IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE
AT KNOXVILLE
September 21, 2004 Session
PAMELA K. GINN v. AMERICAN HERITAGE LIFE
INSURANCE COMPANY, ET AL.
Appeal from the Circuit Court for Monroe County
No. V01011P Lawrence H. Puckett, Judge
No. E2004-00198-COA-R3-CV - FILED DECEMBER 29, 2004
Pamela K. Ginn (“Plaintiff”) purchased a $50,000 life insurance policy on her husband through
American Heritage Life Insurance Company (“American Heritage”). When applying for the
insurance, Plaintiff told the insurance salesman, Daryle Gross (“Gross”), that her husband was in
“basic good health.” Plaintiff’s husband died a few weeks after the life insurance went into effect.
American Heritage denied Plaintiff’s demand for the life insurance proceeds, claiming Plaintiff had
materially misrepresented her husband’s health. Plaintiff sued American Heritage and Gross
(“Defendants”). The jury found Defendants breached their contract with Plaintiff. The jury also
found that the refusal to pay was done in bad faith, assessing a 25% bad faith penalty. The jury also
concluded Defendants had violated the Tennessee Consumer Protection Act (“TCPA”) and assessed
compensatory damages under the TCPA at $110,000, which was remitted by the Trial Court to
$73,855.15. Pursuant to the TCPA, the Trial Court then trebled the damages and awarded attorney
fees. When all was said and done, the amount of the judgment awarded to Plaintiff totaled
$284,980.60. Both Plaintiff and Defendants appeal various aspect of the Trial Court’s Judgment.
The Judgment of the Trial Court is reversed in part and affirmed in part, and judgment is entered in
favor of Plaintiff in the total amount of $73,415.15.
Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Circuit
Court Affirmed in Part and Reversed in Part; Case Remanded
D. MICHAEL SWINEY , J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which HERSCHEL P. FRANKS, P.J., and
CHARLES D. SUSANO , JR., J., joined.
William S. Lockett, Jr., Knoxville, Tennessee, for the Appellants American Heritage Life Insurance
Company and Daryle W. Gross.
John W. Cleveland, Sweetwater, Tennessee, for the Appellee Pamela K. Ginn.
OPINION
Background
This lawsuit involves a claim for life insurance proceeds with the threshold issue
being whether Plaintiff misrepresented her husband’s health when applying for the insurance.
Plaintiff knew her husband, Mr. Tony Ginn, had been diagnosed with diverticulitis in 1991 before
they were married in 1992. Her husband was prescribed antibiotics and the diverticulitis “cleared
up and he was fine.” The diverticulitis flared up again in 1998. This time, Mr. Ginn, who was 5'6"
and weighed 190 pounds, lost approximately 60 pounds. Mr. Ginn was treated by Dr. Kozawa who
prescribed antibiotics and instructed Mr. Ginn to eat a lot of fiber. Unfortunately, the fiber seemed
to make matters worse and, according to Plaintiff, her husband’s health went “downhill.” Mr. Ginn
nevertheless continued to work at a paint and body shop and engage in recreational activities with
his three children. Mr. Ginn eventually went to the emergency room when his symptoms did not
improve. By that time, he was unable to keep food down and when he did, he had diarrhea. After
being treated by various physicians, Mr. Ginn was instructed by Dr. McDonald to quit taking fiber.
Mr. Ginn then started to improve and regained approximately 20 pounds. Mr. Ginn stopped taking
antibiotics in January of 1999 and seemed to be feeling fine, although he continued to take five
milligrams of diazepam every day for stomach spasms.
Plaintiff has a seventh grade education and was employed as a sewing machine
operator at DCB Rothco (“DCB”). While employed at DCB, Plaintiff occasionally observed
defendant Gross, an insurance salesman, come into the plant. February 24, 1999, was the day
Plaintiff first spoke with Gross. According to Plaintiff, Gross “just walked up to my [sewing]
machine and approached me” about purchasing insurance. Plaintiff asked Gross how much life
insurance would cost, and he responded that it would be deducted from her payroll check and the
combined cost for Plaintiff and her husband would be $9.47 per week. Gross quoted her the price
after he asked Plaintiff if she and her husband were smokers, to which Plaintiff responded that they
were. Gross then asked Plaintiff if she or her husband had AIDS, and Plaintiff said that they did not.
Plaintiff testified that Gross then stated: “So, in other words, you’re in basic good health.” Plaintiff
responded in the affirmative. Plaintiff claims Gross did not ask her any other questions, took no
notes, and she never saw the application for life insurance. Gross did, however, set up his laptop
computer on her sewing machine and was entering information during their conversation. Plaintiff
claims Gross asked no other questions about her husband’s health. Plaintiff then signed what
“looked like [an] Etch-a-Sketch type board, a little square box.” Plaintiff testified that Gross asked
her to sign her husband’s application as well. The next day Gross brought her a folder with medical
injury claim forms, but nothing related to life insurance. Plaintiff noticed premiums being withheld
from her paycheck on March 9th, 1999. Plaintiff received the life insurance policies issued through
American Heritage on March 29th, 1999. Mr. Ginn died the next day of a myocardial infarction.
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Plaintiff received a letter dated August 11, 1999, from Claudia Osborne (“Osborne”)
in the Claims Department for American Heritage. Osborne expressed her condolences to Plaintiff
for the loss of her husband. Osborne then stated that had American Heritage been apprised of Mr.
Ginn’s actual medical condition, it would have “postponed” issuing a policy until “a definite
diagnosis had been made and it [was] determined we would have accepted that risk. Accordingly,
we regret we will be unable to honor your request for benefit. A refund of all premiums paid to date
will be sent to you under separate cover.”
Plaintiff filed this lawsuit in January of 2001 asserting claims based on breach of
contract, bad faith refusal to pay the insurance proceeds, as well as violations of the Tennessee
Consumer Protection Act, Tenn. Code Ann. §47-18-101, et seq. Defendants denied any liability to
Plaintiff, claiming Plaintiff had materially misrepresented the state of her husband’s health when she
applied for the insurance.
A trial was held in September of 2003 and much of Plaintiff’s testimony on direct
examination is set forth above. In addition to that testimony, Plaintiff also was asked about the
medical questions on the insurance application. These questions ask whether the applicant has
certain specific ailments or diseases. Plaintiff testified she never was asked any of these questions.
She also testified that other than questions about AIDS and smoking, the only other medical question
asked by Gross was whether she and her husband were in basic good health, to which Plaintiff
responded in the affirmative. When asked about her husband’s health at the time the application for
life insurance was completed, Plaintiff explained:
Q. Compared with the entire rest of the time that you had
known Tony Ginn, what was the state of his health on February the
24th.
A. In good health.
Q. Was there anything remarkable about his health,
physical condition, or treatment between then and the day that he
died?
A. No.
Q. Did he go back for any additional treatment or
examination?
A. He had a [colonoscopy … on] the 22nd of March. …
[After the colonoscopy] Dr. Gholson did come out and hand me some
pictures of – I guess of his colon and said that everything looked fine.
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Plaintiff went on to add that after the colonoscopy on March 22nd, her husband returned to work the
next day. The following Monday he became sick, “hurting in his chest, throwing up.” Mr. Ginn
went to work and called Plaintiff later that day telling her he still was feeling bad. Mr. Ginn died
in his sleep that night. The Certificate of Death listed the cause of death as a myocardial infarction.
Plaintiff met with Gross at DCB on the Monday following her husband’s death.
Gross provided Plaintiff with a form for a doctor to fill out and one for the beneficiary (i.e., Plaintiff)
to fill out. Plaintiff stated Gross asked why her husband was taking diazepam and why she indicated
he had been in good health. Plaintiff responded that “he was, as far as I was concerned.” Gross then
stated that he thought Mr. Ginn was in good health based on what Plaintiff had said, and Plaintiff
told him “he was, other than diverticulitis, [and] it’s not a life threatening disease. And [Gross] said,
well, that wasn’t no big deal, he had it also.”1
While receiving medical treatment in the past, Mr. Ginn had filled out a “Patient
Information Sheet.” This document is undated but appears to be from a recent medical examination.
Mr. Ginn was asked to list any chronic illnesses or conditions and he wrote: “Diverticulitis; High
Blood Pressure; Adrenal Nodule 2.3 x 1.7 cm, Hidal Hernia (sic); and Hemerode Disease (sic).”
Defendants, however, never asked Mr. Ginn for his medical information. Plaintiff admitted on
cross-examination that her husband had discussed with his doctor the possibility of having a portion
of his colon removed. The doctor informed Mr. Ginn that another colonoscopy would have to be
performed before that procedure would be considered, and this in why the colonoscopy was
performed in March of 1999 shortly before Mr. Ginn’s death. Plaintiff also testified on cross-
examination that her husband would only go to the doctor when the pain was so bad he “couldn’t
take it no longer.” Plaintiff then acknowledged that her husband was going to a doctor on a regular
basis the last year of his life.
Gross testified that he would go to businesses and sell various forms of insurance.
Shortly after arriving at DCB on February 24, 1999, a couple of employees informed him that
Plaintiff was interested in purchasing life insurance. Gross then “went to the plant supervisor to
seek authorization” to go onto the plant floor. Gross testified that the plant supervisor showed him
who Plaintiff was because he had never met her before. Gross testified it was typical business
practice when selling insurance on an employee’s spouse for the employee to sign for his or her
spouse when the insurance was being sold in the workplace.2 According to Gross, American
Heritage authorized him to sell insurance on the life of a spouse when the other spouse signed the
application. Disputing Plaintiff’s testimony, Gross stated that he asked Plaintiff the medical
questions and all of the questions that appeared on the application, except for a few questions where
no response was needed because they were not pertinent to life insurance policies. Gross earned a
commission of “[a]round seven dollars” on the sale of the policy insuring Plaintiff’s husband. Gross
1
One of Plaintiff’s coworkers testified she overheard this conversation at the time the initial application for
insurance was filled out, while Plaintiff’s testimony clearly was that it took place after her husband had died.
2
Defendants never have claimed the insurance was invalid because Plaintiff signed the application on her
husband’s behalf.
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claimed he specifically asked Plaintiff about whether her husband had any chronic conditions and
she responded that he did not. After Mr. Ginn died, Gross asked Plaintiff why she had not answered
that question correctly, and Plaintiff responded that she thought her husband’s condition (i.e.,
diverticulitis) was not that important. Gross went on to state that had Plaintiff answered the question
correctly, he still could have insured Mr. Ginn, but he would have had to go through a different
insurance company that was “a lot more liberal.” Gross stated:
[I also sell insurance for] Colonial Life and Accident … [and] if
someone had some pertinent health problems, I would place it with
them because they are a lot more liberal.
They don’t ask a lot of these questions that are on that
application and so those policies automatically get approved and you
have coverage.…
Gross went on to add that he carried two laptop computers with him. One of the
laptops contained only the application for Colonial. “Those that had health problems, I would have
opened the Colonial computer and I would enroll them in that ….” Gross stated that had Plaintiff
correctly informed him of her husband’ health, he would have closed the laptop with the American
Heritage application, and simply opened the one with the Colonial application. According to Gross,
the premiums charged by the two companies were substantially the same. The American Heritage
insurance application does not contain a question specifically asking if an applicant has diverticulitis,
but one of the questions does inquire about whether the applicant is in good health or if the applicant
has a chronic disease.
Pearl Harrison (“Harrison”) is the vice-president of claims for American Heritage.
Harrison testified that whenever a death occurs within two years of the inception of a life insurance
policy, the company requests medical records to determine whether or not the information received
in the records is consistent with the information provided on the application. With regard to Mr.
Ginn’s application, the underwriting department when reviewing Mr. Ginn’s medical records
concluded, due to the significant number of medical problems he was having, that at the very least,
American Heritage would have deferred issuing a policy until there was a final diagnosis. Harrison
testified that when the company obtained Mr. Ginn’s medical records, they discovered:
This gentleman had hypertension, rectal bleeding, which was
I believe bright red blood, as it was described. Severe abdominal
pain. He was on multiple medications. Relatively high doses for a
very long period of time.
He complained constantly, at one point he had back pain, he
had a family history of his father died in his 50s of colorectal cancer.
He had had colonoscopies. There were notes in the records indicating
that … the physicians were concerned about his negative findings, but
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his conditions [were] elusive. They couldn’t determine what his true
diagnosis was.
And it went on to describe a 60 pound weight loss in a brief
period of time. And the records appear to me to be ones where the
physicians were unable to diagnose this condition, but found it
significant enough to treat him frequently and to question what
significant problems he had going on.
Mr. Neal Crawford (“Crawford”) also testified for American Heritage. Crawford is
the vice-president in charge of underwriting and testified that when Mr. Ginn’s policy was issued,
American Heritage authorized its agents to have a spouse sign for the other spouse when they were
taking applications in the workplace. Crawford likewise testified that the claims department
investigates claims when a death occurs within two years of the policy being issued.
After the testimony was completed, the jury was furnished with a verdict form
containing various questions. With regard to the breach of contract claim, the jury found Plaintiff
had not falsely represented her husband’s health, and went further and found that Plaintiff had not
falsely represented her husband’s health with the intent to deceive the Defendants into issuing the
policy. Accordingly, the jury concluded Defendants breached their contract with Plaintiff and
awarded her the face value of the life insurance policy, i.e., $50,000. The jury also awarded pre-
judgment interest at the rate of 10%. The jury further found Defendants acted in bad faith when
refusing to pay Plaintiff, that the bad faith caused Plaintiff to incur additional expense, loss or injury,
and that Plaintiff was entitled to recover from Defendants a bad faith penalty of 25%. As to
Plaintiff’s TCPA claims, the jury found Defendants employed deceptive or unfair practices and
awarded Plaintiff compensatory damages under the TCPA in the amount of $110,000.
Plaintiff filed a post-trial motion seeking an award of attorney fees pursuant to the
TCPA. Plaintiff also sought discretionary costs in the amount of $1,853.51 pursuant to the TCPA
and Tenn. R. Civ. P. 54.04. Defendants filed a motion for a directed verdict or, in the alternative,
a motion for a new trial or to alter or amend the judgment. The Trial Court resolved the post-trial
issues by requiring Plaintiff to elect between her remedies, i.e., breach of contract and the bad faith
penalty, or the remedies available under the TCPA. Plaintiff elected the TCPA. The Trial Court
suggested a remittitur in the amount of compensatory damages awarded by the jury under the TCPA
from $110,000 to $73,855.15, which Plaintiff accepted. The Trial Court did, however, treble the
remitted compensatory damage award bringing the total award of compensatory damages to
$221,565.45. The Trial Court then awarded Plaintiff $40,000 in attorney fees, $1,853.51 in
discretionary costs, and $21,561.64 in pre-judgment interest. The total award to Plaintiff was
$284,980.60.
Defendants appeal raising numerous issues. Although not stated exactly as such,
Defendants claim: 1) the Trial Court erred by denying Defendants’ motion for directed verdict; 2)
the Trial Court erred when it refused to set aside the jury’s verdict when Plaintiff made a material
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misrepresentation when applying for the life insurance; 3) the jury’s finding of a violation of the
TCPA is not supported by the evidence; 4) the jury’s finding that Defendants acted in bad faith when
denying the claim is not supported by the evidence; 5) the Trial Court’s jury instruction on
misrepresentation was legally erroneous; and 6) the Trial Court erred in admitting certain evidence.
Plaintiff raises three additional issues. First, Plaintiff claims the Trial Court erred when it suggested
a remittitur in the amount of compensatory damages awarded by the jury pursuant to the TCPA.
Second, Plaintiff claims the Trial Court erred when it required her to choose between the breach of
contract remedies, including the bad faith penalty, or the remedies available under the TCPA.
Finally, Plaintiff claims that pursuant to the TCPA, she was entitled to an award of all of her attorney
fees and the Trial Court erred by only awarding a portion of those fees.
Discussion
We first address Defendants’ claims that the Trial Court erred in not directing a
verdict in their favor on the breach of contract claim. As this Court recently explained in Stooksbury
v. American Nat. Prop. and Cas. Co., 126 S.W.3d 505 (Tenn. Ct. App. 2003):
In deciding whether a trial court was correct in granting or denying a
motion for directed verdict, an appellate court cannot weigh the
evidence.
Rather, it must take the strongest legitimate view of the
evidence in favor of the plaintiff, indulging in all reasonable
inferences in his favor, and disregarding any evidence to the
contrary. The trial judge's action [granting a motion for
directed verdict] may be sustained only if there is no material
evidence in the record that would support a verdict for the
plaintiff, under any of the theories that he has advanced.
Wharton Transport Corp. v. Bridges, 606 S.W.2d 521, 525 (Tenn.
1980) (quoting Cecil v. Hardin, 575 S.W.2d 268, 271 (Tenn. 1978)).
To resolve this issue, we must determine if the Trial Court
was correct when it overruled Defendant's motion for directed verdict,
thereby implicitly concluding there was material evidence that would
support a verdict for Plaintiff.
Stooksbury, 126 S.W.3d at 516.
With regard to the breach of contract claim, the jury was asked two closely related
questions on this issue and found that Plaintiff had not falsely represented her husband’s medical
condition when applying for insurance. Whether Plaintiff made a misrepresentation as to her
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husband’s health is the threshold question both at trial and in this appeal. What this Court first must
determine is whether there was substantial and material evidence to support this aspect of the jury’s
verdict. The term “substantial and material evidence” has been defined as “such relevant evidence
as a reasonable mind might accept to support a rational conclusion and such as to furnish a
reasonably sound basis for the action under consideration.” Papachristou v. Univ. of Tennessee, 29
S.W.3d 487, 490 (Tenn. Ct. App. 2000) (quoting Clay Co. Manor, Inc. v. State, 849 S.W.2d 755,
759 (Tenn. 1993)). This Court also has described it as requiring “something less than a
preponderance of the evidence . . . but more than a scintilla or glimmer.” Gluck v. Civil Serv.
Comm’n, 15 S.W.3d 486, 490 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1999) (quoting Wayne Co. v. Tennessee Solid Waste
Disposal Control Bd., 756 S.W.2d 274, 280 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1988)).
We believe there was a clear factual issue presented to the jury on whether Plaintiff
materially misrepresented that her husband was in “basic good health.” As noted, this Court is not
to weigh the evidence, and we cannot say that Mr. Ginn’s health at the relevant time was so bad that
we must hold, as a matter of law, that there simply was no way Plaintiff could honestly and
subjectively have believed her husband to be in “basic good health.” Plaintiff testified she believed
her husband to be in basic good health at the time she applied for the insurance and why she believed
this to be so. For example, while Plaintiff testified that her husband had lost approximately sixty
pounds, he also had regained approximately twenty pounds after changing physicians. Further, there
was proof that Plaintiff’s husband continued all his activities, including his work, up until the day
he died. Additionally, Plaintiff’s testimony was directly contrary to Gross’ testimony concerning
which of the questions contained in the application Gross actually asked of her. The jury was at
liberty to believe or disbelieve that testimony, and it chose to credit Plaintiff’s testimony.
It is American Heritage that made the determination to allow Plaintiff to furnish her
spouse’s medical history for the insurance application and, in fact, sign her spouse’s name to the
application. This being so, what is relevant on the issue of misrepresentation is not what knowledge
Mr. Ginn had concerning his health, but rather what knowledge Plaintiff had concerning her
husband’s health. Accordingly, we conclude that there was substantial and material evidence to
support the jury’s verdict when it found that Plaintiff did not make any material misrepresentations
concerning her husband’s health when applying for his life insurance.
We next address whether the Trial Court erred when it charged the jury on
Defendants’ misrepresentation defense. The issue of whether a jury instruction was proper is a
question of law and is reviewed de novo without a presumption of correctness. See Owens v.
Methodist Health Care Systems, No. 02A019704-CV-00089, 1999 Tenn. App. LEXIS 359, at **4,
5 (Tenn. Ct. App. June 7, 1999). In Owens, we stated that “we consider the charge as a whole to
determine whether prejudicial error has been committed. The charge will not be invalidated so long
as it fairly defines the legal issues involved in the case and does not mislead the jury." Owens, 1999
Tenn. App. LEXIS 359, at * 5 (quoting Hunter v. Burke, 958 S.W.2d 751, 756 (Tenn. Ct. App.
1997)).
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Defendants’ primary disagreement with the jury instruction given by the Trial Court
is that it relied on language from Gatlin v. World Service Life Ins. Co., 616 S.W.2d 606 (Tenn.
1981), as opposed to what Defendants believe to be the more factually analogous Broyles v. Ford
Life Ins. Co., 594 S.W.2d 691 (Tenn. 1980). In Gatlin, our Supreme Court distinguished its earlier
opinion in Broyles by stating:
In this Court's recent decision of Broyles v. Ford Life Insurance Co.,
594 S.W.2d 691 (Tenn. 1980), the Court was faced with a situation
involving a term life insurance policy in which the insured had stated
that he was in "good health." In that case the insured had been under
treatment for leukemia; the treatment caused him to experience
blurred vision, headaches, stomach disorders, and rendered him
unable to take some medication. He was undergoing frequent tests
and although the treating physician would not say that he specifically
told Broyles that he had "leukemia," he testified that Broyles
positively knew he had a medical problem. There was a concurrent
finding by the trial court and the intermediate appellate court that
Broyles did not know he had leukemia, but this Court found, as a
matter of law, that he had misrepresented the state of his health, based
upon the overwhelming evidence that he knew he had a serious
medical problem. Another important distinction between the Broyles
case and the present one is that in Broyles the application form
contained a place for exceptions or limitations on the general
statements of health where it was indicated that applicants should
qualify the assertion of "good health," if appropriate. Thus, it was
much more evident in that case that the insurance carrier was relying
on the fact of "good health" rather than the mere representation or
opinion of such status.
Gatlin, 616 S.W.2d at 610-11.
We do not believe Broyles is applicable for two reasons. First, we have already
concluded that Mr. Ginn’s health, unlike Mr. Broyles’ health, was not such that we are required to
conclude, as a matter of law, that Plaintiff made a misrepresentation when she said Mr. Ginn was
in “basic good health.” As already concluded by us, there was substantial and material evidence to
support the jury’s verdict in finding that Plaintiff did not make any material misrepresentation
concerning her husband’s health when applying for her husband’s life insurance. Second, in Broyles
the application contained a “place for exceptions and limitations on the general statements of
health….” Here, Plaintiff testified she never saw the application completed by Gross on his laptop
computer, and that Gross never inquired further about her husband’s health other than asking if he
smoked, had AIDS, or was in basic good health. When considering the Trial Court’s charge to the
jury as a whole, we cannot conclude that the Trial Court committed reversible error when it relied
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more heavily on Gatlin than Broyles when charging the jury on the defense of misrepresentation
given the facts as presented to the jury.
The claimed misrepresentation was the only defense relied upon by Defendants when
denying Plaintiff’s claim. Having affirmed the verdict and the resulting judgment that Plaintiff did
not materially misrepresent her husband’s health, it necessarily follows that we will not disturb the
jury’s finding that there was a breach of contract.
The statute upon which Plaintiff was awarded a 25% bad faith penalty is Tenn. Code
Ann. § 56-7-105(a), which provides as follows:
The insurance companies of this state … in all cases when a
loss occurs and they refuse to pay the loss within sixty (60) days after
a demand has been made by the holder of the policy or fidelity bond
on which the loss occurred, shall be liable to pay the holder of the
policy or fidelity bond, in addition to the loss and interest thereon, a
sum not exceeding twenty-five percent (25%) on the liability for the
loss; provided, that it is made to appear to the court or jury trying the
case that the refusal to pay the loss was not in good faith, and that
such failure to pay inflicted additional expense, loss, or injury
including attorney fees upon the holder of the policy or fidelity bond;
and provided further, that such additional liability, within the limit
prescribed, shall, in the discretion of the court or jury trying the case,
be measured by the additional expense, loss, and injury including
attorney fees thus entailed.
Tenn. Code Ann. § 56-7-105(a) is penal in nature and must be strictly construed. See
Stooksbury, 126 S.W.3d at 519 (citing Minton v. Tennessee Farmers Mut. Ins. Co., 832 S.W.2d 35,
38 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1992)). In order to recover bad faith penalties under this statute, a plaintiff must
prove: “(1) the policy of insurance must, by its terms, have become due and payable, (2) a formal
demand for payment must have been made, (3) the insured must have waited 60 days after making
demand before filing suit (unless there was a refusal to pay prior to the expiration of the 60 days),
and (4) the refusal to pay must not have been in good faith.” Stooksbury, 126 S.W.3d at 519. The
burden of proving that an insurance company acted in bad faith in refusing to pay a claim lies with
Plaintiff herein. Id; see also Nelms v. Tennessee Farmers Mut. Ins. Co., 613 S.W.2d 481, 484 (Tenn.
Ct. App. 1978). In Sisk v. Valley Forge Ins. Co., 640 S.W.2d 844 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1982), this Court
explained that:
The bad faith penalty is not recoverable in every refusal of an
insurance company to pay a loss. An insurance company is entitled
to rely upon available defenses and refuse payment if there is
substantial legal grounds that the policy does not afford coverage for
the alleged loss. If an insurance company unsuccessfully asserts a
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defense and the defense was made in good faith, the statute does not
permit the (sic) imposing of the bad faith penalty.
Sisk, 640 S.W.2d at 852 (emphasis in original)(quoting Nelms v. Tennessee Farmers Mutual Ins. Co.,
613 S.W.2d 481, 484 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1978)).
The jury’s verdict awarding a bad faith penalty can be set aside only if there is no
material evidence to support it. Tenn. R. App. P. 13(d); Forrester v. Stockstill, 869 S.W.2d 328, 329
(Tenn. 1994). However, the verdict cannot be based upon a “mere spark, glimmer, or scintilla of
evidence.” See Stooksbury, 126 S.W.3d at 519 (quoting Sadek v. Nashville Recycling Co., 751
S.W.2d 428, 431 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1988)). In our opinion, Defendants had substantial legal grounds
supporting their position that Plaintiff materially misrepresented her husband to be in “basic good
health” when applying for the life insurance. This is readily apparent given Mr. Ginn’s troubled
medical history. Defendants simply unsuccessfully asserted the misrepresentation defense. We find
no material evidence whatsoever to support the jury’s conclusion that this defense was asserted in
bad faith. Accordingly, we reverse the judgment of the Trial Court insofar as it awards Plaintiff a
bad faith penalty of 25%. See Stooksbury, 126 S.W.3d at 519 (reversing a 25% bad faith penalty
after concluding the defendant had substantial legal grounds supporting its position that the
plaintiffs’ insurance coverage had been cancelled prior to the date of loss). See also Sisk v. Valley
Forge Ins. Co., 640 S.W.2d 844, 852 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1982)(“There were substantial legal grounds,
though not sustained, for the insurer to defend herein. Therefore, we believe the finding of bad faith
must be overturned.”); Nelms v. Tennessee Farmers Mutual Ins. Co, 613 S.W.2d 481, 484 (Tenn.
Ct. App. 1978) (Reversing the jury’s award of a 25% bad faith penalty after concluding there were
“valid reasons for the insurance company to question the loss. Further, we think the insurance
company honestly and in good faith believed … its policy was not liable for the loss. For the above
reasons we think there is no material evidence to support a finding of bad faith and the invoking of
the statutory penalty.”).
Defendants claim the Trial Court erred in not directing a verdict in their favor on
Plaintiff’s TCPA claims. They also raise the related issue of whether Plaintiff even stated an
actionable claim under the TCPA. We will quote the Trial Court’s entire charge to the jury on this
claim:
The plaintiff claims that defendant used the following unfair
or deceptive acts or practices that violate the Tennessee Consumer
Protection law: Tennessee Code Annotated 47-18-104(12).
Representing that a consumer transaction confers or involves rights,
remedies or obligations that it does not have or involve or which are
prohibited by law; Tennessee Code Annotated 47-18-104(14).
Causing confusion or misunderstanding with respect to the authority
of a salesperson, representative or agent to negotiate the final terms
of a consumer transaction; Tennessee Code Annotated 47-18-104(27).
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Engaging in any other act or practice which is deceptive to the
consumer or to any other person.
If you find that the plaintiff has proven by a preponderance of
the evidence that the defendant used any one or more of these acts or
practices, then defendant has violated the Tennessee Consumer
Protection Law.
The plaintiff is entitled to actual damages for any loss of
money, property, or thing of value that was caused by the defendant’s
use of the unfair or deceptive acts or practices.
As we noted in Stooksbury, the “stated purpose of the TCPA is to ‘protect consumers
and legitimate business enterprises from those who engage in unfair or deceptive acts or practices
in the conduct of any trade or commerce in part or wholly within this state.’” Stooksbury, 126
S.W.3d at 520 (quoting Tenn. Code Ann. § 47-18-102(2)). We also noted in Stooksbury that the
TCPA applies to insurance companies. We stated:
The applicability of the TCPA to insurance companies was recently
discussed by our Supreme Court in Myint v. Allstate Ins. Co., 970
S.W.2d 920 (Tenn. 1998). In Myint, the plaintiffs brought suit after
Allstate refused to pay on a claim due to the suspicious nature of the
cause of two fires which ultimately resulted in substantial damage to
the plaintiffs’ property. It was stipulated by the parties that both fires
were set intentionally, but the plaintiffs steadfastly denied that they
set the fires. Id. at 923. The main issue to be decided by the Supreme
Court was whether the TCPA was applicable to insurance companies.
The Court held that it was, concluding the legislature intended the
TCPA to be complementary to other statutes regulating the insurance
industry. After reaching this result, the Court then decided whether
the denial of the plaintiffs’ insurance claim constituted a violation of
the Act. The Court stated:
While the sale of a policy of insurance easily falls
under this definition of “trade” and “commerce,” we conclude
that Allstate’s conduct in handling the Myints’ insurance
policy was neither unfair nor deceptive. The record reveals
no evidence of an attempt by Allstate to violate the terms of
the policy, deceive the Myints about the terms of the policy,
or otherwise act unfairly. It is apparent that the denial of the
Myints’ claim was Allstate’s reaction to circumstances which
Allstate believed to be suspicious. Consequently, Allstate’s
conduct does not fall within the purview of the Tennessee
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Consumer Protection Act, and the Myints are not entitled to
the benefits of treble damages and attorney’s fees recoverable
under the Act.
Stooksbury, 126 S.W.3d at 520 (quoting Myint, 970 S.W.2d at 926).
Here the jury was not asked to state what conduct by Defendants it believed to be
unfair or deceptive. Instead, the jury simply was asked whether Defendants had engaged in
deceptive or unfair acts in violation of the TCPA. In her brief on appeal, Plaintiff lists certain
conduct which she believes supports the jury’s verdict on this claim. For example, Plaintiff claims
Defendants violated the TCPA simply because they took the application for insurance “from
piecework employees trying to make production at their workstations….” Plaintiff also claims the
manner in which Gross took the application was a violation of the TCPA, such as when he failed to
read Plaintiff the questions contained on the application. What Plaintiff overlooks is that she seeks
the benefit of all this alleged conduct when she claims that she had a valid contract of insurance,
successfully we might add.
Plaintiff also claims the Defendants’ denial of her claim violated the TCPA. Plaintiff
claims, among other things, that the denial of her claim was unfair and deceptive because Mr. Ginn’s
medical records were not reviewed by a physician or someone with medical training. We fail to see
how this even remotely states a cause of action under the TCPA.
Plaintiff’s husband had a valid life insurance contract, and Defendants have never
questioned that with the sole exception being whether Plaintiff made material misrepresentations
about her husband’s health. Today we reach the same ultimate conclusion reached by this Court in
Stooksbury and by our Supreme Court in Myint. We conclude there was no unfair or deceptive
conduct by Defendants when the insurance contract was entered into; there was no unfair or
deceptive conduct by Defendants when handling Plaintiff’s claim; there was no evidence of an
attempt by Defendants to violate the terms of the policy; and Defendants had substantial legal
grounds to support their defense to Plaintiff’s claim for benefits.3 After reviewing the entire record
in this case, we conclude there is no substantial or material evidence upon which the jury could have
concluded Defendants violated the TCPA. In short, Plaintiff got exactly what she bargained for –
a $50,000 life insurance policy on her husband. The only reason American Heritage claimed
Plaintiff was not entitled to the proceeds was its good faith belief, albeit mistaken, that Plaintiff
materially misrepresented her husband’s health. Finding no substantial and material evidence
3
Plaintiff apparently anticipated American Heritage was going to claim that Gross improperly allowed Plaintiff
to sign the application on her husband’s behalf. At trial Plaintiff testified to an alleged conversation she had with Gross
where he supposedly told Plaintiff to say her husband actually did sign the application. Assuming for present purposes
only that Gross misrepresenting to Plaintiff that she had authority to sign the application on her husband’s behalf would
or could be a violation of the TCPA, the facts in this case do not support such a claim and it should never have been an
issue at trial. Both Gross and American Heritage unequivocally testified that Gross was authorized to have Plaintiff sign
the application on her husband’s behalf. More importantly, Defendants did not deny Plaintiff’s claim on that basis and
never made that argument either before or at trial.
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anywhere in the record to support a verdict for Plaintiff pursuant to the TCPA, we reverse that
portion of the Trial Court’s judgment. We likewise reverse the award of attorney fees pursuant to
the TCPA. In light of this holding, we pretermit Plaintiff’s claim that the Trial Court erred in forcing
her to elect between remedies, and that it further erred by not awarding her all the attorney fees she
requested.
Defendants’ final issue surrounds whether or not certain evidence should have been
admitted. More specifically, Defendants claim the Trial Court improperly allowed Plaintiff to testify
about the statements of Mr. Ginn’s physician following the March 22, 1999, colonoscopy wherein
the physician told Plaintiff “everything looked fine.” Defendants also claim the Trial Court
improperly refused to allow them to impeach one of Plaintiff’s witnesses via inconsistent statements
contained in an affidavit. We review these evidentiary determination under the abuse of discretion
standard. Otis v. Cambridge Mut. Fire Ins. Co., 850 S.W.2d 439, 442 (Tenn.1992) (holding
"admissibility of evidence is within the sound discretion of the trial judge").
Tenn. R. App. P. 36(b) provides that a “final judgment from which relief is available
and otherwise appropriate shall not be set aside unless, considering the whole record, error involving
a substantial right more probably than not affected the judgment or would result in prejudice to the
judicial process.” This Court has reviewed all of the evidence in this case and the entire record.
Even if Defendants are correct that these evidentiary rulings by the Trial Court were incorrect, we
nevertheless conclude that such rulings did not involve a substantial right that more probably than
not affected the jury’s verdict or the judgment as amended by this Court. Therefore, even if these
rulings were incorrect, Defendants would not be entitled to a new trial.
After the jury rendered its verdict, the Trial Court required Plaintiff to choose between
the remedies available under the breach of contract claim or the remedies available under the TCPA.
Since we reversed the judgment insofar as it awarded any damages under the TCPA, we must
necessarily reinstate the jury’s verdict awarding Plaintiff compensatory damages for breach of
contract in the amount of $50,000, the policy value. Defendants do not challenge the award of
prejudgment interest or discretionary costs, and we affirm those aspects of the judgment. The
Judgment of the Trial Court is affirmed insofar as it awards Plaintiff $50,000 in compensatory
damages, $21,561.64 in prejudgment interest, and $1,853.51 in discretionary costs, bringing the total
judgment to $73,415.15.
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Conclusion
The Judgment of the Trial Court is affirmed in part and reversed in part. Specifically,
the judgment of the Trial Court is modified so as to award Plaintiff $50,000 in compensatory
damages, $21,561.64 in prejudgment interest, and $1,853.51 in discretionary costs for a total
judgment of $73,415.15. This case is remanded to the Trial Court for collection of the costs below.
Costs on appeal are assessed one-half against the Appellants American Heritage Life Insurance
Company and Daryle W. Gross, and their surety, and one-half against the Appellee Pamela K. Ginn.
___________________________________
D. MICHAEL SWINEY, JUDGE
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