In Re Texas Windstorm Insurance Ass'n Hurricanes Rita & Humberto Litigation

339 S.W.3d 401, 2009 Tex. LEXIS 1151
CourtUnited States Judicial Panel on Multidistrict Litigation
DecidedJanuary 27, 2009
Docket08-0914
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 339 S.W.3d 401 (In Re Texas Windstorm Insurance Ass'n Hurricanes Rita & Humberto Litigation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Judicial Panel on Multidistrict Litigation primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Texas Windstorm Insurance Ass'n Hurricanes Rita & Humberto Litigation, 339 S.W.3d 401, 2009 Tex. LEXIS 1151 (jpml 2009).

Opinion

On Review By The MultidistRict Litigation Panel

Presiding Judge PEEPLES

delivered the opinion of the MDL panel.

Texas Windstorm Insurance Association seeks appointment of a pretrial judge for forty-two cases involving hurricane insurance claims in Jefferson, Galveston, and Travis Counties. 1 Thirty-eight cases arise from Hurricane Rita and four from Hurricane Humberto. For the reasons stated below we grant the motion. A pretrial judge has been appointed by separate order.

Rule 13 authorizes us to transfer “related” cases from different trial courts to a single pretrial judge “if transfer will (1) serve the convenience of the parties and witnesses and (2) promote the just and efficient conduct of the litigation.” See In re Ad Valorem Tax Litigation, 216 S.W.3d 83, 84 (Tex. M.D.L. Panel 2006); Tex.R. Jud. Admin. 13.2(f), 13.3(a), 13.3(0. In In re Delta Lloyds Insurance Company, et al., 339 S.W.3d 384 (Tex. M.D.L. Panel, *402 2008), we transferred to a pretrial judge similar Hurricane Rita insurance cases against different insurers. We concluded that the cases were related within the meaning of Rule 13 because the insurers faced substantially the same extra-contractual claims and discovery requests in every case.

Like Texas Windstorm, those insurers did not face mere case-specific contract claims that they failed to pay for damages covered under each insurance policy. Instead, like Texas Windstorm they faced claims that they had designed and pursued a standard business practice of handling these claims in a way that minimized payments to their insureds. That allegation was the foundation for extra-contractual damage claims and for discovery requests seeking information about the training of adjusters; claims handling procedures, instructions, and guidelines; the handling of other claims, including reports submitted by adjusters in other cases; complaints and lawsuits by other insureds; personnel files; and net worth. 2

We are told that there are no common issues in these cases, 3 but it is difficult to envision how the insurers could give anything other than identical responses to common discovery requests like those mentioned, which are not case-specific. We see no genuine difference between these cases and those before the panel in Delta Lloyds, where we analyzed Rule 13’s impact in this situation. Also instructive is our discussion in In re Ocwen Loan Servicing, LLC, 286 S.W.3d 669 (Tex. M.D.L. Panel, 2007). There the plaintiffs alleged that the defendant, pursuant to standard practices, had unlawfully charged them fees, serviced their accounts, and foreclosed on their homes. We said:

The claims in each of the nine pending cases are based on standard practices and procedures followed by Ocwen in its business of servicing mortgage loans. Accordingly, in all nine cases, discovery will be aimed at disclosing the nature of these common practices and procedures. In addition, similar legal issues will arise as to whether those standard practices and procedures give rise to liability under the commonly alleged theories....
... Rule 13 is concerned [about] conflicting demands or repetitive discovery which would inconvenience both the witnesses and the parties.... A transfer will ensure that [common] issues are decided the same way. As contested issues arise, the pretrial judge will be able to make consistent rulings.

Id. 286 S.W.3d at 672-73. We reaffirm our holding in Delta Lloyds that the extra-contractual issues make these cases related within the meaning of Rule 13. We turn now to two other arguments.

1. Relatedness — differences among the cases.

Several plaintiffs argue that the forty-two cases are different from each other in important ways and therefore are not related. The first difference is that thirty-four cases involve residential dwelling policies, while eight involve commercial poli *403 cies. The polities, however, provide the same coverage for the same risks. And the extra-contractual claims are the same, as are the discovery requests related to those claims. The second difference is that four of the cases involve Hurricane Humberto, which occurred after Rita. We consider those cases related to the Rita cases because they involve precisely the same extra-contractual claims and discovery, and because they will involve inquiry into the existence and extent of pre-exist-ing damage from Rita. It is worth noting that when plaintiffs pleaded their extra-contractual causes of action and sought extra-contractual discovery, they did not make distinctions based on the. kind of policy or coverage or the hurricane involved. Because of the extra-contractual claims, the cases are related within the meaning of Rule 13, even though some of them involve a different policy and a later hurricane in the same area.

One response says that the cases fall into “forty-two separate and distinct fact patterns.” As we have said before, every individual case is different, but for MDL purposes Rule 13 mandates transfer to a pretrial court when the cases are related and handling by one pretrial court will promote Rule 13’s goals of convenience, efficiency, and justice. 4 If the “separate and distinct fact patterns” assertion means that each of these cases is unrelated to the others, we respectfully disagree because each case arises from hurricane damage, involves the same insurance coverage, and involves the same or similar extra-contractual claims and discovery discussed above.

The fact patterns of these cases are no more separate and distinct than those of other cases in which MDL motions have been -granted. See, e.g., Union Carbide v. Adams, 166 S.W.3d 1 (Tex. M.D.L. Panel, 2003) (transferring asbestos cases to pretrial judge); In re Silica Products Liability Litigation, 166 S.W.3d 3 (Tex. M.D.L. Panel 2004); In re Vioxx Litigation, No. 05-0436 (Tex. M.D.L. Panel, Aug. 25, 2005); In re Ford Motor Company Speed Control Deactivation Switch Litigation, 285 S.W.3d 185 (Tex. M.D.L. Panel, 2008). The question is not whether the cases are-different. They are. Each of these earlier cases will involve different causation and damages facts. Indeed many of the silica and asbestos cases involve different products and different defendants.

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Bluebook (online)
339 S.W.3d 401, 2009 Tex. LEXIS 1151, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-texas-windstorm-insurance-assn-hurricanes-rita-humberto-litigation-jpml-2009.