delivered the opinion of the Court.
This case comes before us on a certified question from the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit. Pursuant to article V, section 3-c of the Texas Constitution and Texas Rule of Appellate Procedure 58.1, we answer the following question:
Must an insurer show prejudice to deny payment on a claims-made policy, when the denial is based upon the insured’s breach of the policy’s prompt-notice provision, but the notice is nevertheless given within the policy’s coverage period?
XL Specialty Ins. Co. v. Fin. Indus. Corp.,
I
Background 1
XL Specialty Insurance Company (XL) issued a claims-made, management liability *878 policy to Financial Industries Corporation (FIC) for the policy period of March 12, 2005 to March 12, 2006. In exchange for a $475,000 premium, XL agreed to pay on behalf of FIC losses resulting from certain claims — including securities claims — “first made” against FIC during the policy period. The policy’s notice provision, found in section VI under the heading “GENERAL CONDITIONS,” provided: “As a condition precedent to any right to payment under this Policy with respect to any Claim, the Insured shall give written notice to the Insurer of any Claim as soon as practicable after it is first made.”
On June 5, 2005, two plaintiffs sued FIC in Texas state court for breach of contract and fraud. FIC notified XL seven months after the suit was filed, but within the policy’s coverage period. XL and FIC stipulate that this notification breached the policy’s prompt-notice provision but did not prejudice XL. XL subsequently sued FIC in federal district court, seeking a declaratory judgment that the policy did not cover FIC for the lawsuit; XL also sent FIC a letter denying coverage. The district court granted XL’s summary judgment motion, holding that under Texas law, an insurer need not demonstrate prejudice from late notice to avoid coverage on a claims-made policy. FIC appealed.
II
Must an insurer show prejudice to deny payment on a claims-made policy, when the denial is based upon the insured’s breach of the policy’s prompt-notice provision, but the notice is nevertheless given within the policy’s coverage period?
In
Prodigy Communications Corp. v. Agricultural Excess & Surplus Insur-anee Co.,
Recognizing that, for the insui'er, the inherent benefit of a claims-made policy is the insurer’s ability “to ‘close its books’ on a policy at its expiration and thus to attain a level of predictability unattainable under standard occurrence policies,” we concluded that Prodigy’s alleged failure to give notice “as soon as soon as practicable” was immaterial because it did not interfere with this benefit. Id. at 380 (citation omitted).
XL’s claims-made policy differs slightly from the
Prodigy
policy in that XL’s policy requires only that notice of a claim be given “as soon as practicable” and does not contain a clear-cut reporting deadline.
See id.
at 379 n. 7 (discussing difference between standard “claims-made” and “claims-made-and-reported” policies). However, the same reasons for requiring the insurer to demonstrate prejudice ap
*879
ply: FIC gave notice of the claim within the policy’s scope of coverage, i.e., before XL could “close its books” on the policy. Because XL was not denied the benefit of the elaims-made nature of its policy, it could not deny coverage based on FIC’s immaterial breach of the policy’s prompt-notice provision.
See id.
at 377;
see also PAJ, Inc. v. The Hanover Ins. Co.,
Ill
Conclusion
For the reasons stated above and explained more fully in
Prodigy Communications Corp. v. Agricultural Excess & Surplus Insurance Co.,
Notes
. We incorporate the facts as staled by the Fifth Circuit in its certification to this court.
*878
XL Specialty Ins. Co.,
