Thompson v. AIG Hawaii Ins. Co., Inc.

142 P.3d 277, 111 Haw. 413, 60 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. 2d (West) 1016, 2006 Haw. LEXIS 459
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 5, 2006
Docket27463
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 142 P.3d 277 (Thompson v. AIG Hawaii Ins. Co., Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Hawaii Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Thompson v. AIG Hawaii Ins. Co., Inc., 142 P.3d 277, 111 Haw. 413, 60 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. 2d (West) 1016, 2006 Haw. LEXIS 459 (haw 2006).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

MOON, C. J.

This appeal concerns the sole question whether the plaintiffs-appellees Terrie L. Thompson (Mrs. Thompson) and Dwight Thompson (Mr. Thompson) [hereinafter, collectively, the plaintiffs] are entitled to rescind a settlement agreement, releasing all claims for personal injuries arising from an automobile accident, on the ground of unilateral mistake, pursuant to Restatement (Second) of Contracts [hereinafter, Restatement] §§ 153 and 154 (1981), quoted infra. Briefly stated, Mrs. Thompson was involved in a rear-end motor vehicle collision caused by defendant Josephine D. Medeiros, who is not a party to the instant appeal. The plaintiffs 1 eventually settled their personal injury claim with Medeiros in the amount of $35,000, which was paid by Medeiros’s automobile liability insurer, defendant-appellant AIG Hawaii Insurance Company, Inc. (AIG), through its adjusting company, defendant-appellant American International Adjustment Company, Inc. (AIAC) 2 [hereinafter, AIG and AIAC are collectively referred to as the defendants]. At the time of the settlement, the plaintiffs believed that the $35,000 represented the liability limit of Medeiros’s motor vehicle insurance policy when, in fact, the policy limit was $300,000. The plaintiffs brought suit against Medeiros, their former attorneys, AIG, and AIAC, seeking, inter alia, rescission of the settlement agreement. Ultimately, the Circuit Court of the Second Circuit 3 found that the settlement agreement was unenforceable on the ground of uneonseionability and granted the plaintiffs’ *415 motion for summary judgment. An amended final judgment was entered on August 2, 2005.

On appeal, the defendants advance two points of error committed by the circuit court. First, the defendants contend that the circuit court failed to apply Hawaii Revised Statutes (HRS) § 490:2-302 (1993), quoted infra, which dictates that unconscion-ability is determined under the circumstances existing at the time the contract was made. Second, the defendants claim that there are genuine issues of material facts regarding whether the settlement agreement was unconscionable, thereby rendering summary judgment inappropriate.

For the reasons discussed herein, we vacate the circuit court’s August 2, 2005 amended final judgment and remand this case for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.

I. BACKGROUND

A. Factual Background

On October 6, 1990, Mrs. Thompson was involved in a rear-end motor vehicle collision caused by Medeiros (the accident). As a result of the accident, Mrs. Thompson sustained severe personal injuries, including bilateral temporomandibular joint displacements, post-traumatic stress disorder, depression, and cervical, thoracic, and right shoulder injuries.

Shortly after the accident, the plaintiffs retained defendant Burton D. Gould'—a non-party to the instant appeal—as counsel to represent them in connection with their personal injury claim against Medeiros [hereinafter, the personal injury action]. As a result of settlement negotiations between Gould and the defendants’ senior claims adjuster, Billie R. Long, the plaintiffs entered into a settlement agreement on June 26, 1991. In return for a payment of $35,000, the plaintiffs released all claims arising from the accident [hereinafter, the 1991 release] against Medeiros. The plaintiffs executed the 1991 release based upon Gould’s representation that Long had informed him that the $35,000 represented the entirety of Me-deiros’s liability insurance coverage when, in fact, the policy limit was $300,000. Gould testified in his deposition that Long had represented that she was paying the policy limit of $35,000 in order to settle the personal injury action:

Q. [By plaintiffs’ counsel] ... At the time that you purportedly settled [the plaintiffs’] claims against [Medeiros] for $35,000, you were under the impression that [Medeiros] had only a $35,000 minimum policy limit of bodily injury liability coverage through [AIG], correct”
A. [By Gould] Yes.
Q. How did you gain that impression?
A. Well, in talking with [Long], I remember asking for a lot more, and then part of the conversation went well, I don’t—
Q. When you say “asking for a lot more,” what do you mean?
A. You know, I am talking about memory now. I think I might have asked for seventy or something like that.
Q. In other words, you thought [Mrs. Thompson’s] claims were worth a lot more than $35,000, correct?
A. Yes, double, something like that, yes. And then she said something to the effect, well, we don’t have that. All there is, is the thirty-five. Something like that.
Q. Okay. Are those the exacts words?
A. Okay, I am going to try to get the exact words. When we were negotiating, she said, you can have the thirty-five, I remember. And with everything else she said before—taking it out of context, it’s hard, but with everything she said before and with the fact that [Medeiros], I believe, was just a private person, you know, not a business person, and with what she said, I believe there was only thirty-five. When she said, well, we don’t have that, all I have is the thirty-five. To me, that would mean the thirty-five minimum policy.
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... In other words, she didn’t say, well, I can offer you thirty-five and that’s it. *416 She said, you can have the thirty-five. To me, that meant that.

Gould further testified that:

Q. [By plaintiffs’ counsel] When you were talking about the numbers in excess of $35,000, she had said, we don’t have that?
A. [By Gould] Yes. Like, oh, no, but you can have the thirty-five.
Q. Your impression was she didn’t have insurance coverage for the value of claim in excess of $35,000?
A. Yes, yes. And the impression wasn’t gained from just one set of words or phrases, it was the entire conversation and the previous calls, just her attitude .... The thirty-five to me means that’s what their policy limits are, because there was no mention of thirty-five before, where she had made an offer, and said, well, you can have the thirty-five that I offered you last time. She said, you can have the thirty-five that we have, or something like that.

It is undisputed that Gould never inquired about Medeiros’s policy limit, or requested a declaration page from AIG. Instead, as indicated above, Gould assumed that the $35,000 offer by Long represented Medeiros’s policy limit.

Long, however, testified that she represented to Gould that $35,000 was all the authority that she had to settle the personal injury action.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
142 P.3d 277, 111 Haw. 413, 60 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. 2d (West) 1016, 2006 Haw. LEXIS 459, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thompson-v-aig-hawaii-ins-co-inc-haw-2006.