This personal injury lawsuit following a motor vehicle accident has spawned years of litigation. In the first appeal, we reversed the entry of a judgment notwithstanding the verdict and ordered the trial court to reinstate the $2.3 million verdict in favor of respondent Ed Aguilar. The trial court reinstated the verdict and then ordered appellant Farmers Insurance Exchange (Farmers) to pay Aguilar's costs. The costs were substantial because Aguilar had made an offer pursuant to Code of Civil Procedure section 998 (section 998), which Farmers had rejected.
In this appeal, Farmers cites no case suggesting it was improper for the trial court to consider whether an insurer may be liable for an excess judgment when evaluating whether a section 998 offer was reasonable, and we decline to be the first court to so hold. We affirm the cost award.
On January 3, 2004, Aguilar and Larry Gostischef were involved in a motor vehicle accident. At the time of the accident, Gostischef was insured by Farmers with a policy containing a $100,000 limit for each person. Aguilar was injured badly, and the parties agree that costs amounting to $507,718 were reasonable and necessary for past medical expenses. (Aguilar v. Gostischef (May 2, 2011, B217824) [nonpub. opn.] (Aguilar I).)
On February 4, 2004, Aguilar's counsel wrote Farmers requesting discovery of the policy limit. Farmers did not respond. On March 12, 2004,
On August 27, 2004, Aguilar sued Gostischef alleging a single cause of action for personal injury. (Aguilar I, supra, B217824.)
On October 30, 2004, Farmers wrote Aguilar's counsel offering to pay the $100,000 policy limit to settle the case. Farmers informed Aguilar's counsel that Gostischef lived on Social Security and had no real property assets. On November 16, 2004, Gostischef presented Aguilar with a section 998 offer to compromise for $100,000.
In correspondence dated February 1, 2005, Aguilar's counsel wrote Farmers arguing that Farmers would be liable for an excess judgment because Farmers ignored three attempts to settle the matter within policy limits.
On April 6, 2005, Aguilar made on offer pursuant to section 998 in the amount of $700,000.
The case proceeded to jury trial. Jurors found Gostischef negligent and Aguilar contributorily negligent. Jurors awarded Aguilar $4,679,314 in damages, but reduced the verdict to $2,339,657 to account for Aguilar's contributory negligence. Farmers obtained a judgment notwithstanding the verdict, which we reversed on appeal. (Aguilar I, supra, B217824.) Following the appeal, the trial court reinstated the judgment in Aguilar's favor. Aguilar sought $1,639,451.14 in costs. Gostischef moved to tax costs in the trial court. Among other things, Gostischef argued that Aguilar's section 998 offer was not made in good faith. Farmers did not move to tax costs in the trial court. Aguilar's requested costs included prejudgment interest, which is calculated from the date of Aguilar's section 998 offer because Aguilar obtained a judgment more favorable than his section 998 offer. (Civ. Code, § 3291.)
Aguilar argues the appeal must be dismissed because Farmers filed the notice of appeal in a different case. We disagree, as D'Avola v. Anderson (1996) 47 Cal.App.4th 358, 362 [54 Cal.Rptr.2d 689] makes clear that affixing the wrong case number on a notice of appeal does not warrant dismissal. "Although competent attorneys will ensure that the correct case number is affixed to the notice of appeal, there is no authority for the proposition that an incorrect case number deprives an appellate court of jurisdiction." (Ibid.) Aguilar's motion to dismiss the appeal is denied.
For purposes of this appeal we assume that Farmers preserved the claim that the section 998 offer was not made in good faith.
Regardless of whether Aguilar ultimately prevails in his lawsuit to recover the judgment against Farmers, Farmers fails to show it was unreasonable for Aguilar to believe Farmers may be liable for a judgment in excess of policy limits. Prior to filing a lawsuit, Aguilar's counsel had written Farmers three times asking for the policy limits of Gostischef's policy. In his last letter, counsel for Aguilar stated: "My client has asked to know the policy limits so that he can make a policy limits demand and resolve this case and move on with his life. Unfortunately, until and unless we are advised of the limits in coverage, we are not able to make a policy limits demand. He is, however, prepared to do so upon being advised of the limits. [¶] Once again, we entreat you to get permission from your insured to disclose the policy limits, provide them to us in the form of a certified policy and declaration, so that we can then immediately demand policy limits. Please favor us with a reply within the next two weeks." That letter may be interpreted as a genuine offer to settle; it was not necessarily a ploy to set up a bad faith case as Farmers argues. Whether it should be interpreted as genuine or as a ploy is beyond the scope of this appeal.
Boicourt v. Amex Assurance Co. (2000) 78 Cal.App.4th 1390 [93 Cal.Rptr.2d 763] supports the conclusion that an insurer can be liable for an excess judgment absent a formal settlement offer under limited circumstances. In Boicourt, the court held that an insurer's blanket policy of refusing to disclose policy limits in advance of litigation may give rise to a bad faith claim. (Id. at p. 1392.) As relevant here, the Boicourt court reasoned that "a liability insurer `"is playing with fire"' when it refuses to disclose policy limits. Such a refusal `"cuts off the possibility of receiving an offer within the policy limits"' by the company's `"refusal to open the door to reasonable negotiations."'" (Ibid.) In Boicourt, the appellate court reversed a summary judgment "based on the idea that there could be no conflict of interest absent a formal settlement offer" concluding instead that a conflict of interest between insurer and insured could arise even absent a formal settlement offer. (Ibid.)
The final step in determining whether an offer was reasonable is to determine the information known to Farmers. Farmers does not address this step. In any event, the parties' correspondence shows Aguilar revealed his position that Farmers may be liable for an excess judgment well in advance of his section 998 offer. Thus, although Farmers vigorously disputes the excess claim and although Farmers's position may ultimately be meritorious (a question on which we express no opinion), Farmers has not shown that the trial court abused its discretion in concluding Aguilar acted in good faith in requesting $700,000, which as the trial court noted was less than one-third of the ultimate recovery.
The order awarding costs is affirmed.
Rubin, Acting P. J., and Grimes, J., concurred.
Aguilar's motions for judicial notice are denied as Aguilar has not shown the judicial records for which he seeks judicial notice are relevant to the limited issue in the current appeal.