Robert Conrad v. Horace Hebert and Billie Hebert

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 17, 2010
Docket01-09-00331-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Robert Conrad v. Horace Hebert and Billie Hebert (Robert Conrad v. Horace Hebert and Billie Hebert) 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
Robert Conrad v. Horace Hebert and Billie Hebert, (Tex. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

Opinion issued June 17, 2010.

In The

Court of Appeals

For The

First District of Texas

————————————

NO. 01-09-00331-CV

———————————

Robert Conrad, Appellant

V.

Horace Hebert and Billie Hebert, Appellees

On Appeal from the 60th District Court

Jefferson County, Texas[1]

Trial Court Case No. B-177,392-A

MEMORANDUM  OPINION

          Appellant, Robert Conrad, appeals from a judgment rendered upon cross-motions for summary judgment.  We determine whether the trial court erred in implicitly determining as a matter of law that no enforceable settlement agreement existed between Conrad and appellees, Horace and Billie Hebert.  We affirm.

BACKGROUND

          In August 2005, Conrad was driving the car of his parents, Eric and Tammy Hanusch, when he collided with the car driven by the Heberts.  The Heberts were injured in the accident.  The Hanusches’ car involved in the accident was insured by Farmer’s Insurance Group (“Farmers”).

          On June 5, 2006, the Heberts each sent a letter to April Bossley, Farmers’s adjuster, offering to settle their claims.  The pertinent portions of the offer letters read as follows:

          I offer to settle the claims I have for the injuries I received resulting from the collision in exchange for payment to me of Robert Conrad’s policy limits.  Payment must be made to me on or before 5:00 p.m., July 5, 2006.  In exchange for payment of policy limits, I will execute a full and complete release in favor of Robert Conrad for all claims I have arising out of the collision.  I will also pay all subrogation amounts I may owe with the proceeds.  There are no hospital liens.  You can make the check payable to Trailblazer Health Enterprises, LLC, and me if you choose.

          If payment is not made on or before that date and time, this offer will expire and no further offer will be forthcoming. . . .

          Bossley responded to each of the Heberts by separate letters dated June 14, 2006.  Those letters, in pertinent part provided:

          I am extending an offer of $25,000.00, which is our policy limits, to settle your bodily injury claim in exchange for a full and final release.

          Please find the enclosed release form for your injury claim.  The amount on the release is the total amount of the claim.  Upon receipt of this form, we can issue your settlement check. . . .

          Please sign and mail the form back to me in the enclosed return envelope.  Please make sure your spouse also signs the release, before mailing it back to me. . . .

          The release forms attached to Bossley’s letters provided in relevant part that

FOR AND IN CONSIDERATION OF THE SUM OF TWENTY FIVE THOUSAND DOLLARS AND NO CENTS ($25,000), receipt of which is acknowledged, I release and forever discharge the insurer[,] Eric Hanusch, Tammy Hanusch, and Robert Conrad, their principals, agents and representatives from any and all rights, claims, demands and damages of any kind, known or unknown, existing or arising in the future, resulting from or related to injuries and property damage arising from an accident that occurred on August 20, 2005 . . . .

. . .

Further, I agree to reimburse and indemnify all released parties for any amounts which any insurance carriers, government entities, hospitals or other persons . . . or organizations may recover from them in reimbursement for amounts paid to me or on my behalf as a result of this accident by way of contribution, subrogation, indemnity, or otherwise. . . .

          It is undisputed that the Heberts did not sign the releases, did not respond to Bossley’s June 14 letters, and did not return her calls to discuss her letters.  It is also undisputed that neither Farmers nor Conrad paid the Heberts anything by the July 5, 2006 deadline.

          After the deadline had passed, the Heberts sued Conrad.  Their “live” pleading asserted claims for negligence.  In his answer, Conrad pleaded that the Heberts’ suit was barred because the parties had settled these claims.  Conrad also filed a counterclaim, in which he sought enforcement of the alleged settlement agreement. 

          Conrad moved for traditional summary judgment on his defensive and affirmative pleadings based on the alleged settlement agreement.  The Heberts moved for partial, traditional summary judgment on Conrad’s counterclaim and his defense based on the alleged settlement agreement, contending that (1) Conrad failed to accept the offers because he failed to pay the policy proceeds before the offers’ stated deadline and (2) Bossley’s June 14 letters constituted counteroffers, and thus rejections of the settlement offers, because the release contained material terms that differed from those in the settlement offers.  They also objected to portions of Conrad’s summary-judgment evidence.  Conrad file a supplemental summary-judgment motion, raising similar grounds to those raised in his opening motion and contending that the releases’ terms were not requirements or conditions; he also asserted various objections to the Heberts’ summary-judgment evidence.

         

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