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CANCELLED
POLICY PROVIDES NO COVERAGE
Thurston County Superior Court 04-2-01930-1
GailAnn Stargardter continues her successful bad faith insurance defense
practice in her first jury trial as a partner with Barrett &
Worden, PS, by obtaining a unanimous verdict for the carrier from a
Thurston
County
jury.
Plaintiff Guzman was unfortunately involved in a one vehicle
collision two weeks after canceling his collision and comprehensive
coverage with his agent.
This fact did not dissuade him, however, from demanding
coverage, filing a complaint with the Insurance Commissioner, and
suing the carrier for breach of contract and bad faith after it
denied property damage coverage.
Plaintiff admitted that he had inquired with his agent about
canceling comprehensive and collision coverage before the accident,
but he maintained that he had never authorized his agent to remove
the coverage. Two
investigations by the carrier found otherwise.
Upon receiving Plaintiff’s claim, the carrier's claims department
investigated, finding that prior to the accident (1) its agent’s
records documented that Plaintiff had contacted his agent and
requested that comprehensive and collision coverage be cancelled on
a date certain; (2) on the specified date, the carrier canceled
coverage; (3) the carrier’s billings reflected the cancellation,
and the carrier refunded premiums to account for the premium
reduction due to the canceled coverages; and (4) the carrier sent
Plaintiff a new declaration page showing the coverages had been
removed. Upon receiving
notice of the Insurance Commission complaint, the carrier conducted a
second investigation, which reconfirmed that it had both cancelled
the coverage at Mr. Guzman’s request and notified him of the
change in coverage.
Despite the factual situation appearing to be in
the carrier’s favor for trial, Mr. Guzman was a particularly likeable
young man. His version
of events, that he simply called to inquire about the possibility of
removing coverage but did not authorize a change in coverage,
coupled with his low key personality, raised concerns that despite
the paper evidence, the jury could empathize with his plight and
find against the carrier. Gail
undercut that possibility by pitting Mr. Guzman’s testimony
against that of the equally young and very professional
agent who handled his request to remove coverage.
The agent’s testimony, together with the documentation and
testimony provided by the carrier’s underwriters and billing
supervisors, was critical to the jury’s determination that
the carrier had not only carried out Mr. Guzman’s instructions but that
it had ample protections built into its operation to ensure that no
mistakes were made.
At the close of plaintiff’s case Gail successfully
petitioned the court for a directed verdict, in the carrier’s
favor, on the bad faith portion of Mr. Guzman’s claims.
Her argument was that plaintiff failed to submit any evidence
to sustain his burden of proving bad faith as a matter of law.
The court agreed. The
jury rapidly returned a unanimous verdict for the carrier on
Plaintiff’s remaining breach of contract claim.
As Gail suspected, the jury really liked Plaintiff.
In fact, jurors commented that they tried to find a way to
award him something, but that there was simply was no basis on which
to do so. The jury complimented Gail on doing not only a great job
for the carrier but for her professional courtesy and the respect she
showed to Mr. Guzman during the trial.
In addition to vindicating the carrier’s claims handling,
this trial result further demonstrates Gail’s specialized
knowledge and skill in defending insurers against bad faith
allegations.
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