Omni Metals, Inc. v. Poe & Brown of Texas, Inc. and Transcontinental Insurance Co.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 13, 2002
Docket14-00-01081-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Omni Metals, Inc. v. Poe & Brown of Texas, Inc. and Transcontinental Insurance Co. (Omni Metals, Inc. v. Poe & Brown of Texas, Inc. and Transcontinental Insurance Co.) 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
Omni Metals, Inc. v. Poe & Brown of Texas, Inc. and Transcontinental Insurance Co., (Tex. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

Reversed and Remanded and Opinion filed June 13, 2002

Reversed and Remanded and Opinion filed June 13, 2002.

In The

Fourteenth Court of Appeals

_______________

NO. 14-00-01081-CV

OMNI METALS, INC., Appellant

V.

POE & BROWN OF TEXAS, INC. AND

TRANSCONTINENTAL INSURANCE CO., Appellees

_____________________________________________________________

On Appeal from the 61st District Court

Harris County, Texas

Trial Court Cause No.  96-36058-A

_____________________________________________________________

O P I N I O N

            In this appeal, we address whether an insurer and insurance agent misrepresented coverage under a bailee’s policy, or had a duty to disclose policy exclusions, in responding to an inquiry by their insured’s bailor.  The trial court granted summary judgment in favor of the insurer and insurance agency, appellees Transcontinental Insurance Company and Poe & Brown of Texas, Inc.  The bailor, appellant Omni Metals, Inc., appeals raising seven issues: (1) appellees had the duty to disclose an exclusion of coverage; (2) fact issues exist about misrepresentation of coverage; (3) fact issues exist about misrepresentations made to the bailee, upon which Omni relied; (4) Omni did not have notice of the policy and had no duty to read it; (5) Poe & Brown was not rendering a professional service that exempts it from the DTPA; (6) lack of privity does not disqualify Omni as a consumer under the DTPA; and (7) Omni has a cause of action for attorneys’ fees.  We reverse and remand.

                                                            I.  BACKGROUND[1]

            Omni is a customer of Port Metal, a steel processing company.  Port Metal’s business entails keeping large coils of steel for its customers and cutting and processing steel pursuant to customer specifications.  Port Metal keeps the steel coils at no cost for sixty days but charges a storage fee based on tonnage if they remain longer. 

            Concerned about insurance for its customers’ property while located at its premises, Port Metal sought the advice of an insurance agent.  The agent, Danny Sparks, who worked for Poe & Brown at the time of the loss, advised that Port Metal needed a bailee’s liability policy.  The agent thus procured a $3,000,000 “all risk,” bailee liability policy from Transcontinental.  The policy was renewed each year.

            In 1992, when Port Metal’s president read the policy, he noticed that it excluded coverage for property stored for a fee.  He told the insurance agent that he charged his customers a storage fee.  However, the insurance agent told him that the exclusion “prohibited [Port Metal] from storing things other than coils or Port Metal Processing’s business and [Port Metal] couldn’t go out and store washing machines or something without obtaining additional coverage.”  Poe & Brown’s agent also advised at least one of Port Metal’s customers that it did not need to buy additional insurance because its steel was covered under the bailee liability policy while at Port Metal.

            During this time, Poe & Brown also provided certificates of insurance to Omni.  On the certificate for the 1992-93 policy, Poe & Brown noted the $3,000,000 bailee liability policy issued by Transcontinental.  It also noted on the certificate, “coverage includes property of others in custody of insured.”[2]  In subsequent years, this notation was dropped, and the designation “all risk” appeared.[3]  Finally, in 1995, two months before a fire damaged Omni’s steel, Poe & Brown sent another certificate to Omni in response to an inquiry from Omni to Port Metal.  In sending the certificate to Omni, Poe & Brown understood that Omni wanted to make sure its property at Port Metal was insured.

            In December 1995, a fire started at a property adjacent to Port Metal and spread.  Omni sustained over $1,000,000 in damages to its steel.  When Omni submitted its claim under Port Metal’s bailee liability policy, the insurer, Transcontinental, denied coverage because the policy did not cover property stored for a fee. 

            Omni then brought suit against Transcontinental and Poe & Brown for misrepresentation, failure to disclose, and violations of the DTPA and Insurance Code.  Poe & Brown and Transcontinental filed motions for summary judgment, claiming that there was no misrepresentation or false and misleading act.  Additionally, Poe & Brown’s motion contained the following grounds: (1) it provided Omni a professional service exempt from the DTPA; (2) Omni had a duty to read the policy; (3) Omni did not qualify as a consumer because it did not directly purchase or lease goods or services from Poe & Brown; and (4) Omni could not recover attorney’s fees as damages because Poe & Brown committed no wrongful acts.  Lastly, Transcontinental raises for the first time on appeal the ground that it has no agency liability for Poe & Brown’s actions.

            We reverse and remand because: (1) under the circumstances presented in this case, appellees

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Omni Metals, Inc. v. Poe & Brown of Texas, Inc. and Transcontinental Insurance Co., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/omni-metals-inc-v-poe-brown-of-texas-inc-and-trans-texapp-2002.