidence supports liability and punitive damages. We agree with MetLife, however, the amount of punitive damages should match the amount of compensatory damages. Therefore, we affirm the jury’s verdict on [596]*596bad-faith liability and the Nardellis’ entitlement to punitive damages, but reduce the amount of punitive damages to $155,000.1

FACTUAL OVERVIEW AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND2

¶ 4 In December 2001, the Nardellis, with financing from a lender, bought a new 2002 Ford Explorer for $35,750 from Earnhardt Ford. The Nardellis obtained comprehensive insurance coverage for the Explorer from MetLife.

¶ 5 On September 3, 2002, the Explorer was stolen. The Nardellis reported the theft to MetLife and a MetLife claims adjustor, Steve Simpson, told them he would be unable to adjust their claim as a total loss before the expiration of two weeks. According to Ken Nardelli, Simpson also advised the Nardellis they could “shop around,” but should not purchase a replacement vehicle until the two weeks had expired.

¶ 6 On September 18, 2002, the Explorer was found abandoned in Mexico, with slit seats, cut wires, a torn interior, and what turned out to be a ruined engine. The front dashboard vehicle identification number (“VIN”) plate and the driver’s-side-door VIN sticker had also been torn off.

¶ 7 MetLife arranged to have the Explorer delivered to a tow yard in Ajo, Arizona. It also hired an independent appraiser to inspect the Explorer in Ajo, and the appraiser initially estimated the damage would cost $815 to repair’. When Ken Nardelli called the Ajo tow yard, however, a tow-yard employee told him the VINs and the battery were missing and the appraiser had not even lifted the hood.

¶ 8 The Nardellis then elected to have the Explorer towed from Ajo to the Earnhardt Ford body shop in Gilbert, Arizona for an inspection. Ken Nardelli went to Ajo to accompany the tow-truck driver. The tow-truck driver tried to put the Explorer in neutral and the gear shift broke off in his hand. The tow-truck driver then had to drag the Explorer onto the tow truck for the trip to Gilbert.

¶ 9 The next day, October 8, 2002, the Nardellis met with Earnhardt body shop manager “Mike,” tried to start the engine, but quickly turned it off when it made a loud knocking noise. Ken Nardelli testified Mike told him he thought the Explorer would need a new engine.

¶ 10 Three days later, Ken Nardelli, Mike, and MetLife field appraiser Jerry Proctor inspected the Explorer at Earnhardt. Ken Nardelli testified he was very upset because things were falling off the Explorer as he touched it. Proctor, however, testified, “I wasn’t foreseeing anything else [would] come up. I could see it not being a total loss,” and estimated the damages at this point were between $7,000 and $8,000. Relying on Proctor, his supervisor wrote in the claim file, “Jerry states vehicle should not total.” Mike and Proctor then agreed Earnhardt would tear down the engine and make a closer inspection of the Explorer.

¶ 11 On October 25, 2002, after Earnhardt finished its inspection and concluded the Explorer needed a new engine and other repairs, the Nardellis again met at Earnhardt with Mike and Proctor to review the repairs Earnhardt had identified. To their dismay, the Nardellis discovered additional damage. Ken Nardelli testified “it got a little ugly,” because, as the Nardellis pointed out the additional damage, Proctor told Tammy Nar-delli she was “nitpicking.” At the end of the inspection, Proctor estimated the cost to repair the damage was $11,009, and told the Nardellis MetLife would not total the Explorer. The Nardellis disagreed vigorously, because they had found more damage each time they saw the Explorer, and believed it had been trashed.

[597]*597¶ 12 Under their policy (excluding any endorsements, see infra ¶ 43), in the event of a loss, MetLife was required to pay the lesser of (1) the actual cash value of the Explorer at the time of the loss, or (2) the cost to repair or replace the Explorer “with other of like kind and quality.” Thus, under the policy, only if the Explorer could be repaired or replaced to its pre-loss condition could Met-Life select the second option.

¶ 13 Dissatisfied with MetLife’s decision to repair and not total the Explorer, Ken Nar-delli spoke to managers in MetLife’s claims department — Glenda Woolley and David Oy-ler — by telephone on October 29, 2002. He testified Woolley and Oyler gave him the first “official” word “[t]he decision [had] been made____That’s it. The [Explorer was] not getting totaled,” and that Woolley and Oyler “were mad at [him] because [he] was questioning them ... and, their agenda was set.”

¶ 14 Ken Nardelli called back the next day and spoke to Woolley and Oyler’s supervisor, Mike Maurer, who, unbeknownst to Ken Nardelli, had been listening to his telephone conversation with Woolley and Oyler the day before. Although disputed, Ken Nardelli testified Maurer told him MetLife was sending him an appraisal, a check, and a letter, and said “you take your check, you take the letter, you take your truck, and you do whatever you want.” Consistent with his testimony, Ken Nardelli wrote, in a diary he maintained throughout his dealings with MetLife, Maurer told him, “the check is in the mail— do whatever you want.”

¶ 15 After MetLife decided the Explorer could be repaired to pre-loss condition, it issued a joint cheek to the Nardellis and their lender for $10,759.13, which was the cost to repair the truck as estimated by Proctor — based, in part, on information from Earnhardt — as of October 25, 2002 (less a $250 deductible). The Nardellis turned the check over to Earnhardt and voluntarily allowed the lender to repossess the Explorer.

¶ 16 As discussed above, after extensive briefing, the court reduced the jury’s award of punitive damages to $620,000 — a ratio of 4:1 to the $155,000 compensatory damages. The court subsequently denied MetLife’s renewed motions for judgment as a matter of law on bad-faith liability and the Nardellis’ entitlement to punitive damages. The court then entered an amended judgment in the Nardellis’ favor and awarded them a total of $1,571,417.58, which included sanctions under Arizona Rule of Civil Procedure 68 and post-judgment interest.

DISCUSSION

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277 P.3d 789, 230 Ariz. 592, 634 Ariz. Adv. Rep. 11, 2012 WL 1514671, 2012 Ariz. App. LEXIS 65, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nardelli-v-metropolitan-group-property-casualty-insurance-arizctapp-2012.