Find Laws Find Lawyers Free Legal Forms USA State Laws
Laws-info.com » Cases » Texas » 7th District Court of Appeals » 2001 » Miller Daniel and Hugh Daniel v. Mike Box--Appeal from 237th District Court of Lubbock County
Miller Daniel and Hugh Daniel v. Mike Box--Appeal from 237th District Court of Lubbock County
State: Texas
Court: Texas Northern District Court
Docket No: 07-00-00569-CV
Case Date: 10/29/2001
Plaintiff: Rosa's Caf�, Inc.; Bobby Cox Companies, Inc.; and The Bobby Cox Companies Employee Injury Benefit Pl
Defendant: Mitch Wilkerson, Individually and as Surviving Spouse and Representative of the Estate of Johnna Je
Preview:Rosa's Caf?Inc.; Bobby Cox Companies, Inc.; and The
Bobby Cox Companies Employee Injury Benefit Plan v.
Mitch Wilkerson, Individually and as Surviving Spouse
and Representative of the Estate of Johnna Jean
Wilkerson, Deceased; and David Medlin, as Next Friend
and Natural Father of Jonathan David Medlin, a minor-
-Appeal from 142nd District Court of Midland County
Opinion filed December 21, 2005
Opinion filed December 21, 2005
In The
Eleventh Court of Appeals
No. 11-05-00144-CV
ROSA=S CAF , INC.; BOBBY COX COMPANIES, INC.; AND THE BOBBY COX COMPANIES
EMPLOYEE INJURY BENEFIT PLAN, Appellants
V.
MITCH WILKERSON, INDIVIDUALLY AND AS SURVIVING SPOUSE AND REPRESENTATIVE OF THE
ESTATE OF JOHNNA JEAN WILKERSON, DECEASED; AND DAVID MEDLIN, AS NEXT FRIEND AND
NATURAL FATHER OF JONATHAN DAVID MEDLIN, A MINOR, Appellees
On Appeal from the 142nd District Court
Midland County, Texas
Trial Court Cause No. CV-43,873
O P I N I O N
This appeal involves the enforcement of a subrogation provision contained in a settlement agreement executed in
conjunction with the payment of death benefits under an ERISA benefit plan. See Employee Retirement Income
Security Act, 29 U.S.C. ' 1001 - 1461 (2005). The parties executed the settlement agreement after a fatal automobile
accident which caused the death of the plan participant. Under the terms of the settlement agreement, the benefit plan
was entitled to recover reimbursement for all of the death benefits paid under the plan from any recovery obtained by
the plan beneficiaries from the third-party tortfeasor. The trial court did not enforce the reimbursement provision of the
file:///C|/Users/Peter/Desktop/opinions/PDFs1/8116.html[8/20/2013 7:28:09 PM]




settlement agreement. We reverse and render in part and remand in part.
Background Facts
Johnna Jean Wilkerson died as a result of an automobile accident alleged to have been caused by the negligence of
Lois Hesser. The decedent was an employee of Rosa=s Caf , Inc. at the time of the accident (May 10, 2002). As an
employee, the decedent was a participant in a benefit plan provided by her employer.[1] Under the terms of the plan,
the decedent=s surviving spouse and minor child were entitled to death benefits as a result of the decedent=s death
occurring during the course of her employment.[2]
The First Lawsuit and Resulting Settlement Agreement
In order to facilitate the payment of the death benefit to Wilkerson and the minor child, appellees filed suit in the
385th District Court of Midland County on November 14, 2002, against Rosa=s Caf , Inc. The parties, including a
guardian ad litem appointed to represent the minor child, executed a document entitled ASettlement, Indemnification,
and Subrogation Agreement@ (the settlement agreement) in conjunction with the friendly suit on November 21, 2002.
With respect to the right of appellants to obtain reimbursement for the death benefits paid to appellees under the plan,
the settlement agreement provided as follows:
8. Each of the undersigned signatories for the Releasors acknowledges that he has read the subrogation provisions in
Section V.C. of the Plan, which Section V.C. is incorporated by reference into this Agreement the same as if it were
set forth here in full. Mr. Wilkerson, both individually and as Independent Executor of the Will and Estate of Johnna
J. Wilkerson, Deceased, and Jonathan David Medlin, each agrees, represents and warrants that he will perform all of
the obligations set forth in Section V.C. of the Plan, and each of them agrees and acknowledges that the Plan, Bobby
Cox Companies, Inc. and Rosa=s Caf , Inc. have all of the rights set forth in Section V.C. of the Plan and that they are
entitled to subrogate and to recover the full amount of $230,230, without any offsets or reductions to that amount, from
any recovery, by settlement or judgment, that Mr. Wilkerson, Mrs. Wilkerson=s estate and/or Jonathan David Medlin
may make on any claim or in any lawsuit against Mrs. Lois Hesser, based on Mrs. Wilkerson=s death or fatal injuries,
or otherwise arising out of the Automobile Accident, excepting only Social Security benefits and life insurance
proceeds that they may receive as a result of Mrs. Wilkerson=s death. Mr. Wilkerson, both individually and as
Independent Executor of the Will and Estate of Johnna J. Wilkerson, Deceased, and Jonathan David Medlin each
agrees, represents and warrants that he will permit and assist the Bobby Cox Companies Employee Injury Benefit Plan
to intervene in any lawsuit against Mrs. Hesser, that he will cooperate in all respects with the Plan in exercising in
such lawsuit its subrogation rights in this paragraph, and that, through his counsel, he will provide prior notice to
counsel for the Plan of all settlement negotiations, hearings, mediations, trial settings and depositions.[3] (Emphasis
added)
In addition to the foregoing provision, the signature pages for Wilkerson, Medlin, and the minor=s guardian ad litem
contained the following language which the respective signatories swore to under oath before a notary:
I also understand that the Bobby Cox Companies Employee Injury Benefit Plan will be entitled to receive the first
$230,230, without offset or reduction, from any settlement with or judgment against anyone else in connection with
[my wife=s/my son=s mother=s/Mrs. Wilkerson=s] death and fatal injuries.
The trial court entered a judgment in the first lawsuit which incorporated the terms of the settlement agreement and
expressly approved its terms. None of the parties appealed the judgment.
The Second Lawsuit
This appeal arises from the suit appellees filed against Hesser in the 142nd District Court of Midland County.
Appellees reached an agreement with Hesser wherein Hesser confessed judgment in the amount of $2,000,000.
file:///C|/Users/Peter/Desktop/opinions/PDFs1/8116.html[8/20/2013 7:28:09 PM]




However, appellees agreed to accept the sum of $255,000 from Hesser in settlement for the confessed judgment
amount. Appellants filed a plea in intervention in order to obtain reimbursement from the recovery obtained by
appellees from Hesser. Appellants asked the trial court to enforce the terms of the settlement agreement by requiring
appellees to reimburse them for the death benefits paid under the plan from the $255,000 paid by Hesser to appellees.
The parties submitted their contentions to the trial court on an informal basis. After hearing arguments and receiving
post-submission briefs from the parties, the trial court denied in part appellants= intervention claim. The trial court
apportioned the settlement funds received from Hesser in three equal shares of $85,000 between Wilkerson, the minor
child, and the decedent=s estate. The trial court awarded the $85,000 apportioned to the decedent=s estate to appellants
under the court=s interpretation of the benefit plan=s terms.[4] Appellants challenge the trial court=s judgment in two
issues.
Issues on Appeal
Appellants assert in their first issue that the trial court erred by ignoring the express terms of the settlement agreement
requiring complete reimbursement for the $230,230 paid in plan benefits. In their second issue, appellants argue that
the judgment entered in the first lawsuit prevents appellees from raising any defenses to the enforcement of the
settlement agreement. Each of appellants= issues are premised on the assertion that the trial court should have enforced
the terms of the settlement agreement as written.
Analysis
In the absence of formal findings of fact and conclusions of law, the trial court=s judgment will be upheld on any legal
theory that finds support in the evidence. Worford v. Stamper, 801 S.W.2d 108, 109 (Tex. 1990). The briefs filed in
this appeal address two legal theories which would support the trial court=s judgment. The first theory relates to the
trial court=s informal statement that the ruling was based on its interpretation of the terms of the benefit plan rather
than the terms of the settlement agreement. The second theory involves appellees= contention both at trial and on
appeal that appellants were not entitled to complete reimbursement of their subrogation claim under the Amade
whole@ doctrine. See Ortiz v. Great S. Fire & Cas. Ins. Co., 597 S.W.2d 342, 344 (Tex. 1980).
The Express Terms of the Settlement Agreement
Appellants assert that the trial court erred by ignoring the express terms of the settlement agreement requiring complete
reimbursement of the $230,230 paid in plan benefits. In construing a written contract, the primary concern of the court
is to ascertain the true intentions of the parties as expressed in the instrument. Coker v. Coker, 650 S.W.2d 391, 393
(Tex. 1983). If the written instrument is worded so that it can be given a certain or definite legal meaning or
interpretation, then the instrument is not ambiguous; and the court will construe the contract as a matter of law. Id. at
393. The terms of the settlement agreement which we have previously quoted at length expressly provide that
appellants are entitled to full reimbursement for the $230,230 in death benefits paid to Wilkerson and the minor child
from any recovery they obtained from Hesser without offset or reduction.
The trial court implicitly rejected the terms of the settlement agreement by utilizing a construction of the original
benefit plan=s terms in reaching its decision. The trial court erred in this regard. The subsequently executed settlement
agreement contained the following provision:
This Agreement contains the entire agreement between the parties to this Agreement, reduced to writing, and
supersedes and cancels any and all prior agreements and arrangements as to the matters covered herein or relating
hereto.
This provision is typically referred to as a Amerger clause.@ In general, a merger clause is a contractual provision to
the effect that the written terms of the contract may not be varied by prior agreements because all such agreements
file:///C|/Users/Peter/Desktop/opinions/PDFs1/8116.html[8/20/2013 7:28:09 PM]




have been merged into the written document. See IKON Office Solutions, Inc. v. Eifert, 125 S.W.3d 113, 125 n.6 (Tex.
App.CHouston [14th Dist.] 2003, pet. denied)(citing Black=s Law Dictionary 989 (6th ed. 1990)). To the extent the
terms of the original benefit plan might have contradicted the terms of the settlement agreement, the terms of the
settlement agreement prevail under the merger clause.[5] Appellant=s first issue is sustained. In their second issue,
appellants argue that the incorporation of the settlement agreement into the judgment entered in the first lawsuit
prevents appellees from collaterally attacking the enforcement of the settlement agreement in this proceeding.
Appellants are correct in this regard. When an agreement between parties has been approved by a court and made a
part of its judgment, the agreement is no longer merely a contract between private individuals but is the judgment of
the court. Ex parte Gorena, 595 S.W.2d 841 (Tex. 1979). Parties may not raise contractual defenses to an agreement
incorporated into a judgment because such defenses constitute impermissible collateral attacks on the prior judgment.
Id. Appellants= second issue is sustained.
The Made Whole Doctrine
Appellees contend that appellants are not entitled to recover full reimbursement for the $230,230 paid in plan benefits
because they were not Amade whole@ by Hesser for their losses resulting from the decedent=s death. Under the made
whole doctrine, an insurer is not entitled to subrogation if the insured=s loss is in excess of the amounts recovered
from the insurer and the third party causing the loss. Ortiz, 597 S.W.2d at 344. The made whole doctrine is an
equitable theory based upon the concept that if either the insurer or insured must go unpaid, the insurer should bear the
loss. Esparza v. Scott & White Health Plan, 909 S.W.2d 548, 551 52 (Tex. App.CAustin 1995, writ denied). The
doctrine has been applied in a variety of contexts to reduce or eliminate an insurer=s subrogation claim. See Fortis
Benefits v. Cantu, 170 S.W.3d 755 (Tex. App.CWaco 2005, pet. filed)(contractual subrogation); Texas Ass=n of
School Boards, Inc. v. Ward, 18 S.W.3d 256 (Tex. App.CWaco 2000, pet. denied)(statutory subrogation); Esparza, 909
S.W.2d at 551-52 (contractual subrogation). Since appellants= subrogation claim arises from contractual provisions, we
focus our attention on the cases discussing contractual subrogation.
Appellees contend that the recent holding in Fortis Benefits is dispositive. Fortis Benefits involved a subrogation claim
of an insurer that provided health insurance benefits. The insurer asserted that the made whole doctrine does not apply
to a contractual subrogation claim. Relying upon the holding in Esparza, the court rejected the insurer=s contention.
Fortis Benefits, 170 S.W.3d at 758. In Esparza, the court held that the application of the made whole doctrine cannot
be summarily overcome by a boiler plate provision in an insurance contract that purports to entitle the insurer to
subrogation out of the first monies received by the insured. Esparza, 909 S.W.2d at 551 52. The court ruled that,
A[w]hile an insurance contract providing expressly for subrogation may remove from the realm of equity the question
of whether the insurer has a right to subrogation, it cannot answer the question of when the insurer is actually entitled
to subrogation or how much it should receive.@ Esparza, 909 S.W.2d at 551. (Emphasis in original)
Fortis Benefits and Esparza would be analogous to the facts in this case if appellants were only relying upon the
subrogation provision contained in the original benefit plan. In this regard, we do not question the propriety of
applying the made whole doctrine to an insurance contract written before the insurer and insured have knowledge of
the circumstances which will cause the payment of benefits under the policy. The facts in this appeal are much
different. Here, the subrogation claim arises from a settlement agreement executed after the event which triggered the
payment of benefits giving rise to the subrogation claim. The parties, aided by counsel, presumably had knowledge of
the loss sustained by the insured and of the third-party tortfeasor=s financial wherewithal to compensate the insured
for its loss. The settlement agreement expressly provides that appellants are entitled to complete reimbursement from
the recovery obtained from Hesser without any reduction or offset. We conclude that the parties contractually waived
the application of the made whole doctrine by executing the settlement agreement under these circumstances.
This Court=s Ruling
The judgment of the trial court is reversed. Judgment is rendered that Rosa=s Caf , Inc.; Bobby Cox Companies, Inc.;
and the Bobby Cox Companies Employee Benefit Plan recover $230,230 from the $255,000 paid by Hesser to
file:///C|/Users/Peter/Desktop/opinions/PDFs1/8116.html[8/20/2013 7:28:09 PM]




appellees. All remaining issues are remanded to the trial court.
AUSTIN McCLOUD
SENIOR JUSTICE
December 21, 2005
Panel consists of: Wright, C.J., and
McCall, J., and McCloud, S.J.[6]
[1]Appellants are the decedent=s employer, Rosa=s Caf , Inc; the benefit plan, the Bobby Cox Companies Employee
Injury Benefit Plan; and the sponsor and administrator of the benefit plan, Bobby Cox Companies, Inc.
[2]Appellees are Mitch Wilkerson (Wilkerson), the decedent=s surviving husband, and David Medlin (Medlin), the
father of her surviving minor child, Jonathan David Medlin. Wilkerson filed suit in both his individual capacity and as
representative of the decedent=s estate. Medlin filed suit solely in a representative capacity on behalf of the minor.
[3]Section V.C. of the plan provided in relevant part as follows:
1. If a Participant (or if the Participant=s Death Beneficiaries, spouse, heirs, parents or legal representatives) seeks,
becomes entitled to, or receives Plan benefits for any injury or death caused by the negligent or wrongful act or
omission of any person, entity or organization other than the Company or an Employer, and is entitled to or recovers
any damages or other compensation (in any form) on account of the injury or death, whether by insurance, litigation,
arbitration, settlement or otherwise, the Participant (or his or her Death Beneficiaries, spouse, children, heirs, parents
or legal representatives) shall:
a. subrogate his or her right to and reimburse the Plan out of said damages or other compensation (including, if
necessary, all such damages or other compensation received by the Participant including, without limitation, punitive
or exemplary damages and any interest awarded and any portion awarded or paid to the Participant as attorney=s fees
or to otherwise compensate the Participant=s attorney for pursuing the claim against the person, entity or organization)
to the full extent (i.e. 100%) of the Plan benefits paid to and on behalf of the Participant and without regard to whether
said damages or other compensation fully compensate the Participant for his or her injuries and claims against the
person, entity or organization, without regard to whether the Participant was able to recover the full amount of his or
her claims against the person, entity or organization, and without regard to the nature of the damages or other
compensation recovered by the Participant.
2. A Participant, by participation in this Plan, agrees that his or her Death Beneficiaries, spouse, children, heirs, parents
and legal representatives shall be obligated to comply will all of the Participant=s obligations under this Paragraph
with regard to any claim arising from an injury to or the death of the Participant, and the receipt and acceptance of all
or part of a Death Benefit shall constitute agreement and acceptance by the accepting person or entity of all the terms
and conditions of the Plan, including those of this Paragraph.
[4]The trial court did not enter formal findings of fact and conclusions of law. However, the trial court sent a letter to
the parties which explained the rationale for its ruling. The trial court based its determination on its interpretation of
the plan=s terms. The court concluded that, under the terms of the benefit plan, appellants were only entitled to recover
reimbursement for benefits paid directly to a plan participant but not a beneficiary of a death benefit paid under the
plan.
[5] As a result of our holding in this appeal, we do not review the trial court=s interpretation of the original benefit
plan=s terms.
file:///C|/Users/Peter/Desktop/opinions/PDFs1/8116.html[8/20/2013 7:28:09 PM]




[6]Austin McCloud, Retired Chief Justice, Court of Appeals, 11th District of Texas at Eastland sitting by assignment.
file:///C|/Users/Peter/Desktop/opinions/PDFs1/8116.html[8/20/2013 7:28:09 PM]





Download 8116.pdf

Texas Law

Texas State Laws
    > Hazelwood Act
    > Texas Statutes
Texas State
    > Texas Cities
    > Texas State
    > Texas Zip Codes
Texas Tax
    > Texas Franchise Tax
    > Texas Sales Tax
    > Texas State Tax
Texas Court
    > Texas Public Records
Texas Labor Laws
    > Minimum Wage in Texas
Texas Agencies
    > Texas DMV
    > Texas Medicaid

Comments

Tips