Marcus Hernandez and Diane Hernandez v. Truck Insurance Exchange and Team Health, Inc. ( 2018 )


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  •                         COURT OF APPEALS
    SECOND DISTRICT OF TEXAS
    FORT WORTH
    NO. 02-17-00046-CV
    MARCUS HERNANDEZ AND                                               APPELLANTS
    DIANE HERNANDEZ
    V.
    TRUCK INSURANCE EXCHANGE                                             APPELLEES
    AND TEAM HEALTH, INC.
    ----------
    FROM THE 342ND DISTRICT COURT OF TARRANT COUNTY
    TRIAL COURT NO. 342-283463-16
    ----------
    OPINION
    ----------
    I. Introduction
    In this issue of first impression, which presents a legal scenario unlikely to
    be repeated, we are asked to decide whether the supreme court’s opinion in
    Phillips v. Bramlett (Phillips I), 
    288 S.W.3d 876
    (Tex. 2009), constitutes “a
    unicorn crossbow,” i.e., an item theoretically useful, but of no practical value, 1 to
    a personal injury plaintiff when the defendant surgeon surrenders his potential
    Stowers claim back to his malpractice insurer after a jury verdict in the plaintiff’s
    favor exceeds the statutory cap on physician liability under article 4590i of the
    revised civil statutes. 2 Bound by supreme court precedent, we reverse the trial
    court’s judgment, which dismissed Appellants’ claim for want of jurisdiction in
    favor of Appellees Truck Health Insurance (Truck) and Team Health, Inc. (Team),
    and remand this case to the trial court for further proceedings.
    II. Background
    In November 2001, Marcus Hernandez Jr. died from massive blood loss
    following a liver biopsy. Almost two years later, Appellants, Marcus’s parents,
    filed a wrongful death action against both Dr. Hitesh B. Yagnik, M.D. and the
    hospital where their son died. See Yagnik v. Hernandez, No. 02-11-00510-CV,
    
    2013 WL 1668304
    , at *1 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth Apr. 18, 2013, pet. denied)
    (mem. op.). The hospital settled prior to the first trial, which resulted in a hung
    jury, and on retrial a different jury awarded $2,679,000 to Appellants, which—
    1
    We discovered this gem of a phrase in Appellants Marcus and Diane
    Hernandezes’ summary judgment response, in which they argued that summary
    judgment against them would render Phillips I irrelevant.
    2
    Article 4590i was repealed and replaced effective September 1, 2003,
    three days after Appellants filed their medical malpractice claim. See Act of May
    30, 1977, 65th Leg., R.S., ch. 817, § 11.02, 1977 Tex. Gen. Laws 2039, 2052,
    repealed by Act of June 1, 2003, 78th Leg., R.S., ch. 204, § 10.09, 2003 Tex.
    Gen. Laws 847, 884.
    2
    after the trial court applied the statutory caps on medical negligence damages
    and accounted for the hospital’s settlement—resulted in a judgment of
    $1,818,601.63 against Yagnik, from which he appealed.             
    Id. Yagnik then
    released Truck, one of his insurance carriers, from any liability arising from its
    failure to settle the underlying lawsuit in exchange for Truck’s agreement to post
    his supersedeas bond on appeal and to pay the resulting judgment if the trial
    court’s judgment was affirmed on appeal.
    We affirmed the trial court’s judgment in 2013. 
    Id. After the
    supreme court
    denied Yagnik’s petition for review and motion for rehearing, our mandate issued
    on May 5, 2014.
    Over a decade after they filed their original lawsuit, but less than two years
    after we affirmed the trial court’s judgment and issued our mandate, Appellants
    sued Yagnik’s insurance carriers 3 for the negligent failure to settle a claim within
    the insurance policy limits—traditionally known as a common law Stowers
    action 4—seeking to collect the difference between the almost $2.7 million jury
    verdict and the amount of the trial court’s judgment. 5
    3
    Appellants sought recovery from not only Appellees but also Farmers
    Insurance Exchange, Team Health Holdings, Inc., and Texas Medical Liability
    Trust. They dismissed their claims against Farmers Insurance Exchange, Team
    Health Holdings, Inc., and Texas Medical Liability Trust without prejudice in 2016.
    In its brief in this court, Team states that it “does not concede that it was or is an
    insurer or owed any . . . dut[ies]” to Appellants or to Yagnik.
    4
    A Stowers action—so named for G.A. Stowers Furniture Co. v. American
    Indemnity Co., 
    15 S.W.2d 544
    , 547–48 (Tex. 1929)—is based on an insurer’s
    common law tort duty to its insured to settle within policy limits when reasonably
    3
    Truck filed a plea to the jurisdiction, arguing that Appellants lacked
    standing to bring a direct action, 6 and Team filed a motion for summary judgment
    on the same basis. In support of their claim, Appellants expressly relied upon the
    supreme court’s Phillips I opinion, asserting that the holding in Phillips I
    authorized them to bring their Stowers claim as a direct action.
    Team also argued in its motion that because Appellants’ Stowers claim
    was filed after article 4590i was repealed and replaced by civil practice and
    remedies code chapter 73 in 2003, there could be no Stowers liability against the
    insurers beyond the amount of the capped damages. 7
    prudent to do so. See Mid-Continent Ins. Co. v. Liberty Mut. Ins. Co., 
    236 S.W.3d 765
    , 776 (Tex. 2007). The duty is not activated by a settlement demand
    unless three prerequisites are met: (1) the claim against the insured is within the
    scope of coverage, (2) the demand is within policy limits, and (3) the terms of the
    demand are such that an ordinarily prudent insurer would accept the demand,
    considering the likelihood and degree of the insured’s potential exposure to an
    excess judgment. 
    Id. Appellants alleged
    in their pleadings that they had made
    several Stowers settlement demands, received by the insurers, for a settlement
    amount within Yagnik’s insurance policy limits and that each demand had been
    rejected.
    5
    Appellants sought more than $1.3 million as the “difference between the
    statutory physician’s cap and the jury verdict,” as well as exemplary damages for
    the insurers’ gross negligence during the pendency of the underlying medical
    malpractice lawsuit.
    6
    Truck filed a memorandum of law in support of its plea to the jurisdiction
    that it labeled alternatively as a motion for summary judgment.
    7
    When article 4590i was repealed and replaced by civil practice and
    remedies code chapter 73, effective September 1, 2003, the law was changed to
    limit insurers’ liability under a common law Stowers claim to that of the insured.
    Compare Act of May 30, 1977, 65th Leg., R.S., ch. 817, § 11.02(c), 1977 Tex.
    Gen. Laws 2039, 2052, 2064, repealed by Act of June 1, 2003, 78th Leg., R.S.,
    4
    The trial court dismissed Appellants’ claims against Truck and Team for
    lack of subject matter jurisdiction after granting Truck’s plea to the jurisdiction
    and granting in part Team’s summary judgment motion “to the extent that the
    motion was based upon Plaintiffs’ lack of standing to pursue a direct statutory
    Stowers cause of action against Team Health, Inc.” In its order, the trial court
    stated that in light of its ruling that it lacked jurisdiction over the Stowers lawsuit
    due to Appellants’ lack of standing, it expressly made no ruling on any of the
    other grounds for summary judgment in Appellees’ motions.
    III. Discussion
    In four issues, Appellants argue that the trial court erred by concluding that
    they lacked standing because they have a direct Stowers cause of action and
    because their claims are not barred by settlement (under an equitable
    subrogation theory) or capped by the 2003 statute. 8
    ch. 204, § 10.09, 2003 Tex. Gen. Laws 847, 884, with Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem.
    Code Ann. § 74.303(d) (West 2017).
    8
    The trial court’s order dismissing Appellants’ claim was based solely on
    their lack of standing to bring a direct statutory Stowers claim under article 4590i,
    section 11.02(c), but we nonetheless reach the remaining arguments because to
    do otherwise would likely require a subsequent appeal, wasting scarce judicial
    resources both in this court and in the trial court. See Denton Cty. Elec. Co-op.,
    Inc. v. Hackett, 
    368 S.W.3d 765
    , 773 n.9 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth 2012, pet.
    denied) (reaching substantive legal issues instead of remanding for remedy of
    flawed order’s technical error); see also City of Gladewater v. Pike, 
    727 S.W.2d 514
    , 518 (Tex. 1987) (noting the equitable maxim that a court should not require
    the doing of a useless thing).
    5
    A. Standards of Review
    Whether a trial court has subject matter jurisdiction is a question of law that
    we review de novo. Tex. Bay Cherry Hill, L.P. v. City of Fort Worth, 
    257 S.W.3d 379
    , 387 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth 2008, no pet.) (citing Tex. Dep’t of Parks &
    Wildlife v. Miranda, 
    133 S.W.3d 217
    , 226 (Tex. 2004); Tex. Nat. Res.
    Conservation Comm’n v. IT-Davy, 
    74 S.W.3d 849
    , 855 (Tex. 2002)). Standing is
    implicit in the concept of subject matter jurisdiction, and whether a party has
    standing to maintain suit is a question of law. Everett v. TK-Taito, L.L.C., 
    178 S.W.3d 844
    , 850 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth 2005, no pet.) (citing Tex. Ass’n of Bus.
    v. Tex. Air Control Bd., 
    852 S.W.2d 440
    , 443 (Tex. 1993)); see 
    IT-Davy, 74 S.W.3d at 855
    .
    The plaintiff has the burden to plead facts affirmatively showing that the
    trial court has jurisdiction, and we construe those pleadings liberally in favor of
    the pleader, look to the pleader’s intent, and accept as true the factual allegations
    in the pleadings. Tex. Bay Cherry Hill, 
    L.P., 257 S.W.3d at 387
    . If a plea to the
    jurisdiction challenges the existence of jurisdictional facts, we consider relevant
    evidence submitted by the parties when necessary to resolve the jurisdictional
    issues raised, as the trial court is required to do, taking as true all evidence
    favorable to the nonmovant and indulging every reasonable inference and
    resolving any doubts in the nonmovant’s favor. 
    Id. at 387–88
    (citing 
    Miranda, 133 S.W.3d at 228
    ; Bland ISD v. Blue, 
    34 S.W.3d 547
    , 555 (Tex. 2000)). If the
    evidence creates a fact question regarding the jurisdictional issue, then the trial
    6
    court cannot grant the plea to the jurisdiction, and the fact question will be
    resolved by the factfinder. 
    Id. at 388
    (citing 
    Miranda, 133 S.W.3d at 227
    –28;
    
    Bland, 34 S.W.3d at 555
    ). If the relevant evidence is undisputed or fails to raise
    a fact question on the jurisdictional issue, however, the trial court rules on the
    plea to the jurisdiction as a matter of law. Id. (citing 
    Miranda, 133 S.W.3d at 227
    –28; 
    Bland, 34 S.W.3d at 555
    ).
    We also review a summary judgment de novo. See Travelers Ins. Co. v.
    Joachim, 
    315 S.W.3d 860
    , 862 (Tex. 2010).            We consider the evidence
    presented in the light most favorable to the nonmovant, crediting evidence
    favorable to the nonmovant if reasonable jurors could, and disregarding evidence
    contrary to the nonmovant unless reasonable jurors could not. Mann Frankfort
    Stein & Lipp Advisors, Inc. v. Fielding, 
    289 S.W.3d 844
    , 848 (Tex. 2009). We
    indulge every reasonable inference and resolve any doubts in the nonmovant’s
    favor. 20801, Inc. v. Parker, 
    249 S.W.3d 392
    , 399 (Tex. 2008).
    And as has frequently been iterated by this court and our supreme court,
    we review issues of statutory construction de novo, and in construing statutes,
    our primary objective is to give effect to the legislature’s intent, relying on the
    plain meaning of the text unless a different meaning is supplied by legislative
    definition or is apparent from the context or the plain meaning leads to absurd
    results. Jack Cty. Appraisal Dist. v. Jack Cty. Hosp. Dist., 
    484 S.W.3d 228
    , 231–
    32 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth 2016, no pet.) (referencing CHCA Woman’s Hosp.,
    L.P. v. Lidji, 
    403 S.W.3d 228
    , 231 (Tex. 2013), and Tex. Lottery Comm’n v. First
    7
    State Bank of DeQueen, 
    325 S.W.3d 628
    , 635 (Tex. 2010)). We read statutes as
    a whole and interpret them to give effect to “every sentence, clause, and word”
    so that no part thereof will be rendered superfluous. 
    Id. at 232
    (quoting City of
    San Antonio v. City of Boerne, 
    111 S.W.3d 22
    , 29 (Tex. 2003)).
    B. Applicable Law
    We first review the pertinent statutes and cases, in addition to the law on
    standing, for context for the parties’ arguments in the trial court and in their
    appellate briefs.
    1. Article 4590i, section 11.02(c)
    Former section 11.02(c) provided that the statutory cap on physician and
    other healthcare provider liability would not limit the liability of any insurer “where
    facts exist[ed] that would enable a party to invoke the common law theory of
    recovery commonly known in Texas as the ‘Stowers Doctrine.’” 9 Act of May 30,
    1977, 65th Leg., R.S., ch. 817, § 11.02(c), 1977 Tex. Gen. Laws 2039, 2052,
    2064, repealed by Act of June 1, 2003, 78th Leg., R.S., ch. 204, § 10.09, 2003
    Tex. Gen. Laws 847, 884.
    9
    The factors that trigger a common law Stowers claim are a claim against
    the insured within the scope of insurance coverage, a settlement demand within
    policy limits and with reasonable terms, and a failure to settle that results in an
    excess judgment against the insured. See Mid-Continent Ins. 
    Co., 236 S.W.3d at 776
    (“Stowers is the only common law tort duty in the context of third party
    insurers responding to settlement demands.”). Appellants argue that these
    factors are the trigger for strict liability to apply under section 11.02(c).
    8
    2. Civil Practice & Remedies Code Section 74.303(d)
    The Stowers exception in section 11.02(c) was not carried forward when
    article 4590i was repealed.     Rather, section 11.02(c) was replaced by civil
    practice and remedies code section 74.303, which expressly provides that an
    insurer can use the statutory physician’s cap to limit its liability.   See Act of
    June 1, 2003, 78th Leg., R.S., ch. 204, § 10.01, sec. 74.303(d), 2003 Tex. Gen.
    Laws 847, 874–75 (current version at Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code Ann.
    § 74.303(d) (West 2017)). Section 74.303(d) states, “The liability of any insurer
    under the common law theory of recovery commonly known in Texas as the
    ‘Stowers Doctrine’ shall not exceed the liability of the insured.” Tex. Civ. Prac. &
    Rem. Code Ann. § 74.303(d).
    3. 2003 Enabling Statute
    The 2003 enabling provision states that most of chapter 204’s effective
    date would be September 1, 2003, 10 and that it would not apply to actions filed
    prior to that date:
    [e]xcept as otherwise provided in this section or by a specific
    provision in an article [not applicable here], this Act applies only to
    an action filed on or after the effective date of this Act. An action
    filed before the effective date of this Act, including an action filed
    before that date in which a party is joined or designated after that
    10
    Certain provisions of chapter 204 not at issue here had other effective
    dates—article 17 (“Limitations in Civil Actions of Liabilities Relating to Certain
    Mergers or Consolidations”), for example, had an immediate effective date
    subject to certain voting conditions, and some of the other articles would apply to
    actions filed on or after July 1, 2003. See Act of June 1, 2003, 78th Leg., R.S.,
    ch. 204, §§ 17.01, 23.02(a)–(c), 2003 Tex. Gen. Laws at 892, 898–99.
    9
    date, is governed by the law in effect immediately before the change
    in law made by this Act, and that law is continued in effect for that
    purpose.
    Act of June 1, 2003, 78th Leg., R.S., ch. 204, § 23.02(a), (d), 2003 Tex. Gen.
    Laws 847, 898–99.       In addition to health care liability claims, chapter 204
    addressed the reform of “certain procedures and remedies in civil actions,”
    including, among other things, class actions, settlement, venue, forum non
    conveniens, proportionate responsibility, products liability, interest, appeal bonds,
    seat belt evidence, claims against governmental employees or volunteers,
    damages, and the liability of volunteer fire departments and volunteer fire
    fighters. See 
    id. arts. 1–22,
    2003 Tex. Gen. Laws at 847–98. However, it did not
    directly address Stowers other than to limit insurers’ liability to the physician cap
    as it pertained to common law claims. That is, the new legislation ranged broadly
    over a number of topics but neither expressly identified whether a statutory
    Stowers cause of action had been created under former article 4590i nor whether
    such a cause of action was revoked by article 4590i’s repeal and the enactment
    of chapter 74 of the civil practice and remedies code.
    4. Phillips v. Bramlett (Phillips I), 
    288 S.W.3d 876
    (Tex. 2009).
    Six years after the 2003 enactment, the supreme court construed article
    4590i’s Stowers exception in medical malpractice actions in a novel way. In a 5–
    4 split decision, the court held that the Stowers exception functions in a manner
    akin to equitable subrogation, “put[ting] the injured third party in the shoes of the
    insured to the extent the cap eliminates the insured’s incentive to enforce the
    10
    insurer’s duty to settle with reasonable 
    care.” 288 S.W.3d at 882
    . The court
    explained that when insurance coverage was below the cap, the Stowers-
    exception claim could be shared by the insured physican and injured third party
    because both would potentially have excess claims, but when insurance
    coverage rose above the cap, 11 the physician would be fully protected, so only
    the injured third party would have the incentive to pursue the statutory Stowers
    exception claim. 
    Id. Pursuant to
    this construction, the supreme court instructed that a judgment
    against a physician should conform to the physician cap and that a subsequent
    suit would be available against the insurer under the section 11.02(c) Stowers
    exception. 
    Id. at 882;
    see 
    id. at 884–85
    (O’Neill, J., dissenting) (critiquing the
    majority’s analysis as incorrectly construing “the statute to grant the plaintiff in the
    underlying malpractice suit a claim for equitable subrogation against the insurer
    who is negligent in refusing to settle” and as incorrectly relying on the idea that
    the legislature “must have intended to tie Stowers liability against physicians’
    insurers to the jury’s verdict rather than the court’s judgment”).
    The court revisited this issue again in a subsequent appeal that addressed,
    among other things, whether postjudgment interest should be calculated from the
    date of the trial court’s first judgment or the date of the judgment that the trial
    court entered following the supreme court’s remand.              Phillips v. Bramlett
    11
    The court construed the “where facts exist” portion of former section
    11.02(c) to refer to the jury’s verdict for purposes of determining whether excess
    liability existed for a Stowers claim. 
    Id. at 881
    n.6.
    11
    (Phillips II), 
    407 S.W.3d 229
    , 231 (Tex. 2013) (observing that “[w]hen the life
    cycle of a judgment extends beyond an initial appeal, courts often face unique or
    unsettled jurisdictional and procedural issues”). In Phillips II, the court observed
    that the determination necessary to trigger the Stowers exception to article
    4590i’s damages cap is whether “[f]acts exist to enable a party to invoke the
    common law theory of recovery known as the ‘Stowers Doctrine.’” 
    Id. at 232
    n.5.
    However, the court declined to address whether the facts “could support a
    subsequent Stowers claim against Phillips’s insurer,” observing that the issue
    was not before it. 
    Id. It nonetheless
    stated that as to Phillips I, “this language in
    our opinion relates to how trial courts should apply section 11.02 of former article
    4590i in the first instance:   ‘both the statutory cap and its exception can be
    applied as written by conforming the judgment against the physician to section
    11.02(a)’s cap and reserving for another case any suit against the insurer under
    section 11.02(c)’s Stowers exception.’” 
    Id. at 238
    n.7 (quoting Phillips 
    I, 288 S.W.3d at 882
    ).
    5. Bramlett v. Medical Protective Co. of Ft. Wayne (Bramlett I), 855 F.
    Supp. 2d 615 (N.D. Tex. 2012).
    In 2012, Judge Sidney A. Fitzwater, a federal district court judge,
    interpreted Phillips I. Bramlett 
    I, 855 F. Supp. 2d at 615
    –16. In his opinion, he
    noted that Phillips I was “at times difficult to comprehend,” having “perplexed four
    dissenting justices as to its reasoning and effect.” 
    Id. at 621.
    Nevertheless, after
    studying the language and reasoning of the Phillips I majority opinion, he
    12
    concluded that it could “only reasonably be understood as interpreting § 11.02(c)
    to grant an injured third party a direct cause of action against the physician’s
    insurer” when facts exist “that would allow a party to invoke the Stowers
    doctrine.” 
    Id. at 621–22,
    625. 12 Thus, an injured third party would be allowed “to
    recover from the insurer the difference between the jury verdict and what would
    otherwise have been recoverable” under the physician liability cap. 
    Id. at 622,
    625. Judge Fitzwater reasoned that because the supreme court’s focus was on
    maintaining incentives for reasonable settlement, it had made certain that the
    insurer would have an incentive to reasonably settle, regardless of whether
    insurance coverage was above or below the cap, “[b]y interpreting § 11.02(c) as
    creating a direct cause of action for injured third parties when Stowers facts
    exist.” 
    Id. at 623.
    Judge Fitzwater went on to observe that while the supreme court
    analogized to equitable subrogation, the section 11.02(c) exception claim did not
    function like an equitable subrogation claim because, whereas an equitable
    subrogation claim only allows a third party to recover to the same extent as the
    party into whose shoes he steps, “there will be instances in which there is no
    claim for the injured third party and the insured physician to ‘share’.” 
    Id. at 623–
    24 (quoting Phillips 
    I, 288 S.W.3d at 882
    ).       Viewed as a direct action, the
    statutory Stowers exception claim provided the physician a common law Stowers
    12
    While we are not bound by Judge Fitzwater’s decision, we find his
    reasoning compelling.
    13
    claim for his excess liability up to the physician liability cap and provided the
    injured third party a claim for the difference between the physician liability cap
    and the jury verdict. 13 
    Id. at 624.
    To recover on the claim, the injured third party
    would have to prove that the physician’s insurer breached its Stowers duty. 14 
    Id. at 624
    n.16.
    13
    During the hearing on Truck’s and Team’s motions, the trial court also
    expressed frustration with regard to the Phillips I opinion and three prior supreme
    court opinions—Dairyland County Mutual Insurance Co. of Texas v. Childress,
    
    650 S.W.2d 770
    (Tex. 1983), Allstate Insurance Co. v. Watson, 
    876 S.W.2d 145
    (Tex. 1994) (op. on reh’g), and State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Co. v.
    Matlock, 
    462 S.W.2d 277
    (Tex. 1970) (op. on reh’g)—stating,
    Phillips doesn’t overrule Allstate v. Watson; doesn’t -- doesn’t even
    address Dairyland; and those are the two instances where you
    actually have the issue of whether or not there’s a direct action by a
    third-party personal injury claimant against the liability carrier for a
    personal injury defendant, whether it be a malpractice or whether it
    be a car wreck case, okay?
    The only other instance where the Court has actually created
    a direct action is State Farm v. Matlock in the uninsured motorist
    coverage issue. And that has created a nightmare . . . .
    ....
    . . . And Matlock, the Supreme Court basically, without any
    citation to authority, decided, you know, [“]We think it’s probably a
    good idea for a direct action, even though Texas doesn’t allow a
    direct action in common law personal injury cases.[”] So -- and
    that’s been personal pet peeve of mine, shall we say.
    14
    Truck describes the “inextricable dilemma” for insurers produced by
    Phillips I and Bramlett I as follows:
    The availability of a direct cause of action necessarily means that the
    insurer has a duty to its insured, but would also have a duty to the
    tort plaintiff.
    14
    6. Standing
    To establish common law standing, a plaintiff must show both that he has
    suffered a distinct injury and that there is a real controversy between the parties
    that the judicial declaration sought will actually resolve. 
    Everett, 178 S.W.3d at 850
    (citing Brown v. Todd, 
    53 S.W.3d 297
    , 305 (Tex. 2001)). But the legislature
    may exempt litigants from the common law injury requirement, making the statute
    itself the proper analytical framework to determine standing. 
    Id. at 850–51.
    For
    statutory standing to apply, the plaintiff must allege and show how he has been
    injured or wronged within the parameters of the statutory language. 
    Id. at 851.
    In Everett, we explained that the common law standing rules apply except when
    standing is statutorily conferred. 
    Id. at 850;
    see also Marauder Corp. v. Beall,
    
    301 S.W.3d 817
    , 820 (Tex. App.—Dallas 2009, no pet.) (“The standing analysis
    begins and ends with the statute itself.”).
    That duty would necessarily create a “Catch-22” for the insurer
    because the interests of its insured and the interests of the tort
    claimant are not aligned and cannot be aligned. If a proper Stowers
    demand within limits is made, under Bramlett, the insurer would be
    forced at that point not only to consider the insured’s interest, but
    [also] that of the tort claimant. The insurer then [loses] its incentive
    to make any sort of agreement because the agreement would have
    to be in the best interest of the insured and the tort claimant against
    whom the insurer is defending its insured. If the insurer’s exposure
    is above the Stowers exposure, the insurer’s decisions regarding the
    defense of its insured are necessarily impacted. The purpose of the
    Stowers doctrine in the eighty-eight years of its existence has always
    been to protect the insured. The duty to an insured to settle under
    Stowers cannot be workable if the insurer must also consider the
    interests of the tort claimant and the potential verdict.
    15
    C. Motions and Responses
    In the trial court, Truck argued that Appellants had no standing because
    they did not have a direct statutory Stowers cause of action, an assigned
    Stowers claim from Yagnik, or a turnover order entitling them to Yagnik’s Stowers
    claim. Specifically, Truck argued that a Stowers action may be brought by a
    judgment creditor only after a turnover proceeding or a valid assignment and that
    otherwise, the judgment creditor lacks standing to sue the insurer because there
    is no tort duty of an insurer to a third party, relying on Hernandez v. Great
    American Insurance Co. of New York, 
    464 S.W.2d 91
    , 94 (Tex. 1971). 15 Truck
    labeled as dicta the discussion in Phillips I of an insurer’s potential liability under
    the statute, 16 vehemently disagreed with Judge Fitzwater’s Bramlett I opinion,
    15
    In Great American Insurance Co., a case involving a common law
    Stowers claim related to an underlying automobile accident, the supreme court
    eliminated the requirement in Texas law that the insured pay some portion of the
    judgment against him before bringing suit for reimbursement against the 
    insurer. 464 S.W.2d at 92
    (eliminating the prepayment requirement to allow suit from the
    time liability is fixed by final judgment). In that case, decided almost 40 years
    before Philips I, the supreme court noted, “The tort of the insurer in mismanaging
    the defense of the insured in the first case is harmful to the insured alone.” 
    Id. at 94.
          16
    Judge Fitzwater addressed the dicta argument in Bramlett I,
    distinguishing between obiter dictum—a judicial statement made in passing—and
    judicial dictum, “which is ‘articulated very deliberately after mature
    consideration.’” Bramlett 
    I, 855 F. Supp. 2d at 623
    n.14 (quoting Elledge v.
    Friberg-Cooper Water Supply Corp., 
    240 S.W.3d 869
    , 870 (Tex. 2007)). That
    court concluded, as we do, that the discussion of the Stowers exception claim in
    Phillips I was “articulated very deliberately after mature consideration,” that it was
    “integral to the court’s reasoning and to its rejection of the interpretations of
    § 11.02 found in Welch [v. McLean, 
    191 S.W.3d 147
    (Tex. App.—Fort Worth
    2005) (op. on reh’g), overruled by Phillips 
    I, 288 S.W.3d at 879
    –81, 883] and
    16
    and asserted that there is no such thing as a direct Stowers action by a third-
    party plaintiff. Accordingly, Truck claimed, because Appellants lacked either a
    turnover order or an assignment from Yagnik, they had no standing to bring a
    Stowers action, Bramlett I and Phillips I notwithstanding. Truck further argued
    that to the extent that Appellants could bring a Stowers claim via the principles of
    equitable subrogation, Yagnik’s claim could not be pursued because the excess
    judgment against him had been paid upon becoming final in 2014 and Yagnik
    had released Truck from any claims he might have had against Truck, leaving
    nothing to subrogate.
    Team likewise argued that absent an assignment from Yagnik or a
    turnover order, Appellants could not “otherwise establish standing to bring a
    Stowers action against” it. Team also argued that because Appellants did not file
    their current action until January 26, 2016, and because that action was wholly
    separate and apart from their underlying claim, Appellants were barred by civil
    practice and remedies code section 74.303(d) from pursuing any excess liability
    beyond the statutory cap applicable to Yagnik.         Thus, according to Team,
    Appellants’ judgment had been satisfied such that Appellants had no damages.
    Appellants filed a joint response to Truck and Team’s motions in which
    they acknowledged that they had no turnover order or assignment from Yagnik
    Phillips [v. Bramlett, 
    258 S.W.3d 158
    (Tex. App.—Amarillo 2007), rev’d, Phillips 
    I, 288 S.W.3d at 883
    ]” and that it was therefore obligated to follow the supreme
    court’s interpretation of section 11.02(c). See 
    id. 17 but
    asserted that they had brought their action as a direct statutory Stowers claim
    against the insurers pursuant to Phillips I and Bramlett I. Appellants argued that
    Truck entered a settlement agreement with Yagnik “in an attempt to circumvent”
    Appellants’ right to recovery, pointing out that if Yagnik had no Stowers claim,
    then the release he signed with his insurers would fail for lack of consideration.
    Appellants also argued that this situation is why the Phillips I court said
    that the direct claim was akin to equitable subrogation—not that it actually was
    an equitable subrogation claim. See Phillips 
    I, 288 S.W.3d at 882
    (“Similarly, the
    Stowers exception to the cap is like this right to equitable subrogation. It puts the
    injured third party in the shoes of the insured to the extent the cap eliminates the
    insured’s incentive to enforce the insurer’s duty to settle with reasonable care.”
    (emphasis added)); see also Bramlett 
    I, 855 F. Supp. 2d at 624
    –25. Their direct-
    claim argument went to both Truck’s and Team’s motions.
    As to Team’s separate summary judgment argument on 2003’s civil
    practice and remedies code chapter 74 enactment (hereinafter, the 2003 statute),
    Appellants responded that the underlying suit that gave rise to their direct
    Stowers exception claim was filed on August 29, 2003, and was based on events
    that occurred before the statute’s September 1, 2003 effective date, preventing
    the new statute’s application to their claim. Appellants stated, “It beggars belief
    to think the Supreme Court decided Phillips [in 2009] in a way giving rise to a
    claim, but that it did not observe such a claim could never be brought because it
    would be precluded by the 2003 repeal of the MLIIA,” particularly since a
    18
    claimant cannot determine whether a Stowers case exists until a jury verdict is
    rendered. They pointed to “long-settled law that a Stowers lawsuit need not be
    brought until after the suit from which it derives . . . is final,” citing Street v.
    Honorable Second Court of Appeals, 
    756 S.W.2d 299
    , 301–02 (Tex. 1988) (orig.
    proceeding).   To rule in Team’s favor on that argument, they argued, would
    render the supreme court’s decision in Phillips “a unicorn crossbow—theoretically
    useful, but of no practical value.”
    Appellants further argued that the 2003 statute did not govern their claim
    because Appellees are not health care providers and the claim is not a health
    care liability claim. According to Appellants, the 2003 statute governs only health
    care liability claims, not Stowers claims, that are filed after September 1, 2003.
    And they contended that they had been damaged “the entire amount of the
    verdict against the insured that ha[d] not already been paid, plus interest.”
    Team replied that the plain language of the 2003 enabling statute
    encompassed Appellants’ claim because the statute applies to an “action,” not
    just a “health care liability claim,” essentially overruling the supreme court’s 2009
    holding in Phillips I for actions filed after September 1, 2003.      Team further
    argued that Appellants should have brought their Stowers claim in the underlying
    action by adding Team to the case once the trial court entered a judgment
    applying the healthcare liability caps.
    19
    D. The Parties’ Arguments
    In their first two issues, Appellants argue that the trial court erred by
    concluding that they lacked standing because their claim was neither a common
    law claim nor an equitable-subrogation-based claim but rather a direct statutory
    claim. In their third and fourth issues, Appellants argue that their claims are not
    capped by the 2003 statute because that statute is a replacement, not an
    amendment, that the 2003 statute has no effect on claims that are not brought
    under the common law Stowers doctrine, and that they are therefore entitled to
    money damages for the difference between the capped judgment and the verdict.
    Truck responds that the trial court properly granted its plea to the
    jurisdiction because Appellants have no statutory standing under former article
    4590i, section 11.02(c), to bring a Stowers action directly against Truck for
    amounts in excess of a judgment that was fully paid. 17 But see Bramlett v. Med.
    Protective Co. of Ft. Wayne, Ind. (Bramlett II), No. 3:10-CV-2048-D, 
    2013 WL 796725
    , at *7 (N.D. Tex. Mar. 5, 2013) (“MedPro’s payment of the judgment is
    not controlling because, if plaintiffs prove their Stowers claim, they are entitled to
    recover up to the amount of the jury verdict, not the judgment amount.”). Truck
    directs us to insurance code section 541.151 18 and finance code section
    17
    In its brief, Team adopted Truck’s argument and authorities on this issue.
    18
    Insurance code section 541.151, “Private Action for Damages
    Authorized,” states that a “person who sustains actual damages may bring an
    action against another person for those damages” that are caused by the other
    person’s engaging in an act or practice that is defined by chapter 541,
    20
    392.403 19 as examples of statutory grants of standing and to business and
    commerce code section 106.008 20 as an example of when standing is not
    granted. Team contends that the 2003 statute applies to Appellants’ claims,
    which they filed in a separate 2016 lawsuit, and that Appellants have therefore
    received the full compensation to which they are entitled under applicable law
    with regard to Team.
    Appellants counter that the 2003 statute applies to health care liability
    lawsuits filed after September 1, 2003, and to common law claims but that the
    instant case is not a health care liability lawsuit or a common law claim and that
    Appellees’ arguments would require us to ignore both Phillips I and Bramlett I.
    E. Analysis
    We agree with Appellants that we are not at liberty to ignore Phillips I. And
    we also agree with Judge Fitzwater’s characterization of Phillips I as “difficult to
    subchapter B as an unfair method of competition or an unfair or deceptive act or
    practice in the business of insurance or that is specifically enumerated in
    business and commerce code section 17.46(b) as an unlawful deceptive trade
    practice if the person bringing the action relied on the act or practice to his
    detriment. Tex. Ins. Code Ann. § 541.151 (West 2009).
    19
    Finance code section 392.403, “Civil Remedies,” states, in pertinent part,
    that “[a] person may sue for: (1) injunctive relief to prevent or restrain a violation
    of this chapter [on Debt Collection]; and (2) actual damages sustained as a result
    of a violation of this chapter,” and if the plaintiff successfully maintains the action,
    he or she is also entitled to attorney’s fees reasonably related to the amount of
    work performed or costs. Tex. Fin. Code Ann. § 392.403(a)–(b) (West 2016).
    20
    Business and commerce code section 106.008, “No Private Right of
    Action,” states, “This chapter [“Internet Dating Safety Act”] does not create a
    private right of action.” Tex. Bus. & Com. Code Ann. § 106.008 (West 2015).
    21
    comprehend” and “perplex[ing],” Bramlett 
    I, 855 F. Supp. 2d at 621
    , and find his
    analysis instructive.    Judge Fitzwater read Phillips I as acknowledging a
    legislatively-created direct claim for injured third parties via section 11.02(c). 
    Id. at 622.
       Compare Tex. Ins. Code Ann. § 541.151, and Tex. Fin. Code Ann.
    § 392.403, with 
    Dairyland, 650 S.W.2d at 775
    –76 (stating that “[t]here is no
    question in our minds that the compulsory insurance requirement of the Texas
    motor vehicle safety laws implies that all potential claimants for damages
    resulting from automobile accidents are intended as beneficiaries of the
    statutorily required automobile liability coverage” and thus holding that injured
    third-party plaintiffs could obtain both damages and attorney’s fees under the
    insured’s contract with the insurer). We agree. Because Phillips I acknowledged
    a direct claim, and because we are bound by the supreme court’s precedent, we
    hold that Appellants’ claims are not barred by Yagnik’s settlement with his
    insurers, and we sustain their second issue. 21 See Robinson v. Home Owners
    21
    Ignoring our precedential constraints as an intermediate appellate court,
    Truck directs us to the words of former United States Supreme Court Justice
    Felix Frankfurter with regard to statutory construction to remind us that
    [Courts] are under the constraints imposed by the judicial
    function in our democratic society . . . . [T]he function in construing a
    statute is to ascertain the meaning of words used by the legislature.
    To go beyond it is to usurp a power which our democracy has
    lodged in its elected legislature . . . . A judge must not rewrite a
    statute, neither to enlarge nor to contract it.
    In re P.D.M., 
    117 S.W.3d 453
    , 465 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth 2003, pet. denied)
    (Cayce, C.J., dissenting) (quoting Record of the Association of the Bar of the City
    of New York 213 (1947), reprinted in Courts, Judges, and Politics 414 (Walter F.
    22
    Mgmt. Enters., Inc., No. 02-16-00380-CV, 
    2018 WL 1865799
    , at *11 (Tex. App.—
    Fort Worth Apr. 19, 2018, no pet. h.) (“‘[I]t is not the function of a court of appeals
    to abrogate or modify established precedent.’” (quoting Lubbock Cty. v.
    Trammel’s Lubbock Bail Bonds, 
    80 S.W.3d 580
    , 585 (Tex. 2002))).
    Pursuant to this acknowledgment by the supreme court in Phillips I, if
    Appellants’ claims are not barred by the 2003 enactment, then Appellants can
    sue for damages amounting to the difference between the capped judgment and
    the verdict. 22
    As interpreted by the supreme court, section 11.02(c) required the facts
    that give rise to a common law Stowers claim as a trigger for a statutory Stowers-
    based cause of action for “a party,” while section 74.303(d) limits an insurer’s
    liability “under the common law [Stowers] theory of recovery” but says nothing
    about a statutory cause of action.        Accordingly, we agree with Appellants’
    Murphy & C. Herman Pritchett, eds., 2d ed.1974)). But in Phillips I, which issued
    in 2009, six years after article 4590i was repealed, the supreme court essentially
    created a cause of action for third parties injured by medical malpractice by
    reading its own analysis into section 11.02(c)’s text, creating a historical hybrid of
    sorts—an exceptional case for exceptional circumstances in a manner similar to
    its action in Dairyland. Phillips 
    I, 288 S.W.3d at 882
    ; see also 
    Dairyland, 650 S.W.2d at 775
    –76 (holding all potential claimants for automobile accident
    damages are intended beneficiaries of statutorily required automobile liability
    coverage).
    22
    Truck argues that to rule in Appellants’ favor departs from any traditional
    measure of actual liability and creates an inconsistent right in law with regard to
    an insurer’s duties. Nevertheless, we are constrained by the supreme court
    precedent that binds us. See Bramlett 
    I, 855 F. Supp. 2d at 623
    n.14 (explaining
    that to the extent the supreme court’s discussion of the statutory Stowers
    exception in Phillips I is dicta, it is judicial dicta).
    23
    contention that these provisions do not match and that section 74.303(d)
    therefore has no effect on their claim because section 11.02(c) is a statute-based
    Stowers claim, not a common law-based Stowers claim, and we sustain their
    third issue.
    Further, while as a matter of statutory construction, we must presume that
    the legislature “‘is aware of relevant case law when it enacts or modifies
    statutes,’” Phillips 
    II, 407 S.W.3d at 241
    (quoting In re Allen, 
    366 S.W.3d 696
    ,
    706 (Tex. 2012) (orig. proceeding)), at the time that the legislature enacted
    chapter 74 of the civil practice and remedies code to replace former article 4590i,
    Phillips I was not yet a glimmer in the eye of Justice Medina, its author, and the
    legislature did not have the benefit of the court’s interpretation of section
    11.02(c)’s language. Cf. 
    id. (presuming that
    when the legislature enacted finance
    code section 304.005 in 1999, it was aware of the court’s interpretations of the
    word “judgment” in the predecessor statute and intended to convey a meaning
    consistent with the court’s historic usage).   While we presume that statutory
    language has been selected and used with care and that every word or phrase in
    a statute has been intentionally used with a meaning and a purpose, see 
    Allen, 366 S.W.3d at 706
    , to apply 2003’s statutory limitation here would render the
    supreme court’s opinion a nullity when Phillips I, handed down six years after the
    statute was enacted, created a statutory cause of action that relates back to
    former article 4590i. See Bramlett 
    I, 855 F. Supp. 2d at 621
    –22, 625 (interpreting
    Phillips I as granting an injured third party a direct cause of action against the
    24
    physician’s insurer when Stowers facts exist as to a medical malpractice claim
    that accrued in 2002).    As a lower court, we lack the authority to take such
    action. 23
    Section 11.02(c) does not specify a limitations period, but our supreme
    court has held that when a statute lacks an express limitations period, we must
    look to analogous causes of action for which an express limitations period is
    available either by statute or by case law. Johnson & Higgins of Tex., Inc. v.
    Kenneco Energy, Inc., 
    962 S.W.2d 507
    , 518 (Tex. 1998) (op. on reh’g). The
    limitations period for a common law Stowers cause of action is two years. 
    Street, 756 S.W.2d at 301
    . Further, a traditional common law Stowers cause of action
    accrues, and limitations begins to run, when the trial court’s power to alter the
    judgment has ended and execution on the judgment, if appealed, has not been
    superseded, or all appeals have been exhausted. 
    Id. at 301–02
    (“Regardless of
    whether the judgment is superseded, an insured who so wishes may still wait
    until the underlying action has been completely resolved before bringing a
    Stowers suit.”); see Bramlett II, 
    2013 WL 796725
    , at *6 (observing that while
    Texas law permits an insured to bring a common law Stowers action as soon as
    there is a jury verdict exceeding policy limits, the claim does not accrue until the
    23
    The responsibility for reconciling Phillips I with the 2003 statutory scheme
    and related public policy implications in this anomalous case (which is unlikely to
    be repeated) lies with our supreme court.
    25
    judgment is final because no valid public policy is served by forcing an insured to
    bring an action that may ultimately prove to be unnecessary).
    Here, Yagnik appealed the judgment resulting from Appellants’ August
    2003 medical malpractice lawsuit, and his insurers superseded it. We affirmed
    the judgment in 2013; the supreme court denied petition for review on
    November 22, 2013, and denied rehearing of the petition for review on April 25,
    2014; and our mandate issued on May 5, 2014. Accordingly, Appellants had until
    May 5, 2016, to file their statutory Stowers claim. See Bramlett I, 
    855 F. Supp. 2d
    at 621–22, 625; see also Bramlett II, 
    2013 WL 796725
    , at *6. They filed their
    original petition on January 26, 2016. Because Appellants’ claims are not time-
    barred or barred by the September 1, 2003 effective date of the 2003 statute,
    Appellants can pursue damages amounting to the difference between the capped
    judgment and the verdict, and we sustain their fourth issue.
    Based on the supreme court’s holding in Phillips I, as we have analyzed
    above, the trial court erred by concluding that Appellants lacked standing.
    Accordingly, we sustain their first issue.
    26
    IV. Conclusion
    Having sustained Appellants’ four issues, we reverse the trial court’s
    judgment and remand the case for further proceedings.
    /s/ Bonnie Sudderth
    BONNIE SUDDERTH
    CHIEF JUSTICE
    PANEL: SUDDERTH, C.J.; GABRIEL and PITTMAN, JJ.
    DELIVERED: June 21, 2018
    27