Fire & Casualty Insurance Company of Conneticut v. Buslease, Inc.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 13, 2002
Docket08-01-00277-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Fire & Casualty Insurance Company of Conneticut v. Buslease, Inc. (Fire & Casualty Insurance Company of Conneticut v. Buslease, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fire & Casualty Insurance Company of Conneticut v. Buslease, Inc., (Tex. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS

COURT OF APPEALS

EIGHTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS

EL PASO, TEXAS

FIRE & CASUALTY INSURANCE                    )    

COMPANY OF CONNECTICUT,                     )                    No.  08-01-00277-CV

                                                                              )

Appellant,                          )                             Appeal from

v.                                                                           )                       191st District Court

BUSLEASE, INC.,                                               )                   of Dallas County, Texas

Appellee.                           )                      (TC# DV99-05308-J)

O P I N I O N

Fire & Casualty Insurance Company of Connecticut (F & C) appeals from a judgment entered in favor of BusLease, Inc. (BusLease) following a jury trial.  We affirm.

FACTUAL SUMMARY

In 1995, Allstate Coaches, Inc. entered into a security agreement with MCI Acceptance Corporation for the purchase of a motor coach.  Allstate assigned the Security Agreement to BusLease.  Pursuant to the security agreement, Allstate was required to maintain casualty insurance on the motor coach and BusLease was designated a loss payee for any loss to the motor coach.  Allstate purchased a business insurance policy with F & C providing collision coverage for property damage to the motor coach. 


On June 21, 1998, the motor coach sustained substantial property damage as the result of a collision with a tractor trailer in Robstown, Texas.  A few days later, Allstate forwarded to F & C an automobile loss notice and made a property damage claim.  By letter dated August 17, 1998, BusLease informed F & C that it retained all rights as loss payee and expressed its understanding that any check made for repair would be payable to BusLease and Allstate.  At about the same time, F & C obtained an appraisal of the repair cost through an adjuster employed by its policy administrator, GAB Robins.  The adjuster estimated the repair cost at $67,368 subject to the final invoice cost of parts from the Dina Bus Company in Mexico City.[1]  In October 1998, BusLease contacted F & C to inquire about the claim but received no information.  In November 1998, F & C issued a check payable to both Allstate and BusLease in the amount of $66,368 (estimated repair cost less deductible) and delivered it to Allstate.  Allstate, however, steadfastly refused to endorse the check or turn it over to BusLease.  For reasons unrelated to the accident, Allstate also failed to pay the balance owed under the security agreement.  Accordingly, BusLease repossessed the motor coach in December 1998.  BusLease subsequently informed F & C in December 1998 and again in February 1999 that it had repossessed the wrecked motor coach and that Allstate had refused to endorse the check.  It demanded that F & C stop payment on the prior check and reissue a check for $66,368 made payable solely to BusLease since Allstate was no longer entitled to the insurance proceeds.  F & C did not respond to this letter. 


During the entire time it had corresponded with F & C about this matter, BusLease had not been provided with a copy of the estimate obtained by F & C nor did its representatives understand that F & C intended that the $66,368 check tendered to Allstate would be the entire payment made for repairs.  In fact, BusLease=s representatives believed that the check represented only a partial payment.  In an effort to facilitate the repair of the motor coach, BusLease obtained an estimate for repairs in the amount of $130,496.32 from Blitz Bus & Truck in Chicago, Illinois, and forwarded this estimate to F & C in June 1999.  F & C did not contact BusLease to discuss this estimate.  Allstate later signed a release authorizing F & C to make any payments under the policy direct to BusLease.  BusLease filed suit against F & C on July 13, 1999 for breach of the insurance policy.     In February 2000, F & C hired an expert witness, Peter Paluzzi, and instructed him to inspect the motor coach.  Paluzzi determined the reasonable and necessary cost to repair the motor coach to be $95,196.32.  Following Paluzzi=s inspection, F & C informed BusLease that it agreed with the earlier estimate provided by Blitz with the exception of the estimated labor hours.  On February 28, 2000, F & C forwarded a check in the amount of $66,368 payable solely to BusLease.  Three months later, it forwarded a second check in the amount of $28,828.32, representing the difference between the first check and the estimate provided by Paluzzi.  The actual cost to repair the vehicle was $125,317, a difference of $30,120.68 between the amount tendered by F & C and the actual cost of repairs. 

The jury determined that F & C failed to comply with its agreement to timely pay the reasonable and necessary cost of repairs to the motor coach.  It found that the reasonable and necessary cost of repairs was $110,000, approximately $15,000 more than F & C tendered and $15,000 less than the actual cost of repairs.  The jury also awarded BusLease attorney=s fees in the amount of $125,000 for preparation and trial, plus additional attorney=s fees in the event of appeal.  Finally, the jury found that BusLease=s demand to F & C for payment of sums related to the cost to repair the motor coach was not excessive at the time it was made.

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Fire & Casualty Insurance Company of Conneticut v. Buslease, Inc., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fire-casualty-insurance-company-of-conneticut-v-bu-texapp-2002.