The general rule in the Middle District of Florida, with some exceptions, has been that if a Florida statutory bad faith claim under Fla. Stat. § 624.155 is premature, the defendant's remedy is to have it abated rather than dismissed.
In Pranger v. Garrison Prop. & Cas. Ins. Co., No: 6:19-cv-1099-Orl-40EJK, 2019 WL 5448284 (M.D. Fla. Aug. 6, 2019), the Court addressed what it labeled a premature statutory bad faith claim in an Underinsured Motorist Case. The District Judge in this Middle District of Florida case dismissed it and expressly declined to abate it.
Ruling as though this were the inevitable result and ignoring the clear Middle District of Florida precedent, the District Judge cited a pair of cases that ruled in favor of the exception of dismissal rather than abatement of a premature Florida statutory bad faith claim, and declined in the Court's "discretion" to abate it in this case:
Defendant argues that Count II, which alleges a claim for bad faith pursuant to § 624.155 of the Florida Statutes, should be dismissed as premature. Plaintiff agrees that the claim is premature but argues that abatement, rather than dismissal, is proper. “[I]t is this Court’s position that until a bad-faith claim has a factual basis to support it—i.e., the plaintiff’s claim for [underinsured motorist] benefits has been resolved in the plaintiff’s favor—such claim is prematurely brought.”
Pranger, 2019 WL 5448284, at *1. Sometimes exceptions swallow the rules, if we let them.
Please Read The Disclaimer. ©2019 Dennis J. Wall. All Rights Reserved.
Comments