Anderson v. United States Fidelity & Guaranty Co.

LAVENDER, Justice,

with whom OP ALA and ALMA WILSON, JJ., join, dissenting.

¶ 1 I dissent to the majority opinion. In my view, this Court should recognize a common law tort claim for bad faith in favor of a workers’ compensation claimant against a workers’ compensation insurance carrier for the manner in which the latter handles, litigates or defends a workers’ compensation claim. A tort claim should be viable, in my opinion, when a carrier denies or contests a claim for workers’ compensation benefits, with knowledge there is no legitimate legal or factual basis for defense to the claim, or it is in some other appropriate manner shown, the carrier unreasonably, and in bad faith, denies or contests the claim. I would not hold, however, a tort suit viable when the insurer’s conduct evinces mere negligence in the manner it handles, litigates or defends against a workers’ compensation claim.

PART I. A WORKERS’ COMPENSATION CLAIMANT IS OWED BY A WORKERS’ COMPENSATION CARRIER A DUTY OF GOOD FAITH AND FAIR DEALING WITH RESPECT TO THE PRE-AWARD HANDLING OF A WORKERS’ COMPENSATION INSURANCE CLAIM AND CLAIMANT HAS STANDING TO BRING A BAD FAITH CLAIM AGAINST THE CARRIER.

¶ 2 Although an insurer’s duty to deal fairly and in good faith does not extend to every party that may be the eventual recipient of insurance proceeds, when there is a contractual or statutory relationship between the carrier and the party asserting the bad faith claim, the duty will generally attach. Goodwin v. Old Republic Insurance Co., 1992 OK 34, 828 P.2d 431, 432-433; Roach v. Atlas Life Ins. Co., 1989 OK 27, 769 P.2d 158, 161. Goodwin recognized an explicit statutory relationship between an insurer and an injured worker in the workers’ compensation context by virtue of 85 O.S.1981, § 65.3, a section of the Oklahoma Workers’ Compensation Act (Act), 85 O.S.1981, § 1 et seq., as amended (now 85 O.S.1991, § 1 et seq., as amended). 828 P.2d at 433. Section 65.3 expressly provides that a contract of insurance issued by a carrier for the purpose of insuring an employer against liability under the Act is conclusively presumed to be for the benefit of each person upon whom insurance premiums are paid, collected, or whose employment is considered or used in determining the amount of premium collected. Thus, even though the employer might technically be the insured under a workers’ compensation insurance policy, Goodwin recognized a claimanVemployee is a third-party beneficiary under the insurance contract [828 P.2d at 433], is in the same class as an insured and may expect prompt payment of his/her claim unless the insurer in good faith asserts a basis for contesting it. Id. at 434.

¶ 3 To understand the third-party beneficiary status of an injured worker a brief look at the purposes behind workers’ compensation legislation is helpful. Generally, workers’ compensation legislation is a mutual *1219compromise in which an employee relinquishes his/her right to sue the employer or co-employees for damages sustained in job-related injuries at common law; and the employer accepts no-fault liability for a statutorily set measure of damages. Weber v. Armco, Inc., 1983 OK 53, 663 P.2d 1221, 1224. The Act exists to assure a worker and his/ her dependents reasonable support and maintenance during a period of forced idleness resulting from job-related accidents that could destroy or impair earning capacity. Crocker v. Crocker, 1991 OK 130, 824 P.2d 1117, 1120. The Act is intended to provide benefits to the injured workers and their dependents and to prevent the worker or dependents from becoming public charges. Id. One method to insure that an employer has the ability to pay the compensation benefits to a claimant under the Act is-for an employer to contract with an insurance carrier to provide the benefits to the injured worker when a job-related accident occurs.

¶4 As noted in Goodwin, an insurance carrier is generally required by statute to in good faith effectuate prompt, fair and equitable settlement of claims in which liability has become reasonably clear. 828 P.2d at 434. As this Court also earlier understood in Christian v. American Home Assurance Co., 1977 OK 141, 577 P.2d 899, a leading ease in the area of an insurance company’s duty to act in good faith and to deal fairly with its insured, a substantial part of the right purchased via an insurance policy is the right to receive the benefits promptly. Id. at 903. Christian also recognized that unwarranted delay precipitates economic hardship on the insured and that an insurance company has a duty to defend an insurance claim in good faith. Id. at 903-904.

¶ 5 In my opinion, as a third-party beneficiary under a workers’ compensation insurance policy, an injured worker, being the person at risk of enduring economic hardship from unwarranted delay, is entitled to expect prompt payment of a valid claim for benefits. The status of an injured worker as a third-party beneficiary under a workers’ compensation insurance policy is analogous to the life insurance policy beneficiary dealt with in Roach v. Atlas Life Ins. Co., supra. In Roach this Court recognized a life insurance policy beneficiary, being a third-party beneficiary under a life insurance policy obtained by the insured, had a status sufficient for entitlement to assert an action for breach of the duty of good faith and fair dealing against a life insurance company. An injured worker should also be entitled to expect the carrier will only defend a claim for workers’ compensation benefits in good faith. It is, thus, my view, as a third-party beneficiary of this type of insurance contract, the injured claimant/employee is owed a duty of good faith and fair dealing by the workers’ compensation insurer and the claimant should be allowed a common law bad faith tort claim against the carrier if this duty is breached, whether the bad faith conduct occurs prior or subsequent to an award by the WCC. I can discern no valid reason that would justify foreclosing a common law tort suit by an injured worker for breach of these duties by a workers’ compensation insurance carrier, or which would preclude the potential for a viable tort suit against a carrier for bad faith conduct associated with its pre-award actions while defending a claim in the WCC.

PART II. THIS COURT’S PREVIOUS CASES DO NOT PRECLUDE A COMMON LAW TORT CLAIM AGAINST THE CARRIER FOR PRE-AWARD BAD FAITH CONDUCT.

¶ 6 In Goodwin this Court, to a limited degree, dealt with whether a claimant/employee could subject an employer’s workers’ compensation insurance carrier to liability in tort for the carrier’s bad faith conduct in relation to a workers’ compensation claim. The question presented was whether the carrier could be held liable in tort for the wilful, malicious and bad faith refusal to pay a claimant’s workers’ compensation award. In that the facts in Goodwin did not support a claim for bad faith refusal to pay workers’ compensation benefits, it was unnecessary to definitively determine whether such a common law claim would be recognized in Oklahoma — instead the Court merely assumed such a claim existed. Id. at 431-432, 435-436.

¶7 Although certain language in Goodwin was interpreted in Whitson v. Oklahoma Farmers Union Mutual Insurance Compa*1220ny, 1995 OK 4, 889 P.2d 285 to stand for the proposition potential liability of the carder can only arise for conduct occurring after an award against an employer for workers’ compensation benefits has been entered by the WCC, in my view, this Court should now reject such an interpretation of Goodwin. Such a limitation appears to misinterpret Goodwin and, even if it does not, the limitation is an unsound circumscription on the right of a claimant/employee to seek recompense for the pre-award conduct of a workers’ compensation carrier amounting to the bad faith denial or contest of a claim for workers’ compensation benefits.

¶ 8 Any language in Goodwin that would support limitation of the tort to post-award conduct must be read in the context of the facts and claims asserted by the plaintiff in that case and should not be used, as the majority uses it here, to limit a bad faith claim against a carrier to only post-award conduct. To the extent Whitson interpreted Goodwin to have such a limitation in a suit against a carrier, this Court should expressly disapprove Whitson. Whitson involved answering the question, among others, whether a workers’ compensation claimant could have a bad faith claim against his employer. It did not involve a potential claim against a workers’ compensation insurer. Because of this distinction Whitson should not be used to support proscription of a claim against a carrier.

¶ 9 In Goodwin, the claim of bad faith against the carrier was based on the post-award conduct of appealing a WCC order awarding benefits and delaying payment for a period of eighteen (18) days after the appeal of the matter had been finalized and benefits were due. 828 P.2d at 432 and 436. Also, the plaintiff in Goodwin expressly conceded his bad faith claim was not based on any conduct of the carrier during the trial of his workers’ compensation claim, i.e prior to the issuance of the workers’ compensation award. Id. at 432. Thus, statements by this Court in Goodwin to the effect a bad faith claim would arise only after there has been an award against the employer must be viewed as merely responding to the issues that were before the Court. They cannot be taken as definitively precluding a claim based on conduct that predated an actual award in favor of the claimant/employee.

¶ 10 Further, to limit a bad faith tort action in the workers’ compensation context to only post-award conduct, including post-award conduct relating to appeal, makes no logical sense when one understands that such an award would not be finally conclusive until any appeal (if one was instituted) to either an en banc panel of the WCC or to this Court under the provisions of 85 O.S.Supp.1995, § 3.6 is finalized. An appeal, of course, is merely a continuation of the litigation, albeit at the en banc panel or appellate levels, where the insurer may reiterate available defenses under certain defined review standards.

¶ 11 Contrary to the view expressed in the majority’s opinion, the case of McGehee v. State Insurance Fund, 1995 OK 85, 904 P.2d 70 also shows that Goodwin was not meant to limit a bad faith claim to only post-award conduct. In McGehee the plaintiff was claiming bad faith on the part of the insurer relating to conduct in contesting his claim for workers’ compensation benefits, at least part of which conduct predated any award by the WCC. In ruling that both of two potentially applicable statutes of limitation had run on the plaintiff’s bad faith claim against the carrier, this Court implicitly acknowledged a bad faith claim could be based on pre-award conduct when it was assumed the claim arose at the latest when the plaintiff knew or should have known of the carrier’s bad faith conduct — a time that was sometime prior to the WCC’s award of benefits. Id. at 73. If a claim for bad faith conduct of the insurer was limited to only its post-award conduct, it would have constituted a legal impossibility to hold the statute of limitation began to run prior to any claim arising. Thus, Goodwin does not stand for the proposition a bad faith claim against a workers’ compensation insurance carrier may only be based on the carrier’s post-award conduct.

¶ 12 Finally, I note that my recognition of the potential for a tort suit against a carrier for pre-award conduct would not mean an insurer who contests a claim for benefits brought under the Act is automati*1221cally at peril of subjection to a common law bad faith action. See Christian, supra, 577 P.2d at 904-905. A tort action would not be viable where the insurer presents legitimate legal or factual defenses to the claim, even though the defense(s) do not ultimately prevail and benefits are eventually awarded by the WCC. I recognize, as this Court recognized in Christian, that various genuine disputes between a carrier and an insured (here a third-party beneficiary) may exist as to whether a claimant is actually entitled to the insurance proceeds or to a particular amount of benefits. Id. A workers’ compensation carrier should not be penalized with tort liability where it raises genuine or justifiable defenses to a claim, even though the defenses do not ultimately succeed. Nor, in my opinion, may the insurer be subjected to liability in the workers’ compensation context for mere negligence in the manner of its handling, litigating or defending a claim for benefits. Mere negligent behavior cannot be equated with bad faith conduct on the part of the carrier. Under my analysis of the situation, the tort would be viable in the workers’ compensation context only when a carrier denies or contests a claim for compensation benefits, with knowledge there is no legitimate legal or factual basis for defense to the claim, or it is in some other appropriate manner shown, the carrier unreasonably, and in bad faith, denies or contests the claim.

¶ 13 For the reasons specified above, I respectfully dissent to the majority opinion issued in this matter.