Security Officers Service, Inc. v. State Compensation Insurance Fund

17 Cal. App. 4th 887, 21 Cal. Rptr. 2d 653, 58 Cal. Comp. Cases 561, 93 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 5927, 93 Daily Journal DAR 10110, 1993 Cal. App. LEXIS 810
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 4, 1993
DocketB067478
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 17 Cal. App. 4th 887 (Security Officers Service, Inc. v. State Compensation Insurance Fund) 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
Security Officers Service, Inc. v. State Compensation Insurance Fund, 17 Cal. App. 4th 887, 21 Cal. Rptr. 2d 653, 58 Cal. Comp. Cases 561, 93 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 5927, 93 Daily Journal DAR 10110, 1993 Cal. App. LEXIS 810 (Cal. Ct. App. 1993).

Opinion

Opinion

FUKUTO, J.

Does the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing require a workers’ compensation insurer to defend and resolve claims with due regard to the impact of outstanding claims and reserves on the premiums *890 the insured will be assessed and on policy dividends it may receive? Alleging it had been damaged by defendant State Compensation Insurance Fund’s (SCIF) systematic failure to process claims diligently, and its unreasonable inflation of the reserves assigned to them, plaintiff Security Officers Service, Inc., brought this action for breach of contract and implied covenant, as well as fraud and negligence. The trial court sustained without leave to amend a demurrer to plaintiff’s second amended complaint, apparently accepting SCIF’s contentions that its alleged conduct did not constitute a breach of contractual duty, and that SCIF was immune from suit in tort.

The immunity contention having been soundly discredited by two recent decisions in similar cases, we confront the primary issue of liability they did not reach. We hold that under an insurance regime in which the insured’s annual claims experience inexorably influences its premiums, the insurer may be liable if it processes claims and sets reserves without good faith regard for their impact on the insured’s premiums and potential dividends. We therefore reverse the dismissal and direct that plaintiff be allowed to proceed with a new amended complaint.

Factual Statement

We summarize the allegations of plaintiff’s second amended complaint, as supplemented by matters of which judicial notice is mandatory under Evidence Code sections 451, subdivisions (a), (b), and 459, subdivision (a)(2). (These include the Workers’ Compensation Insurance Rating Bureau of California [rating bureau] manual, rating plan, and statistical plan, of which SCIF has requested judicial notice.)

Defendant SCIF is a public workers’ compensation insurance enterprise, governed under Insurance Code sections 11770-11881. In December 1986, plaintiff entered into three insurance contracts with SCIF (collectively the policy), affording workers’ compensation insurance for the period December 1, 1986, to December 1, 1988. Under the policy, SCIF agreed to “pay promptly when due to those eligible under this policy the benefits required of [plaintiff] by the workers’ compensation law.” The policy also obligated SCIF to defend claims, stating in relevant part: “We have the right and duty to defend at our expense any claim, proceeding or suit against you for benefits payable by this insurance. We have the right to investigate and settle these claims, proceedings or suits.”

Part five of the policy provided that premiums would be determined by the rating bureau’s manuals of rules, rates, rating plans, and classifications, and that plaintiff would accept any increased premiums or rates which might be *891 promulgated under an Insurance Commissioner-approved rating plan. Part six provided that plaintiff would “be entitled to participate in any dividend plan applicable to this policy which may be approved for distribution by [SCIF’s] Board of Directors if the final premium determined at the end of the policy period is more than the minimum premium ....[!]... Your participation will be according to the rules adopted by our Board of Directors.”

Plaintiffs policy premiums are determined by the rating bureau, as a function of the “manual rate” for the industry in question (prescribed by Cal. Code Regs., tit. 10, § 2350), the employer’s annual payroll, and its loss “experience rating,” as modified with regard to the number of claims outstanding at the end of the year, and the amount of reserves SCIF has established for those unresolved claims. (See Cal. Code Regs., tit. 10, § 2353 [rating bureau experience rating plan].) Not only does this “experience modification” affect plaintiffs premiums, the claims history also affects its entitlement to dividends.

Against this backdrop, plaintiff alleges the following contractual violations, in overlapping causes of action for breach of contract and “contractual breach of the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing.” First, SCIF breached its policy duty to pay benefits promptly, by unjustifiably allowing claims against plaintiff to remain open. For example, using its own hired consultant, plaintiff was able to resolve within three months several of the oldest such claims, some of which had been open for as long as three years. These claims were closed “for payments of approximately $7,500,” whereas SCIF had assigned them reserves in excess of $100,000, in violation of an implied standard of reasonableness in allotting reserves. SCIF also ignored plaintiffs offer to provide investigators to expedite processing outstanding claims. In consequence of SCIF’s conduct, plaintiff’s experience modification rating increased, causing plaintiffs premiums to rise to unwarranted levels.

Plaintiff further alleges that by its sloth in resolving claims, SCIF breached its duty to defend and resolve them in requisitely diligent fashion, and thereby similarly adversely affected plaintiffs experience modification rating and consequent premiums. Moreover, by the described acts and omissions—not promptly paying claims when due, not diligently defending claims, and not reasonably reserving them—SCIF breached its policy obligations to plaintiff in respect of dividends. This breach also derived from a failure to “follow the rules and conditions for the declaration of a dividend.” On information and belief, plaintiff would have received such dividends had SCIF complied with its duties.

*892 Plaintiff’s third cause of action, denominated “fraudulent claims practice,’’ alleges several particular instances in which SCIF’s personnel delayed resolution of claims against plaintiff, for periods in excess of three and one-half years. On information and belief, plaintiff alleges that the reserves for these claims, totalling in excess of $250,000, were deliberately inflated by SCEF with the intent to raise plaintiff’s experience modification rate, after plaintiff announced it intended to terminate the policy. SCIF orally assured plaintiff these claims were being handled diligently, with appropriate reserves, and plaintiff justifiably relied on those assurances. When plaintiff subsequently discovered improprieties in claims handling, SCIF refused plaintiffs request for a claims audit.

In a final cause of action, for “negligent misrepresentation," plaintiff alleges that in December 1988 SCIF negligently understated plaintiff’s payroll to the rating bureau, by reporting a nine-month payroll as being a full year’s, thereby improperly increasing plaintiff’s attributed percentage of claims to payroll. This miscalculation, together with SCIF’s negligent evaluation of claims, and consequent imposition and reporting of inflated reserves, once more inflated plaintiffs experience modification rating and enhanced its premiums. (The “false" report also is alleged to have constituted a further breach of the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing.) Plaintiff alleges it suffered actual damages of in excess of $250,000 on each cause of action, and prays for punitive damages on the third.

SCEF demurred to each cause of action, alleging failure to state a cause of action and that SCIF was immune from tort liability.

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17 Cal. App. 4th 887, 21 Cal. Rptr. 2d 653, 58 Cal. Comp. Cases 561, 93 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 5927, 93 Daily Journal DAR 10110, 1993 Cal. App. LEXIS 810, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/security-officers-service-inc-v-state-compensation-insurance-fund-calctapp-1993.