*456Opinion
We are called upon to interpret the provisions of an insurance policy issued to plaintiff by defendant company and the scope of defendant’s duty to make payment thereunder. The policy provided that defendant would pay the cost of hospital care, including surgeon’s fees, up to a limit of $5,000, with $100 deductible, and there was an exclusion for losses caused by injuries for which compensation was payable under any workmen’s compensation law.
In July 1966, while the policy was in effect, plaintiff was seriously injured and as a result ultimately incurred $6,900 in medical charges. Defendant carrier refused to make any payments under the policy because plaintiff had filed a claim for workmen’s compensation benefits on account of the injury. The company insisted there could be no final determination as to its liability under the policy until the workmen’s compensation proceeding was concluded. At the same time, the workmen’s compensation carrier denied liability because of defendant’s questionable employment status. The compensation aspect was ultimately determined on April 30, 1968—nearly two years after-the injury—when a compromise and release was approved by the Workmen’s Compensation Appeals Board, settling the case for $3,700; of this recovery $1,100 was in payment of hospital bills through a lien filed by one hospital, the balance of $5,800 in hospital bills remaining unpaid. Defendant denied liability under the policy on the ground that the $3,700 paid under the compensation settlement rendered the exclusion applicable.
Plaintiff filed this action, alleging two causes of action: the first sought a declaration that defendant was liable under the policy, and the second sought damages for physical and mental distress. It was alleged that defendant was guilty of fraud, bad faith and malicious and oppressive conduct, and that plaintiff was entitled to both compensatory and punitive damages.
Initially, the trial court, sitting without a jury, determined in the declaratory relief count that the policy was ambiguous and that, therefore, defendant was obligated under the policy to pay $4,900 of plaintiff’s medical costs (the policy limits minus the $100 deductible). A jury found for plaintiff on the second cause of action, and awarded $75,000' compensatory damages and $500,000 punitive damages. After judgment on the verdict was rendered, the trial court granted defendant’s motion for a new trial on the grounds of insufficiency of the evidence to support the verdict, error in law, and excessive damages. Plaintiff appeals from the order granting the new trial, and defendant cross-appeals from the judgment. (Cal. Rules of Court, rule 3(c).)
*457The major issues involved in plaintiff’s appeal from the order granting a new trial are whether the trial court abused its discretion in concluding that the evidence was insufficient to support a finding defendant was guilty of bad faith justifying an award of compensatory damages, or of fraud or oppression justifying an award of exemplary damages. We determine that the evidence demonstrates as a matter of law that defendant’s failure to pay benefits under the policy constituted bad faith but that the trial court did not abuse its discretion in ruling that the evidence was insufficient to support an award of exemplary damages. In defendant’s appeal from the judgment, our inquiry focuses primarily upon whether the trial court properly found in the first cause of action that the policy was ambiguous. We conclude the trial court judgment was correct in this regard.
Plaintiff’s Appeal
At the time of the accident, plaintiff was 38 years old and the father of two minor children. He owned and operated a dry cleaning business, and earned a monthly income of $500. Plaintiff’s landlord owned a laundromat adjacent to the dry cleaning premises. Although not entirely clear from the record, plaintiff apparently" agreed with his landlord that, in return for a reduction in rent, he would perform incidental services in connection with the laundromat operation. On July 17, 1966, plaintiff noticed smoke in the laundromat area, and in order to locate its source he climbed onto a washing machine. The glass in the lid of the machine broke; plaintiff’s right foot fell into the machine, which was in operation at the time. His foot was severed at the ankle but was surgically restored later that day.
Upon his admission plaintiff advised the hospital that he was insured by defendant, and he notified defendant of the accident within a few days. Defendant immediately sent a routine inquiry to an investigative bureau to determine whether plaintiff had ever previously sought insurance benefits. In the claim forms subsequently filed by plaintiff, he declared that he was self-employed and that he had instituted proceedings to obtain workmen’s compensation benefits. Medical bills for the first hospitalization were received by defendant by early September.
Plaintiff developed an infection in his foot, and further surgery was required. On October 3 he entered another hospital. In his testimony at the trial he claimed that he was unable to return to the hospital where the prior surgery had been performed because its bill remained unpaid. Upon the second admission plaintiff again named defendant as his insurer, and the charges for hospital and surgical services were sent to defendant.
Defendant initially failed to explain to either plaintiff or the hospitals *458the cause of the delay in making payment, but wrote an adjuster in Los Angeles, requesting him to determine whether plaintiff was covered by workmen’s compensation. The letter conceded that workmen’s compensation coverage was questionable because plaintiff was the owner-operator of a cleaning plant. The adjuster was also instructed that, in the event workmen’s compensation did not cover the injury, he should review plaintiff’s medical history for the 10 years prior to the injury. Defendant explained that the purpose of the exhaustive inquiry was to determine if plaintiff might have been uninsurable at the time of the injury. That is, in the event plaintiff had falsified his application in any respect or omitted to mention that he had some prior serious illness such as heart trouble or cancer, defendant could, on the basis of the misrepresentation, rescind the policy, even though such illnesses were not involved in plaintiff’s claim.
l
The adjuster replied in mid-November that the workmen’s compensation carrier denied coverage on the ground plaintiff was not an employee at the time of the injury, and that a hearing would be held by the Workmen’s Compensation Appeals Board in December to determine the issue. The December hearing was continued to February 1967.
Throughout this period, plaintiff and a representative of the insurance agency through which he had purchased the policy made persistent inquiries regarding his claim, and the hospitals at which he had been treated also expressed impatience with the delay in receiving payment. In November and December defendant informed plaintiff as well as the hospitals that there was a question whether plaintiff was covered by workmen’s compensation at the time of the injury, and that until the matter was resolved his benefits under the policy would be withheld.
In April 1967, defendant forwarded its claim file to the Workmen’s Compensation Appeals Board in response to a subpoena duces tecum. No further action was taken by defendant until April 1968, when plaintiff’s attorney wrote defendant that the workmen’s compensation proceeding had been settled by compromise and release because the evidence was in conflict as to whether plaintiff’s injury occurred in the course of employment. The attorney stated that since no formal findings of workmen’s compensation coverage had been made by the board, defendant was liable under .the policy. Defendant denied'liability on the ground that the exclusion was applicable because plaintiff had received payment under the workmen’s compensation law. It offered to settle the claim for $200 “to avoid litigation.” The offer was rejected.
Plaintiff’s condition continued to deteriorate after his second hospitalization. In June 1967 he had a third operation, which was performed at the *459same hospital as the second surgery. The hospital refused to admit him unless he paid $500 of his previous bill. A fourth operation was performed in April 1968, this time at another hospital, since the hospital at which the second and third operations had been performed refused to accept plaintiff as a patient. Plaintiff was also compelled to engage a different surgeon because the surgeon who had previously operated on him had not been paid. In order to obtain the needed surgery plaintiff resorted to a ruse. He entered the hospital on a Saturday, the operation to be performed on Sunday, so that the hospital administrators would not be able to discover over the weekend whether insurance coverage existed. Plaintiff again named defendant as his insurer.1
Shortly after his injury defendant borrowed $2,000 to pay business expenses. Ultimately, he lost his business and could not borrow additional funds because unpaid hospital and medical bills established him to be a poor credit risk. He was compelled to change the place of his residence five times during this period because of lack of funds to pay rent. His utilities were turned off several times for nonpayment, his wheelchair was repossessed, and he had difficulty in affording medication to ease his constant pain. Ultimately, in 1969 plaintiff suffered two nervous breakdowns. A psychiatrist testified that plaintiff’s concern over inability to meet medical expenses contributed to these episodes.
At the trial, the manager of defendant’s claims department testified that defendant refused to pay the medical expenses plaintiff incurred in 1966 because it was awaiting the outcome of the workmen’s compensation proceeding in order to determine whether there was liability under the policy.
The evidence was in sharp conflict as to the custom in the insurance industry regarding the payment of a claim for hospital benefits in these circumstances. Several witnesses for defendant testified that during pendency of a workmen’s compensation proceeding, it was customary to deny benefits or to suspend judgment on an insured’s claim under a hospital care policy until the question of workmen’s compensation coverage was finally decided. A witness for plaintiff testified, on the other hand, that the prevailing practice was to pay the insured’s claim if the workmen’s com*460pensation carrier denied liability and the insured had suffered severe injuries. Thus, he stated, if no workmen’s compensation award was ultimately ordered the payments under the policy would have been properly made, and if benefits were awarded, the insurer could impose a lien on the sums to be paid in the workmen’s compensation proceeding.2
Compensatory Damages
In its order granting a new trial, the trial court found, for the reasons set forth in the margin, that the evidence was insufficient to justify a finding of bad faith.3 It is not necessary to analyze these reasons in detail because, in our view, the evidence shows as a matter of law that defendant breached the covenant of good faith and fair dealing implied in every insurance contract by its failure to make payments under the policy and that, therefore, it was liable for the physical and mental distress próximately caused by its conduct.
The principle was firmly established in Comunale v. Traders & General Ins. Co. (1958) 50 Cal.2d 654, 658-660 [328 P.2d 198, 68 A.L.R.2d 883], and Crisci v. Security Ins. Co. (1967) 66 Cal.2d 425, 429-433 [58 Cal.Rptr. 13, 426 P.2d 173], that the duty of an insurer to accept a reasonable settlement so as to absolve its insured of liability to a third person is implied in the covenant of good faith and fair dealing which exists in every insurance contract. The covenant requires that neither party will do anything to injure the right of the other to receive the benefits of the agreement, and an insurer is obligated to give the interests of the insured at least as much consideration as it gives to its own interests. Violation of the duty of the insurer sounds in tort, we held, and an insured may recover for all detriment resulting from such violation, including mental *461distress. These principles have been extended to cases in which the insurer unreasonably and in bad faith withholds payment of the claim of the insured. (Gruenberg v. Aetna Ins. Co. (1973) 9 Cal.3d 566, 575 [108 Cal.Rptr. 480, 510 P.2d 1032]; Richardson v. Employers Liab. Assur. Corp. (1972) 25 Cal.App.3d 232, 239 [102 Cal.Rptr. 547] (disapproved on another ground in Gruenberg v. Aetna Ins. Co., supra, 9 Cal.3d 566, at fn. 10, pp. 580-581); Fletcher v. Western National Life Ins. Co. (1970) 10 Cal.App.3d 376, 401 [89 Cal.Rptr. 78, 47 A.L.R.3d 286].)
In the present case, the company’s policy application declared in large, heavy type, “Protect Yourself Against the Medical Bills That Can Ruin You.” Plaintiff’s application, filed shortly before the accident, indicated that he had no other hospital or disability insurance and, indeed, the manager of defendant’s claims department testified that the policy would not have been issued if plaintiff had other hospital insurance. Defendant was aware that plaintiff earned only a modest income and had incurred substantial medical and hospital bills. The company also knew that there was a serious question whether plaintiff would qualify for workmen’s compensation benefits, and that the compensation carrier had consistently denied coverage on the ground that plaintiff was not an employee at the time of the accident.
There is no question that if defendant had paid the hospital charges and it was ultimately determined workmen’s compensation covered the injury, defendant could have asserted a lien in the workmen’s compensation proceeding to recover the payments it had made and it would have been entitled to payment from the proceeds of the award. (Lab. Code, § 4903, subd. (b); Foremost Dairies v. Industrial Acc. Com. (1965) 237 Cal.App.2d 560, 579 [47 Cal.Rptr. 173]; Gerson v. Industrial Acc. Com. (1961) 188 Cal.App.2d 735, 739 [11 Cal.Rptr. 1]; see also Rules of Practice & Procedure, Workmen’s Comp. App. Bd., art. 15, § 10886.) Indeed, some of the medical bills incurred by plaintiff were paid by the allowance of a lien from the settlement obtained in the workmen’s compensation proceeding.
No explanation was advanced by defendant as to why it failed to adopt this course in order to vindicate the promise made in the application that the policy was intended to protect the insured against medical bills which could result in financial ruin. Defendant’s attitude toward the payment of plaintiff’s claim was expressed in the declaratory relief phase of the case: merely that it was entitled to wait until the pending compensation proceeding was concluded before it paid or denied the claim. The company failed to see a conflict with its express promise to protect against ruinous medical bills.
*462Although the evidence was in conflict on the issue whether it was customary in the insurance industry to make payments under the policy in these circumstances and the order granting a new trial declared there was insufficient evidence of such a custom, the failure to establish common practice in this regard cannot absolve the insurer. The scope of the duty of an insurer to deal fairly with its insured is prescribed by law and cannot be delineated entirely by customs of the insurance industry.
Under these circumstances defendant’s failure to afford relief to its insured against the very eventuality insured against by the policy amounts to a violation as a matter of law of its duty of good faith and fair dealing implied in every policy. Thus, we conclude the trial court abused its discretion in granting a new trial on the ground that the evidence was insufficient to support a finding that plaintiff is entitled to compensatory damages.
In granting a new trial, the court also indicated that the damages were excessive. However, the order failed to state any reason for this ground other than the declaration that the evidence did not justify an award of $75,000 in compensatory damages “for the reasons stated above.” Since “the reasons stated above” (see fn. 3, ante) did not refer to whether damages awarded by the jury were disproportionate to the injuries suffered by plaintiff but, rather, to whether the evidence justified a finding of bad faith or oppression, the reasons advanced by the trial court for finding the damages to be excessive are clearly inadequate. (See Code Civ. Proc., § 657; Mercer v. Perez (1968) 68 Cal.2d 104, 111 et seq. [65 Cal.Rptr. 315, 436 P.2d 315]; Scala v. Jerry Witt & Sons, Inc. (1970) 3 Cal.3d 359, 363 et seq. [90 Cal.Rptr. 592, 475 P.2d 864].) The trial court’s order must be reversed insofar as it determines that plaintiff was not entitled to compensatory damages and that an award of $75,000 for such damages was excessive.
Exemplary Damages
It does not follow that because plaintiff is entitled to compensatory damages that he is also entitled to exemplary damages. In order to justify an award of exemplary damages, the defendant must be guilty of oppression, fraud or malice. (Civ. Code, § 3294.) He must act with the intent to vex, injure or annoy, or with a conscious disregard of the plaintiff’s rights. (Wolfsen v. Hathaway (1948) 32 Cal.2d 632, 647 et seq. [198 P.2d 1] (overruled on another ground in Flores v. Arroyo (1961) 56 Cal.2d 492, 497 [15 Cal.Rptr. 87, 364 P.2d 263]); Roth v. Shell Oil Co. (1960) 185 Cal.App.2d 676, 682 [8 Cal.Rptr. 514].) While we have concluded that defendant violated its duty of good faith and fair dealing, this alone *463does not necessarily establish that defendant acted with the requisite intent to injure plaintiff.
In granting a new trial the trial court stated that the evidence was insufficient to justify an award of punitive damages because defendant was not put on notice by cases previously decided that its interpretation of the policy was incorrect and because there was insufficient evidence of a practice in the insurance industry to pay a disputed claim and then file a lien in the workmen’s compensation proceeding to recover the payments made. The trial court’s conclusion that defendant was not guilty of oppressive conduct did not constitute a manifest and unmistakable abuse of discretion. (Jiminez v. Sears, Roebuck & Co. (1971) 4 Cal.3d 379, 387 [93 Cal.Rptr. 769, 482 P.2d 681].) Therefore, the order granting a new trial must be affirmed insofar as it determines that the evidence was insufficient to justify the award of punitive damages.
In view of our conclusion that plaintiff was entitled to compensatory damages as a matter of law but that the trial court did not abuse its discretion in holding that the evidence was insufficient to support a finding of exemplary damages, we need not reach two errors of law which the trial court specified as additional reasons iii support of its order.4
Defendant’s Appeal
In its appeal from the judgment on the jury’s verdict, defendant contends that the trial court erred in the declaratory relief phase of the case in finding the policy to be ambiguous and in awarding plaintiff $4,900 in benefits thereunder.
Two separate clauses of the policy are involved on the issue of liability. The first is the insuring clause. It provides “subject to the exceptions, limitations and provisions of this policy [defendant] promises to pay for loss, except losses covered by any Workmen’s Compensation . . . Law . . . covered by this policy and sustained by the insured . . . resulting from injury or sickness; . . .”
The second relevant provision is the exclusionary clause, which states, “Exclusions. This policy does not cover any loss caused by or resulting from (1) injury or sickness for which compensation is payable under any Workmen’s Compensation . . . Law.”
*464Plaintiff contends, and the trial court found, that the insuring clause could be interpreted to mean that payments would be made under the policy even though plaintiff also recovered workmen’s compensation benefits if workmen’s compensation did not meet his total medical expenses. That is, defendant was required to pay hospital charges not covered by workmen’s compensation payments. Defendant, on the other hand, claims that the insuring clause must be read in conjunction with the exclusionary clause, and that the latter provision makes it plain that if workmen’s compensation benefits in any amount are received by the insured, then defendant is not required to make any payments whatever under the policy.
The trial court construed the policy in the light of the familiar rule that any ambiguities in an insurance policy must be read against the insurer. (Bareno v. Employers Life Ins. Co. (1972) 7 Cal.3d 875, 878 [103 Cal.Rptr. 865, 500 P.2d 889].) It determined that the word “loss” in the insuring clause could mean compensable expense and, if so, defendant was required to pay hospital expenses not covered by workmen’s compensation. We agree with this construction. The application for the policy declared in large, capital letters, “All Benefits Payable In Full Regardless of Any Other Insurance You May Have.” This assurance implies at the very least that the receipt of workmen’s compensation payments, comparable to “other insurance” payments, would not entirely vitiate defendant’s liability under the policy.
Thus, the provision in the insuring clause that defendant would pay for “loss, except losses covered by . . . Workmen’s Compensation” rationally means that defendant promised to pay such hospital expenses incurred by plaintiff as were not paid by workmen’s compensation, up to the policy limits.
Defendant relies heavily upon the language of the exclusionary provision, which excludes liability for “any loss caused by or resulting from . . . injury ... for which compensation is payable under any Workmen’s Compensation ... Law . . . .” This provision does not clearly absolve defendant of liability if plaintiff receives any amount in workmen’s compensation benefits, particularly since it must be read in conjunction with the insuring clause, which requires defendant to pay expenses not covered by workmen’s compensation. At best, even acquiescence in defendant’s interpretation of the exclusion would.merely result in a conflict between the exclusionary and the insuring clauses. Under prevailing law that conflict must be resolved in plaintiff’s favor.5
*465Defendant relies upon a number of cases to support its assertion that the policy is not ambiguous. However, with one exception these decisions involved provisions at variance with those in the present case. (E.g., Laing v. Occidental Life Ins. Co. (1966) 244 Cal.App.2d 811 [53 Cal.Rptr. 681); Wenthe v. Hospital Service, Incorporated, of Iowa (1960) 251 Iowa 765 [100 N.W.2d 903].) In Bonney v. Citizens’ Mut. Auto. Ins. Co. (1952) 333 Mich. 435 [53 N.W.2d 321], the policy contained a provision similar to the exclusion here. But there was no inconsistency between that provision and another clause of the policy, as in the present case, and the decision merely held that the exclusion applied to persons eligible for workmen’s compensation benefits whether or not they had actually received such benefits.
There is a penultimate problem involving the policy provisions: whether defendant’s liability terminated as of January 1, 1967, because plaintiff did not pay the premium due on that date. The relevant provision states, “When as the result of injury or sickness and commencing while covered hereunder, any member ... is necessarily confined in a hospital, the Company will pay, subject to the above limitation, [various specified expenses].” Defendant interprets this provision as meaning that the injury and the hospitalization must both occur while the policy is in effect in order to entitle the insured to benefits and that defendant was not liable for those expenses tvhich were incurred by plaintiff after the policy lapsed for nonpayment of premium on January 1, 1967.
The trial court found that the provision meant that if the insured was injured while the policy was in effect defendant would pay hospital expenses during the term of the policy even though the actual hospitalization for the injury occurred after the policy had been deemed to lapse for nonpayment.6
At best, the provision is ambiguous. It can reasonably be interpreted to mean that payments would be made if the injury commenced during the *466life of the policy. Under settled rules of construction, the provision must therefore be interpreted against defendant.
Finally, defendant argues at length on its appeal that plaintiff’s injuries arose out of and in the course of his employment and that the exclusion was therefore applicable. Since we have found the policy to be ambiguous in this regard, we need not discuss this factual contention. It should also be noted that defendant asserts the trial court improperly denied its motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict. Although the denial of such a motion is appealable (Code Civ. Proc., § 904.1, subd. (d)), defendant failed to file a notice of appeal from the order denying its motion. (Cal. Rules of Court, rule 1(a).)7
The order granting a new trial is reversed insofar as it grants a new trial on defendant’s liability for compensatory damages and the amount of compensatory damages, and in all other respects the order is affirmed. On defendant’s cross-appeal, the judgment is affirmed insofar as it awards $75,000 in compensatory damages and $4,900 as benefits under the policy. Plaintiff is to recover costs on appeal.
Wright, C. J., McComb, J., Tobriner, J., Burke, J., and Sullivan, J., concurred.