Newman v. LM General Insurance

CourtCourt of Appeals of Utah
DecidedJune 19, 2026
DocketCase No. 20241295-CA
StatusPublished

This text of Newman v. LM General Insurance (Newman v. LM General Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Utah primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Newman v. LM General Insurance, (Utah Ct. App. 2026).

Opinion

2026 UT App 94

THE UTAH COURT OF APPEALS

ERICA NEWMAN, Appellant, v. LM GENERAL INSURANCE COMPANY, Appellee.

Opinion No. 20241295-CA Filed June 19, 2026

Third District Court, West Jordan Department The Honorable Matthew Bates No. 230901729

Caleb Bertch and Daniel F. Bertch, Attorneys for Appellant Byron G. Martin and Steven M. Edmonds, Attorneys for Appellee

JUDGE DAVID N. MORTENSEN authored this Opinion, in which JUDGES MICHELE M. CHRISTIANSEN FORSTER and RYAN M. HARRIS concurred.

MORTENSEN, Judge:

¶1 Erica Newman sued LM General Insurance Company (LM), arguing that it handled her underinsured motorist insurance claim in bad faith. The trial court determined that Newman had not established damages and granted summary judgment in LM’s favor. Newman appeals. We affirm the court’s ruling on the alternative basis that Newman’s bad faith claim was fairly debatable as a matter of law. Newman v. LM General Insurance Co.

BACKGROUND 1

¶2 In June 2019, Newman was driving with her husband and two children when they were struck by another car. Newman sustained various injuries, most notably one to her right knee, and she sought and received medical treatment. In the days after the crash, Newman retained counsel on a contingency basis to recover for the injuries. 2 The other driver was at fault for the crash and had liability insurance with a limit of $25,000, and Newman settled with the other driver’s insurer for that amount. She also received $10,000 in personal injury protection (PIP) benefits pursuant to her own policy from LM.

¶3 Newman’s policy also had an underinsured motorist (UIM) provision, with a limit of $100,000, which obligated LM to “pay compensatory damages which an ‘insured’ is legally entitled to recover from the owner or operator of an ‘underinsured motor vehicle’ because of ‘bodily injury.’” Believing that her damages exceeded the $35,000 she had already recovered, Newman filed a UIM claim with LM on May 20, 2020. Newman asserted that she had incurred medical expenses of $16,766.74 and noneconomic damages exceeding the policy limit. She demanded the policy limit and gave LM fourteen days to respond.

¶4 An LM adjuster (Adjuster) responded on June 2, stating that he had “fully reviewed all bills/records associated with [Newman’s] case” and had “fully evaluated her injury claim.” But he could not make an offer at that time, primarily because Newman’s claim had not included the amount of the settlement

1. “In reviewing a district court’s grant of summary judgment, we view the facts and all reasonable inferences drawn therefrom in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party and recite the facts accordingly.” M.A. v. Regence BlueCross BlueShield of Utah, 2020 UT App 177, n.1, 479 P.3d 1152 (cleaned up).

2. At all relevant times in this case, Newman was acting through her lawyers and her lawyers’ support staff.

20241295-CA 2 2026 UT App 94 Newman v. LM General Insurance Co.

with the other driver’s insurance company but also because the claim was missing a record from one of Newman’s doctor visits. Adjuster asked Newman to provide that information to move the claim along. That same day, Newman responded that she had settled with the other company for the policy limit of $25,000 but stated that she could not locate the missing record. Two hours later, Adjuster responded, speculating that Newman’s persistent knee pain may have been due to her “morbid obesity.” He offered to settle the case for $1,500 in addition to all other sums Newman previously collected. Adjuster stated his belief that the matter was not “a policy limits case,” but he also indicated his willingness to “discuss the case further to see if [the parties could] achieve an amicable resolution.”

¶5 The next contact between the parties didn’t occur until June 10, when Newman emailed Adjuster about the missing medical record. On June 23, Adjuster replied and stated, among other things, that LM would argue that Newman’s healing could have been affected by her obesity. Adjuster nonetheless stated a desire to “resolve the claim” and asked if Newman had a counteroffer to LM’s initial offer. The next day, Newman responded that there was “a lot more to her damages than [Adjuster was] seeing” and that arbitration would likely be needed to “fully flesh this out.” Newman formally rejected LM’s offer in July and demanded arbitration. She also requested that LM “tender the undisputed $1,500,” and LM did so promptly. After Newman demanded arbitration, LM retained an orthopedic surgeon to conduct a medical evaluation of Newman. In a March 2021 report, the surgeon opined that Newman’s continued knee pain was not related to the car crash.

¶6 The matter proceeded to arbitration in August 2021. The arbitrator determined that Newman had incurred $20,255.44 in past medical expenses 3 and suffered $41,000 in general

3. The briefs in this matter are not clear on how the arbitrator arrived at this figure of past medical expenses where the original (continued…)

20241295-CA 3 2026 UT App 94 Newman v. LM General Insurance Co.

damages—or $61,255.44 in total damages. The arbitrator also found that Newman had not made “a claim for any other category of special damages,” i.e., future medical expenses. Taking into account the $36,500 that Newman had already received ($25,000 from the other driver’s insurance company and $11,500 from LM), the arbitrator effectively determined that LM owed Newman an additional $24,755.44. Two weeks after arbitration, LM paid Newman that amount.

¶7 After arbitration, Newman retained new counsel, again on a contingency agreement, and sued LM, asserting a claim for “insurance bad faith” and seeking both special and general damages. In her initial disclosures, Newman stated that her damages included the fees that she had paid to her original counsel, as well as her attorney fees from the instant suit. She also asserted that her general damages were “not calculable and [were] inherently the province of the finder of fact.”

¶8 At her ensuing deposition, Newman testified that she sued LM because she felt “insulted” by LM’s settlement offer. When LM’s counsel asked her what she meant by this statement, Newman responded, “It felt like [LM] just didn’t want anything to do with it, and so $1,500 to have you go away and this be over with, when I was at home dealing with everything that I was dealing with was insulting. It was kind of disheartening.” She also claimed she felt “emotionally and mentally” “drain[ed]” by the experience. Newman testified that at no point prior to arbitration did she consider settling for less than the $100,000 policy limit. She nonetheless acknowledged she did not “seek any mental health or emotional therapy” or otherwise “go on any medication” due to LM’s conduct. She also testified that her credit score had not been negatively affected by the accident. Finally,

claim stated the medical expenses were $16,766.74. We assume the arbitrator awarded medical expenses that had been incurred after the claim was submitted but prior to arbitration.

20241295-CA 4 2026 UT App 94 Newman v. LM General Insurance Co.

Newman conceded that the arbitrator’s award of $61,255.44 was “fair.”

¶9 After discovery closed, LM moved for summary judgment, asserting, among other arguments, that (1) its valuation of Newman’s underlying claim was “fairly debatable,” which would have barred her bad faith claim as a matter of law, and (2) Newman had “no recoverable damages.” In support of its motion, LM submitted a declaration from Adjuster, who confirmed—under penalty of perjury—that he had reviewed each of the documents that Newman had submitted with her claim.

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Bluebook (online)
Newman v. LM General Insurance, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/newman-v-lm-general-insurance-utahctapp-2026.