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May v. Travelers Property Casualty Company of America

United States District Court, D. Colorado
Nov 6, 2006
Civil Action No. 05-cv-00214-WYD-CBS (D. Colo. Nov. 6, 2006)

Opinion

Civil Action No. 05-cv-00214-WYD-CBS.

November 6, 2006


ORDER


I. INTRODUCTION AND BACKGROUND

THIS MATTER is before the Court on Defendant Travelers Property Casualty Company's ("Travelers") Motion for Entry of Additional Rule 56 Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law, Following the Court's Order of September 26, 2006 (docket #82), filed October 10, 2006 ("motion").

By way of background, I note that this is an insurance dispute arising from an automobile accident involving Plaintiff. At the time of the accident, Plaintiff was traveling as a passenger in a vehicle insured by Travelers under a policy of insurance issued to her husband, Shawn May. Plaintiff, an insured under the policy as a resident relative of Shawn May, was entitled to receive benefits under the policy including Personal Injury Protection ("PIP") benefits pursuant to the then-existing Colorado No-Fault Act, C.R.S. § 10-4-701, et seq (the "No-Fault Act"). The policy at issue provided the minimum complying PIP coverage, which Travelers paid to Plaintiff. Plaintiff then made a claim to Travelers for added personal injury protection benefits ("APIP") without dollar or time limitations. Travelers denied Plaintiff's claim for APIP, and Plaintiff commenced this action seeking, among other things, a declaration under Fed.R.Civ.P. 56 that the policy at issue must be reformed as a matter of law to include the highest amount of coverage required to be offered under C.R.S. § 10-4-710, without any aggregate limit. In addition to her reformation claim, Plaintiff brings claims for breach of contract, statutory bad faith, breach of the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing, and common law bad faith.

The parties filed cross-motions for summary judgment, each seeking a determination of whether Plaintiff is entitled to reformation of the subject policy as a matter of law. An Order on the parties' cross-motions was entered September 26, 2006 (the "Order"). In the Order, I determined that Plaintiff was not entitled to reformation of the policy based on Travelers' failure to properly extend APIP benefits to non-family member occupants and pedestrians under the Colorado Court of Appeal's decision in Brennan v. Farmers Alliance Mut. Ins. Co, 961 P.2d 550 (Colo.App. 1998). However, I found that Plaintiff was entitled to reformation based on her theory that Travelers' offer of APIP was not communicated in a manner reasonably calculated to permit Mr. May to make an informed decision under the standard articulated by the Colorado Supreme Court in Allstate Ins. Co. v. Parfrey, 830 P.2d 905 (Colo. 1992). I concluded that Plaintiff is entitled to reformation of the policy as a matter of law, and granted her motion for partial summary judgment as to her First Claim for Relief. While I agreed with Plaintiff that she is entitled to reformation of the subject policy to include Travelers "Added Personal Injury Protection Options," I found that those benefits were subject to a $200,000 aggregate, per person, per accident, cap. Clark v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co., 292 F.Supp.2d 1252, 1268-69 (D. Colo. 2003).

Following entry of my Order on the parties' cross-motions, Travelers paid Plaintiff the sum of $93,132.20, representing the difference between the Basic PIP already paid and the $200,000 aggregate APIP cap. Travelers then filed the instant motion, in which it asserts that the remaining matters between the parties may properly be decided by the Court on the record before it, without the need for a jury trial. Travelers requests that the Court establish the effective date for reformation of the subject policy, and asserts that if reformation is not granted retroactively, then Plaintiff's remaining claims for bad faith and breach of contract must fail. Travelers maintains that the appropriate date of reformation is September 26, 2006, the date I issued my Order on the parties' cross-motions for summary judgment. Plaintiff contends that there is no need to establish an effective date of reformation and that the policy is reformed ab initio, or, in the alternative, that the appropriate reformation date is the date of the accident.

II. ANALYSIS

As an initial matter, I reject Plaintiff's contention that the policy is reformed ab initio. Contract reformation is an equitable remedy, and the formulation of such remedy rests within the court's discretion. Cabs, Inc. v. Hartford Ins. Group, 151 Fed.Appx. 604, 609-10 (D. Colo. 2005). I agree with Travelers that a determination of the effective reformation date of the subject policy is appropriate prior to the trial in this case as a decision regarding reformation may impact the viability of Plaintiff's remaining claims. See Fincher v. Prudential Prop. and Cas. Ins. Co., 76 Fed.Appx. 917, 923 (10 Cir. 2003) (not selected for publication).

In Clark v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co., 319 F.3d 1234, 1242-43 (10th Cir. 2003), the Tenth Circuit found that once a determination is made that a party is entitled to the equitable remedy of reformation, the district court must then determine the effective date of reformation, based on the particular facts and circumstances of the case. In Clark, the insured was entitled to reformation of the policy at issue under Brennan, supra, which holds that reformation is appropriate when an insurer fails to offer APIP benefits for pedestrians as required under certain provisions of the No-Fault Act. Clark, 319 F.3d at 1242. After the Colorado Court of Appeals decided Brennan, carriers were arguably put on notice that policy forms that failed to afford APIP to the same classes of insureds entitled to "Basic PIP" (i.e., including pedestrians and other permissive users or occupants) were deficient and subject to reformation if a member of an omitted class of insureds had a claim that otherwise qualified for APIP benefits. If an insurer knew, based on Brennan, that a claimant was entitled to APIP because of these deficiencies, but failed to afford the higher benefits, then a case could be made that retroactive reformation was appropriate. The Tenth Circuit reasoned that when determining the effective date for reformation post- Brennan, the district court should consider the following: "(1) the degree to which reformation from a particular effective date would upset past practices on which the parties may have relied, and whether the insurer anticipated the rule in Brennan; (2) how reformation from a particular date would further or retard the purpose of the rule in Brennan; and (3) the degree of injustice or hardship reformation from a particular effective date would cause the parties." Id. at 1243-44.

Here, both parties acknowledge that my Order granting reformation was not based on Brennan, but was based on Travelers' failure to "offer" APIP benefits to its insured in a commercially reasonable manner under the test articulated in Allstate v. Parfrey, 830 P.2d 905 (Colo. 1992). Because my decision was not based on the holding in Brennan, I need not specifically consider the purpose underlying the rule in Brennan or whether Travelers anticipated the rule in Brennan when deciding the effective reformation date. However, because reformation is an equitable remedy, I may consider the appropriate date of reformation, based on the facts and circumstances of this particular case, as discussed in Clark, supra.

This is not a Brennan case where the insurer failed to offer APIP benefits that were mandated by statute. Here, an offer of APIP was made, but that offer was not made in a commercially reasonable manner. As noted in my prior Order, the commercial reasonableness test in Parfrey was adopted in the context of an insurer's statutory duty to offer uninsured motorist coverage pursuant to C.R.S. § 10-4-609(b)(2). In my Order I noted that Plaintiff had not cited any Colorado case applying the Parfrey test in the context of an offer of APIP benefits under § 710 of the Act. Application of the Parfrey standard requires an analysis of whether "under the totality of the circumstances, the insurer's notification and offer to the insured" was performed in a commercially reasonable manner. Parfrey, 830 P.2d at 914 n. 5. While several decisions from this District have utilized the Parfrey standard in cases similar to this one, those cases are all fairly recent. In some cases it will be difficult for an insured to determine whether its conduct was "commercially reasonable" under the "totality of the circumstances" prior to judicial determination.

In this case, the sufficiency of the offer to Mr. May was fairly debatable, and Travelers had a reasonable basis upon which to challenge Plaintiff claim that she was entitled to additional benefits. The evidence presented in the parties' cross-motions did not unequivocally demonstrated that the offer of APIP to Mr. May was unreasonable. Rather, this was a close case that required careful scrutiny and a weighing of the particular facts and circumstances as framed by the parties' in their respective motions. In other words, this is not a case where Travelers should have known or anticipated that the conduct of its agents was unreasonable under Parfrey and would subject it to liability. Where the reformation was not predestined by case law, a retroactive reformation "inequitably would hold [Travelers] liable for coverage it could not foresee during a time it reasonably did not know of such exposure." Clark v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co., 292 F.Supp.2d 1252, 1267 (D. Colo. 2003). I find that in this case retroactive reformation would pose a substantial hardship on Travelers and conclude that the effective date for reformation of the subject policy is September 26, 2006, the date of my Order on the parties' cross-motions for summary judgment. Because Travelers promptly paid the additional benefits due to Plaintiff up to the maximum APIP aggregate benefit of $200,000, Plaintiff's remaining claims for bad faith and breach of contract fail as a matter of law.

III. CONCLUSION

For the reasons discussed above, it is

ORDERED that Travelers Property Casualty Company's Motion for Entry of Additional Rule 56 Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law, Following the Court's Order of September 26, 2006 (docket #82), filed October 10, 2006, is GRANTED as set forth herein. It is

FURTHER ORDERED that Plaintiff's Second, Third, Fourth and Fifth Claims for relief are DISMISSED WITH PREJUDICE. It is

FURTHER ORDERED that Plaintiff's Motion to Strike Defendant Travelers Property Casualty Company's Reply Supporting Motion for Entry of Additional Rule 56 Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law, filed October 27, 2006 (docket #97) is DENIED AS MOOT. It is

FURTHER ORDERED that Plaintiff's Motion to Strike, and Response to, Defendant Travelers Property Casualty Company's Motion In Limine Included Within Its Submission of Issues and/or Motions Requiring Resolution, filed October 27, 2006 (docket #98) is DENIED AS MOOT. It is

FURTHER ORDERED that, all the claims and causes of action in this case being dismissed, the five-day jury trial set to commence Monday, November 13, 2006, is VACATED.


Summaries of

May v. Travelers Property Casualty Company of America

United States District Court, D. Colorado
Nov 6, 2006
Civil Action No. 05-cv-00214-WYD-CBS (D. Colo. Nov. 6, 2006)
Case details for

May v. Travelers Property Casualty Company of America

Case Details

Full title:CAROLYN MAY, Plaintiff(s), v. TRAVELERS PROPERTY CASUALTY COMPANY OF…

Court:United States District Court, D. Colorado

Date published: Nov 6, 2006

Citations

Civil Action No. 05-cv-00214-WYD-CBS (D. Colo. Nov. 6, 2006)