City of College Station, Texas v. Star Insurance C ( 2013 )


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  •      Case: 12-20746   Document: 00512441421     Page: 1   Date Filed: 11/14/2013
    IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT    United States Court of Appeals
    Fifth Circuit
    FILED
    November 14, 2013
    No. 12-20746                   Lyle W. Cayce
    Clerk
    THE CITY OF COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS,
    Plaintiff - Appellant
    v.
    STAR INSURANCE COMPANY,
    Defendant - Appellee
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Southern District of Texas
    Before HIGGINBOTHAM, CLEMENT, and PRADO, Circuit Judges.
    PATRICK E. HIGGINBOTHAM, Circuit Judge:
    Star Insurance Company (“SIC”) refused to defend or indemnify its
    insured, the City of College Station (“the City”), in a lawsuit brought by
    Weingarten Realty Investors (“WRI”), a real-estate investment trust not party
    to this appeal. The City settled the underlying litigation with WRI and sued SIC
    to recover defense costs, indemnification, and statutory penalty interest.
    Applying Texas law, the district court concluded that SIC had no duty to defend
    or indemnify the City in the litigation with WRI and, consequently, no penalty
    liability for late payment. We reverse and remand for further proceedings.
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    No. 12-20746
    I.
    In 2008, WRI sued the City in federal district court. WRI’s suit arose out
    of a dispute over the re-zoning of a tract of land that WRI hoped to develop into
    a shopping mall centered around a Walmart store. As alleged in WRI’s second
    amended complaint, WRI purchased the tract in reliance on the City’s 1990
    Comprehensive Plan, which designated the tract for “regional retail use,” as well
    as the City’s 2001 land use study, which designated the tract for a “power” retail
    center.   According to WRI, the “regional retail use” designation in the
    Comprehensive Plan was legally binding on the City and meant that it could
    only zone the property as “General Commercial (C-1)” — the designation WRI
    needed to develop its mall. However, when WRI requested C-1 zoning in 2006
    — a request that “should have been a mere formality” — the City denied it.
    WRI nevertheless continued to work with the City “in an effort to salvage
    its investment.” WRI met with a member of the City council, who advised WRI
    that it might get approval by replacing Walmart with HEB and by breaking its
    zoning request into several smaller applications so as to arouse less opposition
    from neighboring landowners. WRI followed these instructions, negotiating an
    agreement with HEB to be the new anchor tenant and submitting a revised
    zoning request for only 16 acres of its 76-acre tract. However, the City “tabled”
    the request, purportedly to conduct a transportation study. Though the study
    concluded in November 2007, the City did not take any action for another year
    and a half, until WRI sued the City in 2008.         Finally, in 2009, the City
    introduced a new Comprehensive Plan that re-designated portions of WRI’s
    property as “suburban commercial” and “general suburban” — designations that,
    according to WRI, will make it more difficult to develop the property.
    WRI asserted four distinct causes of action against the City. First, WRI
    claimed that the City’s actions were discriminatory and lacked a rational basis,
    violating its Fourteenth Amendment right to equal protection and entitling it to
    2
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    damages and injunctive and declaratory relief.        WRI supported its equal
    protection claim with detailed factual allegations:
    [The City’s] denials of WRI’s zoning requests were unreasonable and
    constitute treatment different than that given by [the City] to
    individuals and entities situated similarly to WRI. One such
    example is the development directly across the street from [WRI’s]
    [p]roperty. This development is similar to the development planned
    by WRI in that both are retail developments. [The City] approved
    the zoning for that development but not for WRI. Generally
    speaking, upon information and belief, many individuals and
    entities have come before [the City] and requested zoning that is in
    accordance with the Comprehensive Plan, and [the City] has
    granted such zoning requests. Here, [the City] denied WRI’s
    requests despite the fact that they comply with the Comprehensive
    Plan. [The City] has also passed a [n]ew Comprehensive Plan . . .
    directed at blocking WRI’s development in the future, while at the
    same time granting zoning to property owners who are developing
    their properties with the same tenants previously interested in
    WRI’s [p]roperty at the intersection just south of [WRI’s] [p]roperty.
    According to WRI, the real reason for this disparate treatment was the City’s
    irrational bias against WRI, Walmart, and “big box” retail.
    Second, WRI alleged, the City’s repeated denials of its requests for re-
    zoning were “arbitrary and capricious,” violating its Fourteenth Amendment
    right to substantive due process and entitling it to money damages and
    injunctive relief. WRI urged that it had “requested the only type of zoning that
    can possibly be applied to the Property.” Nevertheless, the City repeatedly
    denied WRI’s requests, purportedly because of concerns about “traffic and
    timing.” WRI claimed that these concerns were mere pretext, as they could “all
    have been mitigated at the permit stage before any permit for development was
    issued.” Ultimately, the City council members denied WRI’s requests “because
    of their dislike for Walmart, [and] their own personal or political interests.”
    According to WRI, “none of these reasons for the denial were [sic] legitimate.”
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    Third, WRI claimed that the City’s “intentional actions in denying WRI’s
    zoning requests constitute a taking under Article I, Section 17 of the Texas
    Constitution.” WRI reasoned that in light of the City’s 1990 Comprehensive
    Plan as well as its 2001 land use study, WRI “had reasonable expectations that
    it could develop the [p]roperty for retail use.” Hence, WRI reasoned, the “denial
    of WRI’s zoning proposals . . . had a significant negative impact on WRI’s
    investment-backed expectations and have [sic] resulted in a taking without
    compensation to WRI.” Moreover, WRI urged, the City’s new Comprehensive
    Plan, adopted in 2009, was “designed to ensure that WRI cannot develop its
    [p]roperty in the future.”
    Fourth, WRI claimed that the City’s individual council members had
    “intentionally interfered with WRI’s existing and prospective contracts and
    business relationships for its development,” entitling WRI to compensatory and
    punitive damages. According to WRI, it “lost some of [its prospective] tenants
    to new developments nearby that [the City’s council members] approved.”
    Moreover, WRI alleged, the council members “may have interests in these other
    developments or improper contacts with the other developers that have
    motivated them to approve the other developments while denying the request[s]
    of WRI without a legitimate basis or reason.”
    The City requested that SIC fund its defense of WRI’s lawsuit. However,
    SIC refused, claiming that the general commercial liability policy it had issued
    to the City did not provide coverage. The policy covered liability arising out of
    “wrongful act[s]” by city officials, including errors, misstatements, misleading
    statements, neglect, breach of duty, misfeasance, malfeasance, and nonfeasance.
    However, the policy excluded “any liability . . . actually or allegedly arising out
    of or caused or contributed to by or in any way connected with any principle of
    eminent domain, condemnation proceeding, [or] inverse condemnation . . . by
    4
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    whatever name called.” According to SIC, WRI’s lawsuit fell within the inverse-
    condemnation exclusion.
    After settling WRI’s lawsuit, the City sued SIC under the policy to recover
    defense costs, indemnity, and statutory penalty interest.          SIC moved for
    summary judgment, urging that the allegations in WRI’s second amended
    complaint conclusively negated the possibility of coverage under the policy and
    that it therefore had no duty to defend or indemnify the City. The district court
    agreed that SIC was not liable for the City’s defense costs, reasoning that:
    WRI’s allegations raised a taking/inverse condemnation claim in the
    underlying lawsuit. . . . Although . . . WRI labeled its other claims
    as violation of substantive due process, equal protection . . .
    and . . . tortious interference with WRI’s contracts, the core or
    nucleus of the underlying dispute between WRI and the City is the
    City’s refusal to grant WRI’s zoning requests. In other words, these
    are derivative claims and do not constitute justiciable causes of
    action apart from WRI’s inverse condemnation claim.
    The court also agreed that SIC had no duty to indemnify the City for its
    settlement with WRI, reasoning that “given the broad and comprehensive nature
    of the exclusion provision, . . . there could be no facts in the settlement
    agreement that would alter the Court’s conclusion that all of WRI’s claims
    originate from its alleged inverse condemnation claim.” The court therefore
    granted SIC’s motion for summary judgment. The City appeals.
    II.
    The first issue on appeal is whether SIC is liable for the City’s defense
    costs. In determining whether an insurer’s duty to defend is triggered, Texas
    courts strictly apply the “eight-corners rule,” which looks only to the four corners
    of the most recent complaint in the underlying action as well as the four corners
    5
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    of the insurance policy.1 If the underlying complaint pleads facts sufficient to
    create the potential of covered liability, the insurer has a duty to defend the
    entire case,2 even if the allegations are demonstrably false, fraudulent, or
    groundless,3 and even if some of the injuries alleged are not covered or fall
    within the scope of an exclusion.4 However, if the insurer can show that all of
    the alleged liability falls outside of the scope of coverage or within the scope of
    an exclusion, the insurer has no duty to defend.5 In other words, “[w]hile the
    duty to defend is triggered by a single alleged injury that falls within the scope
    of the coverage provision, exclusions negate the insure[r]’s duty to defend only
    when all of the alleged injuries that fall into the coverage provision are
    subsumed under the exclusionary provision.”6
    Below, SIC contended that the eight-corners rule did not govern its
    liability for defense costs, as the self-insured retention endorsement (“SIR
    endorsement”) to the City’s policy converted SIC’s obligation from a duty to
    defend to a duty to reimburse. According to SIC, the duty to reimburse is
    narrower than the duty to defend, extending only to those costs actually related
    to litigating covered claims. The City disputed SIC’s characterization of the
    policy, noting that it prominently provides that “[SIC] will have the right and
    1
    Nat’l Cas. Co. v. W. World Ins. Co., 
    669 F.3d 608
    , 612 (5th Cir. 2012) (citing Nat’l
    Union Fire Ins. Co. v. Merchs. Fast Motor Lines, 
    939 S.W.2d 139
    , 141 (Tex. 1997)).
    2
    Nat’l Cas. 
    Co., 669 F.3d at 618
    ; see also Zurich Am. Ins. Co. v. Nokia, Inc., 
    268 S.W.3d 487
    , 491 (Tex. 2008) (“If a complaint potentially includes a covered claim, the insurer must
    defend the entire suit.”).
    3
    Zurich 
    Am., 268 S.W.3d at 491
    .
    4
    See 
    id. at 495-96
    (“The duty to defend is not negated by the inclusion of claims that
    are not covered; rather, it is triggered by the inclusion of claims that might be covered.”).
    5
    See Nat’l Cas. 
    Co., 669 F.3d at 616
    .
    6
    
    Id. (citing St.
    Paul Ins. Co. v. Tex. Dep’t of Transp., 
    999 S.W.3d 881
    , 887 (Tex. Ct. App.
    1999)).
    6
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    duty to defend any ‘suit’ seeking [covered] damages” and urging that the only
    effect of the SIR endorsement was to set forth a $250,000 self-insured retention
    amount below which SIC’s duty did not attach. In the alternative, the City
    contended that the duty to reimburse is measured by the same metric as the
    duty to defend. The district court implicitly agreed with the City, applying the
    eight-corners rule to determine SIC’s liability for defense costs. On appeal, SIC
    relies exclusively on the argument that the eight-corners rule does not trigger
    liability, abandoning its earlier contention that the City’s policy did not impose
    a duty to defend. We hold SIC to its forfeiture and turn to apply the eight-
    corners rule to the facts of this case.7
    SIC issued the City a policy that covers liability arising out of “wrongful
    act[s]” by city officials, including errors, misstatements, misleading statements,
    neglect, breach of duty, misfeasance, malfeasance, and nonfeasance.                          SIC
    implicitly concedes that the municipal wrongdoing alleged in WRI’s complaint
    against the City triggers coverage, and the only issue in dispute is whether the
    City’s alleged wrongdoing nonetheless falls within the scope of the policy’s
    “inverse condemnation” exclusion. The exclusion provides that “this insurance
    does not apply to any liability . . . actually or allegedly arising out of or caused
    or contributed to by or in any way connected with any principle of eminent
    domain, condemnation proceeding, [or] inverse condemnation . . . by whatever
    name called.” SIC insists that “all the allegations made and the damages sought
    by WRI in the underlying lawsuit” fall within the ambit of the exclusion, as they
    all “arose from the City’s alleged improper refusal to grant the requested zoning
    change.”      The City rejoins that its potential liability under WRI’s equal
    protection, substantive due process, and tortious interference claims is
    independent of any just-compensation liability “arising out of” the inverse
    7
    See, e.g., Swindle v. Livingston Parish Sch. Bd., 
    655 F.3d 386
    , 392 n.6 (5th Cir. 2011).
    7
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    condemnation action, and that SIC therefore had a duty to defend or fund the
    entire litigation. We agree with the City.
    In assessing whether the allegations in a complaint fall within the scope
    of an exclusion, a reviewing court must interpret the complaint liberally and
    construe the exclusion narrowly, resolving any ambiguity in favor of the
    insured.8 If the insured proffers a reasonable interpretation of the exclusion
    favorable to coverage, a reviewing court must accept it, even if the insurer
    proffers an interpretation negating coverage that is “more reasonable or a more
    accurate reflection of the parties’ intent.”9 Turning to the language of the
    exclusion at issue here, the phrase “inverse condemnation” is a legal term of art
    used to refer to an action brought by a property owner seeking just compensation
    for a regulatory “taking.”10 And under background norms of constitutional law,
    zoning decisions ordinarily do not amount to regulatory takings unless they
    mandate physical intrusion on the owner’s property; totally deny the owner the
    beneficial use of his property; or have a severe economic impact on the owner’s
    reasonable investment-backed expectations.11 WRI’s second amended complaint
    8
    Zurich 
    Am., 268 S.W.3d at 491
    .
    9
    Lexington Ins. Co. v. Nat’l Oilwell NOV, Inc., 
    355 S.W.3d 205
    , 213 (Tex. Ct. App. 2011)
    (citing Gilbert Tex. Constr., L.P. v. Underwriters at Lloyd’s London, 
    327 S.W.3d 118
    , 133 (Tex.
    2010)).
    10
    E.g., BLACK’S LAW DICTIONARY 310 (8th ed. 2004) (defining “inverse condemnation”
    as “an action brought by a property owner for compensation from a governmental entity that
    has taken the owner’s property without bringing formal condemnation proceedings”); see also
    Tekelec, Inc. v. Verint Sys., Inc., 
    708 F.3d 658
    , 665 (5th Cir. 2013) (“Under Texas law, the
    words of a contract must be read in context, and technical or legal terms of art must be given
    their technical or legal meaning.”).
    11
    Lingle v. Chevron U.S.A. Inc., 
    544 U.S. 528
    , 539 (2005) (O’Connor, J.); see also 
    id. (“Although our
    regulatory takings jurisprudence cannot be characterized as unified, [our] three
    inquiries (reflected in Loretto, Lucas, and Penn Central) share a common touchstone. Each
    aims to identify regulatory actions that are functionally equivalent to the classic taking in
    which government directly appropriates private property or ousts the owner from his domain.
    Accordingly, each of these tests focuses directly upon the severity of the burden that
    8
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    alleged that the City’s zoning decisions “had a significant negative impact on
    WRI’s investment-backed expectations” and “rendered WRI’s investment [in its
    property] worthless” — allegations that state a regulatory taking claim and fall
    within the ambit of the inverse condemnation exclusion. However, as the City
    observes, the complaint also alleged facts sufficient to create a possibility of
    liability wholly independent of WRI’s inverse condemnation action — liability
    that could “arise” whether or not the City’s zoning decisions amount to a taking
    that warrants just compensation.
    We begin by examining WRI’s allegation that the City’s zoning decisions
    were discriminatory and driven by an irrational animus toward WRI and
    Walmart, depriving WRI of its right to equal protection. To understand why
    these allegations create the potential of liability “arising” independently of WRI’s
    inverse condemnation action, an extreme illustration is helpful. Suppose that
    a municipality has a policy or custom of imposing zoning restrictions on
    properties purchased by racial minorities — restrictions that do not physically
    intrude on the properties and reduce their value by only about 1%. No one
    would argue that such restrictions amount to regulatory takings; however, the
    municipality would still be liable for violating the Equal Protection Clause.12 To
    say that the municipality’s liability in such circumstances “arises out of” an
    “inverse condemnation” action is untenable — the liability arises out of the city’s
    constitutional malfeasance. And the same general logic applies here.13 Though
    the allegations of discrimination in WRI’s complaint are less compelling than the
    government imposes upon private property rights.”).
    12
    See 42 U.S.C. § 1983; Monell v. Dep’t of Soc. Servs., 
    436 U.S. 658
    , 694–95 (1978).
    13
    Cf., e.g., City of Cleburne v. Cleburne Living Ctr., 
    473 U.S. 432
    , 447–50 (1985)
    (concluding that city’s refusal to grant special use permit to home for the mentally retarded
    violated the Equal Protection Clause, as it lacked a rational basis).
    9
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    facts of our hypothetical, the duty to defend is triggered even by frivolous or
    groundless allegations.14
    We next consider WRI’s related allegation that the City’s zoning decisions
    were arbitrary — driven by an irrational bias against WRI and Walmart — and
    therefore violated WRI’s right to substantive due process.                       Again, we are
    satisfied that these allegations create the possibility of liability “arising”
    independently of WRI’s inverse condemnation action. Another example is useful
    to illustrate our reasoning. Suppose that the City had issued an ordinance, on
    the whim of a killjoy city council member, closing Texas A&M University’s Kyle
    Field to SEC games. Such an ordinance would not necessarily amount to a
    regulatory taking or support an inverse condemnation action for just
    compensation; however, it might lack a rational basis, depriving the University
    of its right to substantive due process as set forth in this Court’s decision in
    Shelton v. City of College Station.15 The municipality’s liability would “arise” not
    from an “inverse condemnation” proceeding, but from its constitutional
    malfeasance, i.e., its irrational decision-making. And the same general logic
    applies in this case, notwithstanding the relatively mundane nature of the
    allegations supporting WRI’s substantive due process claim.
    Finally, we examine WRI’s allegation that individual city council members
    conspired with third-party landowners to poach WRI’s prospective tenants,
    thereby tortiously interfering with WRI’s contracts and business expectancies.
    WRI claimed that the City’s zoning decisions were part of the effort to drive
    away WRI’s suitors. However, WRI’s tortious interference claim was colorable
    even in the absence of a regulatory taking as long as WRI could prove that the
    council members intended the regulations to drive away WRI’s prospective
    14
    Zurich 
    Am., 268 S.W.3d at 491
    .
    15
    
    780 F.2d 475
    , 482 (5th Cir. 1986) (en banc) (“We hold that the outside limit upon a
    state’s exercise of its police power in zoning decisions is that they must have a rational basis.”).
    10
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    tenants, and that the regulations did, in fact, achieve that end.16 Hence, the
    allegations create the possibility of liability “arising” not out of an “inverse
    condemnation” proceeding, but out of the city council members’ tortious conduct.
    It matters not that the City was ultimately able to assert a successful sovereign
    immunity defense to the tortious interference claims: the point of the insurance
    policy was to require SIC to assert and litigate or fund that defense.
    SIC rejoins that its policy was intended to exclude all liability “arising out
    of” any of the City’s zoning decisions, and that here, all of the damages WRI
    alleged in the underlying suit flowed from such decisions — whether those
    decisions are characterized as constitutional violations or tortious interference.
    But this reasoning is based on a flawed premise. As the City observes, SIC’s
    policy did not exclude all liability arising out of any zoning decisions, as some
    municipal liability insurance policies do.17 Instead, it excluded liability “arising
    out of . . . any principle of eminent domain, condemnation proceeding, [or]
    inverse condemnation.” This language cannot reasonably be read to extend to
    liability arising out of all zoning decisions. Fairly read, it covers just-
    compensation liability arising out of a condemnation proceeding or an inverse
    condemnation action. And even if the exclusion were ambiguous, any doubt
    must be resolved in the City’s favor.18 As WRI’s constitutional and tortious
    interference claims may produce liability that does not “arise out of” WRI’s
    inverse condemnation action, SIC is liable for the City’s defense costs.
    16
    See Faucette v. Chantos, 
    322 S.W.3d 901
    , 913–14 (Tex. Ct. App. 2010) (setting forth
    elements of tortious interference claim).
    17
    See, e.g., Nat’l Cas. Co. v. Newtown Twp., No. A99-6524, 
    2000 WL 1052142
    , at *1
    (E.D. Pa. July 24, 2000) (discussing a similar policy that excluded all “damages arising out of
    land use planning or municipal zoning”).
    18
    E.g., Admiral Ins. Co. v. Rio Grande Heart, 
    64 S.W.3d 497
    , 502 (Tex. Ct. App. 2001).
    11
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    III.
    The next question is whether the district court erred in concluding, on
    summary judgment, that SIC had no duty to indemnify the City for its
    settlement with WRI. An insurer’s duty to indemnify is distinct from its duty to
    defend: whereas the duty to defend is exclusively a function of the facts alleged
    in the pleadings, the duty to indemnify must generally be determined on the
    basis of the actual evidence pertaining to liability developed during discovery or
    at trial.19 This rule controls unless “the same reasons that negate the duty to
    defend likewise negate any possibility the insurer will ever have a duty to
    indemnify,” in which case an insurer’s duty to indemnify can be determined on
    the basis of the pleadings alone.20 Here, the district court reasoned that “given
    the broad and comprehensive nature of the [inverse-condemnation] exclusion,
    . . . there could be no facts in the settlement that would alter the Court’s
    conclusion that all of WRI’s claims originate from its alleged inverse
    condemnation claim.” But as we have explained, the pleadings did raise a
    possibility of municipal liability independent of any just-compensation liability
    arising out of WRI’s inverse condemnation action. On remand, the district court
    shall allow the parties to introduce evidence regarding SIC’s indemnity
    obligation.
    IV.
    The third issue on appeal is whether SIC’s failure to furnish the City with
    defense benefits or indemnity entitles the City to statutory penalty interest
    under § 542.058 of the Texas Insurance Code. Under § 542.058, otherwise
    known as the “prompt-payment rule,” an insurer who fails to pay defense costs
    19
    Zurich 
    Am., 268 S.W.3d at 490
    .
    20
    Farmers Tex. Cnty. Mut. Ins. Co. v. Griffin, 
    955 S.W.2d 81
    , 84 (Tex. 1997).
    12
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    or indemnity within the statutorily specified time-frame is liable not only for the
    costs or indemnification but also for an 18% per annum penalty interest rate.21
    Here, the district court concluded that SIC could not be liable for the statutory
    penalty rate, as it had no duty to defend or indemnify. But SIC did have a duty
    to defend and may have a duty to indemnify, pulling the rug out from under the
    district court’s reasoning. On remand, the district court shall assess § 542.058
    penalty interest in a manner consistent with our reasoning in this opinion.
    V.
    The final question before us is whether SIC is liable for the City’s
    attorney’s fees in this litigation (not in the underlying litigation with WRI) under
    § 38.001 of the Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code. Section 38.001 provides
    that “a person may recover reasonable attorney’s fees” in an action for breach of
    contract. The Texas Supreme Court has clarified that § 38.001 attorney’s fees
    are awarded on a claim-by-claim basis, and that a party must prevail on a claim
    in order to receive fees on that claim.22 Here, the district court concluded that
    SIC was not liable for any of the City’s attorney’s fees, as the City had not
    established breach of the insurance contract.                   Again, the district court’s
    reasoning is undermined by the fact that SIC did breach its duty to defend and
    may have also breached its duty to indemnify. However, as it is not yet clear
    whether the City will prevail on its indemnity claim, or how much of the City’s
    attorney’s fees are attributable to litigating the indemnity claim, we leave to the
    district court the determination of any § 38.001 fee award.
    21
    Higginbotham v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co., 
    103 F.3d 456
    , 461 (5th Cir. 1997)
    (“[I]f an insurer fails to pay a claim, it runs the risk of incurring [an] 18 percent statutory fee
    and reasonable attorney’s fees.”); see also Lamar Homes, Inc. v. Mid-Continent Cas. Co., 
    242 S.W.3d 1
    , 4, 19 (Tex. 2007) (clarifying, on certification by the Fifth Circuit, that the statutory
    prompt-payment rule applies to an insurer’s breach of the duty to defend).
    22
    See Green Int’l, Inc. v. Solis, 
    951 S.W.2d 384
    , 389–90 (Tex. 1997).
    13
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    VI.
    We REVERSE the judgment of the district court and REMAND for further
    proceedings consistent with our opinion.
    14