Summit MacHine Tool Manufacturing Corp. v. Great Northern Insurance Co.

997 S.W.2d 840, 1999 Tex. App. LEXIS 5534, 1999 WL 546875
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 29, 1999
Docket03-98-00166-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 997 S.W.2d 840 (Summit MacHine Tool Manufacturing Corp. v. Great Northern 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
Summit MacHine Tool Manufacturing Corp. v. Great Northern Insurance Co., 997 S.W.2d 840, 1999 Tex. App. LEXIS 5534, 1999 WL 546875 (Tex. Ct. App. 1999).

Opinion

BEA ANN SMITH, Justice.

Appellant Summit Machine Tool Manufacturing Corporation (“Summit”) sued its insurance carriers, appellees Great Northern Insurance Company and Chubb & Son, Inc. (together “Chubb”), 1 for various causes of action relating to Chubb’s failure to pay Summit’s claim under an insurance policy covering the shipment of manufacturing machines. The jury awarded Summit compensatory and exemplary damages; however, it also found that Summit willfully concealed or misrepresented material facts relating to the claim and that Chubb had not waived this policy defense. Based on the jury’s answer to this question, the trial court rendered a take-nothing judgment in Chubb’s favor. Summit raises five issues on appeal. We will affirm the trial court’s judgment.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

Summit manufactures and sells industrial machinery. In 1987, it arranged to sell to various Mexican entities several hun *842 dred machines for making precision automotive bearings. The sale was never consummated, however, and Summit sued the Mexican entities. As part of a settlement, Summit received $13 million and retained ownership of the machines, which it stored in a warehouse in Puebla, Mexico for several years. In 1991, Summit arranged to sell the machines to a Slovakian company. To prepare for the transatlantic shipment, Summit began to transport seventy-two truckloads of machinery from Puebla to Oklahoma City in mid-1992.

Prior to shipment, Summit purchased primary insurance from the Mexican insurer Asegudora Mexicana, S.A. (“Asemex”) to cover transit-related property damage en route from Puebla to Oklahoma City. Summit also bought Differences in Conditions, Differences in Limits, and Excess coverage (“DIC/DIL/Excess coverage”) from Chubb as secondary coverage against damage occurring in transit between Puebla and the United States unloading point in Laredo, Texas. 2 The DIC/DIL/Excess policy would pay only if the primary policy did not pay, or, if after exhaustion of the Asemex policy limits, the full amount of the claim had not been paid. Under the terms of the policy, Chubb had the option to pay Summit either the value of the damaged property or the cost to repair or replace the machinery. The policy also contained a “concealment or misrepresentation” clause stating: “This insurance is void as to all insureds if, whether before or after loss, you willfully conceal or misrepresent any material fact or circumstance relating to this insurance.”

When truckloads of damaged machinery began to arrive in Oklahoma City in July 1992, Summit notified Asemex and Chubb of a potential claim. Summit, which valued the machinery at $20,035,347.86 at the time of loss, made a formal demand to Asemex, the primary carrier, for $16,674,-694.16 in transit damages. Asemex refused to pay this amount, and Summit initiated arbitration proceedings in 1993 against Asemex before the Comisión Na-cional de Seguros y Finanzas, in effect the Mexican Insurance Commission. Asemex did not deny coverage, but stated that Summit had not complied with the terms of the policy by failing to substantiate its claimed damages to the machines.

During this period, Summit expressed to Chubb that it was anxious to begin repairs on the machines so that it could sell them to the Slovakians with a warranty. After Chubb representatives inspected the damaged machinery, Summit began repairing the machinery in December 1992. Summit kept records of the hours and costs it incurred, and later submitted these records to Chubb.

In June 1993, Summit sent Chubb a letter demanding payment of $16,674,-694.16. Summit informed Chubb that Ase-mex had effectively denied its claim by thus far refusing to pay: “Accordingly, Summit now looks to Chubb and Arkwright for coverage under the applicable policies.” Summit asked Chubb to “concede coverage and admit liability” on Summit’s claim. Chubb responded that Summit had not filed a sworn statement of loss as required under the policy. In July, Summit requested a statement-of-loss form, and Summit’s counsel stated in a letter to Chubb that he would assist in preparing it. In August, Summit sent Chubb the loss statement, in which Summit’s vice president Dale Redman swore under oath that Summit’s loss under the Chubb policy was $16,674,694.16, the same amount it had claimed under the Asemex policy. Chubb rejected the loss statement, asserting that Summit did not provide credible documentation to substantiate a loss in that amount.

In March 1994, Summit and Asemex entered into a settlement agreement under the following terms: Asemex would pay Summit $3.6 million, in exchange for which *843 Summit would release its claim against Asemex and terminate the Mexican Insurance Commission proceedings. The agreement defined Summit’s claim against Ase-mex as one for “alleged damage to certain machinery and equipment, occurring on various dates....” Summit’s general counsel David Shear signed the settlement agreement on behalf of Summit, and Ase-mex paid Summit the agreed amount.

Summit filed suit against Chubb, Great Northern, and Arkwright in 1995. Chubb moved for summary judgment, arguing that because Asemex paid Summit $3.6 million to settle its claim, the limits of Summit’s primary insurance had not been exhausted; therefore, Chubb argued, its secondary coverage was not triggered as a matter of law. The trial court denied Chubb’s motion, and the case was tried to a jury under Oklahoma law.

At trial, Summit took the position that the Asemex settlement did not constitute a payment by the primary carrier on Summit’s insurance claim. Jack Golsen, the board chairman and president of Summit’s parent company, was one of Summit’s primary witnesses. Golsen testified that the $3.6 million settlement with Asemex was not paid on Summit’s claim for transit damages under the policy; instead, he claimed that the payment was solely in settlement of tort claims against Asemex for defamation and threats of arrest and extradition allegedly made against Golsen and other Summit officials. However, Gol-sen acknowledged that the settlement was not paid out to himself or any other executives personally, but was placed on Summit’s general ledger as a receipt for equipment costs.

David Shear, Summit’s general counsel, gave similar testimony in his deposition, which was read to the jury at trial. Shear testified: “We were paid strictly on our tort claims and not on our cargo claim. We were required to sign this agreement in order to get the money for that.” When asked if the Asemex agreement settled Summit’s claims for transit damages, Shear stated: ‘When you say settled it, we didn’t get any money for that, [but] were we required to give a general release, the answer is yes.”

Other evidence contradicted Golsen’s and Shear’s testimony about the nature of the Asemex settlement. The settlement agreement nowhere stated that the $3.6 million payment was solely for the alleged tortious conduct of Asemex. Summit’s expert on Mexican law testified — and Shear acknowledged — that the Mexican Insurance Commission did not have jurisdiction over tort claims.

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997 S.W.2d 840, 1999 Tex. App. LEXIS 5534, 1999 WL 546875, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/summit-machine-tool-manufacturing-corp-v-great-northern-insurance-co-texapp-1999.