Case: 21-10012 Document: 00515996523 Page: 1 Date Filed: 08/26/2021
United States Court of Appeals
for the Fifth Circuit
United States Court of Appeals
Fifth Circuit
FILED
August 26, 2021
No. 21-10012 Lyle W. Cayce
Clerk
Frymire Home Services, Incorporated; Whitfield
Capital, L.L.C.,
Plaintiffs—Appellants,
versus
Ohio Security Insurance Company,
Defendant—Appellee.
Appeal from the United States District Court
for the Northern District of Texas
USDC No. 3:19-CV-1938
Before Davis, Haynes, and Oldham, Circuit Judges.
Haynes, Circuit Judge:
Defendant Ohio Security Insurance Company (“OSIC”) insured a
commercial office building for Plaintiffs Frymire Home Services, Inc. and
Whitfield Capital, LLC (collectively, “Plaintiffs”). A hailstorm severely
damaged the roof of that building, leading Plaintiffs to seek coverage from
OSIC pursuant to their policy. After OSIC denied their claim, Plaintiffs filed
suit. The district court ultimately granted OSIC summary judgment,
concluding that Plaintiffs’ loss involved concurrent causes because the roof
had some preexisting damage, that Plaintiffs consequently bore the burden of
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No. 21-10012
allocating which portion of their loss came from this particular hailstorm, and
that Plaintiffs had failed to introduce evidence demonstrating a genuine
dispute of material fact on the subject. We lack clear guideposts on those
three determinations, and so, on our own motion, CERTIFY questions as
to each to the Supreme Court of Texas.
CERTIFICATION FROM THE UNITED STATES
COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT
TO THE SUPREME COURT OF TEXAS,
PURSUANT TO TEXAS CONSTITUTION ART. V,
§ 3-C AND RULE 58 OF THE TEXAS RULES OF
APPELLATE PROCEDURE.
TO THE SUPREME COURT OF TEXAS AND THE
HONORABLE JUSTICES THEREOF:
I. Style of the Case
The style of the case in which this certification is made is Frymire
Home Services, Inc. v. Ohio Security Insurance Company, No. 21-10012, in the
United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit. The case is on appeal
from the United States District Court for the Northern District of Texas.
Federal jurisdiction is based on diversity of citizenship. Texas law applies to
the substantive issues.
II. Background
From March 2018 to March 2019, Plaintiffs contracted with OSIC to
insure an office building in Dallas, Texas from various forms of loss. The
policy specifically covered losses caused by “windstorm or hail,” the bane of
North Texas’s roofs. But the policy did not cover all wind and hail damage;
as relevant here, it excluded “cosmetic” damage to the roof, as well as “wear
and tear” on the building more generally.
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Plaintiffs allege that a storm swept through the area in June 2018,
causing significant wind and hail damage to their building. That damage,
Plaintiffs assert, was so severe that the roof needed to be repaired or replaced.
They submitted a claim to OSIC, which OSIC denied on the grounds that its
own investigations had concluded that wear and tear—not wind and hail—
had caused the damage.
OSIC’s conclusion is hotly contested. Specifically, an evaluation of
the roof performed by Plaintiffs’ adjuster Brady Sandlin suggested that,
notwithstanding some preexisting damage, the June 2018 hailstorm was the
sole cause of Plaintiffs’ losses. In Sandlin’s words, although some non-
covered damage from before the policy period was “possible,” this particular
hailstorm had “caused the damage that requires the roof to be replaced.”1
With OSIC declining to cover the repair or replacement costs,
Plaintiffs filed suit in state court, bringing breach of contract and related
extra-contractual claims under Texas state law. OSIC removed the case to
federal district court and moved for summary judgment. The district court
granted OSIC’s motion as to all of Plaintiffs’ claims. Plaintiffs timely
appealed.
III. Jurisdiction & Legal Standards
The district court had jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1332. We have
jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1291.
1
Although OSIC moved to strike Sandlin’s declaration on the grounds that it
contradicted his deposition testimony, the district court did not resolve that motion on the
merits in light of its ruling on the summary judgment motion. We conclude that there was
no fatal inconsistency between Sandlin’s declaration and his testimony for summary
judgment purposes; any potential discrepancies would be for the jury to consider at trial.
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While the ultimate issue in this appeal is whether the district court
correctly granted OSIC summary judgment (an issue we review de novo,
applying the same standards as the district court, Burrell v. Prudential Ins. Co.
of Am., 820 F.3d 132, 136 (5th Cir. 2016)), we believe that a set of certified
questions to the Texas Supreme Court will significantly aid us in resolving
this appeal.2 To determine whether certification is appropriate, we weigh
three factors: (1) “the closeness of the question[s]”; (2) federal–state
comity; and (3) “practical limitations,” such as the possibility of delay or
difficulty of framing the issue. Swindol v. Aurora Flight Scis. Corp., 805 F.3d
516, 522 (5th Cir. 2015) (quotation omitted). Those factors have supported
our decision to certify important insurance law questions in the past. See,
e.g., Evanston Ins. Co. v. Legacy of Life, Inc., 645 F.3d 739 (5th Cir. 2011) (per
curiam), certified questions answered, 370 S.W.3d 377 (Tex. 2012).
IV. Discussion
The central issue in this case is whether Plaintiffs have provided
enough evidence for a reasonable jury to conclude that the June 2018
hailstorm provided covered losses. Resolving that issue appears to require us
to answer three questions: (1) whether any preexisting damage to the roof
makes this a concurrent cause case; (2) if so, whether Plaintiffs—who
provided evidence suggesting that the covered hailstorm is the sole reason
the roof must be repaired or replaced—must nonetheless attribute their
2
The Texas Constitution grants the Supreme Court of Texas the power to answer
questions of state law certified by a federal appellate court. Tex. Const. art. V, § 3-c(a).
Texas rules provide that we may certify “determinative questions of Texas law” that have
“no controlling Supreme Court [of Texas] Precedent.” Tex. R. App. P. 58.1.
Although neither party requested certification in this case, we can certify questions
to the Supreme Court of Texas on our own motion, and that court has graciously accepted
us doing so in the past. Norris v. Thomas (In re Norris), 413 F.3d 526, 527 (5th Cir. 2005)
(per curiam), certified question answered, 215 S.W.3d 851 (Tex. 2007).
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losses; and (3) if so, whether Plaintiffs can satisfy any such attribution
obligation by implicitly attributing all of their losses to the hailstorm.
There does not seem to be a decision by the Texas Supreme Court
squarely governing the resolution of these questions. The primary authority
we see is Lyons v. Millers Casualty Insurance Co. of Texas, but we are uncertain
as to the limits of the legal rule pronounced in that case. 866 S.W.2d 597, 601
(Tex. 1993). Certainly, the rule itself appears to be relatively straightforward:
Lyons says that, when a loss is caused by both covered and non-covered perils,
an insured must present “some evidence” to attribute the loss to just the
covered peril. Id. But Lyons does not answer how a claim becomes subject to
this concurrent cause rule, merely what happens when the rule applies.
Moreover, its particular reasoning on that score appears at least partially
wrapped up in the trial posture in which the case arose; the court concluded
that a jury was justified in attributing all damage to a covered peril in light of
non-expert testimony indicating that there was no preexisting damage to
aspects of the insured property. Id.
This case raises the difficult specter of whether any “wear and tear”
on a roof triggers the “concurrent cause” scenario in building insurance
cases. The extremes suggested by the parties’ arguments are troubling: it
would be a rare roof that lacks wear and tear—but such cosmetic “defects”
are rarely the reason for roof damage that causes leaking and holes in the roof.
Put another way, an ugly roof can function until it is hit by a hailstorm. Would
the hail damage that rendered it nonfunctional be covered in full?
Our reading of Lyons is that it does not resolve this issue: whether the
presence of any preexisting damage necessarily triggers the concurrent cause
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doctrine.3 That question is especially pertinent in the procedural posture we
face, as we must examine the record before us in the light most favorable to
Plaintiffs and so must give credence to evidence suggesting that the
preexisting roof damage played no role in causing the loss. We are, in short,
not sure we can even call this case a concurrent cause case at this point in the
proceedings. Moreover, even if this case is appropriately labeled as such,
Lyons also appears to leave open related questions about the doctrine,
including whether insureds advancing a sole-cause theory nonetheless bear
an attribution burden (especially in pre-trial proceedings) when faced with
preexisting damage, as well as whether insureds can satisfy any such burden
with evidence suggesting that the covered peril caused the entirety of the
loss.
Other courts’ application of Lyons confirms our sense that these
aspects of concurrent cause doctrine are unsettled. Compare Wallis v. United
Servs. Auto Ass’n, 2 S.W.3d 300, 302–04 (Tex. App.—San Antonio 1999, pet.
denied), with Southland Lloyds Ins. Co. v. Cantu, 399 S.W.3d 558, 574–76
(Tex. App.—San Antonio 2011, pet. denied). To be sure, we recently
resolved a somewhat similar hailstorm case, Certain Underwriters at Lloyd’s
of London v. Lowen Valley View, L.L.C., using the doctrine. 892 F.3d 167, 171
(5th Cir. 2018). But that case is distinguishable insofar as the insured there
had failed to produce any evidence suggesting that the particular covered hail
damage was the sole cause of the loss. Id. Without such evidence, we
3
The typical concurrent cause case, it seems to us, involves two simultaneous
perils—say, water and wind from a hurricane—one of which is covered and one of which
is not, rather than a singular covered peril on top of preexisting damage. The doctrine also
seems applicable to a situation where the preexisting damage (say, a soggy roof covering)
actually did contribute to the current damage (say, without that soggy roof covering, the
wind on that day would not have caused the roof to crash). But whether simply saying that
the roof was not 100% perfect prior to the storm triggers the “concurrent cause” world is
another question entirely.
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concluded, the case was (at best) a concurrent cause case in which the insured
had failed to attribute loss to the covered peril, making summary judgment
appropriate. Id. at 171–72. Unlike in Lowen Valley, however, Plaintiffs here
did produce some evidence—Sandlin’s declaration—suggesting that the roof
damage was solely caused by the covered hailstorm. Because we have a more
fulsome record, Lowen Valley does not squarely resolve the issues we face in
this case.4
In sum, determinative questions central to this appeal appear open.
There are also strong comity interests at play: the final arbiters of state law
should have a say on important questions regarding state insurance law.
Practical considerations likewise favor certification; there is no reason to
think that certification would cause undue delay—to the contrary, the Texas
Supreme Court is known for its “speedy, organized docket.” Degan v. Bd. of
Trs. of Dall. Police & Fire Pension Sys., 766 F. App’x 16, 19–20 (5th Cir. 2019)
(per curiam), certified questions answered, 594 S.W.3d 309 (Tex. 2020). We
therefore conclude that certification is warranted.
V. Questions Certified
We respectfully request that the Texas Supreme Court address and
answer the following questions.
(1) Whether the concurrent cause doctrine applies where there
is any non-covered damage, including “wear and tear” to an
4
While Lowen Valley is distinguishable and therefore not controlling under our rule
of orderliness, we recognize that the case poses some quandaries concerning the proper
scope of the concurrent cause doctrine. Simply stated, it is possible that we have put some
cases in that bucket that are more appropriately characterized as sole cause (or no cause)
cases, or possible that we have otherwise misconstrued the concurrent cause attribution
requirement in some way. Cf. Lyons, 866 S.W.2d at 601. If we have, we hope that the
questions we certify today will help us conform our approach to Texas law.
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insured property, but such damage does not directly cause the
particular loss eventually experienced by plaintiffs;
(2) If so, whether plaintiffs alleging that their loss was entirely
caused by a single, covered peril bear the burden of attributing
losses between that peril and other, non-covered or excluded
perils that plaintiffs contend did not cause the particular loss;
and
(3) If so, whether plaintiffs can meet that burden with evidence
indicating that the covered peril caused the entirety of the loss
(that is, by implicitly attributing one hundred percent of the
loss to that peril).
VI. Conclusion
We disclaim any intent that the Texas Supreme Court confine its reply
to the precise form or scope of the legal questions we certify. We transfer to
the Texas Supreme Court the record and appellate briefs in this case with our
certification. We retain this appeal pending the Texas Supreme Court’s
response.
QUESTIONS CERTIFIED TO THE SUPREME COURT
OF TEXAS.
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