On petition for rehearing,
Allstate’s first claim is that the case of
First Preferred Ins. Co. v. Bell,
Since Article 2226 clearly includes contracts of insurance within the term “oral and written contracts,” we must address for the first time and with the aid of very little briefing, appellant’s second issue: whether fire insurance contracts are exempted from Article 2226 by operation of that Article’s exclusion provision. This provision expressly notes:
The provisions hereof shall not apply to contracts of insurers issued by insurers subject to the provisions of the Unfair Claim Settlement Practices Act (Article 21.21-2, Insurance Code), nor shall it apply to contracts of any insurer subject to the provisions of Article 3.62, Insurance Code, or to Chapter 387, Acts of the 55th Legislature, Regular Session, 1957, as amended (Article 3.62-1, Vernon’s Texas Insurance Code), or to Article 21.21, Insurance Code, as amended, or to Chapter 9, Insurance Code, as amended, and each such article or chapter shall be and remain in full force and effect.
Section 7 of the Unfair Claim Settlement Practices Act seems to cover almost every type of insurer that can exist, in order to enable the Texas Board of Insurers to guard against deceptive practices by any of these companies. We find it extremely difficult to believe that the Texas legislature intended the exclusion provision to prevent the award of fees on all insurance contracts in all cases except those brought under the Unfair Claim Act by the Board of Insurers. Rather, it seems more sensible that the legislature excluded from the scope of coverage of Article 2226 suits brought under those Acts-such as the Unfair Claim Settlement Practices Act-which themselves specify conditions for awarding attorney’s fees. Thus, we deem it more logical that the exclusion provision of Article 2226, quoted above, was intended to increase, not decrease, the availability of fees to plaintiffs. Yet, for the time being, it seems that the “plainer” language of Article 2226 and the case of
Standard Fire Insurance Co. v. Fraiman,
Therefore, the judgment of the trial court is affirmed, except in regard to its conclusion as to the availability of attorney’s fees; in that regard, it is reversed.
The judgment of the trial court is
AFFIRMED IN PART AND REVERSED IN PART.
