Tozer v. Scott Wetzel Services, Inc.

883 P.2d 496, 18 Brief Times Rptr. 448, 1994 Colo. App. LEXIS 76, 1994 WL 72541
CourtColorado Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 10, 1994
Docket92CA2105
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 883 P.2d 496 (Tozer v. Scott Wetzel Services, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Colorado Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tozer v. Scott Wetzel Services, Inc., 883 P.2d 496, 18 Brief Times Rptr. 448, 1994 Colo. App. LEXIS 76, 1994 WL 72541 (Colo. Ct. App. 1994).

Opinion

Opinion by

Judge CRISWELL.

Defendant, Scott Wetzel Services, Inc., appeals the judgment entered on a jury verdict in favor of plaintiff, Edward Tozer. We reverse.

The trial here was held in accordance with the remand order entered in Scott Wetzel Services, Inc. v. Johnson, 821 P.2d 804 (Colo.1991). There our supreme court affirmed the conclusion of panels of this court that an independent claims adjusting company, such as defendant, owes a duty of good faith to a client’s injured employee in investigating and processing a workers’ compensation claim, notwithstanding an absence of any contractual privity with the employee. At the trial on remand, the jury found for plaintiff on his claim of breach of good faith and awarded economic, non-economic, and exemplary damages.

Defendant is an independent insurance adjuster which was engaged by Safeway Stores, Inc., to process and adjust Safeway’s workers’ compensation claims. Plaintiff, Edward Tozer, was a Safeway employee. He also worked nights at his own janitorial business.

Plaintiff suffered a work-related injury. Safeway, acting through defendant, admitted liability for temporary total disability benefits and began paying plaintiff for such benefits.

Because of the injury and subsequent surgery, plaintiff was unable to work for several months. And, the injury forced him to cease work again after two weeks, at which time defendant resumed payment for temporary total disability. Later, plaintiffs doctor concluded that he had reached maximum medical improvement and rated plaintiff as having a ten percent permanent partial impairment of the right shoulder.

At that time, defendant filed its final admission of liability, admitting liability for an amount representing partial permanent disability and ceased temporary total disability payments. Plaintiff objected to defendant’s admission, asserting that he was entitled to vocational rehabilitation and greater benefits for permanent partial disability.

Plaintiffs doctor released him to light duty work at his janitorial company, but recommended that he not resume his duties at Safeway. At a later date, plaintiff also underwent surgery for problems related to his shoulder injury. Because he was unable to resume any work after that surgery, defendant again began paying temporary total disability benefits to him.

Some months later, plaintiffs doctor again found that he had reached maximum medical improvement and that his permanent partial impairment rating remained at ten percent disability of his right shoulder. Defendant then filed a second final admission of liability, admitting liability for temporary total disability benefits for the period after surgery and for permanent partial disability thereafter. Plaintiff again contested this admission of liability.

The Administrative Law Judge (ALJ) determined that, during the period that plaintiff was unemployed by Safeway, but was working in his janitorial business, he was entitled to receive temporary partial disability benefits. The amount of such benefits was based upon the ALJ’s findings as to the amount of net income received by plaintiff from this business while he was partially disabled.

In determining this net income, the ALJ found that plaintiffs business, during the year of his surgery, had gross receipts of some $83,000. Based upon plaintiffs income tax returns for that year, the ALJ deducted from such gross receipts certain business expenses, including depreciation for equipment, salaries, and taxes. These deductions resulted in a net income from the business of some $18,500, which the ALJ divided equally between plaintiff and his wife, due to her participation in the business.

Based on the deduction of certain of these expenses and the division of income from the business between plaintiff and his wife (which lowered plaintiffs net income for the pertinent period), counsel for both Safeway and defendant recommended that the ALJ’s order be appealed to the Panel. Such an appeal was, in fact, initiated and pressed.

*498 During the pendency of that appeal, plaintiff was not paid the temporary disability benefits called for by the ALJ’s order. The Panel approved the ALJ’s order, and defendant began the payment of benefits immediately upon being notified of the Panel’s decision.

The basis for plaintiffs assertion that defendant committed a bad faith refusal to settle his workers’ compensation claim is that the appeal from the ALJ to the Panel was unreasonable and engaged in simply to delay the payment of the benefits found by the ALJ to be due. Defendant argues, however, that its pursuit of that appeal was not unreasonable, as a matter of law, and that the prosecution of that appeal, therefore, could not constitute a bad faith breach of the obligations owed to plaintiff, as its insured. We agree.

In Farmers Group, Inc. v. Trimble, 691 P.2d 1138 (Colo.1984), our supreme court recognized a tort claim based upon a “bad faith” refusal to settle a claim made against an insurance policy. In a third-party claim, i.e., a situation in which the insurer is required to represent the insured’s interests and, thus, a quasi-fiduciary relationship arises, such duty is violated by negligence on the insurer’s part.

On the other hand, if the claim is one made directly by the insured, negligence is not the standard by which to judge the insurer’s actions. Rather, in the case of a “first party” claim, an insurer will be held liable for a bad faith refusal to settle a claim only if it is shown that the insurer’s conduct was unreasonable and that the insurer knew that such conduct was unreasonable or acted with a reckless disregard of its unreasonableness. And, a claim made by an employee under a policy providing workers’ compensation coverage is considered such a first party claim. Travelers Insurance Co. v. Savio, 706 P.2d 1258 (Colo.1985).

In Scott Wetzel Services v. Johnson, supra, our supreme court imposed upon a self-insured employer and an independent claims adjustment service the same obligation to process workers’ compensation claims in good faith as would be imposed upon any insurer providing workers’ compensation coverage in like circumstances. Hence, that employer or its adjustment service will be held liable if either takes unreasonable action with the requisite knowledge or reckless disregard. ■

As a result of this conclusion, the supreme court in Scott Wetzel Services affirmed the reversal of the trial court’s judgment dismissing plaintiffs tort claim, because that judgment was based upon the trial court’s conclusion that defendant owed no duty to plaintiff. In reaching the conclusion that such a duty was owed, however, the supreme court did not pass upon the substantive merits of plaintiffs claim.

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883 P.2d 496, 18 Brief Times Rptr. 448, 1994 Colo. App. LEXIS 76, 1994 WL 72541, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tozer-v-scott-wetzel-services-inc-coloctapp-1994.