State Farm Fire and Casualty Insurance Company v. Shao

CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Oklahoma
DecidedJune 23, 2020
Docket4:19-cv-00496
StatusUnknown

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

Bluebook
State Farm Fire and Casualty Insurance Company v. Shao, (N.D. Okla. 2020).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE NORTHERN DISTRICT OF OKLAHOMA STATE FARM FIRE AND CASUALTY ) INSURANCE COMPANY, ) ) Plaintiff, ) ) v. ) Case No. 19-CV-0496-CVE-FHM ) BASE FILE ) (Consolidated with: JUN SHAO, LINA YEUNG, and ) Case No. 19-CV-0666-CVE-FHM) TPLAND, LLC, an Oklahoma Limited ) Liability Company, ) ) Defendants. ) --AND-- ) ) JUN SHAO, LINA YEUNG, and ) TPLAND, LLC, an Oklahoma Limited ) Liability Company, ) ) Plaintiffs, ) ) v. ) ) STATE FARM FIRE AND CASUALTY ) INSURANCE COMPANY, ) ) Defendant. ) OPINION AND ORDER The procedural history of the claims alleged in these consolidated cases is summarized in the order of consolidation. Dkt. # 27.1 Now before the Court is defendants Jun Shao, Lina Yeung, and 1 Defendants filed a state court action against plaintiff on October 8, 2019. Plaintiff removed defendants’ action to the Northern District of Oklahoma on December 9, 2019, where it was initially assigned Case No. 19-CV-666-JED-FHM (‘666 Case). On December 16, 2019, the Court consolidated the removed action with Case No. 19-CV-496-CVE-FHM (‘496 Case). TPLand, LLC’s motion to strike certain State Farm insufficient affirmative defenses (Dkt. # 43). Plaintiff has filed a response (Dkt. # 45), and defendants have filed a reply (Dkt. # 53). I. In response to defendants’ first motion to strike (Dkt. # 34), the Court ruled that defendants

were entitled to better notice of the factual underpinnings of plaintiff’s affirmative defenses and, therefore, plaintiff “would be allowed to restate its affirmative defenses in a manner that meets the Iqbal/Tombly standard.” Dkt. # 37. Plaintiff filed an amended answer (Dkt. # 38) to include the following factual allegations supporting its defenses: 1. Shao Defendants fail to state a claim for which relief may be granted to the extent they premise their bad faith theory on any of the alleged actions of State Farm’s outside counsel hired to represent State Farm after Shao Defendants filed suit against State Farm, including allegation that State Farm’s hired attorneys “‘conspired’ with State Farm to create an invalid ‘reason’ to continue its denial of coverage,” and/or allegations that State Farm’s attorneys were acting as State Farm’s agent (impliedly, State Farm’s agent for purposes of claims handling) when responding to communications from Shao Defendants’ attorney. 2. In applying for insurance coverage for the Property owned by TPLand, LLC, located at 397960 West 4000 Road, Skiatook, Oklahoma, Shao Defendants intentionally misrepresented the Property’s condition, purpose and use. Shao Defendants failed to disclose that two of the Property’s four heating units (all of which were necessary for adequately heating a 6,000 +/- square foot home) were either not working or were missing on the date of purchase, and had been left in that condition for more than a year, through the date of loss; Shao Defendants further failed to disclose on the policy application that the home would not be occupied for 52 weeks per year, or that Shao Defendants intended to have the Property serve as a retirement facility for seniors retiring from China.2 The facts support an inference that Shao Defendants’ misrepresentations were made with an intent to deceive State Farm. State Farm would not have issued a standard homeowners Policy if it had known of the damaged condition of the heaters and the true facts of Shao Defendants’ intended use of the Property, or that Shao Defendants intended 2 Plaintiff states that TPLand, LLC is an acronym for ‘The Promised Land.’ 2 to leave the heating unrepaired throughout winter months. State Farm detrimentally relied on Shao Defendants’ misrepresentations when State Farm issued the policy and also when State Farm issued payments to Shao Defendants’ for loss from a failed solder. State Farm is therefore entitled to rescind the Policy. 3. Having misrepresented the true facts about the Property, Shao Defendants’ claims are barred by the doctrine of estoppel. 4. Given Shao Defendants’ awareness that the Property lacked adequate working heat on the date TPLand, LLC purchased the Property, and Shao Defendants’ intentional or reckless failure to repair or replace the two non- functioning heating units, the loss to the Property resulting from a frozen/burst shower valve and frozen/burst water pipes was not accidental as contemplated by the Policy, and therefore the loss is not covered by the Policy. 5. State Farm adjusters asked Defendant Jun Shao how he could be living in the Property with two of the heaters not working. Mr. Shao responded that he was not concerned about not having heat in the Property during the winter because he lived in California. State Farm had no reason to dispute Mr. Shao, particularly given that the policy records listed Mr. Shao’s address as Fullerton, California. State Farm therefore had a justifiable, good faith basis for its actions, including its conclusion that the Property was not occupied at the time of the loss and that Shao Defendants had failed to take adequate care to maintain heat in the Property. Further, State Farm acted in good faith by extending coverage for a second burst pipe, on the grounds that it was due to a failed solder, when, on information and belief, the proximate cause of the solder failing was pressure from frozen water in the pipes, which, in turn, was the result of Shao Defendants not having repaired or replaced the Property’s two damaged heating units. Given that the defective solder had not leaked for some 20+ years (since the house was built), but then, coincidentally failed during a period of hard freeze, close in time to when a shower head in the Property burst due to freezing, State Farm’s extension of coverage for the resulting loss was an example of its good faith. 6. Given the facts alleged in paragraphs 1 through 5 above, including the facts concerning the damaged heaters, and Shao Defendants’ misrepresentations concerning the Property during the insurance application process, there is a legitimate dispute regarding the coverage afforded by Shao Defendants’ insurance policy. 3 7. Defendants failed to mitigate their damages, in that Defendants did not repair or replace the heating units after purchasing Property, and then knowingly left the Property unheated while the Property was unoccupied for an extended period of time during freezing weather conditions. 8. Defendants’ claim for punitive damages is unconstitutional and violated the due process clauses of the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution and of Article 2, Section 7 of the Oklahoma Constitution for the following reasons: (a) the standards under which such claims are submitted are so vague as to be effectively meaningless and threaten a deprivation of property for the benefit of society without the protection of fundamentally fair procedures; (b) the highly penal nature of punitive damages threatens the possibility of excessive punishment and almost limitless liability without the benefit of fundamentally fair procedures or any statutory limitations; (c) the introduction of evidence of State Farm’s financial worth is so prejudicial as to impose liability and punishment in a manner bearing no relation to the extent of any injury allegedly inflicted or to any benefit to State Farm from any alleged wrongdoing and, therefore, any verdict would be the result of bias and prejudice in a fundamentally unfair manner. 9. Defendants’ claim for punitive damages constitutes an unconstitutional excessive fine under Article 2, Section 9 of the Oklahoma Constitution because such highly penal sanctions may be imposed for the benefit of society under standards so vague and effectively meaningless as to threaten unlimited punishment bearing no relation to the extent of any injury allegedly inflicted at the unbridled discretion of the jury. 10.

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Bluebook (online)
State Farm Fire and Casualty Insurance Company v. Shao, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-farm-fire-and-casualty-insurance-company-v-shao-oknd-2020.