Ware v. Columbus Life Insurance Company

CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Alabama
DecidedJanuary 26, 2023
Docket3:21-cv-01281
StatusUnknown

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

Bluebook
Ware v. Columbus Life Insurance Company, (N.D. Ala. 2023).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT NORTHERN DISTRICT OF ALABAMA NORTHWESTERN DIVISION PRESTON WARE and ) ERIC WARE, ) ) Plaintiffs, ) ) Case No. 3:21-cv-1281-LCB v. ) ) COLUMBUS LIFE INSURANCE ) COMPANY, ) ) Defendant. )

OPINION & ORDER Plaintiffs Preston and Eric Ware—father and son, respectively—filed this action in state court on August 20, 2021,1 and Defendant Columbus Life Insurance Company timely filed its notice of removal here.2 In short, the Wares allege that by terminating Preston’s life-insurance coverage, Columbus ran afoul of the parties’ agreement.3 Before the Court is Columbus’s Motion for Summary Judgment;4 for the forthcoming reasons, the Court GRANTS the Motion in full and, accordingly, DISMISSES this action with prejudice.

1 Circuit Court of Colbert County, Alabama, 10-CV-2021-900182. Doc. 1-1 at 2–7. 2 Doc. 1 (filed Sept. 23, 2021). 3 The Wares initially sought relief for breach of contract (Count I) and bad-faith cancellation (Count II) but now concede that Count II has no basis in Alabama law and is due for adverse summary judgment. Pls.’ Resp., Doc. 22 at 9. 4 Doc. 19; see also Def.’s Br., Doc. 21; Pls.’ Resp., Doc. 22; Def.’s Reply, Doc. 23. I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND The Wares base their claim for relief—and Columbus, its Motion—on the

following undisputed facts. A. The Policy’s Terms Columbus issued life-insurance policy CM2043958U to Preston Ware on June

11, 1986.5 The cost of coverage was, by the Policy’s terms, determined on a monthly basis and was subject to upward variance in relation to Columbus’s “expectations as to future mortality.”6 In other words, the requisite minimum for monthly premiums increased with the passage of time.7 For this “Flexible Premium Adjustable” life-

insurance policy, Preston was able to “choose the amount and frequency of [premium] payments.”8 The amount and frequency Preston selected for those payments had a direct

effect on what the Policy called “cash value.”9 “Cash value” was formulaically defined10 within the Policy: On a given monthly “anniversary” date (here, the 11th of each month), the Policy’s cash value equaled (1) “the cash value on the preceding monthly anniversary day,”11 plus (2) “90 percent of all premiums (except the first)

5 Doc. 21-1 at 12. 6 Id. at 23. 7 Id. at 18, 23. 8 Id. at 12, 21. 9 Id. at 21. 10 Id. at 23. 11 Id. (including interest at a monthly compounding rate of 0.36748%). received since the preceding monthly anniversary day,” minus (3) the next month’s cost of insurance.12 Stated simply, the preceding anniversary date’s cash value,

coupled with 90% of all premiums (except the first) subsequently paid, was required to be at least equal to the next month’s coverage cost.13 Insufficient cash value on a monthly anniversary date triggered a 61-day “grace period,” during which the Policy

permitted retroactive cash-value rectification.14 Columbus also sent annual reports indicating, among other things, the Policy’s cash value.15 The Wares typically paid monthly premiums by way of preauthorized automatic withdrawal (“PAW”) from the checking account on file. An increase in

coverage costs unaccompanied by a corresponding PAW adjustment inherently depleted the Policy’s cash value.16 The Policy set forth two absolute prerequisites for automatic termination

without value.17 The first was the insured’s failure to reestablish a sufficient cash value for the duration of a grace period.18 The second was Columbus’s provision of a “grace notice” via mail.19 Columbus would “not terminate [the] policy until 31

12 Id. Also deducted from (1) and (2) in the cash-value calculation above was a small monthly expense charge, which has no bearing on this case. Id. at 12, 23. 13 Id. at 23. 14 Id. at 22–23. 15 Id. at 21 (Policy provision promising annual report); see also id. at 64–67, 92–95, 126–29 (annual reports). 16 Id. at 21. 17 Id. at 22. 18 Id. 19 Id. at 23. days after” mailing notice to “the last known address” even if a 61-day grace period had already run to completion.20

Between 2010 and 2015, Columbus sent six grace notices to Preston.21 Each time, Preston remitted the minimum payments necessary to rectify the deficient cash value and maintain coverage before automatic termination.22 In October 2015,

Preston directed all further Policy related correspondence to Eric’s residential address (“Golfview address”).23 B. 2016 to 2018 On August 10, 2016, Columbus mailed a grace notice to the Golfview address

requesting payment of at least $21.46 by September 10th.24 The July 11 PAW had been insufficient to maintain a cash value equaling or exceeding the cost of August’s coverage and thus triggered a 61-day grace period.25 To that end—due to the increase

in coverage costs—the notice stated that the Wares’ $245.22 PAW was “not sufficient to keep [the] policy in force,” that the insufficient PAWs had been temporarily halted, and that, moving forward, a PAW of at least $261.46 was

20 Id. For example, if Columbus sent “grace notice” via mail on the 60th day of a 61-day grace period, then Preston would have 31 days from the mailing of such notice (or, stated differently, 91 days from the grace period’s commencement) to rectify the deficient cash value. 21 Id. at 53–59. 22 Id. at 46–51. 23 Id. at 66. 24 Id. at 69–70. 25 See id. at 69. necessary to maintain coverage at the current monthly rate.26 Columbus ultimately received the minimum payment necessary to rectify the July 11 cash value before

the September 10 deadline.27 Thus, the July 11 grace period referenced in the August 10 notice did not lead to termination. Despite rectifying the deficient July 11 cash value, the $21.46 premium did

nothing for the August 11 cash-value calculation, which restarted the 61-day timer.28 And because the Wares had paid nothing beyond $21.46 since the July PAW,29 Columbus sent to the Golfview address another grace notice on September 12, 2016.30 The September notice described the minimum payment necessary to prevent

lapse on October 13, 2016.31 Preston called Columbus to discuss the situation on September 21, and Columbus’s employee explained, as did the August and September notices, that the $245.22 PAWs were insufficient to maintain coverage

at the current rate.32 Nine days later, Columbus received the requested premium, which retroactively established a satisfactory cash value for purposes of both the August 11 and September 11 anniversary dates.33 The following month, Preston sent

26 Id. 27 Id. at 47. 28 See Telephone Tr. (July 3, 2018), id. at 102 (noting that Wares were behind on payments and that payments were being attributed to “the month behind” due to insufficient cash value, in nearly identical circumstances). 29 Id. at 46–47 (detailing premium-payment history). 30 Id. at 72–73. 31 Id. at 72. The September 2016 notice also mentioned temporary cessation of PAWs. Id. 32 See Telephone Tr. (Sept. 21, 2016), id. at 82. 33 See id. at 47. Columbus a letter directing all future correspondence to Eric at a new address (“Cottonwood address”) and also instructed deduction of all future PAWs from

Eric’s bank account.34 Columbus sent a grace notice to Eric at the Cottonwood address on July 11, 2018. The notice stated that coverage would lapse unless Columbus received

$318.72 within 31 days.35 Eric subsequently phoned Columbus about the notice; he agreed to pay the requested premium and to increase future PAWs to $308.88—the minimum amount necessary to keep the Policy afloat until coverage costs rose again.36 Eric also updated his address (“Muscle Shoals address”).37

C. 2020 to Present After receiving the Wares’ $308.88 PAW on June 9, 2020, Columbus mailed its annual report to the Muscle Shoals address on June 11.38 The report showed that

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Ware v. Columbus Life Insurance Company, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ware-v-columbus-life-insurance-company-alnd-2023.