Mid-Continent Insurance Company v. Liberty Mutual Insurance Company

CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 12, 2007
Docket05-0261
StatusPublished

This text of Mid-Continent Insurance Company v. Liberty Mutual Insurance Company (Mid-Continent Insurance Company v. Liberty Mutual 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
Mid-Continent Insurance Company v. Liberty Mutual Insurance Company, (Tex. 2007).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF TEXAS

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF TEXAS

════════════

No. 05-0261

Mid-Continent Insurance Company, Appellant,

v.

Liberty Mutual Insurance Company, Appellee

════════════════════════════════════════════════════

On Certified Questions from the United States

Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit

Argued October 18, 2005

            Justice Wainwright delivered the opinion of the Court.

            Justice Willett filed a concurring opinion.

            This dispute between one primary liability insurer and another primary insurer that also provides the applicable excess insurance policy comes to us on certified questions from the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit. Pursuant to article V, section 3-c of the Texas Constitution and Texas Rule of Appellate Procedure 58.1, we answer the following questions:

            1. Two insurers, providing the same insured applicable primary insurance liability coverage under policies with $1 million limits and standard provisions (one insurer also providing the insured coverage under a $10 million excess policy), cooperatively assume defense of the suit against their common insured, admitting coverage. The insurer also issuing the excess policy procures an offer to settle for the reasonable amount of $1.5 million and demands that the other insurer contribute its proportionate part of that settlement, but the other insurer, unreasonably valuing the case at no more than $300,000, contributes only $150,000, although it could contribute as much as $700,000 without exceeding its remaining available policy limits. As a result, the case settles (without an actual trial) for $1.5 million funded $1.35 million by the insurer which also issued the excess policy and $150,000 by the other insurer.

            In that situation is any actionable duty owed (directly or by subrogation to the insured's rights) to the insurer paying the $1.35 million by the underpaying insurer to reimburse the former respecting its payment of more than its proportionate part of the settlement?

            2. If there is potentially such a duty, does it depend on the underpaying insurer having been negligent in its ultimate evaluation of the case as worth no more than $300,000, or does the duty depend on the underpaying insured's evaluation having been sufficiently wrongful to justify an action for breach of the duty of good faith and fair dealing for denial of a first party claim, or is the existence of the duty measured by some other standard?

            3. If there is potentially such a duty, is it limited to a duty owed the overpaying insurer respecting the $350,000 it paid on the settlement under its excess policy?

Liberty Mut. Ins. Co. v. Mid-Continent Ins. Co., 405 F.3d 296, 310 (5th Cir. 2005). We answer the first question in the negative, and therefore do not reach the second and third questions.

I. Background

            In November 1996, an automobile accident occurred in the construction zone of a State of Texas highway project. A westbound car driven by Tony Cooper on the lanes narrowed by construction crossed into on-coming traffic and collided with an eastbound car driven by James Boutin and occupied by his family. All members of the Boutin family suffered substantial injuries. Kinsel Industries was the general contractor on the highway project. Crabtree Barricades was Kinsel’s subcontractor responsible for signs and dividers. The Boutin family sued Cooper, the State, Kinsel, and Crabtree in the state district court of Liberty County, Texas, for damages resulting from the accident.

            Kinsel was the named insured under Liberty Mutual Insurance Company’s $1 million comprehensive general liability (CGL) policy. Liberty Mutual also provided Kinsel with $10 million in excess liability insurance. Crabtree was the named insured under Mid-Continent Insurance Company’s $1 million CGL policy. Mid-Continent’s policy identified Kinsel as an additional insured for liability arising from Crabtree’s work. Kinsel, therefore, was a covered insured under two CGL policies, both of which provided Kinsel with $1 million in indemnity coverage for the underlying suit. The insurers had no contract between them that was implicated by the automobile accident.

            The CGL policies contained identical “other insurance” clauses providing for equal or pro rata sharing up to the co-insurers’ respective policy limits if the loss is covered by other primary insurance:

            4. Other Insurance.

If other valid and collective insurance is available to the insured for a loss we cover under Coverages A [‘Bodily Injury and Property Damage Liability’] or B of this Coverage Part, our obligations are limited as follows:

a. Primary Insurance

. . . If this insurance is primary our obligations are not affected unless any of the other insurance is also primary. Then, we will share with all that other insurance by the method described in c. below.

. . .

c. Method of Sharing

If all of the other insurance permits contribution by equal shares, . . . each insurer contributes equal amounts until it has paid its applicable limit of insurance or none of the loss remains, whichever comes first.

If any of the other insurance does not permit contribution by equal shares, we will contribute by limits. Under this method, each insurer’s share is based on the ratio of its applicable limit of insurance to the total applicable limits of insurance of all insurers.

Each policy also contained a “voluntary payment” clause,[1] a subrogation clause,[2] and a version of the standard “no action” clause.[3]

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Bluebook (online)
Mid-Continent Insurance Company v. Liberty Mutual Insurance Company, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mid-continent-insurance-company-v-liberty-mutual-i-tex-2007.