Garry Jenkins v. State and County Mutual Fire Insurance Company ( 2009 )


Menu:
  •                          COURT OF APPEALS
    SECOND DISTRICT OF TEXAS
    FORT WORTH
    NO. 2-08-279-CV
    GARRY JENKINS                                                         APPELLANT
    V.
    STATE AND COUNTY MUTUAL FIRE                                             APPELLEE
    INSURANCE COMPANY
    ------------
    FROM THE 153RD DISTRICT COURT OF TARRANT COUNTY
    ------------
    OPINION
    ------------
    This is a suit by a judgment creditor to collect a default judgment under
    an automobile liability policy. It is undisputed that the additional insured against
    whom the default judgment was rendered failed to notify the insurer of the
    lawsuit filed against him. It is further undisputed that the insurer had actual
    knowledge of the suit. The question is whether the insurer is liable for the
    default judgment rendered against the additional insured. We answer “no” and
    affirm the trial court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of the insurer.
    Background
    Except as noted below, the facts of this case are undisputed. Appellant
    Garry Jenkins’s foot was crushed in 1997 when a tank skid fell off a truck
    driven by Mark Lemmon. The accident happened when Mark allegedly applied
    the brakes of the truck too quickly, causing the skid to break free and fall on
    Garry’s foot. Both Garry and Mark were working as independent contractors
    for L & G Pipe, which was owned by Deborah Grisamer and Richard Lemmon;
    Richard is Mark’s brother. The parties dispute who owned the truck Mark was
    driving.
    At the time of the accident, Appellee State and County Mutual Fire
    Insurance Company had issued a business auto policy to Deborah as named
    insured, and the policy was in effect on the day of the accident. The policy
    listed the truck as a “covered auto.” The policy’s “loss conditions” provide as
    follows:
    2.    DUTIES IN THE EVENT OF ACCIDENT, CLAIM, SUIT OR
    LOSS
    ....
    b.     . . . you and any other involved insured must . . .
    [i]mmediately send us copies of any demand, notice,
    2
    summons or legal paper received concerning the claim
    or suit [and] [c]ooperate with us in the investigation,
    settlement or defense of the claim or suit.
    3.    LEGAL ACTION AGAINST US
    No one may bring a legal action against us under this
    Coverage Form until:
    a.    There has been full compliance with all the terms of
    this Coverage Form; and
    b.    Under Liability Coverage, we agree in writing that the
    insured has an obligation to pay or until the amount of
    that obligation has been finally determined by judgment
    after trial.
    Mark was listed as a “driver” on a policy renewal application Debra executed
    before the accident.1 The truck he was driving at the time of the accident was
    listed on the policy as a “covered auto.”
    Garry sued Mark, Deborah, Richard, and L & G Pipe for negligence. Garry
    obtained service on Deborah, Richard, and L & G Pipe.        Those defendants
    forwarded the suit papers to State and County, and State and County defended
    them under the policy.
    1
    … Garry repeatedly refers to Mark as a “named insured” in his brief, but
    he never identifies where in the policy Mark is so named. Our own review of
    the relevant documents finds Mark’s name only on the renewal application, not
    in the policy itself. The policy’s declaration page lists only Deborah as a
    “named insured.”
    3
    When Garry was unable to effect personal service of process on Mark, he
    obtained an order authorizing service on Mark by publication. Mark did not file
    an answer. Garry’s counsel informed State and County’s adjuster that Mark
    had been served by publication and sent him copies of the suit papers. State
    and County’s counsel denied that Mark was entitled to coverage under the
    policy and asserted that even if Mark was covered, he had failed to comply
    with the policy’s notice-of-suit condition. The trial court later rendered a default
    judgment against Mark for $650,000 in actual damages and $260,000 in
    prejudgment interest. 2
    The suit proceeded to trial against the remaining defendants.          A jury
    found that Mark was 100% at fault for the accident, and the trial court
    rendered a take-nothing judgment against the other defendants.
    Garry then sued State and County, seeking to collect the judgment he had
    obtained against Mark. The trial court granted summary judgment for State and
    County on the theory that Mark was not insured under L & G Pipe’s business
    auto policy because Mark, not Deborah, owned the truck. See Jenkins v. State
    & County Mut. Fire Ins. Co., No. 02-06-00067-CV, 
    2007 WL 1168470
    , at *1
    2
    … The trial court did not appoint an attorney ad litem to defend the suit
    on Mark’s behalf as required by rule of civil procedure 244 in cases where the
    defendant is served by publication. See Tex. R. Civ. P. 244.
    4
    (Tex. App.—Fort Worth Apr. 19, 2007, pet. denied) (mem. op.) (“Jenkins I”).
    We reversed and remanded, holding that a genuine issue of material fact as to
    who owned the truck precluded summary judgment. 
    Id. at *3.
    On remand, Garry filed a traditional motion for summary judgment,
    arguing that Mark was a covered driver under the policy. State and County
    filed a combined traditional and no-evidence motion for summary judgment,
    arguing that it had no duty to indemnify Mark or pay the judgment on his behalf
    because Mark had not notified State and County of the suit against him. Garry
    argued that State and County had waived Mark’s compliance with the policy’s
    notice-of-suit condition because it had actual knowledge of Garry’s suit against
    Mark but refused to defend him. The trial court granted State and County’s
    summary judgment motion and denied Garry’s. Garry filed this appeal.
    Standard of Review
    In a summary judgment case, the issue on appeal is whether the movant
    met the summary judgment burden by establishing that no genuine issue of
    material fact exists and that the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of
    law. Tex. R. Civ. P. 166a(c); Sw. Elec. Power Co. v. Grant, 
    73 S.W.3d 211
    ,
    215 (Tex. 2002); City of Houston v. Clear Creek Basin Auth., 
    589 S.W.2d 671
    ,
    678 (Tex. 1979). When both parties move for summary judgment and the trial
    court grants one motion and denies the other, the reviewing court should
    5
    review both parties’ summary judgment evidence and determine all questions
    presented. Valence Operating Co. v. Dorsett, 
    164 S.W.3d 656
    , 661 (Tex.
    2005). The reviewing court should render the judgment that the trial court
    should have rendered. 
    Id. When a
    party moves for summary judgment on both traditional and no
    evidence grounds and the trial court did not specify the grounds on which it
    was granted, we will uphold the summary judgment if any one of the grounds
    advanced in the motion is meritorious. Joe v. Two Thirty Nine Joint Venture,
    
    145 S.W.3d 150
    , 157 (Tex. 2004).
    Discussion
    1.    Mark’s failure to forward suit papers and demand a defense
    In his second issue, Garry argues that the trial court erred by granting
    State and County’s traditional motion for summary judgment. State and County
    contends that Mark’s failure to comply with the notice-of-suit condition
    precludes coverage for Garry’s claims against Mark. Garry argues that State
    and County cannot rely on the condition because it had actual knowledge of his
    suit against Mark. For the purposes of this discussion, we will assume without
    deciding that Mark was an insured under the policy at the time of the accident.
    Our supreme court has consistently held that an insurer has no duty to
    defend or indemnify an insured unless the insured forwards suit papers and
    6
    requests a defense in compliance with the policy’s notice-of-suit conditions.
    See Nat’l Union Fire Ins. Co. v. Crocker, 
    246 S.W.3d 603
    , 610 (Tex. 2008);
    Harwell v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co., 
    896 S.W.2d 170
    , 174–75 (Tex.
    1995); Weaver v. Hartford Accident & Indem. Co., 
    570 S.W.2d 367
    , 370 (Tex.
    1978).
    Weaver is the first of three supreme court decisions that guide our
    analysis. Weaver was involved in a car wreck with Busch, who worked for
    Thomas 
    Enterprises. 570 S.W.2d at 368
    . Thomas was the named insured on
    a comprehensive automobile liability policy issued by Hartford. 
    Id. Weaver sued
    and served Busch, but Busch did not forward the suit papers to Hartford.
    
    Id. Weaver sued
    and served Thomas in the same action; Thomas promptly
    forwarded the suit papers to Hartford, and Hartford defended Thomas. 
    Id. Weaver later
    nonsuited Thomas, and the trial court rendered a default judgment
    against Busch. 
    Id. Weaver then
    sued Hartford to collect the judgment. 
    Id. The supreme
    court noted that a policy’s condition that the insured
    immediately forward suit papers to the insurer serves several purposes. 
    Id. at 369.
    One purpose is to enable the insurer to control the litigation and interpose
    a defense. 
    Id. But “a
    more basic purpose is to advise the insurer that the
    insured has been served with process and that the insurer is expected to timely
    file an answer.” 
    Id. The court
    held that because Busch had never forwarded
    7
    the suit papers to Hartford or requested a defense, Hartford had no duty to
    defend him, and it affirmed the court of appeals’ take-nothing judgment in favor
    of Hartford. 
    Id. at 370.
    Seventeen years later, the supreme court reached a similar result in
    Harwell. Hubbard and Leatherman were in a car wreck; Hubbard died, and
    Leatherman was seriously 
    injured. 896 S.W.2d at 172
    . Hubbard was insured
    by a State Farm automobile liability policy. 
    Id. Leatherman sued
    Hubbard’s
    estate.   Leatherman’s attorney caused the probate court to appoint the
    attorney’s secretary, Harwell, as the estate’s temporary administrator and
    served her with citation. 
    Id. Leatherman’s attorney
    notified State Farm of the
    suit in writing and discussed the case with State Farm’s attorney, but Harwell
    never forwarded any suit papers to State Farm nor demanded a defense. 
    Id. The trial
    court rendered a default judgment in favor of Leatherman. 
    Id. Harwell did
    not notify State Farm of the judgment, but Leatherman’s attorney sent
    State Farm a copy of the judgment one day after the deadline for filing a motion
    for new trial or perfecting appeal. 
    Id. When Leatherman
    attempted to enforce
    the judgment against Hubbard’s policy, State Farm filed a declaratory judgment
    action against Harwell and Leatherman, seeking a declaration that it was not
    responsible for the judgment against Hubbard.      
    Id. at 173.
      The trial court
    8
    granted State Farm’s motion for summary judgment, and the court of appeals
    affirmed. 
    Id. On appeal
    to the supreme court, Harwell argued that State Farm could not
    rely on her failure to forward suit papers because it had actual knowledge of
    Leatherman’s suit against Hubbard; that State Farm was not prejudiced by her
    failure to provide notice; and that State Farm’s refusal to defend the suit
    estopped it from claiming that Harwell’s breach of the notice-of-suit provision
    relieved it of liability. 
    Id. The supreme
    court held that until State Farm received
    notice of suit, it had no duty to undertake Hubbard’s defense. 
    Id. at 174.
    Leatherman’s attorney’s correspondence to State Farm and his discussions with
    State Farm’s attorney did not constitute “notice.”         
    Id. Further, “it
    was
    Harwell’s duty to notify State Farm of the suit against its insured when she
    received service of process; it was not State Farm’s duty to determine when
    or if Harwell had been served.” 
    Id. The court
    also held that “[t]he failure to
    notify an insurer of a default judgment against its insured until after the
    judgment has become final and nonappealable prejudices the insurer as a matter
    of law.” 
    Id. Finally, noting
    that estoppel can only arise when a party refuses
    to do that which he has a duty to do, the court held that State Farm was not
    estopped from asserting Harwell’s breach of the policy as a bar to its liability
    because State Farm was never under a duty to defend Harwell. 
    Id. at 175.
    9
    The third and final controlling case is 
    Crocker. 246 S.W.3d at 603
    .
    There,    a    n ursing   h om e    resident— C rocker— sued        the   hom e’s
    owner—Emeritus—and its employee—Morris— for injuries Crocker sustained
    when she was hit by a door swung open by Morris. 
    Id. at 604.
    Crocker’s
    claims against Emeritus and Morris were covered by a commercial general
    liability policy issued by National Union; Emeritus was the named insured, and
    Morris was an additional insured. 
    Id. at 605.
    Morris was served with process,
    but he did not forward the suit papers to National Union or request a defense.
    
    Id. National Union
    defended Emeritus, but it did not defend Morris even though
    it knew he was an additional insured and a named defendant who had been
    served. 
    Id. The trial
    court eventually rendered a $1 million default judgment
    against Morris. 
    Id. Crocker sued
    National Union to collect the judgment, and National Union
    removed the case to federal court.       
    Id. The federal
    district court granted
    summary judgment in favor of Crocker and awarded her $1 million. 
    Id. at 606.
    On appeal, the fifth circuit certified the following question to the supreme court:
    Where an additional insured does not and cannot be presumed to
    know of coverage under an insurer’s liability policy, does an insurer
    that has knowledge that a suit implicating policy coverage has been
    filed against its insured have a duty to inform the additional insured
    of the available coverage?
    10
    
    Id. The supreme
    court answered “no,” noting that its decision in Weaver
    governed the case: “Put simply, there is no duty to provide a defense absent
    a request for coverage.” 
    Id. at 606,
    608.
    The court explained that notice and delivery-of-suit-papers provisions in
    insurance policies serve two essential purposes: (1) they facilitate a timely and
    effective defense of a the claim against the insured and, more fundamentally,
    (2) they trigger the insurer’s duty to defend by notifying the insurer that a
    defense is expected. 
    Id. at 608
    (citing 
    Harwell, 896 S.W.2d at 172
    ; 
    Weaver, 570 S.W.2d at 369
    ). Mere awareness of a claim or suit does not impose a
    duty on the insurer to defend under the policy; there is no unilateral duty to act
    unless and until the additional insured first requests a defense—a threshold duty
    that the insured fulfills under the policy by notifying the insurer that the insured
    has been served with process and the insurer is expected to answer on its
    behalf. 
    Id. An insurer
    cannot necessarily assume that an additional insured
    who has been served but has not given notice to the insurer is looking to the
    insurer to provide a defense. 
    Id. at 609.
    If there is no duty to defend, there is
    no duty to indemnify: “Absent a threshold duty to defend, there can be no
    liability to [the additional insured], or to [the claimant] derivatively.” 
    Id. at 609.
    The rule from Weaver, Harwell, and Crocker is clear: an insurer has no
    duty to defend and no liability under a policy unless and until the insured in
    11
    question complies with the notice-of-suit conditions and demands a defense.
    This is true even when the insurer knows that the insured has been sued and
    served and when the insurer actually defends other insureds in the same
    litigation, as happened in both Weaver and Crocker.
    In the case before us, State and County knew that Garry had sued Mark
    and knew that Mark had been served by publication. But unless and until Mark
    notified State and County of the suit and forwarded the suit papers in
    accordance with the policy’s conditions, State and County had no duty to
    defend Mark and has no liability under the policy for the judgment against Mark.
    Garry’s attempts to distinguish Crocker, Weaver, and Harwell are
    unavailing.   Garry relies on a single sentence in Weaver—“The question
    presented here is not controlled by the Court’s holding in Employers Casualty
    Co. v. Glens Falls Insurance Co.”—and argues that Employers Casualty does
    control the case before us. In Employers Casualty, the supreme court held that
    when a named insured notified the insurer of a covered accident, the omnibus
    insured was not also required to notify the insurer of the accident. 
    484 S.W.2d 570
    , 576 (Tex. 1972). The word “accident” is the key. Employers Casualty
    dealt with a condition requiring insureds to notify the insurer of an accident, not
    the condition requiring insureds to notify the insurer of a lawsuit and forward
    12
    suit papers. For that reason, Employers Casualty did not control the outcome
    in Weaver, and it does not control the outcome in this case.
    Garry attempts to distinguish Harwell because in that case, State Farm
    “did not learn about the suit, service[,] and default judgment until after it was
    final.” This is a genuine distinction between our case and Harwell, but it does
    not compel a different outcome. In both Weaver and Crocker, the insurers
    knew about the suits, the service on the insureds, and the default judgments
    before the judgments were final—yet the results in those cases were the same
    as in Harwell. Indeed, Crocker specifically rejected the argument Garry makes:
    “Mere awareness of a claim or suit does not impose a duty on the insurer to
    defend under the policy.” 
    Crocker, 246 S.W.3d at 608
    . Thus, while Garry has
    identified a distinction between this case and Harwell, it is a distinction without
    a difference.
    Next, Garry repeatedly identifies Mark as a “named insured”—though, as
    we have noted, this contention has no support in the record—in an apparent
    effort to distinguish this case from Weaver, Harwell, and Crocker, all of which
    concerned omnibus or additional insureds. Even assuming Mark was a named
    insured, the result would be the same. In Crocker, the supreme court held that
    even an additional insured who does not know he is an additional insured and
    has no knowledge of the policy’s terms and conditions is not entitled to
    13
    coverage until he requests a defense. 
    Id. at 605,
    610. If an additional insured
    who has no knowledge of the policy must comply with its conditions in order
    to invoke coverage, then certainly compliance will be required of a named
    insured, who is assumed to have read the policy and is charged by law with
    knowledge of its contents. See Roland v. Transamerica Life Ins. Co., 570 F.
    Supp. 2d 871, 880 (N.D. Tex. 2008) (“In Texas an insured has a duty to read
    the insurance policy and is charged with knowledge of its provisions.”).
    2.    Prejudice
    Finally, Garry argues that State and County cannot show that it was
    prejudiced by Mark’s failure to notify it of Garry’s suit because it had actual
    knowledge of the suit.3 An insured’s failure to timely notify its insurer of a
    claim or suit does not defeat coverage if the insurer was not prejudiced by the
    delay. PAJ, Inc. v. Hanover Ins. Co., 
    243 S.W.3d 630
    , 636–37 (Tex. 2008);
    see also Prodigy Commc’ns. Corp. v. Agric. Excess & Surplus Ins. Co., No. 06-
    0598, 
    2009 WL 795530
    , at *7 (Tex. Mar. 27, 2009) (extending rule to claims-
    made policy where prompt-notice condition was not an essential part of the
    bargained-for exchange under the policy).
    3
    … State and County did not directly address prejudice in its motion for
    summary judgment in the trial court or in its brief in this court. Garry’s
    appellate argument regarding prejudice consists of a single sentence.
    14
    An insurer’s actual knowledge of a claim or suit does not preclude a
    showing of prejudice as a matter of law. In Liberty Mutual Insurance Co. v.
    Cruz, the supreme court held that “failure to comply with the insurance policy
    notice provision by not providing notice of suit until after a default judgment is
    final, when the insurer does not otherwise have actual knowledge of the suit,
    prejudices the insurer as a matter of law and relieves the insurer of liability
    under the policy.” 
    883 S.W.2d 164
    , 165 (Tex. 1993) (emphasis added); see
    also 
    Harwell, 896 S.W.2d at 174
    (holding Harwell’s failure to notify State Farm
    of the suit against Hubbard’s estate prejudiced State Farm as a matter of law).
    But in Crocker—without mentioning Cruz—the supreme court indicated that
    even if an insurer has actual knowledge of a suit against its insured, the insurer
    is not precluded from showing prejudice as a matter of law: “The question . . .
    is . . . whether National Union . . . should be estopped to deny coverage
    because it was aware that Morris had been sued and served and had ample
    time to defend him. The answer must be 
    ‘no.’” 246 S.W.3d at 609
    ; see also
    Md. Cas. Co. v. Am. Home Assur. Co., 
    277 S.W.3d 107
    , 117 n.19 (Tex.
    App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 2009, pet. filed) (recognizing Crocker’s implicit
    overruling of the “actual knowledge of suit” language in Cruz). Thus, under
    Crocker, the fact that State and Country had actual knowledge of Garry’s suit
    against Mark does not preclude proof of prejudice as a matter of law.
    15
    The question, then, is whether State and County proved prejudice as a
    matter of law. For the answer, we turn again to Crocker. The supreme court
    distinguished between late notice, as in PAJ, and no notice, as in Crocker and
    the case before us: “In the pending case, however, the additional insured’s
    notice was not merely late; it was wholly lacking. PAJ’s notice was tardy;
    Morris’s was nonexistent.” 
    Crocker, 246 S.W.3d at 609
    . The court further
    stated that National Union was “obviously prejudiced in the sense that it was
    exposed to a $1 million judgment.” 
    Id. After receiving
    the supreme court’s
    answers to its certified questions, the fifth circuit reversed and remanded with
    instructions to render a take-nothing judgment in favor of National Union,
    holding,
    It is clear from the opinion of the Texas Supreme Court that,
    because Morris never gave National Union any notice of the suit,
    never complied with the National Union policy’s relevant notice
    provisions, never furnished it copies of any relevant papers as
    required by the policy, and never in any manner requested a
    defense from National Union, that National Union owed no duty to
    defend Morris, or to sua sponte notify him that its policy covered
    him, and was entitled to rely on its policy provisions precluding
    coverage on the basis of such noncompliance.
    Crocker v. Nat’l Union Fire Ins. Co., 
    526 F.3d 240
    , 241 (5th Cir. 2008) (per
    curiam).
    In the pending case, as in Crocker, Mark’s notice is not merely late; it is
    wholly lacking. Just as National Union’s actual knowledge of the suit against
    16
    Morris did not preclude proof of prejudice, State and County’s actual knowledge
    of the suit against Mark does not preclude proof of prejudice. And just as
    National Union was “obviously” prejudiced by the rendition of a $1 million
    judgment against Morris, State and County was prejudiced by the $650,000
    judgment rendered against Mark. We hold that Mark’s failure to comply with
    the policy’s notice-of-suit provision prejudiced State and County as a matter of
    law.
    Because Mark never gave State and County any notice of the suit, never
    complied with the State and County’s policy’s relevant notice provisions, never
    furnished it copies of any relevant papers as required by the policy, and never
    in any manner requested a defense from State and County, State and County
    owed no duty to defend Mark, was prejudiced by the default judgment Garry
    took against Mark, and was entitled to rely on its policy provisions precluding
    coverage on the basis of such noncompliance. We therefore hold that the trial
    court did not err by granting a traditional summary judgment in State and
    County’s favor, and we overrule Garry’s second issue.
    Conclusion
    Having overruled Garry’s second issue, we do not reach his first issue, in
    which he argues that the trial court erred by denying his own motion for
    summary judgment, nor his third issue, in which he argues that the trial court
    17
    erred by granting State and County’s no-evidence motion. See Tex. R. App. P.
    47.1. We affirm the trial court’s judgment.
    ANNE GARDNER
    JUSTICE
    PANEL: GARDNER, WALKER, and MEIER, JJ.
    DELIVERED: June 11, 2009
    18