Texas United Insurance Co. v. Burt Ford Enterprises, Inc.

703 S.W.2d 828, 1986 Tex. App. LEXIS 12057
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 30, 1986
Docket12-83-0213-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 703 S.W.2d 828 (Texas United Insurance Co. v. Burt Ford Enterprises, 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.

Bluebook
Texas United Insurance Co. v. Burt Ford Enterprises, Inc., 703 S.W.2d 828, 1986 Tex. App. LEXIS 12057 (Tex. Ct. App. 1986).

Opinion

COLLEY, Justice.

This is a summary judgment case involving a dispute between plaintiff/appellee, Burt Ford, d/b/a Burt Ford Enterprises and Burt Ford Enterprises, Inc. (Ford), and defendant/appellant, Texas United Insurance Company (United), respecting policy coverage of a contractor’s general liability policy issued by United to Ford. At trial both parties filed motions for summary judgment. The trial court denied United’s motion but granted Ford’s motion for interlocutory summary judgment. Thereafter, the trial court heard testimony as to attorneys’ fees and damages and granted a judgment in favor of Ford for $28,273.22 representing damages paid under a settlement agreement to the plaintiffs in a property damage suit earlier filed and prosecuted against Ford and others, and attorneys’ fees for Ford. We affirm in part and reverse and remand the cause in part.

Ford alleges in his live pleadings that he is in the construction business and formerly did business as Burt Ford Enterprises; that United issued a manufacturer’s and contractor’s liability insurance policy to Ford insuring Ford against certain risks. The policy limits were $100,000 for each occurrence. Ford alleges that Cecil Lasa-ter and others filed a lawsuit 1 against him seeking judgment for damages resulting to plaintiffs’ real and personal property from the collapse of a brick wall erected on a construction site adjacent to the plaintiffs’ property. Ford avers that though the policy provisions required United to furnish him a defense to the suit, it refused to do so and also denied coverage of the claim asserted in the Lasater suit; and that after United refused to defend the suit, Ford retained counsel of his own who presented his defense in the suit. At trial in this suit Ford, under the allegations of his pleadings, sought to recover judgment for the amount of the judgment in Lasater’s suit, expenses incurred, including attorneys’ fees paid by him in defense of that suit, and reasonable attorneys’ fees in the instant suit.

Ford filed a motion for summary judgment “on the issue of liability alone.” The basis of the motion is that United wrongfully refused to defend the Lasater suit and thereby waived its policy defense of noncoverage. Attached to the motion were copies of United’s insurance policy, plaintiffs’ original petition in the Lasater suit, and a letter pre-dating the filing of the Lasater suit addressed to United and written by Ford’s attorney advising United of Lasater’s claim. The motion also was based on United’s responses to certain requests for admissions and interrogatories propounded by Ford.

United filed its own motion for summary judgment as well as a response to Ford’s motion. United’s motion sought a take-nothing judgment against Ford based on the allegations of Lasater’s petition, and Ford’s cross-action in the Lasater suit that Ford’s co-defendant Smotherman was an independent contractor. United alleged also a provision in the liability policy excluding coverage for property damage “arising out of operations performed for the named insured by independent contractors or acts or omissions of the named insured in connection with his general supervision of such operations.” United *830 therefore asserted that it had no duty to defend the Lasater suit. The trial court denied United’s motion and granted Ford’s motion, signing an “Interlocutory Summary Judgment,” reciting that “interlocutory summary judgment on the question of liability only is hereby rendered in favor of [Ford] ... against [United]_” This order was signed on August 30, 1982. On August 26, 1983, the case was called for trial and the only evidence received at trial was the testimony of Charles H. Clark, Ford’s attorney. Based on Clark’s testimony, the trial court, incorporating the interlocutory order determining United’s liability in the ease, signed a judgment on September 26, 1983, in favor of Ford. In response to United’s request, the trial judge made and filed findings of fact and conclusions of law. In Finding 8 the trial judge found that in the Lasater suit “judgment was entered in favor of the plaintiffs and against the defendants in the amount of ... ($30,000)_” The trial court concluded that as a consequence of United’s failure to defend Ford in the Lasater suit that United waived its policy defense of noncov-erage.

We conclude that the admissible summary judgment evidence introduced establishes the following facts as a matter of law, to wit: (1) United was duly notified of the Lasater suit against Ford; (2) the process served on Ford in that suit was promptly delivered to the authorized agents of United; and (3) that United refused to defend Ford in the suit on the ground that the cause of action asserted therein was not within policy coverage. However, Ford failed to introduce in support of the summary judgment motion authenticated (sworn) or certified copies of the judgment and verdict, if any, 2 in the Lasater suit. Neither is there other summary judgment evidence establishing the judgment and the findings of fact upon which the judgment rested. When the case was called for trial after the entry of the interlocutory order purporting to establish the liability of United to Ford, Ford produced one witness as heretofore noted, his attorney, Charles Clark. Clark testified that “the total settlement was $30,000”; that Ford agreed to pay half of that amount, and signed a note for $15,000 which was paid to counsel for the plaintiffs in the Lasater suit by three separate checks, two issued by Ford Enterprises, Inc., a corporation formed by Ford to succeed his former business, known as Burt Ford Enterprises and one issued by Ford individually.

United urges two broad points of error in this court, to wit: (1) “The trial court erred in granting the motion for summary judgment of plaintiff.” and (2) “The trial court erred in failing to grant the motion for summary judgment of defendant.”

Under its first point United argues that the cause of action asserted against Ford for damages was not covered by the policy when the allegations contained in the plaintiffs’ petition in the Lasater suit against Ford are considered in light of the policy provisions. Therefore, United was not under a contractual duty to defend the suit and is not liable for the damages sought in this suit. Both parties to this appeal agree that the determination of whether an insurer has a duty to defend its insured is properly based on an analysis of the claim, i.e., the allegations made against the insured and the policy provisions. We agree that this is indeed the correct method of making such determination. Heyden Newport Chemical Co. v. Southern General Insurance Company, 387 S.W.2d 22, 24-25 (Tex.1965). United, however, contends that the language of the plaintiffs’ petition in the Lasater suit, and the allegation made in Ford’s cross-action, properly construed, shows that Ford, a general contractor, was sued for the negligent conduct of one Smotherman, a co-defendant, who was acting on the occasion of such negligence as an independent contractor, performing brick work for Ford on the con *831 struction site. United says the claim against Ford was not covered because of an exclusionary clause of the policy providing that insurance furnished by the policy did not apply to: “(q) ...

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Bluebook (online)
703 S.W.2d 828, 1986 Tex. App. LEXIS 12057, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/texas-united-insurance-co-v-burt-ford-enterprises-inc-texapp-1986.