National Surety Corp. v. First National Bank of Midland

431 S.W.2d 353, 11 Tex. Sup. Ct. J. 572, 1968 Tex. LEXIS 372
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 17, 1968
DocketB-814
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 431 S.W.2d 353 (National Surety Corp. v. First National Bank of Midland) 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
National Surety Corp. v. First National Bank of Midland, 431 S.W.2d 353, 11 Tex. Sup. Ct. J. 572, 1968 Tex. LEXIS 372 (Tex. 1968).

Opinion

CALVERT, Chief-' Justice.

The First National Bank of Midland, Texas, sued National Surety Corporation on a Bankers Blanket Bond to recover the sum of $1,500 paid by Bank as a fee to attorneys who successfully defended a suit against it by one Mrs. Otis Beavers. Both parties moved for summary judgment. The trial court overruled National Surety’s motion, granted the Bank’s motion, and rendered judgment in favor of the Bank. The court of civil appeals affirmed. 424 S.W.2d 27. We reverse the judgments of the courts below and render judgment that the Bank take nothing.

The Bank’s right to recover must be found in the terms of the Blanket Bond issued to it by National Surety. Several of the provisions of the bond are quoted at length in the opinion of the court of civil appeals. Only the provisions deemed relevant to our decision will be quoted here.

In the opening insuring paragraph of the bond, National Surety agreed to indemnify and hold the Bank harmless “from and against any losses sustained and discovered as hereinafter set forth.” The bond contains a number of subject-matter sections, one of which is headed, “THE LOSSES COVERED BY THIS BOND ARE AS FOLLOWSUnder this caption, the bond lists seven classes of losses in separate sections, lettered (A) through (G). The classes are “Fidelity”, “Offices and Equipment”, “In Transit”, “Forgery and Alteration”, “Securities”, “Redemption of United States Savings Bonds”, and “Counterfeit Currency”. Immediately following the listed classes of losses in lettered sections, is an unlettered paragraph providing for reimbursement of court costs and attorneys’ fees. It reads, in relevant part, as follows:

“COURT COSTS AND' ATTORNEYS’ FEES”
(Applicable to all Insuring Clauses now or hereafter forming part of this bond.)
“The Underwriters will indemnify the Insured against court costs and reasonable attorneys’ fees incurred and paid by the Insured in defending any suit or legal proceeding brought against the Insured to enforce the Insured’s liability or alleged liability on account of any loss, claim or damage which, if established against the Insured, would constitute a valid and collectible loss sustained by the *355 Insured under the terms of this bond. Such indemnity shall be in addition to the amount of this bond * * 1

National Surety’s application has four points of error which present two contentions why the Bank is not entitled to a recovery of the fee paid to its attorneys in the prior litigation. They are, (1) the bond covers only “losses”, and the Bank suffered no loss on the claim of Mrs. Beavers, inasmuch as she was unsuccessful in her suit against the Bank; and (2) even if Mrs. Beavers had been successful in her suit against the Bank, the loss would, nevertheless, not have been “a valid and collectible loss” under the terms of the bond as required by the attorneys’ fees provision. The court of civil appeals overruled both of these contentions. The questions presented by the two contentions are questions of pure contract interpretation, and are to be decided under well-known general rules applicable in such situations. Neither party has cited a case in which the questions are directly presented and decided or which we regard as controlling.

We can find no sound basis in the bond’s provisions for holding that the insured must suffer an actual loss under one of the lettered classes of losses before being entitled to reimbursement for court costs and attorneys’ fees incurred and paid in successfully defending against a claim, and every practical and reasonable interpretation of the bond’s provisions point to an opposite conclusion. National Surety points to the fact that in the insuring clause it has agreed to indemnify only against “losses sustained and discovered * * but this manner of looking at the whole clause would blind us to the phrase, “ * * * as hereinafter set forth.” The provision for reimbursement of court costs and attorneys’ fees is listed under the bond’s section which is captioned, “The losses covered by this bond are as follows.” In other words, court costs and attorneys’ fees incurred and paid by the insured are classified in the bond itself as “losses”, and there is no language in the particular paragraph, or elsewhere in the bond, indicating that they are to be classified as losses only if they are incurred in unsuccessfully defending suits. Moreover, it makes little sense to say that National Surety has agreed to pay the insured’s attorneys’ fees when suits have been unsuccessfully defended and it has thereby been required to make heavy indemnity payments, but that it has not agreed to pay attorneys’ fees when suits have been successfully defended and it has thereby been protected against heavy indemnity payments.

The second contention of National Surety presents a more difficult problem. National Surety has not agreed to pay insured’s attorneys’ fees in all litigation to which it may be a party, just as it has not agreed to pay all losses which the insured may incur in its banking business.

National Surety’s liability for court costs and attorneys’ fees is by the plain and unambiguous language of the bond very clearly limited to situations in which they are incurred in suits or legal proceedings in which liability or alleged liability of the insured, if established, would constitute a valid and collectible loss under other loss provisions of the bond. To determine whether National Surety is liable for court costs and attorneys’ fees in a particular case, recourse must be had to the pleadings and papers in the suit which insured’s attorneys defended, and thence to the lettered classes of loss in the bond.

Copies of the pleading of Mrs. Beavers in her suit against the Bank, its answer thereto, the Bank’s motion for summary judgment, and the summary judgment rendered therein decreeing that the Bank be dismissed from the suit, are attached to the Bank’s petition in this case and are incorporated in an affidavit filed by the Bank as summary judgment proof. A copy of Mrs. Beavers’ pleading is also incorporated in an affidavit filed by National Surety as *356 summary judgment proof. These instruments reflect that in 1957, the Crestview Baptist Church of Midland issued church improvement bonds, and that the Bank was appointed trustee and paying agent of the bonds by the terms of a trust indenture.

Mrs. Beavers, alleging that she was the owner of six of such bonds, each in the principal sum of $1,000, sued the Bank, Crestview Baptist Church and others, to recover $30.00 on each of twelve interest coupons which she alleged had matured but which the defendants had refused to pay. She also sought recovery of attorneys’ fees in the amount of ten per cent on unpaid principal and interest. The petition then contained an alternative plea on the basis of which she sought recovery of the full amount of the principal of the six bonds and accrued interest thereon. The alternative plea presents the crux of this suit and we quote it in full, as follows:

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Bluebook (online)
431 S.W.2d 353, 11 Tex. Sup. Ct. J. 572, 1968 Tex. LEXIS 372, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/national-surety-corp-v-first-national-bank-of-midland-tex-1968.