Vinnedge v. Owners Insurance Company

CourtDistrict Court, D. Colorado
DecidedJune 4, 2021
Docket1:19-cv-03521
StatusUnknown

This text of Vinnedge v. Owners Insurance Company (Vinnedge v. Owners Insurance Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Vinnedge v. Owners Insurance Company, (D. Colo. 2021).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLORADO Judge R. Brooke Jackson

Civil Action No 19-cv-03521-RBJ

STASIA VINNEDGE,

Plaintiff,

v.

OWNERS INSURANCE COMPANY,

Defendant.

ORDER ON DEFENDANT’S MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT and MOTIONS IN LIMINE

This case involves an insurance coverage dispute that arose from a car accident in which Stasia Vinnedge (“plaintiff”) suffered numerous injuries. ECF No. 37 at 4, ¶9. Owners Insurance Company (“defendant” or “Owners”) insured Ms. Vinnedge at the time of the accident. Ms. Vinnedge sues defendant for breach of an insurance contract and statutory unreasonable delay. Defendant filed a motion for summary judgment on all claims. ECF No. 37. For the following reasons, that motion is GRANTED in part and DENIED in part. The Court also addresses the pending motions in limine in this order. I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND On December 20, 2013 Ms. Vinnedge was in a car accident and sustained serious injuries. ECF No. 37 at 4, ¶8. Defendant issued the insurance policy that was in effect on the date of the accident. Id. at 3, ¶1. Ms. Vinnedge’s policy with Owners had an underinsured motorist (“UIM”) provision that agreed to cover $500,000 in the event that an at-fault driver’s insurance was insufficient to cover the insured’s medical costs. ECF No. 37-1 at 2. The policy stated, “[w]ith regard to an underinsured automobile, there is no coverage under this endorsement until the limits of liability of all bodily injury liability bonds and insurance policies applying to the underinsured automobile and its operator have been exhausted by payment of judgments or settlements.” Id. at 5. Anna White, the at-fault driver, also had an insurance policy with insurance limits of $100,000. Id. at ¶9. Ms. Vinnedge, with defendant’s permission, accepted a $100,000 settlement from Ms. White’s insurance company in November 2017. ECF No. 37 at 4, ¶12. On August 25, 2014 Owners contacted Ms. Vinnedge to inform her that it had not heard

whether she was still receiving treatment for injuries from the car accident. The letter also stated that “[i]f you are still treating, please contact us and advise us the extent of your injuries and how long you anticipate treating for. Please also send in any other outstanding bills you have so that we can use your medical payments coverage to its exhaustion.” ECF No. 37-2. Three years passed. On September 7, 2017 plaintiff provided defendant with medical bills totaling $48,467.00. Id. at ¶11. On October 23, 2017 defendant entered the following into Ms. Vinnedge’s claim file: “recd email from defense and Deana Danger said that plaintiff’s counsel doesn’t think the case is worth more than the $100,000 defendant’s [sic] policy limits.” ECF No.

37-3 at 2. In November 2017, with Owners’ consent, plaintiff accepted $100,000 from Ms. White’s insurer. On January 25, 2018 an Owners representative contacted plaintiff to determine whether she intended to file a UIM claim. She responded that she did intend to file a UIM claim. Id. However, she did not contact defendant again for nearly two more years. During those two years defendant continued to communicate with plaintiff to determine the status of her UIM claim. ECF No. 37-3 at 2. On January 26, 2018 Owners sent a letter to plaintiff’s counsel that read Pursuant to the conditions set forth in the policy, we are requesting that you provide us with information regarding all liability insurance that may be available to any person/entity that you are claiming is legally liable for the motor vehicle accident on December 20, 2013. Please also provide any information regarding any other policies that may provide underinsured motorist coverage to your client . . . .

We also request that you provide us with complete medical records and billings for any treatment that is being claimed as a result of this accident. Please also provide the name and contract [sic] information of your clients [sic] primary physician. Please advise on any lost wages, current status, future medical treatment and any impairment your client is claiming.

ECF No. 37-4 at 1. Ms. Vinnedge did not respond to this letter personally, nor did her attorney respond. ECF No. 46-1 at 126:12-14. On March 21, 2018 defendant again sent a letter to plaintiff’s counsel. That letter read I am contacting you to find out the status of your client’s potential UIM claim. We have not heard from you in some time. I did send a status update letter on 1/26/18. If we do not hear from you by April 30, 2018, we will assume the claim is not being pursued and we will close the file.

Id. at 2. Neither plaintiff nor her attorney ever responded to this letter, and Owners accordingly closed the file. ECF No. 37 at 4, ¶14. On October 31, 2019—two years after defendant approved the settlement with the at- fault driver and more than seventeen months after defendant sent the two aforementioned letters—plaintiff sent defendant a letter to notify it that she was still receiving treatment for injuries and intended to file a UIM claim. ECF No. 37-6 at 2–3. The letter listed twenty-three medical records as enclosures and also included Ms. Vinnedge’s responses to interrogatories and expert disclosures from the underlying suit against the at-fault driver. See ECF No. 37-6. Plaintiff’s counsel further wrote As of September 20, 2017, Ms. Vinnedge’s past medical bills total $195,142.72 and her future medical bills will be in excess of $500,000. The estimate for future medical bills is based on Ms. Vinnedge’s need for Botox injections four times per year for the rest of her life at approximately $4,877.10 per treatment ($19,500 per year) and the need for radiofrequency ablations (rhizotomies) approximately every 18 months at approximately $13,000 per treatment ($169,052 for 13 rhizotomies over the next twenty years). Ms. Vinnedge is 50 years old. I am very conservatively estimating treatment for the next 20 years for the sake of this claim at this time. I believe this is everything you will need to evaluate the UIM claim.

ECF No. 37-6 at 3. While the letter said these records were enclosed, they were not actually attached to the email and apparently were sent separately via regular mail. Defendant did not receive the listed enclosures at or near the time it received the letter. It only received them during discovery. ECF Nos. 37 at 5, ¶17; 46 at 5, ¶17. As a result of plaintiff’s delay, the statute of limitations was set to expire immediately after she filed her UIM claim with defendant. Plaintiff requested that defendant toll the statute of limitations so that it would have sufficient time to review her medical records and make a benefits determination prior to its expiration. Defendant refused to toll the statute of limitations. II. PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND Plaintiff filed suit in state court on November 14, 2019, six years after the accident, two years after the settlement with the at-fault driver’s insurance company, and two weeks after submitting her claim for UIM benefits to Owners. Defendant removed the action to federal court on December 12, 2019. ECF No. 1. On December 20, 2019 plaintiff filed an amended complaint and jury demand. ECF No. 11. Defendant filed its answer to the amended complaint on January 23, 2020. ECF No. 15. Defendant moved for summary judgment on February 4, 2021. ECF No. 37. Plaintiff filed her response on March 22, 2021, and defendant filed its reply on April 5, 2021. ECF Nos. 46, 47. The motion is ripe for review. III. STANDARD OF REVIEW A court may grant summary judgment if “there is no genuine dispute as to any material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(a).

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Vinnedge v. Owners Insurance Company, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vinnedge-v-owners-insurance-company-cod-2021.