$1 MILLION PUNITIVE DAMAGES FOR BAD FAITH BREACH OF INSURANCE CONTRACT.
In Mazik v. GEICO General Ins. Co., No. B281372, 2019 WL 2150799 (Cal. 2d DCA, Div. 2, May 17, 2019), a California jury awarded $313,508.00 in damages for delayed payment in bad faith of an Uninsured Motorist (UIM) claim. The jury also assessed $4Million in Punitive Damages.
A California trial judge reduced the punitive damages assessment to $1 Million. GEICO appealed only the judgment for punitive damages.
A California appellate court affirmed. In simple and basic terms, the California appellate panel held that the evidence of insurer bad faith conduct in the record of that case was sufficient to support the judgment of bad faith including punitive damages, and the assessment fell within the constitutionally permissible range of punitive damages assessments:
We reject GEICO’s arguments and affirm. There is sufficient evidence in the record to show that GEICO’s managing agent ratified conduct warranting punitive damages. In concluding that Mazik’s claim was worth far less than the policy limits, GEICO disregarded information provided by Mazik showing that he had a permanent, painful injury, and instead selectively relied on portions of medical records that supported GEICO’s position that Mazik had fully recovered. As reduced by the trial court, the $ 1 million in punitive damages (approximately three times the amount of compensatory damages) is within the constitutionally permitted range in view of the degree of reprehensibility of GEICO’s conduct.
Mazik v. GEICO General Ins. Co., No. B281372, 2019 WL 2150799, at *1 (Cal. 2d DCA, Div. 2, May 17, 2019).
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