FIRST-PARTY PROPERTY EXCESS POLICY

EASILY THE MOST OBSCURE & DIFFICULT TO UNDERSTAND INSURANCE COVERAGE DECISION EVER WRITTEN

RSUI INDEMNITY CO. v. THE LYND COMPANY 13-0080 (Tex. 2015)

PART II*

*This is a more or less complete account of the themes and arguments of this case, together will my comments. Part I of this Blog published December 8, 2020, was an overview of one of the main themes to be found in this case the way occurrences are characterized and integrated into very complex property policies. (12/8/20) In this Part, I make a number of “Comments about the court’s opinion and the dissent, as they are presented. For better or for worse, these are in brackets.—MSQ

My overall view is that what makes this opinion so difficult is that it is interpreting a complex, complicated contract of insurance that was very poorly drafted. No skilled and thoughtful coverage lawyers, with a feel for the subtle, would let this happen. They would have seen in advance the types of problems manifest in this set of decisions and would have avoided them through a well-conceived and better-written policy.

This is a long essay about a very lengthy and extraordinarily complicated contract of insurance. It’s about how policy limits provision in first-party commercial contracts of insurance that are poorly drafted, and how insurance companies can try to measure the size of losses.

Before going any further, it would be a good idea to distinguish between what is often called scheduled policies and what are called blanket policies. Although these concepts apply to all sorts of first-property insurance policies, and not just to insurance the foundations of which are buildings or even widgets, these policy concerns buildings, some of their contents, and some loss of income.

Scheduled policies might cover several buildings by means of an all-in-one policy (aka contract of insurance), but each coverage for each building (etc.) would be independent of the others. Thus, the coverage of more than one of the buildings would never assent a screwy policy provision be used to calculate amounts of coverage for and/or policy limits on the others.

Blanket policies are, to some extent, the opposite. For multiple buildings, there will be circumstances where amounts of coverage and policy limits might be calculated together. It is possible if one of three buildings was damaged but the others or one of the others were not, all by the same event or occurrence, some of the policy limits from the undamaged building might be utilized to pay for damages to the one damaged. The same logic would apply if one of the buildings sustained serious damage, but the other two sustained lighter damages, and so on.

The central issue, in this case, was where the insurance policy at issue was a scheduled policy or a blanket policy. It is not the case that all blanket policies are for horrible weather. They could be for a lot of different events or occurrences.

Lynd Company was and is a “big-time” property management company. When Hurricane Rita came ashore in September 2005, fifteen (15) of “its” properties apartment buildings sustained physical damage.

RSUI was the excess property insurer. The primary carrier was Westchester Fire Insurance Company, and its policy limit was $20M per occurrence. RSUI agreed with Lynd that there was one occurrence, Hurricane Rita. RSUI’s limit was $480M above Westchester’s limit. RSUI’s policy was said to be a “follow form” policy, a proposition that does not appear to be quite true.

The RSUI policy is a very complex one. The policy does not specify by name and/or the description covered property. Instead, Lynd was required to identify the property to be insured. This is natural enough since different properties within Lynd’s jurisdiction will come and go. It is somewhat unusual when comparing and contrasting a huge range of property policies for this to be the way of establishing coverage size or policy limits, though this methodology is not impossible, incoherent, irrational, imprudent, or anything of the sort. One sees it fairly routinely in open lot inventory and other inventory first-party policies.

In any case, whether the policy was some sort of blanket policy or some sort of scheduled limits policy was the major issue in this case. This issue might be called arcane; however, the reasoning and semantics leading to a correct decision were and are not. The difficulties in this judicial decision are mostly the fault of the policy.

Back to the case at hand. There is an endorsement to the policy prescribing procedures for Lynd to put the property on the covered list. That endorsement is named “Scheduled Limit of Liability,” (SLL) and the list for covered properties are named “Statement of Values.” (SV) That statement set forth what Lynd or the actual property owners assigned as money values, and it did this in three separate categories: replacement value, the value of building contents, and the value of rental income for the specified property for one year.

The policy specified how premiums would be calculated. The formula began with the values assigned in the “Statement of Values.” One then moved to the “Reporting Endorsement.” It specified that the premium rate would be a fraction of each $100 value; that fraction was $0.025 of the reported value.

The policy required quarterly updates, and Lynd complied with these requirements. It added several newly acquired properties by means of endorsements. Something peculiar about the policy, it seems to me, is that it provided that the policy would only cover losses “at the locations listed on the latest Statement of Values” and only if “a value is shown for [the] scheduled item.” It seems to me that one of the peculiarities of the contract is that it only requires that some value or other be listed on the latest SV; it does not require that it be accurate not even “more or less.”

The principal issue, in this case, was how to calculate how much RSUI owed on the loss Rita inflicted loss. This calculation was itself both unusual and complicated, and it was the methodology for it that was the principal issue in the case. This controversy was not a mere matter of disagreement about arithmetic. It was an issue as to what the contract of insurance required. The calculation in question, insofar as it was relevant to this case, hinged on whether the policy was a scheduled limits policy or a blanket policy

The parties agreed that Rita was a single “occurrence” that this single occurrence caused all the damages and that Lynd’s total loss after Westchester paid its limits was $24.5M. The use of the term “occurrence” is also an oddity in the policy, as I explained in Part I this blog entry was published on 12/8/20. Here, the court and apparently the parties utilized the “standard” meaning of “occurrence” which is inconsistent with the way that term is defined and used in the policy.

In any case, Lynd made a claim for $4.5M over Westchester’s $20M. RSUI refused to pay it and offered only $750,000. Its reasoning was based on a reading of the policy which was the heart of the dispute, and RSUI’s approach will be explained presently. It hinges on the idea of ambiguity in contracts and especially contracts of insurance, something also explained in an earlier post (“Interpreting Insurance Policies, (12/7/20) which was intended to be a preface to this post.)

RSUI has acted on its interpretation of the policy, to wit: it has refused to pay a whole claim based upon its reading. Lynd claims that this is an error and provided a different interpretation of the language of the policy. The court has to pick one of them if it determines that the policy language is genuinely ambiguous. And it must adopt the interpretation of the insured if it is reasonable.

The “Scheduled Limit of Liability Endorsement” is crucial to the court’s reasoning that Paragraph 1 must be spelled out at some length. It sets forth how the liability of RSUI is limited; it is to the least of three (3) alternatives for each “occurrence”:“the actual adjusted amount of the loss, less applicable deductibles, and primary. . . limits; “115% of the individually stated value for each scheduled item of the property insured at the location which had the loss as shown in the latest Statement of Values in file with [RSUI], less applicable deductibles and primary. . . limits; “the Limit of Liability as shown on the Declarations Page of this policy. . . .”

In some sense, the case is really about 1b, as Justice Hecht noted in his dissenting opinion. The majority opinion holds that the language of 1b cannot be treated just by itself but must be considered the light of the rest of the wording to be found elsewhere in the policy. The dissenting opinion rejects this move because ends up with what–surely from the insurer’s point of view is an unrealistic and counter-intuitive result. For this reason, if no other, the language of 1b must not be taken by itself as to the relevant issues.—MSQ

RSUI and Lynd disagreed, said the court, “on how to compare and apply the three alternative limits when one occurrence causes losses at multiple locations.” RSUI determined what it thought least of them, namely 1.b, and applied it. However, observed Justice Boyd for the majority, RSUI applied it multiple times, once for each of the coverage items at each of the damaged locations.

So, this is what the case is about, and to some degree, it hinges on whether the policy is a scheduled limits policy covering multiple buildings or a blanket policy, also covering several buildings. To get a full grasp, it is necessary to look at an assortment of different things: the contract, more facts, the law as applied, and more, plus the dissenting opinion.

It is worth knowing a little bit about the history of the case: the trial court had decided the case in RSUI’s favor, but the court of appeals had decided in favor of Lynd. In the end, the Supreme Court affirmed the Court of Appeals and decided it in favor of Lynd.

Another important feature of this case, which has already been mentioned in Part I is the “Ambiguity Rule” as to the proper interpretation of insurance contract language applies. That rule is this: if a court finds a term to be actually or genuinely ambiguous, as opposed to a word with respect to which there is a disagreement between opposing parties, the court must find use the interpretation of the party that did not draft the contract even if its interpretation is the less reasonable.

This doctrine applies with special force to insurance policies. This proposition is probably never actually said explicitly by courts, but it is true for two reasons. First, the insurer is the draftsman of the contract of insurance in all but very unusual cases. Second, there is a “special relationship” between insurance companies and their insureds making many courts inclined toward protecting the interests of the policyholder.

The language of the endorsement is crucial. The court’s discussion is divided up into several sections, so that organization shall be followed:

A. The Language of the EndorsementThis case is mainly about the endorsement in the policy that is named “Scheduled Limit of Liability.” The language of it is therefore central, though not completely decisive. The court examines several components of that language.

1. “The Title”The first major section is entitled “A. The Language of the Endorsement[.]” It has several subsections. The majority of the court, i.e., the court, “conclude[d] that the endorsement reasonably can be read to support either party’s proposed construction and is therefore ambiguous.”

The title of the endorsement is “Scheduled Limits of Liability. (The emphasis is that of the court.) The term “Scheduled” is not defined in the policy, but RSUI argues that its meaning is “widely accepted within the insurance industry that a ‘scheduled’ policy provides ‘scheduled coverage’ meaning coverage is limited on an item-by-item basis. RSUI argued, said the court, that “scheduled” necessarily limits coverage on an item-by-item basis.

The phrase widely accepted within the insurance industry is a key focus of the arguments in this opinion and the dissenting opinion. The use of the methodology expressed in the phrase changed dramatically the traditional method of contract interpretation. —MSQ

The court’s reaction to this argument includes the following: “When construing undefined contractual terms, courts may consider the terms’ commonly accepted meaning within relevant industries. Those meanings are not necessarily determinative, however, and may not apply when the language and its context demonstrate that the parties intended a different meaning.” And the parties certainly disagreed in this case.

The court indicates that titles, like any other portion of a contract, are relevant to determining to mean; “headings and titles provide context and can inform the meaning of the sections they label. [Citations omitted.] Generally speaking, courts should construe contractual provisions in a manner consistent with the labels the parties have given them.”

Hence, while RSUI’s view that the title provides some support for RSUI’s view of “limited on an item-by-item basis” that is not the whole story. “‘[A]lthough “‘courts may consider the title of a contract provision or section to interpret a contract, ‘the greater weight must be given to the operative contractual clauses of the agreement.’ Thus, titles and headings are not determinative, and when they are inconsistent with the plain meaning of the provision’s operative language, [courts shall] afford greater weight to the operative language.”

Shouldn’t testimony be required as to this matter? To be sure, the long-established view in the legal profession is that courts interpret language, but the question under discussion isn’t like that. It is about the empirical fact as to whether specified word choices are used in a given industry. This is an empirical fact as to which testimony is relevant. “Yes, we do use that phrase in our industry, and here’s how we do it.” If someone contradicts that view–(1) “No we don’t use it,” or (2) “Yes, we do use that phrase in our industry, but not that way.”–then the judicial inquiry and analysis begin there.]—MSQ

2. The Cautionary LanguageThe cautionary language appears twice in the endorsement, immediately above the title and immediately below it. Here is the language: “This Endorsement changes The Policy. Please Read It Carefully,” and “This endorsement modifies insurance provided under. . . ALL COVERAGE PARTS.”

According to the Court, the cautionary language is relevant, but not in a way to affect this case. The RSUI excess policy is a “follow form” policy the parties agree to this. This means that the policy is “generally subject to the terms and conditions of Westchester’s primary policy except were RSUI’s policy expressly modifies those terms.”

The Westchester policy was not a “scheduled” policy; the parties agree about this. The cautionary language and the wording of the title make it clear that the RSUI-Lynd policy is a “scheduled” policy and so is different from the Westchester policy. Thus, the cautionary language makes it clear that this policy is not, in fact, a “follow-form policy,” even though relevant people might have called it that, and even though the phrase “follow-form policy” might have occurred elsewhere in the policy, and/or relevant documents. Thus, the endorsement changed the policy. The parties agreed on all this.

But said the court, the real question is how the endorsement changed the policy. The fact that there was some change does not solve or even address the crucial issue in this case. The methods of determining policy limits are different, but that difference does not resolve the question as to how they differ.

3. Paragraph 1’s Introductory StatementThe opening sentence of the endorsement three different alternative possible coverage limits “‘in the event of [a covered] loss.'” Which of the three alternatives is used in a given case will depend on the one which most substantially limits the exposure of the insurer, Elsewhere in the policy, the term “loss” is defined; it means “a loss or series of losses arising out of one event or occurrence.”

I believe that the entire case collapses at least in part because of this definitional malpractice.]The definitions in the next paragraph are just as bad, although perhaps less catastrophic.]—MSQ

The policy specifies that policy contains three alternative methods of specifying policy limits “‘in anyone ‘occurrence.'” The policy defines the term “‘occurrence'” to “‘mean any one loss, disaster, casualty or series of losses, disasters, or casualties, arising out of one event.'” The language goes this way: “when the occurrence is a hurricane or other significant peril, one event” includes ‘all losses arising during a 72-hour period.’ [Court’s emphasis.]

Thus [said the court], at least for the purposes of a significant peril, the policy defines the word ‘occurrence’ essentially the same way it defines the word ‘loss’: an “occurrence” is one hurricane taken as a whole, including causes of it, and any or losses arising within it. Most importantly to interpret this policy the notion of a series of losses is incorporated into the single term “loss” or the term “one loss” both individual losses and series of losses.

In any case, there are three possible ways to calculate policy limits.

Part 1a LimitThe first one”Part 1a’s Limit” in the relevant endorsement is this: “[t]he actual adjusted amount of the loss, less applicable deductibles, less applicable deductibles, and primary and underlying excess limits.”

RSUI took the term “loss” to be singular–after all, the word itself was singular and not plural. In contrast, Lynd understood the word to be plural reaching a series of losses and well as each separate individual loss, since that’s the way the definition worked. So, said the court, the term was consistent with the views of both parties. This fact rendered the term ambiguous, something in favor of the insured.

Not that it makes any real difference in the end, but this reasoning of the court is dead wrong. It is not ambiguous. It is just as Lynn interpreted it. In this policy the term “loss” did not have an ordinary usage meaning; it had only a technically defined meaning, and this was not ambiguous. The term “loss” was defined so that it includes losses. This fact is a consequence of simple semantics. If the district court had recognized this obvious fact, thousands of thousands of dollars in legal fees might have been avoided.—MSQ

Part 1b LimitThe second of the three possible criteria specified in the policy the carrier might use to determine limits on the payable amount of the insured’s claim, i.e., determine its policy limits is this: “115% of the individually stated value for each scheduled item of the property insured at the location which has the loss as shown in the latest Statement of Values…, less applicable deductible and primary and underlying excess limits.”

Lynd attempted to aggregate locations by suggesting that in the context of this case the word “individual” should be understood as all of the locations taken together. The court rejects this view. It also noted that “each” scheduled item could not be used to group different items together. “Each” means each; it does not mean “all”; it does not mean “taking-them-together.”

The opinion points out that this criterion does not rest on the amount of the “loss” but the amount of the “stated value” at the location that “had the loss.” In part, because of the “the” before the word “location,” neither losses nor location gets aggregated. The phrase “the location” in this context does not mean all locations.

So, Boyd’s opinion states that so far the correct reading of “Part 1b Limit” supports RSUI’s interpretation, the same as Justice Hecht points out in his dissenting opinion. But that is not the whole story, says Justice Boyd, something Justice Hecht rejects. To do more, one must examine the required subtraction of “applicable deductibles and primary and underlying excess limits.”

RSUI then applies the $25,000 deductible to each of the individual items in its item-by-item counting process. This requires that the $25k number be applied again and again. But deductibles are determined based on the occurrence, and the term “occurrence” is defined in terms of interconnected series of losses unless there is just one individual loss included within the occurrence. The trouble is that each occurrence is conceptually linked to a series of losses.

There is a presumption in legal interpretation, however, to the effect that if a word in a contract means x in one place it is presumed to mean the same thing in another. The opinion calls this “a natural presumption.” Atl. Cleaners & Dyers v. United States, 286 U.S. 427, 433 (1932). This presumption is not “rigid,” however, so it is not conclusive; sometimes a word can mean x in one place of the contract but y in another where x and y are not both be true. If the opposite of the “natural presumption” is true here, then RSUI’s position would not be undermined; otherwise, it is.

Another way to save RSUI’s approach is to apply the deductibles on a “pro-rata” basis, but nothing like that is suggested in the policy’s language, so this approach won’t work. Apparently, this is one of the points with respect to which there is the most intense disagreement between Justice Boyd and Justice Hecht.

Consequently, although Lynd’s view does not conform to the language of Part 1b Limit, its overall view is more consistent with the basic ideas of the policy.

The Part 1c LimitThe court interpreted this limit but rejected its applicability to this case, so it need not be considered here.

B. Is Lynd’s Proposed Construction ReasonableA word or phrase is ambiguous in a contract (or other text) if and only if each proposed interpretation is reasonable. The court virtually starts from the position that RSUI’s interpretation is reasonable. The issue of ambiguity, therefore, is determined whether Lynd’s interpretation is also reasonable. Justice Boyd concludes that it is.

RSUI argues that there is a commonly accepted meaning in the insurance industry as to the meaning of “scheduled” so that the meaning of the phrase “Scheduled Limit of Liability” is clear and undeniable.

Lynd rejects this view. It argues that there are two different recognized types of insurance policies having this general function to be found in the insurance industry. One of them to be sure is the “scheduled” coverage type, while the other type is “blanket” coverage policies.

RSUI more or less admits this but distinguishes them sharply. According to it, one of them insures all buildings (entities) together for various occurrences, while the other insures several buildings (entities) in one policy, but insures them separately or individually. The “specific” type provides different, separate coverage limits while the blanket policy provides one limit. The latter types aggregate the insured buildings as to coverage; the former does not but treat them separately.

The fact that two entities are insured in the same policy and aggregated together in that way does not entail that their coverage and therefore limits are aggregated. Those who have auto coverage as to two or more cars insured under the same policy, for example, a family policy, all know this. Such people know that even if both vehicles are damaged or destroyed in the same accident, each insured auto has its own policy limits.—MSQ

However, said Justice Boyd, a court cannot start with the proposition if of one of these sorts and then apply limits. A court must first look at the policy language and draw inferences as to which type a given policy is. Not even a given title will make this choice certain. [Quinn’s Meta-Comment: One might keep in mind that there is such a thing as “fraud by title,” although this phrase is my invention.]

On this matter, RSUI is correct, and Lynd admits. The question is not what kinds of policies exist, but what kind of policy this one is. Of course, it is true that scheduled policies are a popular way of insuring several buildings at once. But it is the language of the policy which determines what kind of policy the contract is.

This very important observation indeed, a pillar of contract interpretation sets up the remainder of the logic of the majority argument.

The court’s argument works this way. The opinion lists all the considerations RSUI gives in support of its position and rejects each of them as determinative. Since Lynd’s position is reasonable, irrespective of whose is the more reasonable, the terms of the policy are ambiguous. Hence, if RSUI’s various premises individually or together do not entail its position, Lynd prevails. So, the rest of the opinion is spent considering RSUI’s various positions, i.e., premises.Multiple Properties and Multiple Locations: RSUI’s policy is a follow-form policy, it says, but the primary policy is a blanket policy. These multiples prove nothing.

Required List of Properties and Values: The presence of such lists does not prove that a contract is a schedule policy. The list may be there for other reasons, e.g., to set premiums. Several courts around the country have agreed with this.Reliance on Values to Determine Risk and Premium: RSUI averaged the premium amounts for various different items to determine the premium. This fact is usually associated with the [“]blanketness[“] of a policy.

Various courts have disagreed about precisely (or close to) the issues before the court in this case, and their decisions are mixed. Therefore, this court need not be influenced by established patterns of court decisions.

Conclusion of MajorityThe court held “that the Scheduled Limit of Liability endorsement, in this case, is reasonably subject to both parties’ constructions and that the endorsement is therefore ambiguous. Because our rules require us to construe an insurance policy’s ambiguous coverage in favor of coverage for the insured, we affirm the court of appeals’ judgment adopting Lynd’s proposed construction.”

Miscellany

Adjustment (aka claims handling) problems are barely mentioned in this opinion, although it is clear that they were central to the claim, its processing, and the ultimate dispute. The reason that claims handling is important in this case is that it involved understanding the “accounting” aspects of the claim, what the policy permitted and demanded, the investigation to Lynd’s own accounting, and it involved understanding how insurance law worked as applied to the limits found in the policy. It is common that adjusters are required to understand the applicable law. The demand here, however, was extraordinary is what it demanded.  This was an amazingly difficult case, and so it would have been for the adjusters. Who thought that adjustment was an easy profession?

The dissenting opinion to which we now turn said as little about the adjustment problems inherent in the case as did the opinion of the court.

Dissenting OpinionJustice Hecht wrote a short dissenting opinion. I, and many other lawyers, have immense respect for Justice Hecht, but in this case, a number of lawyers have been harshly critical of his opinion, particularly as to tone. I have no view about this; I do not regard it as my place.

However, I find myself in agreement with the majority opinion on several grounds.

First, it is a fundamental rule of contract interpretation that the language of the contract is to be analyzed taken as a whole. Thus, without an explicit definition, a term may not be used in different senses without there is ambiguity. Meaning consistency and uniformity is fundamental provision of contract interpretation. If this makes the contract economically or prudentially unreasonable, so be it; at least the drafting party was in charge.

Second, Justice Hecht is critical of the majority opinion for an overly detailed analysis of language. He criticized justices in the majority for relying on their judicial intuitions as to semantics. Well, as a matter of law, that is how language in such documents as contracts are supposed to be understood. This is a strong and deep tradition. Also, it is a good thing to remember that this insurance policy was a mess, so linguistics and semantics were very important. [I myself have doubts about this tradition since it lets what is really an empirically based decision, “How do most reasonable people think about the meaning of this word with another empirically based answer “Is my intuition about how reasonable people think about the meaning of this word Arguably, all empirical factual matters are to go the trier of fact, not into the semantic mind of the judge. My doubts are not an issue here, obviously.]

Third, Justice Hecht uses the term reasonable in two different senses. He seems to say that an interpretation is unreasonable if it ends up interpreting a contract document in a way that a reasonable party would not adopt upon reflection, e.g. because it is (or leads to) a financial disaster for it.

Fourth, Justice Hecht seems to think that if both parties have similar and reasonable but somehow differing analyses of the unambiguous terms of a contract, then the disagreement must be resolved in favor of the insurer, at least in surplus lines markets. Of course, he would no doubt agree, the opposite is true if the relevant terms are genuinely and actually ambiguous, then the ambiguity must be resolved in favor of the insured, even if the insurers’ account is the more plausible. [Of course, he would say, what counts as a genuine and actual ambiguity depends upon widely accepted usage in a relevant market, which is semantically stable.]

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ON OVER-DOING THINGS

  WRITING AND SPEAKING FOR LAWYERSMichael Sean Quinn, Ph.D., J.D., Etc.My grandmother, Ruth Probert, was a witty woman, an excellent ironist, and a person of considerable wisdom. I didn’t pay nearly as much attention to her personally during her long life or in my memory for long periods, as I’m now certain I should have. Some years ago, after I sustained something some doctors described as serious trauma, my defective ways became clear to me.  On at least one occasion, when I was very young, my grandmother said something to me the substance of which I have never forgotten. I had her repeat it at least several times., then it became abstract in my mind for a long time. At first, at least, I didn’t really understand the truth, importance, and wisdom of what she said, but I loved the rhythm. I was a talkative kid and became rather argumentative, big-mouthed, and loud, according to school administrators and teachers who made my life miserable from 6 to 16. It seems to me that I spent much of my early school years standing facing a corner either in the classroom or in the hallway. (Is it any wonder I hated school and the wretched teachers and administrators who ruin year after year of it?) In any case, here is what my grandmother said to me: Once you have said what you intend to say simply and once, stop, since, in all probability, what you have already said constitutes a sufficiency of muchness, or more, so any further discourse on the subject there and then would probably be a copious redundancy. Maybe, over all these years, I am not remembering the wording exactly. Surely, what she said to me as a little kid would have been much simpler. Still, I know I realized both the substance and the irony of the maxim well before I could write it out or even repeat it correctly.  I call it the “Ruth Principle.” The aphorism has applied and applies to me with special force. I have been a teacher, a professor, a lecturer, a speaker in various contexts, a court advocate, and an author of many, many arguments. Often, I have believed that I had to spell my ideas out in great detail. After all, I said to myself, “Often what I was saying is true, important, and complicated. I am conveying information on important subjects, and the audience needed to hear it.” Some people think that I have been guilty of a similar violation of the “Ruth Principle,” not only as to what I have said but also to what I have written.    During all my adult life, I have always rejected fallacious arguments and one fallacy is the based-on-personal-authority, where the person does not have the needed experience or reliability to assert the proposition s/he is trying to prove. In my view, there is a sense in which each argument (or cluster of them) together with its set of premises must stand on its own and this must be done so that if someone reads, listens, reviews (if needed), and understands it and its premises, s/he would embrace the conclusion–or reject it– for good reasons and–hopefully–only for them.   “I believe p, so you must accept it too,” is almost always a fallacy; and “I believe that p & q entail(s) r, so you must too, if you are not an epistemic dolt.”  For rhetorical purposes, I have often called this the “I fallacy.”In my imagination, I have heard my grand grandmother groaning over and over again. I can still hear it. How, when, and where have I been wrong in ignoring the Ruth Principle? I cannot count the ways. I wonder if there are not others who fall into the pit Ruth identified, described, and discouraged. Here’s an easy opening exercise for self-education and reform. Go over my formulation of the Ruth Principle, then determine where and how many times this discourse goes wrong by violating that very Principle. In addition, look at the immediately preceding sentence and find at least one violation right there.  For fun, see Barach Obama, A Promised Land 83 (2020).  

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RSUI Indemnity Company–A Very Complex Excess Property Policy–Texas Style (Part I)

MOST DIFFICULT TO UNDERSTAND INSURANCE DECISION EVER WRITTEN, MAYBE, THOUGH WORTH THE READ, PERHAPS:FIRST-PARTY PROPERTY EXCESS POLICY:RSUI INDEMNITY CO. v. THE LYND COMPANY (Texas Supreme Court 13-0080 2015) PART IMichael Sean Quinn, PhD., J.D. Etc. The contract of insurance at issue, in this case, was a first-party excess property policy covering 100 apartment buildings. The policy was over Westchester First Insurance Company’s primary policy which had coverage for the first $20M per occurrence. RSUI covered the same buildings with $450M for each occurrence. The insured’s loss arose out of Hurricane Rita which hit the Gulf Coast in September 2005. The Lynd Company managed many properties and of them, 13 reportedly sustained damage in or from this storm. The main issues in the case surrounded how much RSUI owed under its policy given the nature of the policies and the contract prescription for how to compute amounts owed.Before proceeding to these matters, however, let’s take a look at two crucial elements of the policy and then look at its applications. The reader might wish to remember that the principal principles of insurance contract interpretation were set forth and discussed in a previous posted. See Quinn, “Interpreting Insurance Policies: Texas Law of Contract Semantics” (December 4, 2020).“Occurrence“One of the most important things about this insurance policy is the way the term “occurrence” was defined. Instead of being defined in terms of the causal or result producing event(s), it was defined as “any one loss, disaster or series of losses from any one loss, disasters, causality, arising from one event.”  A variety of perils to which the term “occurrence” applies; they include “tornado cyclone, hurricane, windstorm, hail, flood, earthquake, volcanic eruption, riot, riot attending a strike, civil commotion and vandalism and malicious mischief, [where] one event shall be construed to be all losses arising during a continuous period of 72 hours.”“When filing a proof of loss[,] the insured may elect the moment at which the 72 hour period shall be deemed to have commenced, which shall not be earlier than the first loss to occur at any covered location. “ [Quinn Comment: As the reader will notice, the context, vocabulary and definitions are to some degree unusual from the standpoint of historically standard verbal usage, and this “deviation from nomenclature norm” is part of the problem with understanding the policy, the case, and this opinion. most significantly, the term “occurrence” in ordinary, standard American “insurance English” usually–almost always–refers to the cause of the loss, sort of, or part thereof. (Better put, “occurrence” is the word naming a category for the sort of event out of which a loss might arise or from which it might result. Sometimes the term “accident”–or some word like it–has been part of the definition of “occurrence.” Sometimes the word “unexpected” has played a role. In this RSUI policy the term “occurrence” refers to a loss and the term “loss,” also includes a series of connected losses. In some sense, this usage is not only unusual, from the standpoint of what has been quite usual, but it is also the opposite of how many see the term as normally used. Another way to put the same point might be to say that “occurrence” has usually been–during relatively recent coverage history–a synonym for a “peril” that happened (ie., ‘occurred’), while the term “loss” stood on its own (some injury to a building, e.g., windows), even if it included more than simple individual losses (roof, windows, carpets, foundation, etc.) but also included complex, multi-dimensional losses (e.g., building destruction and lost revenue) and even included series of individual but related losses (two buildings and some of the contents of each).What has happened here is that the policy groups together too many different concepts. One way to put this point is to observe that the policy uses the word “disaster” to cover both the loss and that which lead to–or caused–the loss. Of course, in ordinary English, it makes perfect sense to refer to the whole event or series of events as a disaster, and even as a single event. That is a bad idea for an insurance contract, however, where what was cause and what was effect are conceptually different].Policy TypologyInsurance policies of a given category fall into many different subtypes. In fact, the idea of subtypes is itself complex. Here we have a property policy, which is an excess policy, and then we have an excess policy that insures more than one building. Within that sub-category, there are more. Some policies are “blanket” policies, and some are not. Often non-blanket policies are called “specific” or “scheduled” policies. This typology pertains to how limits and sub-limits on the insurer’s liability for losses are to be conceived. Blanket policies have one aggregate limit, while scheduled policies have a series or concatenation of individual limits. More or less, “blanket” policies add up the covered values on all the buildings covered and think of that as policy limits. In a “scheduled” policy, one might say that each building has separate coverage, and policy limits are specified item by item, that is, building by building. In this case the insurer and the insured disputed which subtype this one was. The insurer side “scheduled,” while the insured said “blanket.” Interestingly, in the end, the courts took itself to be governed by contract language and not the widely used insurance industry (or, world-of-insurance-markets) frameworks. At the same time, remember that there was a dissent.  

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LEGAL ETHICS Ethical Limits on Crusading Litigation

LEGAL ETHICSEthical Limits on Crusading Litigation Michael Sean Quinn, Ph.D., J.D. Etc.  We know that there is something wrong with a lawyer filing a lawsuit s/he knows is destined to fail. One cannot ethically file lawsuits exclusively or principally for publicity purposes, simply to teach yourself a part of the law, or to raise money.  For now, reader, think election law and/or constitutional law as applied to elections. This seems obvious when nearly 60 similar lawsuits have already been lost to some extent, including appellate versions, and lost to one degree of judicial opinion or another. One good place to look for the “governing ethical rules,” “fundamental ethical principles,” or “foundational guidelines” in Texas of legal ethics to be found in the “Lawyer’s Creed”–an often ignored, overlooked, or underestimated source. Even so-called “Warriors for Righteousness” face ethical, as well as legal limits.  That may be particularly true in the aftermath of the defeat of President Trump in 2020, not to mention the crusade against Dominion and its softward. mquinn@msqlaw.com(512) 656-0503

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INTERPRETING INSURANCE POLICIES: TEXAS LAW OF CONTRACT SEMANTICS

TEXAS LAW OF PROPER INSURANCE POLICY INTERPRETATION:PRINCIPLES, RULES, APHORISMS, & MAXIMSMichael Sean Quinn, Ph.D., J.D., Etc.There are established legal principles as to how to interpret contracts and that almost always includes insurance policies–how could it not be since insurance policies are unquestionably a type of contract.  Whole books have been written on the general subject. In addition, coverage lawyers often find themselves rooting around looking for an applicable principle in this or that situation. For “ordinary” lawyers, the situation is often even more grueling. In 2015, the Texas Supreme Court issued an opinion in a very difficult case. RSUI Indemnity Company v. The Lynd Company, 13-0080 (May 8, 2015). The case was difficult for at least four reasons. First, the contract analyzed was a relatively rare sort and very complex in and of itself; second, the problem was (and remains) unusual; third, the language of the contract was defective in a variety of ways; fourth, it was a 6-3 opinion and the justices who wrote the opinions–did not appear, at any rate, to be restrainedly affable-though divided as to jurisprudence–a rarity for a Texas appellate court.I will discuss the actual case concretely in another blog-essay. Here I propose to set forth what the case says about the legally approved logic of the semantics of contract interpretation. Much of what a reader will find here are quotes–or near quotes–from the opinions in RSUI; most of them will come from the lengthy majority opinion, with some from the quite short dissenting opinion.  [QC. What the majority opinion states and quotes is a broad and helpful compilation of the relevant semantical principles.I shall paraphrase a few principles enunciated with particularity as applicable to this set of facts. I will formulate them in general ways; these generalized versions are themselves established rules of interpretation.  When I comment, it will be in brackets and begin “QC” standing for “Quinn’s Comments.” The same applies to slight changes, e.g., changing the phrase “insurance policy” to “contract.” Thus, this very paragraph should have begun with “[QC.” and closed with “]”.The opinion I am using is frequently based what it says on older opinions and cite them explicitly. For the sake of simplicity, I am leaving out the citations and most of the “internal” quotes.  The reader who is looking for authority, as well as exposition, can do it quickly]. PRINCIPLES OF INTERPRETATION The following are taken from the RSUI Indemnity case’s majority opinion written by the 6 justices. “An insurance policy is a contract, generally governed by the same rules of construction as all other contracts. When construing a contract, our primary concern is to ascertain the intentions of the parties as expressed in the document. Unless the [contract or] policy dictates otherwise, we give words and phrases their ordinary and generally accepted meaning, reading them in context and in light of the rules of grammar and common usage. We strive to give effect to all of the words and provisions so that none is rendered meaningless. ‘No one phrase, sentence, or section {of a contract} should be isolated from its setting and considered apart from the other provisions.’[QC. The bracket sign {} in the last sentence of the quote are those of the majority opinion. The principle in the last sentence implies that a contract, including an insurance policy, should be interpreted as a whole, with the language of various parts fitting together and being interpreted jointly. But what is one to do if two parts are unquestionably inconsistent? One can imagine this happening, and the parties together admitting that it’s true.]“When interpreting an insurance policy, we are mindful of other courts’ interpretations of policy language that is identical or very similar to the policy language at issue. ‘Courts usually strive for uniformity in construing insurance provisions, especially where. . . the contract provisions are identical across the jurisdictions. (‘We have repeatedly stressed the importance of uniformity ‘when identical insurance provisions will necessarily be interpreted in various jurisdictions.’)” [QC: The parentheses are those of the majority opinion; the language quoted within them is from the case quoted].“[In insurance policies, for sure, and other contracts often:] If only one party’s construction is reasonable, the policy is unambiguous, and we will adopt that party’s construction. But if both constructions present reasonable interpretations of the policy’s language, we must conclude that the policy is ambiguous. In that event, ‘we must resolve the uncertainty by adopting the construction that most favors the insured,’ and because we are construing a limitation on coverage, we must do so, ‘even if the construction urged by the insurer appears to be the more reasonable or a more accurate reflection of the parties’ intent.’ ‘This widely followed rule is an outgrowth of the general principle that uncertain contractual language is construed against the party selecting that language,’ and is ‘justified by the special relationship between insurers and insured arising from the parties’ unequal bargaining power.” [QC. The paradigm here results from two factors. First, contracts of insurance are usually standardized, and the insurer is in much more control than the insured. Second, the “special relationship” is crucial to interpreting insurance policies. Not all standardized contracts are treated the same.]“In contract law, the terms ‘ambiguous’ and ‘ambiguity’ have a more specific meaning that merely denoting a lack of clarity in language. ‘An ambiguity does not arise simply because the parties offer conflicting interpretations.’ Instead, ‘a contract is ambiguous only when the application of pertinent rules of interpretation to the face of the instrument leaves it genuinely uncertain which one of two or more meanings is the proper meaning.’ Thus, a contract is ambiguous only if, after applying the rules of construction, it remains ‘subject to two or more reasonable interpretations.'” [QC. The emphasis is mine, not the opinion’s.]“Nor does the law deem a contract provision ambiguous merely because both parties can point to words or phrases, that read in isolation, favor different constructions of the contract or because both parties can identify language that, through the lens of hindsight, could have been more clearly stated. Few contracts could withstand that scrutiny. ‘An ambiguity does not arise simply because the parties offer conflicting interpretations.’ To be ambiguous, both interpretations must be a reasonable interpretation of the words chosen by the parties when read in the context of the policy taken as a whole.”[QC: Notice that the language of the court is “only when” and “only if.” This is potentially very important. Neither, “only when” or “only if” constitute “when” or “if.” This means what the court is saying is that language can possibly remain unclear and something other than ambiguous, even after all the pertinent rules of construction has been applied. The phrases “only when” and “only if” state necessary conditions only and not sufficient conditions.  I have never seen this distinction applied, and contract lawyers including coverage counsel do not think of the logic of this semantic principle working this way. The majority opinion, however, is quite clear on this point.” Virtually all competent lawyers know the difference between necessary and sufficient conditions].     

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In different situations, even propositions which appear undeniable may not be true in all situations.~Michael Sean Quinn, PhD, JD, CPCU, Etc.Tweet

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