Ostrovitz & Gwinn, LLC v. First Specialty Insurance Company

393 S.W.3d 379, 2012 WL 6559516, 2012 Tex. App. LEXIS 10379
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 13, 2012
Docket05-11-00143-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by40 cases

This text of 393 S.W.3d 379 (Ostrovitz & Gwinn, LLC v. First Specialty 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.

Bluebook
Ostrovitz & Gwinn, LLC v. First Specialty Insurance Company, 393 S.W.3d 379, 2012 WL 6559516, 2012 Tex. App. LEXIS 10379 (Tex. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

OPINION

Opinion 1 by

Justice FITZGERALD.

Appellant Ostrovitz & Gwinn, LLC (“Landlord”) owned a commercial property in Dallas, Texas, which it leased to a tenant in 2003. The tenant obtained property insurance from appellee First Specialty Insurance Company. 2 Landlord was identified in the policy as a loss payee, not as a named or additional insured. After a fire damaged the buildings on the property in 2006, Landlord sought compensation from First Specialty, and First Specialty took the position that Landlord was entitled to no insurance benefits. Landlord sued First Specialty and others on a variety of theories. First Specialty obtained partial summary judgment on most of Landlord’s claims against it, and Landlord appealed after the rest of its claims were disposed of. We affirm.

I.Background

A. Factual allegations

Landlord alleged the following in its live pleading. In 1998 it leased some real property in Dallas County to a company now known as Integral Texas Pallet Operations, LP (“Tenant”). In 2003 that lease was renewed for a five-year term. The 1998 lease required Tenant to insure the buildings on the property and to have Landlord named as an additional insured on the policy. On account of a mutual mistake, Landlord alleged, the 2003 lease did not contain this insurance requirement.

A First Specialty insurance policy was in effect on September 9, 2006, when a fire occurred on the leased premises, damaging the buildings there. First Specialty advised Landlord that there was no coverage of Landlord’s loss under the policy.

B. Procedural history

Landlord sued Tenant, First Specialty, and the individual who allegedly set the fire. Landlord later amended its pleadings and added another defendant, Keith D. Peterson & Company, Inc., which was allegedly First Specialty’s agent. 3 In its live pleading, Landlord asserted claims against First Specialty for breach of contract, violations of various provisions of the insurance code, violations of the DTPA, negligence, negligent misrepresentation, promissory estoppel, and declaratory judgment. First Specialty counterclaimed for a declaratory judgment that Landlord was not entitled to any recovery under the insurance policy in question.

Landlord filed a motion entitled “Plaintiffs First Amended Motion for Partial Summary Judgment for Declaratory Relief (Insurable Interest and Financial Interest).” By this motion, Landlord sought a partial summary judgment declaring that both Tenant and Landlord had insurable *384 interests in the damaged buildings, declaring that Tenant had no financial interest in those buildings, and ordering First Specialty to deposit policy proceeds into the registry of the court for division between Landlord as owner of the buildings and Tenant as owner of the damaged personal property. The appellate record contains no written order disposing of this motion, but First Specialty avers in its appellate brief that the trial judge orally denied that motion at a hearing on June 23, 2010.

First Specialty filed a motion for summary judgment in which it challenged all of Landlord’s claims on various grounds, including some no-evidence grounds under Texas Rule of Civil Procedure 166a(i). The judge heard First Specialty’s motion, and on July 28, 2010, the judge signed an order granting First Specialty’s “Traditional Motion for Summary Judgment” as to all of Landlord’s claims against First Specialty except declaratory judgment. On September 2, 2010, the judge signed a second order additionally granting summary judgment for First Specialty as to some of Landlord’s claims on no-evidence grounds, but expressly denying summary judgment as to Landlord’s declaratory-judgment claim. Thereafter, all of the remaining claims in the case were disposed of by other orders. As part of that process, Landlord nonsuited its declaratory-judgment claim against First Specialty on December 13, 2010. The final order in the case was a dismissal of Landlord’s claims against Tenant on January 11, 2011.

Landlord timely filed its notice of appeal. Because Landlord’s appellate issues concern only its claims against First Specialty, First Specialty is the only appellee in this appeal. See Showbiz Multimedia, LLC v. Mountain States Mortg. Ctrs., Inc., 303 S.W.3d 769, 771 n. 3 (Tex.App.-Houston [1st Dist.] 2009, no pet.).

II. Motion to Amend Notice of Appeal

After oral argument, Landlord filed a motion for leave to file an amended notice of appeal. We grant the motion.

A. Pertinent facts

The notice of appeal that appears in the clerk’s record is missing page two. Thus, some of the text of the notice of appeal is missing; an incomplete sentence cuts off at the bottom of page one, and the next page in the record is page three, which contains only the signature block. Landlord filed a copy of the notice of appeal with the clerk of this Court the same day it filed its notice of appeal in the trial court. The copy filed with the clerk of this Court is also missing page two.

In its appellee’s brief, First Specialty raises a different complaint regarding Landlord’s notice of appeal. First Specialty argues that the notice of appeal limits Landlord’s appeal to the partial-summary-judgment order signed on July 28, 2010, and does not invoke appellate jurisdiction over the partial-summary-judgment order signed on September 2, 2010 or the oral denial of Landlord’s motion for partial summary judgment in June 23, 2010. Therefore, First Specialty concludes, we should “sever and dismiss the complaints related to those rulings.” First Specialty relies on the opening language of the notice of appeal, which reads as follows:

[Landlord] desires to appeal, and does appeal the adverse summary judgment against it granted to [First Specialty] on July 28, 2010. This Order Granting First Specialty[’s] Traditional Motion for Summary Judgment was made final by the entry of the subsequent following orders:....

Following this verbiage, Landlord begins a list of subsequent orders that cuts off in the middle of the third item because of the omission of page two noted above. The *385 partial list on page one does not include the partial-summary-judgment order signed on September 2, 2010. Nor does it include the January 11, 2011 order dismissing Landlord’s claims against Tenant, which was the order that resulted in a final, appealable judgment in the case.

We informed Landlord’s counsel during oral argument that page two of its notice of appeal was missing. Several days later, Landlord filed a motion for leave to file an amended notice of appeal, with a proposed amended notice of appeal attached as Exhibit A.

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Bluebook (online)
393 S.W.3d 379, 2012 WL 6559516, 2012 Tex. App. LEXIS 10379, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ostrovitz-gwinn-llc-v-first-specialty-insurance-company-texapp-2012.