Yorkshire Insurance Co., LTD and Ocean Marine Insurance Co., LTD v. Roy Seger, Individually and as Substitute Administrator of the Estate of Randall Jay Seger, and Don Hoskins, Independent of the Estate of Shirley Faye Hoskins

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 19, 2013
Docket07-12-00090-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Yorkshire Insurance Co., LTD and Ocean Marine Insurance Co., LTD v. Roy Seger, Individually and as Substitute Administrator of the Estate of Randall Jay Seger, and Don Hoskins, Independent of the Estate of Shirley Faye Hoskins (Yorkshire Insurance Co., LTD and Ocean Marine Insurance Co., LTD v. Roy Seger, Individually and as Substitute Administrator of the Estate of Randall Jay Seger, and Don Hoskins, Independent of the Estate of Shirley Faye Hoskins) 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.

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Yorkshire Insurance Co., LTD and Ocean Marine Insurance Co., LTD v. Roy Seger, Individually and as Substitute Administrator of the Estate of Randall Jay Seger, and Don Hoskins, Independent of the Estate of Shirley Faye Hoskins, (Tex. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

In The Court of Appeals Seventh District of Texas at Amarillo

No. 07-12-00090-CV

YORKSHIRE INSURANCE CO., LTD., AND OCEAN MARINE INSURANCE CO., LTD., APPELLANTS

V.

ROY SEGER, INDIVIDUALLY AND AS SUBSTITUTE ADMINISTRATOR OF THE ESTATE OF RANDALL JAY SEGER, DECEASED, AND DON HOSKINS, INDEPENDENT EXECUTOR OF THE ESTATE OF SHIRLEY FAYE HOSKINS, DECEASED, APPELLEES

On Appeal from the 84th District Court Hutchinson County, Texas Trial Court No. 33,355, Honorable Abe Lopez, Presiding

July 19, 2013

OPINION Before QUINN, C.J. and CAMPBELL and HANCOCK, JJ.

Appellants, Yorkshire Insurance Co., Ltd., and Ocean Marine Insurance Co., Ltd.

(collectively, “Insurers”), appeal a judgment entered against them awarding appellees,

Roy Seger, individually and as substitute administrator of the estate of Randall Jay

Seger, and Don Hoskins, independent executor of the estate of Shirley Faye Hoskins

(collectively, “the Segers”), $35,848,273.50 each as well as post-judgment interest at an annual rate of five percent. By seven issues, Insurers appeal. We will reverse the trial

court’s judgment and render judgment that the Segers take nothing by their claims.

Background

The procedural history of the lawsuit between the Segers and Insurers is

extensive. Due to our resolution of the matters presented on appeal, we will constrain

our discussion of the history of this litigation to those facts that are pertinent to the

present appeal.

The incident giving rise to this action was the death of Randall Jay Seger.

Randall did drilling work for two related companies, Diatom Drilling Co., L.P. (Diatom),

and Employer's Contractor Services, Inc. (ECS). ECS was a corporation established by

Diatom's general partner, Cynthia Gillman, to provide oil field workers to Diatom and

other drilling contractors. On July 13, 1992, while employed by ECS but providing

services to Diatom, Randall was killed when a Diatom rig he was working on collapsed.

Diatom, who was insured by a Lloyd's of London-type comprehensive general liability

(CGL) insurance policy at the time of the accident, notified the subscribing insurers

(collectively, "the CGL insurers") of the accident. Insurers were members of this group.

In June of 1993, Randall's parents,1 filed suit against Diatom, its partners, and

ECS alleging negligence and gross negligence. The CGL insurers were not specifically

notified of the suit at the time that it was filed. The suit sat virtually dormant until 1998.

In 1998, Diatom demanded that the CGL insurers provide a defense to the Segers' suit.

1 Roy Seger and Shirley Faye Hoskins are Randall’s parents.

2 The CGL insurers refused to provide a defense, contending that Randall's death was

not a covered occurrence and that Diatom failed to provide timely notice of suit.

After the CGL insurers refused to provide Diatom a defense, the Segers offered

to settle their suit against Diatom for $500,000, the policy limits of the CGL policy.

Diatom made demand on the CGL insurers to settle the claim based on this offer. The

CGL insurers notified Diatom that two of the insurers had become insolvent and,

therefore, the demand exceeded the available policy limits of the CGL policy. Based on

this additional information, the Segers offered to settle the suit for $368,190, the policy

limits available from the solvent CGL insurers. The Segers subsequently lowered their

settlement offer to $250,000. The CGL insurers refused each of these settlement

demands.

Prior to trial in Seger v. Diatom (“the underlying proceeding”), the Segers non-

suited all of the named defendants except for Diatom, and Diatom's counsel withdrew

from representation. On March 27, 2001, the underlying proceeding was held. Gillman

was subpoenaed to attend and did attend as a witness. While the trial court indicated in

its judgment that Gillman appeared as the pro se representative of Diatom, Gillman did

not identify herself as being present at the proceeding in a representative capacity.

Likewise, the record reflects that Gillman's participation in the proceeding was

consistent with that of a witness rather than a party. Gillman's limited "representation"

of Diatom is evidenced by the fact that Diatom was not represented by counsel, did not

announce ready when the proceeding was called, presented no opening or closing

argument, offered no evidence, and failed to cross-examine any of the Segers’

witnesses. Gillman testified and, at the conclusion of her testimony, was excused. As a

3 result of this proceeding, the trial court entered judgment against Diatom awarding Roy

Seger and Shirley Faye Hoskins $7,500,000 each, plus pre- and post-judgment interest

(“the underlying judgment”).

Following entry of the underlying judgment, Gillman contacted Diatom's CGL

insurers to inquire what they intended to do about the judgment. When Gillman

received no response to her inquiry, she assigned Diatom's rights against the CGL

insurers to the Segers. The assignment reserved Diatom's right to recover its attorney's

fees incurred in defense of the underlying suit, but otherwise assigned all of Diatom's

rights against the CGL insurers to the Segers. Following the assignment, the Segers

filed a Stowers2 action against the CGL insurers seeking damages based on the

insurers' wrongful refusal to defend Diatom and negligent failure to settle the Segers'

claim when demand was made within policy limits.

Prior to trial on the Stowers action, the Segers settled their assigned claims

against all of the remaining solvent CGL insurers, except Yorkshire and Ocean Marine,

and the settling insurers were dismissed from the suit. After resolving certain issues by

pretrial summary judgment, including finding that the parties in the underlying

proceeding were in a “fully adversarial relationship” and that the proceeding was a

“trial,” the only issues that remained to be determined at the Stowers trial were the

determination of Insurers' negligence, causation, and damages. During the trial, the trial

court directed the verdict as to damages based on the underlying judgment. The issues

2 See generally G.A. Stowers Furniture Co. v. Am. Indem. Co., 15 S.W.2d 544, 548 (Tex. Comm'n App. 1929, holding approved).

4 of negligence and causation were submitted to a jury. The jury returned a verdict in

favor of the Segers.

Insurers appealed the trial court’s judgment. This Court reviewed the six issues

presented by Insurers. See Yorkshire Ins. Co. v. Seger, 279 S.W.3d 755 (Tex.App.—

Amarillo 2007, pet. denied) (hereinafter, “Seger I”). We affirmed the trial court’s denial

of Insurers’ motions to recuse and disqualify counsel, and the trial court’s grant of

summary judgment on the issue of whether the Segers made a sufficient demand within

the CGL policy limits. Id. at 775. However, in all other respects, we reversed the

judgment and remanded the case for a new trial. Id.

After the case was remanded, the trial court called the case for trial on October 3,

2011. The case was submitted to a jury. Based on the jury’s findings, the trial court

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Yorkshire Insurance Co., LTD and Ocean Marine Insurance Co., LTD v. Roy Seger, Individually and as Substitute Administrator of the Estate of Randall Jay Seger, and Don Hoskins, Independent of the Estate of Shirley Faye Hoskins, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/yorkshire-insurance-co-ltd-and-ocean-marine-insurance-co-ltd-v-roy-texapp-2013.