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inscobadfaith.net/ hall of shame
Contained on this page are
examples of "insurance company bad faith." We
like to call it our "Hall of Shame." Every so
often, we recognize an extremely bad case of insurance
company bad faith with our infamous "Unclean Hands
Award."
Be forewarned! Some of
these bad faith cases are quite egregious!
- FEDERAL INSURANCE COMPANY CONCEALS COVERAGE IN BAD FAITH AND FORCES
POLICYHOLDER TO LITIGATE A SECRETLY COVERED CLAIM
Federal Insurance Company, part of the Chubb Group of
Companies, concealed coverage from its policyholder and forced the
policyholder into litigation. That is the decision of the Court of Appeal
in
Los Angeles on August 27, 2001 in the case of Silgan Containers Corp. v.
Federal Insurance Company, No. B126141. In a case involving a defective
product, Federal secretly determined that a multi-million dollar claim was
covered by Federal's policy, but decided to conceal that finding of
coverage
from the policyholder. Instead, Federal told the policyholder that the
claim
was not covered and filed suit against the policyholder. Under
cross-examination at trial, Federal admitted that it had decided, two years
prior, that the claim was covered; but decided not to tell the policyholder
of that fact. Read the decision here.
- Travelers - on
April 22, 1998, the California Court of Appeal
upheld a $25,000,000 punitive damage award
against Travelers, for breach of the duty to
defend an environmental claim brought against the
operator of an auto body repair business. The
court held that "Travelers' behavior toward
Vann, personally, and as indicative of a broader
recalcitrance to honor contractual obligations
and the rule of law, manifests a high degree of
reprehensible conduct." The court also noted
that "Travelers had a nationwide practice of
refusing to honor claims arising from
environmental damage." Excerpts
from this decision are reproduced right here.
- State
Farm - in State Farm Cas. Co. v.
Taylor, 54 Cal.App.4th 625 (1997) the
California Court of Appeal upheld the criminal
fraud exception to attorney-client communications
between State Farm's claim handlers and State
Farm's attorneys. The case involves allegations
that State Farm forged signatures on applications
for earthquake insurance. The court noted that
"the declaration of Samantha Boyd
established that in 1990 State Farm adopted a
policy of destroying potentially relevant
documents to avoid producing them in bad faith
actions." Id. at 647. The court also
reviewed the testimony of Amy Zuniga, a claims
specialist, who was advised by a senior executive
"that State Farm witnesses should not admit
that forgeries happen, unless and until they are
compelled to do so by a court order." Id.,
at 648.
A recently filed case alleges that
State Farm engaged in a "widespread practice
of forging and faking insureds' signatures on
State Farm insurance documents." Cohen v.
State Farm Mutual Automobile Ins. Co.,
Superior Court, Los Angeles County.
-
AETNA - on May 8, 1998, the
Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals upheld a bad faith
verdict against Aetna for denying disability
benefits. In Ace v. Aetna Casualty Co. the
court noted that the evidence was undisputed
that:
(1) Aetna
did not investigate the claim;
(2)
failed to provide a reasonable explanation for
its denial of the claim;
(3)
falsely advised the claimant that Aetna had no
claim adjustment guidelines; and numerous other
misdeeds.
The
denial of benefits forced the claimant to sell
her home, send her eldest son to live with
another family, and to live in her car. The court
did, however, find that the amount of punitive
damages, $16.5 million, was excessive.
-
Argonaut - Workers Compensation Insurance
In Diamond Woodworkers, Inc. v. Argonaut Ins. Co., 109 Cal. App. 4th 1020 (2003) the appellate court upheld a jury verdict for bad faith and fraud in failing to provide coverage for "leased employees". The court reduced a $14 million award for punitive damages to $1 million (four times compensatory damages), following the Supreme Court's decision in State Farm v. Campbell.
- Paul Revere /Unum Provident - Disability Insurance
The federal court decision in Handgarter v. Paul Revere (Nov. 2002) upholds a $5 million punitive damage award and details a company-wide scheme to deny disability benefits to save money for the insurance company.
A California jury in state court awarded $30 million in punitive damages against Unum Provident for terminating the long-term disability benefits of an eye surgeon. The trial judge reduced the damage award to $5 million. Chapman v. UnumProvident (Jan. 2003).
- Truck Insurance Exchange - Pollution Coverage
Truck misrepresented policy provisions by stating that a pollution exclusion barred coverage for contamination at a car dealership. A $30 million award by a California jury was reduced to $3 million in an unpublished decision in Earnest v. Truck Insurance Exchange. (Nov. 2002)
- Truck Insurance Exchange - Failure to Defend Advertising Injury Claims
Truck Insurance failed to defend the maker of a surgical device against allegations of advertising injury and unfair competition. A jury award pf lost profits in the sum of $4.5 million was upheld in an unpublished decision. (June 2002).
- New Hampshire Ins. Co. - Additional Insured Coverage
New Hampshire Insurance Co. denied a defense to a gasoline refinery on
Grounds that the additional insured endorsement did not provide coverage. In an unpublished decision, a $4.5 million punitive damage award was upheld. Tosco v.
New Hampshire Ins. Co. (Oct. 2002)
- National Union - Certificate of Insurance
National Union denied coverage for a school bus, claiming it had been deleted from an insurance policy. A $10 million punitive damage award was re3duced to $1.7 by the Court of Appeal in an unpublished decision (June 2002).
If you have been a victim
of of any of these practices, please let
us know.
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©1998-2000 Jordan S. Stanzler & Stanzler Funderburk & Castellon LLP, contact@inscobadfaith.net, 415.677.1450
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last modified Dec 02, 2005 / 01:15 AM, GMT
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