USF Insurance v. Smith's Food & Drug Center

921 F. Supp. 2d 1082, 2013 WL 438585
CourtDistrict Court, D. Nevada
DecidedFebruary 4, 2013
DocketCase No. 2:10-cv-01513-MMD-VCF
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 921 F. Supp. 2d 1082 (USF Insurance v. Smith's Food & Drug Center) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Nevada primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
USF Insurance v. Smith's Food & Drug Center, 921 F. Supp. 2d 1082, 2013 WL 438585 (D. Nev. 2013).

Opinion

ORDER

MIRANDA M. DU, District Judge.

I. SUMMARY

Before the Court are three competing summary judgment motions filed by Plaintiff USF Insurance Company (“USF”) and Defendant Smith’s Food & Drug Centers, Inc. (“Smith’s”); (Dkt. nos. 61, 63, and 84.) At stake is the resolution of USF’s claims and Smith’s’ counterclaims arising out of an insurance dispute. The Court has reviewed the briefings in these motions, and makes its rulings in accordance with the reasoning set forth below.

II. BACKGROUND

A. The Insurance Contracts

J & I Maintenance (“J & I”) is in the business of providing janitorial and cleaning services to its clients. On January 19, 2004, Smith’s, a national grocery store operator, entered into a one-year Maintenance Agreement (“Agreement”) in which J & I agreed to perform daily cleaning and maintenance at various Smith’s stores. The Agreement obligated J & I to defend, indemnify, and hold Smith’s harmless from all claims, losses, expenses, and liability resulting from J & I’s cleaning and maintenance. The Agreement also required J & I to maintain comprehensive liability insurance with a minimum aggregate coverage of $2,000,000 under which Smith’s was to be designated as an additional named insured.

J & I was insured under a comprehensive commercial general liability policy (“the Policy”) through USF with a general aggregate liability limit of $2,000,000 and a personal injury limit of $1,000,000. USF agreed to defend and indemnify J & I [1087]*1087against all claims of bodily injury that J & I becomes legally obligated to pay. The Policy also stated that USF agreed to defend and indemnify all “additional insureds.”

On May 25, 2006, Smith’s and J & I extended the terms of the Agreement for an additional year.

B. The Bell Litigation

In February 2007, Tammy Bell filed suit against Smith’s and J & I for injuries resulting from an alleged slip and fall that occurred at a Smith’s location. On February 26, 2008, Smith’s’ counsel, Mr. Jerry Busby, tendered the defense of the Bell litigation to J & I and demanded that Smith’s be defended and indemnified from all liability pursuant to the Agreement. (Dkt. no. 61-B.) USF alleges that J & I never accepted the tender. Instead, the attorney USF had authorized to represent J & I, John Shannon, misrepresented to USF that J & I did in fact accept Smith’s’ tender. USF alleges that as a result of this misrepresentation, USF authorized Mr. Shannon to also defend Smith’s in the action on July 15, 2008. (Dkt. no. 68-E.)

On July 2, 2008, Mr. Shannon sent USF an initial suit report detailing the facts of the case, his assessment of J & I’s liability, and an estimated damages exposure in light of Ms. Bell’s surgery. (Dkt. no. 84-O.) At the time the report was prepared, Ms. Bell’s deposition had not been taken, and various medical records relating to an upcoming spinal fusion surgery as well as earlier medical procedures pre-dating the accident were unavailable. Nevertheless, Mr. Shannon assessed J & I’s liability at 100% based on the testimony of various witnesses. Mr. Shannon noted that he could not, assess J & I’s potential exposure in light of the missing medical evidence, but approximated it to be roughly $200,000.

Smith’s alleges that Mr. Shannon took Ms. Bell’s deposition on September 18, 2008, where he learned that Ms. Bell had undergone a failed back fusion surgery before her deposition. Smith’s alleges that it was never informed of Bell’s deposition or alleged injuries, or that her medical bills had risen to over $200,000.

On November 24, 2008, Ms. Bell’s counsel served an Offer of Judgment seeking to settle the litigation for $999,999.99 (“the Offer”). (Dkt. no. 68-F.) Smith’s alleges that it was not apprised of this offer during the acceptance period. Having received no response from J & I, Ms. Bell’s counsel wrote Mr. Busby on December 17, 2008, extending the deadline to respond to the Offer and noting that J & I’s failure to respond may constitute bad faith on the part of J & I’s insurer. (Dkt. no. 68-G.) In the meantime, and after having received the Offer which USF had rejected, Mr. Shannon wrote to USF on December 22, 2008, recommending that USF revisit its previous denial of the Offer and to accept Ms. Bell’s Offer in light of the documented medical damages suffered by Ms. Bell. (Dkt. no. 68-1.)

Having not received a response to the Offer or a response to a phone call, Ms. Bell’s counsel wrote to Mr. Shannon on December 29, 2008, to extend the deadline for J & I’s response to the Offer. (Dkt. no. 68-H.) The offer ultimately lapsed.

On April 27, 2009, mediation in the Bell litigation failed to settle the dispute. After its completion, Mr. Busby wrote Mr. Shannon and J & I on April 29, 2009, on behalf of Smith’s, expressing his disapproval of J & I’s failure to settle the litigation. (Dkt. no. 68 — J.) Mr. Busby described the mediation as a failure, and noted his frustration that J & I countered Ms. Bell’s offer of a $8.75 million settlement with only a $100,000 offer. In light of the failure, Mr. Busby concluded that [1088]*1088“[t]he decision made by either J & I or their insurance carrier to risk a verdict over policy limits appears to have been made in bad faith,” and reserved his client’s rights to pursue a claim against J & I and USF. (Id. at 2.)

On November 19, 2009, Mr. Busby wrote Mr. Shannon, USF, and J & I demanding that USF provide separate counsel for Smith’s and that USF settle the litigation above its policy limits and incur all of the resulting costs. (Dkt. no. 68-K.)

In response to the November 19, 2009, letter, Sally Rock, Liability Claims Examiner for USF, wrote Mr. Busby on December 22, 2009, to explain USF’s decision not to settle. (Dkt. no. 68-L.) She explained that USF’s failure to respond to Ms. Bell’s offer was due to not having all of Ms. Bell’s medical records to evaluate her claims, and that USF’s failure to resolve the dispute during mediation was due to Ms. Bell’s surprise request for settlement above the policy limit. Ms. Rock concluded the letter by informing Mr. Busby that USF’s duty to defend and indemnify Smith’s depends on the terms of USF’s policy with J & I, and that this policy does not permit Smith’s to choose its own counsel. Ms. Rock again refused to appoint independent counsel as documented in a March 15, 2010, letter. (Dkt. no. 84-M.)

On May 7, 2010, Mr. Busby wrote to Ms. Rock concerning Smith’s and J & I’s liability in the underlying Bell litigation. (Dkt. no. 6-L.) In this letter, Mr. Busby recountéd a March 25, 2010, status report prepared by Mr. Shannon in which Mr. Shannon noted that a conflict of interest existed between J & I and Smith’s, that sufficient evidence existed for J & I to be found liable for causing the accident, and that he valued the exposure in the case to be between $6 to $10 million. (Id.)

Thereafter, Smith’s retained its own counsel to proceed with the Bell litigation. On August 20, 2012, USF requested Smith’s clarify the existence of a current agreement that addresses the accident at issue in the Bell litigation.

C. This Lawsuit

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921 F. Supp. 2d 1082, 2013 WL 438585, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/usf-insurance-v-smiths-food-drug-center-nvd-2013.