Every insurance contract is accompanied by an implied covenant of
good faith and fair dealing, meaning that the insurer cannot “unfairly
frustrate” or unreasonably “deprive” the insured of the benefits of the
insurance contract. This implied covenant applies to all types of insurance
policies, including disability insurance, life
insurance, health/medical insurance, long-term care insurance, accidental death
and dismemberment insurance, and homeowners insurance. If the
insurer unreasonably or without proper cause refuses to pay a benefit due under
in insurance policy, the insurer may have acted in “bad faith.” This may allow
an insured to collect extra-contractual damages, such as emotional distress
damages, attorney’s fees and punitive damages. Typically, bad faith allegations
follow a decision by the insurance company to deny a valid claim for benefits.
However,
a recent Central District of California decision confirmed that a bad faith
claim can be asserted even in the absence of a claim denial, if the insured can
assert that any benefit of the policy was withheld by the insurance company. A
bad faith claim does not necessarily only follow the denial of a claim. An
insurer’s decision to unreasonably withhold anything of value regarding the
insurance policy can be an act of bad faith.
That case, EFG Bank AG, Cayman Branch v.
Transamerica Life
Insurance Co., 2017 WL 3017596, 2017 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 109780
(C.D. Cal., July 6, 2017), involved a dispute between Transamerica and the
owners and beneficiaries of 68 universal life insurance policies. Under
the policies, premiums were deposited into an account for each policy,
and each month, Transamerica withdrew a monthly deduction from each account and
deposited a separate amount of interest. The amount in each policy’s account is
known as the “Accumulation Value.” The plaintiffs alleged that Transamerica
breached those insurance contracts, and did so in bad faith, by wrongfully
increasing the monthly deduction rates (“MDR”) on the policies, and in doing so
reduced the Accumulation Value of the policies.
Transamerica
filed a motion to dismiss, claiming that its actions in calculating the MDR
were proper and consistent with the plain language of the policies. The Court
denied the motions to dismiss, in full, and in the process, confirmed that
insurers can be liable for bad faith, even in the absence of a claim denial
decision.
First,
the court denied Transamerica’s motion to dismiss the breach of contract claim,
finding that the policies did not give Transamerica “unfettered discretion” to
set the MDR lower than the guaranteed maximum rate included in the policies.
Turning
to the bad faith claim, the Court first ruled that it was not duplicative of
the breach of contract claim because the plaintiffs alleged that Transamerica
“exercised its discretion [in setting the MDR] in a way that was intentionally
designed to unfairly frustrate the agreed purposes of the Policies.”
Next, the Court analyzed
Transamerica’s argument that plaintiffs could not maintain a bad faith claim
because they did not allege that Transamerica “withheld a benefit,” an
allegation necessary to maintain a bad faith claim. See, e.g., Benavides v. State
Farm General Insurance Co., 136 Cal. App. 4th 1241, 1250 (2006) (“[T]he
essence of the tort of the implied covenant … is focused on the prompt payment
of benefits under the insurance policy, there is no cause of action … when no
benefits are due.”). The Court rejected Transamerica’s argument, explaining
that if Transamerica improperly increased the MDR, that reduced plaintiffs’
Accumulation Value in the policies and forced them to pay increased premiums,
and that impermissibly increasing premiums could constitute a breach of the implied
covenant of good faith and fair dealing. See, e.g., Notrica v. State
Comp. Ins. Fund, 70 Cal. App. 4th 911 (1999).
Typically,
bad faith insurance claims are asserted only after an insurance company
wrongfully denies a benefits claim. This case further confirms that an
insurance company can be liable for bad faith damages for actions other than
denying a claim. Basically, if the insurance company withholds anything of
value under an insurance policy from an insured or causes the insured to
unnecessarily pay increased premiums, they are potentially liable for bad faith
damages.