Aрpellee Great American Lloyd’s Insurance Co. (“Lloyd’s”) originally brought a declaratory judgment action against The Elliott System, Inc. (“Elliott”), the former employer of appellant Fred Adаms. In a final summary judgment, the trial court declared that Lloyd’s commercial liability policy did not cover damages Adams incurred due to Elliott’s negligent failure to include Adams on its health insurancе policy. By two points of error, Adams argues that the trial court erred in granting summary judgment for Lloyd’s. We will affirm the trial-court judgment.
THE CONTROVERSY
Elliott hired Adams on December 21,1989, as a full-time apartment complex manager. Elliott promised Adams that he would be enrolled in its medical insurance plan once he had completed three months of full-time work. On March 21, 1989, Adams completed three months of full-time work, but Elliott failed to enroll Adams in its health insurance plan with the Aetna Life Insurance Company. In April 1990, Adams suffered severe kidney failure that required hospitalization.. Because Elliоtt had not enrolled Adams, Aet-na refused to cover Adams’s medical expenses; the plan would have covered these expenses had Adams been enrolled.
Adams sued Elliott in state court on negligence and breach of contract theories; Elliott removed the case to federal court on the basis that the Employee Retirement Income Security Act governed the action. See 29 U.S.C. §§ 1001-1461 (1988) (since amended) (hereinafter “ERISA”). Lloyd’s, Elliott’s commercial liability carrier, refused to defend Elliott on the ground that the commercial liability policy (“the рolicy”) did not cover Adams’s claim. After a bench trial, the federal court found Elliott negligent and rendered a judgment awarding Adams the damages ERISA permitted: medical expenses, attorney’s fees, and interest. While the case was pending in federal district court, Lloyd’s filed the present declaratory judgment action against Elliott in state court, seeking a declaration that Lloyd’s had no obligation to pay any judgment that Adams obtained against Elliott. After the judgment in federal court, Elliott assigned its cause of action against Lloyd’s to Adams, Adams was substituted for Elliott as the dеfendant in the declaratory judgment action, and Lloyd’s moved for summary judgment.
At the summary judgment hearing, Lloyd’s contended that Adams’s damages for medical costs constituted economic loss which, as a matter of law, the policy did not cover. The policy provides, in relevant part:
COVERAGE A. BODILY INJURY AND PROPERTY DAMAGE LIABILITY
1. Insuring Agreement
a. We will pay those sums that the insured becomes legally obligated to pay *771 as damаges because of “bodily injury” or “property damage” to which this insurance applies.
“Property damage” means:
a. Physical injury to tangible property, including all resulting loss of use of that property; or
b. Loss of use of tangible property that is not physically injured.
In response, Adams first contended that his damages fell within the coverage provision for bodily injury, arguing that he had pleaded for mental anguish damages in his state-court petition against Elliott and that mental anguish constitutes bodily injury. The trial court concluded that the federal-court judgment established the measure of Adams’s recoverable damages because the policy provides coverage only for sums “that the insured becomes legally obligated to pay as damages_” Because the fedеral judgment pursuant to ERISA limited Adams’s award to medical costs, the trial court concluded that no mental anguish damages were recoverable and, hence, that there was no coverage under the bodily injury provision. 1
Adams next contended that his damages were covered under the property damage coverage provision. While Adams did not argue that he sustаined physical damage to tangible property, he argued that he had lost the use of the group insurance policy, which he contended was tangible property and thus was covered under Lloyd’s policy. The trial court concluded that Adams’s damages constituted ecоnomic loss and ruled as a matter of law that the coverage provision for property damage did not cover any form of economic loss. Having ruled that neither the property damage nor bodily injury provision covered Adams’s damages, the trial court granted summary judgment for Lloyd’s.
DISCUSSION
To sustain its summary judgment, Lloyd’s must show that it is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Tex.R.Civ.P. 166a(c);
Rodriguez v. Naylor Indus., Inc.,
A. Policy Coverage Analysis
In his first point of error, Adams urges that the trial court erred in granting summary judgment for Lloyd’s on thе basis that his claim was one for economic loss and, therefore, was not covered by the policy. He argues that the policy does not specifically exclude reсovery for “economic loss,” making the trial court’s ruling tantamount to a hidden exclusion for economic loss without reference to the actual coverage terms. We agree.
In an insurance coverage dispute, the language of the policy determines the insurer's liability.
Daca, Inc. v. Commonwealth Land Title Ins. Co.,
The record reflects that the trial court characterized Adams’s loss of benefits as an
*772
economic loss and, finding policy coveragе only for bodily injury or property damage, concluded that Lloyd’s liability policy did not cover his loss. Adams insists that the proper analysis focuses on the coverage language. He рoints out that this language covers damages that result from
loss of use of tangible property.
Adams argues that the health insurance policy is tangible property the use of which he was wrongly deprived, resulting in liability for medicаl costs. Therefore, we must first determine whether Adams’s interpretation of the policy is a reasonable one.
National Union Fire Ins. Co.,
Tangible property is capable of being hаndled or touched and may be evaluated by the physical senses.
Lay,
Because Adams’s damages resulted from the loss of use of intangible property, no reasonable construction of the Lloyd’s policy affords coverage for those damages. Therefore, the trial court properly granted summary judgment in favor of Lloyd’s.
National Union Fire Ins. Co.,
B. Policy Exclusion
As an alternative ground for sustaining the trial court’s summary judgment, Lloyd’s cites a contractual liability exclusion in the poliсy. Because we hold that the Lloyd’s policy does not cover appellant’s legally recoverable damages, we need not consider the effect of a coverage exclusion.
CONCLUSION
Adams’s legally recoverable damages, as established by his federal-court judgment pursuant to ERISA, resulted from the loss of use of intangible property, namely insurance coverage rights. Because the insurance policy at issue cannot reasonably be construed to cover Adams’s damages, we affirm the trial court’s summary judgment in favor of Lloyd’s.
Notes
. In the сontext of employee benefit plans, ERISA preempts and displaces all state-law causes of action and provides the exclusive remedy for the rights that it protects. 29 U.S.C. §§ 1144(a), (c)(1) (1988);
Ingersoll-Rand Co. v. McClendon,
