OPINION
Ansell Healthcare Products, Inc. appeals from a judgment in favor of United Medical on its claim for indemnity under Section 82.002 of the Texas Civil Practices and Remedies Code (the “CPRC”). Ansell contends that United Medical failed to properly segregate its indemnifiable losses, that the attorney’s fees award is unreasonable as a matter of law, and that trial court erred by failing to make the appellate attorney’s fees awards contingent оn success on appeal. We conclude that the evidence supports the trial court’s awards for indemnity and attorney’s fees but that the award for appellate attorney’s fees must be conditioned on which party prevails on appeal. We modify the award of appellate attorney’s fees accordingly and affirm the judgment as modified.
Background
After her daughter, Cheyanne, suffered an allergic reaction to latex glovеs while at *739 Texas Children’s Hospital, Lisa Talley brought a products liability action against more than thirty defendants that Talley alleged were “in the business of manufacturing, designing, assembling, fabricating, distributing, supplying, and/or selling latex-containing products and specifically latex gloves used generally in the health care field and more specifically during multiple surgeries performed at Texas Children’s hospital on [Cheyanne.]” United Medical and Ansell were among the defendants named in Talley’s suit. United Medical filed a cross-action for indemnity against Ansell and other defendants.
In 2002, Talley nonsuited her claims against United Medical. United Medical then filed a motion for partial summary judgment on its cross-claims against An-sell and another defendant, Safeskin Corporation, on the basis of Chapter 82 of the CPRC. United Medical argued that it was an innocent seller under Chapter 82 and thus entitled to indemnification for its expenses in defending the Talley claims from Ansell and Safeskin, who manufactured the latex gloves United Medical sold to Texas Children’s Hospital. See Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem.Code § 82.002(a) (“A manufacturer shall indemnify and hold harmless a seller against loss arising out of a products liability action, except for any loss caused by the seller’s negligence, intentional misconduct, or other act or omission, such as negligently modifying or altering the product, for which the seller is independently liable.”). The trial court granted United Medical’s partial summary judgment on liability against Ansell and Safeskin.
Subsequently, United Medical settled with Safeskin, and Ansell settled with Talley. For years after the summary judgment on liability and the resolution of the Talley claims, United Medical and Ansell hotly contested the scope of Ansell’s indemnification duty to United Medical. From 2003 through 2010, Ansell and United Medical filed numerous, voluminous motions in the trial court, including motions for partial or complete summary judgment. The trial court denied these motions and conducted a bench trial to determine the amount of Ansell’s indemnity obligation to United Medical. At trial, United Medical presented expert testimony that its recoverable attorney’s fees totaled $329,781.30. According to the testimony, this figure consisted of United Medical’s reasonable and necessary attorney’s fees incurred for (1) defending the Talley claims with respect to Ansell, exclusive of fees relating to Safeskin and fees incurred after United Medical was nonsuited, and (2) prosecuting its indemnity claim against Ansell through the end of trial. The trial court expressly found this testimony to be credible. Ansell put on expert testimony that United Medical should have expended minimal efforts to defend the Talley claims because, as a pass-through distributor protected under Chapter 82 of the CPRC, United Medical had little or no risk. Ansell’s expert testified that reasonable and necessary аttorney’s fees for United Medical to defend the Talley claims would have been $22,475 and that none of this amount was attributable to Ansell’s product as opposed to Safeskin’s product. The trial court expressly found this testimony to be less credible than the expert testimony offered by United Medical.
After the close of evidence, the trial court entered judgment awarding United Medical:
• $74,037.11 plus interest pursuant to Ansell’s Chapter 82 indemnification obligatiоn in the Talley action,
• $249,220.49 for attorney’s fees in prosecution of the indemnity claim against Ansell through trial,
*740 • $30,000 in attorney’s fees in the event of an appeal to the court of appeals,
• $12,500 in the event of a petition for review to the Texas Supreme Court, and
• $15,000 in the event review is granted by the Texas Supreme Court.
This appeal ensued.
Standard of Review
Ansell’s appeal presents both questions of law and questions touching on the sufficiency of the evidence. We review questiоns of law de novo.
In re Humphreys,
In a factual sufficiency review, the court must examine the evidence both supporting and contrary to the judgment.
See Dow Chem. Co. v. Francis,
The Indemnity Award
A. Chapter 82’s Duty to Indemnify
With certain exceptions, Chapter 82 of the CPRC obligates manufacturers to indemnify innocent sellers from products liability actions arising out of their products. Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem.Code Ann. § 82.002. This duty is a creature of statute, new and distinct from the duties owed by manufacturers under the common law.
Owens & Minor, Inc. v. Ansell Healthcare Prods., Inc.,
In
Owens & Minor,
which also arose out of a latex allergy products liability action against multiple manufacturers and sellers, seller-defendant Owens sought to recover Chapter 82 indemnity from Ansеll and another manufacturer-defendant, Becton, Dickinson and Company, even though An-sell and Becton were not the manufacturers of the products sold by Owens.
On appeal, Owens argued that it was entitled to indemnity from Ansell and Bec-ton regardless of whether they were the manufacturers of the products it sold. The Supreme Court of Texas disagreed. The supreme court observed that the plaintiffs pleadings were sufficient to trigger each manufacturer-defendant’s duty of indemnification, but this duty did not make each manufacturer liable to indemnify every seller in the case for all of its costs. Id. at 484. The court held that an entity qualifies as a “manufacturer” under Chapter 82 only with respect to the products it manufactured. Id. at 485; see also Tex. Civ. PRAC. & Rem.Code Ann. § 82.001(4) (defining “manufacturer” as “a person who is a designer, formulator, constructor, rе-builder, fabricator, producer, compounder, processor, or assembler of any product or any component part thereof and who places the product or any component thereof in the stream of commerce”). Thus, the court concluded that a manufacturer’s duty to indemnify under Chapter 82 extends only to claims related to the sale of the manufacturer’s own products. Id. at 489; see also id. (Brister, J., concurring) (“[A] retailer is not required to prove that a defendant’s product caused the plaintiffs injury (and thus its own defense costs), only that a plaintiffs allegation about the defendant’s product did so.”)
*742 B. United Medical’s Indemnifiable Costs
'In its first argument on appeal, Ansell contends that, under Owens & Minor, United Medical was required to “segregate its defense costs between manufacturers named in the Talleys’ pleadings” and failed to do so. Ansell asserts that the reason United Medical sought indemnity only from Ansell and Safeskin was that discovery showed that these were the only manufacturers whose products United Medical sold to Texas Children’s Hоspital, where Cheyanne’s injury occurred. Ansell argues that this was impermissible because, under Fitzgerald, the duty of indemnification arises out of the pleadings and subsequent discovery may not be considered.
Meritor Automotive, Owens & Minor, and Fitzgerald set up three parameters for determining the Chapter 82 indemnity obligations between a seller and a manufacturer.
First, is the claim part of a products liability action?
See Meritor Automotive,
Second, is the party seeking indemnity an innocent seller to which an indemnity duty is owed?
See Fitzgerald,
Third, is the party from whom indemnity is sought a “manufacturer” who owes a duty to indemnify sellers, and if so, what is the scope of that duty?
See Owens & Minor,
Ansell’s position on appeal is that United Medical necessarily incurred some costs in defеnse of products manufactured by the other named manufacturer-defendants, and that it failed to account for those costs by subtracting them from the expenses incurred in defending the Talley claims. We disagree that United Medical necessarily incurred costs in defending
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claims relating to other manufacturer’s latex gloves but not Ansell’s gloves. Some of United Medical’s legal work may have been useful with respect to all claims asserted against it, but when litigation costs are reasonably and necessarily incurred in defense of a claim for which costs are recoverable, they are not rendered unrecoverable merely because they are also reasonable and necessary with respect to other claims for which costs are not recoverable.
See Tony Gullo Motors I, L.P. v. Chapa,
Moreover, regardless of whether United Medical incurred costs relating to other defendants’ products, Owens identifies no basis for discrеditing United Medical’s evidence that the specific costs it sought to recover from Ansell were incurred in defending claims relating to Ansell’s product. Ansell’s trial strategy was not to disprove that specific expenses related to its product but to attack the amount of expenses through expert testimony that United Medical should have done little to defend the Talley claims and relied on its right to indemnity — the very indemnity Ansell resists here.
3
United Medical put on evidence that the costs it sought to recover were incurred in relation to Ansell’s product, and the trial court, as finder of fact, was free to credit that evidence.
See City of Keller,
C. Settlement Credit
Ansell argues, in the alternative, that “[w]ere the Court to hold that Ansell and Safeskin could be targeted for joint and several liability under § 82.003,” An-sell would be entitled to a settlement credit in the amount of United Medical’s settlement with Safeskin pursuant to the “one satisfaction rule.” There is no joint and several liability between Ansell and Safes-kin here. The issue tried was the amount of damages incurred by United Medical as a result of Ansell’s breach of its Chapter 82 duty to indemnify United Medical; the evidence presented related to defense costs incurred by United Medical in defending claims relating to Ansell’s product, expressly excluding costs relating to Safes-kin’s products; and the trial court’s judgment is against Ansell alone and awards damages only for Ansell’s brеach of its duty to indemnify. The “one satisfaction rule” does not apply to these facts.
See Crown Life Ins. Co. v. Casteel,
The Attorney’s Fees Award
In its second and third arguments on appeal, Ansell argues that the trial court’s *744 award of attorney’s fees is unreasonable as a matter of law and that the trial court erred in failing to condition recovery of appellate attorney’s fees on the outcome of the appeal.
A. Reasonableness of the Attorney’s Fees at Trial
Ansell argues that the award of $249,220.49 in attorney’s fees and costs through trial of the indemnity claim is unreasonable as a matter of law in light of the amount recovered by United Medical ($74,037.11) for indemnification and the lack of “uniqueness” of the case.
Chapter 82 authorizes sellers like United Medical who are entitled to indemnity from a manufacturer also to recover from the manufacturer court costs and “reasonable attorney fees” incurred by the seller to enforce its right to indemnity. Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem.Code Ann. § 82.002(g). A reasonable fee is one that is moderate or fair but not excessive or extreme.
Garcia v. Gomez,
We will reverse a fact-finder’s determination of the reasonableness of attorney’s fees on the basis of a legal sufficiency challenge only if there is no evidence to support it.
See Redwine v. Wright,
No. 14-10-00030-CV,
Several of the Arthur Andersen factors weigh in favor of the attorney’s fees award. The parties’ indemnity dispute lasted over a considerable length of time and was hotly contested, with multiple voluminous motions filed by both sides. See id. (identifying as a factors for consideration: time and labor required, novelty and difficulty of quеstions involved, and skill required to perform legal services properly). The record demonstrates that a significant portion of the legal work performed by United Medical in prosecuting its indemnity claim was in response to motions filed by Ansell, some of which asked the trial court to reconsider or revisit issues already decided in United Medical’s favor. Contrary to Ansell’s contention that there were no “unique” issues in this case, Ansell presented a number of legal arguments related to the mechanics *745 of Chapter 82 indemnity in the context of multi-defendant products liability actions— an area of law not yet fully developed in the jurisprudence — which United Medical defended against. See id.
While the amount in controversy is less than the amount of attorney’s fees incurred, United Medical obtained a good result, recovering most of the fees it sought. See id. (identifying as factors: amount in controversy and result obtained). Moreover, the record demonstrates that counsel for Ansell determined this indemnity action worthy of a rigorous defense, and there is no basis in the record for concluding that United Medical’s counsel could not have reasonably reached the same conclusion. Finally, the expert testimony supports an inference that the rate charged by United Medical’s counsel is consistent with the rate for services from other attorneys in the area with comparable experience, skill and ability. See id. (identifying as factors: experience, skill and ability of attorney and going-rate for similar services in local area).
There is more than a scintilla of evidence to support the trial court’s assessment, as the trier of fact, of United Medical’s reasonable attorney’s fees.
See id.; see also John A. Broderick, Inc. v. Kaye Bassman Int’l Corp.,
B. Conditioning Appellate Attorney’s Fees on Outcome
Ansell’s final argument is that the trial court’s award of attorney’s fees for appeal is erroneous because it requires Ansell to pay United Medical’s attorney’s fees (1) on appeal, regardless of which party prevails on appeal and (2) for a petition for review to the Supreme Court of Texas, regardless of which party files the petition. We agree that the award of appellate attorney’s fees should be dependent on which party prevails on appeal.
Keith v. Keith,
c. Reasonable attorney’s fees incurred in the prosecution of this action as follows: ...
ii. $30,000.00 in the event of an appeal to the court of appeals unless An-sell prevails in the court of appeals and petition for review is not granted by the Texas Supreme Court or unless Ansell prevails in the Texas Suprеme Court;
iii. $12,5000 in the event that Ansell files a petition for review in the Texas Supreme Court unless Ansell prevails in the Texas Supreme Court;
iv. $15,000 in the event Ansell’s petition for review is granted by the Texas Supreme Court unless Ansell prevails in the Texas Supreme Court.
(modified language italicized).
Conclusion
We affirm the trial court’s judgment as modified.
Notes
. In
Meritor Automotive,
the court addressed what claims are included within a "products
*741
liability action” for which a seller is entitled to indemnity and when the statutory exception to the duty to indemnify, excluding loss caused by the seller’s own misconduct, applies. The court determined that the duty to indemnify extends to all claims properly joined to a claimant’s products liability action, including a negligence claim against a seller.
. In
Fitzgerald,
the court addressed who is entitled tо indemnity under Chapter 82.
Fitzgerald,
. At trial, Ansell also offered expert testimony that none of United Medical's costs could be attributed to Ansell’s product because Ansell’s gloves were not among the gloves to which Cheyanne was exposed. The issue for indemnity, however, is not whether Ansell’s products are ultimately found responsible for the plaintiff's injuries — an issue often left unresolved due to settlement, as occurred here. Instead, the issue is whether the costs were incurred in defending claims alleged against the seller on the basis of its sale of the manufacturer’s product.
See Fitzgerald,
