Millard Gutter Co. v. Farm Bureau Prop. & Cas. Ins. Co. , 29 Neb. Ct. App. 678 ( 2021 )


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    03/30/2021 09:08 AM CDT
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    Nebraska Court of Appeals Advance Sheets
    29 Nebraska Appellate Reports
    MILLARD GUTTER CO. v. FARM BUREAU PROP. & CAS. INS. CO.
    Cite as 
    29 Neb. App. 678
    Millard Gutter Company, a corporation
    doing business as Millard Roofing and
    Gutter, appellant, v. Farm Bureau
    Property & Casualty Insurance
    Company, appellee.
    ___ N.W.2d ___
    Filed March 30, 2021.    No. A-19-1089.
    1. Motions to Dismiss: Pleadings: Appeal and Error. A district court’s
    grant of a motion to dismiss on the pleadings is reviewed de novo,
    accepting the allegations in the complaint as true and drawing all rea-
    sonable inferences in favor of the nonmoving party.
    2. Motions to Dismiss: Pleadings. To prevail against a motion to dismiss
    for failure to state a claim, a plaintiff must allege sufficient facts to state
    a claim to relief that is plausible on its face. In cases in which a plaintiff
    does not or cannot allege specific facts showing a necessary element, the
    factual allegations, taken as true, are nonetheless plausible if they sug-
    gest the existence of the element and raise a reasonable expectation that
    discovery will reveal evidence of the element or claim.
    3. Pleadings: Appeal and Error. An order of the district court requiring a
    petition to be made more definite and certain will be sustained on appeal
    unless it clearly appears that the court abused its discretion.
    4. Judges: Words and Phrases. A judicial abuse of discretion exists when
    the reasons or rulings of a trial judge are clearly untenable, unfairly
    depriving a litigant of a substantial right and denying just results in mat-
    ters submitted for disposition.
    5. Actions: Insurance: Parties. A first-party bad faith cause of action is
    based upon allegations that the insurer, in bad faith, refuses to settle
    with its own policyholder insured, who thereby suffers some type of
    direct loss.
    6. Actions: Pleadings: Notice. Civil actions are controlled by a liberal
    pleading regime; a party is only required to set forth a short and plain
    statement of the claim showing that the pleader is entitled to relief and
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    MILLARD GUTTER CO. v. FARM BUREAU PROP. & CAS. INS. CO.
    Cite as 
    29 Neb. App. 678
    is not required to plead legal theories or cite appropriate statutes so long
    as the pleading gives fair notice of the claims asserted.
    7. Actions: Pleadings. The rationale for a liberal notice pleading standard
    in civil actions is that when a party has a valid claim, he or she should
    recover on it regardless of a failure to perceive the true basis of the
    claim at the pleading stage.
    8. Breach of Contract: Pleadings: Proof. In a breach of contract action,
    a plaintiff need only plead the existence of a promise, its breach, dam-
    ages, and compliance with any conditions precedent that activate the
    defendant’s duty.
    9. Appeal and Error. An appellate court is not obligated to engage in an
    analysis that is not necessary to adjudicate the case and controversy
    before it.
    Appeal from the District Court for Douglas County:
    Kimberly Miller Pankonin, Judge. Reversed and remanded
    for further proceedings.
    Theodore R. Boecker, Jr., of Boecker Law, P.C., L.L.O., for
    appellant.
    Raymond E. Walden and Michael T. Gibbons, of Woodke &
    Gibbons, P.C., L.L.O., for appellee.
    Pirtle, Chief Judge, and Moore and Riedmann, Judges.
    Pirtle, Chief Judge.
    INTRODUCTION
    Millard Gutter Company, a corporation doing business as
    Millard Roofing and Gutter (Millard Gutter), appeals from
    an order of the district court for Douglas County dismiss-
    ing its amended complaint against Farm Bureau Property &
    Casualty Insurance Company (Farm Bureau) without prejudice.
    On appeal, Millard Gutter argues that the district court erred in
    dismissing its bad faith claims against Farm Bureau, in order-
    ing it to file a second amended complaint, and in dismissing
    the amended complaint sua sponte when Millard Gutter failed
    to file a second amended complaint. For the reasons that fol-
    low, we reverse, and remand for further proceedings.
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    Nebraska Court of Appeals Advance Sheets
    29 Nebraska Appellate Reports
    MILLARD GUTTER CO. v. FARM BUREAU PROP. & CAS. INS. CO.
    Cite as 
    29 Neb. App. 678
    BACKGROUND
    On April 9, 2018, Millard Gutter filed a complaint in the
    district court against Farm Bureau. Millard Gutter alleged
    that it was “the assignee of various insured property owners,
    who purchased insurance from [Farm Bureau].” The complaint
    stated only that the assignments were “associated with the
    2013 storms” and did not otherwise identify the policies or the
    insureds at issue. Millard Gutter alleged that Farm Bureau was
    in breach of contract for failing to pay Millard Gutter pursuant
    to these assignments. Further, Millard Gutter alleged bad faith
    and claimed prejudgment and postjudgment interest, as well as
    attorney fees.
    Subsequently, Farm Bureau filed a motion to enforce
    prior rulings, a motion to dismiss Millard Gutter’s bad faith
    claims, a motion for a more definite statement regarding the
    breach of contract claims, a motion to strike, and a motion to
    sever. These motions are not contained in the record before
    this court. Before the district court ruled on Farm Bureau’s
    motions, Millard Gutter filed an amended complaint. The
    amended complaint identified the names and addresses of 20
    individuals who had assigned their rights to payment under
    their insurance policies to Millard Gutter, as well as the dates
    of the assignments.
    Following the submission of briefs, the district court ruled
    on Farm Bureau’s pending motions on April 29, 2019. As rel-
    evant to this appeal, the district court granted Farm Bureau’s
    motion to dismiss Millard Gutter’s bad faith claims. The court
    reasoned that inchoate bad faith claims cannot be assigned
    and that there were no allegations in the amended com-
    plaint regarding whether “any homeowner had made a bad
    faith claim against [Farm Bureau] at the time of the assign-
    ment, which may have been a ‘present interest’ assigned to
    [Millard Gutter].” The district court additionally sustained
    Farm Bureau’s motion for a more definite statement “as to the
    date of the alleged breaches of contract so that Farm Bureau
    [could] assess any potential statute of limitations defenses.”
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    MILLARD GUTTER CO. v. FARM BUREAU PROP. & CAS. INS. CO.
    Cite as 
    29 Neb. App. 678
    Millard Gutter was ordered to file a second amended complaint
    within 30 days.
    Millard Gutter did not file a second amended complaint,
    and on October 16, 2019, the district court entered an order
    dismissing the case without prejudice. This appeal followed.
    ASSIGNMENTS OF ERROR
    Millard Gutter assigns that the district court erred in (1) dis-
    missing its bad faith claims against Farm Bureau, (2) ordering
    it to file a second amended complaint, and (3) dismissing the
    amended complaint.
    STANDARD OF REVIEW
    [1,2] A district court’s grant of a motion to dismiss on the
    pleadings is reviewed de novo, accepting the allegations in
    the complaint as true and drawing all reasonable inferences in
    favor of the nonmoving party. Schaeffer v. Frakes, 
    306 Neb. 904
    , 
    947 N.W.2d 714
     (2020). To prevail against a motion to
    dismiss for failure to state a claim, a plaintiff must allege
    sufficient facts to state a claim to relief that is plausible on
    its face. 
    Id.
     In cases in which a plaintiff does not or cannot
    allege specific facts showing a necessary element, the factual
    allegations, taken as true, are nonetheless plausible if they
    suggest the existence of the element and raise a reasonable
    expectation that discovery will reveal evidence of the element
    or claim. 
    Id.
    [3,4] An order of the district court requiring a petition to
    be made more definite and certain will be sustained on appeal
    unless it clearly appears that the court abused its discre-
    tion. Christianson v. Educational Serv. Unit No. 16, 
    243 Neb. 553
    , 
    501 N.W.2d 281
     (1993). A judicial abuse of discretion
    exists when the reasons or rulings of a trial judge are clearly
    untenable, unfairly depriving a litigant of a substantial right
    and denying just results in matters submitted for disposition.
    George Clift Enters. v. Oshkosh Feedyard Corp., 
    306 Neb. 775
    ,
    
    947 N.W.2d 510
     (2020).
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    MILLARD GUTTER CO. v. FARM BUREAU PROP. & CAS. INS. CO.
    Cite as 
    29 Neb. App. 678
    ANALYSIS
    Bad Faith Claims.
    Millard Gutter argues that the district court erred in grant-
    ing Farm Bureau’s motion to dismiss its bad faith claims for
    failure to state a claim. The district court found that Millard
    Gutter had not alleged any acts of bad faith committed by
    Farm Bureau prior to the dates of the assignments, nor were
    there allegations that any homeowner had made a bad faith
    claim against Farm Bureau prior to the assignments. The dis-
    trict court ultimately held that “an inchoate claim for bad faith
    cannot be assigned.” Additionally, the court found that the
    complaint alleged only that the insureds had assigned the “pro-
    ceeds under policies of insurance” to Millard Gutter and that
    the complaint failed to allege that the insureds had assigned
    related tort claims for bad faith.
    Millard Gutter argues that the district court’s analysis was
    “inconsistent with the standards that should be employed in
    examining a motion to dismiss.” Brief for appellant at 9.
    Millard Gutter argues that at the pleadings stage of a case, a
    plaintiff need only state a claim that was “‘plausible on its
    face,’” and that therefore, the district court erred in concluding
    Millard Gutter had failed to state a claim as a matter of law. 
    Id.
    (emphasis omitted).
    In support of its position, Millard Gutter claims that after
    the assignments were made, it “stood in the shoes of . . . each
    of the insureds” under the original contract, and that under the
    contract, Farm Bureau had a continuing obligation to adjust the
    insureds’ claims in good faith and to make prompt payments to
    Millard Gutter as assignee. Brief for appellant at 11. Millard
    Gutter further alleges that its bad faith claims, as pled in its
    complaint, were sufficiently plausible and could have been fur-
    ther developed with the aid of discovery.
    [5] Millard Gutter correctly asserts that Nebraska courts
    have recognized a first-party bad faith cause of action. The
    tort of bad faith “is based upon allegations that the insurer, in
    bad faith, refuses to settle with its own policyholder insured,
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    MILLARD GUTTER CO. v. FARM BUREAU PROP. & CAS. INS. CO.
    Cite as 
    29 Neb. App. 678
    who thereby suffers some type of direct loss.” Braesch v. Union
    Ins. Co., 
    237 Neb. 44
    , 54, 
    464 N.W.2d 769
    , 776 (1991), disap-
    proved on other grounds, Wortman v. Unger, 
    254 Neb. 544
    ,
    
    578 N.W.2d 413
     (1998). The tort of first-party bad faith “is
    based on the covenant of good faith and fair dealing which, in
    turn, is premised on a contractual relationship.” Id. at 56, 
    464 N.W.2d at 776
    . The court in Braesch noted that a nonpolicy­
    holder generally does not have standing to assert a first-party
    bad faith claim because there is not a contractual relationship
    between the nonpolicyholder and the insurer.
    Here, Millard Gutter is not a policyholder with Farm Bureau,
    and no contractual relationship exists between Millard Gutter
    and Farm Bureau. The court in Braesch held that “stran­
    gers to the contract” cannot bring first-party bad faith claims
    against an insurer as a policyholder and beneficiary. 
    237 Neb. at 55
    , 
    464 N.W.2d at 776
    . The district court correctly found
    that because Millard Gutter is a stranger to the contract, it
    cannot assert a traditional first-party bad faith claim against
    Farm Bureau.
    Millard Gutter argues, however, that a bad faith claim
    against an insurer may be assigned by an insured. Neither this
    court nor the Nebraska Supreme Court has explicitly ruled on
    the assignability of bad faith claims or on the requirements
    for such an assignment. Yet, for the reasons set forth below,
    it is unnecessary for us to conclusively decide that issue in
    this case.
    [6,7] Nebraska is a notice pleading jurisdiction. Tryon v.
    City of North Platte, 
    295 Neb. 706
    , 
    890 N.W.2d 784
     (2017).
    Civil actions are controlled by a liberal pleading regime. 
    Id.
    A party is only required to set forth a short and plain state-
    ment of the claim showing that the pleader is entitled to relief.
    
    Id.
     The party is not required to plead legal theories or cite
    appropriate statutes so long as the pleading gives fair notice
    of the claims asserted. 
    Id.
     The rationale for this liberal notice
    pleading standard is that when a party has a valid claim, he or
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    MILLARD GUTTER CO. v. FARM BUREAU PROP. & CAS. INS. CO.
    Cite as 
    29 Neb. App. 678
    she should recover on it regardless of a failure to perceive the
    true basis of the claim at the pleading stage. 
    Id.
    In its amended complaint, Millard Gutter alleged that Farm
    Bureau had a contractual obligation to pay the costs of repair-
    ing the damages to the insureds’ homes. Millard Gutter alleged
    that it was the valid assignee of the rights to proceeds under
    the insureds’ policies and that Farm Bureau was sent proper
    notification of the assignments. The amended complaint went
    on to allege that Millard Gutter demanded payment from Farm
    Bureau and that Farm Bureau refused to pay either Millard
    Gutter or the insureds the amounts due under the policies.
    Finally, the complaint alleged that the “bad faith conduct” of
    Farm Bureau caused damage to Millard Gutter.
    Upon our de novo review, accepting the allegations in the
    amended complaint as true and drawing all reasonable infer-
    ences in favor of Millard Gutter, we determine that for the
    purposes of a motion to dismiss, Millard Gutter has sufficiently
    pled a bad faith claim under Nebraska law. The amended
    ­complaint specifically alleges that Farm Bureau failed to make
    payments for the insureds’ losses, failed to recognize the
    validity of the assignments, and failed to act in good faith.
    These pleadings are sufficient to give Farm Bureau fair notice
    of the claims asserted against it. See Tryon v. City of North
    Platte, 
    supra.
    The district court correctly ascertained that at this point
    in the case, it is unclear whether the alleged assignments to
    Millard Gutter specifically include any tort claims or interest
    in the homeowners’ insurance policies. However, this infor-
    mation can be determined during the discovery process. If
    at some point in the future, Farm Bureau learns that some or
    all of the insureds at issue did not validly assign to Millard
    Gutter the right to pursue bad faith tort claims related to their
    insurance policies, then an appropriate motion may be filed at
    that time.
    Therefore, we conclude that the district court erred in grant-
    ing Farm Bureau’s motion to dismiss the bad faith claims.
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    MILLARD GUTTER CO. v. FARM BUREAU PROP. & CAS. INS. CO.
    Cite as 
    29 Neb. App. 678
    Order for More Definite Statement.
    Millard Gutter next argues that the district court abused its
    discretion in requiring it to make a more definite statement
    with respect to its breach of contract claims against Farm
    Bureau. Millard Gutter argues that the district court and Farm
    Bureau improperly treated the motion for a more definite state-
    ment “as a discovery tool” and that under notice pleading rules,
    its complaint sufficiently stated a cause of action for breach of
    contract. Brief for appellant at 20.
    In its order, the district court required Millard Gutter to file
    a second amended complaint that included “a more definite
    statement as to when the alleged breach of contract is claimed
    to have occurred as to each insured.”
    [8] As stated above, Nebraska is a notice pleading jurisdic-
    tion. Tryon v. City of North Platte, 
    295 Neb. 706
    , 
    890 N.W.2d 784
     (2017). Nebraska courts have established that in a breach
    of contract action, a plaintiff need only “plead the existence
    of a promise, its breach, damages, and compliance with any
    conditions precedent that activate the defendant’s duty.” See
    Kotrous v. Zerbe, 
    287 Neb. 1033
    , 1037, 
    846 N.W.2d 122
    , 126
    (2014). The record shows that Millard Gutter’s amended com-
    plaint met these minimal pleading requirements.
    In addition to the above, Neb. Ct. R. Pldg. § 6-1109(f) states:
    “For the purpose of testing the sufficiency of a pleading, aver-
    ments of time and place are material and shall be considered
    like all other averments of material matter.” Nebraska’s notice
    pleading regime is modeled after the Federal Rules of Civil
    Procedure, and an appellate court may look to federal deci-
    sions for guidance in interpreting state rules. See, Eastermann
    v. Bose, 
    296 Neb. 228
    , 
    892 N.W.2d 857
     (2017); Kellogg v.
    Nebraska Dept. of Corr. Servs., 
    269 Neb. 40
    , 
    690 N.W.2d 574
    (2005). Similarly to Nebraska’s § 6-1109(f), Fed. R. Civ. P.
    9(f) states: “An allegation of time or place is material when
    testing the sufficiency of a pleading.” Pursuant to this rule,
    federal courts have granted motions for a more definite state-
    ment when “a plaintiff’s allegations span several years, some
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    MILLARD GUTTER CO. v. FARM BUREAU PROP. & CAS. INS. CO.
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    of which fall outside of the statute of limitations period.” See
    Meyer v. United Airlines, Inc., 
    624 F. Supp. 2d 923
    , 932 (N.D.
    Ill. 2008).
    In Nebraska, a breach of contract action based on a written
    agreement has a 5-year statute of limitations. See 
    Neb. Rev. Stat. § 25-205
     (Reissue 2016). Millard Gutter’s complaint
    was filed on April 9, 2018. The complaint alleged that Millard
    Gutter’s claims against Farm Bureau were “associated with the
    2013 storms.” The amended complaint more specifically pled
    that each insured made an assignment to Millard Gutter follow-
    ing “an incident occurring on April 9, 2013.” Based upon these
    allegations, the earliest any of Millard Gutter’s claims against
    Farm Bureau could have become ripe was April 9, 2013, which
    is within 5 years of the date the complaint was filed. Although
    Millard Gutter’s allegations in the complaint and amended
    complaint did span several years, they did not fall outside the
    statute of limitations period. Therefore, this case is not one in
    which the rule articulated in Meyer v. United Airlines, Inc.,
    
    supra,
     would apply.
    Under the specific circumstances of this case, we conclude
    that the district court abused its discretion in requiring Millard
    Gutter to make a more definite statement as to its claims of
    breach of contract against Farm Bureau.
    Order of Dismissal.
    [9] Finally, Millard Gutter argues that the district court
    erred in dismissing the amended complaint in its entirety
    without prior notice or hearing. However, because we have
    already determined that the district court erred in granting
    Farm Bureau’s motion to dismiss and abused its discretion in
    requiring Millard Gutter to make a more definite statement,
    we need not consider this assignment of error. An appellate
    court is not obligated to engage in an analysis that is not nec-
    essary to adjudicate the case and controversy before it. AVG
    Partners I v. Genesis Health Clubs, 
    307 Neb. 47
    , 
    948 N.W.2d 212
     (2020).
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    MILLARD GUTTER CO. v. FARM BUREAU PROP. & CAS. INS. CO.
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    29 Neb. App. 678
    CONCLUSION
    We conclude that the district court erred in granting
    Farm Bureau’s motion to dismiss Millard Gutter’s bad faith
    claims. We also conclude that the district court abused its
    discretion in requiring Millard Gutter to make a more definite
    statement and to file a second amended complaint. Accordingly,
    we reverse the district court’s order and remand the cause for
    further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
    Reversed and remanded for
    further proceedings.