SIDNEY A. FITZWATER, Chief Judge.
Defendants' motion to dismiss requires the court to interpret and apply the Texas Supreme Court's decision in Phillips v. Bramlett, 288 S.W.3d 876 (Tex.2009) ("Phillips II"). Although Phillips II construed § 11.02(c) of the now-repealed Medical Liability and Insurance Improvement Act of 1977 ("MLIIA"), Tex.Rev.Civ. Stat. Ann. art. 4590i (repealed Sept. 1, 2003),
The court has recounted the background facts and procedural history of this litigation in Bramlett v. The Medical Protective Co., 2010 WL 1491422, at *1 (N.D.Tex. Apr. 13, 2010) (Fitzwater, C.J.) ("Bramlett I"), and Bramlett v. The Medical Protective Co., 2011 WL 248849, at *1 (N.D.Tex. Jan.26, 2011) (Fitzwater, C.J.) ("Bramlett II"). It will therefore limit its discussion to what is pertinent to today's decision.
This is a removed state-court lawsuit arising in connection with a medical malpractice lawsuit (the "Underlying Suit") that plaintiffs
Defendant The Medical Protective Company of Fort Wayne, Indiana insured Dr. Phillips under a medical malpractice policy with limits of $200,000 (the "Policy"). The jury in the Underlying Suit returned a verdict in plaintiffs' favor, and the trial court entered judgment against Dr. Phillips for $9,196,364.50 in actual damages and $2,972,000 in punitive damages. Phillips v. Bramlett, 258 S.W.3d 158, 164 (Tex. App.2007) ("Phillips I"), rev'd, 288 S.W.3d 876 (Tex.2009). On appeal, the court of appeals affirmed in most respects. Id. at 183.
Dr. Phillips petitioned the Supreme Court of Texas for review. See Phillips II, 288 S.W.3d at 878. He argued, inter alia, that the court of appeals erred in not limiting his liability based on the MLIIA. See id. The Texas Supreme Court granted review and held that the court of appeals erred in not limiting Dr. Phillips' liability under the Physician Liability Cap of the MLIIA. The court reversed and remanded the case to the trial court to cap Dr. Phillips' liability and render judgment. Id. at 883. In doing so, it "reserv[ed] for another case any suit against the insurer under section 11.02(c)'s Stowers exception." Id. at 882.
In 2009 plaintiffs filed such a lawsuit in Texas state court against The Medical Protective Company of Fort Wayne, Indiana, Medical Protective Insurance Services, Inc. d/b/a The Medical Protective Company of Fort Wayne, Indiana (collectively, "MedPro"), and two individuals. After MedPro removed the case to this court, plaintiffs' claims against MedPro were dismissed without prejudice. See Bramlett I, 2010 WL 1491422, at *1.
Plaintiffs subsequently filed the instant case in Texas state court against MedPro and Dr. Phillips,
Although MedPro moves to dismiss this action under Rule 12(b)(1) for lack of standing, the motion does not challenge whether this court has subject matter jurisdiction.
The question whether plaintiffs have a viable claim against MedPro under the MLIIA for excess liability — i.e., the difference between the capped MLIIA amount and the jury verdict
In Phillips II the Texas Supreme Court interpreted two provisions of the MLIIA. The first — the Physician Liability Cap — stated: "[i]n an action on a health care liability claim where final judgment is rendered against a physician or health care provider, the limit of civil liability for damages of the physician or health care provider shall be limited to an amount not to exceed $500,000." Tex.Rev.Civ. Stat. Ann. art. 4590i, § 11.02(a). The second — the "Stowers Exception" — created an exception to the cap: "[t]his section shall not limit the liability of any insurer where facts exist that would enable a party to invoke the common law theory of recovery commonly known in Texas as the `Stowers Doctrine.'" Id. § 11.02(c). The Phillips II court discussed the opinions of two Texas
In Welch v. McLean, 191 S.W.3d 147 (Tex.App.2005, no pet.), the Fort Worth Court of Appeals addressed a physician's contention that the trial court had improperly refused to apply the Physician Liability Cap to the damages award against him. Id. at 166. The trial court did not apply the cap because it found facts that enabled the plaintiffs to come under the Stowers Exception. Id. On appeal, the physician argued that the Stowers Exception "merely provides that his insurer's liability is not limited by the [Physician Liability Cap] if facts exist that would enable him to invoke the Stowers doctrine." Id. at 167 (emphasis added). The Welch court agreed that the Physician Liability Cap applied to the physician's liability and that the Stowers Exception applied only to insurers and did not affect the physician's right to limit his liability under the cap. Id. at 168. But the Welch court also limited a potential recovery under the Stowers Exception by a physician against his insurer to the difference between the Physician Liability Cap and the policy limits. In other words, the Welch court did not permit the physician to recover the difference between the Physician Liability Cap and the excess judgment. See id. at 171.
In Phillips I the Amarillo Court of Appeals disagreed with Welch's interpretation of the MLIIA. Dr. Phillips argued that the trial court had committed reversible error by failing to apply the Physician Liability Cap to him, which would have resulted in an approximately $8 million reduction in the judgment, and that the Welch court had properly interpreted the MLIIA in holding that the Stowers Exception did not abrogate the Physician Liability Cap. Phillips I, 258 S.W.3d at 176-78. The Phillips I court, however, construed the Stowers Exception to preclude any application of the Physician Liability Cap in a manner that would limit the liability of the insurer in a subsequent Stowers claim. Id. Thus Phillips I held that, before the trial court could enter a judgment in a medical malpractice action, it must determine whether there were facts that would enable a party to invoke the Stowers doctrine; if there were, the Stowers Exception eliminated the Physician Liability Cap as to the physician's liability where Stowers facts existed. Id. at 179.
In Phillips II the Texas Supreme Court disagreed in material respects with Welch and Phillips I. The court rejected Welch's view (which the four dissenting justices in Phillips II would have adopted) "that the Stowers exception to the cap was meant only to clarify the continued, but limited, application of the Stowers Doctrine to claims governed by article 4590i[,]" i.e., that the Stowers Exception to the Physician
The Phillips II court then interpreted § 11.02, concluding that its plain language made "unmistakable" at least two aspects of the Texas Legislature's intent. Id. First, the Legislature enacted § 11.02(a) "to cap the liability of a physician or other health care provider according to the statutory formula." Id. Second, the Legislature enacted § 11.02(c) so "that the cap [w]ould not benefit any insurer when Stowers facts exist." Id. at 880-81. The court also concluded that whether Stowers facts existed was to be determined based on the jury verdict rather than on the verdict as capped by § 11.02(a). Id. at 881 n. 6. Thus even if a traditional Stowers claim was not available because the insured's policy limits exceeded the Physician Liability Cap, Stowers facts could still exist. This was so because excess liability was determined by the jury verdict. If Stowers facts did exist, the Physician Liability Cap should only benefit the insured physician, not the insurer. The Texas Supreme Court's interpretation of § 11.02 in Phillips II did not embrace the reasoning of Welch or Phillips I. The Phillips II court disagreed with Welch "because it extends the cap's benefit to insurers without regard to whether Stowers facts exist." Id. at 881. And it disagreed with Phillips I because it did not cap the physician's liability when Stowers facts existed, even though § 11.02(a) required that the physician's liability always be capped. Id.
Phillips II then concluded that the Physician Liability Cap, while eliminating a conflict between the insured and the insurer for liability that exceeded the cap, did "nothing to encourage settlement. In fact, it may have the opposite effect in the most serious cases, that is, in cases where liability is reasonably certain to exceed the cap." Id. at 881-82. Concluding that the Texas Legislature was concerned about the effect the cap would have on an insurer's Stowers duty, the Phillips II court interpreted § 11.02(c) to "ameliorate[] that potential effect." Id. at 882.
To illustrate this point, the court analogized the case to American Centennial Insurance Co. v. Canal Insurance Co., 843 S.W.2d 480 (Tex.1992), "where the insured's purchase of an excess insurance policy operated like the cap here to potentially skew the primary insurer's duty to settle with reasonable care." Phillips II, 288 S.W.3d at 882. In Canal the insured had three insurance policies: a primary policy that provided coverage up to $100,000, an excess policy that provided coverage from $100,000 to $1 million, and an additional excess policy that provided coverage from $1 million to $4 million. Canal, 843 S.W.2d at 481. After the primary insurer and its counsel allegedly negligently mishandled the underlying claim, resulting in a settlement of $3.7 million, the two excess insurers sued the primary insurer to recover under Stowers. Id. The Texas Supreme Court addressed the question whether an excess insurer could recover against a primary insurer under Stowers. Id. It held that an excess insurer can "maintain an action against the primary liability insurer for its wrongful refusal
The Phillips II court then applied its interpretation of § 11.02 to hold that "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. In that other case, the Stowers Exception claim "may be shared by the insured physician and the injured third party because both will potentially have excess claims when the damages finding exceeds the cap." Id. But "[w]hen insurance coverage is above the cap ... the physician is fully protected, and only the injured third party has incentive to pursue the statutory Stowers exception." Id.
The parties to the present case agree that Phillips II interpreted § 11.02(c) as granting an injured third party a cause of action against an insurer where Stowers fact exist, i.e., where the insurer negligently fails to settle within policy limits in a suit governed by the MLIIA. See Phillips II, 288 S.W.3d at 882 ("[R]eserving for another case any suit against the insurer under section 11.02(c)'s Stowers exception.") (emphasis added). The parties disagree, however, about the nature of the claim. MedPro maintains that the claim, while statutory, functions as a common law equitable subrogation claim, meaning that plaintiffs "step into the shoes" of the insured physician to assert any rights he has against the insurer. If MedPro is correct, this would allow insurers to assert against the injured third parties the defenses that they could raise against the insured physician were he bringing the claim. See Canal, 843 S.W.2d at 483. Plaintiffs argue that Phillips II interpreted § 11.02(c) to grant to an injured third party (where Stowers facts exist) a direct cause of action against the insurer to recover the difference between the Physician Liability Cap and the jury verdict. In other words, they maintain that, where Stowers facts exist, injured third parties can recover from the insurer on a direct Stowers-type cause of action, even if the amount they seek exceeds the Physician Liability Cap, and even though the insured himself would not have a right to recover under Stowers because of his statutorily-capped liability.
This court is obligated to attempt as best it can to faithfully interpret a decision of the Texas Supreme Court — even one that, as here, is at times difficult to comprehend and that has perplexed four dissenting justices as to its reasoning and effect.
The Phillips II court rejected the position of the dissenting justices and Welch that the Texas Legislature enacted § 11.02(c) merely to clarify that the Physician Liability Cap did not alter the availability of a traditional Stowers action in those instances where it would otherwise have been available. If the views of the dissenting justices and Welch had prevailed, § 11.02(c) would only have mattered in "cases involving insurance policies falling below the cap." Phillips II, 288 S.W.3d at 880. But the majority in part determined the intent of the Texas Legislature from the fact that an insured physician would have had a traditional Stowers action for excess liability up to the Physician Liability Cap even had § 11.02(c) not been enacted. Id. Therefore, the Phillips II majority thought the dissenting justices and Welch had rendered § 11.02(c) "meaningless" by interpreting it to preserve what would have been the case even without § 11.02(c). Id. The Phillips II majority therefore concluded that, properly interpreted, § 11.02(c) must provide a cause of action that is greater than a traditional Stowers action for damages up to the statutory cap, and this cause of action must ensure "that the cap [does] not benefit [the] insurer when Stowers facts exist." Id. at 880-81.
The majority also reasoned that the Texas Legislature did not intend that the Physician Liability Cap benefit insurers when Stowers facts existed because, if the cap had that effect, it would in some instances remove the insurer's incentive to reasonably settle. Id. at 881-82.
Id. For example, if an insurer could benefit from the Physician Liability Cap, it would have little incentive to settle for an amount near the cap, even if the offer represented a reasonable settlement, because the most the physician (and thus the insurer) would have to pay in a subsequent traditional Stowers action would be cabined by the Physician Liability Cap. Thus, according to the majority, to maintain an insurer's incentive to reasonably settle, the Texas Legislature enacted § 11.02(c) to provide injured third parties a direct cause of action to recover the difference between the Physician Liability Cap and the jury verdict.
Under this interpretation, the Stowers Exception ensures that insurers will face excess liability if they fail to reasonably settle within policy limits, just as a traditional Stowers action did before the Physician Liability Cap was enacted. When insurance coverage is below the
MedPro argues that the Phillips II court analogized the Stowers Exception claim to the equitable subrogation claim in Canal because the court intended that the Stowers Exception claim function in the same manner as an equitable subrogation claim. See Phillips II, 288 S.W.3d at 882 ("[T]he 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."). The court disagrees with MedPro's position.
First, although the Phillips II court analogized to equitable subrogation, it did not explicitly state that the cause of action was an equitable subrogation claim. To be sure, the claim "puts the injured third party in the shoes of the insured," but it does so "to the extent the cap eliminates the insured's incentive to enforce the insurer's duty to settle with reasonable care." Id.
Third, the Phillips II court discussed the analogy to the equitable subrogation claim in Canal in the context of its concern
Because the court holds that, as interpreted in Phillips II, § 11.02(c) provides injured third parties a direct cause of action against insurers when facts exist that would allow a party to invoke the Stowers doctrine, and plaintiffs have adequately pleaded that such Stowers facts exist, the court denies MedPro's motion to dismiss plaintiffs' § 11.02(c) Stowers Exception claim.
In their amended complaint, plaintiffs assert that MedPro violated Tex. Ins.Code Ann. § 541.060(a)(2)(A) (West 2009), that it acted in bad faith and with gross negligence, and that it breached the policy. At oral argument, the court inquired of plaintiffs about the grounds for these claims. Although plaintiffs' counsel neither withdrew the claims nor conceded that they lack merit, he essentially acknowledged that plaintiffs are primarily pursuing the claim that the court has today declined to dismiss. Accordingly, based on the briefs and plaintiffs' counsel's position at argument, the court dismisses plaintiffs' claims for violation of § 541.060(a)(2)(A), bad faith and gross negligence, and breach of contract.
For the reasons explained, the court denies MedPro's motion to dismiss as to plaintiffs' Stowers Exception claim, and grants the motion to dismiss plaintiffs' claims for violation of § 541.060(a)(2)(A), bad faith and gross negligence, and breach of contract.
Texas law distinguishes between obiter dictum, which is a judicial statement made in passing, and judicial dictum, which is "articulated very deliberately after mature consideration." Elledge v. Friberg-Cooper Water Supply Corp., 240 S.W.3d 869, 870 (Tex.2007) (per curiam) (citations and internal quotation marks omitted). Lower courts need not follow obiter dictum. But judicial dictum "is at least persuasive and should be followed unless found to be erroneous." Palestine Contractors, Inc. v. Perkins, 386 S.W.2d 764, 773 (Tex.1965); see also Elledge, 240 S.W.3d at 870 (holding that although "not essential to the outcomes" of two previous cases, the court of appeals "should have[] followed" the Texas Supreme Court's statements in those cases).
The discussion of the Stowers Exception claim in Phillips II is judicial dictum because it was "articulated very deliberately after mature consideration." Elledge, 240 S.W.3d at 870. The discussion was integral to the court's reasoning and to its rejection of the interpretations of § 11.02 found in Welch and Phillips I. Moreover, the explanation of how the Stowers Exception claim would work (depending on whether the insurance policy was above or below the Physician Liability Cap) further demonstrates that the court gave its interpretation of the Stowers Exception claim the "mature consideration" necessary to classify it as judicial dictum. This court is therefore obligated to follow the Phillips II court's interpretation of § 11.02(c).