Rhonda Renae Jones as for the Estate of Patricia Huff v. Joshua E. Huff as Administrator Cum Testamenta Annexo for the Estate of Harlan E. Huff

CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedJuly 5, 2013
DocketA13A0257
StatusPublished

This text of Rhonda Renae Jones as for the Estate of Patricia Huff v. Joshua E. Huff as Administrator Cum Testamenta Annexo for the Estate of Harlan E. Huff (Rhonda Renae Jones as for the Estate of Patricia Huff v. Joshua E. Huff as Administrator Cum Testamenta Annexo for the Estate of Harlan E. Huff) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rhonda Renae Jones as for the Estate of Patricia Huff v. Joshua E. Huff as Administrator Cum Testamenta Annexo for the Estate of Harlan E. Huff, (Ga. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

THIRD DIVISION ANDREWS, P. J., DILLARD and MCMILLIAN, JJ.

NOTICE: Motions for reconsideration must be physically received in our clerk’s office within ten days of the date of decision to be deemed timely filed. http://www.gaappeals.us/rules/

July 5, 2013

In the Court of Appeals of Georgia A13A0255. BAKER et al. v. HUFF.

A13A0256. LIBERTY MUTUAL INSURANCE COMPANY v. HUFF.

A13A0257. JONES v. HUFF.

ANDREWS, Presiding Judge.

These consolidated appeals arise from assorted litigation spawned by a single-

car accident in December 2002 in which Harlan Huff was killed when he lost control

of his car and hit a tree, and his adult son, Joshua Huff (Joshua), a passenger in the

car, was seriously injured. Liberty Mutual Insurance Company provided a liability

insurance policy on the car with policy limits of $100,000 per person. In pursuit of

a personal injury claim against the Estate of Harlan Huff (Harlan’s Estate), Joshua

made time-limited offers to Liberty Mutual to settle the claim for the policy limits. Liberty Mutual eventually tendered the policy limits, but not within the time deadline,

and Joshua rejected the tender. Joshua’s personal injury suit was tried in January 2006

resulting in a $278,806 judgment against Harlan’s Estate. Liberty Mutual paid the

$100,000 policy limits to partially satisfy the judgment, leaving an unpaid judgment

against Harlan’s Estate in excess of the policy limits in the amount of $178,806, and

leaving Harlan’s Estate with a potential claim against Liberty Mutual for the unpaid

judgment based on allegations that Liberty Mutual acted in bad faith or negligently

by failing to accept the time-limited offers to settle Joshua’s claim for the policy

limits.

Patricia Huff,1 the executrix of Harlan’s Estate, refused Joshua’s request for

assignment of the Estate’s claim against Liberty Mutual. As executrix, Patricia Huff

hired an attorney, Bonnie Baker of the law firm of Meadows & Macie, P.C. (where

Patricia worked as a paralegal) to represent Harlan’s Estate. Baker negotiated with

Liberty Mutual to attempt to settle the Estate’s claim, but Huff, as executrix, refused

to sign a draft agreement purporting to settle the claim for $15,000. Liberty Mutual

unsuccessfully sued to enforce the settlement, ultimately resulting in this Court’s

decision in In re Estate of Huff, 287 Ga. App. 614 (652 SE2d 203) (2007), ruling that

1 Patricia Huff was Harlan Huff’s wife and Joshua Huff’s stepmother.

2 there was no settlement agreement. In the meantime, Patricia Huff, as executrix,

eventually offered to assign the Estate’s claim against Liberty Mutual to Joshua, but

Joshua refused the offer and filed a motion in the probate court seeking removal of

Huff as executrix of Harlan’s Estate. In April 2007, the probate court granted the

motion; removed Patricia Huff as executrix of Harlan’s Estate; and appointed Joshua

as administrator (with the will annexed) of Harlan’s Estate.

This brings us to the litigation the subject of the present appeals. Harlan’s

Estate (acting by its administrator, Joshua) filed a complaint in October 2008 alleging

causes of action against the following defendants: (1) against Liberty Mutual –

alleging bad faith, negligence, and breach of contractual obligations by failing to

accept the time-limited offers to settle Joshua’s claim against Harlan’s Estate for the

policy limits; (2) against Liberty Mutual, Baker, and the Estate of Patricia Huff

(represented by Rhonda Jones, as executrix)2 – alleging violation of the Uniform

Fraudulent Transfers Act (UFTA) (OCGA § 18-2-70 et seq.) by a conspiracy to settle

the bad faith/negligence claim possessed by Harlan’s Estate for less than its true

value; (3) against Baker and Meadows & Macie, P.C. – alleging legal malpractice,

negligence, and breach of fiduciary duty by failing to properly represent the interests

2 Patricia Huff died before Harlan’s Estate filed the complaint.

3 of Harlan’s Estate, and (4) against the Estate of Patricia Huff – alleging breach of

fiduciary duty owed to Harlan’s Estate by actions taken by Huff, as executrix of the

Estate, authorizing or approving settlement of the Estate’s bad faith claim for less

than its true value. The trial court denied motions for summary judgment filed by all

the named defendants and granted certificates of immediate review. We granted

applications for interlocutory appeals from the denial of summary judgment brought

by: Liberty Mutual in Case No. A13A0256; Meadows & Macie, P.C. and Bonnie

Baker in Case No. A13A0255; and Rhonda Jones, as executrix of the Estate of

Patricia Huff, in Case No. A13A0257.

Case No. A13A0256

1. Liberty Mutual moved for summary judgment on the causes of action for bad

faith or negligent failure to settle within the policy limits; for breach of contract; and

for violation of the UFTA.

(a) We first consider the claim by Harlan’s Estate that Liberty Mutual acted in

bad faith or negligently when it failed to accept Joshua’s time-limited offers to settle

his personal injury claim for the policy limits.

On March 18, 2003, Liberty Mutual received a medical authorization from

Joshua (prior to being represented by an attorney) pursuant to which Liberty Mutual

4 obtained (on or about May 22, 2003) medical records and bills relevant to the

December 26, 2002 automobile accident showing that Joshua had suffered a fractured

ulna (forearm) and a cerebral contusion in the accident and had medical bills of about

$35,000. The medical records obtained as of that date showed that, as a result of the

cerebral contusion, Joshua had initially suffered substantial hemiparesis (weakness)

and numbness on his right side. The records showed that Joshua was discharged from

a hospital in Atlanta three days after the accident “ambulating as tolerated with [a]

cane” with directions to follow-up in one to two weeks (when he returned to his

Texas residence) with orthopedic and neurological consultations and to continue with

physical therapy. The medical records subsequent to the hospital discharge showed

that Joshua’s injuries had substantially improved since the accident. A January 23,

2003 progress note from a family health center in Texas states “hemiparesis showing

great improvement.” Records from a Texas orthopedist showed that the fractured ulna

had fully healed as of early May 2003. The medical records also showed evidence

that Joshua had sustained a prior head injury in a 1995 automobile accident that

required craniofacial surgery. Although Joshua’s family health center and orthopedic

records showed that a neurological consultation was scheduled, there was nothing in

the medical records obtained by Liberty Mutual on May 22 showing that Joshua had

5 followed up with a neurological consultation to evaluate his right-side impairments

as a result of the cerebral contusion, or that he had continued physical therapy as

directed.

On May 23, 2003, Michael Neff sent a letter informing Liberty Mutual that he

was representing Joshua as his attorney on a personal injury claim against Liberty

Mutual’s insured (Harlan’s Estate) arising out of the accident. The letter informed

Liberty Mutual that “[o]ur office will prepare a complete closing brochure

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Rhonda Renae Jones as for the Estate of Patricia Huff v. Joshua E. Huff as Administrator Cum Testamenta Annexo for the Estate of Harlan E. Huff, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rhonda-renae-jones-as-for-the-estate-of-patricia-huff-v-joshua-e-huff-as-gactapp-2013.