Darmer v. Jenkins-Jones

U.S. District Court, District of Minnesota

Darmer v. Jenkins-Jones

Trial Court Opinion

                 UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT                            
                    DISTRICT OF MINNESOTA                                


Steven Darmer,                      Case No. 17-cv-4309-JRT-KMM          

               Plaintiff,                                                

vs.                               ORDER ON MOTION TO AMEND               
                                     COMPLANIT AND MODIFY                
State Farm Fire and Casualty           SCHEDULING ORDER                  
Company,                                                                 

                  Defendant.                                             


    This matter is before the Court on Steven Darmer’s motion to amend his 
complaint. Pl.’s Mot. to Am. Compl., ECF No. 62. Mr. Darmer seeks leave to 
include: (1) additional allegations he claims are relevant to his breach-of-
contract claim; and (2) a new claim for bad-faith denial of insurance benefits 
pursuant to 
Minn. Stat. § 604.18
. Also before the Court is Mr. Darmer’s request 
for modification of the scheduling order. Pl.’s Mot. to Am. Scheduling Order, ECF 
No. 116. For the reasons that follow, Mr. Darmer’s motion to amend the    
complaint is granted and the scheduling order is modified.                
I.   Motion to Amend Complaint                                            
    The parties disagree about two main issues with respect to Mr. Darmer’s 
request to amend to include a bad-faith claim.1 First, the parties disagree 
whether Mr. Darmer’s motion to add that claim is governed by Federal Rule of 

1    Because there does not appear to be any dispute with respect to      
Mr. Darmer’s request to add allegations to his pleadings that relate to his 
breach-of-contract claim, the Court grants the motion to the extent it seeks 
such relief without further discussion.                                   
Civil Procedure 15 or by 
Minn. Stat. § 604.18
, subd. 4. Second, the parties 
dispute whether amendment should be permitted under either standard.      
    A. Applicable Standard                                               
    Rule 15(a)(2) and 
Minn. Stat. § 604.18
, subd. 4(a), set out different 
standards for a court to apply when considering whether to allow a plaintiff to 
add a claim to recover “taxable costs” based on an insurance company’s alleged 
bad-faith denial of benefits. Under Rule 15, leave to amend should be freely 
granted when justice requires. Fed. R. Civ. P. 15(a)(2). Federal courts applying 
this standard deny leave to amend where there is undue delay, bad faith or 
dilatory motive on the part of the plaintiff, repeated failure to cure deficiencies 
by amendments previously permitted, or where the amendment would cause    
undue prejudice to the defendant.      , 
371 U.S. 178, 182
 (1962)         
Leave may also be denied where the proposed amendment is futile, meaning that 
the allegations in the proposed amended pleading are insufficient to survive a 
motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim under Rule 12(b)(6).  ,    
601 F.3d 842, 850
 (8th Cir. 2010). Courts evaluating futility do not consider 
matters outside the proposed amended pleading in deciding whether to permit 
the amendment.                         , No. 13-cv-1681 (PJS/JJG),        
2013 WL 12145854
, at *1 (D. Minn. Oct. 28, 2013) (“No matters outside the 
pleading may be considered.”) (quoting       , 
313 F.3d 414, 417
 (8th     
Cir. 2002)).                                                              
    The standards established by the Minnesota Legislature governing     
amendment of complaints under 
Minn. Stat. § 604.18
, subd. 4(a), are different. 
This statute prevents a plaintiff from bringing a claim for bad-faith denial of 
insurance benefits at the beginning of a “civil action by an insured against an 
insurer.”   Instead, “[a]fter filing the suit,” the plaintiff is allowed to “make a 
motion to amend the pleadings to claim recovery of taxable costs under this 
section.”  Such a motion “must be accompanied by one or more affidavits   
showing the factual basis for the motion” and the insurer may submit evidence 
to show that there is no factual basis for the motion.  The court may grant the 
plaintiff leave to amend “if the court finds prima facie evidence in support of the 
motion.”                                                                  
    For several years in the District of Minnesota, the standards laid out in 
Minn. Stat. § 604.18
, subd. 4(a), have been applied to motions seeking leave to 
add a bad-faith-denial-of-benefits claims in diversity-jurisdiction cases like 
this one.                                , 
800 F. Supp. 2d 1020
,          
1024–30 (D. Minn. 2011). Recently, however, the propriety of applying the 
Minnesota gatekeeping standard, as opposed to Fed. R. Civ. P. 15, has come into 
question. In                                     , No. 16-cv-4077         
(PJS/SER), 
2018 WL 1960450
, *5–13 (D. Minn. Apr. 26, 2018), the court directly 
addressed “what legal standard controls amendments to the pleadings in a  
diversity case[.]”  at *2. The   court concluded that Rule 15(a)(2)’s     
standards must be applied because Rule 15’s are in direct conflict with the 
standard applied under 
Minn. Stat. § 604.18
, subd. 4(a). Specifically, the court 
concluded that the Minnesota statute requires a party seeking leave to amend to 
shoulder a more difficult burden than required under the Federal Rule.2  , 
2018 WL 1960450
, at *7 (noting that § 604.18 requires an evidentiary showing 
where the Rules of Civil Procedure focus the court’s inquiry on only the facial 
plausibility of the pleading itself);   at *8 (“[S]ection 604.18 requires a greater 

2    United States Magistrate Judge Steven E. Rau’s decision in  was      
appealed to United State District Judge Patrick J. Schiltz. At the time of this 
Order, Judge Schiltz has not ruled on the objections to Judge Rau’s order. In 
another recent case, the District Court overruled an objection to Magistrate 
Judge Rau’s conclusion that federal courts in diversity cases must apply Rule 15 
to motions to amend complaints to add punitive damages rather than 
Minn. Stat. § 549.191
, which followed reasoning similar to the decision in  .         
               , No. 13-cv-1927 (ADM/LIB), 
2018 WL 3475484
 (D. Minn.     
Jul. 19. 2018) (Montgomery, J.) (overruling defendant’s objection to magistrate 
judge order granting leave to amend to add a claim for punitive damages by 
applying Rule 15 instead of 
Minn. Stat. § 549.191
).                       
showing than the standard contemplated by the Federal Rules of Civil      
Procedure.”).                                                             
    This Court agrees with and adopts the reasoning in  . The  court     
carefully analyzed the Supreme Court precedent that must guide the        
determination of whether to apply a state rule or a Federal Rule of Civil 
Procedure that appear to be in conflict.  at *2–3 (discussing             
                                    , 
559 U.S. 393
 (2010),               
            , 
480 U.S. 1
 (1987), and         , 
380 U.S. 460, 471
         
(1965)). In addition, the   court cogently explained how a futility analysis 
under Rule 15 requires a court to accept as true the allegations in a proposed 
amended pleading, while avoiding consideration of matters outside the pleadings. 
 at *5–6. This conflicts directly with the prima facie evidentiary showing that a 
moving party must marshal under § 604.18 and the consideration a court must 
give to evidence submitted in opposition to the motion.   at *6–8. Rule 15 
provides a uniform answer to the question of when leave to amend should be 
permitted in federal litigation and its liberal standard cannot peacefully coexist 
with the more difficult one created by § 604.18.  at *8–9, 11. Moreover,  
Rule 15 is valid under the Rules Enabling Act for all the reasons noted in the 
  .   at *12–13. Accordingly, the Court concludes that Rule 15’s standards 
must be applied to Mr. Darmer’s motion for leave to add a bad-faith-denial-of-
benefits claim.3                                                          
    B. Futility Analysis                                                 
    In light of the lenient amendment standard contemplated by Rule 15, the 
Court must determine whether Mr. Darmer’s motion should be denied because 

3    State Farm notes that in                      , No. 16-cv-55         
(PJS/KMM), 
2017 WL 8315883
 (D. Minn. Apr. 26, 2017), the undersigned applied 
the “stricter standard in § 604.18.” Defs.’ Resp. at 28, ECF No. 102. Neither 
party in       suggested that Rule 15’s standards should apply to the motion 
to amend to add a claim under § 604.18.                                   
amendment would be futile.4 Although the Court remains quite skeptical of 
whether a finder-of-fact would ever conclude that State Farm acted in bad faith 
based on the full record, the Court concludes that amendment would not be futile 
and should therefore be permitted.5                                       
    Plausibility is a concept applicable to motions to dismiss for failure to 
state a claim under Rule 12(b)(6),                  , 
550 U.S. 544
,       
556–57 (2007), which is the same standard courts consider when evaluating 
futility of amendment,  , 
601 F.3d at 850
. Construing State Farm’s position to 
be that leave to amend should be denied because Mr. Darmer’s claim is futile, 
Court will evaluate whether the factual allegations in the Proposed Second 
Amended Complaint could survive a motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim 
for recovery of “taxable costs” under 
Minn. Stat. § 604.18
.               
    Section 604.18 allows an insured to recover “taxable costs” from an  
insurer where the insured can show:                                       
    (1) the absence of a reasonable basis for denying the benefits of the 
      insurance policy; and                                              
    (2) that the insurer knew of the lack of a reasonable basis for      
      denying the benefits of the insurance policy or acted in reckless  

4    State Farm has not suggested that Mr. Darmer’s motion should be denied 
for undue delay, bad faith or dilatory motive, repeated failure to cure   
deficiencies, or undue prejudice. Therefore, the Court will not address these 
issues.                                                                   

5    State Farm’s opposition to Mr. Darmer’s motion to amend is largely   
premised upon the factual record in this case, pointing to several matters 
beyond the pleadings.  Defs.’ Resp. at 3–25 (referencing affidavits and   
several exhibits). As such, State Farm’s opposition to the motion does not focus 
on the allegations in Mr. Darmer’s Proposed Second Amended Complaint.     
Nevertheless, State Farm argues that the facts demonstrate that Mr. Darmer’s 
proposed bad-faith claim is not “plausible,” which signals a futility challenge to 
Mr. Darmer’s motion to amend. Defs.’ Resp. at 29.                         
      disregard of the lack of a reasonable basis for denying the        
      benefits of the insurance policy.                                  
Minn. Stat. § 604.18
, subd. 2(a).6 Courts looking to this statutory language have 
held that the insurer is not liable for such “taxable costs” where the insured’s 
claim is “fairly debatable.”     , 
800 F. Supp. 2d at 1025
.               
    With these standards in mind, the Court must consider whether the    
allegations set forth in the proposed Second Amended Complaint plausibly allege 
that State Farm failed to comply with its contractual obligations in an   
unreasonable manner and did so knowing (or recklessly disregarding) that it had 
no reasonable basis to deny the benefits of the insurance policy.  , 
2018 WL 1960450
, at *14–15. Looking only at the allegations,  Redlined Proposed 
Second Am. Compl. (“SAC”), ECF No. 99, and taking the facts alleged as true, 
the Court finds that Mr. Darmer has plausibly alleged a claim for bad-faith denial 
of insurance benefits.                                                    
    Mr. Darmer asserts that State Farm should be held liable under 
Minn. Stat. § 604.18
 in three respects. First, he alleges that State Farm unreasonably 
delayed paying benefits for the loss of his home itself. Taken together, his 
factual allegations plausibly allege that State Farm knew his home was damaged 
in the November 15, 2016 fire to such an extent that it was either a total loss or 
a constructive total loss under his policy. State Farm’s representatives allegedly 
knew that the City of St. Paul declared the property a total loss and issued an 
order for abatement of the property shortly after the fire. State Farm’s internal 
correspondence on the day of the fire noted that entire portions of the structure 
were destroyed. A State Farm representative was aware that the City intended 
to tear down what was left of the home within weeks. A State Farm         

6    A showing under subdivision 2 of § 604.18 allows a court to award “(1) an 
amount equal to one-half of the proceeds awarded that are in excess of an 
amount offered by the insurer at least ten days before the trial begins or 
$250,000, whichever is less; and (2) reasonable attorney fees actually incurred 
to establish the insurer's violation of this section.” 
Minn. Stat. § 604.18
, subd. 3. 
representative estimated that the cost of repairing or replacing the home 
exceeded the policy limits. However, according to Mr. Darmer’s proposed SAC, 
State Farm did not make full payment for the replacement of his home until 
September 1, 2017.                                                        
    Second, Mr. Darmer asserts that State Farm unreasonably refused to pay 
for the contents of his home despite knowing or recklessly disregarding that it 
had no reasonable basis to refuse payment. Again, Mr. Darmer has plausibly 
alleged a bad-faith claim. According to the facts set forth in the proposed SAC, 
Mr. Darmer provided State Farm with the information required under the policy 
to value the contents of his home that were lost in the fire. When State Farm’s 
representatives entered the items that Mr. Darmer said were damaged into its 
own system for evaluating a contents claim, he alleges that the replacement 
costs and valuations for the entries that State Farm verified far exceeded the 
policy limits for this coverage. Despite being aware that even the verified items 
exceeded the policy limits, State Farm allegedly delayed payment of benefits. 
Mr. Darmer asserts that State Farm unreasonably demanded further information 
and then rejected his proof of loss claiming it needed additional documentation. 
Finally, according to Mr. Darmer’s SAC, State Farm ultimately never paid its 
policy limits for the contents of his home.                               
    Third, Mr. Darmer claims that State Farm was unreasonable in its decision 
to cancel alternative living expense payments before his new residence was 
fully constructed. Mr. Darmer asserts that the policy entitles him to payment of 
such expenses for up to two years so that he has the same living conditions he 
enjoyed before the fire. State Farm paid some alternative living expenses for a 
period after the fire, but it terminated the payments in October of 2017.  State 
Farm allegedly canceled these payments because it recklessly disregarded that 
construction could not begin until State Farm paid the policy limits to replace the 
dwelling, which did not occur until September of 2017. He asserts that when he 
asked State Farm to reinstate the expenses, it refused, unreasonably      
determining that he was only entitled to a lesser standard of living that was not 
actually comparable to his pre-fire experience.                           
    In sum, the Court founds that, taking Mr. Darmer’s allegations as true and 
applying the liberal amendment standard contemplated by Rule 15, Mr. Darmer’s 
motion to amend should be granted.                                        
    C. A Word of Caution                                                 
    As explained, on a futility challenge, the Court determines only whether 
Mr. Darmer’s bad-faith claim is plausible, and assumes all of the facts alleged in 
his proposed SAC to be true. When evaluating his position going forward in this 
case, Mr. Darmer should be aware of just how permissive the standard applied 
by the Court is. Mr. Darmer is cautioned that a fact-finder evaluating a complete 
record could easily conclude Mr. Darmer’s insurance claims were, at a minimum, 
fairly debatable, and therefore his bad-faith claim would not succeed. For 
example, if the Court looks beyond Mr. Darmer’s one-sided view of the facts, 
the record suggests that State Farm may, in fact, have reasonably delayed 
paying the policy limits for the dwelling because it did not receive a signed 
repair contract until the end of August 2017. The record also suggests that 
Mr. Darmer may have repeatedly and substantially misrepresented the value of 
the contents he lost during the fire, which certainly calls into question Darmer’s 
argument that State Farm was not entitled to debate his claim for policy limits 
regarding the contents of the home. Moreover, Mr. Darmer’s own emails also 
indicate that he instructed his public adjuster not to cooperate with State Farm’s 
claims adjuster, which would indicate that State Farm was entitled to closely 
examine and question his contents claim, essentially eliminating a bad-faith 
finding. And State Farm has presented facts outside the proposed SAC that 
indicate it was fairly debatable whether Mr. Darmer’s alternative-living- 
expenses claim required the insurer to accommodate the precise demands    
Darmer made. In light of its decision to apply Rule 15, the Court has not taken 
these extra-pleading materials into account. Nevertheless, the Court notes these 
matters here to highlight that although Mr. Darmer is being given leave to amend 
to allege a bad-faith claim, he should not read this decision as implying that he 
is likely to succeed.7                                                    
    Based on the foregoing, IT IS HEREBY ORDERED THAT Mr. Darmer’s       
motion for leave to file a Second Amended Complaint (ECF No. 62) is GRANTED. 
On or before November 26, 2018, Mr. Darmer shall file his Second Amended  
Complaint in substantially the same form as the (non-redlined) proposed Second 
Amended Complaint submitted in connection with his motion.                
II.  Motion to Modify the Scheduling Order                                
    This matter is also before the Court on Mr. Darmer’s request for     
modification of the schedule. Pls.’ Consolidated Mots., ECF No. 116. As noted in 
the Court’s October 5, 2018 Order, the Court deferred ruling on this request 
until a decision was reached on the motion to amend. Order (Oct. 5, 2018), ECF 
No. 218. State Farm represented at the October 3rd hearing that its production 
of documents and other discovery responses were not significantly limited by its 
objection that there was no bad-faith claim in the litigation at that time. The 

7    In opposing the motion to amend, State Farm argues that the motion   
should be denied because Mr. Darmer’s bad-faith claim would not survive   
summary judgment. Def.’s Resp. at 33–34. Indeed, were that the standard at this 
stage, the Court’s ruling might be different. However, courts must apply the 
Rule 12(b)(6) standard when considering whether a proposed amendment is   
futile, a review that ignores matters outside the pleadings. To the extent federal 
district courts may convert a futility challenge into a motion for summary 
judgment, the Court declines to do so here.             , No. 15-         
cv-469 (RHK/JJK), 
2016 WL 7888036
, at *5 (D. Minn. Apr. 7, 2016) (refusing to 
consider matters outside the pleadings on a futility challenge to a motion to 
amend and declining to convert the challenge to a motion for summary      
judgment);                     , No. 12-CV-2893 (RHK/LIB), 
2013 WL 12140953
, at *3 n.3 (D. Minn. May 30, 2013) (declining to convert a futility 
challenge to a motion for summary judgment).                              
Court advised the parties that, if the Court grants the motion to amend to add a 
bad-faith claim, which it has done in this Order, the Court would permit a very 
brief extension of the schedule to allow narrowly tailored discovery on the bad-
faith claim. The Court also allowed Mr. Darmer to serve 5 additional document 
requests and 5 additional interrogatories relating to the then-putative bad-faith 
claim. Plaintiff’s counsel did not articulate a basis for the Court to determine that 
earlier depositions would need to be reopened even if the bad-faith claim was 
permitted. ECF No. 218.                                                   
    Because the Court has granted Mr. Darmer’s motion to amend,          
Mr. Darmer’s request for modification of the schedule (ECF No. 116) is    
GRANTED IN PART to the extent it seeks a modest extension of the remaining 
deadlines. IT IS HEREBY ORDERED THAT:                                     
    1.  The parties may conduct limited discovery concerning the bad-faith 
      claim allowed by Part I of this Order. Any such discovery must be  
      served in time to be completed by January 21, 2019. No additional  
      depositions will be allowed absent leave of the Court.             
    2.  If any disputes arise with respect to the limited discovery permitted by 
      this Order, the parties are required to engage in a meet-and-confer 
      process that includes at least one in-person meeting or personal phone 
      conversation. If the parties are unable to work out any such disputes, 
      those issues must be raised through the Court’s informal discovery 
      dispute resolution process.                                        
    3.  All dispositive motions shall be served and filed by the moving party on 
      or before April 1, 2019.                                           
    4.  This case shall be ready for a jury trial on July 1, 2019.       
Date: November 21, 2018                                                  
                                  Katherine Menendez                    
                                  United States Magistrate Judge        

Trial Court Opinion

                 UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT                            
                    DISTRICT OF MINNESOTA                                


Steven Darmer,                      Case No. 17-cv-4309-JRT-KMM          

               Plaintiff,                                                

vs.                               ORDER ON MOTION TO AMEND               
                                     COMPLANIT AND MODIFY                
State Farm Fire and Casualty           SCHEDULING ORDER                  
Company,                                                                 

                  Defendant.                                             


    This matter is before the Court on Steven Darmer’s motion to amend his 
complaint. Pl.’s Mot. to Am. Compl., ECF No. 62. Mr. Darmer seeks leave to 
include: (1) additional allegations he claims are relevant to his breach-of-
contract claim; and (2) a new claim for bad-faith denial of insurance benefits 
pursuant to 
Minn. Stat. § 604.18
. Also before the Court is Mr. Darmer’s request 
for modification of the scheduling order. Pl.’s Mot. to Am. Scheduling Order, ECF 
No. 116. For the reasons that follow, Mr. Darmer’s motion to amend the    
complaint is granted and the scheduling order is modified.                
I.   Motion to Amend Complaint                                            
    The parties disagree about two main issues with respect to Mr. Darmer’s 
request to amend to include a bad-faith claim.1 First, the parties disagree 
whether Mr. Darmer’s motion to add that claim is governed by Federal Rule of 

1    Because there does not appear to be any dispute with respect to      
Mr. Darmer’s request to add allegations to his pleadings that relate to his 
breach-of-contract claim, the Court grants the motion to the extent it seeks 
such relief without further discussion.                                   
Civil Procedure 15 or by 
Minn. Stat. § 604.18
, subd. 4. Second, the parties 
dispute whether amendment should be permitted under either standard.      
    A. Applicable Standard                                               
    Rule 15(a)(2) and 
Minn. Stat. § 604.18
, subd. 4(a), set out different 
standards for a court to apply when considering whether to allow a plaintiff to 
add a claim to recover “taxable costs” based on an insurance company’s alleged 
bad-faith denial of benefits. Under Rule 15, leave to amend should be freely 
granted when justice requires. Fed. R. Civ. P. 15(a)(2). Federal courts applying 
this standard deny leave to amend where there is undue delay, bad faith or 
dilatory motive on the part of the plaintiff, repeated failure to cure deficiencies 
by amendments previously permitted, or where the amendment would cause    
undue prejudice to the defendant.      , 
371 U.S. 178, 182
 (1962)         
Leave may also be denied where the proposed amendment is futile, meaning that 
the allegations in the proposed amended pleading are insufficient to survive a 
motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim under Rule 12(b)(6).  ,    
601 F.3d 842, 850
 (8th Cir. 2010). Courts evaluating futility do not consider 
matters outside the proposed amended pleading in deciding whether to permit 
the amendment.                         , No. 13-cv-1681 (PJS/JJG),        
2013 WL 12145854
, at *1 (D. Minn. Oct. 28, 2013) (“No matters outside the 
pleading may be considered.”) (quoting       , 
313 F.3d 414, 417
 (8th     
Cir. 2002)).                                                              
    The standards established by the Minnesota Legislature governing     
amendment of complaints under 
Minn. Stat. § 604.18
, subd. 4(a), are different. 
This statute prevents a plaintiff from bringing a claim for bad-faith denial of 
insurance benefits at the beginning of a “civil action by an insured against an 
insurer.”   Instead, “[a]fter filing the suit,” the plaintiff is allowed to “make a 
motion to amend the pleadings to claim recovery of taxable costs under this 
section.”  Such a motion “must be accompanied by one or more affidavits   
showing the factual basis for the motion” and the insurer may submit evidence 
to show that there is no factual basis for the motion.  The court may grant the 
plaintiff leave to amend “if the court finds prima facie evidence in support of the 
motion.”                                                                  
    For several years in the District of Minnesota, the standards laid out in 
Minn. Stat. § 604.18
, subd. 4(a), have been applied to motions seeking leave to 
add a bad-faith-denial-of-benefits claims in diversity-jurisdiction cases like 
this one.                                , 
800 F. Supp. 2d 1020
,          
1024–30 (D. Minn. 2011). Recently, however, the propriety of applying the 
Minnesota gatekeeping standard, as opposed to Fed. R. Civ. P. 15, has come into 
question. In                                     , No. 16-cv-4077         
(PJS/SER), 
2018 WL 1960450
, *5–13 (D. Minn. Apr. 26, 2018), the court directly 
addressed “what legal standard controls amendments to the pleadings in a  
diversity case[.]”  at *2. The   court concluded that Rule 15(a)(2)’s     
standards must be applied because Rule 15’s are in direct conflict with the 
standard applied under 
Minn. Stat. § 604.18
, subd. 4(a). Specifically, the court 
concluded that the Minnesota statute requires a party seeking leave to amend to 
shoulder a more difficult burden than required under the Federal Rule.2  , 
2018 WL 1960450
, at *7 (noting that § 604.18 requires an evidentiary showing 
where the Rules of Civil Procedure focus the court’s inquiry on only the facial 
plausibility of the pleading itself);   at *8 (“[S]ection 604.18 requires a greater 

2    United States Magistrate Judge Steven E. Rau’s decision in  was      
appealed to United State District Judge Patrick J. Schiltz. At the time of this 
Order, Judge Schiltz has not ruled on the objections to Judge Rau’s order. In 
another recent case, the District Court overruled an objection to Magistrate 
Judge Rau’s conclusion that federal courts in diversity cases must apply Rule 15 
to motions to amend complaints to add punitive damages rather than 
Minn. Stat. § 549.191
, which followed reasoning similar to the decision in  .         
               , No. 13-cv-1927 (ADM/LIB), 
2018 WL 3475484
 (D. Minn.     
Jul. 19. 2018) (Montgomery, J.) (overruling defendant’s objection to magistrate 
judge order granting leave to amend to add a claim for punitive damages by 
applying Rule 15 instead of 
Minn. Stat. § 549.191
).                       
showing than the standard contemplated by the Federal Rules of Civil      
Procedure.”).                                                             
    This Court agrees with and adopts the reasoning in  . The  court     
carefully analyzed the Supreme Court precedent that must guide the        
determination of whether to apply a state rule or a Federal Rule of Civil 
Procedure that appear to be in conflict.  at *2–3 (discussing             
                                    , 
559 U.S. 393
 (2010),               
            , 
480 U.S. 1
 (1987), and         , 
380 U.S. 460, 471
         
(1965)). In addition, the   court cogently explained how a futility analysis 
under Rule 15 requires a court to accept as true the allegations in a proposed 
amended pleading, while avoiding consideration of matters outside the pleadings. 
 at *5–6. This conflicts directly with the prima facie evidentiary showing that a 
moving party must marshal under § 604.18 and the consideration a court must 
give to evidence submitted in opposition to the motion.   at *6–8. Rule 15 
provides a uniform answer to the question of when leave to amend should be 
permitted in federal litigation and its liberal standard cannot peacefully coexist 
with the more difficult one created by § 604.18.  at *8–9, 11. Moreover,  
Rule 15 is valid under the Rules Enabling Act for all the reasons noted in the 
  .   at *12–13. Accordingly, the Court concludes that Rule 15’s standards 
must be applied to Mr. Darmer’s motion for leave to add a bad-faith-denial-of-
benefits claim.3                                                          
    B. Futility Analysis                                                 
    In light of the lenient amendment standard contemplated by Rule 15, the 
Court must determine whether Mr. Darmer’s motion should be denied because 

3    State Farm notes that in                      , No. 16-cv-55         
(PJS/KMM), 
2017 WL 8315883
 (D. Minn. Apr. 26, 2017), the undersigned applied 
the “stricter standard in § 604.18.” Defs.’ Resp. at 28, ECF No. 102. Neither 
party in       suggested that Rule 15’s standards should apply to the motion 
to amend to add a claim under § 604.18.                                   
amendment would be futile.4 Although the Court remains quite skeptical of 
whether a finder-of-fact would ever conclude that State Farm acted in bad faith 
based on the full record, the Court concludes that amendment would not be futile 
and should therefore be permitted.5                                       
    Plausibility is a concept applicable to motions to dismiss for failure to 
state a claim under Rule 12(b)(6),                  , 
550 U.S. 544
,       
556–57 (2007), which is the same standard courts consider when evaluating 
futility of amendment,  , 
601 F.3d at 850
. Construing State Farm’s position to 
be that leave to amend should be denied because Mr. Darmer’s claim is futile, 
Court will evaluate whether the factual allegations in the Proposed Second 
Amended Complaint could survive a motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim 
for recovery of “taxable costs” under 
Minn. Stat. § 604.18
.               
    Section 604.18 allows an insured to recover “taxable costs” from an  
insurer where the insured can show:                                       
    (1) the absence of a reasonable basis for denying the benefits of the 
      insurance policy; and                                              
    (2) that the insurer knew of the lack of a reasonable basis for      
      denying the benefits of the insurance policy or acted in reckless  

4    State Farm has not suggested that Mr. Darmer’s motion should be denied 
for undue delay, bad faith or dilatory motive, repeated failure to cure   
deficiencies, or undue prejudice. Therefore, the Court will not address these 
issues.                                                                   

5    State Farm’s opposition to Mr. Darmer’s motion to amend is largely   
premised upon the factual record in this case, pointing to several matters 
beyond the pleadings.  Defs.’ Resp. at 3–25 (referencing affidavits and   
several exhibits). As such, State Farm’s opposition to the motion does not focus 
on the allegations in Mr. Darmer’s Proposed Second Amended Complaint.     
Nevertheless, State Farm argues that the facts demonstrate that Mr. Darmer’s 
proposed bad-faith claim is not “plausible,” which signals a futility challenge to 
Mr. Darmer’s motion to amend. Defs.’ Resp. at 29.                         
      disregard of the lack of a reasonable basis for denying the        
      benefits of the insurance policy.                                  
Minn. Stat. § 604.18
, subd. 2(a).6 Courts looking to this statutory language have 
held that the insurer is not liable for such “taxable costs” where the insured’s 
claim is “fairly debatable.”     , 
800 F. Supp. 2d at 1025
.               
    With these standards in mind, the Court must consider whether the    
allegations set forth in the proposed Second Amended Complaint plausibly allege 
that State Farm failed to comply with its contractual obligations in an   
unreasonable manner and did so knowing (or recklessly disregarding) that it had 
no reasonable basis to deny the benefits of the insurance policy.  , 
2018 WL 1960450
, at *14–15. Looking only at the allegations,  Redlined Proposed 
Second Am. Compl. (“SAC”), ECF No. 99, and taking the facts alleged as true, 
the Court finds that Mr. Darmer has plausibly alleged a claim for bad-faith denial 
of insurance benefits.                                                    
    Mr. Darmer asserts that State Farm should be held liable under 
Minn. Stat. § 604.18
 in three respects. First, he alleges that State Farm unreasonably 
delayed paying benefits for the loss of his home itself. Taken together, his 
factual allegations plausibly allege that State Farm knew his home was damaged 
in the November 15, 2016 fire to such an extent that it was either a total loss or 
a constructive total loss under his policy. State Farm’s representatives allegedly 
knew that the City of St. Paul declared the property a total loss and issued an 
order for abatement of the property shortly after the fire. State Farm’s internal 
correspondence on the day of the fire noted that entire portions of the structure 
were destroyed. A State Farm representative was aware that the City intended 
to tear down what was left of the home within weeks. A State Farm         

6    A showing under subdivision 2 of § 604.18 allows a court to award “(1) an 
amount equal to one-half of the proceeds awarded that are in excess of an 
amount offered by the insurer at least ten days before the trial begins or 
$250,000, whichever is less; and (2) reasonable attorney fees actually incurred 
to establish the insurer's violation of this section.” 
Minn. Stat. § 604.18
, subd. 3. 
representative estimated that the cost of repairing or replacing the home 
exceeded the policy limits. However, according to Mr. Darmer’s proposed SAC, 
State Farm did not make full payment for the replacement of his home until 
September 1, 2017.                                                        
    Second, Mr. Darmer asserts that State Farm unreasonably refused to pay 
for the contents of his home despite knowing or recklessly disregarding that it 
had no reasonable basis to refuse payment. Again, Mr. Darmer has plausibly 
alleged a bad-faith claim. According to the facts set forth in the proposed SAC, 
Mr. Darmer provided State Farm with the information required under the policy 
to value the contents of his home that were lost in the fire. When State Farm’s 
representatives entered the items that Mr. Darmer said were damaged into its 
own system for evaluating a contents claim, he alleges that the replacement 
costs and valuations for the entries that State Farm verified far exceeded the 
policy limits for this coverage. Despite being aware that even the verified items 
exceeded the policy limits, State Farm allegedly delayed payment of benefits. 
Mr. Darmer asserts that State Farm unreasonably demanded further information 
and then rejected his proof of loss claiming it needed additional documentation. 
Finally, according to Mr. Darmer’s SAC, State Farm ultimately never paid its 
policy limits for the contents of his home.                               
    Third, Mr. Darmer claims that State Farm was unreasonable in its decision 
to cancel alternative living expense payments before his new residence was 
fully constructed. Mr. Darmer asserts that the policy entitles him to payment of 
such expenses for up to two years so that he has the same living conditions he 
enjoyed before the fire. State Farm paid some alternative living expenses for a 
period after the fire, but it terminated the payments in October of 2017.  State 
Farm allegedly canceled these payments because it recklessly disregarded that 
construction could not begin until State Farm paid the policy limits to replace the 
dwelling, which did not occur until September of 2017. He asserts that when he 
asked State Farm to reinstate the expenses, it refused, unreasonably      
determining that he was only entitled to a lesser standard of living that was not 
actually comparable to his pre-fire experience.                           
    In sum, the Court founds that, taking Mr. Darmer’s allegations as true and 
applying the liberal amendment standard contemplated by Rule 15, Mr. Darmer’s 
motion to amend should be granted.                                        
    C. A Word of Caution                                                 
    As explained, on a futility challenge, the Court determines only whether 
Mr. Darmer’s bad-faith claim is plausible, and assumes all of the facts alleged in 
his proposed SAC to be true. When evaluating his position going forward in this 
case, Mr. Darmer should be aware of just how permissive the standard applied 
by the Court is. Mr. Darmer is cautioned that a fact-finder evaluating a complete 
record could easily conclude Mr. Darmer’s insurance claims were, at a minimum, 
fairly debatable, and therefore his bad-faith claim would not succeed. For 
example, if the Court looks beyond Mr. Darmer’s one-sided view of the facts, 
the record suggests that State Farm may, in fact, have reasonably delayed 
paying the policy limits for the dwelling because it did not receive a signed 
repair contract until the end of August 2017. The record also suggests that 
Mr. Darmer may have repeatedly and substantially misrepresented the value of 
the contents he lost during the fire, which certainly calls into question Darmer’s 
argument that State Farm was not entitled to debate his claim for policy limits 
regarding the contents of the home. Moreover, Mr. Darmer’s own emails also 
indicate that he instructed his public adjuster not to cooperate with State Farm’s 
claims adjuster, which would indicate that State Farm was entitled to closely 
examine and question his contents claim, essentially eliminating a bad-faith 
finding. And State Farm has presented facts outside the proposed SAC that 
indicate it was fairly debatable whether Mr. Darmer’s alternative-living- 
expenses claim required the insurer to accommodate the precise demands    
Darmer made. In light of its decision to apply Rule 15, the Court has not taken 
these extra-pleading materials into account. Nevertheless, the Court notes these 
matters here to highlight that although Mr. Darmer is being given leave to amend 
to allege a bad-faith claim, he should not read this decision as implying that he 
is likely to succeed.7                                                    
    Based on the foregoing, IT IS HEREBY ORDERED THAT Mr. Darmer’s       
motion for leave to file a Second Amended Complaint (ECF No. 62) is GRANTED. 
On or before November 26, 2018, Mr. Darmer shall file his Second Amended  
Complaint in substantially the same form as the (non-redlined) proposed Second 
Amended Complaint submitted in connection with his motion.                
II.  Motion to Modify the Scheduling Order                                
    This matter is also before the Court on Mr. Darmer’s request for     
modification of the schedule. Pls.’ Consolidated Mots., ECF No. 116. As noted in 
the Court’s October 5, 2018 Order, the Court deferred ruling on this request 
until a decision was reached on the motion to amend. Order (Oct. 5, 2018), ECF 
No. 218. State Farm represented at the October 3rd hearing that its production 
of documents and other discovery responses were not significantly limited by its 
objection that there was no bad-faith claim in the litigation at that time. The 

7    In opposing the motion to amend, State Farm argues that the motion   
should be denied because Mr. Darmer’s bad-faith claim would not survive   
summary judgment. Def.’s Resp. at 33–34. Indeed, were that the standard at this 
stage, the Court’s ruling might be different. However, courts must apply the 
Rule 12(b)(6) standard when considering whether a proposed amendment is   
futile, a review that ignores matters outside the pleadings. To the extent federal 
district courts may convert a futility challenge into a motion for summary 
judgment, the Court declines to do so here.             , No. 15-         
cv-469 (RHK/JJK), 
2016 WL 7888036
, at *5 (D. Minn. Apr. 7, 2016) (refusing to 
consider matters outside the pleadings on a futility challenge to a motion to 
amend and declining to convert the challenge to a motion for summary      
judgment);                     , No. 12-CV-2893 (RHK/LIB), 
2013 WL 12140953
, at *3 n.3 (D. Minn. May 30, 2013) (declining to convert a futility 
challenge to a motion for summary judgment).                              
Court advised the parties that, if the Court grants the motion to amend to add a 
bad-faith claim, which it has done in this Order, the Court would permit a very 
brief extension of the schedule to allow narrowly tailored discovery on the bad-
faith claim. The Court also allowed Mr. Darmer to serve 5 additional document 
requests and 5 additional interrogatories relating to the then-putative bad-faith 
claim. Plaintiff’s counsel did not articulate a basis for the Court to determine that 
earlier depositions would need to be reopened even if the bad-faith claim was 
permitted. ECF No. 218.                                                   
    Because the Court has granted Mr. Darmer’s motion to amend,          
Mr. Darmer’s request for modification of the schedule (ECF No. 116) is    
GRANTED IN PART to the extent it seeks a modest extension of the remaining 
deadlines. IT IS HEREBY ORDERED THAT:                                     
    1.  The parties may conduct limited discovery concerning the bad-faith 
      claim allowed by Part I of this Order. Any such discovery must be  
      served in time to be completed by January 21, 2019. No additional  
      depositions will be allowed absent leave of the Court.             
    2.  If any disputes arise with respect to the limited discovery permitted by 
      this Order, the parties are required to engage in a meet-and-confer 
      process that includes at least one in-person meeting or personal phone 
      conversation. If the parties are unable to work out any such disputes, 
      those issues must be raised through the Court’s informal discovery 
      dispute resolution process.                                        
    3.  All dispositive motions shall be served and filed by the moving party on 
      or before April 1, 2019.                                           
    4.  This case shall be ready for a jury trial on July 1, 2019.       
Date: November 21, 2018                                                  
                                  Katherine Menendez                    
                                  United States Magistrate Judge        

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