Nobles v. Employees Retirement System of Texas

53 S.W.3d 483, 2001 Tex. App. LEXIS 4997, 2001 WL 838834
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 26, 2001
Docket03-00-00769-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 53 S.W.3d 483 (Nobles v. Employees Retirement System of Texas) 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
Nobles v. Employees Retirement System of Texas, 53 S.W.3d 483, 2001 Tex. App. LEXIS 4997, 2001 WL 838834 (Tex. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

KIDD, Justice.

Deborah Nobles (“Nobles”) appeals the trial-court judgment affirming a final order issued by the Employees Retirement System of Texas (“ERS”) that denied her insurance claim for accidental death benefits. Nobles asserts that ERS erroneously *485 imposed the burden of negating a policy-exclusion on her. We will affirm.

BACKGROUND

Nobles is an employee of the Texas Department of Criminal Justice. As a state employee, she is eligible for the Uniform Group Insurance Program (“the Program”). The insurer for that Program is currently Fort Dearborn Life Insurance Company. 1 Prior to her husband’s death, Nobles enrolled him in the Program. As part of her insurance program, Nobles elected dependent accidental death and dismemberment (“ADD”) and dependent voluntary accident insurance (“VAI”).

On November 2, 1996, Nobles, her husband Chris, and their son Greg, attended a Halloween party. Chris drove the family to the party in his pickup truck. At the party, they met Chris’s friend, Juston McCarver. Chris and McCarver drank alcoholic beverages at the party, but Chris later drove the family home without incident; McCarver accompanied them in the truck. Once home, the entire family went inside the house; however, Chris rejoined McCarver outside to return to the party. The two men left the house in Chris’s truck, which he had recently modified to enhance engine performance and increase speed. On the way back to the party, the truck left the highway and eventually landed upside down in a creek, killing both men.

Department of Public Safety Sergeant Skylor Hearn, who investigated the accident scene, found Chris’s body in the creek and McCarver’s body inside the truck, lying across the cab with a foot pinned between the dashboard and windshield on the passenger’s side. The passenger’s door was open; the driver’s door was closed. Hearn’s initial report indicated that he could not discern who had been driving. Furthermore, there were no witnesses to verify who was driving; Nobles had not watched the men leave. Autopsies revealed that both men were legally intoxicated at the time of the accident. Chris’s blood-alcohol level was .14; McCarver’s was .25. A few months later, Hearn’s supplemental accident report listed Chris as the driver.

Following Chris’s death, Group Life issued payment of $5000 in dependent term life benefits to Nobles. She also filed a claim for $5000 in ADD benefits and $100,000 in VAI benefits. Group Life denied the claim based on a policy term excluding coverage for a death occurring while the insured dependent is engaged in any felonious activity (“the felony exclusion”). Group Life asserted that there was evidence Chris had caused McCarver’s death by driving while intoxicated, a second-degree felony under the Texas Penal Code. 2 See Tex. Penal Code Ann. § 49.08 (West Supp.2001).

Nobles requested that ERS review the denial of her claim. The acting director of benefit contracts denied the claim once *486 more, and Nobles sought review by the Board of Trustees. The Board referred the ease to an administrative law judge (“ALJ”) for an evidentiary hearing. The ALJ issued findings of fact, conclusions of law, and a proposal for decision that the claim be denied. The Board adopted the findings, conclusions, and proposal in a final order. Nobles’s motion for rehearing was overruled by operation of law.

Nobles sought judicial review of the ERS final order in Travis County district court. The district court rendered judgment in favor of ERS. By eleven issues, Nobles asserts that ERS violated a provision of the Texas Insurance Code and challenges findings of fact and conclusions of law incorporated in the final order denying her claim.

THE CONTROVERSY

Nobles challenges the finding that Chris was driving at the time of the accident and the conclusion that, had he survived, he could have been subjected to second-degree felony charges for intoxication manslaughter. 3 Under section 21.58(b) of the Texas Insurance Code, the insurer has the burden of proof regarding any exception to coverage, such as the felony exclusion. Tex. Ins.Code Ann. art. 21.58(b) (West Supp.2001). Nobles asserts that ERS erroneously required her to prove the inapplicability of the felony exclusion — to prove that Chris was not driving at the time of the accident.

In formulating the proposal for decision, the ALJ explicitly cited our decision in Employees Retirement System v. Cash, 906 S.W.2d 204 (Tex.App.—Austin 1995, writ denied). That case stands for the proposition that when the insurer presents “some evidence” that the insured decedent was engaged in a felony causing his death, the presumption of his innocence disappears and the burden shifts to the claimant to negate the applicability of the felony exclusion. Id. at 208. Approximately ten months after the claim accrued in the Cash case, article 21.58 was added to the Texas Insurance Code. Article 21.58, which was not raised by either party in Cash, provides:

Art. 21.58. Burden of Proof and Pleading

(a) This article applies to any insurer doing business in this state, including:
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(19) ... It is intended that this article apply to all insurance companies doing business in this state, regardless of form and however organized ....
(b) In any suit to recover under a contract of insurance, the insurer has the burden of proof as to any avoidance or affirmative defense that must be affirmatively pleaded under the Texas Rules of Civil Procedure. Any language of exclusion in the policy and any exception to coverage claimed by the insurer constitutes an avoidance or an affirmative defense.

Id. art. 21.58(a), (b). Thus, under Cash, the insurer had the burden to plead a policy exclusion and present “some evidence” of its applicability. Article 21.58 changed this burden so that the insurer has to plead and prove, by a preponderance of the evidence, the exclusion. See id.

*487 DISCUSSION

Burden of Proof

It is undisputed that prior to the enactment of article 21.58 an insurer only needed to plead and present “some evidence” of the applicability of an exclusion in a life insurance policy. Cash, 906 S.W.2d at 208. Since September 1, 1991, however, insurers are required to both plead and prove the applicability of an exclusion. Nobles argues that article 21.58 applies not only in courts of law, but also in contested-case hearings before the Board.

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Bluebook (online)
53 S.W.3d 483, 2001 Tex. App. LEXIS 4997, 2001 WL 838834, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nobles-v-employees-retirement-system-of-texas-texapp-2001.