Linda Edwards v. Employees Retirement System of Texas and Group Life and Health, a Division of Fort Dearborn Life Insurance Company

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 26, 2004
Docket03-03-00737-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Linda Edwards v. Employees Retirement System of Texas and Group Life and Health, a Division of Fort Dearborn Life Insurance Company (Linda Edwards v. Employees Retirement System of Texas and Group Life and Health, a Division of Fort Dearborn Life Insurance Company) 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.

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Linda Edwards v. Employees Retirement System of Texas and Group Life and Health, a Division of Fort Dearborn Life Insurance Company, (Tex. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN



NO. 03-03-00737-CV

Linda Edwards, Appellant



v.



Employees Retirement System of Texas and Group Life and Health, A Division

of Fort Dearborn Life Insurance Company, Appellees



FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF TRAVIS COUNTY, 201ST JUDICIAL DISTRICT

NO. GN203838, HONORABLE W. JEANNE MEURER, JUDGE PRESIDING

M E M O R A N D U M O P I N I O N



The Board of Trustees of the Employment Retirement System of Texas (the Board) (1) denied Linda Edwards's claim for voluntary accidental death and dismemberment benefits citing an exclusion in the policy for a death that was the "direct result" of the insured's being under the influence of alcohol. The district court reviewed the record of the administrative proceedings and affirmed the Board's order in its entirety. Linda Edwards contends that the district court erred because the Board lacked the authority to make findings of fact contrary to those recommended by the administrative law judge (ALJ), that the Board failed to interpret the language of the policy exclusion in her favor, and that the Board erroneously changed the ALJ's conclusion of law that ERS had met its burden of proof. We affirm the judgment of the district court.



FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND



Linda Edwards made a claim with ERS seeking life insurance benefits through her daughter's employment with the Texas Department of Criminal Justice. Linda Edwards's daughter Yovette Edwards died in a single-car accident in the early morning hours of New Year's Day 1999. She was survived by her mother and two minor children. Although Linda Edwards's issues focus primarily on the legal standards relating to the Board's denial of her claim, a brief overview of the record concerning the accident is useful.

Yovette Edwards attended two parties on the night of the accident with James McClendon. McClendon followed Yovette Edwards in a separate car as they traveled from the first party to the second. When the two left the second party, McClendon again followed Yovette Edwards's car. McClendon was the only witness to the accident. He told police that, directly before the accident, Yovette Edwards was driving too fast for him to follow, and that he had to drive 45-50 miles-per-hour in order to keep her in sight. He then saw her car spin around and, when he caught up, the car was upside down. McClendon discovered that Yovette Edwards was not moving and ran to a nearby house to call an ambulance. She was later pronounced dead at the scene. An autopsy revealed that she had a blood alcohol content of .19 and a vitreous alcohol content of .13. Her death was caused by blunt force injuries to her skull.

Yovette Edwards's car went off the road at a turn where the posted speed limit was 30 miles-per-hour. Police officers who investigated the scene concluded that Yovette Edwards's car struck a mound of dirt by the side of the road causing it to roll over four or five times and eventually land upside down on the roadway. It was drizzling with a light fog, and the pavement was wet, slippery, and poorly lit.

The role of Yovette Edwards's intoxication in the accident was examined by several sources. Deputy Medical Examiner Elizabeth Peacock explained in her deposition that consumption of alcohol can lead to a variety of symptoms including: emotional instability, decreased inhibitions, loss of critical judgment, impairment of memory and comprehension, decreased sensory response, slower reaction time, muscular incoordination, disorientation, mental confusion, dizziness, and double vision. She stated that a person driving with a blood alcohol content of .19 would be a danger to herself and others. Dr. Peacock also concluded that in an accident involving damp road conditions, poor visibility, and excessive speed, the driver's blood alcohol content of .19 would be the most significant factor in causing the accident. Toxicologist J. Rod McCutchen gave deposition testimony that similarly explained the effects of alcohol on a person and concluded that Yovette Edwards's intoxication made the accident much more likely. Officer Jeff Donohue, who investigated the accident, was also asked about the effects of alcohol in his deposition. He testified as to the general impairments associated with intoxication and concluded that Yovette Edwards's blood alcohol content of .19 contributed to her accident.

After a hearing and full briefing by the parties, the ALJ issued a Proposal for Decision (PFD) granting Linda Edwards's appeal of the denial of her claim. The PFD interpreted the exclusion in the insurance policy to apply only when the insured's intoxication was a proximate cause of the loss. The PFD discredited the medical experts' conclusions that Yovette Edwards's intoxication was the most significant factor in the accident on the grounds that those experts lacked expertise in accident reconstruction and did not view the scene. Citing Officer Donohue's deposition testimony, the ALJ found that:



the concurrent probable causes of the accident (each of which, if removed from the chain of causation, would likely have resulted in no accident) were speeding, poor visibility, and the odd terrain. An additional probable cause of her death was the existence of the dirt mounds, in that the three causes of the accident, in a natural and continuous sequence, coupled with encountering the dirt mounds, led to her car flipping and killing her.



Although Donohue stated that Yovette Edwards's intoxication "contributed" to the accident, the ALJ concluded that "an inference that intoxication was the most significant factor, and that its absence would have avoided the accident, cannot be drawn from Officer Donohue's testimony."

The General Counsel of ERS submitted alternative proposed findings of fact and conclusions of law to the Board. ERS's proposed findings modified the ALJ's findings of facts by adding a finding that Yovette Edward's blood alcohol content was an additional factor, along with her speed, the poor visibility, and the odd terrain, "without each of which the accident would not have occurred." Citing title 34, section 67.91 of the administrative code, the proposed findings contained an extensive discussion explaining that the addition was justified because the original finding in the PFD was (1) against the intent, as determined by the board, of the intoxication exclusion in the insurance policy; (2) was against the weight of the evidence; (3) was based on an insufficient review of the evidence and was clearly erroneous and illogical; and (4) was not sufficient to protect the public interest, the interest of the plans and programs for which the Board is trustee, or the interests, as a group, of the participants covered by such plans and programs.



The proposed findings modified the ALJ's conclusions of law by eliminating a paragraph that stated that ambiguities in the terms of the exclusion for intoxication--including the term "direct result"--should be construed in favor of the insured.

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Flores v. Employees Retirement System of Texas
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Stroburg v. Insurance Company of North America
464 S.W.2d 827 (Texas Supreme Court, 1971)

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Linda Edwards v. Employees Retirement System of Texas and Group Life and Health, a Division of Fort Dearborn Life Insurance Company, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/linda-edwards-v-employees-retirement-system-of-tex-texapp-2004.