Texas Mutual Insurance Company v. Goetz Insurors, Inc. and Goetz Insurors, Inc., as Assignee of the Claims of Cattlco., Inc.
This text of Texas Mutual Insurance Company v. Goetz Insurors, Inc. and Goetz Insurors, Inc., as Assignee of the Claims of Cattlco., Inc. (Texas Mutual Insurance Company v. Goetz Insurors, Inc. and Goetz Insurors, Inc., as Assignee of the Claims of Cattlco., Inc.) 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.
Opinion
NO. 07-08-0279-CV
IN THE COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE SEVENTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS
AT AMARILLO
PANEL C
MARCH 25, 2010
______________________________
TEXAS MUTUAL INSURANCE COMPANY,
Appellant
v.
GOETZ INSURORS, INC. AND GOETZ INSURORS, INC.,
AS ASSIGNEE OF THE CLAIMS OF CATTLCO, INC.,
Appellee
_______________________________
FROM THE 64TH DISTRICT COURT OF SWISHER COUNTY;
NO. A-10810-05-11; HON. ROBERT W. KINKAID, JR., PRESIDING
Opinion
Before QUINN, C.J., and HANCOCK and PIRTLE, JJ.
Texas Mutual Insurance Company (Texas Mutual) appeals from a final judgment wherein it claims that the trial court erred in awarding attorney’s fees and prejudgment interest on attorney’s fees to Goetz Insurors, Inc. and Goetz Insurors, Inc., as assignee of the claims of Cattlco, Inc. (Goetz). We reverse in part.
Background
The story before us is a long one that started about seven years ago. It involves a feedlot, Cattlco, Inc., Stanley (a Cattlco employee), and Goetz (entities in the business of providing insurance to Cattlco). It begins with Goetz attempting to find worker’s compensation insurance for Cattlco. The latter’s current policy was expiring and another was needed by December 31, 2002. Texas Mutual was contacted via an initial application for insurance sent on December 20, 2002. Per correspondence from Texas Mutual, an amended application was sent on December 30, 2002. Accompanying it was a deposit for the requisite insurance. Both items were received and the monies were deposited by Texas Mutual long before January 22, 2003. The latter date is of import for that is when Stanley broke his leg while on the job. Nevertheless, Texas Mutual denied coverage, contending that the policy had not been effective on that date. Rather, it purportedly became effective on February 1, 2003.
While Cattlco, Goetz, and Texas Mutual quarreled over the policy’s effective date, Stanley’s medical needs necessitated redress. So, Cattlco and Goetz paid for his care and settled any claims he may have had not only against Cattlco but also Texas Mutual. Cattlco then assigned its claims against Texas Mutual for breach of contract and the like to Goetz. This lead to Goetz suing Texas Mutual in a Travis County district court for, among other things, breach of contract.[1]
No one denied that the central issue in dispute involved the effective date of the policy. Yet, Texas Mutual argued that the subject was related to issues of compensability and implicated the Texas Worker’s Compensation Act. And, because it purportedly did, the Texas Worker’s Compensation Commission purportedly had exclusive jurisdiction over it. Moreover, it convinced our sister court in Austin to accept the proposition. See In re Texas Mutual Ins., 157 S.W.3d 75 (Tex. App.–Austin 2004, orig. proceeding). As a result of that court’s decision, Goetz was obligated to submit the dispute for resolution by the TWCC. Though various departments within that entity disagreed, the Commission finally decided in favor of Texas Mutual. Believing that to be the wrong answer, Goetz initiated another suit in a Swisher County district court to test the ruling’s accuracy.
The original petition filed by Goetz included complaints about various findings of the Commission, a cause of action sounding in breached contract for the failure to abide by the agreement with Cattlco, and requests for damages and attorney’s fees. Trial was convened, and the trial court afforded a jury opportunity to resolve the controversy. Moreover, that jury was asked if Texas Mutual had entered “into a contract to provide worker’s compensation insurance coverage for Cattlco . . . to be effective on or before January 22, 2003 . . . .” It answered “yes.” It was also asked if Cattlco or its assignee Goetz was “entitled to reimbursement of indemnity and medical payments for Texas Mutual . . . that resulted from such failure to comply with the contract to provide worker’s compensation insurance.” [2] The jury answered “yes” to that question as well. When asked about the amount of damages that would “fairly and reasonably compensate Goetz . . . for damages . . . that resulted from the failure of Texas Mutual . . . to comply with the contract . . .,” the jury found approximately $39,500 to be the appropriate sum. Then, it found that a reasonable attorney’s fee for the legal services provided Goetz would be $109,971 for the preparation and trial of the matter outside the environs of the Commission, $25,810 for the services rendered in prosecuting the matter within the Commission, and $35,000 if various appellate steps were taken.
After the trial court entered judgment upon the jury’s verdict, Texas Mutual appealed. It did not contest the findings that it had entered into the contract and was obligated to pay damages due to its breach of the agreement. Rather, it merely attacked the attorney’s fees awarded Goetz, contending, among other things, that the suit was not actually one for breach of contract but rather for judicial review of an administrative decision.
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Texas Mutual Insurance Company v. Goetz Insurors, Inc. and Goetz Insurors, Inc., as Assignee of the Claims of Cattlco., Inc., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/texas-mutual-insurance-company-v-goetz-insurors-in-texapp-2010.