IN THE SUPREME COURT OF TEXAS
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NO. 19-0280
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LOUIS HINOJOS, PETITIONER,
v.
STATE FARM LLOYDS AND RAUL PULIDO, RESPONDENTS
════════════════════════════════════════════════════
ON PETITION FOR REVIEW FROM THE
COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE EIGHTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS
════════════════════════════════════════════════════
Argued September 17, 2020
JUSTICE BLAND delivered the opinion of the Court, in which CHIEF JUSTICE HECHT,
JUSTICE LEHRMANN, JUSTICE BOYD, JUSTICE DEVINE, JUSTICE BUSBY, and JUSTICE HUDDLE
joined.
JUSTICE GUZMAN filed a dissenting opinion.
JUSTICE BLACKLOCK filed a dissenting opinion, in which JUSTICE GUZMAN joined.
The Texas Prompt Payment of Claims Act, codified in Insurance Code Chapter 542,
imposes deadlines on insurers to pay valid claims. 1 If an insurer fails to comply with Chapter 542,
then it is liable for statutory interest on the amount of the claim and attorney’s fees. 2 The insurer
in this case accepted a homeowner’s claim and paid part of it before the statutory deadline.
Dissatisfied with that amount, the homeowner sued, seeking full payment of the claim plus
interest and attorney’s fees under Chapter 542. While suit was pending—and after the statutory
1
TEX. INS. CODE §§ 542.057–.058; see Barbara Techs. Corp. v. State Farm Lloyds, 589 S.W.3d 806, 812
(Tex. 2019).
2
TEX. INS. CODE § 542.060.
deadline for payment had passed—the insurer invoked the policy’s appraisal process. The
appraisers awarded the homeowner substantially more than the amount the insurer had paid.
The insurer paid the difference and then moved for summary judgment on the homeowner’s
Chapter 542 claim, contending that its payment of the appraisal award precluded liability. Without
the benefit of our decisions in Barbara Technologies Corp. v. State Farm Lloyds 3 and Alvarez v.
State Farm Lloyds, 4 the trial court granted summary judgment, and the court of appeals affirmed. 5
We granted the homeowner’s petition for review.
Applying Barbara Technologies and Alvarez, we hold that payment of an appraisal award
does not absolve the insurer of statutory liability when an insurer accepts a claim but pays only
part of the amount it owes within the statutory deadline. Because the insurer in this case did not
pay the amount that “must be paid” 6 on the claim before the statutory deadline, it was not entitled
to summary judgment. Accordingly, we reverse the judgment of the court of appeals and remand
the case to the trial court.
I
Chapter 542, subchapter B, imposes liability when an insurance company misses a
statutory payment deadline for a documented claim that it owes under an insurance policy. 7 In the
statute, the Legislature instructs that the subchapter’s provisions be “liberally construed to promote
the prompt payment of insurance claims.” 8
3
589 S.W.3d 806 (Tex. 2019).
4
601 S.W.3d 781 (Tex. 2020).
5
569 S.W.3d 304, 313 (Tex. App.—El Paso 2019).
6
TEX. INS. CODE § 542.051(2)(B).
7
Id. § 542.060; see Barbara Techs., 589 S.W.3d at 812–13.
8
TEX. INS. CODE § 542.054.
2
When an insurer receives a claim, it has fifteen days to acknowledge its receipt, begin an
investigation, and request from the claimant all “items, statements, and forms” that the insurer
reasonably believes are necessary to evaluate the claim. 9 Within a further fifteen business days of
receiving the “items, statements, and forms,” the insurer must inform the claimant, in writing,
whether it accepts or rejects the claim. 10 If an insurer accepts the claim, in whole or in part, it has
five business days to pay the insured. 11 To enforce these deadlines, Chapter 542 provides that a
claimant may recover statutory interest and attorney’s fees, in addition to the amount of the claim,
when an insurer violates the statute:
if an insurer, after receiving all items, statements, and forms reasonably requested
and required under Section 542.055, delays payment of the claim for a period
exceeding the period specified by other applicable statutes or, if other statutes do
not specify a period, for more than 60 days, the insurer shall pay damages and other
items as provided by Section 542.060. 12
Section 542.060(a), in turn, sets out that interest accrues at 18% per year and assesses
attorney’s fees against a liable insurer:
if an insurer that is liable for a claim under an insurance policy is not in compliance
with this subchapter, the insurer is liable to pay the holder of the policy . . . , in
addition to the amount of the claim, interest on the amount of the claim at the rate
of 18 percent a year as damages, together with reasonable and necessary attorney’s
fees. 13
This case stems from a dispute over State Farm Lloyds’ liability for statutory damages
under section 542.060(a).
9
Id. § 542.055(a).
10
Id. § 542.056(a).
11
Id. § 542.057(a).
12
Id. § 542.058(a).
13
Id. § 542.060(a).
3
II
After a summer wind and hail storm in 2013, Louis Hinojos reported a claim to State Farm
for damage to his home. A State Farm adjuster inspected the home on June 12, nine days after
Hinojos reported the claim. The adjuster valued the damage at $755.02, an amount below
Hinojos’s policy deductible. On June 20, State Farm informed Hinojos that, because the value of
the claim was below his policy’s deductible, State Farm owed nothing on the claim. Hinojos
requested a second inspection. At the second inspection, the adjuster identified additional damage.
On August 7, State Farm sent Hinojos a letter agreeing that there was “covered damage” in the
amount of $3,859.22. The letter enclosed payment of $1,995.11, reflecting State Farm’s
assessment of the value of the claim, less the deductible and depreciation.
Hinojos sued State Farm and its adjuster the following February. 14 Among other claims,
Hinojos alleged that State Farm had violated Chapter 542 by delaying payment on the claim. 15
Nearly two years after Hinojos submitted his claim, and fifteen months after he filed suit,
State Farm invoked the policy’s appraisal clause. The appraisal process results in a binding
determination of the amount owed for a covered loss under the policy:
If you and we fail to agree on the amount of loss, either one can demand that the
amount of the loss be set by appraisal. If either makes a written demand for
appraisal, each shall select a competent disinterested appraiser. . . . The appraisers
shall then set the amount of the loss. If the appraisers submit a written report of an
agreement to us, the amount agreed upon shall be the amount of the loss. . . .
14
Hinojos filed the operative First Amended Petition in April. We refer to State Farm and its adjuster, Raul
Pulido, collectively as “State Farm.”
15
Hinojos alleged: “State Farm’s conduct constitutes multiple violations of the Texas Insurance Code,
Prompt Payment of Claims. All violations made under this article are actionable by TEX. INS. CODE §542.060. . . .
State Farm’s delay of the payment of Plaintiff’s claims following State Farm’s receipt of all items, statements, and
forms reasonably requested and required, for longer than the amount of time provided . . . constitutes a non-prompt
payment of the claims. TEX. INS. CODE §542.058.”
4
The appraisers valued Hinojos’s loss at $38,269.95 on a replacement cost basis and
$26,259.86 on an actual cash basis. Within a week of the appraisers’ decision, and about two-and-
a-half years after Hinojos submitted his claim, State Farm tendered an additional $22,974.75,
reflecting payment of the appraisal award net of the earlier payment it made to Hinojos, the
deductible, and depreciation.
Following the appraisal, State Farm moved for summary judgment, contending that “timely
tendering of the appraisal award precludes prompt payment damages under Chapter 542 of the
Texas Insurance Code.” Hinojos responded that State Farm was subject to statutory liability
because it had “failed to issue any payment within the deadlines provided by section 542.057.”16
In the alternative, Hinojos argued that, even if State Farm’s first payment was timely, State Farm
is liable for statutory interest on the difference between the appraisal award and the partial payment
“for the period August 7, 2013 to the present.” The trial court granted summary judgment.
Hinojos appealed, contending that “the payment of the appraisal award should allow him
to receive interest penalties under the statute because the appraisal payment was ultimately paid
outside the sixty-day statutory-window.” 17 The court of appeals rejected this reasoning and
affirmed. It concluded that “because State Farm made a reasonable payment on Hinojos’s claim
within the sixty-day statutory limit,” State Farm had not violated Chapter 542. 18
Hinojos petitioned for review. He argues that “[w]hile State Farm paid part of the claim
‘not later than the fifth business day after the notice was made,’ it did not pay the rest of the claim
within the statutory time frame.” In response, State Farm asserts that it “undisputedly paid
16
See TEX. INS. CODE § 542.057(a) (“[I]f an insurer notifies a claimant . . . that the insurer will pay a claim
or part of a claim, the insurer shall pay the claim not later than the fifth business day after the date notice is made.”).
17
569 S.W.3d 304, 312 (Tex. App.—El Paso 2019).
18
Id. at 313. The court of appeals referred to section 542.058(a) of the Texas Insurance Code as a potential
basis for a statutory violation. Id. at 312–13.
5
Hinojos’s claim within 60 days after receiving all information required to evaluate the claim,”
notwithstanding the fact that it later paid more on that claim after the appraisal. We granted review.
III
The parties agree on the key facts: (1) State Farm “accepted” Hinojos’s claim and paid
some money toward that claim within the statutory window; and (2) State Farm fully paid the
amount it owed to satisfy the claim after the deadline had passed. 19 The issue presented is whether
State Farm can avoid liability under Chapter 542 as a matter of law based on these facts.
After the court of appeals in this case ruled, we decided Barbara Technologies Corp. v.
State Farm Lloyds. 20 In that case, State Farm rejected a claim because it valued the property
damage below the policy’s deductible. 21 State Farm later paid the claimant an appraisal award. 22
We held that the payment of an appraisal award does not foreclose prompt payment damages when
an insurer rejects an insurance claim. 23 An appraisal payment, we concluded, “is neither an
acknowledgment of liability nor a determination of liability under the policy for purposes of
TPPCA damages under section 542.060” 24 and “has no bearing on any deadlines.” 25 Thus,
“[n]othing in the TPPCA would excuse an insurer from liability for TPPCA damages if it was
19
In the parties’ briefing, including in the courts below, some ambiguity exists as to which statutory deadline
State Farm’s post-appraisal payment failed to meet. Compare TEX. INS. CODE § 542.057(a), with id. § 542.058(a).
That discrepancy does not affect our analysis, and we do not address it here.
20
589 S.W.3d 806 (Tex. 2019).
21
Id. at 809, 813.
22
Id. at 810.
23
Id. at 809, 817–19. Barbara Technologies addressed “whether an insured party can prevail on its claim for
damages for delayed payment pursuant to the [Act] . . . when it is undisputed that the insurer investigated the claim,
rejected it, invoked the policy’s provision for an appraisal process, and ultimately paid the insured in full in accordance
with the appraisal.” Id. at 809.
24
Id. at 820.
25
Id. at 817–18.
6
liable under the terms of the policy but delayed payment beyond the applicable statutory deadline,
regardless of use of the appraisal process.” 26
We followed Barbara Technologies with Alvarez v. State Farm Lloyds. 27 There, in contrast
to Barbara Technologies, State Farm accepted the claim. 28 The facts in Alvarez parallel those here:
State Farm initially assessed the claim to be worth less than the homeowner’s deductible; the
homeowner objected; State Farm revised its assessment and paid an amount toward the claim;
appraisers eventually determined that State Farm owed more on the claim than it had paid; and
State Farm paid the appraisal amount. 29 We reversed summary judgment for State Farm, holding
that the later payment of the appraisal award did not bar Chapter 542 liability. 30
Our holdings in Barbara Technologies and Alvarez apply in this case. 31 State Farm does
not dispute that it is “liable under the terms of the policy” or that it fully satisfied the claim only
after the statutory deadline had passed. As we stated in our earlier decisions, State Farm’s payment
of the appraisal award outside the statutory deadline does not relieve it of Chapter 542 liability.
The court of appeals in this case added that State Farm was also entitled to summary
judgment because Chapter 542 requires only “a reasonable payment” within the sixty-day statutory
Id. at 819; see Ortiz v. State Farm Lloyds, 589 S.W.3d 127, 135 (Tex. 2019) (“As we hold today in Barbara
26
Technologies, an insurer’s payment of an appraisal award does not as a matter of law bar an insured’s claims under
the Prompt Payment Act.”).
27
601 S.W.3d 781 (Tex. 2020) (per curiam).
28
Id. at 782.
29
Id.
30
Id. at 783 (“The court of appeals concluded that Alvarez could not maintain his TPPCA claim due to State
Farm’s payment of the appraisal award. Under Barbara Technologies and Ortiz, this was error.”). The disposition in
Alvarez demonstrates that the Court in Barbara Technologies did not endorse Breshears v. State Farm Lloyds, 155
S.W.3d 340 (Tex. App.—Corpus Christi–Edinburg 2004, pet. denied), in the respects that JUSTICE BLACKLOCK
suggests. Post at __ (citing Barbara Techs., 589 S.W.3d at 821–22).
31
Contrary to the suggestion that the issue was not before the Court, in its brief in Alvarez, State Farm raised
arguments concerning “whether the insurer’s partial payment of a claim before the deadline precludes liability under
the Act.” Post at __.
7
limit, not full payment. 32 State Farm adopts that position in this Court. Its new position is similarly
unavailing. The Legislature defines “claim” as:
a first party claim that:
(A) is made by an insured or policyholder under an insurance policy or contract
or by a beneficiary named in the policy or contract; and
(B) must be paid by the insurer directly to the insured or beneficiary. 33
Nothing in Chapter 542 discharges prompt payment liability based on the partial payment of the
amount that “must be paid” under the policy. 34 Otherwise, an insurer could pay a nominal amount
toward a valid claim to avoid the prompt payment deadline that the Legislature has imposed. We
rejected such a contention in Republic Underwriters Insurance Co. v. Mex-Tex, Inc., holding in
that case that an insurer owes interest on the amount of the claim it did not promptly pay when it
makes a partial payment. 35 The phrase “must be paid by the insurer” in the definition of “claim”
includes the amount of the claim and “limits ‘claim’ to the amount ultimately determined to be
owed, which of course would be net of any partial payments made prior to that determination.”36
We explained that “[t]his encourages insurers to pay the undisputed portion of a claim early,
32
569 S.W.3d 304, 313 (Tex. App.—El Paso 2019). The court of appeals adopted this interpretation from
Breshears.
33
TEX. INS. CODE § 542.051(2).
34
State Farm’s reliance on the Fifth Circuit’s decision in Mainali Corp. v. Covington Specialty Insurance
Co., 872 F.3d 255 (5th Cir. 2017), is misplaced. State Farm incorrectly understands the case as holding that
“reasonable” partial payments within the deadline establish compliance with Chapter 542. See id. at 259. Instead, the
Fifth Circuit held in Mainali that an insurer did not violate Chapter 542 when the insurer timely paid more than the
amount the appraisers determined it owed under its policies. Id. at 257. The appraisers found that the insurance
company owed a lower overall amount but allocated the amount differently across the insured’s various coverages;
the insurer then paid an additional amount “out of an abundance of caution.” Id. at 257, 259. Because the insurer in
that case paid more than the total amount it owed pursuant to the appraisal, the Fifth Circuit rejected a claim under
Chapter 542. Here, in contrast, State Farm paid significantly less within the statutory deadline than the amount the
appraisers ultimately determined that it owed on the claim.
35
150 S.W.3d 423, 426–28 (Tex. 2004) (interpreting the definition of “claim” in Chapter 542’s substantively
similar predecessor statute).
36
Id. at 426; see TEX. INS. CODE § 542.051(2) (defining “claim”).
8
consistent with the statute’s purpose ‘to obtain prompt payment of claims made pursuant to
policies of insurance.’” 37
In urging that we depart from Mex-Tex in this case, JUSTICE BLACKLOCK distinguishes
between the statutory definition of “claim” and the amount ultimately owed under the policy,
contending that “claim” is the amount that State Farm agreed to pay, not the amount it owed.
Chapter 542, however, expressly defines “claim” to include the amount that “must be paid by the
insurer,” not the amount the insurer agrees to pay. 38 Chapter 542’s definition of claim, in the
context of sections 542.058 and 542.060, comprises both liability for the loss and the amount owed
for that loss. The amount “that must be paid” may not be established until after an insurer’s
investigation (or an appraisal), but it does not make the statute’s use of the word “claim”
inconsistent. While an insured’s demand constitutes a claim on the policy for the full amount of
the loss, the statute provides deadlines for finalizing that amount. Removing the amount that “must
be paid” from the statutory definition, as the dissenting Justices would do, fails to cohere with
Chapter 542’s primary remedy, which is “interest on the amount of the claim” that was not
promptly paid. 39
Finally, although the statute provides that an insurer may “notif[y] a claimant . . . that the
insurer will pay . . . part of a claim,” 40 it does not authorize partial payment of an accepted claim—
37
Mex-Tex, 150 S.W.3d at 426; see also id. at 427–28 (“We conclude that from November 4, 1999, 75 days
after [the insurer] tendered Mex-Tex partial payment of $145,460, to the date of judgment, Mex-Tex was entitled to
the statutory penalty only on the $33,540 difference between the tendered payment and the amount of Mex-Tex’s
claim.”). Our recent decision in Alvarez further undercuts State Farm’s argument. There, like here, State Farm made
a partial payment on the claim within the deadline, and we held that statutory liability was not precluded. Alvarez v.
State Farm Lloyds, 601 S.W.3d 781, 782–83 (Tex. 2020).
38
TEX. INS. CODE § 542.051(2). The dissenting Justices would have us read “must be paid by the insurer”
out of the definition of “claim.” However, we must “read statutes contextually to give effect to every word, clause,
and sentence because every word or phrase is presumed to have been intentionally used with a meaning and a purpose.”
Fort Worth Transp. Auth. v. Rodriguez, 547 S.W.3d 830, 838 (Tex. 2018) (citation omitted).
39
TEX. INS. CODE § 542.060(a) (emphasis added).
40
Id. § 542.057(a).
9
JUSTICE BLACKLOCK conflates a partial acceptance with a partial payment when the statute
expressly separates the two. 41 Chapter 542 does not provide that a partial payment of a valid claim
discharges liability for statutory interest. Accordingly, we hold that an insurer’s acceptance and
partial payment of the claim within the statutory deadline does not preclude liability for interest
on amounts owed but unpaid when the statutory deadline expires.
Our holding accords with our past decisions in Mex-Tex, Barbara Technologies, and
Alvarez, as well as the statute’s stated purpose of “promot[ing] the prompt payment of insurance
claims.” 42 By requiring insurers to promptly satisfy claims that they owe in their entirety, the
Legislature incentivizes insurers to resolve disputes and invoke the appraisal process sooner rather
than later. Although the statute says nothing about reasonableness, a reasonable payment should
roughly correspond to the amount owed on the claim. When it does not, a partial payment mitigates
the damage resulting from a Chapter 542 violation. Interest accrues only on the unpaid portion of
a claim. 43
A significant delay in requesting an appraisal, as in this case, may cause additional interest
to accrue. Although “[a]ccess to the appraisal process to resolve disputes is an important tool in
41
Compare id. (“[I]f an insurer notifies a claimant . . . that the insurer will pay a claim or part of a claim, the
insurer shall pay the claim not later than the fifth business day after the date notice is made.” (emphasis added)), with
id. § 542.060(a) (“[I]f an insurer that is liable for a claim under an insurance policy is not in compliance with this
subchapter, the insurer is liable to pay the holder of the policy . . . , in addition to the amount of the claim, interest on
the amount of the claim at the rate of 18 percent a year as damages, together with reasonable and necessary attorney’s
fees.” (emphasis added)). “When the Legislature uses a word or phrase in one part of a statute but excludes it
from another, the term should not be implied where it has been excluded.” Cadena Comercial USA Corp. v. Tex.
Alcoholic Beverage Comm’n, 518 S.W.3d 318, 329 (Tex. 2017).
42
TEX. INS. CODE § 542.054. JUSTICE BLACKLOCK offers that “statutory claims are available against insurers
who make low offers in bad faith.” Post at __. His position ignores that the remedy for insurers’ bad-faith acts is actual
damages, TEX. INS. CODE § 541.151, which payment of an appraisal award, however delayed, negates. See Ortiz v.
State Farm Lloyds, 589 S.W.3d 127, 129 (Tex. 2019) (holding that the insurer’s payment of an appraisal award “bars
the insured’s common law and statutory bad faith claims to the extent the only actual damages sought are lost policy
benefits”); Biasatti v. GuideOne Nat’l Ins. Co., 601 S.W.3d 792, 794 (Tex. 2020) (per curiam) (“[W]e held in Ortiz v.
State Farm Lloyds that payment of an appraisal award forecloses an insurer’s liability for breach of contract and
common-law and statutory bad faith unless the insured suffered an independent injury.”).
43
See Republic Underwriters Ins. Co. v. Mex-Tex, Inc., 150 S.W.3d 423, 426 (Tex. 2004).
10
the insurance claim context,” it is the insurer’s responsibility to seek prompt resolution of a
disputed claim through appraisal to avoid statutory interest on amounts that were not promptly
paid. 44
* * *
This appeal from a summary judgment in State Farm’s favor does not address Hinojos’s
affirmative claim for relief under Chapter 542. To prevail on his claim, Hinojos must establish:
(1) the amount for which State Farm is contractually liable under the insurance policy; 45 (2) that
State Farm failed to comply with statutory deadlines; and (3) statutory damages based on the
amount contractually owed less the amounts paid within the statutory deadline. We reverse the
judgment of the court of appeals and remand the case to the trial court for proceedings consistent
with this opinion.
______________________________
Jane N. Bland
Justice
OPINION DELIVERED: March 19, 2021
44
Barbara Techs. Corp. v. State Farm Lloyds, 589 S.W.3d 806, 814 (Tex. 2019).
In Barbara Technologies, we noted that the appraisal amount may bind the parties as to the amount of the
45
loss, even though it does not establish liability. Id. at 822 n.12 (opining that if an insurer is adjudicated liable, the
insurer owes “the amount of the claim, as fixed by the binding appraisal”); see also id. at 823 n.14 (“An appraisal is
binding only as to the amount of the loss on the claim, not as to liability.”).
11