Sebastian v. Provident Life & Accident Insurance

73 F. Supp. 2d 521, 1999 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 16719, 1999 WL 988688
CourtDistrict Court, D. Maryland
DecidedSeptember 27, 1999
DocketCIV. AMD 97-205
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 73 F. Supp. 2d 521 (Sebastian v. Provident Life & Accident Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sebastian v. Provident Life & Accident Insurance, 73 F. Supp. 2d 521, 1999 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 16719, 1999 WL 988688 (D. Md. 1999).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM

DAVIS, District Judge.

I. Introduction

In this action, here under the diversity of citizenship jurisdiction, plaintiff James Sebastian has sued Provident Life and Accident Insurance Company, the company that has held his disability income insurance policy since 1987. Sebastian alleges that Provident breached the insurance contract by failing to pay him the disability benefits (exceeding $6,000 per month) he was entitled to receive during the period January 1, 1994, through August 1, 1995. He also contends that he is entitled to a refund of premium payments under the policy’s waiver of premium provision and to reimbursement for all medical and rehabilitation expenses he has incurred in the course of his alleged total disability arising from a psychiatric disorder.

Provident has filed a counterclaim. It seeks to recover the value of the benefits it paid under the policy for the period August 1, 1995, through July 2, 1998, and a declaratory judgment that Sebastian’s material breaches of the policy voids the policy. Specifically, it accuses Sebastian of fraud and willful misrepresentation in making his claim for benefits under the policy. 1

*523 Discovery has concluded; pending before the court are Sebastian’s motion for summary judgment on the counterclaim and Provident’s cross motion for partial summary judgment on several key issues. No hearing is necessary. For the reasons stated herein, I shall grant in part Provident’s motion for partial summary judgment; I shall deny Sebastian’s motion for summary judgment.

II. Facts

The parties have dramatically divergent views of the facts and, more important, of the reasonable inferences that may be properly drawn from the facts that are supported by evidence in the record. Of course, each party, qua nonmovant, is entitled to have the facts (and the inferences arising from them) viewed in the light most favorable to his or its position on the competing motions for summary judgment.

Until late 1993, Sebastian operated Longwood Enterprises, Inc. (“Longwood”), a corporation that provided construction management and related services. Sebastian was the sole officer, shareholder and employee of Longwood. In 1993, Long-wood’s sole client was Joseph A. Bank Clothiers (“JAB”), for which Longwood acted as a general contractor in the construction of retail stores.

During late 1993, Sebastian began to feel ill; he was fatigued and unable to concentrate. By the end of 1993, he realized that he could no longer work. He began to wrap up his business affairs. By January 1994, Sebastian’s company had completed its last project for JAB. Sebastian contends that he did not work or receive any employment-related income after January 1,1994.

On deposition, Sebastian testified that his condition worsened over time. He described his condition as follows:

Suddenly my arms and legs felt like lead .... It was like a giant toothache, a numbing .... I had a fractured elbow, which I left untreated for four weeks, because every other thing was so painful that I ignored it. You interlock that with a mental ability to not seem to get the first step. We have all tried to write a term paper and couldn’t get started. That was my life. What came so easy to me, what came in a flash, I could not get started. I am walking around with a fractured arm that I don’t get set. I can barely move my arms and legs, and the thought of making a phone call was frightening because the first sentence would not come out. That set the stage. I worked self-employed since the early eighties. It’s now fourteen years later, and I don’t know how or who to call for help.

Sebastian Dep. at 67-68.

Dr. Edward P. Gorrie has been Sebastian’s primary care physician since 1979. In 1982, Dr. Gorrie had begun prescribing medications for Sebastian to relieve bouts of anxiety and depression. When Sebastian called Dr. Gorrie on April 12, 1994, to report that something was wrong with him and that he felt “like crap,” Dr Gorrie prescribed Valium to treat him for anxiety. Dr. Gome’s practice of providing prescriptions by telephone to Sebastian (and without examining him or seeing him in person) was a common occurrence during 1994-95.

On September 13, 1994, Sebastian actually had an appointment with Dr. Gorrie and reported that he needed a stress management program instead of medication. Sebastian reported that he felt depressed and anxious. Dr. Gorrie diagnosed Sebastian with anxiety and depression and prescribed an antidepressant, Zoloft. Dr. Gorrie testified on deposition that he also advised Sebastian to seek care from a psychiatrist because he felt that Sebastian was not responding to the medications he had prescribed. Gorrie Dep. at 47. Sebastian does not recall Dr. Gorrie advising him to seek psychiatric help during the September 1994 visit and Dr. Gorrie’s *524 treatment notes do not reflect that he gave this advice.

In fact, Sebastian did not visit a psychiatrist until a year later, in September 1995. Up until then, the only treatment Sebastian received was in the form of taking the medications prescribed to him (as mentioned above, often by telephone and without an office visit) by Dr. Gorrie. In October 1994, Dr. Gorrie again prescribed Valium to combat Sebastian’s anxiety and in August 1995, he prescribed Paxil, an antidepressant medication. Dr. Gorrie attests that he again advised Sebastian to see a psychiatrist in August 1995.

In September 1995, Sebastian remembered that he had a disability income insurance policy with Provident. He contacted his agent, Kevin Leshczynski, and informed him that he was sick. Leshczyn-ski mailed the appropriate claim forms to Sebastian. Upon receipt of the forms, however, Sebastian ripped them up. He testified that he felt unable to cope with the fact that he was ill and needed help.

Soon thereafter, Sebastian sought treatment from Dr. William Hankin, a psychiatrist. Sebastian went to see Dr. Hankin on his own initiative; he selected Dr. Han-kin because he was the only psychiatrist listed in the phone book in Cape May County, New Jersey, apparently near Sebastian’s then home.

Dr. Hankin diagnosed Sebastian with “adjustment disorder with depressed mood.” On deposition, he described Sebastian’s illness as follows:

When external events in a person’s life are such that they produce the stresses and distress that causes a change in a person’s mood state, and depending upon the person, they might have different reactions to the same set of stressors. Specifically, in this case, I felt that his blowup with his wife had led to his loss of interests and his other signs of depression, lack of energy, sleep disturbance, other factors that were all symptoms of a depressive reaction rather than an anxious reaction.

Hankin Dep. at 80. After only four visits, however, Sebastian terminated his relationship with Dr. Hankin. Sebastian felt that Dr. Hankin was not interested in helping him to get well; he was disturbed that Dr. Hankin interrupted his visits to accept phone calls from other patients.

On September 28, 1995, Sebastian returned to see Dr. Gorrie. He reported to Dr.

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73 F. Supp. 2d 521, 1999 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 16719, 1999 WL 988688, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sebastian-v-provident-life-accident-insurance-mdd-1999.