Estate of Casper v. Guarantee Trust Life Insurance Co , 421 P.3d 1184 ( 2016 )


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  • COLORADO COURT OF APPEALS                                       2016COA167
    Court of Appeals No. 14CA2423
    Pueblo County District Court No. 12CV740
    Honorable David W. Crockenberg, Judge
    Estate of Michael Dean Casper, by and through Nick Casper, personal
    representative,
    Plaintiff-Appellee,
    v.
    Guarantee Trust Life Insurance Company, an Illinois corporation,
    Defendant-Appellant.
    JUDGMENT AFFIRMED AND CASE
    REMANDED WITH DIRECTIONS
    Division II
    Opinion by JUDGE HARRIS
    Webb and Ashby, JJ., concur
    Announced November 17, 2016
    Levin Rosenberg PC, Bradley A. Levin, Nelson A. Waneka, Denver, Colorado;
    Keating Wagner Polidori Free PC, Zachary C. Warzel, Denver, Colorado, for
    Plaintiff-Appellee
    Hall & Evans, LLC, Kevin E. O’Brien, Alan Epstein, Malcolm S. Mead, Cristin J.
    Mack, Denver, Colorado, for Defendant-Appellant
    ¶1    Under Colorado law, the death of a plaintiff in a personal
    injury action extinguishes his entitlement to recover noneconomic
    and punitive damages. But what happens when the plaintiff dies
    after those damages have been awarded by a jury but before the
    district court has entered a judgment? This question had never
    been answered in Colorado.
    ¶2    Michael Dean Casper bought a cancer insurance policy from
    defendant, Guarantee Trust Life Insurance Company (GTL); when
    he was diagnosed with cancer seven months later, GTL refused to
    pay his claims. Casper sued GTL for breach of contract, bad faith
    breach of an insurance contract, and statutory unreasonable denial
    of benefits. A jury awarded him more than $4,500,000 in punitive
    and other noneconomic damages.
    ¶3    The trial court immediately entered an oral order making the
    verdict a judgment. But Casper died nine days later, before the
    court had reduced its oral order entering judgment to a written
    judgment as required by C.R.C.P. 58. After resolving attorney fees
    and interest issues, the court entered a signed and dated written
    judgment in favor of plaintiff, the Estate of Michael Dean Casper
    1
    (the Estate), in the amount of $1,997,996.40, nunc pro tunc to the
    date of verdict.
    ¶4    GTL says that as a matter of law the delay in entering the
    written judgment means that under the Colorado survival statute,
    § 13-20-101, C.R.S. 2016, the Estate is entitled only to the $50,000
    awarded as economic damages for the breach of contract claim. We
    disagree. Because the verdict resolved the merits of the case, and
    judgment would necessarily follow, the survival statute did not
    extinguish Casper’s right to damages. We therefore affirm the
    judgment.
    I.   Background
    ¶5    Casper bought a “First Diagnosis” cancer insurance policy in
    August 2010. According to his testimony, he was sold the policy by
    Joanna Gaylord, a door-to-door insurance salesperson who worked
    for Platinum Supplemental Insurance, Inc. (Platinum), an agency
    with exclusive rights to sell GTL’s policy. Casper listened to
    Gaylord’s presentation but expressed concern about his ability to
    qualify for benefits, based on prior arterial blockages in his legs.
    Gaylord assured him that, as long as he had not been diagnosed
    with, or been advised to seek treatment for, AIDS, cancer, a heart
    2
    attack, or a stroke, he would be covered by the policy. Casper
    answered truthfully that he had not been diagnosed with or advised
    to seek treatment for any of those conditions. He filled out the
    application, authorized GTL to obtain ten years’ of medical records,
    and agreed to monthly electronic premium payments. A month
    later, GTL approved his application.
    ¶6    In March 2011, Casper was diagnosed with prostate cancer.
    He submitted claims to GTL, which denied them. According to page
    twelve of the policy, cancer was not a covered condition “when
    advice or treatment is received . . . prior to the Effective Date, and
    such advice or treatment results in the First Diagnosis of Cancer.”
    GTL maintained that Casper had received such advice, in
    connection with his treatment for a non-cancerous condition
    involving an enlarged prostate, which had ultimately resulted in the
    detection of Casper’s prostate cancer.
    ¶7    In 2012, Casper sued GTL for breach of contract, bad faith
    breach of insurance contract, and unreasonable denial of benefits
    in violation of sections 10-3-1115 and -1116, C.R.S. 2016. He also
    sued, but then settled with, Gaylord and Platinum on claims for
    3
    negligent misrepresentation and fraud based on their role in
    marketing the policy on behalf of GTL.
    ¶8     Trial was originally scheduled to begin in February 2014. But
    in October 2013, the court, on its own motion, reset the trial to July
    2014.
    ¶9     During trial, the court directed a verdict for Casper on his
    breach of contract claim, finding that the exclusion provision was
    ambiguous and, therefore, as a matter of law, the policy had to be
    construed as covering Casper’s cancer. On July 15, 2014, the jury
    returned a verdict in favor of Casper on all claims. It awarded
    Casper $50,000 for breach of contract, $50,000 for unreasonable
    denial of benefits, $150,000 in economic damages for bad faith
    breach of the contract, $550,000 in noneconomic damages for bad
    faith breach of the contract, and $4,000,000 in punitive damages.1
    ¶ 10   Because Casper was in hospice care by then, his lawyer
    requested that the court immediately enter judgment on the verdict
    to avoid any limitation on recovery under Colorado’s survival
    1 The parties later agreed that the economic damages awards for the
    breach of contract, bad faith breach of an insurance contract, and
    statutory unreasonable denial of benefits claims were duplicative
    and that economic damages totaled $50,000.
    4
    statute. The court attempted to oblige, announcing that it was
    entering judgment. It directed the clerk to receive and enter the
    verdict in the court registry. Then it entered an unsigned minute
    order reflecting that it had ordered judgment to be entered.
    ¶ 11   When Casper died nine days later, GTL moved to set aside the
    verdict in part and to limit the recoverable damages. It argued that
    because attorney fees and prejudgment interest had not been
    determined and statutory caps had not been applied, Casper had
    died before final judgment had been entered. Thus, according to
    GTL, the statutory bad faith denial of benefits claim was
    extinguished, as was Casper’s entitlement to recover noneconomic
    and punitive damages. GTL requested that the court enter final
    judgment on the breach of contract claim in the amount of $50,000.
    In the alternative, GTL requested that the court impose statutory
    caps on the noneconomic and punitive damages.
    ¶ 12   Casper’s attorneys, in the meantime, moved to substitute the
    Estate as plaintiff, and then they requested an award of attorney
    fees under section 10-3-1116 and prejudgment interest to July 15,
    2014, the date the court had orally entered judgment.
    5
    ¶ 13   The district court denied GTL’s motion to set aside the verdict,
    ruling that the survival statute was not implicated because Casper
    had died after entry of judgment on the verdict. It did, however,
    grant GTL’s motion to enforce the statutory caps on damages.
    ¶ 14   On October 30, 2014, after reducing the noneconomic and
    punitive damages pursuant to statutory caps and awarding
    approximately one-third of the fees requested by Casper’s attorneys,
    the district court entered an amended final judgment, nunc pro
    tunc to July 15, 2014, in favor of the Estate in the amount of
    $1,997,996.40.
    ¶ 15   On appeal, GTL contends that the district court erred by
    failing to vacate all of the damages (with the exception of the
    $50,000 breach of contract damages), by characterizing the
    attorney fees awarded under section 10-3-1116 as compensatory
    damages for purposes of calculating punitive damages, by failing to
    further reduce the attorney fees award, and by instructing the jury
    on an insurance regulation related to the standard of care for the
    sale and marketing of insurance policies. We take up each of these
    contentions, reject them, and therefore affirm.
    6
    II.   Colorado’s Survival Statute
    ¶ 16   At common law, claims based on personal torts abated upon
    the death of either party. To ameliorate the harsh effects of this
    rule, Colorado, like most other states, enacted a survival statute in
    the late 1800s. Its current iteration — section 13-20-101 —
    provides:
    All causes of action, except actions for slander
    or libel, shall survive and may be brought or
    continued notwithstanding the death of the
    person in favor of or against whom such action
    has accrued, but punitive damages shall not
    be awarded nor penalties adjudged after the
    death of the person against whom such
    punitive damages or penalties are claimed;
    and, in tort actions based upon personal
    injury, the damages recoverable after the death
    of the person in whose favor such action has
    accrued shall be limited to loss of earnings and
    expenses sustained or incurred prior to death
    and shall not include damages for pain,
    suffering, or disfigurement, nor prospective
    profits or earnings after date of death. An
    action under this section shall not preclude an
    action for wrongful death under part 2 of
    article 21 of this title.
    ¶ 17   GTL contends that because Casper died before a final,
    appealable judgment was entered, the Estate may recover only the
    $50,000 awarded as economic damages.
    7
    A. Standard of Review and Principles of Interpretation
    ¶ 18   Resolution of this case turns on the interpretation of a statute,
    an issue of law subject to de novo review. Kyle W. Larson Enters.,
    Inc. v. Allstate Ins. Co., 
    2012 COA 160M
    , ¶ 9.
    ¶ 19   Our primary task when construing a statute is to ascertain
    and give effect to the legislature’s intent based on its chosen
    language. Young v. Brighton Sch. Dist. 27J, 
    2014 CO 32
    , ¶ 11; see
    also State v. Nieto, 
    993 P.2d 493
    , 502 (Colo. 2000) (“Legislative
    intent is the polestar of statutory construction.” (quoting Schubert v.
    People, 
    698 P.2d 788
    , 793 (Colo. 1985))). We give words and
    phrases their plain and ordinary meanings, and we read the statute
    as a whole, giving consistent, harmonious, and sensible effect to all
    of its parts. Young, ¶ 11. We must choose a construction that
    serves the purpose of the legislative scheme and avoids absurd
    results. Town of Erie v. Eason, 
    18 P.3d 1271
    , 1276 (Colo. 2001).
    ¶ 20   If the statutory language is unambiguous, we apply it as
    written. Reno v. Marks, 
    2015 CO 33
    , ¶ 20. If a statute is
    ambiguous, however, we may consider indicia of legislative intent
    such as the object to be attained, the circumstances under which
    the statute was enacted, the common law, and the consequences of
    8
    a particular construction. § 2-4-203, C.R.S. 2016; see also State
    Eng’r v. Castle Meadows, Inc., 
    856 P.2d 496
    , 504 (Colo. 1993)
    (listing indicators of legislative intent). “Because we also presume
    that legislation is intended to have just and reasonable effects, we
    must construe statutes accordingly and apply them so as to ensure
    such results.” Castle Meadows, 
    Inc., 856 P.2d at 504
    ; see also § 2-
    4-201(1)(c), C.R.S. 2016.
    B. Discussion
    ¶ 21   The survival statute sets forth a broad rule, with two
    exceptions. As relevant here, all causes of action survive the death
    of a party. But, neither punitive damages nor penalties shall be
    “awarded” or “adjudged” after the death of a party,2 and in personal
    injury cases, the damages “recoverable” after the death of the
    2 The statute prohibits the award of punitive damages or penalties
    “after the death of the person against whom such punitive damages
    or penalties are claimed,” § 13-20-101, C.R.S. 2016 (emphasis
    added), but the supreme court has interpreted this limitation on
    damages to apply not just when the tortfeasor dies, but also when
    the plaintiff dies. See Kruse v. McKenna, 
    178 P.3d 1198
    , 1200
    (Colo. 2008); see also Warren v. Liberty Mut. Fire Ins. Co., Civ. A. No.
    05-cv-01891-PAB-MEH, 
    2011 WL 1103160
    , at *9 (D. Colo. 
    2013 A.K. Marsh. 24
    , 2011) (Although the statutory language appears to bar
    recovery of punitive damages or penalties only after the death of the
    tortfeasor, “[t]his interpretation of the statute . . . has been
    foreclosed by the Colorado Supreme Court.”).
    9
    plaintiff are limited to economic damages suffered before death and
    shall not include noneconomic damages or future earnings. § 13-
    20-101.
    ¶ 22   GTL maintains that the survival statute precludes recovery of
    punitive or noneconomic damages if the plaintiff dies before his
    claims merge into a final judgment, an event that prevents
    abatement. And, it argues, the judgment that was entered in July
    2015, days before Casper’s death, was not final because it did not
    include an award of attorney fees or prejudgment interest.
    Therefore, the jury’s award of damages became a nullity when
    extinguished by Casper’s death nine days later.
    ¶ 23   We agree with GTL that, as a general matter, claims merge
    into a judgment and a judgment does not abate, even if the cause of
    action would not have survived the party’s death. Ahearn v. Goble,
    
    90 Colo. 173
    , 176, 
    7 P.2d 409
    , 410 (1932). And, neither the court’s
    oral pronouncement nor the minute order constituted a “judgment”
    within the meaning of C.R.C.P. 58(a) because the rule requires
    entry of a written, dated, and signed judgment. But we do not
    believe that these propositions lead inexorably to a conclusion that
    the survival statute precludes recovery of punitive and other
    10
    noneconomic damages if the plaintiff dies after the verdict is
    returned but before judgment is entered. We conclude that, based
    on the language, history, and purpose of the statute, the legislature
    did not intend to draw such a bright line between verdict and
    judgment. Rather, in our view, one naturally leads to the other, so
    that a party who survives to verdict and obtains an entitlement to a
    judgment may recover punitive and other noneconomic damages,
    regardless of whether the party is alive when the resulting judgment
    is entered.
    ¶ 24   To begin, the statute does not set the date of judgment as the
    time when a claim for noneconomic damages is no longer subject to
    abatement. Nor does it mention the date of verdict. Some other
    states’ survival statutes do explain more explicitly when the party’s
    death extinguishes a right to recover damages. See, e.g., Cal. Prob.
    Code § 573 (West 1991) (“Where a person having a cause of action
    dies before judgment, the damages recoverable . . . are limited to
    the loss or damage the decedent sustained or incurred prior to
    death, including any penalties or punitive or exemplary damages
    . . . but not including any damages for pain, suffering, or
    disfigurement.”) (repealed 1992); Nev. Rev. Stat. § 41.100 (2016)
    11
    (“[W]hen a person who has a cause of action dies before judgment,
    the damages recoverable by the decedent’s executor . . . include all
    losses or damages which the decedent incurred or sustained before
    the decedent’s death, including any penalties or punitive and
    exemplary damages . . . and damages for pain, suffering or
    disfigurement . . . .”); Or. Rev. Stat. § 121.010 (1964) (“An action for
    a wrong shall not abate by the death of any party, after a verdict
    has been given therein, but the action shall proceed thereafter in
    the same manner as in cases where the cause of action survives.”)
    (repealed 1965).
    ¶ 25   The General Assembly’s decision to forego an explicit selection
    of either the date of verdict or the date of judgment as the
    controlling date for survival purposes shows that it did not consider
    the distinction relevant. The General Assembly has distinguished
    between the verdict and the judgment in a number of other
    statutes. See, e.g., § 8-2-203, C.R.S. 2016 (“[T]he verdict of the jury
    and the judgment of the court shall specify the amount of damages
    awarded to each person . . . .”); § 13-64-205, C.R.S. 2016 (setting
    forth the procedure to determine “what judgment is to be entered on
    a verdict requiring findings of special damages”); § 38-1-113, C.R.S.
    12
    2016 (“The court shall cause the verdict of the jury and the
    judgment of said court to be entered upon the records of said
    court.”). Thus, had the General Assembly intended to bar a party’s
    recovery of noneconomic damages in the event of death after the
    verdict but before judgment, it could have said so. See Specialty
    Rests. Corp. v. Nelson, 
    231 P.3d 393
    , 397 (Colo. 2010) (“[T]he
    General Assembly’s failure to include particular language is a
    statement of legislative intent.”).
    ¶ 26   Turning to the language that does appear in the survival
    statute, we conclude that it supports an interpretation that survival
    to verdict suffices for a party to recover noneconomic damages.
    With respect to punitive damages, the statute instructs that a
    plaintiff cannot be “awarded” punitive damages after his death or
    the death of the tortfeasor. Because punitive damages are awarded
    by the jury, an “award” of punitive damages necessarily occurs at
    the time of the verdict. See § 13-21-102, C.R.S. 2016 (jury may
    award exemplary damages in addition to actual damages).
    Accordingly, the legislature’s choice of the word “awarded” indicates
    that a punitive damages award is not extinguished if the plaintiff
    dies after a verdict is returned. See People v. Guenther, 
    740 P.2d 13
      971, 976 (Colo. 1987) (In construing a statute, the court assumes
    that the legislative choice of language is a “deliberate one calculated
    to obtain the result dictated by the plain meaning of the words.”).
    ¶ 27   Though the General Assembly used another term —
    “recoverable” — when referring to other types of noneconomic
    damages, we do not read the statute as imposing different rules
    depending on the type of noneconomic damages at issue. In other
    words, we do not believe that the legislature intended to allow a
    party to recover punitive damages if he survived to verdict, but to
    allow recovery of other noneconomic damages only if he survived to
    entry of judgment. The creation of separate standards within the
    same provision of a statute would be unusual enough that we
    would expect the legislature to delineate that distinction more
    explicitly. And, if the statute creates a single standard, we believe
    that the word “awarded” is a more clear description of the relevant
    event than the word “recoverable.”
    ¶ 28   Even so, because the language could reasonably be interpreted
    to support both Casper and GTL, we conclude that the statute is
    ambiguous. Thus, we must look to other tools of statutory
    construction to ascertain legislative intent.
    14
    ¶ 29   Under the common law of England, causes of action did not
    abate upon the death of a party once a verdict was returned as long
    as the judgment followed within a prescribed period of time. See,
    e.g., Isley’s Case (1589) 74 Eng. Rep. 172 (K.B.) (where the plaintiff
    died after verdict but before judgment was entered, cause of action
    was not abated but instead judgment related back to date of
    verdict); see also 17 Car. 2 c. 8 (1665) (“[I]n all Actions Personall (’)
    Reall or mixt the death of either partie betweene the Verdict and the
    Judgement shall not hereafter be alleadged for Error soe as such
    Judgement be entred within Two Termes after such Verdict.”);
    Skidaway Shell-Road Co. v. Brooks, 
    77 Ga. 136
    , 138 (1886) (under
    English common law, return of a verdict before the death of a party
    prevented abatement). In other words, because the judgment
    followed from the verdict, the verdict was ordinarily sufficient to
    prevent abatement.
    ¶ 30   GTL points out that while Colorado adopted the common law
    of England, it did not adopt statutes enacted after 1607. See § 2-4-
    211, C.R.S. 2016. But under the common law, as well as the pre-
    1607 statutes that codified it, the death of a party after verdict did
    not result in an abatement of the claims.
    15
    ¶ 31   C.R.C.P. 58(a) also codifies this concept. Under the rule,
    “upon a general or special verdict of a jury, or upon a decision by
    the court, the court shall promptly prepare, date, and sign a written
    judgment.” Rule 58(a), then, contemplates that the verdict and
    judgment go hand in hand. And C.R.C.P. 54(f) instructs that “[i]f a
    party dies after a verdict or decision upon any issue of fact, and
    before judgment, the court may, nevertheless, render judgment
    thereon.” This rule confirms that, once a verdict is returned, the
    judgment shall follow, even if the party dies before judgment is
    entered. See Bates v. Burns, 
    274 P.2d 569
    , 570 (Utah 1954)
    (interpreting equivalent rule and concluding that the plaintiff’s
    action did not abate where the plaintiff died after verdict but before
    judgment because purpose of rule is to “preserve the verdict until a
    judgment can be entered thereon”).
    ¶ 32   A number of courts share our view that once the merits of the
    case have been decided by a verdict and the plaintiff is entitled to a
    judgment, the action or claim for damages will not abate, even if
    judgment has not been entered at the time of the party’s death.
    ¶ 33   In Tunnell v. Edwardsville Intelligencer, Inc., 
    252 N.E.2d 538
    (Ill. 1969), for example, the jury returned a verdict for the plaintiff
    16
    on his defamation action. The court entered judgment
    notwithstanding the verdict for defendant and plaintiff appealed,
    but while the appeal was pending, the plaintiff died. After reversal
    by the court of appeals, the defendant objected to reinstatement of
    the verdict, arguing that the defamation claim did not survive the
    plaintiff’s death. The Illinois Supreme Court disagreed, holding that
    an action does not abate when the plaintiff dies after obtaining a
    verdict in his favor:
    What is significant in such cases, in our
    opinion, is not any metaphysical notion of
    merger of the cause of action into the verdict,
    but rather the circumstance that all factual
    questions had been resolved before the plaintiff
    died. . . . The present case was ripe for
    judgment when the plaintiff died, and the
    appellate court properly held that his death
    did not abate the action.
    
    Id. at 541.
    ¶ 34   An analogous situation arose in Reed v. United States, 
    891 F.2d 878
    (11th Cir. 1990). In that case, the parents of a child who
    was born with birth defects asserted negligence claims against the
    government under the Federal Tort Claims Act. The parties reached
    a settlement; shortly thereafter, the lawyer for the government
    notified the plaintiffs that the settlement had been approved. The
    17
    following day, the government’s lawyer prepared a stipulation and
    sent it to the plaintiffs’ lawyer for signature. The child had died,
    however, the day before, just after the parties had confirmed
    approval of the settlement. The government attempted to withdraw
    from the settlement, contending that, under Florida’s survival
    statute in effect at the time, the negligence action abated upon the
    child’s death.
    ¶ 35   The Eleventh Circuit affirmed the district court’s enforcement
    of the agreement. It reasoned that the period between settlement
    and final judgment was similar to the period between verdict and
    judgment because, in both situations, the dispute had been
    “conclusively resolved.” 
    Id. at 881-82;
    Variety Children’s Hosp., Inc.
    v. Perkins, 
    382 So. 2d 331
    (Fla. Dist. Ct. App. 1980) (cause of action
    does not abate during period between verdict and judgment). The
    settlement entitled the plaintiffs to a judgment and, thus, the cause
    of action did not abate between settlement and final judgment. 
    Id. at 882;
    see also Parker v. Parker, 
    319 A.2d 750
    , 751 (N.J. Super. Ct.
    App. Div. 1974) (husband’s death after resolution of parties’ dispute
    but before judgment did not abate divorce action because trial court
    had “made a definitive adjudication of the controversy, reflecting its
    18
    conclusive determination that each party be granted a divorce”);
    Garrett v. Byerly, 
    284 P. 343
    , 358 (Wash. 1930) (concluding that
    cause of action does not abate when party dies after the verdict
    because party is “entitled to a judgment” at the time of his death
    (quoting Fitzgerald v. Stewart, 
    53 Pa. 343
    , 346 (1866))); Wilson v.
    Coop. Transit Co., 
    30 S.E.2d 749
    , 753 (W. Va. 1944) (negligence
    claim did not abate where the plaintiff died after verdict but before
    entry of judgment).
    ¶ 36   Undaunted, GTL contends that Casper was not entitled to a
    “final judgment” at the time of his death because the court had not
    yet computed attorney fees and prejudgment interest. To be sure,
    when attorney fees and prejudgment interest constitute
    compensatory damages — as they do in this case — a final,
    appealable judgment cannot be entered until the calculations are
    complete. See Grand Cty. Custom Homebuilding, LLC v. Bell, 
    148 P.3d 398
    , 400-01 (Colo. App. 2006). But that does not mean that
    the court could not enter a judgment pursuant to C.R.C.P. 58(a)
    before it performed the calculations necessary to enter an amended
    judgment that would be final and appealable under C.R.C.P. 54(a).
    A “final judgment” is simply a type of judgment from which an
    19
    appeal may lie. See C.R.C.P. 54(a) (“‘Judgment’ as used in these
    rules includes a decree and order to or from which an appeal lies.”);
    C.R.C.P. 58 (“The term ‘judgment’ includes an appealable decree or
    order as set forth in C.R.C.P. 54(a).”); see also Musick v. Woznicki,
    
    136 P.3d 244
    , 251 (Colo. 2006) (distinguishing judgments from
    final, appealable judgments under C.R.C.P. 54); cf. In re Estate of
    Becker, 
    32 P.3d 557
    , 559-60 (Colo. App. 2000) (judgment in
    dissolution of marriage case could have been entered after initial
    hearing, even though court had not yet ruled on child custody
    issues). We therefore reject GTL’s argument that Casper’s claim
    abated merely because he was not entitled to a final, appealable
    judgment.
    ¶ 37   Here, entry of judgment under C.R.C.P. 58(a) was surely
    proper, as the jury had returned a general verdict. Indeed, the
    dispute had been fully and finally resolved, all issues of liability had
    been determined, and the jury had awarded all damages based on
    the evidence presented at trial. See, e.g., Kaufman v. Herrman, 
    748 So. 2d 310
    , 312 (Fla. Dist. Ct. App. 1999) (The personal injury
    action did not abate upon death of the plaintiff before entry of
    judgment because the “dispute in this case had been conclusively
    20
    decided in favor of [plaintiff] by the rendition of the verdict prior to
    [plaintiff’s] death.”).3
    ¶ 38    In any event, we are not persuaded that the General Assembly
    intended the extinguishment of a jury verdict to turn on whether
    attorney fees are characterized as costs or compensatory damages,
    particularly where the legislature itself created the special remedy
    that allows for reimbursement of attorney fees. Under GTL’s
    reasoning, its own egregious conduct in unreasonably denying
    benefits (which turns attorney fees otherwise treated as costs into
    compensatory damages) would cause the delay that then renders
    the jury’s award of noneconomic damages unrecoverable. We
    3 The Estate contends that, not only was it entitled to a judgment
    after the jury verdict under C.R.C.P. 58, but that judgment was
    actually entered at this time because, when the court entered its
    later written judgment, it did so nunc pro tunc to the date of the
    verdict. “Nunc pro tunc judgments operate retrospectively and are
    given the same force and effect as if entered at the time the court’s
    decision was originally rendered.” Dill v. County Court, 37 Colo.
    App. 75, 76 
    541 P.2d 1272
    , 1273 (1975). However, a court may
    only enter a judgment nunc pro tunc to a date on which the
    judgment legally could have entered. Robbins v. A.B. Goldberg, 
    185 P.3d 794
    , 797 (Colo. 2008). Because we conclude that the
    judgment legally could have entered on the date of the verdict, we
    agree with the Estate that judgment was validly entered nunc pro
    tunc to that date. But this conclusion is not necessary to the
    resolution of the Estate’s claim: even if the court had not entered
    the judgment nunc pro tunc, Casper’s claim would not have abated
    because he was entitled to a judgment.
    21
    decline to read the survival statute to require that result. Castle
    Meadows, 
    Inc., 856 P.2d at 504
    (court should construe a statute in
    a way that promotes the just and reasonable result the legislature
    surely intended).
    ¶ 39   Finally, our interpretation of the statute advances its overall
    goal of preserving claims and remedies. GTL says that we should
    construe the statute in favor of abatement. But the supreme court
    has explained that the statute indicates “an intention to create
    remedies rather than to kill or suppress them.” Publix Cab Co. v.
    Colo. Nat’l Bank of Denver, 
    139 Colo. 205
    , 220, 
    338 P.2d 702
    , 710
    (1959).
    ¶ 40   For these reasons, we conclude that the claims for
    noneconomic damages, including punitive damages, did not abate
    upon Casper’s death.
    III.   Attorney Fees and Costs Under Section 10-3-1116
    ¶ 41   Under section 13-21-102(1)(a), the amount of “actual
    damages” awarded to a plaintiff determines the amount of punitive
    damages the plaintiff may recover. GTL asserts that attorney fees
    and costs awarded by the trial court under section 10-3-1116 do
    not constitute actual damages. Thus, GTL contends that the
    22
    district court erred when calculating both actual and punitive
    damages. We disagree.
    A. Standard of Review
    ¶ 42   Although we typically review a district court’s decision to
    award attorney fees for an abuse of discretion, we review the legal
    conclusions that provided the basis for that decision de novo.
    Jorgensen v. Colo. Rural Props., LLC, 
    226 P.3d 1255
    , 1259 (Colo.
    App. 2010); see also Sch. Dist. No. 12 v. Sec. Life of Denver Ins. Co.,
    
    185 P.3d 781
    , 787 (Colo. 2008). And because the district court
    awarded attorney fees pursuant to section 10-3-1116(1), we also
    review its interpretation of this statute de novo. Kisselman v. Am.
    Family Mut. Ins. Co., 
    292 P.3d 964
    , 969 (Colo. App. 2011).
    ¶ 43   Our ultimate task when examining statutes is to give effect to
    the intent of the legislature, as expressed through the plain
    language of the statute. Kyle W. Larson Enters., Inc., ¶ 10. Even
    so, we may still examine legislative history when there is
    substantial legislative discussion that bolsters our plain language
    interpretation. 
    Kisselman, 292 P.3d at 972
    ; see Welby Gardens v.
    Adams Cty. Bd. of Equalization, 
    71 P.3d 992
    , 995 (Colo. 2003)
    23
    (discussing legislative history despite concluding that “the plain
    language of the statute is clear”).
    B. Discussion
    ¶ 44   Pursuant to section 10-3-1116, the district court awarded
    attorney fees and costs as part of the Estate’s actual damages.
    Relying on Hall v. American Standard Insurance Co. of Wisconsin,
    
    2012 COA 201
    , which determined that attorney fees are damages
    (but did not specify whether they were actual, i.e., compensatory,
    damages), the district court concluded that attorney fees and costs
    were a component of actual damages and not a penalty, as GTL
    asserted.
    ¶ 45   We agree with the district court and conclude that under the
    plain meaning of section 10-3-1116, reasonable attorney fees and
    court costs in this context are actual damages and do not constitute
    penalties or other types of damages. Hall, ¶ 20. Although Hall does
    not explicitly say that such damages constitute “actual damages,”
    we find Hall’s analysis and reasoning lead to that conclusion.
    ¶ 46   Section 10-3-1116, which became effective August 5, 2008,
    concerns “[r]emedies for unreasonable delay or denial of [insurance]
    benefits.” The language provides, in pertinent part, that “[a] first-
    24
    party claimant . . . whose claim for payment of benefits has been
    unreasonably delayed or denied may bring an action . . . to recover
    reasonable attorney fees and court costs and two times the covered
    benefit.” § 10-3-1116(1); 
    Kisselman, 292 P.3d at 967
    . Additionally,
    subsection (4) provides that the “action authorized in this section is
    in addition to, and does not limit or affect, other actions available
    by statute or common law, now or in the future.” § 10-3-1116(4).
    ¶ 47   The plain language of the statute lists two components of
    recovery: “reasonable attorney fees and court costs” and “two times
    the covered benefit.” § 10-3-1116(1); see also Hall, ¶ 20. Unlike
    other statutes permitting the recovery of attorney fees, such as
    sections 13-40-123, 24-34-402.5(2)(b)(I), and 38-33.3-123(1)(c),
    C.R.S. 2016, section 10-3-1116 does not separate or place in a
    distinct subsection the provision providing for the recovery of
    attorney fees and costs. Hall, ¶¶ 13, 20. This structure evinces the
    legislature’s intent to make the award of attorney fees and costs a
    primary remedy, and not an additional or ancillary remedy. See id.;
    compare § 13-40-123 (separating and distinguishing attorney fees
    and costs from other “recover[able] damages”), with § 10-3-1116(1)
    25
    (listing nothing to recover other than “reasonable attorney fees and
    court costs and two times the covered benefit”).
    ¶ 48   Further, “[c]lassification of attorney fees as either costs or
    damages depends on context, and turns on the nature of the
    requested attorney fees in a particular case.” Hall, ¶ 15. When
    attorney fees and costs are part of the substance of the lawsuit,
    that is, when they are the “legitimate consequences” of the tort or
    breach of contract sued upon, attorney fees are clearly damages.
    
    Id. at ¶¶
    15, 20 (quoting Ferrell v. Glenwood Brokers, Ltd., 
    848 P.2d 936
    , 941 (Colo. 1993)). Accordingly, we agree with Hall’s conclusion
    that attorney fees and costs are “a ‘legitimate consequence’ of
    bringing. . . an action to remedy an insurer’s unreasonable
    conduct” and that this interpretation “is consistent with the
    statutory authorization” in section 10-3-1116. 
    Id. at ¶
    20; see also
    Stresscon Corp. v. Travelers Prop. Cas. Co. of Am., 
    2013 COA 131
    ,
    ¶¶ 119-20 (relying on Hall to conclude attorney fees are damages
    under section 10-3-1116), rev’d on other grounds, 
    2016 CO 22M
    .
    Thus, under section 10-3-1116, attorney fees and costs are actual
    damages. Cf. Bunnett v. Smallwood, 
    793 P.2d 157
    , 160 (Colo. 1990)
    (Attorney fees are not considered “actual damages” when “they are
    26
    not the legitimate consequences of the tort or breach of contract
    sued upon.” (quoting Taxpayers for the Animas-LaPlata Referendum
    v. Animas-LaPlata Water Conservancy Dist., 
    739 F.2d 1472
    , 1480
    (10th Cir. 1984))); see 
    Ferrell, 848 P.2d at 941-42
    (attorney fees
    should be considered actual damages when they are part of the
    substance of the lawsuit); Double Oak Constr., L.L.C. v. Cornerstone
    Dev. Int’l, L.L.C., 
    97 P.3d 140
    , 150 (Colo. App. 2003) (Attorney fees
    are actual damages when “but for defendants’ obdurate conduct,
    plaintiff would not have incurred attorney fees in pursuing its
    judgment.”).
    ¶ 49   True enough, this interpretation of section 10-3-1116 is a
    departure from the common law rule that attorney fees are not
    recoverable as damages for a first-party insurance bad faith claim.
    See Bernhard v. Farmers Ins. Exch., 
    915 P.2d 1285
    (Colo. 1996).
    But when the General Assembly enacted this statute it created “a
    new private right of action for insureds in addition to and different
    from a common law bad faith claim.” 
    Kisselman, 292 P.3d at 975
    .
    In stating that the “action authorized in this section is in addition to
    . . . other actions available by statute or common law,” § 10-3-
    1116(4), the statute makes clear that it imposes upon insurers
    27
    additional liabilities and provides for additional means of recovery
    for plaintiffs. See 
    Kisselman, 292 P.3d at 972
    -73.
    ¶ 50   Despite this language, GTL contends that Bernhard should
    control, and to hold otherwise would create a conflict between
    Bernhard and the statute. We perceive no conflict.
    ¶ 51   While, under Bernhard, attorney fees in this case would not be
    considered actual damages, it is axiomatic that the legislature can,
    and frequently has, abrogated various common law tort doctrines.
    Union Pac. R.R. Co. v. Martin, 
    209 P.3d 185
    , 187 (Colo. 2009); see,
    e.g., Fibreboard Corp. v. Fenton, 
    845 P.2d 1168
    , 1176 (Colo. 1993)
    (recognizing the legislature’s abrogation of the common law rule
    that the release of one tortfeasor operated to release all tortfeasors
    from liability for the same tort).
    ¶ 52   Section 10-3-1116 was enacted nearly twelve years after
    Bernhard was announced; Bernhard simply has no bearing on how
    attorney fees should be treated under a later-enacted statute that
    explicitly departs from the common law. And the court in Bernhard
    expressly recognized that deviations from the common law rule
    preventing the recovery of attorney fees as damages could be
    properly established by the legislature; it merely concluded that at
    28
    that time — before the enactment of section 10-3-1116 — the
    legislature had not yet created such an 
    exception. 915 P.2d at 1288
    (“Permitting Bernhard to recover attorney fees would
    represent the creation of a new exception to the American rule: a
    function better addressed by the legislative than the judicial branch
    of government.”).
    ¶ 53   Thus, because section 10-3-1116 created a new statutory right
    of action separate and apart from common law bad faith claims,
    Bernhard, which discusses common law bad faith claims, is not
    dispositive. 
    Kisselman, 292 P.3d at 975
    ; see also Vaccaro v. Am.
    Family Ins. Grp., 
    2012 COA 9M
    , ¶ 35 (“As the Kisselman division
    observed, common law bad faith precedent is helpful, but not
    dispositive, when interpreting a statutory right of action expressly
    intended to apply ‘in addition to . . . other actions available by
    statute or common law.’” (quoting § 10-3-1116(4))).
    ¶ 54   Moreover, following Bernhard would be contrary to the clear
    intent of the legislature. Section 10-3-1116 expanded the causes of
    action against insurance companies and provided for additional
    remedies. 
    Kisselman, 292 P.3d at 972
    -73. It is clear from both the
    plain meaning of the statute and the legislative history behind it
    29
    that the legislature intended to carve out exceptions to the common
    law, including an exception to the common law rule that attorney
    fees were not recoverable as actual damages. Id.; see § 10-3-
    1116(1). The legislature made clear that insureds should not be
    forced to sue their insurers to obtain the benefit of their bargain.
    Thus, the General Assembly departed from the common law to
    enact new protections for individuals that would permit the
    recovery of reasonable attorney fees and court costs as actual
    damages. See 
    Kisselman, 292 P.3d at 972
    -73.
    ¶ 55   GTL further contends that, even if Bernhard does not control,
    attorney fees and costs are a penalty, and not damages, because
    section 10-3-1116 is penal in nature. Thus, GTL argues, attorney
    fees and costs cannot be included in the calculation of actual
    damages.
    ¶ 56   But we disagree that the statute is penal and instead conclude
    that section 10-3-1116 is remedial in nature. See Stresscon Corp.,
    ¶ 121. In Stresscon, a division of this court determined that the
    attorney fees under section 10-3-1116 were damages, not costs,
    and “this request for damages is part of a remedial statutory
    scheme.” 
    Id. at ¶
    121. After examining the legislative history and
    30
    comparing the statute to other similar statutory schemes, the
    division concluded that “section 10-3-1116 was enacted as a
    remedial measure, intended ‘to curb perceived abuses in the
    insurance industry.’” 
    Id. at ¶
    124 (quoting 
    Kisselman, 292 P.3d at 976
    ). Thus, the fee-shifting component of the statute has a
    “compensatory purpose” and is not a penalty. 
    Id. at ¶
    122.
    ¶ 57   Even assuming some aspect of the statute is penal, GTL’s
    argument is too broad: statutes may be both remedial and penal in
    nature. See Moeller v. Colo. Real Estate Comm’n, 
    759 P.2d 697
    , 701
    (Colo. 1988). Although section 10-3-1116 may be penal in the
    sense that the General Assembly intended for it to punish
    insurance companies and deter them from unreasonably denying
    the claims of their insureds, see 
    Kisselman, 292 P.3d at 972
    , the
    penal nature of the statute only manifests itself in the ability to
    recover two times the amount of the covered benefit. See Gerald H.
    Phipps, Inc. v. Travelers Prop. Cas. Co. of Am., Civ. A. No. 14-CV-
    01642-PAB-KLM, 
    2015 WL 5047640
    , at *2 (D. Colo. Aug. 27, 2015)
    (noting that the ability to recover “two times the covered benefit . . .
    reflects the imposition of a penalty”). But this double recovery has
    no bearing on whether the attorney fees and costs are a penalty and
    31
    therefore not actual damages. Cf. 
    Moeller, 759 P.2d at 701
    (“When
    a statute is both remedial and penal in nature, the remedial and
    penal elements are separated and the appropriate standard is
    applied to each.”).
    ¶ 58   Although section 10-3-1116 does not explicitly label attorney
    fees and costs as “actual damages,” we conclude that the statute
    intended to classify them as actual or compensatory damages.
    Thus, the district court did not err in its calculation of both actual
    and punitive damages.
    IV.   Supplemental Award of Attorney Fees and Costs
    ¶ 59   GTL next asserts that the district court erred by not reducing
    by two-thirds the supplemental request for attorney fees. We
    disagree.
    A. Additional Background
    ¶ 60   Casper’s attorneys filed two requests for fees. In their first
    motion, they sought $396,180 in fees, plus a lodestar enhancement
    of fifty percent, for a total of $594,270, as well as costs in the
    amount of $57,840.55. They later filed a supplemental fee request,
    seeking an additional $123,925 in post-trial fees and $15,105.24 in
    costs.
    32
    ¶ 61      GTL opposed both fee requests. Regarding the initial fee
    request, GTL asserted that no fees were recoverable, but, at most,
    Casper’s lawyers could recover only those fees attributable to the
    statutory unreasonable denial of benefits claim, without any
    lodestar enhancement. GTL attached an affidavit from an expert,
    who recommended that the court award no more than $75,000 in
    fees.
    ¶ 62      GTL made the same apportionment argument with respect to
    the supplemental fee request and attached an exhibit that set forth
    its objections to specific time entries. It identified numerous entries
    that it claimed were attributable to work on a related probate
    matter, but it only identified two entries as being otherwise
    unrelated to the statutory claim, and those entries amounted to
    approximately $800 in fees. It did not provide an expert affidavit
    related to apportionment or reasonableness of the supplemental fee
    request.
    ¶ 63      The hearing on attorney fees was conducted by telephone and
    neither party called any witnesses or introduced any evidence
    beyond the expert affidavits that had previously been submitted by
    both parties. Casper’s lawyers reiterated their request for fees plus
    33
    a fifty percent lodestar enhancement, and GTL reiterated its request
    that the court award only those fees attributable to the statutory
    claim, though it did not suggest any particular percentage or
    amount. At the hearing, GTL did not reassert its specific objections
    to the time entries or protest that the vagueness of the entries
    prevented additional specific objections.
    ¶ 64   The court determined that, as a rough estimate, only one-third
    of the fees in the initial request were attributable to the statutory
    bad faith claim. It denied Casper’s lawyers a fifty percent lodestar
    enhancement and instead applied a twenty percent enhancement to
    the reduced fee amount. As for the supplemental fees, the court
    examined the time entries, concluded that — with the exception of
    work on the probate case — the entries related to the statutory bad
    faith claim, and approved the remaining fees. After those
    reductions, the attorney fee award totaled $281,197, a sixty percent
    overall decrease from the request of approximately $718,000
    ($594,270 in the initial motion for fees plus the $123,925 requested
    in the supplemental motion).
    ¶ 65   On appeal, GTL contends that the district court erred in
    awarding all of the fees requested in the supplemental fee request,
    34
    insisting that the court should have reduced the overall request of
    $123,925 by two-thirds. It specifically objects to the award of fees
    related to the motion to amend the judgment and research on
    abatement, which GTL says were matters unrelated to the statutory
    claim.
    B. Standard of Review
    ¶ 66   The determination of what constitutes reasonable attorney fees
    is a question of fact for the trial court and will not be disturbed on
    review unless it is patently erroneous and unsupported by the
    evidence. Melssen v. Auto-Owners Ins. Co., 
    2012 COA 102
    , ¶ 67;
    see also Planning Partners Int’l, LLC v. QED, Inc., 
    2013 CO 43
    , ¶ 12.
    We therefore review the reasonableness of the amount of attorney
    fees awarded for an abuse of discretion. Melssen, ¶ 67.
    C. Discussion
    ¶ 67   The parties disagree as to whether apportionment of fees is
    necessary in this case. GTL maintains that the court could award
    fees only for work directly related to the statutory unreasonable
    denial of benefits claim. The Estate, however, argues that
    apportionment is not required under section 10-3-1116 and that, in
    any event, Casper’s statutory claim was intertwined with the
    35
    common law claim, rendering apportionment unnecessary. We
    need not resolve this dispute because we determine that, even if
    apportionment was required, the district court did not clearly err in
    its award of supplemental fees.
    ¶ 68   GTL did not request a two-thirds reduction in the
    supplemental fees until after the court had reduced the initial
    request for fees by two-thirds. Indeed, it never suggested any
    percentage reduction based on an apportionment theory. Its
    argument, then, is simply that the court was required to apportion
    the supplemental fees in precisely the same manner as the initial
    fees. We discern no such requirement.
    ¶ 69   Rather than applying a rough, across-the-board reduction in
    fees, as it had with the primary motion for attorney fees, the district
    court examined the entries included in the supplemental fee
    petition and the parties’ related exhibits to determine whether those
    entries were sufficiently related to the statutory claim. We perceive
    no abuse of discretion in the use of this more precise methodology
    for apportionment. See Planning Partners, ¶ 23 (“‘[T]here is no
    precise rule or formula’ for determining attorney’s fees.” (quoting
    Evans v. Jeff D., 
    475 U.S. 717
    , 736 (1986))); cf. Haystack Ranch,
    36
    LLC v. Fazzio, 
    997 P.2d 548
    , 557 (Colo. 2000) (observing that
    because the trial court made no attempt to parse the billing
    statements and timesheets, the allocation was unsupported by the
    evidence).
    ¶ 70   That leaves GTL’s specific objections to two time entries: work
    related to (a portion of) the motion to amend the judgment and
    research concerning abatement. GTL did not object to Casper’s
    lawyers’ recovery of their fees for research on abatement until after
    the court had issued its order on attorney fees. But even if it had
    made an earlier objection, the district court did not clearly err in
    determining that research on abatement of claims was related to
    Casper’s statutory bad faith claim. GTL’s motion to set aside the
    verdict argued that Casper’s statutory claim had abated upon his
    death. Research conducted in response to that argument would
    relate to the statutory claim. As for the motion to amend the
    judgment, GTL concedes that at least some portion of the motion
    was attributable to that claim. Even where apportionment is
    warranted, we do not require the kind of surgical precision
    demanded by GTL. The trial court’s goal when awarding attorney
    fees and costs “is to do rough justice, not to achieve auditing
    37
    perfection.” Payan v. Nash Finch Co., 
    2012 COA 135M
    , ¶ 35
    (quoting Fox v. Vice, 
    563 U.S. 826
    , 838 (2011)).
    ¶ 71   Furthermore, the district court’s apportionment of fees
    resulted in an overall reduction of more than sixty percent from the
    amount requested. Given that GTL did not suggest any particular
    apportionment method or percentage reduction, we discern no
    abuse of discretion in the district court’s apportionment of the
    supplemental fees. See Am. Water Dev., Inc. v. City of Alamosa, 
    874 P.2d 352
    , 384 (Colo. 1994) (reviewing court will uphold allocations
    of fees if the record affords sufficient support).
    V.   Jury Instruction 27
    ¶ 72   Finally, GTL asserts that the trial court erred by instructing
    the jury on Regulation 4-2-3, which regulates advertising by the
    insurance industry. Div. of Ins. Reg. 4-2-3, 3 Code Colo. Regs. 702-
    4. We are not persuaded.
    A. Standard of Review
    ¶ 73   A trial court has substantial discretion in formulating and
    tendering jury instructions, so long as they include correct
    statements of the law and fairly and adequately cover the issues
    presented. Tricon Kent Co. v. Lafarge N. Am., Inc., 
    186 P.3d 155
    ,
    38
    162 (Colo. App. 2008); Taylor v. Regents of Univ. of Colo., 
    179 P.3d 246
    , 248 (Colo. App. 2007). Therefore, we review de novo the jury
    instruction at issue to assess whether the instruction correctly
    states the law, Bedor v. Johnson, 
    2013 CO 4
    , ¶ 8, and review for an
    abuse of discretion the trial court’s decision to give a particular jury
    instruction. 
    Id. B. Discussion
    ¶ 74   The duty of good faith and fair dealing implied in every
    insurance contract in Colorado extends to the advertisement and
    purchase of the policy. Ballow v. PHICO Ins. Co., 
    875 P.2d 1354
    ,
    1362-63 (Colo. 1993). To determine whether an insurer has
    breached this duty, its conduct is measured objectively and is
    tested based on industry standards. Am. Family Mut. Ins. Co. v.
    Allen, 
    102 P.3d 333
    , 343 (Colo. 2004). Administrative rules and
    agency regulations may help establish the applicable standard of
    care. Id.; see also Giampapa v. Am. Family Mut. Ins. Co., 
    919 P.2d 838
    , 842 (Colo. App. 1995). However, even if they do not, they “may
    nonetheless ‘be relevant evidence bearing on the issue of negligent
    conduct.’” Gerrity Oil & Gas Corp. v. Magness, 
    946 P.2d 913
    , 931
    (Colo. 1997) (quoting Restatement (Second) of Torts § 288B (Am.
    39
    Law Inst. 1965)). Thus, regulations may be “valid, but not
    conclusive, evidence” of an insurer’s breach of the duty of good faith
    and fair dealing. 
    Id. ¶ 75
      Regulation 4-2-3 was set forth in Instruction 27. The
    instruction first explained that “[a]t the time of the sale of the policy
    at issue in this case, the following regulations of the Division of
    Insurance . . . were in effect, and applied to the advertisement of
    policies like the one purchased by Mr. Casper.” The instruction
    then presented excerpts of Regulation 4-2-3, including
    requirements that all policy limitations and restrictions be “set out
    conspicuously,” and that advertisements not contain misleading
    representations.
    ¶ 76   The instruction concluded by stating that “[t]hese regulations
    are valid, but not conclusive evidence of insurance industry
    standards, and you may consider such regulations in determining
    whether the defendant acted unreasonably toward the Plaintiff.”
    ¶ 77   GTL objected to the instruction at trial, contending that it was
    irrelevant to Casper’s remaining claims, given the settlement with
    Platinum and Gaylord. The district court disagreed, concluding
    that the instruction related to Casper’s theory that GTL’s marketing
    40
    and sale of the insurance policy, through Platinum, was evidence of
    its bad faith. We perceive no abuse of the district court’s discretion.
    ¶ 78   One of Casper’s theories at trial was that GTL, through
    Platinum, intentionally misrepresented the nature of the insurance
    coverage by misleadingly calling the policy a “First Diagnosis” policy
    when, in fact, hidden and ambiguous language enabled the
    insurance company to deny benefits if the diagnosis was traceable
    in any way to advice given prior to the effective date of the policy.
    ¶ 79   Casper’s lawyers discussed advertising and marketing tactics
    in their opening statement. Many of Casper’s witnesses addressed
    GTL’s allegedly deceptive sales practices; one of his expert witnesses
    testified extensively about Regulation 4-2-3 and the connection
    between GTL’s sales practices and the denial of Casper’s claim.
    Additionally, two of GTL’s own witnesses discussed Regulation 4-2-
    3. They acknowledged that GTL’s duty to act in good faith extended
    to the advertising, marketing, and sale of the insurance policy, but
    they opined that GTL’s conduct had not violated the regulation.
    ¶ 80   We agree with the district court that the standard of care
    related to the sale and marketing of the policy was relevant to
    Casper’s claims, and it is undisputed that the instruction was a
    41
    correct statement of the law. Accordingly, we conclude that the
    district court did not abuse its discretion in giving the instruction.
    VI.   Appellate Attorney Fees
    ¶ 81   Finally, the Estate asserts that it should be awarded its
    attorney fees and costs on appeal. We agree that under section
    10-3-1116, Casper’s estate is entitled to an award of its reasonable
    appellate attorney fees and costs. Stresscon, ¶ 136 (“When a party
    is awarded attorney fees for a prior stage of the proceedings, it may
    recover reasonable attorney fees and costs for successfully
    defending the appeal.” (quoting Melssen, ¶ 75)).
    ¶ 82   We exercise our discretion under C.A.R. 39.1 to remand this
    issue to the district court to determine the total amount of the
    Estate’s reasonable fees and costs incurred on appeal, and to award
    those fees. Payan, ¶ 63 (citing Martin v. Essrig, 
    277 P.3d 857
    , 862-
    63 (Colo. App. 2011)).
    VII.   Conclusion
    ¶ 83   The judgment is affirmed, and the case is remanded to the
    district court to determine and award the total amount of the
    Estate’s reasonable appellate fees and costs allocable to the
    statutory claim.
    42
    JUDGE WEBB and JUDGE ASHBY concur.
    43
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 14CA2423

Citation Numbers: 2016 COA 167, 421 P.3d 1184

Filed Date: 11/17/2016

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 4/17/2021

Authorities (27)

Fox v. Vice , 131 S. Ct. 2205 ( 2011 )

Musick v. Woznicki , 136 P.3d 244 ( 2006 )

Bunnett v. Smallwood , 14 Brief Times Rptr. 843 ( 1990 )

Tunnell v. Edwardsville Intelligencer, Inc. , 43 Ill. 2d 239 ( 1969 )

Reno, Chafee County Clerk and Recorder v. Marks , 349 P.3d 248 ( 2015 )

benjamin-a-reed-a-minor-by-and-through-lavern-a-reed-and-linda-l-reed , 891 F.2d 878 ( 1990 )

Parker v. Parker , 128 N.J. Super. 230 ( 1974 )

Dill v. COUNTY COURT IN & FOR CITY & CTY. OF DENVER , 37 Colo. App. 75 ( 1975 )

Publix Cab Co. v. Colorado National Bank of Denver , 139 Colo. 205 ( 1959 )

Moeller v. Colorado Real Estate Commission , 759 P.2d 697 ( 1988 )

Double Oak Construction L.L.C. v. Cornerstone Development ... , 2003 Colo. App. LEXIS 1502 ( 2003 )

Ahearn v. Goble , 90 Colo. 173 ( 1932 )

American Family Mutual Insurance Co. v. Allen , 102 P.3d 333 ( 2004 )

Garrett v. Byerly , 155 Wash. 351 ( 1930 )

State Engineer v. Castle Meadows, Inc. , 17 Brief Times Rptr. 1154 ( 1993 )

Variety Children's Hosp., Inc. v. Perkins , 1980 Fla. App. LEXIS 16398 ( 1980 )

Taylor v. Regents of the University of Colorado , 2007 Colo. App. LEXIS 1843 ( 2007 )

taxpayers-for-the-animas-la-plata-referendum-jean-mcculloch-thomas , 739 F.2d 1472 ( 1984 )

American Water Development, Inc. v. City of Alamosa , 18 Brief Times Rptr. 829 ( 1994 )

Schubert v. People , 1985 Colo. LEXIS 369 ( 1985 )

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