Phillips v. AAA N. Cal., Nevada and Utah Ins. Exchange CA3

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 27, 2023
DocketC095321
StatusUnpublished

This text of Phillips v. AAA N. Cal., Nevada and Utah Ins. Exchange CA3 (Phillips v. AAA N. Cal., Nevada and Utah Ins. Exchange CA3) 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
Phillips v. AAA N. Cal., Nevada and Utah Ins. Exchange CA3, (Cal. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

Filed 9/27/23 Phillips v. AAA N. Cal., Nevada and Utah Ins. Exchange CA3 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA THIRD APPELLATE DISTRICT (Shasta) ----

MILLICENT PHILLIPS, C095321

Plaintiff and Appellant, (Super. Ct. No. 187346)

v.

AAA NORTHERN CALIFORNIA, NEVADA AND UTAH INSURANCE EXCHANGE et al.,

Defendants and Respondents.

Plaintiff Millicent Phillips owned a home in Redding. She obtained a homeowners insurance policy from defendants AAA Northern California, Nevada and Utah Insurance Exchange and CSAA Insurance Exchange. In 2012 and again in 2016, when plaintiff was not living at the property, intruders broke into the house, damaged the property, and stole personal property. Plaintiff reported both instances to defendants and, following the 2016 incident, submitted a personal property claim for both incidents. Defendants paid plaintiff approximately $25,000 for her personal property losses, substantially less than the amount of the losses plaintiff claimed. Plaintiff commenced this action asserting causes of action for breach of contract and tortious breach of contract

1 -- bad faith. A jury declined to award any damages to plaintiff under the asserted causes of action, and specifically found defendants’ failure to pay or delay in payment of additional policy benefits was not unreasonable or without proper cause. On appeal, plaintiff asserts (1) the jury’s verdicts were the result of instructional errors, (2) the jury improperly and arbitrarily rejected uncontroverted expert testimony, (3) no issue concerning the statute of limitations and contractual limitations periods could properly result in an award of zero damages, and (4) substantial evidence does not support the jury’s verdicts. We affirm.

BACKGROUND First Amended Complaint According to plaintiff’s first amended complaint, she owned a residence in Redding. She purchased homeowners insurance from defendants.1 In June 2012, someone entered the residence and vandalized, stole, damaged, and destroyed covered property. Plaintiff filed a claim with defendants. According to plaintiff, defendants assessed an unreasonable amount of depreciation to the personal property, never paid plaintiff the true estimated value of the property, made repeated requests for unnecessary information, delayed in processing the claim, and ultimately constructively denied the claim by alleging there had been a lack of contact from plaintiff. The second incident occurred in January 2016. Again, someone entered the residence and stole, damaged, and destroyed covered property. Plaintiff filed a claim

1 At trial, the parties stipulated that both defendants AAA Northern California, Nevada and Utah Insurance Exchange and CSAA Insurance Exchange “are jointly to be treated as the same entity for purposes of your verdict.” We do not distinguish between defendants on appeal, instead referring to defendants collectively throughout.

2 with defendants. According to plaintiff, defendants undervalued personal property and assessed an unreasonable amount in depreciation. Plaintiff asserted causes of action seeking to recover damages for (1) breach of contract and (2) tortious breach of contract -- bad faith. The Trial Plaintiff purchased the Redding residence in 2006 to be her “forever home.” However, after moving into the property, in 2009, she returned to the Bay Area for work. She remained in the Bay Area between 2010 and 2012 when her adult son was hospitalized in the San Jose area. Plaintiff would visit her Redding property on the weekends. In June 2012, plaintiff discovered there had been a break-in at her property. Six windows were broken and nine doors breached. Inside, there was glass everywhere, items were strewn about, and there was excrement on the carpets. Plaintiff prepared an initial inventory of missing items and notified defendants. Eventually, defendants’ employee, Lynda Scobba, assured plaintiff not to worry, that it was “being all taken care of.” Scobba did not request any additional information. Plaintiff assumed she had provided Scobba with all the information she needed. Asked if she did not communicate with defendants again about the 2012 break-in until the next break-in in 2016, plaintiff responded, in part, “I believe that I provided [Scobba] with everything that she needed to move forward on the 2012.” Scobba testified she sent a document to plaintiff instructing her how to fill out a form for her personal property claim. Scobba could not recall whether she spoke with plaintiff again after that. However, she did attempt to call plaintiff on several occasions and left her voicemails which were not returned. Scobba never received a list from plaintiff with the details of the items lost. She also never received photographs showing the damage to the real property itself that she requested from the contractor. The contractor indicated he had not heard from plaintiff, and Scobba testified she sent a

3 “status to close” letter, indicating that if defendants did not hear from plaintiff, defendants would “close the file.” Scobba closed the file at the end of October 2012. Defendants’ expert, William Thomas, testified that, following the 2012 first notice of loss, defendants did not have what they needed to properly adjust the file. “They were not furnished with proper documentation to adjust the claim. They needed documentation on the damaged property, especially the condition of it, the age of it, . . . they just didn’t have the proper documentation to adjust the file, the claim, in my opinion.” The list of stolen items plaintiff furnished in connection with the police report was too vague, did not contain ages of the items, and did not describe their condition. Defendants did not receive additional information regarding the 2012 loss until after the 2016 loss. After the 2012 break-in, plaintiff did not consider the property to be habitable and did not believe the house was secure. When she would come to the area, she would stay with friends. She did not stay at the property, but rather would just visit it and make sure everything was okay. In January 2016, plaintiff learned intruders had entered the residence again. As a result of this incident, the “house was in total devastation.” The house “was practically stripped naked,” and essentially all of her belongings were gone. Plaintiff again contacted an employee of defendants to report the incident, on this occasion Giovanna Rodarte. Plaintiff informed Rodarte of the new incident and also reported she had not finished her claim from the 2012 incident. Rodarte told plaintiff to combine the claims and inventory lists. Constance Amos, employed by defendants, testified she did not receive any inventory list pertaining to the 2016 claim until December 2016, almost a year after plaintiff filed the claim. In Amos’s experience, that was a long time for an insured to delay in providing a personal inventory list.

4 Theresa Eurby, a personal property associate for defendants, described her duties in that role: “process the inventory, basically, look up the items off the inventory that the insured provided for us; so I’m pricing out items based on their description and preparing an estimate for the adjustor.” According to Eurby, she would determine the replacement cost of an item, then categorize the item, and then a computer program would calculate depreciation based on age. Eurby worked on plaintiff’s personal property list, which she completed in January 2017. Eurby priced some items on plaintiff’s list lower than plaintiff’s estimates, and some higher.

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Phillips v. AAA N. Cal., Nevada and Utah Ins. Exchange CA3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/phillips-v-aaa-n-cal-nevada-and-utah-ins-exchange-ca3-calctapp-2023.