Smith v. Southern Farm Bureau Casualty Insurance Co., No. 20-2486 (8th Cir. 2021)
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Plaintiff filed a class action complaint against Farm Bureau, alleging breach of contract and seeking a declaratory judgment. Plaintiff's breach of contract claim was based, in part, on an alleged violation of Arkansas Insurance Rule and Regulation 43, which he claimed was incorporated into the policy. The district court granted Farm Bureau's motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim. Plaintiff then filed a motion to clarify whether the order also disposed of the common law breach of contract theory, which the district court dismissed.
The Eighth Circuit agreed that the Arkansas regulation that Farm Bureau allegedly violated is not incorporated into plaintiff's policy, and thus he cannot use it as the basis for a breach of contract claim. However, because plaintiff also states a breach of contract claim based on the policy language, the court reversed in part. In this case, plaintiff alleges that "a 9% reduction on a used vehicle is not typical and does not reflect market realities," and that dealers' actual practice is not to inflate prices above market value because of the "intense competition in the context
of internet pricing and comparison shopping." The court explained that, if this is true, then Farm Bureau did not consider the truck's fair market value. Rather, it considered an artificially lower value, in breach of its contractual duty and thus plaintiff stated a claim for breach of contract based on the policy language. Finally, the court denied plaintiff's motion to certify questions of law to the Arkansas Supreme Court.
Court Description: [Kobes, Author, with Colloton and Wollman, Circuit Judges] Civil case - Insurance. In an action alleging defendant undervalued plaintiff's totaled pickup truck by application of a "Projected Sold Adjustment" which deducted 9% from comparable vehicles' values to reflect defendant's assumption that car buyers pay less than sticker price, Arkansas Insurance Regulation 43, which sets minimum standards for insurance settlement practices, was not incorporated into the policy in question, either automatically or by application of the policy's "Conformity Clause;" however, the complaint did alleged an action for common law breach of contract, and the district court erred in dismissing that portion of the complaint; request to certify questions of law to the Arkansas Supreme Court denied. Judge Colloton, dissenting.
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