GREGORY, Circuit Judge
Liberty Mutual Fire Insurance Company ("Liberty") filed an action in the district court seeking reimbursement under its insurance policies after settling five product defect lawsuits. Liberty insured J.T. Walker Industries, Inc. and its subsidiary MI Windows & Doors, Inc. (collectively, "MI"), named defendants in the product defect actions. Despite MI's insistence on taking the cases to trial, Liberty settled all five cases within the deductible limits of the applicable insurance policies. MI refused to pay the costs of settlements it did not desire. When Liberty sued for breach of contract, MI filed counterclaims alleging that Liberty breached both the explicit terms of the insurance policies and the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing.
A jury found both parties liable for contract damages and also found Liberty liable for actual and punitive damages on MI's bad faith claim. The district court set aside the bad faith damages, finding that MI failed to prove actual damages and, as a result, was not entitled to punitive damages. The district court affirmed the verdict as to the breaches of contract, and refused to award litigation costs and prejudgment interest. The parties now appeal the post-trial rulings and evidentiary issues. For the reasons stated below, we affirm the district court's ruling on all issues except bad faith damages. We vacate the ruling on punitive damages and remand.
MI has manufactured windows and doors for nearly sixty years. Throughout that time, MI purchased various insurance policies, providing general liability, umbrella, and excess coverage. Between 1997 and 2003, Liberty insured MI under six annual commercial general liability insurance policies ("the Policies"). The Policies conferred upon Liberty the duty and right to defend MI against lawsuits claiming property damage. They also vested in Liberty the discretion to "investigate any occurrence and settle any claim or suit that may result."
Each policy contained a $2,000,000 aggregate limit, with a limit of $1,000,000 per occurrence. The Policies also provided for a $500,000 deductible, requiring MI to reimburse Liberty up to that amount for any defense and indemnity costs incurred per occurrence. The Policies established claim handling fees, with charges ranging from $625 to $967 for each claim file Liberty opened in relation to MI's coverage.
During the time period covered by the Policies, MI was a named defendant in five property damage lawsuits in South Carolina. Each suit alleged that,
MI tendered each suit to Liberty, which agreed to defend MI in all five cases. Liberty retained counsel to represent MI's interests in each of the underlying lawsuits. Finley Clarke served as counsel in four cases, and Scott Taylor served as counsel in
After receiving the cases, Liberty set a reserve for each case — an estimate of losses due to MI's potential exposure. Liberty set the reserves based upon the facts of each claim and adjusted the amounts to reflect any new information it received. Liberty used these figures to inform an evaluation of whether a given case should be tried or settled. The aggregate reserve total amounted to $475,000. Liberty also estimated costs of defending each case through trial, eventually allocating $769,310 for defense costs. Based on the evidence, these estimates, the nature of the claims, and the potential for joint and several liability, Liberty settled each of the five underlying lawsuits, despite MI's desire to proceed to trial on four of them.
Approximately one week before trial was to commence, MI learned that the claims adjuster authorized Liberty to settle MI's portion of the
In
The next two cases,
In
The final case,
Being that each claim settled for no more than $500,000, Liberty sought reimbursement from MI for the full settlement amounts in accordance with the deductible under the Policies. Liberty also requested fees for opening twenty-six processing claims in connection with the lawsuits. Having intended to go to trial and exonerate its products, MI refused to submit the requested amounts.
Liberty filed this diversity action in the United States District Court for the District of South Carolina. Liberty sought declaratory relief concerning the trigger of insurance coverage, allocation, and the right to refuse and control settlement. Liberty also sought damages for breach of contract, seeking the settlement amounts and processing fees incurred in resolving the underlying lawsuits. MI countersued for contrary declarations and for damages for breach of contract and bad faith.
In ruling on the parties' summary judgment motions, the district court held that Liberty retained sole discretion to settle the underlying cases. As a result, the district court held that MI lacked the authority to approve settlement decisions. The district court also denied Liberty's motion for summary judgment on the bad faith claims for two reasons. First, the district court held that MI's inability to approve of settlements would not preclude a finding that Liberty acted in bad faith in settling the claims. This was because bad faith extends to unreasonableness in paying a claim as well as the manner in which a claim is processed. Second, the district court held that the settlement amounts provided sufficient evidence for MI to take its bad faith claim to a jury.
The district court held a jury trial on the breach of contract and bad faith claims. The district court granted Liberty's motion in limine to exclude any evidence that Liberty never defended or settled a case against MI, aside from those at issue, for an amount exceeding the $500,000 deductible. During MI's case-in-chief, the district court sustained Liberty's objection to MI evidence related to Liberty's motive in reaching the final settlement amounts, finding this motive evidence irrelevant and unduly prejudicial.
The evidence adduced at trial tracked the aforementioned facts. MI offered evidence that Liberty failed to disclose certain portions of settlement discussions, including the timing of the
Conflicting testimony arose as to the processing claims files. The evidence demonstrated that Liberty opened twenty-six claims related to the underlying lawsuits. According to Langro, Liberty typically opened one claim file per lawsuit per year of coverage. Another Liberty witness noted that a single occurrence of injury or damage could give rise to multiple processing claims. Additional witnesses suggested that each of the five underlying cases were actually two lawsuits — one involving the homeowners association and one involving the individual homeowners — thus requiring multiple claims per suit.
After MI's case-in-chief, Liberty moved for a directed verdict. Liberty averred,
The jury returned a verdict in favor of both parties. The jury ruled in Liberty's favor on its breach of contract claim, thereby holding MI liable for $894,416.01 — the amount billed by Liberty to MI for the settlements. The jury also ruled in MI's favor on its breach of contract claim, awarding MI $18,290 — the amount of excess processing fees. On MI's bad faith claim, the jury ruled in MI's favor and found Liberty liable for consequential damages of $684,416.01. The jury also awarded MI $12.5 million in bad faith punitive damages.
The parties filed numerous post-trial motions. Liberty sought judgment notwithstanding the verdict (JNOV) on the bad faith claim, a new trial based on improper jury instructions, reduction of punitive damages, and an award of prejudgment interests and costs. MI sought judgment as a matter of law (JMOL) as to a portion of Liberty's contract damages, and for attorney's fees and costs.
The district court disposed of most of the post-trial motions on August 10, 2012, leaving prejudgment interest and costs for later resolution. The district court granted Liberty's motion for JNOV on the grounds that MI failed to prove damages flowing from any bad faith. The district court held that the jury had sufficient evidence to find the settlement amounts unreasonably high, based on the reserve amounts, alleged unpreparedness of defense counsel to conduct a trial, and disputes between the parties as to whether Liberty should have taken the underlying cases to trial. However, the district court held that MI failed to prove that absent bad faith, MI would have spent less than the settlement amounts on defense costs and, in the event of an adverse verdict, damages. With MI having failed to prove actual or consequential damages, the district court found that MI was not entitled to punitive damages.
The district court granted in part MI's JMOL on the basis that Liberty was not entitled to the $290,000 of the
The parties timely appealed the post-trial rulings, and MI also appealed the district court's evidentiary rulings. We have jurisdiction over this appeal pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1291.
The parties raise a host of issues arising from the district court's disposal of the case, virtually all of which track the parties' post-trial motions. They concern (1) bad faith liability and damages, (2) breach of contract damages, (3) prejudgment interest, (4) litigation costs, and (5) jury instructions and evidentiary rulings. We discuss each of these in turn.
The central issue on appeal concerns the district court's granting in part of Liberty's motion for JNOV. In doing so, the court set aside the damages for Liberty's breach of the duty of good faith and fair dealing. We review
The parties dispute whether Liberty waived its challenge on the damages evidence, as well as the district court's substantive rulings on liability, damages, and attorney's fees.
As an initial matter, MI argues that Liberty waived its right to argue causation of bad faith damages in its motion for JNOV. MI claims that Liberty's motion for directed verdict, by failing to make the specific arguments in the motion for JNOV, waived any challenge on those grounds asserted post-trial. We disagree and find that Liberty sufficiently preserved the issue.
A trial court may entertain a motion for judgment as a matter of law any time before the case has been submitted to the jury and after a party has been fully heard on a claim or an issue. Fed. R. Civ. P. 50(a). The court may grant the motion if the evidence could not provide a legally sufficient basis for a reasonable jury to find for the nonmoving party. Fed. R. Civ. P. 50(a)(1). "The motion must specify the judgment sought and the law and facts that entitle the movant to the judgment." Fed. R. Civ. P. 50(a)(2).
Rule 50(b) permits a party to renew its Rule 50(a) motion post-trial, asserting the same grounds initially raised in the prior motion. Fed. R. Civ. P. 50(b);
We find that Liberty preserved its Rule 50(b) arguments. In its Rule 50(a) motion, Liberty plainly stated, albeit briefly, that the settlement amounts alone were insufficient to demonstrate what damages resulted from any alleged bad faith. Having identified a perceived deficiency in damages and causation, Liberty sufficiently preserved this issue for post-trial review.
The substantive challenges to the district court's ruling on bad faith concern the legal standard applied by the court, sufficiency of evidence on actual or consequential damages, the availability of nominal and punitive damages, and an award of attorney's fees either as damages or by statutory provision.
South Carolina recognizes a common law tort action for an insurer's bad faith in exercising duties owed to policyholders.
Where an insurer refuses to provide benefits under a mutually binding insurance contract, the insured may prevail on a bad faith action by proving "the insurer's bad faith or unreasonable action in breach of an implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing arising on the contract," and damages stemming from that breach.
MI contends that the district court applied an incorrect legal standard for what comprises bad faith.
Evidence regarding processing fees did not inform the jury's bad faith finding. The verdict form provided space to write in the damage amount for each claim. These amounts provided insight into the usually unascertainable thoughts of the jury, to the extent that we know that the jury considered the processing fees under MI's breach of contract claim. For MI's contract claim, the jury entered $18,290 — the amount of the wrongfully charged processing fees. For bad faith damages, the jury awarded an amount equal to the total owed to Liberty for the settlements. The jury's award thus suggests that it found bad faith in the settlements, not any aspect of processing.
Furthermore, MI's contention that charging excessive fees supports bad faith is beyond the bounds of South Carolina law in this context. The bad faith tort rests upon the special characteristics of the insurance relationship and the concern that, in the absence of potential tort liability, an insurer could "delay and deny a claim with virtual impunity" and pay only the contractual limits.
Liberty did not delay or deny coverage. It promptly defended and settled claims, and in the process charged a number of fees based on a disputed interpretation of the contract. Charging excessive fees might constitute bad faith when used to delay or deny coverage, or as leverage to pressure an insured into making certain concessions. Liberty engaged in no such use. The district court found the processing fees excessive only because two reasonable interpretations of policy language required a construction against Liberty, as the drafter, and favorable to MI. Judicial interpretation and contract damages adequately resolve the excessive fee dispute, rendering an extra-contractual remedy unnecessary here. The excess charges are not the sort of bad faith processing of
For these reasons, we find no error in the bad faith legal standard applied by district court.
The district court set aside the jury's award of actual or consequential bad faith damages, finding that MI failed to provide sufficient evidence of ascertainable loss. The district court held that without any evidence of what MI would have spent on trial and potential liability absent any bad faith, the jury lacked a legally sufficient basis for determining the actual damages caused by Liberty's actions. MI argues that the district court erred in requiring such evidence.
A policyholder may receive actual or consequential damages in a bad faith action.
To the extent it is not speculative, MI's damages evidence undermines its argument by demonstrating an absence of damages. MI relies upon the estimated trial costs, reserves, and settlement amounts for each case. Considering all five underlying claims, the total estimate to defend the cases was $769,310 and the reserves, estimating MI's exposure, totaled $475,000. The total settlement amount was $1,047,300 — $197,010 less than the combined estimated defense costs and reserves. Using these figures, no actual damage occurred.
Further, MI failed to present evidence calling these estimates, upon which they now heavily rely, into question. MI offered no evidence that the defense costs were overstated, nor did it provide substantial evidence that it would have prevailed had it proceeded to trial in the underlying cases. In addressing the jury, MI's trial counsel referred to
MI contends that the jury was within its power to reject the defense costs and award the full settlement amounts. We find this position specious for two reasons. First, no reasonable factfinder could conclude that MI could have proceeded to trial without incurring any defense costs. MI's argument that the jury was within its power to discount the prospective trial costs defies common sense. Proceeding to trial would have certainly cost some amount, arguably a significant figure due to the complexity of construction defect cases and the need for expert testimony on claims seeking multimillion dollar damages.
Second, to the extent MI relies on testimony that some of the plaintiffs "might" have walked away from their claims at any moment, it presented nothing more than speculative testimony on this point. No facts indicated that any of the underlying plaintiffs considered abandoning their claims. Clarke repeatedly noted that resolution would only occur through either settlement or trial. MI fails to demonstrate where in the record the evidence indicates that any of the underlying plaintiffs actually wavered on their commitment to litigate their claims. Indeed, at least two sets of plaintiffs — those in
MI also urges that we impose upon Liberty, as the insurer, the burden of proving damages in instances of bad faith refusal to settle cases. Relying on Washington law, MI argues that in the insurance context, the insurer stands in a much better position of knowing the costs of litigation and thus being able to prove what would have happened absent bad faith.
We decline to adopt MI's burden shifting argument. MI's reliance on
For these reasons, we affirm the district court's ruling that MI failed to prove direct or indirect damages.
We reverse the district court's ruling that absent actual or consequential damages, MI cannot receive punitive damages. An absence of ascertainable damages does not necessarily preclude nominal or punitive damages where, as here, the jury finds a party liable for punitive damages.
A court may award punitive damages in bad faith tort actions for conduct willful, wanton, or reckless in disregarding a plaintiff's rights.
The rule requiring actual or nominal damages as a prerequisite to punitive damages "is premised on the fact that liability must be established before a plaintiff can seek punitive damages."
Despite its inability to demonstrate direct or indirect damages, MI was entitled to, and did receive, the opportunity to have the jury consider punitive damages liability. The court properly instructed the jury as to the punitive damages standard. In awarding punitive damages, the jury found Liberty's actions willful, wanton, or reckless. As a result, MI is not prohibited from receiving punitive damages.
The district court's sole basis for setting aside the jury's punitive damages award was MI's failure to prove ascertainable damages of Liberty's bad faith. Having already applied the preponderance of evidence standard to find bad faith, the district court should have further considered whether MI "might be entitled to nominal damages . . . even [though] actual damages cannot be precisely ascertained."
Accordingly, we vacate the district court's ruling on punitive damages. On remand, the district court must consider whether the evidence supported the jury's finding that Liberty engaged in willful, wanton, or reckless conduct. If so, MI is entitled to nominal damages, and then the court must consider Liberty's challenge to the amount of the punitive damages award.
MI argues that it was entitled to attorney's fees either as consequential damages or pursuant to S.C. Code § 38-59-40. Neither argument carries the day.
MI first claims attorney's fees as consequential damages in bad faith claims. This theory relies on MI's assumption that South Carolina follows California on issues concerning bad faith insurer actions. Because California recognizes attorney's fees as damages in bad faith claims to a certain extent,
Courts applying South Carolina bad faith law have not awarded attorney's fees as consequential damages in tort actions. MI acknowledges that in
For additional reasons, we do not find that California's rule on attorney's fees applies here. MI's inference that South Carolina strictly follows California law on bad faith insurance issues is dubious. South Carolina does not look explicitly to California law in the bad faith context, and will consider California's principles equally with those of other states.
Alternatively, MI seeks attorney's fees pursuant to S.C. Code § 38-59-40. This statute provides for an attorney's fees award where an insurer refuses to defend or pay a claim without reasonable cause.
MI's construction crumbles upon the slightest of examinations. The South Carolina statute "did not intend . . . that attorneys' fees should be paid in every contested case won by the insured."
MI also appeals the district court's order denying MI's challenge to Liberty's breach of contract damages. MI argues that the district court should not have allowed Liberty to recover damages for liabilities incurred in bad faith. Essentially, MI contends, the breach of the covenant of good faith was unlawful and thus placed the settlements, and MI's obligation to pay the deductible amounts, beyond the bounds of its contractual duties.
To the extent it rests on pillars of the illegality doctrine, MI's argument fails.
The Policies obligated MI to reimburse Liberty up to $500,000 in indemnity and defense costs per occurrence. Each settlement fell within this limit. MI attempts to circumvent this obligation by saying that they are only "contractually bound to reimburse Liberty for payments that were properly incurred under the policies," and should not reimburse Liberty for expenditures MI did not wish to incur. However, Liberty retained the right to settle cases at its discretion. Promptly defending, investigating, and settling the underlying suits was the very purpose of the Policies. Liberty's settlement decisions were at odds with MI's assessments of the cases, not any contractual duties or obligations. MI remained obligated to reimburse Liberty up to $500,000 spent per occurrence defending MI. Accordingly, we affirm the district court's order awarding $684,416.01 in contract damages to Liberty.
Liberty appeals the district court's orders denying prejudgment interests and costs. We affirm.
Liberty argues that it is entitled to prejudgment interest under the terms of the Policies. State law governs prejudgment interest awards in diversity cases.
"In all cases of accounts stated and in all cases wherein any sum or sums of money shall be ascertained and, being due, shall draw interest according to law, the legal interest shall be at the rate of eight and three-fourths percent per annum." S.C. Code Ann. § 34-31-20(A). South Carolina permits prejudgment interest "on obligations to pay money from the time when, either by agreement of the parties or operation of law, the payment is demandable, if the sum due is certain or capable of being reduced to certainty."
The district court could not determine the sum due Liberty until it resolved a contractual dispute regarding the parties' rights. This contractual uncertainty could be enough to preclude a prejudgment interest award.
Liberty argues that the district court erred in denying its request for costs. We review a denial of costs for abuse of discretion.
The district court did not abuse its discretion. The district court cited the closeness of the issues, which required sifting through novel and difficult questions, including one certified to the Supreme Court of South Carolina. The district court further noted that in addition to complexity, the fact that both parties were prevailing parties as a result of the other's breach of duties suggested hesitancy in shifting costs onto either party. This conclusion is well within the discretion of the court.
The parties further appeal evidentiary and jury instruction issues. In light of our aforementioned conclusions, these issues are moot.
We affirm the district court's ruling in all respects except for bad faith damages. We agree that without proof of expenditures absent bad faith, MI failed to demonstrate direct or indirect damages resulting from Liberty's bad faith conduct. However, we vacate the ruling on punitive damages and remand with instructions to determine whether MI is entitled to nominal and punitive damages under South Carolina law. If the court finds that the evidence supports the jury's conclusion that Liberty acted willfully, wantonly, or recklessly, MI is entitled to nominal damages, and the court must consider Liberty's challenge to the amount of punitive damages. For these reasons, the judgment of the district court is
DAVIS, Circuit Judge, concurring:
I concur fully in the majority opinion, but not without a measure of discomfort regarding our remand of the case to permit the district court to examine the record and determine the propriety of a punitive damages award.
To be sure, it appears that South Carolina has something of a unique jurisprudence surrounding the availability of punitive damages.
In this case, the majority reasons as follows, in part:
In short, I lack any certainty that the Supreme Court of South Carolina would reach the result we reach on the record before us. That is, I question whether the kind of pecuniary "injury" Liberty has ostensibly inflicted in this case, an injury for which there is no proof of actual damage or loss, supports a claim for nominal damages sufficient to serve as a predicate for an award of punitive damages. Nevertheless, I believe the majority opinion's valiant effort to harmonize South Carolina's "bad faith" case law and its damages principles is as well thought out as the law of the state allows.
All that said, I concur fully in the majority opinion.