This сase presents the issue of an insurance agent’s liability when he places a client’s insurance with a company which later becomes insolvent and unable to pay the client’s claim. Based on jury findings of negligence on the part of the agent, the district court rendered judgment for the client. Because we find no evidence of negligence, we reverse and render a take nothing judgment.
In 1980, Jack Greer purchased a bowling сenter in Marshall, Texas. He insured the center by a multi-peril insurance policy written by Proprietors Insurance Corporation (PIC), an Ohio company. The policy was procured by appellant Higginbotham, an independent insurance agent in Fort Worth. The center was destroyed by fire in 1981. After the fire Higginbotham submitted Greer’s claim to PIC, and a check in payment of the loss was issued. The check was deposited but was returned unpaid because PIC had become insolvent.
Greer sued Higginbotham alleging negligence in the procurement of the policy and misrepresentations under the Texas Deceptive Trade Practices Act. The jury found for Greer оn both causes of action, but the district court disregarded the finding of misrepresentation. Higginbotham brings several points of error, including the assertion that the evidence is insufficient to support a finding of negligence. Greer’s сross-points urge that the jury’s finding of misrepresentation should not have been disregarded and that he was entitled to treble damages under the Deceptive Trade Practices-Consumer Protection Act. We agree thаt there is no evidence of Higginbotham’s negligence, and also find that the district court properly disregarded the jury’s finding of misrepresentation.
The general rule is that an insurance agent or broker is not a guarantor of thе financial condition or solvency of the company from which he obtains the insurance. He is required, however, to use reasonable skill and judgment with a view to the security or indemnity for which the insurance is sought, and a failurе in that respect may render him liable to the insured for resulting losses. Thus, where a policy is procured in a company known by the agent to be insolvent, the agent is liable for a loss suffered by reason of such insolvency. On the other hand, where the company was
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solvent when the policy was procured, its subsequent insolvency generally does not impose liability on the agent or broker. 3 Couch on Insurance 2d § 25:48 (rev.1984); 43 Am.Jur.2d
Insurance
§ 143 (1982); An-not.,
The Texas cases which have applied these rules have been cases where the policy was procured in a company known by the agent to be insolvent either before the policy’s procurement or at some point before a loss occurred. In
Diamond v. Duncan,
While those cases are illustrative of the general rules regarding insurer insolvency and negligence, they do not directly address the issue before us because in each of them, the agent had actual knowledge of insolvency during a time when an insured could have been protected. The facts here more closely resemble those in
Master Plumbers Limited Mutual Liability Co. v. Cormany & Bird, Inc.,
We find these authorities persuasive, and conclude that an agent is not liable for an insured’s lost claim due to the insurer’s insolvency if the insurer is solvent at the time the policy is procured, unless at that time or at a later time when the insured could be protected, the agent knows or by the exercise of reasonable diligence should know, of facts or circumstances which would put a reasonable agent on notice that the insurance presents an unreasonable risk.
Greer attempts to avoid the rule here by arguing that this is not an insurer insolvency case but rather a case of an agent’s overall negligence in failing to provide his client the best available insurance at the best price. The only damage he claims, however, is his loss due to the insurer’s insolvency. He has not alleged or provеn that Higginbotham either failed to procure a policy or allowed it to lapse, or that the PIC policy failed to provide full coverage, or contained unwarranted exclusions, or cost more money than it should have. Indeed, he candidly states in his brief: “The PIC policy provided the correct coverage, the company was simply unable to pay the claim.” Yet, all of the cases he relies on are cases where matters other than insolvency caused the loss.
See Kitching v. Zamora,
Applying the above stated rule to the facts of this case, we find no evidence to *48 support the jury’s finding that Higginbotham was negligent. It is undisputed that at the time of procurement Higginbotham had no actual knowledge of any financial instability within PIC, and there is no evidence which demonstrates that he reasonably should have known that the coverage would represent an unreasonable risk. PIC was a fully admitted and approved carrier in Texas and therefore was subject to financial analysis and other requirements by the State Board of Insurance. At the time the policy was written, PIC was paying its claims promptly, was paying dividends to its policyholders, and had made an underwriting profit the year before. PIC was rated B+ (very good) by the Alfred M. Best insurance analysis company for the preceding year.
In arguing that there is sufficient evidence, Greer relies on the testimony of his expert witness, Ronald Home. Home stated that the B+ rating given to PIC for the years 1979 and 1980 placed PIC in the lower twenty-five percent of Best’s rated companies for that year. Nevertheless, Horne conceded that the B+ rating signified “very good” by Best’s rating standards, and that an agent could properly place coverage with such a company, so long as the client was “generally informed of what’s going on.” Home also stated that in general, a declining Best rating over a period of five to seven years was a pretty good indication a company was headed for financial trouble. Home then charted the Best rating for PIC for the years 1975 through 1980. In 1975 and 1976, PIC had an A rating whiсh fell to a B+ rating for the years 1977 through 1980. Horne observed, however, that the rating had leveled off for four years in a row, which he stated was a sign of stability. He also pointed out that the Best report indicated that PIC had plаced greater reliance on reinsurance, but explained that this indicated PIC was growing too rapidly and that reinsurance was used for PIC to protect itself. It was also established that the lost profit PIC encountered in 1978 had been cured, as they were making a profit in 1979 and their financial stability had leveled off for four to five years. It was undisputed that PIC was an admitted, authorized carrier in Texas at all relevant times. There is nothing in this testimony cоnstituting evidence that a reasonable agent would have known or should have known that PIC constituted an unreasonable risk at the time the insurance was procured, or at any time prior to the loss.
Additionally, the evidence shows that Greer knowingly exercised an independent choice to insure his property with PIC. The prior owner of the center, Ronald Rhodes, was insured by PIC through Higginbotham. Rhodes told Bob Ballard, who worked for Higginbotham, about thе forthcoming sale to Greer, told him that Greer had reviewed and was satisfied with the current insurance coverage, and wanted to continue it as it was then written. Ballard contacted Greer about the continued cоverage, and Greer agreed he was interested in continuing the policy as written. Greer then called Rhodes and inquired about coverage and about the reliability of Higginbotham. Rhodes told Greer Higginbotham was a reputable company and recommended Ballard as an agent. Greer then told Ballard to take care of the coverage.
These facts conclusively demonstrate that Greer selected the insuranсe he wanted, and there is no evidence to support a finding of negligence on the part of Higginbotham. If it can be considered that some evidence supports the jury finding of negligence, we find that evidence to be factually insufficient to support the answer.
We next consider Greer’s cross-points which contend that the district court erred in disregarding the jury’s affirmative answer to the misrepresentation special issue. Speсial Issue 2 reads:
Do you find from a preponderance of the evidence that the Defendant represented to Plaintiff that its services as an insurance agent were of particular standard, grade or quality, whеn in fact they were of another.
The court may disregard a special issue finding only if there is no support in the
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evidence for the jury’s answer. Tex.R. Civ.P. 301. We conclude that the trial court correctly disregarded the finding. There is no evidence that Higginbotham or Ballard made any express misrepresentation to Greer. Greer maintains that Ballard’s statement that the Higginbotham agency represented the majority of the bowling centers in East Texas constituted a kind of implied representation that Higginbotham had special skill and expertise in placing that kind of insurance. Even if such a specific representation could be inferred from such a general stаtement, which we doubt
(see Employers Cas. Co. v. Fambro,
It is not necessary to rule on Higginbotham’s other points. The judgment of the trial court is reversed and judgment is here rendered that Greer take nothing.
