Exxonmobil Corporation v. National Union Fire Insurance Company of Pittsburgh, Pa, and Starr Indemnity & Liability Insurance Company

CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedApril 14, 2023
Docket21-0936
StatusPublished

This text of Exxonmobil Corporation v. National Union Fire Insurance Company of Pittsburgh, Pa, and Starr Indemnity & Liability Insurance Company (Exxonmobil Corporation v. National Union Fire Insurance Company of Pittsburgh, Pa, and Starr Indemnity & Liability Insurance Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Exxonmobil Corporation v. National Union Fire Insurance Company of Pittsburgh, Pa, and Starr Indemnity & Liability Insurance Company, (Tex. 2023).

Opinion

Supreme Court of Texas ══════════ No. 21-0936 ══════════

ExxonMobil Corporation, Petitioner,

v.

National Union Fire Insurance Company of Pittsburgh, PA, and Starr Indemnity & Liability Insurance Company, Respondents

═══════════════════════════════════════ On Petition for Review from the Court of Appeals for the First District of Texas ═══════════════════════════════════════

Argued February 23, 2023

JUSTICE YOUNG delivered the opinion of the Court.

Justice Lehrmann did not participate in the decision.

The law of this State has long recognized that the terms of a separate contract may be incorporated by reference into an insurance policy if that reference is clearly manifested in the terms of the policy itself. This clear-manifestation requirement, along with the concomitant duty to consult the separate contract only to the extent that the policy

1 requires it, follows from the rudimentary principle that courts must enforce but not expand the parties’ agreement. The question presented in this case is whether an insurance policy incorporates the payout limits in an underlying service agreement. Based on ordinary rules of contract interpretation and our precedents applying the incorporation- by-reference doctrine, we hold that it does not. We accordingly reverse the judgment of the court of appeals and remand the case to that court for further proceedings. The underlying facts are undisputed and arise from the same incident we recently addressed in ExxonMobil Corp. v. Insurance Co. of the State of Pennsylvania, 568 S.W.3d 650 (Tex. 2019). Exxon hired Savage Refinery Services to work as an independent contractor at Exxon’s refinery in Baytown, Texas. Their working relationship was memorialized in a service agreement under which Savage promised to obtain at least a minimum stated amount of liability insurance for its employees and to name Exxon as an additional insured.1 Savage fulfilled this contractual obligation and ultimately procured five different insurance policies. National Union Fire Insurance Company, one of the respondents

1 The relevant provision of the agreement (with all emphasis added) reads as follows: [Savage] shall carry and maintain in force at least the following insurances and amounts: . . . (2) its normal and customary Commercial General Liability insurance coverage and policy limits or at least $2,000,000, whichever is greater, providing coverage for injury, death or property damage resulting from each occurrence . . . . Notwithstanding any provision of an Order to the contrary, [Savage’s] liability insurance policy(ies) described above shall: (i) cover [Exxon] and Affiliates as additional insureds in connection with the performance of Services; and (ii) be primary as to all other policies (including any deductibles or self- insured retentions) and self-insurance which may provide coverage.

2 in this case, underwrote two of them—a primary policy for general commercial liability and an umbrella policy.2 A third policy was underwritten by Starr Indemnity & Liability Insurance Company, the other respondent before us.3 As we recounted in ExxonMobil, 568 S.W.3d at 652–54, the eventual payout dispute between these parties (and others) arose from a workplace accident at Exxon’s Baytown refinery in which two Savage employees were severely burned. The employees sought compensation for their injuries and later settled with Exxon for a collective amount exceeding $24 million. About $5 million of that settlement money came from some of Savage’s primary-insurance policies under which Exxon was recognized as an “additional insured,” including the primary policy underwritten by National Union, which was exhausted to its limits. Exxon paid the rest of the settlement money out of pocket because National Union and Starr both denied Exxon coverage under their umbrella policies. Exxon then sued both National Union and Starr for breach of contract, asserting that both had wrongfully denied coverage. What followed was a flurry of summary-judgment motions, largely centering

2The parties refer to these two policies as the “National Union Commercial General Liability Policy” and the “Commercial Umbrella Liability Policy.” For simplicity, we refer to them as the “primary policy” and the “umbrella policy,” respectively. 3 Starr’s policy is a “bumbershoot” policy, which, as Starr explains, is a marine insurance policy similar to a land-based commercial general liability policy that operates as an umbrella to one or more different underlying policies. As the court of appeals noted, “the Starr Bumbershoot Policy is an umbrella policy.” 658 S.W.3d 305, 319 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 2021) (internal quotations and citations omitted).

3 on Exxon’s status as an “insured” under those umbrella policies and whether Exxon’s service agreement with Savage otherwise limited its entitlement to further policy proceeds. The trial court ultimately sided with Exxon, ruling that National Union (but not Starr) was obligated under its umbrella policy to reimburse Exxon for the roughly $20 million it had paid in settling with the two injured employees. National Union appealed and maintained that Exxon was not insured under its umbrella policy. The court of appeals agreed with National Union and reversed. 658 S.W.3d 305 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 2021). The court concluded that the umbrella policy incorporated the primary policy’s limits and that the primary policy in turn incorporated the limits of the underlying service agreement, which (as relevant here) required only commercial general liability insurance of a specified minimum amount. Id. at 318. Thus, the court of appeals held, “[b]ecause coverage available to Exxon as an additional insured under the [primary policy], through its incorporation of the Exxon–Savage Contract, makes clear that Exxon’s status as an additional insured is limited to primary coverage, Exxon is not entitled to coverage under the [umbrella policy] as an ‘additional insured.’” Id. For similar reasons, the court affirmed the summary-judgment ruling in favor of Starr. Id. at 319–20. We granted Exxon’s ensuing petition for review and now reverse. The general principles of law in this area are well settled. As early as 1886, this Court recognized as “a cardinal principle of . . . insurance law” that “[t]he policy is the contract; and if outside papers are to be imported into it, this must be done in so clear a manner as to leave no doubt of the intention of the parties.” Goddard v. E. Tex. Fire Ins. Co.,

4 1 S.W. 906, 907 (Tex. 1886). We have never strayed from this rule. Not long before the turn of this century, Chief Justice Phillips wrote for a unanimous Court that “Texas law has long provided that a separate contract can be incorporated into an insurance policy by an explicit reference clearly indicating the parties’ intention to include that contract as part of their agreement.” Urrutia v. Decker, 992 S.W.2d 440, 442 (Tex. 1999) (citing Goddard, 1 S.W. at 907). Our more recent cases follow the same paradigm. In re Deepwater Horizon reiterated that “we rely on the policy’s language in determining the extent to which, if any, we must look to an underlying service contract to ascertain the existence and scope of additional-insured coverage.” 470 S.W.3d 452, 462 (Tex. 2015) (citing Evanston Ins. Co. v. ATOFINA Petrochems., Inc., 256 S.W.3d 660, 668–69 (Tex. 2008)).

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Related

Evanston Insurance Co. v. ATOFINA Petrochemicals, Inc.
256 S.W.3d 660 (Texas Supreme Court, 2008)
Urrutia v. Decker
992 S.W.2d 440 (Texas Supreme Court, 1999)
in Re Deepwater Horizon
470 S.W.3d 452 (Texas Supreme Court, 2015)
Goddard v. East Texas Fire Insurance
1 S.W. 906 (Texas Supreme Court, 1886)

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Bluebook (online)
Exxonmobil Corporation v. National Union Fire Insurance Company of Pittsburgh, Pa, and Starr Indemnity & Liability Insurance Company, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/exxonmobil-corporation-v-national-union-fire-insurance-company-of-tex-2023.