POLICY’S LIMITATION ON LIABILITY COVERAGE DID NOT APPLY TO DEFENSE COSTS

Anadarko Petroleum Corp. v. Houston Casualty Co.
Supreme Court of Texas, No. 16-1013 (January 25, 2019)
Opinion by Justice Boyd (linked here)
In yet another insurance dispute arising out of the 2010 Deepwater Horizon drilling-rig catastrophe, the Texas Supreme Court rejected the insurer’s argument that its policy limited coverage for defense costs to a fraction of the actual costs. The opinion is another lesson in the Court’s approach to interpreting insurance policies.

Anadarko owned a 25% minority interest in BP’s Deepwater Horizon operation. After a federal court held BP and Anadarko jointly and severally liable for damages under the Oil Pollution Act, Anadarko reached a settlement with BP, under which Anadarko paid BP $4 billion and relinquished its 25% interest in exchange for BP’s agreement to indemnify Anadarko for any additional liability. BP did not agree to pay Anadarko’s defense costs, so Anadarko sought to recover those costs, which exceeded $100 million, under an excess liability policy purchased on the Lloyd’s London market. The policy provided coverage up to $150 million for Anadarko’s “Ultimate Net Loss,” which included both liability and defense costs. The Underwriters, however, took the position that a joint-venture endorsement limited the insurers’ responsibility to 25 % of the limit, i.e., $37.5 million, which it paid. Anadarko acknowledged the $37.5 million limit applied to the $4 billion settlement payment, but argued it did not limit its right to recover defense costs up to $112.5 million—the remaining balance of the $150 million policy limit.
The joint-venture endorsement had three clauses. The first provided the basic coverage limitation: [A]s regards any liability of [Anadarko] which is insured under this Section III and which arises in any manner whatsoever out of the operation or existence of any joint venture … in which [Anadarko] has an interest, the liability of Underwriters under this Section III shall be limited to the product of (a) the percentage interest of [Anadarko] in said Joint Venture and (b) the total limit afforded [Anadarko] under this Section III.
The second and third clauses provided exceptions to the limit imposed by the first clause. The trial court granted part of the relief sought by Anadarko, finding the first clause applied but was modified by the third clause, so that Anadarko was entitled to recover some, but not all, of the costs it requested. The Beaumont Court of Appeals granted the parties’ cross-petitions for permissive appeal, reversed the judgment, and granted judgment for the Underwriters. The appellate court agreed the first clause’s limitation was triggered, but held neither of the exceptions applied. On review, the Texas Supreme Court disagreed with both of the lower courts, and held the limitation imposed by the first clause applied only to Anadarko’s liability, not to defense costs.

The Court parsed the first clause, quoted above, in the context of the policy’s defining “Ultimate Net Loss” to mean:
the amount [Anadarko] is obligated to pay, by judgment or settlement, as damages resulting from an “Occurrence” covered by this policy, including the service of suit, institution of arbitration proceedings and all “Defence Expenses” in respect of such “Occurrence.”
After consulting dictionaries, cases describing common uses in insurance and other legal contexts, and other provisions in the policy using the term “liability,” the Court construed the term as referring to the insured’s “legally imposed obligation to pay for a third party’s damages in response to a written claim.” As such, the term does not encompass defense costs, i.e., the “voluntarily assumed obligation to pay lawyers, investigators, or others for services provided to defend against the liability.” Consequently, the Court held, “the liability insured and defense expenses are two separate components of the Ultimate Net Loss,” and only the former is limited by the joint-defense endorsement.

The Court reversed the judgment of the court of appeals, rendered judgment granting Anadarko’s motion for partial summary judgment, and remanded to the trial court “for further proceedings consistent with this opinion”—a determination of the amount of defense costs incurred up to the remaining policy limit.

COURT ERRED IN HOLDING THAT WELLS FARGO FAILED TO PROVE ITS CAPACITY TO SUE FOR NON-JUDICIAL FORECLOSURE

Wells Fargo Bank, N.A. v. Kingman Holdings, LLC
Dallas Court of Appeals, No. 05-17-01240 (January 17, 2019)
Justices Schenck, Reichek (opinion linked here), and Nowell
The Woomers’ home mortgage went through several assignments before they defaulted on their payments in 2016. The only contested issue in this declaratory judgment action was Wells Fargo’s capacity to bring suit to establish its lien and to proceed with a non-judicial foreclosure on the property as trustee for Lehman ABS Mortgage Loan Trust 2007-1, Mortgage Pass-Through Certificates, Series 2007-1. Wells Fargo introduced several documents proving its capacity, including copies of the note, the security instrument, and documents showing the chain of assignments of the security instrument from the original mortgage holder to Wells Fargo. In an attempt to contest Wells Fargo’s capacity to bring suit, Kingman Holdings (which had purchased the home subject to the mortgage) submitted an “attestation” by a records and information management specialist for the Securities and Exchange Commission that “[a] diligent search has this day been made of the records and files of this Commission, and the records and files do not disclose that any filings have been received in this Commission under the name of Lehman ABS Mortgage Loan Trust 2007-1, or Lehman ABS Mortgage Loan Trust 2007-1, Mortgage Pass-Through Certificates, Series 2007-1, pursuant to any of the Acts administered by the Commission.” Kingman argued the attestation showed that the trust of which Wells Fargo claimed to be trustee did not exist “or at least [was] not found in the records of the Securities and Exchange Commission.” The trial court found Wells Fargo had failed to meet its burden to prove capacity and entered judgment against Wells Fargo.

The Dallas Court of Appeals disagreed. It held that Kingman had failed to show Wells Fargo was required to make any filings with the SEC or that the lack of any filings with the SEC prevented Wells Fargo from bringing suit on behalf of the trust. Absent such proof, the attestation was meaningless, and Wells Fargo’s evidence that it was the last entity to which the security interest was assigned was sufficient to conclusively show it had capacity to bring the action. So the appellate court reversed the trial court and rendered judgment declaring that Wells Fargo has a valid and subsisting superior lien on the property.
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