Walter J. Lack Engstrom, Lipscomb & Lack Specialty: Civil
Litigation Law School: Loyola, 1973
INSURANCE BAD FAITH: EXPERT
WITNESSES AND EVIDENCE
(Walter J. Lack and Jill P. McDonell)
While expert witnesses in
bad faith litigation should educate the jury in insurance, their testimony
should also be used to present a comprehensive picture of the evidence and
to argue the case to the jury. Insurance bad faith is still a rather novel
concept to the average juror. If the jury is not fully educated regarding
insurance concepts and bad faith conduct, insidious conduct by an insurer
will appear as little more than a few mistakes by people doing their jobs
or a company policy that is a little lacking.
A. CHOOSING
AN EXPERT
Theories of bad faith include everything from an
improper denial of a first party claim to an insurer's breach of a duty to
defend, to investigate, or to settle. The choice of an expert will depend
upon the theory of recovery. In addition to insurance industry and legal
experts, health care experts may be needed to testify as to what
constitutes reasonable and necessary medical treatment; civil engineers or
contractors may be needed regarding coverage in construction defect cases;
psychologists may be needed regarding emotional distress due to the bad
faith, and so on. Each of their roles should be well defined by the
attorney, not the expert, from the outset of the case. The testimony of
insurance industry experts, such as claims handlers or underwriters,
should dovetail with the testimony of legal experts.
The role of a legal expert should take into account California
Shoppers, Inc. v. Royal Globe Ins. Co., 175 Cal.App.3d 1 (1985). Although
the attorney testifying as an expert witness was "a highly qualified trial
attorney," the California Shoppers court found that this did not mean that
he "had any special knowledge, skill, experience, training or education
such as would qualify him as an expert on insurance industry practices. It
is no answer, that certain of his professional efforts are aimed at
discovering insurance company derelictions of duty, and then taking them
to task." Id. at 66.
California Shoppers does not mean that an attorney can no longer act as
an expert in a bad faith case. While a legal expert can still testify as
to the legal import of a policy, the strength of the underlying case and
an insured's liability due to the insurer's bad faith, etc., an insurance
industry expert should testify as to the insurance industry's standards
and practices. The relationship between the insurance industry expert and
legal expert will be complimentary if handled appropriately and will be
problematic and overly cumulative if handled incorrectly. Each expert
should address the evidence from a different angle and demonstrate how it
was despicable from both perspectives.
An attorney can be particularly effective if he has in-house insurance
experience, or has assisted in drafting procedural manuals and policies.
Whether his experience is recent should be taken into account. If an
attorney has not worked in-house for twenty years, his knowledge of the
effects of more recent regulations and legal developments on common
practice may be called into question. See Hurtado v. Western Medical 222
Cal.App.3d 1998 (1990) and Paxton v. Stewart 68 Cal.App.4th 331
(1998).
B. PREPARATION OF AN EXPERT
The
most important element of proper preparation of an expert is early
retention and participation. About 90% of all experts are first contacted
and retained by telephone. The "super experts," however, are those who are
retained early by personal interview. Designating an expert without prior
consultation can lead to embarrassing situations or even the belated
determination of a conflict of interest. No substitute exists for an early
meeting to explain the direction of the case and to provide time
estimates.
The jury instructions should act as your road map from the first expert
meeting through the presentation of testimony and closing arguments.
Relevant documents should be produced to the expert for review as soon as
they are available. This will prevent the expert from being deluged with
the documents at the last minute and will allow the attorney to keep the
expert up-to-date on the developments in the case. Summary judgment
motions and critical witnesses' entire deposition transcripts are critical
in presenting the facts to your expert.
The C.C.P. §2034 designation should be as broad as possible, i.e.,
regarding bad faith case. A copy of the designation should be sent to the
expert before deposition, to make sure that the expert's testimony is
consistent. A pre-deposition meeting is mandatory, regardless of the
witness's experience. An attorney needs to explain the need for this
expert and where that testimony fits in the presentation of the case, not
the other way around. While he should not be coached, the expert should
understand the areas he is expected to address and may suggest the
theories of recovery, which he believes can be expanded. Prior to
deposition, the quality, weaknesses, strengths and style of the deposing
attorney should be described to the expert.
In deposing an opponent's experts, an attorney would ask him to state
precisely why he was hired and what his assignment was. This is an easy
trap for an inexperienced expert who doesn't know that he is not supposed
to be an advocate. Remember, don't allow your own expert to fall into that
same trap.
The issue of fees should never be a problem area with an expert. Fees
should be addressed up front at the first meeting. At the deposition, the
attorney should always mark the time at the end and calculate the fees on
the record. Any embarrassing situation which could arise surrounding fees
should be prevented.
C. TRIAL TESTIMONY
1.
Qualifications
An expert's qualifications can be boring. Jurors are
unlikely to respond well to counsel reading from a c.v. One should
elaborate, describe and impress the jury with the credentials. The expert
can describe his degrees, the prestigious schools he attended and the
number of years it took to attain his position. Any particular training
for the specialty about which he will be opining should be included. The
jury should know these qualifications were no small feat, but they don't
need to know the names of all of the articles he wrote. They should be
left with the impression that the expert lives, sleeps and breathes his
specialty.
2. First Educate Generally, then Specifically
An
average person merely considers paying their insurance premiums a
necessary evil, but spends little time recognizing what insurance is
really supposed to buy them - peace of mind. After an accident or a loss,
an insured normally sighs with relief, "Thank God I'm covered." That is
the first point the plaintiff's and the expert witness's testimony should
make clear. In conjunction with the basic purpose of insurance, the jury
should be educated on the covenant of good faith and fair dealing in every
insurance policy. The provisions and need for this covenant cannot remain
a vague legal term to the jury, or the case will remain an uphill battle.
The insured entered into an adhesion contract with reasonable expectations
that the insurer would properly handle a financially and emotionally
stressful situation.
With judges frequently placing time limitations on expert testimony,
the temptation arises to shorten the time spent on general issues of
insurance. Don't give in to the temptation. If jurors do not understand
the "language of insurance," they cannot be expected to determine whether
the insurer acted improperly. The reasons for the extensive regulation of
the insurance industry and the expected claims handling practices should
be made a clear standard for the jurors to measure the defendant insurer
against. The insurer's employees are paid to their job and handle
stressful and difficult situations. The jurors must recognize that they
are not to compare the insurer's employees' conduct against a more lax
standard found in other businesses. If they perform their jobs improperly,
insureds will be left without transportation or a roof over their heads.
Starting in voir dire, the jurors should be taught to empathize with the
insured and recognize the insurance company for the big bad company that
it is.
The jury should also be taught to read a policy. They need to
understand the difference and relationship between definitions,
conditions, exclusions and endorsements. Presume the jury starts with no
knowledge of this information. Irrelevant terms in the insuring agreement
should also be isolated for the jury and disposed of as such. The expert's
job is to take the mystery out of the subject matter.
An expert's analysis of the construction of a policy should take into
account some basic legal principles. The mutual intention of the parties
at the time a contract is formed will govern its interpretation, and if
possible, such intent is to be inferred solely from the written language
of the contract. AIU Ins. Co. v. Superior Court, 51 Cal.3d 807 (1990). If
the language is clear and explicit, the contract language will govern its
interpretation. Cal. Civil Code §§1638, 1633, Bank of the West v. Superior
Court 2 Cal. 4th 1254 (1992). The policy should be read as a lay person
would read it, not as it might be analyzed by an attorney or an insurance
expert. Crane v. State Farm Fire & Cas. Co., Cal. 3d 112 (1971).
"Technical words are to be interpreted as usually understood by person in
the profession or business to which they relate, unless clearly used in a
different sense." Cal. Civil Code § 1645. As such, an expert should be
used for those terms considered "technical."
After the jury has been given its general education, the expert should
address the specifics of the case. An expert's testimony should be limited
to those areas in which his expertise is strong. The witness should not be
stretched too thin, or he may be cross-examined and find himself on thin
ice. Ignoring California Shoppers and having a lawyer testify on coverage
and claims handling procedures is a mistake frequently made.
To question beyond the scope of his designation into a strong and
favorable area of the expert's specialty will not harm the questioner.
Opposing counsel may object, but if sustained, the presumption will be
left that your expert would have said something favorable. Of course, this
should also be expected of the opposition, and if it will likely pose a
problem, it should be preempted by a motion in limine.
The best experts make the case on cross-examination. Prepare an expert
for the expected cross-examination prior to testifying and educate him as
to the weaknesses of his opinion. In preparing for cross, the expert
should recognize what to give in on and should be prepared for traps which
could cause a problem.
In giving opinions, the expert can reiterate each piece of evidence on
which he bases his opinion. This point is crucial as it enables the jurors
to recognize how they should see the evidence. The expert should be
prepared to simplify by analogy and utilize demonstrative evidence. Jurors
will remember more of what they hear and see, and will listen more
attentively to testimony they find interesting. In addition, they have
gotten use to seeing court rooms on television and expect technology and
special effects.
Visual aids can be used in countless ways to illustrate the methods by
which an expert reached his opinion. For instance, an expert on claims
adjusting should not just say he reviewed several thousand documents.
Rather, the boxes of invoices, receipts, etc. reviewed should be placed on
the counsel table or on the floor for effect. This concrete example will
have a more profound effect on the jury than merely testifying that "he
read a lot."
Extremely relevant documents should invariably be enlarged, highlighted
and discussed by an expert in an attempt to get the jury to read them.
These documents can easily also be photocopied onto transparencies using
color photocopiers to allow an expert to annotate them during an overhead
presentation. In the bad faith arena, any "smoking gun" documents can be
enlarged and highlighted for emphasis. These visual aids also allow the
expert to stand up and leave the impression of a scholar and professor
teaching.
On redirect, the basic point of an expert's purpose may be emphasized.
He should be asked if he is there to advocate for one side or the other.
In response, he will affirm that he is there to help the jury understand
the facts and enable them to reach the right decision.
3. Opinion
as to Ultimate Issue
An expert witness' testimony is allowed
regarding an opinion "[r]elated to a subject that is sufficiently beyond
common experience that the opinion of an expert would assist the trier of
fact." Cal. Evid. Code §801(a). On the other hand, an expert opinion on
the ultimate issue of the case was historically excluded as a usurpation
of the province of the jury. Cal. Evid. Code §805, however, has addressed
that issue and specifically provides: "Testimony in the form of an opinion
that is otherwise admissible is not objectionable because it embraces the
ultimate issue to be decided by the trier of fact."
In balancing Section 801 and 805, it is within the judge's discretion
not to admit expert evidence as to the ultimate issue if he does not
believe that it will assist the jury. Addressing this issue, the
California Supreme Court explained, "[w]e can conceive of many ways in
which a lay jury, in assessing the conduct and motives of an insurance
company in denying coverage under its policy, could benefit from the
opinion of one who, by profession and experience, was peculiarly equipped
to evaluate such matters in the context of similar disputes." Neal v.
Farmers Ins. Exchange 21 Cal.3d 910, 924 (1978). Accordingly, the
admission of this testimony will depend upon the trial judge.
An award of punitive damages, requires a finding by clear and
convincing evidence that defendant was guilty of fraud, malice or
oppression, which is defined as "despicable conduct." BAJI 14.71. See
Gagnon v. Continental Casualty Company 211 Cal.App.3d 1598 (1989). Whether
an expert can testify to the ultimate issue of an insurer's conduct as
"despicable" is a recurring problem that will depend upon the judge. Any
open-ended question on cross-examination may leave the door open for the
expert to describe the insurer's conduct as "despicable" or "malicious,"
which he needs to be prepared to do.
D. EMOTIONAL DISTRESS
DAMAGES IN THE BAD FAITH SETTING
Evidence and expert
opinion regarding emotional distress damages need to take into account the
complex and sometimes convoluted line of case law addressing emotional
distress damages incidental to insurance bad faith claims. See Crisci v.
Security Insurance Co., 66 Cal.2d 425 (1967); Gruenberg v. Aetna Ins. Co.
, 9 Cal.3d 566 (1973); Jarchow v. Transamerica Title Ins. Co., 48
Cal.App.3d 917 (1975). In Torres v. Automobile Club of Southern
California, 15 Cal.4th 771 (1997), the California Fourth District Court of
Appeal reviewed the history of the development of the law in this area and
clarified the extent and severity of loss required. When the only damage
other than emotional distress is financial, Torres provides for recovery
of emotional distress damages in either of two situations: 1. "There
must be a showing of 'substantial' injury other than the emotional
damage"; or 2. "[T]he emotional distress damage itself must be severe,
substantial or enduring."
The Court reasoned that requiring sufficient severity of either the
financial injury or the emotional injury "validates" claims and prevents
trivial or fraudulent actions.
The California Second District Court of Appeal concurred with the
reasoning in Torres and further emphasized the fact that "a claim for
emotional distress in a bad faith action cannot stand alone, but must be
accompanied by some showing of economic loss." In addition, since the
emotional injuries were incidental to the financial injuries, no statutory
remedy of prejudgment interest should be awarded. Continental Insurance
Company v. Superior Court of Los Angeles County, 37 Cal.App.4th 69
(1995).
More recently, the court has clarified that in first party bad faith
cases, damages for emotional distress are only recoverable when the
insured has suffered some financial loss, and insurer's mere denial of
benefits is insufficient to support the claim. Waters v. United Services
Auto. Ass'n, 41 Cal.App.4th 1063 (1996).
A successful plaintiff must reach the threshold requirement of economic
damage in order to recover for emotional injuries. However, these economic
damages in a bad faith claim may include such losses as damage to personal
credit due to inability to pay outstanding debts and attorney fees accrued
in order to collect wrongfully withheld
funds.