On Application foh WRIT of ERROR to the Court of Appeals FOR the Twelfth DistRict of Texas.
delivered the opinion of the Court, in which all Justices join.
The principal issue in this case is whether an insurance company may assert the defense of misrepresentation for statements made in an application not attached to a life insurance policy. In reversing and remanding a jury verdict in favor of an insured, the court of appeals considered evidence contained in an application for life insurance that was not attached to, or made a part of, the life insurance policies at issue.
*280 I.
Claytor Blake III, died as the result of a gun-shot wound to the head. At the time of his death, he owned two life insurance policies, each in the amount of $250,000, issued by General American. General American refused the beneficiaries’ claims, and Fredonia State Bank (the “Bank”), as assignee of one of these policies and as executor of the Clay-tor Blake estate, sued to collect the proceeds of the policies. General American asserted two defenses to the claim, that Blake had committed suicide, and that Blake had made misrepresentations regarding his medical history which were material to the risk assumed by General American. The Bank denied that the application contained misrepresentations, and argued that the application could not, in any event, provide the basis for a misrepresentation defense because the application was not attached to the policies issued to Blake. After evidence on both of these theories was introduced at trial, the jury found that Blake did not commit suicide, that the medical portion of Blake’s application was not attached to the insurance policies, and that Blake did not misrepresent his medical history in order to obtain insurance, among other findings favorable to Fredonia Bank.
The trial court rendered judgment for the Bank for the proceeds of both policies. The judgment signed by the trial court did not award all of the relief sought by the Bank, however, and the Bank appealed. General American responded with cross points attacking the sufficiency of the evidence to support the findings concerning misrepresentation. The court of appeals sustained General American’s points that the great weight and preponderance of the evidence was contrary to the jury’s failure to find that Blake made misrepresentations in order to obtain insurance. The court therefore reversed and remanded for a new trial.
II.
As a preliminary matter, we must consider whether General American’s factual sufficiency claims were properly before the court of appeals. General American raised factual sufficiency points in a motion for new trial filed after the trial court originally rendered judgment. Later, the trial court signed a second judgment. The Bank contends that only a motion for new trial filed after the court’s second judgment would preserve factual sufficiency points. We disagree.
After the jury returned a verdict generally favorable to the Bank, General American filed its motion for judgment not withstanding the verdict. The motion, filed May 3, 1990, asked the court to disregard several controlling issues, and render a take-nothing judgment.
The trial court signed a judgment on May 14,1990. The court granted General American’s motion for judgment NOV in part disregarding findings of bad faith; the court rendered judgment on the verdict on the remaining issues, however, including actual and punitive damages, and attorney fees.
On June 1, 1990, General American filed its Motion for New Trial and to Correct or Reform Judgment. The motion asked the court to set aside its judgment of May 14, 1990 and grant a new trial for factual sufficiency reasons. Alternatively, General American requested a modification of the judgment to reduce the amount of attorneys fees. The court conducted a hearing on the motion but never ruled on it.
On July 27, 1990, the trial court signed an order ruling on General American’s motion for judgment NOV consistent with the prior judgment, except that the trial court disregarded the finding on attorney fees. In a separate handwritten document entitled “Order”, the court recited that the judgment “should be reformed” by deleting $276,142.45 of the attorney fees, “to reflect the ruling of the court on Defendant’s Motion for Judgment Notwithstanding the Verdict signed this date.”
On August 27, 1990, the trial court rendered its “Reformed Final Judgment” which was substantially the same as its prior judgment, except that the trial court deleted the award of attorneys fees. Without further motion in the trial court, General American filed its appeal bond on September 4, 1990.
In its initial opinion, the court of appeals invited the parties to áddress whether
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the August judgment was the final judgment and consequently, whether the court of appeals had jurisdiction. Despite the Bank’s position to the contrary, the court of appeals correctly held that because the trial court changed its judgment during the period of its plenary power, the time for perfecting appeal started over with the August judgment. Since the appeal bond was filed less than 30 days later, the court of appeals properly exercised jurisdiction.
In this court, the Bank shifts the emphasis of its argument from jurisdiction to preservation of error. The Bank contends the final judgment signed on August 27,1990, was not challenged by a motion for new trial, therefore General American has waived any complaint about the factual sufficiency of the evidence supporting the jury’s verdict.
General American asserts in part that its motion for new trial preserved error in the subsequent modified judgment under Rule 68(c) of the Texas Rules of Appellate Procedure which states:
(c) In civil cases, if the trial court has signed an order modifying, correcting, or reforming the order appealed from, or has vacated that order and signed another, any proceedings relating to an appeal of the first order may be considered applicable to the second....
Tex.R.App.P. 58(c). To complain on appeal that a jury finding is not supported by factually sufficient evidence, or is against the overwhelming weight of the evidence, a party must have first raised the matter in a motion for new trial. Tex.R.Civ.P. 324(b)(2), (3).
The Bank contends that Rule 58(c) does not apply for two reasons. First, the Bank argues the motion for new trial should not be considered because it expressly assailed only the first judgment, not the second judgment. 1 Second, the Bank claims the motion for new trial was overruled by operation of law, and therefore was not a viable pleading at the time the August 27 Judgment was signed.
We conclude that under Rule 58(e) a motion for new trial relating to an earlier judgment may be considered applicable to a second judgment when the substance of the motion could properly be raised with respect to the corrected judgment.
See, e.g., Gill v. Rosas,
The Bank relies for authority on the case of
A.G. Solar & Co., Inc. v. Nordyke,
Rule 58 is not limited by its language to motions that are “live” when the final judgment is rendered, although for jurisdictional purposes, the
Solar
court and a number of other courts of appeals have engrafted such a requirement onto the rule by judicial interpretation. Other than
Solar,
in each of the cases in which the court engrafted the “live” pleading requirement to the rule, the court ultimately held the motion for new trial filed in the ease was viable, and therefore could be considered as a premature motion.
Syn-Labs,
We have not previously addressed this construction of Rule 58. Another court has declined to follow the analysis of
Solar,
however.
Harris County Hosp. Dist. v. Estrada,
The Texas Supreme Court has twice enacted rules to assure that cases are not dismissed because the motion for new trial was filed too soon. Neither of those rules limits their application to “live” pleadings. To require a “live” pleading here would defeat the purpose of those rules.
Id. at 880.
We conclude that the better reasoned application of Rule 58, more congruent with the Rule’s purpose, is set forth in Estrada. The trial court was fully apprised of General American’s complaints in its motion for new trial and the hearing on the motion, and the court rejected those arguments when it reformed judgment. Therefore the requirements of Rule 52 of the Texas Rules of Appellate Procedure for preservation of error have been fully satisfied. The result of the Bank’s reasoning would be that legal sufficiency points were preserved, but factual sufficiency points expressly presented in a motion for new trial were waived for failure to file a second identical motion. To read into the rules a requirement that a redundant motion for new trial is necessary to preserve error would defeat the goal of hearing cases on their merits whenever possible, without advancing any corresponding policy considerations. 2 The Rules of Appellate Procedure, and particularly Rule 58, should not be read to defeat the right to appeal except when such a construction is absolutely necessary. We hold that a motion for new trial overruled by operation of law, which complains of error brought forward in a subsequent judgment, preserves the complaints to the extent applicable to the subsequent judgment, under Rule 58 of the Texas Rules of Appellate Procedure. We therefore disapprove of Solar to the extent that it can be read to mean that a motion for new trial overruled by operation of law is insufficient to preserve error in a subsequent judgment under Rule 58. The court of appeals here properly considered the sufficiency of evidence points of error raised in General American’s prematurely-filed motion for new trial. 3
III.
Among the points raised by General American in the court of appeals, the court sus-
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tamed legal and factual sufficiency challenges to the jury’s findings that the medical portion of Blake’s application for life insurance was not attached to his policies, and held that the jury’s finding that Blake did not misrepresent his medical history in order to obtain life insurance was contrary to the great weight of the evidence. In holding for General American, the court of appeals held that whether or not the application was attached to the policy is irrelevant to whether the insurance company could assert misrepresentations in the application as a defense. The court of appeals did not agree with the Bank’s assertion that, under article 21.35 of the Texas Insurance Code, General American could not rely on any misrepresentation contained in the applications because the jury found in questions two and three, that the applications were not attached to the insurance policies. Article 21.35 has been interpreted to mean that the application must be attached to the policy as a precondition to its use in the insurer’s defense of misrepresentation.
Johnson v. Prudential Ins. Co. of Am.,
The court of appeals initially sustained General American’s legal and factual sufficiency challenges to the jury’s answers concerning attachment of the applications to the policies on the grounds that the Bank failed to adequately challenge General American’s statement of the facts in its brief. Rule 74(f) of the Texas Rules of Appellate Procedure provides in pertinent part that “(a)ny statement made by appellant in his original brief as to the facts or the record may be accepted by the court as correct unless challenged by the opposing party.” Tex.R.App.P. 74(f).
The Bank’s reply point in the court of appeals was: “THERE IS SUFFICIENT EVIDENCE TO SUPPORT THE JURY’S ANSWER TO QUESTION 2 AND 3 [in which the jury found the applications were not attached to the policies].” Rather than support the point with record citations, however, the Bank argued that General American’s points were moot because of the failure of the jury to find misrepresentation. This general, conclusory statement in the Bank’s brief cannot be held to constitute a challenge to the specific statements of fact and citations to the record contained in General American’s brief.
See Hercules, Inc. v. Eilers,
The Bank argues that even if its challenge was insufficient, our decision in
Inpetco, Inc. v. Texas American Bank/Houston N.A.,
Davis
relied on an advisory opinion of the Subcommittee on Interpretation of the Texas Rules of Practice and Procedure in Civil Cases, which stated that a party should move
*285
to amend its brief when he or she has failed to comply with the briefing rules.
See Civil Procedure,
7 Tex.B.J. 281, 288 (1944). The Subcommittee quoted approvingly from
Cochran v. Wool Growers Central Storage Co.,
Allowing our intermediate courts some discretion in ordering rebriefing is necessary to balance the twin objectives of a liberal and just construction of procedural rules and the prompt and efficient resolution of appeals.
See A.C. Collins Ford, Inc. v. Ford Motor Co.,
Our determination that the court of appeals was justified in accepting General American’s statement of facts under Rule 74(f) does not end our inquiry, however. As the Bank points out, the court of appeals made the leap from applying Rule 74(f) to sustaining General American’s legal and factual sufficiency challenges without any intervening analysis. Even accepting General American’s facts as true, the court was still required to conduct a sufficiency review of those facts.
See Whatley v. Whatley,
IV.
The court of appeals further erred in holding that the finding that copies of the medical portion of the application were not attached to the policies was “immaterial” to General American’s misrepresentation defense. The court of appeals relied on
Wise v. Mutual Life Insurance Company of New York,
The first sentence of Article 21.35 provides:
Except as otherwise provided in this code, every contract or policy of life insurance issued or contracted for in this State shall be accompanied by a written, photographic or printed copy of the application for such insurance policy or contract, as well as a copy of all questions asked and answers given thereto.”
Tex.Ins.Code art. 21.35 (Supp.1989) (emphasis added). No doubt article 21.35 as presently worded applies to life insurance policies; however, the word “life”, emphasized above, was not added until 1989. Act of 1989, 71st Leg., R.S., ch. 656, § 1, 1989 Tex. Gen.Laws 2163. The act provides that it is to be effective for all claims for payment filed ■with an insurer after September 1, 1989, but claims made prior to that date are to be governed by the law in effect at that time. Id., § 2, 1989 Tex.Gen.Laws 2163. The beneficiaries made their claims on the policies in 1986. Thus we must determine the meaning of the statute prior to the 1989 amendment. 8
The federal court in
Wise
stated that its holding was compelled by Texas law as set forth in
First Texas Prudential Insurance Company v. Pedigo,
The statute that was to become article 21.35 of the Texas Insurance Code was passed in 1903. Act Adopted March 27, 1903, 28th Leg., R.S., ch. 69, § 1, 1903 Tex. GemLaws 94, 95. As reenacted into the Texas Revised Civil Statutes of 1911 at article 4951, it provided in relevant part:
Every contract or policy of insurance issued or contracted for in this State shall be accompanied by a written, photographic or printed copy of the application for such insurance policy or contract, as well as a copy of all questions asked and answers given thereto. The provisions of the foregoing Articles [articles 4947-4949, concerning the misrepresentation defense] shall not apply to policies of life insurance in which there is a clause making such policy indisputable after two years or less, provided premiums are duly paid....
Tex.Rev.Civ.Stat. art. 4951 (1911) (repealed) (emphasis added). From a plain reading of the statute, it would appear that the first sentence of this statute was to apply to all insurance policies of every kind.
In 1909, the legislature enacted another statute which required that all life insurance policies contain a provision that the policy, or the policy and the application, is the entire agreement between the parties, and shall be incontestable after two years. Act Approved March 22,1909, 31st Leg., R.S., ch. 108, § 22, 1908 Tex.Gen.Laws 192, 200, reenacted at Tex.Rev.Civ.Stat. art. 4741 (1911) (repealed, see now Tex.Ins.Code Ann. art. 3.44(3)).
The court in
Welsh
perceived a conflict between the second sentence of article 4951, and the act of 1909.
Welsh,
The holding in Welsh is overly broad. The first two sentences of article 4951 dealt with entirely different matters. The first sentence required every policy of insurance to include the application. The second sentence concerned the prerequisites for incontestability of life insurance, and it was only this sentence that the Evert and Welsh courts held conflicted with the 1909 act. It was unnecessary for the court in Welsh to hold that all of the provisions of article 4951 did not apply to policies issued after 1909.
The court in
Pedigo
gave
Welsh
a broad reading, and concluded that article 5049 of the Revised Civil Statutes of 1925 (repealed), does not apply to life insurance policies issued after 1909.
Pedigo,
Pedigo
should not have relied on
Welsh
⅛ broad statements as the basis for holding that the first sentence of article 5049 does not apply to life insurance policies issued after 1909. To the extent that
Pedigo
might be read as finding a conflict between article 5049 and articles 4732 and 5050 such that the more recently enacted provisions should control, we do not believe that such a conflict exists. The Fifth Circuit read
Pedigo
as finding such a conflict, because articles 4732 and 5050 “allow the insurance company the option of attaching or not attaching the application to a life policy,” and article 5049’s language is mandatory.
Wise,
Therefore, even assuming that the Wise court correctly construed Pedigo as finding a conflict between the first sentence of article 21.35 and articles 21.24 and 3.44(3), we conclude that such conflict does not exist and is therefore not a justification for not applying the first sentence of article 21.35 to life insurance policies issued after the enactment of these later articles. We overrule Pedigo’s holding that an insurance company may assert a misrepresentation defense based on misrepresentations in an application that was not attached to the policy. We disapprove of the Fifth Circuit’s reliance on Pedigo in its Wise opinion to the extent the Fifth Circuit sought to declare Texas law.
We conclude that prior to the 1989 amendment, article 21.35 of the Texas Insurance Code applied to life insurance policies, and therefore representations in an application not attached to the policy cannot be the basis of a misrepresentation defense. Because the jury findings on this point are material to the viability of General American’s defense, and the court of appeals did not perform a review of the legal and factual sufficiency of these findings, we reverse the judgment of the court of appeals and remand this cause to that court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion. •
Notes
. Defendant's Motion for New Trial and to Correct or Reform Judgment provides:
Comes now General American Life Insurance Company, defendant herein, and moves this Court pursuant to Texas Rules of Civil Procedure 320 and 329b to set aside the Judgment rendered on the 14th day of May, 1990 in the above-styled and numbered cause and to order a new trial, and to correct or reform this Judgment, and in support thereof shows the following.
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(Emphasis added.)
. We do not purport to resolve the conflict between Solar and Estrada on the question of whether a motion for new trial overruled by operation of law is effective to extend the appellate deadline from a subsequent judgment.
. General American also asserts that its motion for new trial should be considered a prematurely-filed motion, sufficient to preserve error in the subsequent modified judgement under Rule 306c of the Texas Rules of Civil Procedure. A number of authorities apply Rule 306c of the Texas Rules of Civil Procedure and Rule 58(c) of the Texas Rules of Appellate Procedure in tandem in their analysis of "second judgment” problems.
See, e.g., Alford,
. Texas Rule of Civil Procedure 419 was repealed effective September 1, 1986. Its provisions were reenacted as the last sentence of Rule 74(f). Tex. R.App.P. 74(f).
. Rule 74(o) uses similarly discretionary language concerning the disposition of motions to amend: "Briefs may be amended or supplemented at any time when justice requires....” Tex. R.App.P. 74(o).
. The provisions of Rule 83 apply to the courts of appeals and duplicate those of Rule 185, which apply to this Court. See Tex.R.App.P. 185.
. Although General American also asserted a cross-point that the jury’s answers to the attachment questions were established as a matter of law, we do not believe that its statement of facts conclusively proves that the application was attached to the policies. General American’s statement of facts under both cross-points consists of citations to the testimony of various witnesses that they were not aware whether the medical portion of the application was attached to the original policy issued to Blake. There is also a reference to insurance agent Dale Weir’s testimony that after delivering Fredonia’s copy of the policy to General American following Blake’s death, he never received any communication from General American that the application was not attached. These citations to the record were prefaced by a statement arguing that because there was no probative evidence that the application was not attached, the application must have been attached. Such evidence, even if accepted as true, does not establish attachment as a matter of law.
. The House staff assumed that 21.35 was applicable to life insurance policies:
Currently, the first sentence of Article 21.35, Insurance Code, provides that every contract or policy of insurance issued in Texas shall be accompanied by a copy of the application for such a contract or policy, as well as a copy of all questions asked and answers given. Some have interpreted the provision to apply only to policies of life insurance, rather than to all policies of insurance. S.B. 1644 would clarify the ambiguity.
House Comm. On Insurance, Bill Analysis, Tex.S.B. 1644 (1989). While the bill analysis is helpful to determine the purpose of the 1989 amendment, it does not control the meaning of the statute prior to that date.
. Article 4951 is the predecessor to article 5049 of the Revised Civil Statutes of 1925 which preceded article 21.35 of our present Insurance Code. Tex.Ins.Code art. 21.35; Tex.Rev.Civ.Stat. art. 5049 (1925); Tex.Rev.Civ.Stat. art. 4951 (1911); Acts 1903, 28th Leg., ch. 69.
. Article 5050 of the Revised Civil Statutes of 1925 provided "Every policy of insurance issued or delivered or issued within this State by any life insurance company doing business within this State, shall contain the entire contract between the parties, and the application therefor may be made a part thereof." Its provisions are now contained in article 21.24 of the Insurance Code. Article 4732 replaced article 4741 of the Revised Civil Statutes of 1911, and now appears as article 3.44(3) of the Insurance Code.
