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THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF ALASKA
ALLSTATE INSURANCE COMPANY )
and KATHY BERRY, ) Supreme Court No. S-16509
)
Appellants, ) Superior Court No. 4BE-04-00103 CI
v. )
) OPINION
MARY KENICK and ANGELINA )
TRAILOV, ) No. 7331 – January 25, 2019
)
Appellees. )
)
Appeal from the Superior Court of the State of Alaska,
Fourth Judicial District, Bethel, Charles W. Ray Jr. and
Bethany S. Harbison, Judges.
Appearances: Gary A. Zipkin and Kristin E. Bryant, Guess
& Rudd, P.C., Anchorage; Rebecca J. Hozubin, Hozubin
Moberly Lynch & Associates, Anchorage; and Peter H. Klee,
Sheppard, Mullin, Richter & Hampton, LLP, San Diego,
California, for Appellant Allstate Insurance Company.
Alfred Clayton, Jr., Clayton & Diemer, LLC, Anchorage, for
Appellant Kathy Berry. Mark A. Sandberg, Law Office of
Mark A. Sandberg, Anchorage; Dennis Mestas, Law Office
of Dennis Mestas, Anchorage; and Myron E. Angstman,
Angstman Law Office, Bethel, for Appellees Mary Kenick
and Angelina Trailov.
Before: Stowers, Chief Justice, Winfree, Maassen, Bolger,
and Carney, Justices.
CARNEY, Justice.
I. INTRODUCTION
We are asked to determine the preclusive effect of a declaratory judgment
in favor of an insurance company against its insured in federal court in a subsequent state
court proceeding. The superior court concluded that the declaratory judgment had no
preclusive effect on a negligent adjustment action brought in state court by the insured’s
assignees against the insurance company and its claims adjuster. The state action
proceeded to an 11-day jury trial ending with a multi-million dollar verdict against the
insurance company and its claims adjuster.
The insurance company and the adjuster raise a number of issues on appeal,
but it is necessary for us to decide only one: the preclusive effect of the federal
declaratory judgment. The declaratory judgment determined that the insurance company
and the adjuster acted reasonably when they offered policy limits to settle the underlying
claim against the insured. Because the insurance company’s and adjustor’s
reasonableness in adjusting the insurance claim is a necessary element of a negligent
adjustment tort, we hold that the assignees of the insured were precluded from
relitigating this issue. The superior court therefore erred in denying the insurance
company’s and claims adjuster’s motions for summary judgment, and we vacate the
judgment against them.
II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS
A. Facts
In mid-September 2002 Charles Herron, who was under the influence of
alcohol and not old enough to legally possess or consume it, was involved in a single-
vehicle accident in Bethel. A 15-year-old passenger in Herron’s vehicle, Angelina
Trailov, was injured.
Herron was insured by Allstate Insurance Company. The policy provided
liability coverage of up to $100,000 per person/$300,000 per occurrence, medical
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payments coverage of $25,000 per person, and underinsured motorist (UIM) coverage
of up to $100,000 per person/$300,000 per occurrence.
Shortly after the accident Allstate was notified of Trailov’s injuries and her
liability claim against Herron. By the end of September Allstate received notice that
attorney Michele Power represented Trailov in the matter. Allstate assigned Trailov’s
bodily injury claim to its in-house claims adjuster, Kathy Berry. Over the next few
months Berry and Power corresponded regarding Trailov’s claim; much of their
communication related to obtaining medical records documenting Trailov’s injuries.
Power made a “policy limits demand plus attorney’s fees, costs and
interest” for Trailov’s claim in a February 14, 2003, letter to Berry. In the same letter
Power also for the first time asserted a separate negligent infliction of emotional distress
(NIED) claim on behalf of Mary Kenick, Trailov’s mother. Power made “a policy limits
demand plus attorney’s fees, costs and interest” for Kenick’s NIED claim.
In March Berry responded to Power’s February demand letter. Berry
requested additional information about any treatment Trailov had received since the
accident. She also asked for information about Kenick’s NIED claim.
Power responded in April that Kenick had taken a new job because of her
emotional distress from the accident (and had taken a substantial pay cut); however,
Power noted that Kenick had not sought counseling. Power asserted that Trailov had
been absent-minded and forgetful since the accident and disclosed for the first time that
Trailov was suffering back pain from the accident. In closing Power wrote: “While the
offer dated February 14, 200[3], remains open, it will be revoked on May 16, 2003, and
a complaint will be filed, unless there is some discussion regarding pre-filing resolution.”
On May 9 Berry responded to Power that “[w]e are in the process of
completing our evaluation of Angelina Trailov’s claim and anticipate responding to your
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demand by your May 16, 2003 deadline.” Berry stated she needed additional support for
Kenick’s NIED claim.
On May 15 Power sent Berry two pay stubs for Kenick as proof of her
NIED claim; there was no mention of the May 16 deadline in the letter. On May 16
Berry sent another letter to Power requesting additional information about Kenick’s job
change and its relationship to the NIED claim. Berry also advised that Allstate’s
evaluation of Trailov’s claim was not complete: “Our evaluation will be completed by
the end of the month, and I am hoping to respond to your demand sooner than that.”
Berry referred the entire claim to a higher-ranking claims adjuster for
evaluation. That adjuster directed Berry to open a UIM claim for Trailov because, based
upon her knowledge of similar claims in the Bethel area, Trailov would likely receive the
$100,000 policy limit on the UIM claim as well as the underlying liability limit of
$100,000. But the second adjuster suggested offering $10,000 for the NIED claim
because she did not believe there was sufficient information to determine its value.
On May 29, 2003, an attorney from the Law Office of Dennis Mestas wrote
to Berry that he had been retained as co-counsel to file suit on behalf of Kenick and
Trailov. The letter stated that the policy limits offer had lapsed on May 16 and that no
further policy limits offers would be made or accepted. The following day Berry wrote
to Power offering to settle Trailov’s bodily injury claim for $112,500, encompassing
policy limits plus attorneys’ fees. Berry also offered to settle Kenick’s NIED claim for
$10,000 in an effort to resolve the matter expeditiously, but she advised that if the offer
was not accepted she would need additional documentation for the claim.
B. Proceedings
Three pleadings, and the proceedings related to them, define the current
appeal. The first pleading is Kenick’s and Trailov’s personal injury and NIED complaint
against Herron filed in June 2003 in the superior court in Bethel. The second is
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Allstate’s March 2004 federal complaint against Herron for declaratory relief. And the
third pleading is the complaint filed by Kenick and Trailov as Herron’s assignees against
Allstate in April 2004 in the superior court in Bethel.
In their June 2003 personal injury complaint against Herron, Kenick and
Trailov sought both compensatory and punitive damages for injuries and distress
resulting from the September 2002 accident. Herron resolved Kenick and Trailov’s
personal injury action against him in early April 2004 by signing a consent to entry of
judgment. Herron consented to judgment in favor of Kenick, on behalf of her minor
daughter Trailov, for $1,750,000 on Trailov’s liability claims and attorneys’ fees and
consented to judgment in favor of Kenick for $187,500 on her NIED claim and
attorneys’ fees. The total judgment entered against Herron was $1,937,500. He also
assigned to Kenick and Trailov any and all legal claims he possessed against Allstate.
Herron and Kenick, individually and on behalf of Trailov, also entered into a covenant
not to execute on any of Herron’s assets other than the potential proceeds from the
assigned claims against Allstate.
Meanwhile in early March 2004 Allstate filed a complaint for declaratory
relief in the U.S. District Court for the District of Alaska in anticipation of Herron
confessing judgment in the accident-related personal injury suit. Allstate requested a
declaration that “its good faith attempt to settle Trailov and Kenick’s claims satisfied its
obligation to its insured, and a further declaration that Allstate [wa]s not obligated to pay
any portion of the confessed judgment that exceed[ed] the limit of the bodily injury
coverage afforded Herron under the [p]olicy.” In late May, due to Herron’s April
confession of judgment and assignment of claims, Allstate amended its federal complaint
for declaratory relief. The only material addition was the statement that Herron had
confessed judgment and assigned his rights against Allstate.
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In April 2004, shortly after Herron’s confession of judgment, Kenick and
Trailov, as his assignees, filed a complaint against Allstate and Berry in the Bethel
superior court. Kenick and Trailov asserted that Allstate and Berry had negligently and
recklessly adjusted the claims arising from the accident and by doing so they had
exposed Herron to a large nondischargeable liability. Kenick and Trailov argued that as
Herron’s assignees they were entitled to compensatory damages in the amounts agreed
to in the confessed judgments and to punitive damages in an amount to be determined
by a jury. The superior court action was stayed during the pendency of the federal
declaratory action.
In late June 2004 Herron answered Allstate’s declaratory complaint; Kenick
and Trailov were not parties to that action. Herron asserted a number of affirmative
defenses, including an allegation that “the plaintiff’s damages, if any, are the result, in
whole or in part, of its negligence, or that of others for whom the defendant is not
responsible.” He also alleged that Allstate had breached the insurance contract.
In early December 2004 Allstate filed a second amended complaint for
declaratory relief, seeking declarations that Herron breached the insurance contract when
he confessed judgment and assigned his rights and that his “breach was not excused by
any prior material breach by Allstate” and thus “voided the insurance contract.” Later
that month Allstate filed a notice ratifying Berry’s conduct and actions as an Allstate
employee.
Berry was Allstate’s first witness in the federal trial, held in June 2008.
After describing her employment in 2002-03, she discussed her evaluation of Kenick’s
and Trailov’s claims. She was cross-examined about actions she took relating to her
determination of the claims’ reserves, company standards and legal requirements for
documenting her file, and the language of her communications with Power from
February to May 2003. Berry was also questioned about alleged delays in obtaining
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medical records relevant to evaluating Trailov’s claim; her delay in responding to
Power’s communications; the lack of documentation about when she evaluated Trailov’s
claim; and the lack of an apparent reason why Trailov’s claim could not have been
evaluated by May 16, Power’s purported deadline to avoid a lawsuit. In response to
questioning about the meaning of Power’s April letter, Berry testified that she believed
it required either that Allstate agree to settle for policy limits or that it engage in
settlement discussions. Berry testified that she believed that discussion of settlement in
her May 9 and May 16 letters satisfied the terms of the April letter.
Allstate called Charles Bean as an expert in handling insurance claims.
Bean testified that Allstate’s claims handling from February 14 to May 31, 2003, met
industry standards. Bean also testified to his understanding of the communications
between Berry and Power, including the meaning of Power’s April letter. Bean opined
that Berry’s evaluation of Trailov’s claim was of a high quality and that Berry’s
documentation in the claims log was acceptable. Bean also believed Allstate had acted
appropriately to protect Herron’s interests. On cross-examination Bean agreed that
Allstate had a duty to protect Herron and conduct an investigation. He conceded that it
was unclear when Berry performed her evaluation of Trailov’s claim and that Allstate
“could” have done the evaluation prior to May 16.
Allstate also called Power as a witness. Power conceded that her April
letter was too imprecise for Berry to rely on and that the letter’s meaning was unclear.
At the close of evidence, after instructing the jury that Allstate had the
burden of proof in the matter, the court further instructed that:
An insurer is bound to exercise that degree of care which an
insurer of ordinary prudence would exercise. Insurance is a
profession with skill in the investigation and settlement of
liability claims. It is not an extraordinary degree of care, but
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the care that a reasonable insurer is required to exercise under
the circumstances.
The court next instructed the jury:
In response to a policy limits demand, an insurer owes a duty
to its insured to offer the full policy limits available when the
insurer knows or should know that there is a substantial
likelihood of an excess verdict against that insured.
These were the only substantive legal instructions given to the jury in the 13 closing
instructions.
Only a single question was submitted to the jury: “Considering all the facts
and circumstances contained in the evidence submitted to you, did Allstate act
reasonably by offering policy limits on May 30, 2003?” The jury answered the question
“yes” and returned the verdict in favor of Allstate.
The federal court entered judgment that “Allstate did act reasonably by
offering policy limits on May 30, 2003.” Allstate moved to amend the judgment; the
federal court granted Allstate’s motion in February 2009. The amended judgment stated:
1. The jury returned a verdict in favor of Allstate on June 11,
2008, finding that under all the facts and circumstances
Allstate acted reasonably by offering policy limits on
May 30, 2003.
2. It is undisputed that Herron breached the insurance
contract by consenting to entry of judgment and assigning his
rights without Allstate’s consent.
3. Pursuant to the jury’s verdict, Herron’s breach was not
excused by any prior breach by Allstate.
4. Herron’s breach voided the insurance policy’s liability
coverage.
5. Herron’s assignment of rights to Trailov and Kenick is
null and void because Herron had no rights to assign as of the
date of the assignment.
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Herron appealed to the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals in March 2009. He
argued that the district court’s exercise of jurisdiction was improper, the court erred in
not granting Herron’s motions for summary judgment or directed verdict, the court erred
in excluding evidence concerning other claimed breaches by Allstate, and the judgment
was improperly amended.
The Ninth Circuit ruled in March 2011 that the district court had not
improperly exercised its jurisdiction over Allstate’s suit for declaratory relief.1 After
addressing Herron’s argument that the district court had improperly exercised
jurisdiction, the Ninth Circuit stated:
The issues in this suit and the tort suit overlap solely because
Kenick and Trailov’s rights against Allstate are entirely
derivative of Herron’s rights under his insurance agreement.
The jury’s declaration of Allstate’s reasonableness pertains
to Alaska law defining an insurer’s contractual obligations to
its insured, not tort law. That declaration may well be fatal to
Kenick and Trailov’s tort claims against Allstate, but only
because an unexcused breach of the contract by Herron may
have thus prevented him from assigning any rights against
Allstate to Kenick and Trailov in the first place. At bottom,
Allstate’s suit sounds in contract, not tort, regardless whether
the merits of this action have become entwined with a
defense Allstate may potentially raise to Kenick and Trailov’s
derivative tort action.[2]
The Ninth Circuit held that the district court had abused its discretion by
amending the judgment to include paragraphs 4 and 5.3 The jury had not considered
1
Allstate Ins. Co. v. Herron, 634 F.3d 1101, 1108 (9th Cir. 2011).
2
Id. (citing Cont’l Ins. Co. v. Bayless & Roberts, Inc., 608 P.2d 281, 293
(Alaska 1980)).
3
Id. at 1112-13.
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whether Herron’s breach prejudiced Allstate enough to void the insurance policy’s
liability coverage.4 And without a finding of prejudice, Allstate was not relieved of its
liability up to the policy limits.5 The appeals court then found that entering paragraph 5
of the judgment was an abuse of discretion, stating: “[B]ecause Allstate remains liable
to Herron within the insurance policy’s limits, Herron retained assignable rights against
Allstate to the extent of that liability.”6
On remand the district court granted partial summary judgment on the issue
of prejudice in favor of Herron. The district court found that, as a matter of law,
Herron’s confession of judgment had not prejudiced Allstate and thus had not voided
Allstate’s obligation to indemnify him up to the policy limits. The court entered a second
amended final judgment in July 2012. It removed paragraphs 4 and 5 of the first
amended final judgment and added a new paragraph 4: “Herron’s breach did not
prejudice Allstate, therefore it did not void the liability portion of the insurance policy.”
Following the conclusion of the federal case, the superior court lifted its
stay of the state proceedings. In July 2012 Allstate moved to dismiss the state court case,
arguing that Herron’s assignment of claims to Kenick and Trailov was invalid and that
Kenick’s and Trailov’s claims had been conclusively determined in the federal case.
Berry joined Allstate’s motion. Kenick and Trailov responded that the federal court’s
holding that Allstate was not prejudiced by Herron’s breach meant that the assignment
had not been voided. They filed a cross-motion for summary judgment, arguing they
were not precluded from litigating their negligent adjustment claim because this claim
4
Id.
5
Id. at 1113.
6
Id.
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had not been adjudicated on the merits to a final judgment in the federal declaratory
action.
In March 2013 the superior court denied Allstate’s motion — which it
treated as a summary judgment motion7 — and granted Kenick and Trailov’s
cross-motion for summary judgment. The court found that identical issues had not been
decided in the federal declaratory action; it therefore held that issue preclusion did not
preclude litigation of the negligent adjustment claim. The court stated that the federal
court had not “decide[d] any issues of Alaska law outside of that defining Herron and
Allstate’s contractual relationship” and that the issue of negligence was not identical to
any issue decided in the federal declaratory action.8
Allstate and Berry both appeal the superior court’s ruling; they argue that
the determination of their reasonableness — and by implication whether they were
negligent — was precluded by the federal declaratory judgment. Because we hold that
Kenick and Trailov were precluded from relitigating the issue of Allstate and Berry’s
reasonableness as it relates to the negligent adjustment claim, we do not discuss any later
superior court proceedings.
7
The court noted that because matters outside of pleadings were presented
in Allstate’s motion to dismiss, it was treating it as a motion for summary judgment. See
Alaska R. Civ. P. 12(b).
8
Allstate and Berry continued to raise arguments throughout the subsequent
state court proceedings that Kenick and Trailov’s negligent adjustment claim was
precluded by the federal decision. None of the court’s later rulings disturbed the
reasoning outlined in the court’s order denying Allstate’s motion to dismiss and granting
Kenick and Trailov’s cross-motion for summary judgment.
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III. STANDARD OF REVIEW
The applicability of issue preclusion “is a question of law subject to
independent review.”9 “We therefore review de novo whether the elements of [issue
preclusion] are met.”10
IV. DISCUSSION
Issue preclusion “bars the relitigation of issues actually determined in
[earlier] proceedings.”11 Issue preclusion prohibits a party from relitigating an issue of
fact if the following four factors are met:
(1) the party against whom the preclusion is employed was a
party to or in privity with a party to the first action;
(2) the issue precluded from relitigation is identical to the
issue decided in the first action;
(3) the issue was resolved in the first action by a final
judgment on the merits; and
(4) the determination of the issue was essential to the final
judgment.[12]
A. Kenick And Trailov Are In Privity With Herron, Who Was A Party
To The Federal Action.
Kenick and Trailov concede that they are in privity with Herron as his
assignees and that he was a party to the federal declaratory judgment action. The first
9
Lane v. Ballot, 330 P.3d 338, 341 (Alaska 2014).
10
Id.
11
Latham v. Palin, 251 P.3d 341, 344 (Alaska 2011) (alteration in original)
(quoting Jeffries v. Glacier State Tel. Co., 604 P.2d 4, 8 n.11 (Alaska 1979)).
12
Id. (quoting Midgett v. Cook Inlet Pre-Trial Facility, 53 P.3d 1105, 1110
(Alaska 2002)).
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factor is therefore satisfied. Their concession is also in accord with the approach adopted
by the Restatement (Second) of Judgments.13
B. The Issue Of “Reasonableness” Is Identical In Both The Federal And
State Proceedings.
We now consider the second issue preclusion factor: identity of the issue.
In the federal proceeding, the jury was asked to determine whether Allstate and Berry
acted reasonably by offering policy limits on May 30. The jury was instructed on the
standard of care for an insurer in adjusting claims and on an insurer’s duties to respond
to a policy limits demand and protect its insured. The jury made a factual finding that
Allstate acted reasonably by offering the policy limits on May 30. The question before
us is whether this determination of reasonableness is identical to the determination of
reasonableness required in the state court action.
In evaluating this factor we have applied the analysis suggested in
commentary to the Restatement (Second) of Judgments for resolving identity issues.14
To determine whether the issue resolved in the federal action is identical to the issue in
the state action, we weigh a number of considerations, including:
Is there a substantial overlap between the evidence or
argument to be advanced in the second proceeding and that
advanced in the first? Does the new evidence or argument
13
“A judgment in an action that determines interests in . . . personal property
. . . [h]as preclusive effect upon a person who succeeds to the interest of a party to the
same extent as upon the party himself.” RESTATEMENT (SECOND) OF JUDGMENTS § 43
(AM. LAW INST. 1982). “A judgment in an action by either the assignee or the assignor
against the obligor of an obligation that has been assigned precludes a subsequent action
on the obligation by the other of them if the person maintaining the action had power to
discharge the obligation.” Id. § 55.
14
Powercorp Alaska, LLC. v. Alaska Energy Auth., 290 P.3d 1173, 1182
(Alaska 2012), as amended on reh’g (Jan. 7, 2013) (citing RESTATEMENT (SECOND) OF
JUDGMENTS § 27 cmt. c (AM. LAW INST. 1982)).
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involve application of the same rule of law as that involved
in the prior proceeding? Could pretrial preparation and
discovery relating to the matter presented in the first action
reasonably be expected to have embraced the matter sought
to be presented in the second? How closely related are the
claims involved in the two proceedings?[15]
No party has identified, nor can we discern, any difference between the
pretrial preparation and discovery for the federal action and what could reasonably be
expected in the state court action.16
The federal jury was tasked with deciding a single issue of fact: it found
that Allstate had acted reasonably by offering the policy limits on May 30. This factual
finding allowed the federal court to conclude that Herron’s breach of the contract was
not excused. But the jury instructions indicate that the determination of reasonableness
foreclosed any possibility of a claim that Allstate had breached the covenant of good
faith and fair dealing.
As we discussed in Lockwood v. Geico General Insurance Co., all contracts
carry an implied duty of good faith and fair dealing.17 This gives the insured both a
cause of action that sounds in contract and one that sounds in tort.18 In Lockwood we
stated that “our precedent makes clear that the element of breach at least requires the
insured to show that the insurer’s actions were objectively unreasonable under the
15
Id. (quoting RESTATEMENT (SECOND) OF JUDGMENTS § 27 cmt. c (AM.LAW
INST. 1982)).
16
Cf. id. at 1182-83. During the state court trial it was clear there was a
tremendous amount of overlap of discovery and the evidence that was presented.
However, in analyzing this issue, we place ourselves in the same position as the superior
court at the time of the motion to dismiss and cross-motion for summary judgment.
17
323 P.3d 691, 697 (Alaska 2014).
18
Id. at 697 n.19.
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circumstances.”19 The parties do not appear to dispute that the federal jury’s
determination that Allstate acted reasonably in offering a policy limits demand on
May 30 forecloses Kenick and Trailov from pursuing a tort claim based on a breach of
the duty of good faith and fair dealing.
But the jury’s finding that Allstate acted reasonably likewise forecloses any
claim for negligent adjustment. To find that Allstate or Berry committed the tort of
negligent adjustment, a fact finder would need to find that Berry had been negligent —
that she had breached the tort duty of reasonable or ordinary care20 — by not agreeing
to settle for policy limits before May 30. A finding that she was negligent would be
inconsistent with the federal jury’s determination that Allstate, which had ratified its
employee Berry’s conduct, acted reasonably by offering policy limits on May 30.
While the evidence and argument for each involve application of different
rules of law, Kenick’s and Trailov’s two claims and legal theories remain entwined. The
tort of negligent adjustment is an independent cause of action that may be separate from
a claim based on the insurance contract, but a negligent adjustment claim stems in part
from the contractual relationship between an insured and an insurance company.21 An
19
Id. at 697.
20
See C.P. ex rel. M.L. v. Allstate Ins. Co., 996 P.2d 1216, 1220 (Alaska
2000) (quoting Cont’l Ins. Co. v. Bayless & Roberts, Inc., 608 P.2d 281, 287 (Alaska
1980)) (stating that an insurance adjuster “could be held liable for negligence arising out
of a breach of the general tort duty of ordinary care”).
21
Id. at 1220-22 (Alaska 2000) (“[W]e recognize[] that an insurance adjuster
owes a duty of care to the insured which is independent of any contractual obligation
arising out of the insurance policy, and that a breach of this duty is actionable.” (quoting
Sauer v. Home Indemn. Co., 841 P.2d 176, 184 (Alaska 1992))); Cont’l Ins. Co., 608
P.2d at 287-88, 288 n.10 (stating adjuster “could not be held liable for a breach of the
fiduciary duty of good faith arising out of the insurance contract, but he could be held
(continued...)
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adjuster’s duties to the insured do not arise from an insurance contract because an
adjuster is not a party to the contract. But for the adjuster to owe the insured a duty to
act with reasonable care, a contractual relationship must exist.22 Absent a contractual
relationship between an insurance company and an insured, an adjuster would owe no
duty. Kenick and Trailov focus on the fact that Berry was not a party to the federal
action, but they ignore that Allstate ratified Berry’s conduct and that Berry’s actions as
Allstate’s in-house adjuster were at issue in the federal action. It was her conduct on
Allstate’s behalf that the federal jury found to be reasonable.
The evidence and argument to be advanced in the state proceeding overlap
significantly with that which was advanced in the federal declaratory action.23 The focus
of the litigation in both proceedings, as shown by the available record of the federal
proceeding and as outlined in the underlying complaint, is Berry’s actions or omissions
in evaluating Trailov’s bodily injury claim and Kenick’s NIED claim, with particular
focus on what Berry did after receiving Power’s February demand letter and the letter
with the May 16 deadline.24
Weighing all of these considerations, we hold that the federal jury’s
determination that Allstate acted reasonably in offering policy limits on May 30
encompasses the issue of fact that Berry, as Allstate’s employee, acted reasonably in
offering policy limits on May 30.
21
(...continued)
liable for negligence arising out of a breach of the general tort duty of ordinary care”).
22
Cf. C.P. ex rel. M.L., 996 P.2d at 1220-21.
23
See Powercorp Alaska, LLC v. Alaska Energy Auth., 290 P.3d 1173, 1182
(Alaska 2012), as amended on reh’g (Jan. 7, 2013).
24
Cf. id. at 1182-83.
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C. The Issue Of Allstate’s Reasonableness Was Resolved In A Final
Judgment On The Merits.
Kenick and Trailov argue that “no tort issues were decided in the federal
case, [only] a series of contract issues were decided.” But this argument seemingly
conflates the identity of issues factor with the final judgment factor for determining
whether issue preclusion applies.25 The relevant inquiry here is whether the issue had
“actually be[en] litigated.”26 We have identified the issue of fact — that Allstate acted
reasonably. Because this issue was determined by a federal jury, “the issue was resolved
in the first action by a final judgment on the merits.”27
D. The Determination Of Allstate’s Reasonableness Was Essential To The
Final Judgment.
The fourth and final factor in determining whether issue preclusion applies
is whether the issue was essential to the final judgment in the federal case. Allstate’s
reasonableness was the only issue of fact resolved by the federal jury. It therefore was
essential to the federal court’s declaration that Allstate had not breached the insurance
contract and that Herron’s breach was not excused.28 If the federal jury had returned a
verdict that Allstate had not acted reasonably, Allstate would have been in breach and
Herron’s breach would have been excused.
25
As we noted, the second factor of the four-factor issue preclusion test is
whether the precluded issue is “identical to the issue decided in the first action”; the third
factor is whether that issue “was resolved in the first action by a final judgment on the
merits.” See supra 12 (quoting Latham v. Palin, 251 P.3d 341, 344 (Alaska 2011)
(quoting Midgett v. Cook Inlet Pre-Trial Facility, 53 P.3d 1105, 1110 (Alaska 2002))).
26
In re Adoption of A.F.M., 15 P.3d 258, 268 n.46 (Alaska 2001).
27
Id.
28
Cf. Powercorp Alaska, LLC., 290 P.3d at 1183.
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Because all four factors of issue preclusion are met, Kenick and Trailov are
precluded from relitigating the issue of reasonableness. An essential element of the tort
of negligent adjustment is the lack of reasonable care; the federal jury found that there
was no such lack.29 The superior court erred in denying Allstate and Berry’s motion to
dismiss.
V. CONCLUSION
We VACATE the jury’s verdict and resulting judgment. We REVERSE
the superior court’s order denying the motion to dismiss and REMAND for dismissal of
the complaint consistent with this opinion.
29
See C.P. ex rel. M.L. v. Allstate Ins. Co., 996 P.2d 1216, 1220-21 (Alaska
2000); Cont’l Ins. Co. v. Bayless & Roberts, Inc., 608 P.2d 281, 287 (Alaska 1980).
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