In this case, the Plaintiff argued that a Liberty Mutual Insurance standard Tort Election Form that Liberty Mutual had secured from the Plaintiff and which purported to indicate that the Plaintiff had knowingly elected the Limited Tort option, was defective. The Plaintiff argued that the form was defective in that it deviated, in several areas, from the language required by 75 Pa. C.S.A. §1705(a) for such tort election forms.
The trial court judge agreed with the Plaintiff and found not only that the tort election form was defective, but that its defective nature rendered the form invalid, which therefore rendered the Plaintiff a Full Tort Plaintiff.
The court rejected the defense argument that the statute at issue did not provide for any remedy for instances in which a tort election form is different from the language required by the statute.
As stated, the court in this case found that the discrepancies were sufficient in quantity and quality to allow the court to rule that the Plaintiff in this case should be deemed to be a Full Tort Plaintiff. The trial court stated that, here, the Plaintiff was not making a free and informed choice as to the tort election where the carrier’s form did not include alll of the required statutory language, most crucially when describing the parameters of the Limited Tort option to a customer purchasing automobile insurance.
The court stated that the statute at issue, 75 Pa. C.S.A. §1705(a)(3), is clear that, when no tort election is made the insured is presumed to have chosen the Full Tort option. Here, the court found that, given that the Plaintiff had signed a Limited Tort option form without being accurately informed as to the meaning of a limited tort election by way statutorily prescribed language, the Plaintiff effectively made no valid tort election under the statute.
The court rejected the defense argument that the deviations from the statutory language were de minimus.
The court also noted that, if an insurance company was permitted to deviate from the language required by the language when describing the tort options, and still have the insured’s subsequent choice constitute a valid tort election form, then the statutory provisions §1705 would have no effect.
As such, the court granted the Plaintiff’s Motion for Summary Judgment and provided the remedy not found in the statute that, where the language of the tort election form so substantially deviates from the statutorily required language for such forms, an insured customer of the insurance company should be deemed to be covered by the Full Tort option even though the Limited Tort Option was selected on the form.
Anyone wishing to review a copy of this decision may click this LINK.
I send thanks to Attorney John H. Aitchison, of the law office of Steven L. Chung, in Philadelphia for bringing this case to my attention.
As such, the court granted the Plaintiff’s Motion for Summary Judgment and provided the remedy not found in the statute that, where the language of the tort election form so substantially deviates from the statutorily required language for such forms, an insured customer of the insurance company should be deemed to be covered by the Full Tort option even though the Limited Tort Option was selected on the form.
Anyone wishing to review a copy of this decision may click this LINK.
I send thanks to Attorney John H. Aitchison, of the law office of Steven L. Chung, in Philadelphia for bringing this case to my attention.
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