Court Opinion

ID: 9369976
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-02-10 15:04:37.349717+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:16:18.105804
License: Public Domain

RENDERED: FEBRUARY 3, 2023; 10:00 A.M.
                          TO BE PUBLISHED

                 Commonwealth of Kentucky
                           Court of Appeals

                              NO. 2021-CA-1213-MR

ALLSTATE PROPERTY AND
CASUALTY INSURANCE
COMPANY                                                                APPELLANT

                APPEAL FROM JEFFERSON CIRCUIT COURT
v.              HONORABLE A. C. MCKAY CHAUVIN, JUDGE
                        ACTION NO. 19-CI-005034

BRITTANY BROWN                                                           APPELLEE

                                    OPINION
                                   AFFIRMING

                                   ** ** ** ** **

BEFORE: CALDWELL, CETRULO, AND COMBS, JUDGES.

CALDWELL, JUDGE: Allstate Property and Casualty Company (“Allstate”)

appeals from a Jefferson Circuit Court judgment ordering it to pay Brittany Brown

penalty interest and attorney fees for delays in paying basic reparations benefits

under the Kentucky Motor Vehicle Reparations Act (“MVRA”). We affirm.
                                      FACTS

             Brown was involved in an automobile accident in late January 2019.

She was a listed driver and the vehicle she had been driving was a listed vehicle

under a policy issued by Allstate. She submitted a claim for basic reparation

benefits (“BRB”) and retained counsel. Brown directed that her personal injury

protection (“PIP”) benefits be reserved to pay for treatment by certain medical

providers, prescription medication, and lost wages rather than for hospital or

emergency care. In early February 2019, her counsel stated in a letter to Allstate

that payments “may” be made directly to the indicated providers.

             For a couple of months starting in early February 2019, Allstate

received bills from Brown’s medical providers. In late February 2019, Allstate

requested that Brown submit to an examination under oath (“EUO”). Brown

agreed to do so. But her counsel sent a letter (dated March 11) indicating that

immediate payment was expected and that interest would accrue on overdue

payments – at 12% on outstanding bills starting immediately and increasing to

18% after the EUO. Counsel also stated payments for PIP and interest should be

made directly to Brown and forwarded to counsel’s attention.

             The EUO took place on June 14, 2019. On or around August 5 and 8,

Allstate made payments directly to Brown’s medical providers – apparently

                                         -2-
unbeknownst to Brown and counsel. The payments were for amounts less than the

amounts billed, but also included 12% interest according to Allstate.

            On or about August 9, Brown’s counsel emailed Allstate’s counsel

and adjustor to inquire about the status of payments. No response was received for

several days. Brown filed suit against Allstate on August 19.

            Allstate received service of the complaint on August 22. On that

same day, the adjustor responded to Brown’s counsel’s email with a log of the PIP

payments made directly to the providers. The log showed some reductions and

denials and indicated 12% interest was paid to the providers.

            After Allstate filed its answer and discovery occurred, both parties

filed motions for partial summary judgment. The trial court granted Brown’s

motion and denied Allstate’s motion in an October 2020 opinion and order.

            The trial court determined that Allstate failed to show a reasonable

foundation for its delay in making payments and that penalty interest should be

paid to Brown. It ordered Allstate to pay interest of 12% per annum from March

14, 2019, through June 14, 2019, and 18% per annum from June 14 through

August 8, 2019. And it ordered Allstate to pay Brown’s reasonable attorney fees

from June 14, 2019, through May 19, 2020 – from the date of the EUO until final

submission of summary judgment motions upon completion of briefing and oral

argument.

                                        -3-
              Following the trial court’s order resolving the summary judgment

motions, the parties briefed issues about the amounts to be paid. They presented

arguments about whether the interest to be paid should be calculated on amounts

originally billed or on the reduced amounts actually paid to medical providers and

accepted as full satisfaction of the debt. (Brown submitted medical bills totaling

just over $10,000 and Allstate made payments to medical providers totaling about

$6,800 according to the PIP payment log.)1

              The trial court determined that the interest to be paid would be

calculated based on the amounts paid to and accepted as full satisfaction by the

medical providers rather than on the amounts originally billed.2

              The parties had also offered arguments and proof about the amount of

attorney fees to be paid, which the trial court resolved in the same order. Brown

had requested $20,391 in attorney fees for her attorneys’ time spent on the case

beginning with the June 14, 2019, EUO, and extending through mid-December

1
  Brown had also argued that she was entitled to additional benefits of about $3,000 since
Allstate paid only $6,800 to providers for medical bills. But we are unaware of any resolution of
this issue. Instead, the trial court’s October 2020 and September 2021 opinions and orders only
resolved issues about interest and attorney fees. And the parties have only made arguments
about interest and attorney fees in their appellate briefs.
2
  The trial court ordered interest paid to Brown based on the “amount” paid to the “provider” and
accepted as satisfaction of the debt. (Page 5 of September 2021 opinion and order, Record
(“R.”) p. 510.) But Brown directed that her BRB benefits be used to pay multiple providers –
who billed various amounts adding up to just over $10,000. We construe the trial court’s
reference to the amount paid to the provider as the total sum of amounts paid to providers and
accepted as satisfaction of the debt owed to them – about $6,800 according to the PIP log.

                                               -4-
2020. She attached an affidavit from counsel about the firm’s hourly rates and a

spreadsheet with billing entries from June 14, 2019, through December 14, 2020.

(Briefing was completed and the case was submitted for final adjudication on

December 15, 2020.) Allstate argued, inter alia, that the amount of attorney fees

requested was not reasonable on various grounds and that any time entries after

May 19, 2020, should be excluded under the October 2020 order.

                 The trial court concluded that the amount requested by Brown for

attorney fees was reasonable and ordered Allstate to pay the full $20,391 in

attorney fees that Brown requested. The trial court entered its opinion and order

resolving the issues about interest and attorney fees in September 2021.

                Allstate filed a CR3 59.05 motion, which included a request to amend

to state that the trial court’s order was final and appealable. The trial court granted

the request to designate its order as final and appealable but otherwise denied the

CR 59.05 motion. Allstate then filed a timely appeal.

                On appeal, Allstate argues that the trial court erred in deciding that

Allstate had no reasonable foundation for delaying payment and must pay penalty

interest to Brown. It also argues the trial court erroneously awarded attorney fees.

3
    Kentucky Rules of Civil Procedure.

                                            -5-
                                         ANALYSIS

    Due to Lack of Preservation Statement, We Review for Manifest Injustice

              Allstate’s brief does not “contain at the beginning of the argument a

statement with reference to the record showing whether the issue was properly

preserved for review and, if so, in what manner.” CR 76.12(4)(c)(v).4 Due to this

failure to provide the required preservation statement, we have the authority to

review the issues on appeal only for manifest injustice rather than under otherwise

applicable standards of review. See Ford v. Commonwealth, 628 S.W.3d 147, 155

(Ky. 2021) (“[T]he manifest injustice standard of review is reserved only for errors

in appellate briefing related to the statement of preservation. If a party fails to

inform the appellate court of where in the record his issue is preserved, the

appellate court can treat that issue as unpreserved.”).

              Preservation statements are required “so that we, the reviewing Court,

can be confident the issue was properly presented to the trial court and therefore, is

appropriate for our consideration.” Oakley v. Oakley, 391 S.W.3d 377, 380 (Ky.

App. 2012). Without the required specific statement about how and where in the

4
  CR 76.12(4)(c)(v) was in effect at the time appellate briefs in this case were filed. A nearly
identical provision about requiring preservation statements is contained in the new Rules of
Appellate Procedure (“RAP”) effective January 1, 2023. See RAP 32(A)(4) (An appellant brief
“shall contain at the beginning of the argument a statement with reference to the record showing
whether the issue was properly preserved for review and, if so, in what manner.”).

                                              -6-
record each argument was presented to the trial court, we are not confident such

issues were properly presented to the trial court. And we are not required to search

the record to discover if each argument was preserved for review. Koester v.

Koester, 569 S.W.3d 412, 415 (Ky. App. 2019). See also Phelps v. Louisville

Water Co., 103 S.W.3d 46, 53 (Ky. 2003).

             Allstate provided some, not always accurate, page number citations to

the written record about some matters in its statement of facts and argument

sections of its appellant brief. But it did not specifically identify where each issue

raised on appeal was presented to the trial court for consideration. Thus, we will

treat the issues on appeal as unpreserved and review only for palpable error

resulting in manifest injustice. See CR 61.02; see also Mullins v. Ashland Oil, Inc.,

389 S.W.3d 149, 154 (Ky. App. 2012) (conducting “a limited review of this case

for manifest injustice” due to lack of preservation statement along with other

substantial failures to comply with appellate briefing rules).

             No Manifest Injustice in Trial Court’s Award of Interest

             Allstate raises several complex issues regarding the trial court’s award

of interest to Brown in its appellant brief. However, without a preservation

statement clearly identifying where each of these specific issues was presented to

the trial court, it is not appropriate for us to consider these specific issues. See

                                           -7-
Oakley, 391 S.W.3d at 380. Instead, we generally review whether the trial court’s

award of interest resulted in manifest injustice under CR 61.02.

              Before Allstate filed its answer, Brown filed a motion for a default

judgment5 in which she claimed entitlement to about three hundred dollars based

on 12% interest on bills not paid within thirty days of submission and 18% interest

on bills paid to date from June 14 through the early August dates of payment (on

the 5th and the 8th). She indicated the amount due might increase based on

interest accruing on unpaid bills to a provider. In a supplemental filing, she stated

the earlier amount was erroneously calculated based on what Allstate actually paid

providers and asserted she was actually due almost five hundred dollars based on

what the medical providers originally billed.

              Ultimately, the trial court ordered Allstate to pay Brown interest of

about 12% per annum accruing for three months and 18% per annum accruing for

about two months on the amount (about $6,800) that Allstate paid providers.

Given the relatively small amount of interest at stake versus payment delays

5
  Brown did not obtain a default judgment and the parties did not discuss default judgment issues
in their appellate briefs. Nonetheless, her requested relief for default judgment purposes
provides context about the approximate amount of money at stake in interest issues here.

                                               -8-
frustrating the MVRA’s goal of encouraging prompt payment of accident victims’

medical bills,6 the trial court’s award of interest did not result in manifest injustice.

              The MVRA clearly calls for insurers to either pay benefits quickly –

generally within a month or two of receiving reasonable proof of the fact and

amount of loss – or to promptly provide the claimant with written notice of why

the claim is being denied. See KRS 304.39-210(1) and (5).7 Medical bills are

presumed reasonable. KRS 304.39-020(5)(a). And case law holds that submission

of medical bills along with written authorization to obtain medical reports is

considered reasonable proof of the fact and amount of a loss regarding medical

costs. Kentucky Farm Bureau Mut. Ins. Co. v. Roberts, 603 S.W.2d 498, 499-500

(Ky. App. 1980) (concluding insurer received reasonable proof of loss as of the

date when medical bills were received along with “a completed medical

authorization form”).

              From February to April 2019, Allstate received bills from the medical

providers for whose care Brown had directed her PIP benefits be paid. Allstate has

6
  See Kentucky Revised Statutes (“KRS”) 304.39-010(3) (“To encourage prompt medical
treatment and rehabilitation of the motor vehicle accident victim by providing for prompt
payment of needed medical care and rehabilitation[.]”).
7
  This does not mean that insurers (otherwise known as reparations obligors) must always pay
the full amount of medical bills charged. Under KRS 304.39-245, “A reparation obligor may
request or negotiate a reduction or modification of charges from a provider of services to a
secured person” although the medical provider cannot bill the secured person (the claimant) for
the reduction or modification.

                                              -9-
not argued that Brown failed to provide any requested authorization to receive

providers’ reports, nor did it file a petition to obtain court-ordered discovery of

medical matters. See KRS 304.39-280(1)(b) and (3); KRS 304.39-270. Allstate

clearly did not pay the bills within a month or two of receiving them and the record

does not clearly indicate that it sent a prompt written notice of a reason for denial.

See KRS 304.39-210(1) and (5).

             Instead, Allstate made payments to providers in early August 2019 –

about six months after being advised Brown had obtained representation and

receiving the first bills from providers. Allstate indicated these payments for lesser

amounts than originally billed also included 12% interest, thus admitting the

payments were overdue. And it did not inform Brown’s counsel about the

payments until about the same time it received service of the complaint.

             Allstate has argued that it could properly hold off on paying medical

bills until it had a chance to review the transcript of Brown’s EUO. But our

Supreme Court clearly held that examinations under oath to obtain medical

information in this context are not authorized. Instead, such medical information

must be obtained through shared documentation or through petitioning the court

for discovery of medical information under the MVRA. See State Farm Mutual

Automobile Insurance Company v. Adams, 526 S.W.3d 63, 68 (Ky. 2017).

                                         -10-
             In Adams, our Supreme Court noted that the insurer identified four

problematic issues – including some distinctly non-medical issues such as whether

a hit-and-run occurred – prompting it to seek an examination under oath. Id.

(And initially, the insurer made medical payments promptly in Adams before

identifying the problematic issues prompting the EUO.) In contrast, the insurer

here articulated no clear reasons for suspicion or further investigation before

declining to make medical payments and requesting an EUO.

             Furthermore, our Supreme Court discussed how discovery on some of

the problematic issues identified in Adams (such as information about the accident

itself) could be properly sought through requesting an EUO. But it made clear that

medical information must be sought as set forth in MVRA provisions. Id. at 68.

             Brown, unlike Adams, agreed to the requested EUO. But Brown’s

counsel made it clear in correspondence that while his client would cooperate with

the EUO request, medical bills were expected to be paid within thirty days of

receipt – even if that was before the EUO was completed. And generally, an

insurer’s duty to pay medical bills within thirty days of receipt of reasonable

medical proof (i.e., bills and medical authorization) is not excused simply because

the insurer claims to be investigating or seeks an EUO for unspecified reasons.

             We are aware that Allstate claims that the EUO turned out to be useful

as it somehow discovered from its investigation that some treatment was not

                                         -11-
properly medically supervised or otherwise improper, resulting in its denial of

payment for such services. But other than the supposedly improperly conducted

treatment (a medical, non-accident-related issue for which information should have

been sought under the means provided in the MVRA under Adams), Allstate has

offered no justification for the delay in making payments on medical bills – most

of which it ultimately paid at a reduced rate supposedly along with 12% interest.

             We do not believe insurers may validly extend their thirty-day

deadline for paying medical bills (presumed reasonable under the MVRA) upon

receipt of reasonable proof (bills and medical reports and/or authorization) without

petitioning the court for further medical discovery simply because the insurer

chooses to conduct a fishing expedition through requesting an EUO. While the

insurer may certainly request an EUO for certain purposes, that does not mean that

its duty to promptly pay medical bills under the MVRA does not arise until the

EUO is completed and transcribed. Though insurance policy provisions may state

that submitting to questioning under oath is a condition precedent to coverage, the

Supreme Court only specifically approved treating the EUO as a condition

precedent to coverage where the EUO was sought, at least in part, to obtain non-

medical, accident-related information. Adams, 526 S.W.3d at 68 (“State Farm

should have pursued any medical-related questions through the provisions of the

MVRA. Because some of the issues listed by State Farm involved the acquisition

                                        -12-
of accident-related information, the circuit court correctly found that Adams was

required to submit to questioning under oath regarding those issues as a condition

precedent to coverage.”).

             Also, no one has directed our attention to where in the record a

transcript of the EUO may be found so that we could see whether it concerned

permitted matters about how the accident happened rather than medical

information which must be obtained through other means under the MVRA. See

id. So, we must assume the missing EUO transcript would support the trial court’s

findings and ultimate decision – including its finding that the EUO focused on

medical issues and its finding of no reasonable foundation for the delay in paying

benefits. See Smith v. Smith, 450 S.W.3d 729, 732 (Ky. App. 2014) (appeals must

be resolved based on the record on appeal and missing items in the record must be

presumed to support the trial court’s decision).

             While we decline to speculate on what would be the proper result had

the required preservation statement been provided, we cannot say that the end

result on the interest issue was so shocking or judicially intolerable that a manifest

injustice resulted. See Summe v. Gronotte, 357 S.W.3d 211, 216 (Ky. App. 2011)

(noting lack of required preservation statement and concluding that even if errors

existed, they were not so shocking or judicially intolerable as to amount to

manifest injustice).

                                         -13-
           Attorney Fee Award Did Not Result in Manifest Injustice

             Allstate points out that it made payments to medical providers shortly

before the suit was filed. Based on this, it argues the trial court erred in awarding

Brown a reasonable attorney fee. But Allstate’s making payments before suit was

filed does not necessarily preclude an attorney fee award. An attorney fee may

also be awarded if overdue benefits are paid after receiving notice of counsel’s

representation if denial or delay is without reasonable foundation.

             KRS 304.39-220(1) provides in pertinent part:

             If overdue benefits are recovered in an action against the
             reparation obligor or paid by the reparation obligor after
             receipt of notice of the attorney’s representation, a
             reasonable attorney’s fee for advising and representing a
             claimant on a claim or in an action for basic or added
             reparation benefits may be awarded by the court if the
             denial or delay was without reasonable foundation.

             Allstate paid about $6,800 to Brown’s medical providers in early

August 2019, stating these payment amounts included 12% interest and thus

admitting the payments were overdue. These overdue payments occurred six

months after Allstate received notice of Brown’s counsel’s representation and

began receiving medical bills. And the trial court later determined that Allstate’s

delay in making payments was without reasonable foundation. Thus, the basic

requirements were met for the trial court to award a reasonable attorney fee under

KRS 304.39-220.

                                         -14-
             Allstate asserts Brown did not require legal assistance to obtain

payment of benefits and that her counsel’s involvement had no bearing on her bills

getting paid. Thus, it argues she was not entitled to an award of a reasonable

attorney fee, citing dicta in Phoenix Healthcare of Kentucky, L.L.C. v. Kentucky

Farm Bureau Mutual Insurance Company, 120 S.W.3d 726, 727 (Ky. App. 2003)

(in affirming dismissal of an Unfair Claims Settlement Practices Act claim as the

MVRA provided the exclusive remedy for the insurer’s/reparations obligor’s delay

in paying medical bills, stating “KRS 304.39-220 allows a claimant to recover

reasonable attorney’s fees if legal assistance is required to recover payment”). No

actual or requested attorney fee award under KRS 304.39-220 was at issue in

Phoenix Healthcare. And in any event, the record before us does not indisputably

show that Brown had no need for legal assistance or that counsel’s involvement

was of no consequence in obtaining payment of benefits – particularly since

Allstate requested to examine Brown under oath, did not make payments until

shortly before suit was filed, and did not inform Brown’s counsel of payments

made until the same day it received service of the complaint. There was no

manifest injustice in the trial court’s decision to award a reasonable attorney fee.

             Furthermore, Allstate has not raised in its appellate briefs any specific

issues about the amount of the attorney fee awarded – which was based on

Brown’s counsel’s affidavit about billing rates and detailed time entries. Nor can

                                         -15-
we say the amount was shocking or judicially intolerable or resulted in manifest

injustice.

             We decline to address other arguments raised by the parties in their

appellate briefs as unnecessary to our resolution of this appeal.

                                  CONCLUSION

             For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the Jefferson Circuit Court’s

judgment.

             COMBS, JUDGE, CONCURS.

             CETRULO, JUDGE, DISSENTS AND FILES SEPARATE
OPINION.

CETRULO, JUDGE, DISSENTING: Respectfully, I dissent from the majority

Opinion herein. At the outset, I do not agree that this matter can only be reviewed

for palpable error resulting in manifest injustice. The matter was heard on

summary judgment, with both parties arguing for same in briefs filed before the

Jefferson Circuit Court. The record is easily reviewable, and all arguments

presented herein were presented to the trial court. I believe the proper standard of

review for this Court, as both parties asserted in their briefs, is de novo. Rhodes v.

Commonwealth, 417 S.W.3d 762, 764-65 (Ky. App. 2013) (citing Cumberland

Valley Contractors, Inc. v. Bell County Coal Corp., 238 S.W.3d 644, 647 (Ky.

2007)). Based upon that review, I would reverse the Opinion below.

                                         -16-
                              PROCEDURAL HISTORY

              Ms. Brown’s accident occurred on January 24, 2019. She was a listed

driver under a policy of insurance issued by Allstate and thus was entitled to

submit a claim for PIP benefits. On February 7, counsel for Ms. Brown sent a

letter to Allstate advising of his representation and directing that no payments be

made to any emergency room or initial hospital treatment, but rather that all PIP

payments be reserved for other providers, such as physical therapy and chiropractic

care and lost wages. She sought treatment at Chambers Medical and River City

Chiropractic, and those providers began submitting bills to Allstate in February.

On February 25, 2019, well within 30 days, Allstate requested an EUO from

counsel for the appellee to which he promptly agreed. Throughout the pleadings,

the attorneys for Brown agreed that this was proper and timely.8 It is clear from

the record that the attorneys were jointly working together on scheduling, but the

EUO was not actually scheduled until June 14, 2019. Later, on the very day of the

examination, correspondence from Brown’s attorney advised Allstate that Brown

did not intend to rush Allstate, but that she would be seeking payment of the bills

promptly upon Allstate’s review of the transcript and would be seeking interest.

8
  Allstate properly followed the MVRA in timely requesting the examination under oath and had
a reasonable basis to delay plaintiff’s payments until she submitted to an EUO. (Brown’s
Motion for Summary Judgment, p. 10-11, R. at 116.)

                                            -17-
             All bills were in fact then paid on August 5 or 8 to the providers.

Interest was actually paid by Allstate as well, although to the providers rather than

to Ms. Brown. Reductions were also secured on the bills by Allstate, an action that

all parties agree is permissible under KRS 304.39-245. It appears from the briefs

by both parties that the EUO was responsible at least in part for the reduction, as

the investigation revealed that some of the charges were for services that were not

actually performed by the provider. The reduced amounts were accepted as

payment in full by the providers, although some interest was included in the

payments to the providers as well.

             A couple of weeks after payments had been made, this lawsuit was

filed by Brown asserting that she was owed the interest on the overdue payments

and seeking approximately $2,500 in attorney fees incurred up to the time of the

filing and/or the aforementioned payments. The parties both filed numerous briefs

and motions in the court below and ultimately, the trial court did not issue its order

until over a year later in October of 2020. The court held that Allstate did not have

a reasonable foundation for delaying payment because the EUO exceeded the

scope permitted by law. The court below further held that Allstate was required to

pay interest of 12% from March 14 to June 14, 2019, the date of the EUO, and

18% interest from June 14 to August 8, 2019. Attorney fees were ordered to be

paid from June 14, 2019 to May 19, 2020, the date that the motion for attorney fees

                                         -18-
was made in this litigation. Brown’s attorney then submitted a bill and sought and

was awarded $20,391 in fees, plus the interest.

             This case presents a question of statutory construction and the

application of the law to essentially undisputed facts. It also presents a question

that both parties and the court below have stated is one of first impression, i.e., to

whom is the interest to be paid. As the trial court noted, the MVRA is silent on

this issue, and this silence “creates an interesting question of law and a potentially

problematic issue of public policy.” The trial court went on to note that requiring

the reparation obligor to pay the interest penalty directly to the claimant is an

imperfect means of filling that statutory void as the MVRA provides that a person

is only entitled to PIP benefits if she sustains a loss. “Loss” is defined as accrued

economic loss which this insured did not sustain. KRS 304.39-020(5).

Nonetheless, the court below recognized it has also been held that the medical

providers lack standing to sue for the interest. See Neurodiagnostics, Inc. v. Ky.

Farm Bureau Mut. Ins. Co., 250 S.W.3d 321 (Ky. 2008). Thus, the court reasoned,

the penalty should have been paid to the party who has standing under KRS

304.39-210. I would find no fault with that portion of the trial court’s order.

             However, as the trial court noted, this was an area of first impression

and the statute itself is silent on this question. The payment by Allstate was made

before this action was even filed but was simply made to the carrier instead of the

                                         -19-
insured. The parties all agree it was unclear where the interest was to be paid, and

both parties were entitled to litigate over that issue.

             Secondly, it appears that the award of attorney fees was based upon

the mistaken conclusion of the trial court that the EUO was improper and that it

extended beyond the limited scope permitted by KRS 304.39-280(3). With that, I

must disagree. Allstate had the absolute right to conduct an EUO as a condition

precedent to paying the PIP benefits. Adams, 526 S.W.3d 63. Here, the carrier

promptly, and in accord with the statute, advised the insured of its request to

conduct an EUO pursuant to the policy provisions. The insured, through counsel,

promptly agreed to cooperate. The fact that the insurer then did not have to

petition the court for permission to proceed should not in any way be seen as

violative of KRS 304.39-280(3) which is what the trial court concluded.

             Our Supreme Court previously held that “Allstate [sought] discovery

from [its insured], i.e., testimony . . . provided under oath, which is exactly the

function of KRS 304.39-280(3), the statute under which Allstate began this case.”

Allstate Prop. & Cas. Ins. Co. v. Kleinfeld, 568 S.W.3d 327, 332 (Ky. App. 2019).

Similarly, in Government Employees Insurance Company v. Sanders, 569 S.W.3d

923, 926 (Ky. 2018), the Court specifically held that when requested and addressed

by the policy, the injured party was required to submit to questioning under oath as

a condition precedent to coverage. Allstate began investigating this claim in

                                          -20-
accordance with the MVRA by immediately requesting an EUO pursuant to the

policy and in keeping with the Supreme Court’s earlier ruling in Adams, 526

S.W.3d 63.

             While they did so with the risk that they would then owe penalties

under KRS 304.39-210(2) for interest and under KRS 304.39-220 for attorney fees

for delay in payment, it was not until after the EUO was completed and the

information was available that Allstate had any responsibility to pay the claimed

benefits under the statute. Based upon the statute, the delay after the EUO was

only approximately 15 days.

             Certainly, Allstate should not be penalized because it did not have to

seek judicial intervention and the parties were able to proceed with the EUO

without “unnecessarily involving the courts.” Adams, 526 S.W.3d at 66 (Ky.

2017). Such agreement and cooperation of the parties should be applauded, not

used as a basis to award more in fees and interest than if Allstate had petitioned the

court (which it was not required to do since Brown consented). Furthermore,

where, as here, a reasonable basis exists in the law for disputing whether the

interest was owed to Ms. Brown, who had no economic loss and paid no bills, or

whether it was owed to the provider itself, I believe that the trial court’s award of

                                         -21-
attorney fees for over a year of subsequent litigation that Brown initiated was

clearly erroneous.9

              Furthermore, it is not clear that benefits were withheld to Brown

“without a reasonable foundation” as required in order to support any award of fees

under KRS 304.39-220. That statute specifically states:

              if overdue benefits are recovered in an action against the
              reparation obligor . . . after receipt of notice of the
              attorney’s representation, a reasonable attorney’s fee for
              advising and representing a claimant . . . in an action for
              . . . benefits may be awarded . . . if the denial or delay
              was without reasonable foundation.

(Emphasis added.) This action was not filed for recovery of overdue benefits

because they had already been paid. It was filed solely to seek attorney fees and

interest that had already been paid to the providers under the statute. What

constitutes a reasonable fee is generally within the discretion of the court and

reviewed for an abuse of discretion. Spees v. Kentucky Legal Aid, 274 S.W.3d

447, 451 (Ky. 2009). However, an abuse of discretion occurs if the court’s ruling

9
  This case is indistinguishable, in my view, to this Court’s non-published opinion in Grange
Property & Casualty Insurance Company v. Chappell, No. 2017-CA-001418-MR, 2019 WL
645911 (Ky. App. Feb. 15, 2019). Therein, we reversed a similar summary judgment awarding
attorney fees and 18% interest because the trial court had found that Grange was required to
petition the court for a discovery order to obtain information to determine the validity of
Chappell’s claims. Citing to Adams, this Court held that recovery of interest and recovery of
attorney fees are predicated on two things – the benefits must be overdue because of failure to
pay within 30 days after receipt of reasonable proof and the delay or denial must have been
without reasonable foundation. Because the court below concluded that Grange was required to
petition the court for the information (just as this trial court concluded), it never made the
requisite finding that the delay was without reasonable foundation.

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is unsupported by sound legal principles or arbitrary or unreasonable.

Commonwealth v. English, 993 S.W.2d 941, 945 (Ky. 1999).

             Because the court below concluded that Allstate was required to

petition the court for the EUO, the requisite finding that the delay was without

reasonable foundation and in violation of the statute is clearly erroneous and not

supported by sound legal principles. For the foregoing reasons, I would reverse the

judgment of the trial court below.

BRIEFS FOR APPELLANT:                      BRIEF FOR APPELLEE:

Brian D. Stempien                          Kevin M. Adams
J. Michael Wells                           Cornelius Kearns
Louisville, Kentucky                       Louisville, Kentucky

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