Archive for the 'PA - Limitations Period' Category

OCTOBER 2018 BAD FAITH CASES: INSURANCE FRAUD CLAIMS NOT TIME BARRED SIMPLY BECAUSE INSURER HAD BEGUN INVESTIGATION OVER TWO YEARS BEFORE FILING SUIT, WHERE ALLEGED FRAUD WAS COMPLEX AND CONCEALED (Philadelphia Federal)

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The insurer brought claims under Pennsylvania’s Insurance Fraud Act, 18 Pa.C.S. § 4117, and common law fraud, among others, seeking to recover allegedly fraudulent payments to medical providers.

The medical providers argued on summary judgment that the statutory fraud claims were time barred. They made extensive arguments concerning a variety of fact patterns to support its claim that the insurer was on notice of the fraud prior to the statute of limitations running, and there should be no tolling. The court analyzed each set of facts closely, but concluded that even though the insurer had been investigating a potential fraud, there was an argument that it did not know there was an actual fraud, and thus tolling might be permitted.

Thus, the court found that “whether the two-year statute of limitations period for Plaintiffs’ statutory insurance fraud claim should be tolled is genuinely disputed. Here, a reasonable factfinder could find that despite Plaintiffs’ reasonable diligence in discovering their injury, they did not discover the alleged fraud until … after reviewing hundreds of Defendants’ records with the assistance of an expert medical reviewer and counsel.” Ordinarily, factual issues about notice and the plaintiff’s diligence are jury questions, and such genuine issues of material fact as to when the statute of limitations runs preclude summary judgment.

The court observed that tolling could be proper if the “Plaintiffs were unable to discover the alleged fraud as a result of the scheme’s complexity and Defendants’ efforts to conceal it.”

On the common law fraud claim, the defendants argued for similar reasons that the insurer could not have justifiably relied on the insureds’ misrepresentations because of its alleged knowledge of the insureds’ fraudulent representations. Again, this made for disputed issues of fact that could not be resolved on summary judgment.

Date of Decision: September 28, 2018

State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Co. v. Stavropolskiy, U. S. District Court Eastern District of Pennsylvania CIVIL ACTION NOS. 15-05929 and NO. 16-01374, 2018 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 167425, 2018 WL 4680241 (E.D. Pa. Sept. 28, 2018) (Joyner, J.)

 

JULY 2017 BAD FAITH CASES: STATUTE OF LIMITATIONS NOT TOLLED BY SETTLEMENT NEGOTIATIONS (Philadelphia Common Pleas)

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In this case, the Philadelphia Court of Common Pleas Judge stated that the two year bad faith statute of limitations began to run with the date of loss. Settlement negotiations did not toll the running of the statute of limitations. Under those principles, the claims in this case were time-barred.

Date of Decision: July 3, 2017

Dutton v. American Bankers Insurance Company, September Term 2016, No. 1412, 2017 Phila. Ct. Com. Pl. LEXIS 181 (C.C.P. Phila. July 3, 2017) (Anders, J.)

JULY 2017 BAD FAITH CASES: COURT DECLINES TO CONSIDER MERITS OF ASSIGNED BAD FAITH CLAIM BECAUSE STATUTE OF LIMITATIONS HAD RUN (Western District)

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In 2007, the insured was involved in a motor vehicle accident, injuring another driver. The injured party filed a negligence action against the insured. The insurer sent a 2007 letter declining to defend or indemnify the insured. In 2008, the insurer filed a declaratory judgment action, claiming that it did not have a duty to defend or indemnify the insured. The court entered a consent order that the insurer owed no duty to defend or indemnify.

Around the same time-period, the injured party separately filed her own declaratory judgment against the insurer, arguing that the insurer was obligated to defend and indemnify the insured. This second declaratory judgment action did not assert claims for breach of contract or bad faith, and there was no assignment of such claims by the insured to the injured plaintiff. In February 2009, the injured party was given leave to withdraw this second declaratory judgment action, without prejudice.

The insured passed away in 2015. In 2016, after trial, the court entered judgment in favor of the injured party in the original 2007 negligence action, for a sum in excess of $1 Million. The estate assigned the injured party any and all of its rights, claims, demands, and causes of action against the insurer, including claims for breach of contract and bad faith.

The injured party subsequently filed an action against the insurer. The claims included breach of contract and statutory bad faith claim, as well as a request for declaratory relief. The court granted summary judgment on the assigned breach of contract and bad faith claims, though not as to the injured party’s own declaratory judgment count.

An assignee stands in the assignor shoes. Any causes of action the insured had for breach of contract and bad faith accrued when the insurer conveyed a letter denying any duty to defend and indemnify the 2007 negligence action (or, at the latest, in 2008, when the court entered the consent order). The court stated that any bad faith claim had to be raised no later than 2009 (under the two year statute of limitations governing statutory bad faith claims) or by 2011 for the breach of contract claim.

The court concluded: “In order to advance timely claims for breach of contract/bad faith, under the facts here, [the insured] would had to have filed suit and challenged that coverage denial in the 2008 ‘second’ declaratory judgment suit by seeking an assignment to include the breach of contract/bad faith claims at that time. Instead, [the insured] brought only a declaratory judgment action.”

As the bad faith claim was not filed within two years after the initial denial of coverage, the court found that the claim was time-barred.

Date of Decision: May 22, 2017

Falo v. Travelers Personal Insurance Co., No. 17cv0143, 2017 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 77425 (W.D. Pa. May 22, 2017) (Schwab, J.)

 

MARCH 2017 BAD FAITH CASES: TYING PAYMENT TO RELEASE OF BAD FAITH CLAIMS IS ONLY BAD FAITH IF THAT REQUEST IS PART OF INSURER’S REGULAR PRACTICE; REFUSAL TO EXTEND ONE-YEAR SUIT PERIOD WAS NOT BAD FAITH (Philadelphia Federal)

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The homeowner’s policy at issue provided a one-year period in which to bring suit. Some repair work was identified and paid, but the repairs needed on other sections of the home would go beyond the one-year period. The insured attempted to negotiate an extension or tolling of the one-year period, pending the repairs. As the one-year term was approaching, the insured filed a writ of summons to toll the period and the insurer filed a Rule to File a Complaint.

In response to the insured’s counsel continuing to seek a tolling agreement, the insurer’s “counsel responded that Plaintiff would have to release any bad faith claim … in order for [the insurer] to consider entering into a tolling agreement.” “Plaintiff’s counsel offered to waive any claims of past bad faith in exchange for a tolling agreement which would give Plaintiff an additional year to complete any necessary repairs.” In response, the insurer “sent a status letter reiterating the one-year suit limitation provision and did not respond to Plaintiff’s offer.” Plaintiff then filed a breach of contract and bad faith complaint.

The focus of the bad faith claim was the alleged unreasonable refusal to enter a tolling agreement. However, the pleading did not meet Twombly/Iqbal standards, and was dismissed without prejudice. The most the complaint said was that the insured had a homeowner’s policy, suffered a covered loss for which he received some benefits, and was refused an extension of the one-year suit period. The complaint did not offer any basis from which the court could conclude that the refusal to extend was not made on a reasonable basis.

More interestingly, the court then addressed the issue of the insurer’s tying a release of bad faith claims to its entering a tolling agreement. The insured argued that this violated Pennsylvania’s Unfair Insurance Practices Act (UIPA). The court accepted the Superior Court of Pennsylvania’s view that UIPA violations can be evidence of bad faith.

The regulation at issue “forbids insurers from ‘request[ing] a first-party claimant to sign a release that extends beyond the subject matter that gave rise to the claim payment,’ where it is shown that the insurer makes such requests ‘with a frequency that indicates a general business practice.’” Even though plaintiff alleged that the insurer conditioned its agreement on releasing bad faith claims, he “alleges no facts showing that [the insurer] had a regular practice of forcing insureds to release claims in this way….” Thus, the court could not “consider the potential violation of the regulation as a factor swaying against dismissal.”

Date of Decision: March 3, 2017

Jack v. State Farm Fire & Cas. Co., No. 16-5771, 2017 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 30136 (E.D. Pa. Mar. 3, 2017) (Baylson, J.)

DECEMBER 2016 BAD FAITH CASES: VIOLATION OF UNFAIR CLAIMS SETTLEMENT PRACTICES REGULATIONS ALONE CANNOT FORM THE BASIS OF A BAD FAITH CLAIM (Philadelphia Federal)

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In this homeowners’ case, the insured alleged breach of contract and bad faith. On the contract claim, the court focused on the contractual limitations period for bringing suit. The insured argued, among other things, that the insurer had a duty under the Unfair Claims Settlement Practices Regulations (UCSPR) to give notice of the suit limitation period, and failure to do so tolled that period. The court rejected this argument as a basis to toll the contract claim, as well as a basis for the bad faith claims.

As to the bad faith claim, the court further observed that a violation of the UCSPR standing alone does not establish clear and convincing evidence of bad faith. The court also rejected an argument concerning negotiations over a boiler’s repair or replacement as the basis for a bad faith claim.

Date of Decision: November 9, 2016

Pecko v. Allstate Ins. Co., No. 16-1988, 2016 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 155355 (E.D. Pa. Nov. 9, 2016) (Pratter, J.)

NOVEMBER 2016 BAD FAITH CASES: BAD FAITH CLAIM TIME BARRED WHERE SUIT BROUGHT 4 YEARS AFTER INSURER CLEARLY PROVIDED AN END DATE TO MEDICAL BENEFITS (Middle District)

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This first party injury case involved an insurer’s demanding independent medical examinations of the insured. The court found that the Motor Vehicle Financial Responsibility Law controlled, and that the insurer had to petition and show good cause for an IME. The insurance policies allowed for unlimited medical examinations, so long as they are reasonably required, and the insurer sought an IME under this provision.

The insured’s attorney did not agree to the conditions the insurer requested, and the insurer stopped paying first party medical benefits. The insured brought a breach of contract claim, successfully, but lost his bad faith claim on statute of limitations grounds.

Statutory bad faith claims are governed by a two-year statute of limitations. The insurer provided a clear and unambiguous letter setting forth the date it would stop paying medical benefits. The insured’s action was commenced 4 years later. Thus, the claim was time-barred and summary judgment was entered for the insurer on the bad faith claim.

Date of Decision: October 6, 2016

Scott v. Travelers Commercial Insurance Company, 14-CV-534, 2016 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 138728, (M.D. Pa. Oct. 6, 2016) (Schwab, M.J.)

JULY 2016 BAD FAITH CASES: BAD FAITH CLAIM AGAINST INSURER CONCERNING CRIMINAL CLAIMS AGAINST INSURED FOR HAVING MADE AN INSURANCE CLAIM IS NOT TOLLED UNTIL VINDICATION UNLESS INSURER INSTIGATED CRIMINAL PROCEEDING (Superior Court of Pennsylvania) (not precedential)

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In Fieldhouse v. Metropolitan Property and Casualty Insurance Company, the court provides an overview on when tolling applies to the bad faith statute of limitations where the issue involves criminal charges against an insured for a false insurance claim. The court points out that tolling applies if the insurer instigates the criminal proceeding, until the time when the insured successfully defends against the criminal charges. However, where the criminal process is not initiated through the insurer’s effort, there is no tolling.

Date of Decision: June 21, 2016

Fieldhouse v. Metro. Prop. & Cas. Ins. Co., No. 3056 EDA 2015, 2016 Pa. Super. Unpub. LEXIS 2166 (Pa. Super. Ct. June 21, 2016) (Bowes, Mundy, Musmanno, JJ.) (not precedential)

 

MARCH 2016 BAD FAITH CASES: NO BAD FAITH IN CASE WHERE PROFESSIONAL LIABILITY INSURER COVERED SUMS IT ALLOCATED TO INSURANCE BAD FAITH CLAIMS AGAINST ITS INSURED – A LIABILITY INSURER – BUT DID NOT COVER SUMS ALLOCATED TO UNCOVERED BREACH OF CONTRACT AND PUNITIVE DAMAGE CLAIMS (Philadelphia Federal)

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In United National Insurance Company v. Indian Harbor Insurance Company, the insured was itself an insurance company, which had been sued for bad faith (Insurer-1). The insurer-defendant in this action had issued a professional liability policy (Professional Liability Insurer). Two of Insurer 1’s insureds had been sued, and both of those matters ultimately resulted in bad faith claims against Insurer 1, which were settled.

Professional Liability Insurer contributed to the settlement of one of the claims, but Insurer 1 claimed it was required to pay more. Professional Liability Insurer did not pay anything toward settlement of the second claim on the basis that the professional liability policy’s self-insured retention had not been reached on covered claims. Insurer 1 sought some, but not all, of the settlement it paid from Professional Liability Insurer.

There was no dispute that the “bad faith” claims against Insurer 1 were covered as “Wrongful Acts”; however, breach of contract damages in settlement of the first action were not covered. As to the second settlement, again “bad faith” claims were covered, but punitive damages were not. The parties disputed the applicability of the allocation of sums to the settlement based on covered and uncovered claims against Insurer 1.

The court ruled in favor of Professional Liability Insurer with regard to the amounts contributed towards the settlements, and found that it had the right to allocate the settlements between covered and non-covered amounts pursuant to an unambiguous allocation provision in the policy.

The court noted that under Pennsylvania law, the insured has the burden to prove what portion of each settlement is covered under the policy, and the insured here failed to meet that burden. Thus, summary judgment was granted to Professional Liability Insurer on the coverage issues.

Insurer 1 had also brought a claim for “breach of duties”. While not specifically pleading a legal theory, Insurer 1 alleged that Professional Liability Insurer was liable for “engag[ing] in a pattern or practice of improperly investigating claims, refusing to pay defense costs and demanding improper allocation of loss in violation of its common law and statutory obligations.” It also made allegations against Professional Liability Insurer for “misrepresenting policy provisions, demanding reinsurance information, relying on provisions of the … policy that do not apply, and wrongfully denying payments….”

The court found this adequate to plead both statutory and common law bad faith claims.

As to the second lawsuit against Insurer 1, however, Professional Liability Insurer successfully argued that this claim was barred by the statute of limitations being two years for statutory bad faith and four years for common law contractual bad faith. “[W]here an insurer clearly and unequivocally puts an insured on notice that he or she will not be covered under a particular policy for a particular occurrence, the statute of limitations begins to run and the insured cannot avoid the limitations period by asserting that a continuing refusal to cover was a separate act of bad faith. … Repeated or continuing denials of coverage do not constitute separate acts of bad faith giving rise to a new statutory period.”

The present suit was not instituted until four years after notice had been given that no payment would be made toward the second settlement.

As to settlement of the first action, where Professional Liability Insurer had allocated some payment to Insurer 1, the court found that there was nothing in the record showing bad faith conduct, and summary judgment was granted as to all claims for bad faith. Date of Decision: February 8, 2016

United Nat’l Ins. Co. v. Indian Harbor Ins. Co., No. 14-6425, 2016 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 14791 (E.D. Pa. February 8, 2016) (Bartle, J.)

FEBRUARY 2016 BAD FAITH CASES: BAD FAITH CLAIM BASED ON INSURER’S ALLEGED COOPERATION WITH POLICE INVESTIGATION OF INSURED BARRED BY STATUTE OF LIMITATIONS (Philadelphia Court of Common Pleas)

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In Fieldhouse v. Metropolitan Property & Casualty Insurance Company, the Philadelphia Court of Common Pleas granted summary judgment on the insured’s bad faith claims, finding that the insured’s claim was barred by the applicable two-year limitations period.

On January 24, 2013, the insured filed a Complaint, alleging that he was in a car accident and his covered vehicle was damaged after striking a pedestrian. The insured’s car was impounded, and the insured submitted a claim to his insurer. In support of his claim for bad faith, the insured averred that the insurer’s employee assigned to investigate the claim acted in bad faith by “electing to actively participate in and contribute to a criminal investigation of the policyholder initiated by the Pennsylvania State Police… and obtained information which he thereafter shared with the Pennsylvania State Police.” The insured averred the employee’s actions occurred between August 13, 2008 and January 5, 2009.

The insurer asserted that the Pennsylvania State Police solicited information from the insurer as part of the police investigation into the insured. Moreover, it argued that the bad faith claims were time barred; that it was statutorily immune from civil suits for sharing information with law enforcement; there can be no bad faith by initiating a fraud investigation; the insured never presented a claim for damage, but even if he had presented a claim, it would be barred under the terms of the policy, and thus there could be no bad faith absent coverage.

The insurer argued that the statute of limitation began to run at the latest on January 5, 2009, when the employee last communicated with the police. The insured argued that the statute of limitations was tolled upon the institution of criminal charges, which were later noelle prossed.

The Court stated that “an action for bad faith may extend to an insurer’s investigative practices.” With regard to the two year statute of limitations for claims of bad faith, the Court stated that “the courts have expressly noticed that in contract actions the tolling of the statute begins at the time of the initial breach, whether or not the breach continues throughout the trial.” The court rejected the insured’s argument that the statute did not begin to run until the institution of criminal charges because there was no evidence that he was “induced not to sue”; and the criminal charges were brought at the instigation of the police, not the insurer.

Ultimately, the Court held that a cause of action accrues at the time of the insurer’s actions at issue, and because the alleged cooperation with the police was no later than January 5, 2009, the two year period ran before suit was instituted. [Note: The court did not specifically address whether the statute of limitations accrues in bad faith cases at the time a benefit is denied, and how conduct evidencing bad faith relates to triggering the statute of limitations. The Superior Court recently took a similar view that the statute of limitations in bad faith cases can be triggered by bad faith conduct which is not in and of itself the denial of a benefit.]

Date of Decision: December 1, 2015

Fieldhouse v. Metro. Prop. & Cas. Ins. Co., October Term 2012 No. 2205, 2015 Phila. Ct. Com. Pl. LEXIS 396 (C.C.P. Philadelphia Dec. 1, 2015) (Wright Padilla, J.)

FEBRUARY 2016 BAD FAITH CASES: STATUTE OF LIMITATIONS CAN BE TRIGGERED BY DENIAL OF BENEFIT, OR FAILURE TO INVESTIGATE THE SAME CLAIM AFTER DENIAL, WHERE INSURER IS PROVIDED WITH NEW INFORMATION (Pennsylvania Superior Court)

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In Rancosky v. Washington National Insurance Company, the Superior Court addressed a bad faith claim in the first party context, where the insured had purchased a “Cancer Policy”. The Superior Court ruled that the bad faith claim fell within the two year statute of limitations period based upon poor investigative practices, even when the original denial of the benefit was beyond the two year period.

The insurance policy had a contractual “suit limitations clause,” providing legal actions for benefits. However, for purposes of the bad faith claim, the court ultimately focused on the two year statute of limitations. The policy also contained detailed waiver of premium provisions based upon a manifestation of cancer and disability therefrom. The policy also addressed the situation where an insured ceased making direct premium payments via payroll checks, but could convert to making direct payments personally, while keeping coverage.

After going into the facts in painstaking detail, the Superior Court concluded that the waiver of premium provision should have applied; that there was no need to address conversion for future premium payments; and thus that the insurer’s denial of benefits for missing premium payments was an unreasonable position for the insurer to take.

At trial level, after a jury ruled for the insured on the breach of contract claim, the trial court ruled for the insurer on the bad faith claim.

The Superior Court reversed, and among other things in its close factual analysis, stated: “The record reflects that [the insurer] did not purport to conduct any investigation regarding [the] claim until it received [the insured’s] request for reconsideration … eighteen months after it had first received conflicting information regarding the starting date of [her] disability.” Before that time, the insured had provided 8 authorizations, all of which permitted the carrier to contact her employer and physicians “regarding the date when she first became unable, due to cancer, to perform all the substantial and material duties of [her] regular occupation.”

Instead, “despite requiring that [the insured] sign these authorizations, [the insurer] never bothered to use them to obtain the information that it needed in order to make an accurate determination as to the starting date of her disability.”

LEGAL ANALYSIS

  1. Self Interest and Ill Will are not elements of a bad faith claim.

First, the trial court effectively ruled that a bad faith plaintiff must establish the insurer had a motive of self-interest or ill will. As the Superior Court has stated numerous times in earlier opinions, this is not an element of proof in a statutory bad faith claim. Ill will or self-interest are only evidence that can be used to establish the second element of statutory bad faith, i.e., that the insurer knowingly or recklessly disregarded the first element, that there was no reasonable basis to withhold the benefit. While the trial court had ruled that self-interest or ill will were considered in weighing the first element, absence of a reasonable basis, the Superior Court found this was merely a back door ruling that self-interest or ill will were required elements to establish the claim.

  1. Superior Court defines bad faith expansively.

Second, as stated above, the appellate court reviewed the record and concluded that the trial court erred in finding there was a reasonable basis to deny coverage. In reaching this decision, the court rendered an expansive view of the bad faith statute.

It began by stating that “a heightened duty of good faith was imposed on [the insurer] in this first-party claim because of the special relationship between the insurer and its insured, and the very nature of the insurance contract.” It then stated that statutory bad faith under section 8371 “is not restricted to an insurer’s bad faith in denying a claim.” The Superior Court then cited six of its prior decisions as examples to support this point. It did not cite or discuss the Supreme Court’s 2007 Toy decision in this context, as to what constitutes a cognizable section 8371 bad faith claim. It solely cited language from the prior Superior Court decisions on, e.g., the breadth of the statute’s aim to stop all forms of bad faith, and that section 8371 was intended to address conduct that evades “the spirit of the bargain, lack of diligence and slacking off, willful rendering of imperfect performance, abuse of a power to specify terms, and interference with or failure to cooperate in the other party’s performance.”

  1. Bad Faith statute of limitations period can be extended by conduct of investigative practices, irrespective of the time when the claim was originally denied.

Third, and most significantly, the Superior Court addressed when the statute of limitations begins to run. It observed that “there is an important distinction between an initial act of alleged bad faith conduct and later independent and separate acts of such conduct.” It ruled that: “When a plaintiff alleges a subsequent and separately actionable instance of bad faith, distinct from and unrelated to the initial denial of coverage, a new limitations period begins to run from the later act of bad faith.” Thus, “[a]n inadequate investigation is a separate and independent injury to the insured.”

[Note: This conclusion is measured against a prior Superior Court opinion, and does not address the Supreme Court’s Toy decision. The court cites the Supreme Court’s Ash opinion on the bad faith statute’s limitations period, though it does not reference footnote 10 of the Ash opinion on the scope of the bad faith statute (“The bad faith insurance statute, on the other hand, is concerned with ‘the duty of good faith and fair dealing in the parties’ contract and the manner by which an insurer discharge[s] its obligation of defense and indemnification in the third party claim context or its obligation to pay for a loss in the first party claim context.”)]

The court then states that “a refusal to reconsider a denial of coverage based on new evidence is a separate and independent injury to the insured. The statute of limitations for such injuries begins to run, in the first instance, when the insurer communicates to the insured the results of its inadequate investigation, and in the latter instance, when the insurer communicates to the insured its refusal to consider the new evidence that discredits the insurer’s basis for its claim denial.” The Superior Court found that had the insurer conducted a “meaningful investigation” and “good faith investigation” into the additional information, or “undertaken to ‘research’ the new information” it would have discovered that there was no reasonable factual basis to deny coverage. Thus, the insurer’s “failure to conduct an meaningful investigation of [the] claim when it undertook to do so in [8 months after its original denial of the benefit], and its refusal to reconsider its denial of coverage based on the new information provided by [the insured] in her November 30, 2006 letter [7 months after the insurer’s original denial], constituted new injuries to the insured.”

By contrast, the Dissent in this 2-1 decision would have ruled that the statute of limitations began to run when the insurer first denied the benefit was due. In response, the majority stated that the Dissent unduly focused on the denial of the benefit as the basis for the bad faith claim, “without considering [the insured’s] claim for bad faith based on [the insurer’s] lack of good faith investigation.” Once again, citing prior Superior Court case law without reference to Toy or Ash, the court observed that “a claim for bad faith may be based on an insurer’s investigative practices.” Thus, “[i]n declining to acknowledge these tenets of Pennsylvania’s bad faith law, the Dissent has failed to acknowledge [the insured’s] claims for bad faith based on a lack of good faith investigation, or identify the date(s) on which such claims accrued. Thus, we abide by our conclusion that [insured’s] bad faith claim is not time-barred.”

4. Failure to allege bad faith based on litigation conduct waived

The insured also sought reversal on the basis that the trial court failed to consider the insurer’s litigation conduct during the bad faith litigation and trial itself. However, the insured had never made this argument prior to trial, and such an argument was waived.

  1. Court finds bad faith claim by a distinct insured was properly dismissed on summary judgment.

Lastly, the court affirmed a summary judgment against the foregoing insured’s husband, who likewise had developed cancer and was seeking relief from the same insurer. The court found that the husband insured had not provided evidence as to why it was not reasonably possible for him to have given the required notice under the policy.

While upholding this later judgment, the case was reversed and remanded on the wife insured’s bad faith claim.

Date of Decision: December 16, 2015

Rancosky v. Wash. Nat’l Ins. Co., Superior Court No. 1282 WDA 2014, 2015 Pa. Super. LEXIS 822 (Pa. Super. Ct. December 16, 2015)

The Supreme Court’s Rancosky decision ultimately held that self-interest and ill will are not elements of a statutory bad faith claim.