Owners Insurance Company v. Black

CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Alabama
DecidedJune 22, 2021
Docket2:20-cv-01563
StatusUnknown

This text of Owners Insurance Company v. Black (Owners Insurance Company v. Black) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Owners Insurance Company v. Black, (N.D. Ala. 2021).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE NORTHERN DISTRICT OF ALABAMA SOUTHERN DIVISION

OWNERS INSURANCE ) COMPANY, ) ) Plaintiff, ) ) Case No. 2:20-CV-01563-CLM v. ) ) DONALD BRYAN BLACK, ) ) Defendant. ) MEMORANDUM OPINION A car crash left Defendant Donald Bryan Black with significant medical bills. The at-fault driver did not have enough insurance cover Black’s bills, but Black had a policy with Plaintiff Owners Insurance Company that covered underinsured motorists. For reasons the parties hotly dispute, Black released the at-fault driver and his insurer, GEICO Casualty Company, from liability. Owners claims it now owes Black nothing because, by signing the release, Black violated his policy. Black threatened to sue. Owners beat him to the punch by filing this complaint for declaratory judgment. Black sued Owners in state court 13 days later. The question presented is which court should hear the case: this federal court or the state court. For the reasons stated with, the state court is the better venue for this case, so the court GRANTS Black’s motion to dismiss this federal action without prejudice (doc. 7). STATEMENT OF THE FACTS I. The Owners Policy

Black had a $500,000 “uninsured motorist” policy with Owners. That policy defined “uninsured vehicles” to include an “underinsured motor vehicle.” So if Black was injured by an insured driver whose policy limit failed to cover all of

Black’s resulting medical costs, the Owner’s policy would kick in to cover the difference, up to a $500,000 limit. If an underinsured driver injured Black, the policy required Black to “promptly notify [Owners] in writing of a tentative settlement between [Black] and

the insurer of [the underinsured] vehicle.” The same provision then gave Owners 30 days to advance payment of the tentative settlement amount to Black so that Owners could “preserve our rights against the insurer, owner or operator of [the underinsured

vehicle.” II. The Accident & GEICO’s offer Michael Andrew Reinert caused the wreck that injured Black. Black’s injuries were severe, and he needed (at least) a left shoulder arthroplasty and a multi-level

cervical fusion. No one disputes the cost of these procedures is more than $25,000. But $25,000 was the limit of Reinert’s policy with GEICO. Because the wreck was Reinert’s fault, GEICO offered Black $25,000 (the policy limit) to settle Black’s

claims against Reinert. III. Correspondence: where the parties agree To comply with the notice provision of Black’s policy, Black’s lawyer sent a

letter to Owners on June 23, 2020, that told Owners about GEICO’s policy limit offer of $25,000. In the letter, Black’s lawyer asked if Owners wanted to “front” GEICO’s settlement offer—i.e., have Owners send Black/GEICO $25,000—or

waive Owner’s subrogation claim. Under the policy, Owners then had 30 days to front the money to preserve its subrogation claim. More than 50 days later (i.e., August 13, 2020), Owners told Black that Owners intended to “front” GEICO’s settlement and requested payment instructions.

Black told Owners how to pay him, and Owners sent Black a $25,000 check the next day (i.e., August 14, 2020). IV. Correspondence & Waiver: where the parties disagree

The parties disagree about what happened next. A. Black says that, on August 17, Owners’ Subrogation Department sent a letter to GEICO that (a) told GEICO that Owners had advance Black $25,000 and (b) requested that GEICO resolve Owner’s subrogation claim against Reinert. Later

that day, GEICO told Owners that it could not reimburse Owners’ $25,000 because Black had yet to sign a release, so there was no settlement. Black says that Owners then sent his attorney a letter that requested more

information and documents about the wreck. The next day (September 9), Owners again asked GEICO to resolve its subrogation claim by paying Owners $25,000. After receiving this second letter, Black says that GEICO told Black that

Owners wanted Black to sign a release so that GEICO could repay Owners’ $25,000 advance. So—because Black believed that Owners wanted him to—Black signed a release of all claims against Reinert, GEICO, and Samantha Mullins (the named

insured) on September 29. On October 2, Black’s attorney sent Owners the documents and information that it had requested on September 8th. Black’s attorney also made a policy limit demand. Owners responded by telling Black’s attorney that, because Black signed a

release of all claims on September 29, it owed Black nothing more. B. Owners says that it never intended to resolve or extinguish its subrogation interest against Reinert or GEICO; it simply wanted to be reimbursed. Owners says

that GEICO told Owners that it could not reimburse the $25,000 because a settlement had yet to be reached—not because GEICO needed Black to sign a release. Owners agrees that it sent a letter to Black on September 8 but says that it did not send a second letter to GEICO the next day. And Owners claims it never told Black to sign

a release. Instead, Owners says that Black signed the release “without receiving any additional correspondence or communication from Owners[.]” Doc. 9 at 2. V. The Lawsuits Owners and Black sued each other. Owners struck first, filing this action for

a declaratory judgment under 28 U.S.C. § 2201. See Doc. 1. Black is the only defendant here and declaratory judgment is the only count. Black sued Owners, GEICO, and Reinert in state court 13 days later. See Black

v. Reinert, et al., Case No. 58-cv-2020-900819 (Shelby Co.). In his first count, Black seeks declaratory judgment about the same uninsured policy claim at issue here. But Black doesn’t stop there. In Counts 2-4, Black sues Reinert for negligently and wantonly causing the accident. In Count 5, Black seeks a payout under the Owners

policy. In Count 6, he alleges Owners acted in bad faith when it declined to refused to pay his full claim. In Count 7, he alleges that Owners breached a contract. And in Count 8, Black alleges that GEICO misrepresented its conversations with Owners to

induce Black to sign the release. The parties have multiple pending motions in the state case. Reinert and GEICO have moved to enforcement settlement. Id. (docs. 16, 45).Owners has moved to dismiss, arguing that the state court should defer to this court’s ruling on Owners’

declaratory judgment action. Id. (doc. 31). Owners’ Rule 12 motion has been pending in state court for about six months, meaning the state court may be waiting for this court to rule on Black’s similar Rule 12 motion. STANDARD OF REVIEW Because this is a Rule 12 motion, the court accepts the allegations in Owners’

complaint as true and construes them in the light most favorable to Owners. Lanfear v. Home Depot, Inc., 697 F.3d 1267, 1275 (11th Cir. 2012). The ultimate question is whether all of Owners’ allegations, when accepted as true, “plausibly give rise to an

entitlement of relief.” Ashcroft v. Iqbal, 556 U.S. 662, 678-79 (2009). If the facts as pleaded could entitle Owners to relief, then the court must deny Defendant’s motion to dismiss. If, however, the court accepts all of Owners’ pleaded facts as true, and Owners still would not be entitled to relief, then the court must grant the motion.

Only the complaint, attachments to the complaint, and briefs are to be considered.

ANALYSIS

Black advances three arguments for dismissal. First, Black argues that Owners’ complaint fails to state a claim that can entitle Owners to relief. Second, Black argues that Owners failed to join necessary parties under Rule 19.

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