Fortis Benefits v. Vanessa Cantu

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 21, 2004
Docket10-04-00036-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Fortis Benefits v. Vanessa Cantu (Fortis Benefits v. Vanessa Cantu) 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
Fortis Benefits v. Vanessa Cantu, (Tex. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

Fortis Benefits v. Cantu


IN THE

TENTH COURT OF APPEALS


No. 10-04-00036-CV


     FORTIS BENEFITS,

                                                                              Appellant

     v.


     VANESSA CANTU,

                                                                              Appellee


From the 249th District Court

Johnson County, Texas

Trial Court # 249-87-98

                                                                                                                

MEMORANDUM OPINION

                                                                                                                

      Counsel for Appellant notified the Clerk of this Court by letter dated February 24, 2004 that this appeal is interlocutory because the judgment being appealed does not dispose of all parties and claims. The Clerk notified the parties that the appeal would be dismissed for want of jurisdiction if a response showing grounds for continuing the appeal was not filed within 10 days. No response has been filed. Accordingly, the appeal is dismissed. See Tex. R. App. P. 42.3(a).



                                                                   PER CURIAM

Before Chief Justice Gray,

      Justice Vance, and

      Justice Reyna

Appeal dismissed

Opinion delivered and filed April 21, 2004

[CV06]

of contract and seeks recovery of the $11,868.02 as special damages.  Service Lloyds filed a motion to dismiss for lack of jurisdiction, asserting that the trial court lacked subject-matter jurisdiction because Bestor had not exhausted his administrative remedies relating to the $11,868.02 before the Texas Workers’ Compensation Commission (now the Texas Department of Insurance, Division of Workers’ Compensation).  The trial court granted Service Lloyds’ motion to dismiss and dismissed the suit.  Service Lloyds also filed a motion for summary judgment on the ground that Bestor was not entitled to recover those attorney’s fees as damages for breach of contract as a matter of law because subsection 408.221(b) mandates that attorney’s fees in a worker’s compensation case are payable out of the claimant’s recovery, and the trial court alternatively granted that motion.

Bestor contends in his first issue that his breach of contract claim is not barred by the workers’ compensation exclusivity provision and that the trial court has subject-matter jurisdiction over his breach-of-contract claim.

Whether the trial court has subject-matter jurisdiction is a question of law that we review de novo.  Texas Natural Resources Comm’n v. IT-Davy, 74 S.W.3d 849, 855 (Tex. 2002).  The plaintiff has the burden of alleging facts that affirmatively establish the trial court’s subject-matter jurisdiction.  Texas Ass’n Bus. v. Texas Air Control Bd., 852 S.W.2d 440, 446 (Tex. 1993).

            Bestor’s breach-of-contract theory begins with the correct assertion that a workers’ compensation insurance policy is a three-party contract between the carrier, the employer, and the employee.  See Aranda v. Ins. Co. of N. Am., 748 S.W.2d 210, 212 (Tex. 1988).  The carrier owes the employee a duty of good faith and fair dealing:  a duty on the part of the carrier to deal fairly and in good faith with an injured employee in the processing of a worker’s compensation claim.  See id. at 212-13.  Bestor then latches on to Aranda’s statement that “accompanying every contract is a common law duty to perform with care, skill, reasonable expedience and faithfulness the thing agreed to be done, and a negligent failure to observe any of these conditions is a tort as well as a breach of contract.”  Id. at 212 (quoting Montgomery Ward & Co. v. Scharrenbeck, 146 Tex. 153, 157, 204 S.W.2d 508, 510 (1947)).  Bestor thus concludes, based on Aranda and Arnold v. Nat’l County Mut. Fire Ins. Co., that he can bring a breach-of-contract claim to recover the attorney’s fees as special damages and that he need not have exhausted his administrative remedies because those damages arose from the contractual relationship, rather than from his on-the-job injury.[1]  Arnold v. Nat’l County Mut. Fire Ins. Co., 725 S.W.2d 165, 168 & n.1 (Tex. 1987) (recognizing that both a breach-of-contract claim on an insurance policy and a claim for breach of duty of good faith and fair dealing can be brought by insured), modified on other grounds by Murray v. San Jacinto Agency, 800 S.W.2d 826, 829 (Tex. 1990), and Universe Life Ins. Co. v. Giles, 950 S.W.2d 48 (Tex. 1997).

            Bestor’s theory has some logic to it, but it nevertheless must yield to the requirement that he have exhausted his claim administratively.

            Texas district courts have “exclusive, appellate, and original jurisdiction of all actions, proceedings, and remedies, except in cases [in which jurisdiction is] conferred . . . on some other court, tribunal, or administrative body.”  Tex. Const.

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