Wopshall v. Travelers Home & Marine Ins. Co.

369 F. Supp. 3d 1283
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Florida
DecidedApril 2, 2019
DocketCASE NO. 18-14424-CIV-MAYNARD
StatusPublished

This text of 369 F. Supp. 3d 1283 (Wopshall v. Travelers Home & Marine Ins. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wopshall v. Travelers Home & Marine Ins. Co., 369 F. Supp. 3d 1283 (S.D. Fla. 2019).

Opinion

SHANIEK M. MAYNARD, UNITED STATES MAGISTRATE JUDGE

*1286THIS CAUSE comes before this Court upon the Plaintiff's Motion for Leave to Amend Complaint (which begins at page 161 of DE 1-2), Motion to Remand (DE 8), and Amended Rule 11(c)(2) Motion for Sanctions (DE 13). Having reviewed the Motions, their respective Responses and Replies, and the Plaintiff's Notice of Filing Supplemental Authority (DE 21), this Court finds as follows:

BACKGROUND

1. Underlying this lawsuit is a motor vehicle accident that occurred on February 3, 2016. A third-party driver caused the accident, and the victim of that accident, the Plaintiff, is seeking insurance benefits. National General insured the third party tortfeasor with a $ 100,000 bodily injury policy. Florida law, the Defendant argues, makes the tortfeasor's insurer the primary source of coverage. The Defendant insured the Plaintiff with a $ 100,000 uninsured/underinsured motorist ("UM") policy. Florida law, the Defendant continues, makes the UM insurer the secondary source of coverage, covering those damages left after the tortfeasor's insurer pays. See § 627.727(1), Fla. Stat., and Neff v. Prop. & Cas. Ins. Co., 133 So.3d 530, 533 (Fla. 2nd DCA 2013).

2. On June 12, 2017 the Plaintiff sent 600 pages of medical records and medical bills totaling $ 147,000 to the Defendant. The Plaintiff asked the Defendant to pay the full $ 100,000 UM policy benefit. On June 26, 2017 the Defendant waived its subrogation rights and gave the Plaintiff permission to recover directly from the tortfeasor's insurer. However the Defendant refused to pay the full UM policy benefit.

3. The Plaintiff settled with the tortfeasor. The details of the Plaintiff's settlement with the tortfeasor are unknown. Neither party expressly says how much the tortfeasor's insurer paid. The implication, however, is that the tortfeasor's insurer paid the Plaintiff the full $ 100,000 benefit of his bodily injury liability insurance policy.

4. The Plaintiff filed a Civil Remedy Notice of Insurer Violations on October 20, 2017. There she complained about the Defendant's failure to settle her UM policy claim in good faith, in violation of § 624.155, Fla. Stat. She complained that the Defendant made no offer "despite there being only $ 100,000 in BI limits with about $ 150,000 in medical bills." In other words the Plaintiff complained that the Defendant, her UM insurer, was not paying $ 50,000 in UM benefits to cover that amount of her medical bills that exceeded the tortfeasor's bodily injury liability coverage. The Defendant answered the Civil Remedy Notice on December 4, 2017 denying that it acted in bad faith or handled the Plaintiff's claim improperly.

5. The Plaintiff filed suit against the Defendant in Florida state court on February 18, 2018. There the Plaintiff alleged a *1287wide variety of personal injuries that she said resulted from the motor vehicle accident. She alleged suffering "bodily injury, resulting pain and suffering, disability, disfigurement, permanent impairment, mental anguish, loss of capacity of enjoyment of life, expense of medical care and treatment, aggravation of a condition, and loss of earnings." Those losses, the Plaintiff furthered, "are either permanent or continuing and she will continue to suffer the losses in the future." In that way the Plaintiff pleaded only categories of personal injury. She did not quantify them in terms of a specific dollar amount (except to plead that they exceed Florida state circuit court's $ 15,000 jurisdictional threshold). She attached to her Complaint the Civil Remedy Notice of Insurer Violations that she had sent the Defendant beforehand, on October 20, 2017.

6. As for what the face of the Complaint and its attachment shows, the value of the Plaintiff's claim fairly could be construed to be $ 50,000. It also leaves open the possibility that the amount in controversy is more than $ 50,000 if there are damages in addition to the reported medical bills, but the amount of any additional compensatory damages is wholly speculative on this Court's part. Presumably the $ 100,000 UM policy limit thereby limits the maximum amount of damages (other than fees and costs) that the Plaintiff could recover. As a speculative exercise, therefore, the Complaint implies a range of $ 50,000 to $ 100,000 for what the amount in controversy could. be. For instant purposes, however, only the non-speculative $ 50,000 valuation counts.

7. On June 12, 2018 the Plaintiff produced in discovery medical bills of more than $ 150,000. The Plaintiff's medical bill claim had increased very little since the $ 147,000 claim from the year before.

8. On August 28, 2018 the Defendant offered to pay the Plaintiff the full $ 100,000 UM policy benefit to settle the lawsuit. The Plaintiff rejected the offer. The rejection implies that the Plaintiff values her claim above the full $ 100,000 UM policy benefit. That would mean that the Plaintiff is asserting damages that exceed both what the tortfeasor's bodily insurance policy already had paid and the Defendant's offer of the full UM policy benefit.

9. The Defendant's offer to tender the UM policy's $ 100,000 limit prompted the Plaintiff on September 18, 2018 to amend her Complaint. As she explains in her Motion for Leave to Amend Complaint, she seeks to add a bad faith claim. She complains that the Defendant's initial refusal to pay the UM policy limit forced her to file the lawsuit to recover "benefits that were rightfully due under the Policy."

10. The Plaintiff attaches to her Motion the Amended Complaint that she seeks to file. It contains no changes in how she pleads her claim for UM benefits (other than to designate it now as "Count I"). The Plaintiff still does not quantify in a specific dollar amount how much the Defendant should pay her on her UM policy claim (other than to plead that it exceeds Florida state circuit court's $ 15,000 jurisdictional threshold). The only substantive change is the newly added Count II which alleges statutory bad faith. There she pleads that the Defendant initially had denied that her injuries exceed the tortfeasor's bodily injury coverage limit, but then on August 28, 2018 the Defendant changed course and "admitted that [her] damages meet or exceed the Policy's UM limits". Again the Plaintiff still does not quantify as a specific dollar amount what her damages are. The implication, however, is that the amount that Count I places into controversy is the full $ 100,000 UM policy limit if the Defendant's settlement offer is *1288accepted as a reliable valuation of it. As for Count II---the bad faith count---it is prematurely raised, and thus has no value of its own. Therefore it does not increase the amount that the Plaintiff's lawsuit places into controversy. See Marquez v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co., 2014 WL 2968452 (M.D.Fla. 2014).

11. On October 16, 2018 the Defendant removed the lawsuit to this federal court.

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Bluebook (online)
369 F. Supp. 3d 1283, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wopshall-v-travelers-home-marine-ins-co-flsd-2019.