Thayer v. State Farm ( 2023 )


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    1         IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO
    2 Opinion Number: _____________
    3 Filing Date: September 25, 2023
    4 No. A-1-CA-37133
    5 WILLIAM THAYER,
    6            Plaintiff-Appellant,
    7 v.
    8 STATE FARM MUTUAL AUTOMOBILE
    9 INSURANCE COMPANY,
    10            Defendant-Appellee.
    11 APPEAL FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF DOÑA ANA COUNTY
    12 Marci E. Beyer, District Court Judge
    13 Law Firm of Daniela Labinoti, P.C.
    14 Daniela Labinoti
    15 El Paso, TX
    16 for Appellant
    17 Miller Stratvert P.A.
    18 Todd A. Schwarz
    19 Luke A. Salganek
    20 Albuquerque, NM
    21 for Appellee
    1                                        OPINION
    2 DUFFY, Judge.
    3 {1}    Plaintiff William Thayer filed a complaint for breach of contract and bad faith
    4 after State Farm denied his claim for underinsured motorist (UIM) benefits. State
    5 Farm moved for summary judgment, arguing it was not liable for UIM benefits
    6 because Thayer had breached a contract provision requiring him to obtain State
    7 Farm’s written consent before settling with the tortfeasor. Thayer acknowledged that
    8 he had settled without State Farm’s permission, but asserted he had notified State
    9 Farm of the offer and waited more than a year before ultimately accepting the
    10 settlement. The district court granted State Farm’s motion and dismissed the case
    11 with prejudice.
    12 {2}    The factual circumstances of this case are a matter of first impression in New
    13 Mexico and we must decide whether Thayer, after properly requesting consent to
    14 settle from his insurer, breached the consent-to-settle provision as a matter of law by
    15 settling with the tortfeasor before receiving the insurer’s decision. The answer
    16 depends on whether the insurer acted reasonably to provide or withhold consent to
    17 the insured’s settlement request. We hold that when an insurer has received notice
    18 of a proposed settlement between its insured and a third-party tortfeasor, but fails to
    19 notify its insured of the insurer’s decision to either grant or withhold consent to settle
    20 within a reasonable amount of time, the insurer may have waived its right to rely on
    1 a consent-to-settle clause. In such circumstances, the insured’s settlement will not
    2 preclude recovery of UIM benefits. Because disputed issues of fact exist on these
    3 matters, we reverse.
    4 BACKGROUND
    5 {3}    In August 2011, Thayer, a New Mexico State Police officer, was directing
    6 traffic along Interstate 10 in Doña Ana County when a semi-truck and trailer crashed
    7 into the back end of a pickup truck, causing the pickup to ignite and severely injuring
    8 its driver. Thayer and another officer were in the path of the crash and quickly ran
    9 out of the way, but both were injured in the process.
    10 {4}    The driver of the pickup truck filed a complaint for personal injury against the
    11 driver of the semi-truck (hereinafter referred to as the tortfeasor) and the tortfeasor’s
    12 employer, Quality 1st Produce. Thayer and his fellow officer intervened with their
    13 own injury claims. Quality 1st was insured by Granite State Insurance and had $1
    14 million in liability coverage available for the three claims.
    15 {5}    In August 2012, Thayer attended a mediation with Granite State, during which
    16 he was advised that Granite State was tendering $900,000 to the injured driver of the
    17 pickup, and that the policy deducted costs and expenses from the amount of the limit.
    18 Thayer’s fellow officer received $60,000 from the policy, and Granite State offered
    19 to settle Thayer’s claim for the remainder—approximately $14,000—an amount less
    20 than his total damages. Thayer alleges that during the mediation, he called his own
    2
    1 insurance company, State Farm, to make an underinsured motorist claim and to
    2 request permission to settle.
    3 {6}    Thayer’s policy with State Farm contained a consent-to-settle provision that
    4 required Thayer to inform State Farm of any settlement offer and State Farm to
    5 respond in writing. The policy stated:
    6        Consent to Settlement
    7        The Insured must inform us of a settlement offer, if any, proposed by
    8        or on behalf of the owner or driver of the uninsured motor vehicle, and
    9        the insured must request our written consent to accept such settlement
    10        offer.
    11        If we:
    12        1.       consent in writing, then the insured may accept such settlement
    13                 offer.
    14        2.       inform the insured in writing that we do not consent, then the
    15                 insured may not accept such settlement offer and:
    16                 a.    we will make payment to the insured in an amount equal
    17                       to such settlement offer. This payment is considered a
    18                       payment made by or on behalf of the owner or driver of
    19                       the uninsured motor vehicle; and
    20                 b.    any recovery from or on behalf of the owner or driver of
    21                       the uninsured motor vehicle shall first be used to repay us.
    22 Thayer alleges that during his initial phone call to State Farm during the August 2012
    23 mediation, he informed State Farm of the offer he had received from Granite State,
    24 but State Farm neither provided nor denied consent to settle. Thayer asserts that as
    25 a result, he was unable to settle his claims against the tortfeasor at the mediation.
    3
    1 {7}    Thayer alleged in an affidavit that he tried to contact State Farm multiple times
    2 after the mediation without success. About seven months after the mediation, on
    3 March 8, 2013, Thayer’s attorney sent State Farm a letter requesting consent to
    4 settle. The letter described the accident, Thayer’s injuries and treatment, and stated
    5 that Granite State was offering to settle Thayer’s claim for approximately $14,000,
    6 which represented the amount remaining under the policy.
    7 {8}    State Farm sent a letter in response on April 5, stating that it had called
    8 Plaintiff’s attorney on March 12 to discuss the claim and had left a voice message.
    9 The letter went on to state:
    10        In order to sanction Mr. Thayer[’]s settlement against Granite State
    11        Insurance, we will need the following documentation to begin our
    12        investigation:
    13        *Total payments to parties involved in this accident.
    14        *The declarations page confirming Liability coverage on the policy.
    15        We look forward to your call. Thank you.
    16 Notably, although the letter indicated that State Farm would need additional
    17 information, the letter was unclear as to how the information would be obtained, i.e.,
    18 whether State Farm would gather the documentation or whether it was asking Thayer
    19 to do so. Thayer did not respond.
    20 {9}    The following month, on May 16, State Farm sent a reservation of rights letter
    21 to Thayer. In addition to various reservation of rights statements, the letter stated,
    22 “If you have any information or materials that may aid us in the analysis of your
    4
    1 claim for coverage, please provide it to us as soon as possible.” As with the previous
    2 letter, the May 16 letter did not directly request any specific documentation from
    3 Thayer or state that Thayer needed to contact State Farm regarding his claim. Again,
    4 Thayer did not respond.
    5 {10}   State Farm sent a second reservation of rights letter on June 27, which
    6 contained the same general request quoted above and stated that if State Farm did
    7 not hear from Thayer within thirty days, State Farm would close the claim. Thayer
    8 again did not respond.
    9 {11}   Thayer eventually accepted a settlement in the amount of $28,780 from
    10 Granite State in January 2014, having never received a written response from State
    11 Farm indicating that it was either providing or withholding consent to Thayer’s
    12 request to settle. Thayer notified State Farm of the settlement by letter in February
    13 2014 and requested that State Farm tender the limits of his UM/UIM insurance. State
    14 Farm denied the claim.
    15 {12}   Thayer filed suit, asserting claims for breach of contract, bad faith, and
    16 violation of the Unfair Insurance Practices Act and Unfair Trade Practices Act.
    17 Thayer alleged that State Farm improperly disclaimed coverage and breached the
    18 UM/UIM contract. Thayer’s extra-contractual claims were based on allegations that
    19 State Farm acted in bad faith by failing to honor its contractual and statutory
    20 obligations under New Mexico law. Thayer’s complaint included as exhibits the
    5
    1 police report and two asset investigations—one on the tortfeasor and another on
    2 Quality 1st—that had been produced in the underlying lawsuit against the tortfeasor.
    3 Those investigations showed that as of mid-2012, the tortfeasor had limited assets
    4 and was effectively judgment-proof. Quality 1st had approximately $130,000 in
    5 liquid assets but was also subject to five different UCC liens in unspecified amounts
    6 that were secured with tangible and intangible assets.
    7 {13}   State Farm moved for summary judgment, arguing that Thayer was not
    8 entitled to UIM benefits under the policy because he had released the tortfeasor
    9 without State Farm’s consent, in breach of the policy’s consent-to-settle provision.
    10 State Farm asserted that it suffered substantial prejudice because the settlement
    11 destroyed its subrogation rights against Quality 1st, and as a result, Thayer was not
    12 entitled to UIM coverage as a matter of law. State Farm attached as exhibits to its
    13 motion Thayer’s letters to State Farm, a single page from the policy containing the
    14 consent-to-settle provision,1 and an affidavit from a certified fraud investigator who
    1
    State Farm asserted as an “undisputed material fact” that the policy at issue
    states, “There is no coverage: 1. for an insured who, without our written consent,
    settles with any person or organization who may be liable for the bodily injury or
    property damage.” In support, State Farm referenced the single page of the policy
    attached as an exhibit to its motion. That exhibit contains the consent to settle
    provision quoted in paragraph six of this opinion, but does not anywhere contain the
    language quoted by State Farm in its motion. Nevertheless, Plaintiff did not
    challenge State Farm’s representation of the policy language in his response in the
    district court, and we therefore accept that the policy contains the coverage exclusion
    represented by State Farm. See Rule 1-056(D)(2) NMRA (“[M]aterial facts set forth
    6
    1 had completed an asset investigation of the tortfeasor and Quality 1st in April 2014,
    2 after Thayer had settled his claims against them. State Farm’s investigation showed
    3 that Quality 1st still had significant liquid assets but did not list any UCC liens or
    4 other encumbrances on Quality 1st’s assets.
    5 {14}   Thayer responded to the motion by arguing that State Farm had acted with
    6 unreasonable delay in responding to his request for consent to settle, and that he had
    7 accepted the settlement only after State Farm failed to respond to his request for
    8 seventeen months. He also argued that State Farm breached its duty to timely
    9 investigate his claim. The exhibits Thayer attached to his response included
    10 affidavits from Thayer and his wife stating that they had contacted State Farm to
    11 request consent during the August 2012 mediation, the asset investigation conducted
    12 on the tortfeasor, and correspondence from State Farm to Thayer’s attorney. Thayer
    13 contended that fact issues remained as to whether he had waited for a reasonable
    14 period of time before accepting the settlement, and whether State Farm had acted
    15 reasonably under the circumstances. State Farm responded that it had left one
    16 voicemail and sent three letters (two of which were reservation of rights letters) to
    17 Thayer’s attorney requesting a conversation regarding and information related to
    18 Thayer’s claim for UM/UIM insurance, to which no response was received.
    in the statement of the moving party shall be deemed admitted unless specifically
    controverted.”).
    7
    1 {15}   After a hearing, the district court granted State Farm’s motion and dismissed
    2 all of Thayer’s claims with prejudice.2 Thayer appeals.
    3 DISCUSSION
    4 I.     Standard of Review
    5 {16}   “We review de novo the question of whether the application of law to
    6 undisputed facts supports a summary judgment determination regarding uninsured
    7 motorist coverage.” Haygood v. United Servs. Auto. Ass’n (USAA), 2019-NMCA-
    8 074, ¶ 7, 
    453 P.3d 1235
    . “[I]n reviewing a district court’s summary judgment
    9 decision, we conduct a whole-record review of the facts in the light most favorable
    10 to the party opposing summary judgment and draw all reasonable inferences in
    11 support of a trial on the merits.” Ridlington v. Contreras, 
    2022-NMSC-002
    , ¶ 13,
    12 
    501 P.3d 444
     (internal quotation marks and citation omitted). If the record indicates
    13 a genuine dispute as to any material fact, summary judgment will be reversed and
    14 the case remanded for determination at trial. Rummel v. Lexington Ins. Co., 1997-
    15 NMSC-041, ¶ 15, 
    123 N.M. 752
    , 
    945 P.2d 970
    .
    16 II.    Consent to Settle
    17 {17}   As a general matter, consent to settle provisions in UM/UIM policies are valid
    18 and enforceable under New Mexico law. March v. Mountain States Mut. Cas. Co.,
    The parties have not designated hearing transcripts or recordings for our
    2
    review. Nevertheless, the parties agree that this appeal can and should be decided
    based on the written record.
    8
    1 
    1984-NMSC-092
    , ¶ 18, 
    101 N.M. 689
    , 
    687 P.2d 1040
    , modified on other grounds
    2 by State Farm Mut. Ins. Co. v. Fennema, 
    2005-NMSC-010
    , ¶ 6, 
    137 N.M. 275
    , 110
    
    3 P.3d 491
    . Our courts have recognized that “the purpose of a consent-to-settle
    4 provision is to allow the insurer an opportunity to protect its subrogation interest.”
    5 Fennema, 
    2005-NMSC-010
    , ¶ 9. “[I]f an insured, without the knowledge of his
    6 insurer, effectively releases a wrongdoer from liability, the insured destroys any
    7 right of subrogation the insurer may have against the wrongdoer.” Id. ¶ 5. Under
    8 those circumstances, an insured may be precluded from recovering from his insurer.
    9 See id.
    10 {18}   Our courts apply a two-step analysis to determine whether an insurance
    11 company may be relieved from paying UIM benefits based on the insured’s alleged
    12 violation of a consent-to-settle provision. Id. ¶¶ 2 14. The first step is to examine
    13 whether the insured breached the consent-to-settle provision. Id. ¶¶ 7, 13; see also
    14 Roberts Oil Co. v. Transamerica Ins. Co., 
    1992-NMSC-032
    , ¶ 22, 
    113 N.M. 745
    ,
    15 
    833 P.2d 222
     (holding that “an insurer must demonstrate substantial prejudice as a
    16 result of a material breach of the insurance policy before to be relieved of its
    17 obligations under a policy” (internal quotation marks and citation omitted)). Once
    18 the insurer has established breach, the second step is to determine whether the insurer
    19 was substantially prejudiced by the settlement of the tort claim. Fennema, 2005-
    9
    1 NMSC-010, ¶¶ 5, 11, 13. Applying the Fennema analysis here, we conclude there
    2 are disputed issues of material fact as to the threshold question of breach.
    3 {19}   This case stands in contrast to previous consent-to-settle cases in New Mexico
    4 because Thayer fully complied with his initial obligations under the policy’s
    5 consent-to-settle provision: he provided notice to his insurer of the proposed
    6 settlement and requested the insurer’s permission to accept the settlement. Cf. Salas
    7 v. Mountain States Mut. Cas. Co., 
    2007-NMCA-161
    , ¶ 4, 
    143 N.M. 113
    , 
    173 P.3d 8
     35 (“[W]ithout the knowledge of consent of [her insurer], [the p]laintiff settled the
    9 personal injury case and executed a [r]elease.”), aff’d, 
    2009-NMSC-005
    , 
    145 N.M. 10
     542, 
    202 P.3d 801
    ; see March, 
    1984-NMSC-092
    , ¶ 2 (concluding that an insured’s
    11 release and settlement with the tortfeasor, without the knowledge or consent of his
    12 insurance company, relieved the insurer of its obligations to the insured). Upon
    13 receiving notice of the proposed settlement, the policy required State Farm to
    14 exercise one of two options, either (1) consent to the settlement or (2) withhold
    15 consent and tender payment to Thayer in an amount equal to the settlement offer. It
    16 is undisputed that State Farm never notified Thayer in writing of its election, and
    17 Thayer accepted the settlement either eleven or seventeen months after first
    18 requesting permission to do so, depending on whether the fact-finder believes
    19 Thayer’s first request for consent occurred over the telephone at the August 2012
    20 mediation or by letter in March 2013.
    10
    1 {20}   State Farm maintains that Thayer’s settlement with the tortfeasor necessarily
    2 amounts to a breach of the consent-to-settle provision. Thayer maintains that the
    3 insurer’s conduct after receiving notice and a request for consent bears on the
    4 enforceability of the consent-to-settle provision. Thayer’s essential position on
    5 appeal is that an insurer has a duty to respond reasonably promptly to an insured’s
    6 request for consent to settle, and an insurer’s failure to do so may waive its right to
    7 enforce the consent provision. Both propositions find support in New Mexico law
    8 and elsewhere.
    9 {21}   In Fennema, our Supreme Court made clear that “[t]he insurer must act
    10 reasonably under the circumstances to investigate [the] claim and to evaluate
    11 whether to consent to a settlement between its insured and the tortfeasor.” 2005-
    12 NMSC-010, ¶ 12. The Court observed that this requirement arises out of the
    13 insurer’s statutory and common law duties of good faith. 
    Id.
     In light of the insurer’s
    14 “duty to make a timely and fair investigation,” the Court assumed that the insurer’s
    15 decision of whether to pursue subrogation would be made relatively quickly. 
    Id.
    16 {22}   Our Supreme Court has also recognized that an insurer can waive its right to
    17 enforce consent provisions through unreasonable delay. See Stahmann v. Maryland
    18 Cas. Co. 
    1940-NMSC-025
    , 
    44 N.M. 289
    , 
    101 P.2d 1021
    . In Stahmann, a worker’s
    19 compensation insurance carrier failed to respond to an employer’s request to pay an
    20 injured worker’s medical expenses and benefits. Id. ¶ 3. The insurance policy
    11
    1 included a consent provision requiring the employer to seek the insurer’s written
    2 consent before paying any indemnifiable compensation expenses. Id. ¶ 15. After the
    3 insurer failed to respond to two requests for indemnification, the employer paid the
    4 injured worker’s medical expenses and benefits and promptly filed suit against the
    5 insurer. Id. ¶ 4.
    6 {23}   The trial court sustained the insurer’s demurrer on the basis that payment was
    7 not made with the insurer’s consent. Id. ¶ 17. On appeal, our Supreme Court noted
    8 that the consent provision gave control over the claim to the insurer, and because of
    9 this power imbalance, the insurer “should not be allowed, by inaction or
    10 indifference, to prejudice the rights of the insured.” Id. ¶ 26. The Court held that the
    11 insurer had a duty to respond to the insured with “reasonable promptness,” but had
    12 failed to do so, noting that the employer had not made payment until the carrier “had
    13 its opportunity to either settle or demand suit. [The insurer] stood by and refused to
    14 act.” Id. ¶¶ 26-27. The Court concluded that under the circumstances, “the
    15 provisions in the policy contract prohibiting a settlement unless directed in writing
    16 should be considered waived, and the insurance company estopped to rely on the
    17 provisions to defeat a recovery by the insured upon the ground that the insured
    18 settled the claim without its authority.” Id. ¶ 26.
    19 {24}   Although Stahmann has not been widely cited, New Mexico courts have
    20 indicated in more recent opinions that the same waiver principles may apply to
    12
    1 consent-to-settle provisions in UIM policies. See Salas, 
    2007-NMCA-161
    , ¶ 26
    2 (stating that for waiver to apply to a settlement without consent, the insurer must “be
    3 on notice that it had a UIM subrogation claim that it needed to protect and then chose
    4 not to protect its right,” but concluding the facts did not support waiver because the
    5 insurer did not know about the settlement negotiations before the plaintiff executed
    6 the release); see also March, 
    1984-NMSC-092
    , ¶ 15 (observing that “the insured is
    7 protected by the generally-accepted notion that an insurer’s arbitrary and
    8 unreasonable withholding of consent would constitute a waiver of the consent
    9 requirement” but that “no such waiver was possible where the insured never even
    10 gave the insurer an opportunity to consent”).
    11 {25}   And since Stahmann was decided, our Legislature has codified an insurer’s
    12 duty to “act reasonably promptly upon communications with respect to claims from
    13 insureds arising under policies,” as well as to promptly investigate claims and
    14 effectuate reasonable settlements. See NMSA 1978, § 59A-16-20(B), (C), (E)
    15 (1997). Likewise, “[u]nder the common law, all insurance contracts include an
    16 implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing that the insurer will not injure its
    17 policyholder’s right to receive the full benefits of the contract.” Sherrill v. Farmers
    18 Ins. Exch., 
    2016-NMCA-056
    , ¶ 34, 
    374 P.3d 723
     (internal quotation marks and
    19 citation omitted). In view of an insurer’s statutory and common law duties, we
    20 believe the waiver rule articulated in Stahmann applies equally to consent-to-settle
    13
    1 provisions in the UIM context. See 
    1940-NMSC-025
    , ¶ 26 (reasoning that an insurer
    2 places the insured “at a disadvantage that it ought not be subjected to” when it fails
    3 to advise the insured of its decision with reasonable promptness). Consequently, we
    4 hold that if an insurer fails to notify the insured of its decision to either grant or
    5 withhold consent within a reasonable amount of time after receiving an insured’s
    6 request for consent to settle, the insurer may waive the consent requirement and may
    7 not rely on the consent-to-settle provision as a basis to deny coverage.
    8 {26}   Our holding aligns with a number of other jurisdictions that have concluded
    9 consent to settle provisions can be waived through inaction. See Fisher v. USAA Cas.
    10 Ins. Co., 
    973 F.2d 1103
    , 1107 (3d Cir. 1992) (applying Pennsylvania law and
    11 holding that an insurer may not unduly delay a coverage decision arising from a
    12 request for consent to settle); Taylor v. Gov’t Emps. Ins. Co., 
    978 P.2d 740
    , 749
    13 (Haw. 1999) (“If the carrier denies the claim of its insured without a good faith
    14 investigation into its merits, or if the carrier does not conduct its investigation in a
    15 reasonable time, the carrier may not deny UIM benefits to its insured.” (emphasis,
    16 internal quotation marks, and citation omitted)); Tate v. Secura Ins., 
    587 N.E.2d 665
    ,
    17 672 (Ind. 1992) (holding that an insurer’s delay in providing consent to settle created
    18 issues of waiver and estoppel); Ferrando v. Auto-Owner’s Mut. Ins. Co., 2002-Ohio-
    19 7217, ¶ 91, 
    781 N.E.2d 927
     (“[If] the insurer failed to respond within a reasonable
    20 time to a request for consent to the settlement offer . . . the release will not preclude
    14
    1 recovery under the UIM policy.”); Fulmer v. Insura Prop. & Cas. Co., 
    760 N.E.2d 2
     392, 399 (Ohio 2002) (“[W]e hold that when an insured has given her
    3 underinsurance carrier notice of a tentative settlement prior to release, and the
    4 insurer has had a reasonable opportunity to protect its subrogation rights by paying
    5 its insured the amount of the settlement offer but does not do so, the release will not
    6 preclude recovery of underinsurance benefits.”); Gaston v. Tenn. Farmers Mut. Ins.
    7 Co., 
    120 S.W.3d 815
    , 819-20 (Tenn. 2003) (holding that an insurer’s delay in
    8 responding to a request for consent to settle created issues of material fact as to
    9 whether the insurer waived the provision); see also 14 Plitt, et al., Couch on Ins.
    10 § 124.12, Westlaw (database updated June 2023) (“An insured is not precluded from
    11 recovering uninsured/underinsured (UM/UIM) benefits as a consequence of entering
    12 into a nonconsensual settlement if the insurer has, through its actions, waived its
    13 right to rely on a ‘consent to settle’ clause. An insurer may waive its right to rely on
    14 the clause if . . . it does not notify the insured of its decision to either grant or
    15 withhold consent within a reasonable amount of time.” (citations omitted)).
    16 {27}   Returning to the case at hand, there are genuine issues of fact as to whether
    17 Thayer breached the consent-to-settle provision as a result of his settlement with the
    18 tortfeasor. Thayer presented evidence that could allow a jury to infer that State Farm
    19 had a reasonable opportunity to respond to Thayer’s request for consent to settle but
    15
    1 failed to do so, and thereby waived its right to rely on the consent-to-settle provision
    2 of the contract.
    3 {28}   For example, the record demonstrates a genuine issue of fact as to when State
    4 Farm was first put on notice of Thayer’s request for consent to settle. Thayer
    5 produced evidence in response to State Farm’s motion for summary judgment
    6 showing that he first requested consent to accept Granite State’s settlement offer by
    7 phone at the August 2012 mediation. State Farm disputes this, asserting that it has
    8 no record of that phone call and instead received notice for the first time upon
    9 receiving Thayer’s March 2013 letter. This factual dispute is material to the issue of
    10 waiver because its resolution by a fact-finder establishes the starting point for
    11 evaluating State Farm’s response. Thayer asserts that if the period of delay is
    12 measured from his phone call to State Farm during the mediation, State Farm did
    13 not respond in any fashion for over seven months, and “a reasonable trier of fact
    14 could find that State Farm failed to comply with its obligations to respond within a
    15 reasonable time to Thayer’s request for consent to settle.” See Fennema, 2005-
    16 NMSC-010, ¶ 12 (stating that the insurer has a duty to timely investigate upon
    17 receiving an insured’s request for consent to settle). State Farm maintains that its
    18 first notice of the claim occurred in March 2013 when it received Thayer’s letter,
    19 and that it responded promptly by calling and sending a series of three letters to
    20 Thayer.
    16
    1 {29}   In addition to disputing the amount of time at issue, the parties also offer
    2 competing interpretations of the nature and effect of State Farm’s letters to Thayer.
    3 Thayer states that after writing to State Farm in March 2013, he “continued to wait
    4 for State Farm to provide an explanation and consent for him to settle with the
    5 tortfeasor,” but that State Farm never expressly granted or denied consent. State
    6 Farm states that it was entitled to investigate Thayer’s claim in order to evaluate
    7 whether to consent to the settlement. See id. State Farm asserts that it made multiple
    8 attempts to contact Thayer in order to obtain more information so that it could
    9 evaluate the proposed settlement, and because Thayer never responded, State Farm
    10 was “prevented . . . from exercising its right to protect its subrogation interests.” We
    11 observe, however, that State Farm’s letters never expressly asked Thayer to provide
    12 any particular information to State Farm, instead stating its general need for certain
    13 specific and nonspecific information, and it was not until June 2013—three months
    14 after receiving Thayer’s written request for consent to settle—that State Farm clearly
    15 requested contact from Thayer within thirty days. The record is silent as to what
    16 information, if any, State Farm needed from Thayer in order to evaluate his request
    17 for consent to settle. Put differently, State Farm has not established that there was
    18 information necessary to its investigation that it was unable to obtain without
    19 Thayer’s assistance. On the record before us, State Farm’s investigation consisted of
    20 one phone call and three letters to Thayer’s attorney (two of which were reservation
    17
    1 of rights letters), and an asset investigation conducted approximately one year after
    2 receiving Thayer’s March 2013 letter. Whether these facts demonstrate that State
    3 Farm acted reasonably under the circumstances to investigate Thayer’s claim and
    4 evaluate whether to consent to the settlement, or whether they demonstrate that State
    5 Farm failed to comply with its obligations to investigate and respond to Thayer’s
    6 request for consent to settle within a reasonable time, are disputed factual issues that
    7 must be decided by the fact-finder.
    8 {30}   The resolution of these factual issues bears on whether State Farm is entitled
    9 to enforce the consent provision as a basis to deny UIM coverage. Because there are
    10 factual disputes about whether State Farm waived the policy provision requiring
    11 consent to settle, we hold that State Farm was not entitled to judgment as a matter of
    12 law.
    13 CONCLUSION
    14 {31}   For the foregoing reasons, the summary judgment for State Farm is reversed,
    15 and the case is remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
    16 {32}   IT IS SO ORDERED.
    17                                         __________________________________
    18                                         MEGAN P. DUFFY, Judge
    18
    1 WE CONCUR:
    2 _________________________________
    3 J. MILES HANISEE, Judge
    4 _________________________________
    5 ZACHARY A. IVES, Judge
    19
    

Document Info

Filed Date: 9/25/2023

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 10/2/2023