G
GoforLaw
Guest
interesting case
yes IAAL, I read this case and it was very interesting. But it has nothing to do with the poster's question. The case holds that an insurer's decision to cut off disability benefits was not bad faith because it was reasonably relying on interpretation of the policy under unsettled and contradictory law. When the law was ultimately settled (by the Cal Supreme Court), although the insurer's interpretation turned out incorrect, it could not be said that it was originally acting unreasonably to subject it to liability for bad faith. I had a Dec Relief action like this once, where the same issues came out. But in the poster's question, there is nothing about unsettled law and Prop 103 has been in effect since 1990 ... I assisted in its implementation at a large insurance company. Certainly, if the poster can show substantial evidence to the insurance company that he was not liable for the accident because he was cut off by an improper lane change, and if the insurance company just pooh poo'hs that, I would think he could sue them for bad faith. But that just my opinion.
yes IAAL, I read this case and it was very interesting. But it has nothing to do with the poster's question. The case holds that an insurer's decision to cut off disability benefits was not bad faith because it was reasonably relying on interpretation of the policy under unsettled and contradictory law. When the law was ultimately settled (by the Cal Supreme Court), although the insurer's interpretation turned out incorrect, it could not be said that it was originally acting unreasonably to subject it to liability for bad faith. I had a Dec Relief action like this once, where the same issues came out. But in the poster's question, there is nothing about unsettled law and Prop 103 has been in effect since 1990 ... I assisted in its implementation at a large insurance company. Certainly, if the poster can show substantial evidence to the insurance company that he was not liable for the accident because he was cut off by an improper lane change, and if the insurance company just pooh poo'hs that, I would think he could sue them for bad faith. But that just my opinion.