IN THE SUPREME COURT OF TEXAS
══════════
No. 19-0280
══════════
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
══════════════════════════════════════════
JUSTICE BLACKLOCK, joined by JUSTICE GUZMAN, dissenting.
The Court suggests the outcome of this case is controlled by our recent decisions in
Barbara Technologies Corp. v. State Farm Lloyds, 589 S.W.3d 806 (Tex. 2019) (“Barbara Tech”),
and Ortiz v. State Farm Lloyds, 589 S.W.3d 127 (Tex. 2019) (“Ortiz”). I disagree. The issue in
Barbara Tech and Ortiz was whether, by invoking the contractual appraisal process, an insurer can
re-set section 542.058’s prompt-payment clock and thereby avoid penalties owed by an insurer
who “delays payment.” TEX. INS. CODE § 542.058. 1 I joined the dissent in those cases, but they
are now the precedent of the Court. They do not, however, answer the question posed in this case:
Has an insurer who makes a timely payment to its insured but later agrees to pay a higher amount
1
See Ortiz, 589 S.W.3d at 135 (summarizing Barbara Tech’s holding) (“As we hold today in Barbara
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.”).
“delay[ed] payment of the claim” under section 542.058(a) and thereby subjected itself to liability
under the Prompt Payment of Claims Act?
The Court relies on the following statement from Barbara Tech: “Nothing in the TPPCA
would excuse an insurer from liability for TPPCA damages if it was liable under the terms of the
policy but delayed payment beyond the applicable statutory deadline, regardless of use of the
appraisal process.” Ante at ___ (quoting Barbara Tech., 589 S.W.3d at 819). This sentence
mirrors the statutory text by observing that an insurer who “delays payment” owes TPPCA
penalties. But the question presented today is not whether insurers who “delay[] payment of a
claim” violate the TPPCA. All agree they do. The question is what it means to “delay[] payment
of a claim.” Barbara Tech never squarely addresses that question, other than to hold that invoking
a contractual appraisal provision does not excuse an otherwise “delay[ed] payment.”
Barbara Tech itself described the question it was attempting to answer: “We must
determine whether an insurer can be liable for TPPCA damages when it initially denied the claim
but later paid the insured in full according to the amount of loss determined through the policy’s
appraisal process.” 589 S.W.3d at 815 (emphasis added). The Court answered that insurers who
initially deny a claim and later make payment after an appraisal have “delay[ed] payment” for
purposes of section 542.058(a). The Court never wrestled with what it means to “delay[] payment
of the claim,” instead focusing on the impact of the appraisal process on the TPPCA’s deadlines.
Although I disagreed with Barbara Tech’s treatment of the appraisal process, I concede that when
the insurer makes no payment at all until many months beyond the statutory deadline, it makes
sense to say the insurer has “delay[ed] payment of the claim.” Yet what about insurers who
2
initially make a timely payment? If the insurer pays a claim in the amount it thinks it owes by the
deadline, I find it difficult to see how the insurer has “delay[ed] payment of the claim.” The insurer
may have paid the claim in an amount less than the claimant hoped, and it may incur additional
liability if it has done so in bad faith, but the payment of the claim was timely, not delayed.
Barbara Tech repeatedly states its holding as applicable to claims that have been initially
“rejected” or “denied.” Id. at 809, 813, 815, 817, 820, 823, 825–28. But in today’s case, Hinojos’s
claim was never rejected or denied. It was partially paid, on time. The closest Barbara Tech
comes to addressing Hinojos’s situation actually points in the other direction. The Court in
Barbara Tech quoted at length from Breshears v. State Farm Lloyds, 155 S.W.3d 340 (Tex.
App.—Corpus Christi–Edinburg 2004, pet. denied), a court-of-appeals case this Court endorsed
as “persuasive.” The passage from Breshears quoted favorably in Barbara Tech is worth
reproducing in full:
The Breshears argue that because of the appraisal process, they were not actually
paid until after State Farm paid them the difference between the first payment and
the appraisal award, which occurred long after the sixty-day statutory limit. The
Breshears also argue that by invoking the appraisal process, State Farm did not
notify them as to whether it intended to pay their claim within the time required by
the code. We disagree. The Breshears were paid by State Farm within the sixty-
day limit, and they were notified that State Farm would pay the claim when State
Farm sent them an estimate of the cost of their repairs accompanied by a check.
The fact that the appraisal process was later invoked does not alter the fact that
State Farm complied with the Insurance Code . . . .
Barbara Tech, 589 S.W.3d at 821–22 (quoting Breshears, 155 S.W.3d at 345).
Breshears thus involved a situation much like today’s case. The insurer made an initial
timely payment. Then later, after an appraisal, it paid more. The court of appeals rejected the
Breshears’ argument that State Farm’s later payment of the higher amount gave rise to prompt-
3
pay liability. The court sided with State Farm and held that, by virtue of the initial timely payment
that turned out to be too low, “The Breshears were paid by State Farm within the sixty-day limit,”
and State Farm thereby “complied with the Insurance Code.” Id. In Barbara Tech, this Court
endorsed the above-quoted passage from Breshears. Thus, far from indicating that a timely initial
payment cannot satisfy section 542.058 if it turns out to be lower than the amount ultimately paid,
Barbara Tech suggests the opposite by quoting Breshears with approval. Today, however, the
Court says State Farm owes prompt-pay damages for doing exactly what it did in Breshears.
Barbara Tech is no doubt a dense thicket, but surely it cannot both endorse Breshears as
“persuasive” and also compel the Court to abrogate Breshears in today’s case.
Although the Court’s opinion relies principally on Barbara Tech and Ortiz, 2 by my reading
the case truly doing the heavy lifting under the Court’s reasoning is Republic Underwriters
Insurance Co. v. Mex-Tex, Inc., 150 S.W.3d 423 (Tex. 2004). Unlike Barbara Tech, Mex-Tex
does deal to some extent with what it means to “delay[] payment of a claim” under the Insurance
Code. Mex-Tex construed the statutory definition of “claim” in Chapter 542’s predecessor statute.
Then and now, the definition reads:
“Claim” means 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
2
The Court also relies on Alvarez v. State Farm Lloyds, 601 S.W.3d 781 (Tex. 2020) (per curiam). That case
also involved a partial payment within the TPPCA deadline. However, as in Barbara Tech and Ortiz, the Court had
no occasion to squarely address whether the partial payment precluded liability under the TPPCA. Just as in Barbara
Tech and Ortiz, we held only that the invocation of appraisal and payment of the appraisal award did not bar recovery
under the TPPCA. Alvarez, 601 S.W.3d at 783. Although the facts in Alvarez were similar to this case, we are not
bound by unstated, implied holdings on legal issues the Court’s opinion did not squarely address. See Canadian
Helicopters Ltd. v. Wittig, 876 S.W.2d 304, 307 (Tex. 1994).
.
4
(B) must be paid by the insurer directly to the insured or beneficiary.
TEX. INS. CODE § 542.051(2). In resolving the issue before it, the Court in Mex-Tex focused on
the definition’s use of the phrase “must be paid by the insurer.” The Court stated, “The emphasized
phrase—‘that must be paid’—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.” Mex-Tex,
150 S.W.3d at 426 (dashes added). The Court today takes this statement from Mex-Tex to be a
judicial paraphrase of the entire statutory definition of “claim.” Because of Mex-Tex, the Court
reasons, “claim” now means “the amount ultimately determined to be owed.” If that is right, then
an insurer would always “delay[] payment of a claim” until it finally pays the “amount ultimately
determined to be owed.” But it is not right.
For four reasons, the quoted language from Mex-Tex should not be understood to provide
a definition of “claim” that can automatically be applied in today’s case. First, Mex-Tex itself does
not purport to do that. It does not say that the definition’s use of the phrase “must be paid by the
insurer” means that a “claim” and “the amount ultimately determined to be owed” are the same
thing. Instead, it says the phrase “‘must be paid by the insurer’ . . . limits ‘claim’ to the amount
ultimately determined to be owed.” (emphasis added). In other words, Mex-Tex says the “claim”
on which prompt-pay damages are calculated can be no higher than “the amount ultimately
determined to be owed.”
Second, the dispute the Court was resolving in Mex-Tex further demonstrates that its
characterization of the word “claim” was intended to place an upward limit on the amount from
which prompt-pay damages are calculated, not to restrictively define the word “claim” for all
5
purposes in the prompt-pay statute. In Mex-Tex, the insured sought prompt-pay damages on the
total amount the insurer ultimately paid. Id. at 425. The Court rejected that request, holding that
prompt-pay damages could only be recovered on the amount that was paid late. Id. at 427–28. In
effect, the Court held that Mex-Tex could not recover damages on more than it was owed when the
prompt-pay clock ran out. Under Mex-Tex, for purposes of calculating prompt-pay liability, a
“claim” can never be higher than the amount determined to be owed, but Mex-Tex says nothing
about whether the amount of a “claim” can ever be lower than that amount. Considering the
sentence from Mex-Tex in its context, it is clear to me that the Court did not intend to restrictively
redefine the statutory word “claim” to mean only “the amount ultimately determined to be owed.”
Third, it makes no difference that the outcome of Mex-Tex was that the insurer paid prompt-
pay damages even after making, as State Farm did here, an initial timely payment. The insurer in
Mex-Tex never argued—as the insurer in Breshears did and as State Farm does here—that its initial
payment satisfied section 542.058. Instead, in Mex-Tex, the insurer argued only that it did not owe
prompt-pay damages on amounts it paid on time. This Court agreed with that argument but never
considered whether the initial payment was a timely payment that discharged the insurer’s prompt-
pay obligations. Needless to say, this Court’ silence on an issue never raised has no precedential
effect.
Fourth, and perhaps most importantly, the result of understanding the word “claim” as the
Court believes Mex-Tex requires would be to make several passages in Chapter 542 unintelligible.
To begin with, an insurer cannot “receive[] notice of a claim . . . acknowledge receipt of the claim
. . . or commence an[] investigation of the claim,” TEX. INS. CODE § 542.055, if the “claim” is “the
6
amount ultimately determined to be owed.” Likewise, the insurer could not “accept[]” or “reject[]”
the “claim” by the deadline in section 542.056 because the insurer would not yet know “the amount
ultimately determined to be owed.” And if “claim” means “the amount ultimately determined to
be owed,” then the statutory definition of “claim” is internally contradictory. A claim cannot be
“made by an insured or policyholder under an insurance policy,” id. § 542.051(2)(A), for an
amount that will not be determined until it is later decided how much “must be paid by the insurer,”
id. § 542.051(2)(B).
In sum, although Mex-Tex comes closer to addressing the pertinent question than does
Barbara Tech, neither case answers the question presented here: Has an insurer who timely pays
a claim in the amount it decides it owes and then later agrees to pay a larger amount “delay[ed]
payment of a claim”? To answer that question, we should look anew at the text of the statute. The
first thing to notice about the way the prompt-pay statute uses the word “claim” is that it does so
in many different ways. As indicated above, the word “claim” is used repeatedly throughout
Chapter 542. A claim is made by an insured, its receipt is acknowledged, it is investigated, more
information may be requested, the claim is accepted or rejected, the claim (or “part of a claim”) is
paid, and finally, if the insurer “delays payment” or otherwise violates the subchapter, a penalty is
calculated based on the claim. TEX. INS. CODE § 542.051 et seq. Throughout this process, the
amount of the “claim” may increase or decrease depending on the parties’ decisions and on the
context in which the statute uses the word. There is no talismanic “amount” of a claim that is fixed
across time and across the statute’s multiple uses of the word “claim.”
7
There is, however, a strong textual indication that an insurer who timely pays “a claim or
part of a claim” does not “delay[] payment of the claim” under section 542.058. Under section
542.057(a), “if an insurer notifies a claimant under Section 542.056 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.” TEX. INS. CODE § 542.057(a) (emphasis added). Under section
542.057(a), when State Farm notified Hinojos that it “will pay . . . part of a claim,” State Farm
incurred an obligation to “pay the claim not later than the fifth business day after” the notice. The
statute thus contemplates that paying the “part of the claim” the insurer agrees it owes amounts to
“pay[ing] the claim.” Id. The obligation to “pay the claim” by the fifth business day was
discharged when State Farm paid the “part of the claim” it told Hinojos it would pay. No obligation
arose to pay a yet-to-be-determined-amount-ultimately-owed by the fifth business day.
Even though partial payment of a claim unquestionably counts as “pay[ing] the claim” in
section 542.057, the Court concludes that partial payment does not count as “payment of the claim”
in the very next section, 542.058. I can see no basis in the statute for such an odd result. To the
contrary, the premise of section 542.058 is that the prompt-pay clock begins to run after the insurer
has had time to gather “items, statements, and forms reasonably requested and required” so that
the insurer can determine how much of the claim to pay. As the Court sees it, however, the amount
paid as a result of that investigation is not “payment of the claim.” So the obligation to make
“payment of the claim” within 60 days arises after the insurer receives all materials required for
its investigation, but making payment based on the results of the investigation is not “payment of
the claim.” This puts the insurer in no man’s land. It has no way of knowing whether it has paid
8
the claim or delayed paying the claim until the insured accepts a settlement or an amount owed is
fixed through appraisal or litigation.
By my reading, the statute’s use of the verb “delay” suggests a deliberate act. E.g., Delay,
BLACK’S LAW DICTIONARY (10th ed. 2014) (“The act of postponing or slowing”). One who timely
pays what he believes he owes does not “delay,” as that word is commonly understood. 3 Under
the Court’s reasoning, however, the insurer “delays payment” not by paying too late, but by not
paying enough. Yet at the time of payment, the insurer cannot know what is enough. It “delays
payment” without knowing whether it has done so and with no way of knowing whether it will
later be found to have done so. It cannot make a timely “payment of the claim” by paying “part
of the claim,” despite section 542.057’s clear indication to the contrary. Instead, it can only make
“payment of the claim” by paying an amount that is unknowable at the time of payment. The
statutory text does not compel so curious an outcome, and we should not adopt one.
As I see it, the simple approach that best comports with the statutory text is that an insurer
who timely pays its insured’s claim at an amount lower than the insured would like has not
“delay[ed] payment of the claim.” I acknowledge that insurance companies have an incentive to
low-ball insureds and hope they will accept the initial offer. But statutory claims are available
against insurers who make low offers in bad faith. TEX. INS. CODE §§ 541.060(a)(2) &
542.003(b)(4). Our job is to apply the statutory text, not to worry about whether the text wisely
aligns the incentives. The text we are applying is the Prompt Payment of Claims Act, not the
3
An insurer that deliberately paid less than it determined it owed would face separate statutory liability for
its bad-faith handling of the claim. TEX. INS. CODE §§ 541.060(a)(2) & 542.003(b)(4).
9
Maximum Payment of Claims Act. Its stated goal is to “promote the prompt payment of insurance
claims.” Id. § 542.054 (emphasis added). It does just that. If some believe the statute should
encourage insurers to offer higher payments in addition to prompt ones, their concerns should be
directed to the Legislature.
I respectfully dissent.
__________________________________
James D. Blacklock
Justice
OPINION DELIVERED: March 19, 2021
10