Justice WILLETT delivered the opinion of the Court.
This indemnity case concerns products-liability litigation in the residential construction industry. Specifically, we examine a synthetic stucco manufacturer's duty to indemnify a contractor under Chapter 82 of the Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code. Two threshold questions are paramount: (1) Is synthetic stucco a "product"? and (2) Is the contractor that installs it on a house a "seller"? We answer yes to both, meaning Chapter 82 applies. We also conclude that the manufacturer's statutory obligation to indemnify the contractor covers a settlement payment made by the contractor to the homebuilder where the contractor may have been independently obligated by contract to indemnify the homebuilder. We therefore affirm in part and reverse in part the court of appeals' judgment, and render judgment for Fresh Coat, Inc. in accord with the trial court's original judgment.
K-2, Inc. manufactures synthetic stucco components that are collectively referred to as EIFS, an acronym for exterior insulation and finishing system. Fresh Coat, Inc. contracted with a homebuilder, Life Forms, Inc., to install EIFS on the exterior walls of several homes that Life Forms was building. Fresh Coat purchased K-2's EIFS and installed it with the help of K-2's instructions and training.
Over 90 homeowners sued K-2, Life Forms, and Fresh Coat, alleging the EIFS allowed water penetration that in turn caused structural damage, termite problems, and mold. The plaintiffs alleged the
K-2, Life Forms, and Fresh Coat settled with the homeowners. Fresh Coat paid the homeowners just over $1 million. Fresh Coat also settled with Life Forms, paying $1.2 million to cover part of Life Forms' payment to the homeowners. The case proceeded to trial on various claims the defendants brought against each other. This appeal concerns claims Fresh Coat asserted against K-2. Fresh Coat sought indemnity from K-2 for its settlements with the homeowners and Life Forms, as well as $726,642 in attorney fees. The claims were tried to a jury, and Fresh Coat received a judgment for all the damages requested.
The court of appeals affirmed the trial court's judgment except with regard to the settlement payment Fresh Coat made to Life Forms.
K-2 and Fresh Coat each filed petitions in this Court. K-2 argues that the court of appeals erred in awarding Fresh Coat indemnification for the homeowners' settlement because under Chapter 82 EIFS is not a product, and Fresh Coat is not a seller.
Chapter 82 governs a manufacturer's indemnity obligations arising from a "products liability action." Section 82.002(a) states:
Section 82.002(a) applies to losses arising from a products-liability action, which Section 82.001(2) defines as
K-2 argues that EIFS was not a "defective product" for purposes of Chapter 82. K-2 claims the "product" was the finished EIFS wall of the home, if not the home, while Fresh Coat argues that Life Forms purchased EIFS components plus the services required for its installation, and that the synthetic stucco system is the product. K-2 does not dispute that EIFS is a product as it was sold by K-2; rather K-2 claims that, after the EIFS components were purchased by Fresh Coat, they were not resold as products.
Under K-2's definition of product, products that become part of homes cannot be the subject of indemnity claims by homebuilders and their contractors if those homebuilders and contractors are sued by homeowners. Instead, K-2 claims that products placed into the stream of commerce are not products once they become integrated into a house, which is real property, even if they were products for all purposes beforehand. We agree with the court of appeals that Chapter 82 contains no such limitation.
Chapter 82 itself does not define "product," but it defines "seller" as
From that definition, a product is something distributed or otherwise placed, for any commercial purpose, into the stream of commerce for use or consumption.
We hold that the EIFS provided by Fresh Coat was a "product" as that word is used in the text of Chapter 82. K-2 does not dispute that it is a manufacturer under Chapter 82 and that it placed its EIFS — which it admits is a product — into the stream of commerce. As the court of appeals noted, "The record establishes that the EIFS is a synthetic stucco system made of component parts manufactured by [K-2]."
Other definitions of "product" also comport with how products are described in Chapter 82. Black's Law Dictionary defines "product" as "[s]omething that is distributed commercially for use or consumption and that is usu[ally] (1) tangible personal property, (2) the result of fabrication or processing, and (3) an item that has passed through a chain of commercial distribution before ultimate use or consumption."
Each party argues that comment e to Section 19 of the Restatement supports that party's own definition of product. However, comment e merely addresses whether a person is a product seller, not whether something is a product. Even so,
Chapter 82's definition of manufacturer is also instructive. Section 82.001(4) defines "manufacturer" as
Under this definition, a manufacturer is anyone who builds, formulates, or assembles the product or any component part thereof. Thus, even if K-2 were correct that an EIFS wall is the relevant "product," a manufacturer may be liable for defects in "any component part thereof." This language suggests the word "product" should not be read narrowly to exclude EIFS.
None of the sources discussed above, including Chapter 82, except from the definition of product those things that may become an integral part of a home. Moreover, the Legislature could have easily excluded such products from the definition of product, or from "products liability actions" as that term is defined in Chapter 82. The Legislature could have added a few words to carve out components of homes or components of homes that become fixtures by some definition. Yet there is nothing in the text that can be read to exclude EIFS from being the type of defective product that can give rise to a products-liability action.
The courts of appeals appear not to have dealt with the specific question of whether a home component can be a product for purposes of Chapter 82, but they have applied Texas products-liability law to subcomponents of homes.
K-2 contends that even if EIFS is a product, Fresh Coat is not a seller. K-2
In Chapter 82, "seller" is defined as
Section 82.002(d) elaborates with regard to a manufacturer's duty to indemnify:
We agree with the court of appeals that "Chapter 82's definition of `seller' does not exclude a seller who is also a service provider, nor does it require the seller to only sell the product."
We further agree with the court of appeals that Fresh Coat provided legally sufficient evidence that it is a product seller for purposes of Chapter 82. It is undisputed that Fresh Coat installed EIFS according to K-2's instructions. Moreover, K-2 trained and certified Fresh Coat personnel in the installation of its EIFS system. Under its contract with Life Forms, Fresh Coat was to provide "labor, services and/or materials, equipment, transportation, or facilities necessary" in order to provide "synthetic stucco application and finish." As the court of appeals noted, witnesses testified that Fresh Coat was in the business of providing EIFS products combined with the service of EIFS installation.
Chapter 82, like the Restatement, anticipates that a product seller may also provide services. Thus, we conclude that when a company contracts to provide a product that is alleged to be defective — like the EIFS system in this case — the company's installation services do not preclude it from also being a seller. Accordingly, as to indemnity for Fresh Coat's settlement with the homeowners, we affirm the court of appeals' judgment.
Section 82.002(a) imposes a duty on manufacturers to indemnify sellers for a "loss arising out of a products liability action." It provides an exception "for any loss caused by the seller's negligence, intentional misconduct, or other act or omission, such as negligently modifying or altering the product, for which the seller is independently liable."
K-2 does not argue that the statutory exception should apply because Fresh Coat improperly installed the EIFS, an argument that would apply equally to Fresh Coat's settlements with Life Forms
Under Section 82.002(a), Fresh Coat's settlement with Life Forms "ar[ose] out of a products liability action." Fresh Coat's settlement indisputably arose out of homeowner claims against Life Forms that were settled. Those underlying homeowner claims, as well as Life Forms' indemnity cross-claim against Fresh Coat, were brought in a "products liability action," which, under Section 82.001(2), is broadly defined to include actions for damage allegedly caused by a defective product "whether the action is based in strict tort liability ... negligence ... or any other theory or combination of theories." As explained above, the claims in this case involved a "product." Further, since Fresh Coat was a "seller" under Section 82.002(a), that provision requires indemnity from K-2 for Fresh Coat's settlement with Life Forms unless the exception found in Section 82.002(a) applies.
The court of appeals reasoned that Fresh Coat could not recover its settlement payment to Life Forms from K-2 since Fresh Coat was independently liable for the loss in the contract. However, the statute does not except the manufacturer from its indemnity obligation whenever the seller is contractually liable to another. The exception applies only for "any loss caused by the seller's negligence, intentional misconduct, or other act or omission, such as negligently modifying or altering the product, for which the seller is independently liable."
The court of appeals excluded from its analysis all the language of the exception preceding "for which the seller is independently liable." The jury, however, was correctly instructed to exclude from its calculation of Fresh Coat's loss "any amount that constitutes loss caused by Fresh Coat's own negligence, intentional misconduct, or other act or omission, if any (such as negligently modifying or altering the product), for which Fresh Coat is independently liable." The jury did not find the exception applicable.
The court of appeals focused solely on Fresh Coat's independent liability, and did not find the reason for that liability relevant. Fresh Coat argues that Section
Section 82.002(a) excepts the manufacturer from indemnity only when it proves that a loss was "caused by the seller's negligence, intentional misconduct, or other act or omission, such as negligently modifying or altering the product, for which the seller is independently liable."
Moreover, Section 82.002(e) expressly provides that the manufacturer's "duty to indemnify under this section ... is in addition to any duty to indemnify established by law, contract, or otherwise." Thus, Section 82.002(e) suggests that the indemnification duty under Chapter 82 is not affected by the mere creation of other contracts or obligations to indemnify.
Our "ultimate purpose" when construing statutes "is to discover the Legislature's intent."
The 20 words in Section 82.002(a) that K-2 ignores make clear that what is important is not merely whether a seller is independently liable, but why. Otherwise, all of those intervening words in Section 82.002(a) would be needless. Although we have not previously held that what matters is not merely whether but why a seller is independently liable, this Court has suggested as much: "To escape this duty to indemnify, the indemnitor must prove the indemnitee's independent culpability."
Section 82.002(a) exempts from indemnity a seller's own "negligence, intentional
Both the text of Section 82.002(a) and the other provisions of Chapter 82, such as 82.002(e), lead us to conclude that K-2 failed to prove that Fresh Coat's settlement payment to Life Forms was caused by the type of act or omission for which K-2 owes no indemnity under the statutory exception.
Chapter 82's text does not limit "product" to exclude items that may later become part of a house wall. Also, a "seller" under Chapter 82 may include those who sell both products and services, so that a person who contracts to both provide and install a single product may be considered a seller of that product. Finally, we hold that a manufacturer is not exempt from any loss for which a seller is independently liable. The statutory exception to indemnity is limited to losses caused by the seller's tortious or otherwise culpable act or omission for which the seller is independently liable. We therefore affirm in part and reverse in part the court of appeals' judgment, and render judgment for Fresh Coat in accord with the trial court's original judgment.
Id. Comment e also notes that builders may be held liable as product sellers even with regard to homes when they sell prefabricated homes or other cookie-cutter-type homes as part of a large development.