*791 ORDER
Pending before the Court are Third Party Defendant’s Motion to Dismiss and for Summary Judgment (Dkt.# 31), Defendants’ Motion for Summary Judgment (Dkt.# 32), and Plaintiffs Motion for Summary Judgment (Dkt.# 34).
I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND
A. Lloyd’s London
Lloyd’s London (“Lloyd’s”) is a 300-year-old market in which individual and corporate underwriters, known as Names, underwrite insurance. 1 Lloyd’s itself is not an insurance company; it merely provides the physical premises and administrative staff and services to enable the actual underwriters to carry on their business. To increase efficiency and multiply resources, Names have joined together to form syndicates, of which there are now more than four hundred; a particular syndicate may have a few hundred or several thousand Names. Syndicates have no legal existence apart from the Names, and *792 syndicates neither assume liability nor underwrite risks. Within each syndicate, an “active” underwriter is authorized to determine the conditions to which a risk will be subject, the percentage of risk to be assumed by the syndicate on behalf of the Names, and the percentage of risk each Name in the syndicate will assume. Thus, when the active underwriter accepts a percentage of the risk, he binds every Name in the syndicate'. Each Name assumes unlimited liability for his share of the syndicate’s losses, but he is liable for no other portion assumed by any other Name.
Only approved brokers are permitted to place risks with Lloyd’s underwriters. Typically, a broker will prepare the “slip,” a summary of the details of the risk the broker is seeking to insure (or reinsure). The broker and the active underwriter proceed to negotiate the terms and premium, indicating as much .on the slip itself. The underwriter who structures the transaction with the broker is known as the “lead” underwriter; the lead underwriter’s syndicate is known as the “market lead” or “leader of the market” for that particular risk. When the underwriter signs (or “scratches”) the slip, a binding contract between his syndicate and the insured is formed. Having obtained the signature of the lead underwriter, the broker retains the slip and approaches other syndicates or insurance companies to secure coverage for the remaining Risk. Once the broker has succeeded in procuring full coverage, he retains the slip and provides subscribing underwriters with copies of the terms and conditions of the coverage. If a claim under the insurance (or reinsurance) agreement is not outstanding, an underwriter may agree to waive issuance of a policy; the slip is then signed “on risk.” Otherwise, the broker’s policy department prepares the policy and forwards it to the Lloyd’s Policy Signing Office (“LPSO”). The LPSO checks the policy against the slip to ensure that the policy contains all the terms and conditions of the slip. If no inconsistencies are discovered, the policy issues, often long after the initial signing of the slip.
B. The Transaction
Plaintiff Houston Casualty Company (“HCC”) is an insurance company with its principal place of business in Houston, Texas. Between December 15, 1994, and September 15, 1995, HCC insured Beech Holdings Corporation (“Beech”) and its subsidiary and affiliated companies (including Budget Rent-A-Car) under HCC Policy No. 050028/35/37011 (the “Beech policy”), which provided coverage for, inter alia, Beech’s interest in a fleet of rental vehicles. The Beech policy had limits of $5,000,000 per occurrence, with a deductible of $1,000,000 per occurrence, and in the aggregate annually, and $250,000 per occurrence thereafter. Seeking to limit its exposure under the Beech policy, HCC requested that ■ Third Party Defendant Fenchurch Insurance Brokers, Ltd. (“Fen-church”) secure reinsurance in the London market for a portion of HCC’s risk. (HCC’s chairman, Stephen Way, had “broked” on the floor of Lloyd’s earlier in his career and had been a Name with several syndicates; consequently, a significant portion of HCC’s dealings were in the London market.) To this end, in late December of 199,4, Fenchurch — in the person of Julian Hall — approached Colin Baker, the Active Underwriter for Syndicate 947, a syndicate of underwriters at Lloyd’s. Syndicate 947 signed on as the lead syndicate for the reinsurance sought by HCC, and by January 6, 1995, Fenchurch had procured 100% of the coverage sought by HCC.
On April 29,1995, the Dallas/Fort Worth area was besieged by a hail storm that damaged a number of Beech’s vehicles. Beech notified HCC of the loss and requested indemnification. HCC adjusted Beech’s loss at a total of $4,393,106.66 and paid Beech $4,143,106.66 (the total less HCC’s deductible), $4,141,127.00 of which accounted for damage to Beech’s vehicles. Another hail storm in early May caused *793 additional damage to Beech’s vehicles, for which Beech again sought indemnification. HCC adjusted Beech’s second loss at $2,439,117.39 and paid Beech $2,126,627.39 (the total less HCC’s deductible). HCC apprised the Lloyd’s underwriters subscribing to the reinsurance agreement (collectively the “Underwriters”) of these two payments and requested indemnification of $2,267,744.39, plus loss allocated expenses of $83,720.94. The Underwriters, however, refused, and continue to refuse, to pay any amount to HCC.
The subject of the parties’ dispute is the Lloyd’s Standard Wording 507 Basis of Loss Clause (the “LSW 507 clause”). Before he scratched the slip, lead underwriter Colin Baker added in his own handwriting at the top of the slip the phrase “Basis of Loss Clause based LSW 507.” Underwriters’ Exhibit (“Ex.”) 8. Baker has since explained that he meant to require the inclusion of a clause “[t]he same or substantially the same as [LSW] 507,” Deposition of Colin Baker 59 [hereinafter Baker Deposition], a clause which controls the basis of loss on damaged vehicles, specifying how certain claims will be adjusted and requiring that depreciation of value must be taken into account. 2 On December 28, 1994, Fenehurch advised HCC of the addition of the new condition, Ex. 8, and on January 1, 1995, HCC returned to Fen-church an edited version of the slip, marked up with amendments that it wished to see incorporated in the slip; that version included “Basis of Loss Clause based L.S.W. 507” typed in its “Conditions” section. Ex. 12. Fenehurch was able to announce to HCC on January 3 that Baker had assented to various additions and that 40% of the risk had been covered; a clean copy of the slip still incorporated Baker’s “based L.S.W. 507” language. Ex. 13. On January 6, 1995, Fenehurch announced that 100% of the coverage sought had been secured. Ex. 17. The cover note, 3 dated February 3, 1995, listed as a condition “Basis of Loss Clause based on Dealer’s Open Loi^Basis of Loss Settlement LSW 507.”
On September 5, 1995 — four months after the Texas hail storms — a copy of the slip forwarded by Fenehurch to HCC still contained the “based L.S.W. 507” phrase. Ex. 32. On September 18, 1995, HCC advised Fenehurch of its claims resulting from the hail storms. Fenehurch passed on the information to the Underwriters, one of whom wrote on the face of the fax, *794 “We expect a full report from the Rein-sured with details of the loss adjustment ... bearing in mind the basis of loss settlement clause (LSW 507) attached to the wording.” Ex. 71; Deposition of Peter Dodds 55. On January 4, 1996, in an effort finally to issue a policy, a member of Fenchurch’s wording department wrote in an interoffice • memo, “[W]e have a problem. The conditions [in the slip] contain various conditions which are applicable to the original policy only and therefore we need to amend the slip to show these to be ‘as original’ or put them under information.” Ex. 100. Adam Long, the author of those sentences, has explained,
It would appear that I made the assumption that the slip showed various conditions which were applicable to the original policy and therefore would follow through to the reinsurance policy.
Therefore, I said that these should be shown as “as original,” stating they were in the original policy, or they should be put under information because, again, they were in the original policy.
Deposition of Adam Long 51 [hereinafter Long Deposition], Among the conditions listed in the memo was the “based LSW 507” clause; no party now disputes that the Beech policy in fact did not have the LSW 5Ó7 clause, or one based thereon.
On January 5, 1996, Fenchurch issued Endorsement No. 3, which amended the slip to read, “Basis of Loss Clause based 507, as original.” Ex. 46 (emphasis added). There is consensus that the emphasized phrase signified that the LSW 507 clause, or one like it, was part of the Beech (the “original”) policy. See, e.g., Baker Deposition 41; Long Deposition 27; Way Deposition Way 72; Deposition of Leonard Bateman 42; Deposition of Alan Parker 27. Duncan Bennett, in Fenchurch’s technical department, prepared the endorsement, and Alan Parker, with Syndicate 947, scratched his approval. Thereafter, the LPSO, upon review of the proposed wording of the policy alongside the slip (including Endorsement No. 3), approved and stamped Policy No. 839/DA44790, sans the LSW 507 clause.
When HCC sought indemnification from the Underwriters under the reinsurance policy, the Underwriters balked, insisting that adjustment of loss had not been performed in accordance with the LSW ,.507 clause. See Second Amended Answer 5 (“Pursuant to LSW 507 wording, in order for the reinsurance to be invoked, the vehicles must have been sold at retail and retail value obtained for those vehicles. The vehicles which form the basis of Plaintiffs claims were not sold at retail. Further, retail value was not obtained for the vehicles.”). Emphasizing that the LSW 507 clause is not part of the reinsurance1 policy, and that the policy provided that the Underwriters would “follow the settlements” of HCC, 4 HCC sued the Underwriters for (1) breach of contract; (2) breach of duty of good faith and fair dealing; and (3) various Texas Insurance Code violations. In turn, the Underwriters asserted counterclaims for reformation, based on mutual mistake; rescission, based on Fenchurch’s material misrepresentations; and declaratory judgment. 5 The Underwriters also pursued a third party action against Fenchurch for contribution and indemnity.
*795 II. SUMMARY JUDGMENT STANDARD
Summary, judgment is proper if “the pleadings, depositions, answers to interrogatories, and admissions on file, together with the affidavits, if any, show that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the moving party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law.” Fed. R.Civ.P. 56(c);
see also Celotex Corp. v. Catrett,
“For any matter on which the non-mov-ant would bear the burden of proof at trial ..., the movant may merely point to the absence of evidence and thereby shift to the non-movant the burden of demonstrating by competent summary judgment proof that there is an issue of material fact warranting trial.”
Transamerica Ins. Co. v. Avenell,
III. CHOICE OF LAW
A threshold question is what jurisdiction’s laws govern this controversy. A federal court must apply the conflict-of-law rules of the state in which it sits.
See Klaxon Co. v. Stentor Elec. Mfg. Co.,
A. Statutory Directive
Under the Restatement’s approach, at the first step, “[a] court, subject to constitutional restrictions, will follow a statutory directive of its own state on choice of law.” Restatement (Second) of Conflict of Laws § 6(1). HCC urges that Tex.Ins.Code Ann. § 21.42 (Vernon 1981) is just such a directive, mandating that Texas law be applied in this case. Section 21.42 provides:
Any contract of insurance payable to any citizen or inhabitant of this State by any insurance company or corporation doing business within this State shall be held to be a contract made and entered *796 into under and by virtue of the laws of this State relating to insurance, and governed thereby, notwithstanding such policy or contract of insurance may provide that the contract was executed and •the premiums and policy (in case it becomes a demand) should be payable without this State, or at the home office of the company or corporation issuing the same.
Assuming the reinsurance agreement at issue is indeed a “contract of insurance,”
compare Stradley v. Southwestern Life Ins. Co.,
The Court is not persuaded by the Underwriters’ contention Article 1.14-l(b)(2) of the Insurance Code — which excludes “the lawful transaction of reinsurance by insurers” from that article’s definition of “doing an insurance business” — is conclusive. In
Great Am. Ins. Co. v. North Austin Utility,
However, the Court need not hold that
all
reinsurance transactions are beyond the scope of Article 21.42 to find that the immediate one is. It is true that HCC is a Texas corporation. But surely doing business with a Texas corporation is not tantamount to doing business
in Texas.
Article 21.42 may not be given extraterritorial effect so as “to regulate business outside the state of Texas.”
Austin Bldg. Co. v. National Union Fire Ins. Co.,
B. “Most Significant Relationship”
In the absence of a statutory directive, a Texas court must look to the principles enunciated in the Restatement (Second) of Conflict of Laws.
See Maxus Exploration v. Moran Bros., Inc.,
HCC argues that the place of performance was Texas, but in so doing, it confuses the place of loss with' the place of performance. HCC’s obligation under the parties’ agreement was to pay a premium; the Underwriters’ obligation was to indemnify certain losses.
Where
the losses occurred did not affect either obligation. When the contract is one of payment, the place of performance seems, in truth, of no particular consequence. Under Texas law, at least, the mutual obligations would cancel each other out. “When a contract requires payment of money but does not
*798
specify the place of payment, the place of payment is the domicile of the payor.”
Temperature Sys., Inc. v. Bill Pepper, Inc.,
HCC also maintains that the subject matter of the reinsurance policy is “Houston Casualty’s business of insurance located in Houston.” The Court disagrees. The subject matter of the reinsurance policy, as identified by the policy itself, is Beech’s fleet of commercial vehicles, located not only in Texas, but also across the United States
and
the United Kingdom.
8
See Hefner v. Republic Indem. Co. of Am.,
773 F.Supp; 11, 13 (S.D.Tex.1991) (“If [the insured] were held to have a significant relationship with each state in which insured properties are located, he would potentially be subject to twenty different state laws. By analogy, the owner of a fleet of ships would potentially be liable throughout every port city in the United States.”). This factor in the analysis is just not determinative.
Cf. Syndicate 420 at Lloyd’s London v. Early Am. Ins. Co.,
In fact, only the last contact might be said to favor HCC, and then only slightly. HCC is a Texas corporation with its primary place of business in Texas. The Underwriters’ domicile, on the other hand, has not been revealed; there is no requirement that a Name live in England, and many evidently do not. Nevertheless, it .is plain that the syndicates collectively maintain offices and do business in London. In any event, the Court agrees that the “place of negotiating and contracting is more significant than the reinsured’s place of business .... ”
International Ins. Co. v. Certain Underwriters at Lloyd’s London,
The described contacts must be evaluated in the context of certain policy factors listed in the Restatement: “(a) the needs of the interstate and international systems, (b) the relevant policies of the forum, (c) the relevant policies of other interested states and the relative interests of those' states in the determination of the particular issue, (d) the protection of justified expectations, (e) the basic policies underlying the particular field of law, (f) certainty, predictability, and uniformity of result, and (g) ease in the determination and application of the law to be applied.”
Nishika,
C. The Effects of Application of English Law
The application of English law has two effects. First, HCC’s Texas statutory claims are no more. Second, in those instances that English common law conflicts with that of Texas, the Court is bound to apply the former. The Court emphasizes, however, that the party championing the application of English law is obliged to demonstrate the existence of actual conflicts.
See
Fed.R.Civ.P. 44.1 (“A party who intends to raise an issue concerning the law of a foreign country shall give notice by pleadings or other reasonable written notice.”); Restatement (Second) of Conflict of Laws § 136 cmt. h (“When both parties have failed to prove the foreign law, the forum may say that the parties have acquiesced in the application of the local law of the forum.”);
Wachs v. Winter,
IV. MUTUAL MISTAKE
A. The Agency Relationship
Claiming mutual mistake, the Underwriters seek to have the reinsurance policy reformed to include the LSW 507 clause. Underlying their theory is the assumption that Fenchurch was HCC’s agent. That is, HCC and the Underwriters never communicated directly; to hold HCC liable for communications made by Fenchurch, it is essential that the Underwriters demonstrate that (1) Fenchurch was HCC’s agent, and (2) those communications were made within the scope of authority granted Fenchurch.
See Spring Garden 79U, Inc. v. Stewart Title Co.,
*800
Fenchurch was clearly HCC’s agent.
See Foundation, Reserve Ins. Co. v. Wesson,
“Actual” authority, which includes both express and implied authority, usually denotes that authority a principal 1) intentionally confers upon an agent, 2) intentionally allows the agent to believe that he possesses, or 3) allows the agent to believe that he possesses by want of due care....
One who seeks to bind a principal based on the apparent authority of its agent must show that a reasonably prudent person would believe that the agent had the authority to act as he did.
Spring Garden,
The Court finds, as a matter of law, that Fenchurch’s representation to the Underwriters was made within the scope of its actual authority. Fenchurch was HCC’s reinsurance broker. Even 'if it is accepted that Fenchurch’s authority was limited to “obtaining] a reinsurance policy that fully ‘followed the settlements’ ” of the underlying policy,
see
HCC’s Response to the Underwriters’ Motion for Summary Judgment 19,
10
surely it is the case that representations regarding the terms and conditions of precisely that underlying policy are authorized.
See Polland & Cook v. Lehmann,
In determining a principal’s vicarious liability, the proper question is not whether the principal authorized' the specific wrongful act; if that were the case, principals would seldom be liable for their agents’ misconduct. Rather, the proper inquiry is whether the agent was acting within the 'scope of the agency relationship at the time of committing the act.
Celtic Life Ins. Co. v. Coats,
B. Reformation
Reformation is a proper remedy when the parties have reached a definitive and explicit agreement, understood in the same sense by both, but, by their mutual or common mistake, the written contract fails to express the agreement.
See Champlin Oil & Refining Co. v. Chastain,
First, by Colin Baker’s own admission, the phrase “Basis of Loss Clause based LSW 507,” had no defined meaning. To him, it meant a clause “[t]he same or
substantially the same
as [LSW] 507.” Baker Deposition 59 (emphasis added). He has explained, “If [substantially similar] language was presented to me ..., then I would have agreed to such language.” Affidavit of Colin Baker 3 [hereinafter Baker Affidavit]. Brenda Whibley, who works for the LPSO and is presumably practiced in the art of interpreting slips, has testified, “It just says based. It doesn’t actually say that it is the LSW 507, so I would have gone with whatever had been attached to the slip and the policy documentation agreed to by the underwriter.” Whibley Deposition 21. The Underwriters, then, have failed to adduce any evidence regarding the terms of the parties’ “actual” contract. At best, the Underwriters have proffered evidence that tends to show that, had they understood that the Beech policy contained neither the LSW 507 clause nor a “substantially similar” clause, they would have insisted on the inclusion of one or the other in the reinsurance policy — a matter left for negotiation. Such showing does not suffice.
See National Resort Communities v. Cain,
Second, the Underwriters’ argument reveals a misapprehension of the nature of the alleged mistake. As the Underwriters concede, it was both parties’ intention to include no LSW 507 provision in the Underwriters policy. Thus, the written instrument, which in fact included no LSW 507 provision, was a faithful reflection of
*802
the parties’ agreement. “For the remedy of reformation to be available on the ground of mutual mistake the parties must have reached a definite and explicit agreement, understood in the same sense by both, which agreement has been
misstated
in the written contract because of a mistake common to both contracting parties.”
Zurich Ins. Co. v. Bass,
V. MATERIAL MISREPRESENTATION
According to the doctrine of
uberrimae fidei
— “[t]he most abundant good faith; absolute and perfect candor or openness and honesty; the absence of any concealment or deception, however slight,”
Black’s Law Dictiona'i'y
1520 (6th ed.1990) — “a mistake or commission material to a ... risk, whether it be willful or accidental, or result from mistake, negligence or voluntary ignorance, avoids the policy.”
Gulfstream Cargo, Ltd. v. Reliance Ins. Co.,
First. Insurance is a contract upon speculation.
The special facts, upon which the contingent chance is to be computed, lie most commonly in the knowledge of the insured only: the under-writer trusts to his representation, and proceeds upon confidence that he does not keep back any circumstances in his knowledge, to mislead the under-writer into a belief that the circumstance does not exist, and to induce him to estimate the risque, as if it did not exist.
The keeping back such circumstance is a fraud, and therefore the policy is void. Although the suppression should happen through mistake, without any fraudulent intention; yet still the underwriter is deceived, and the policy is void; because the risque run is really different from the risque understood and intended to be run, at the time of the agreement.
Id.
at 1909. American courts adopted the English rule,
see e.g., M’Lanahan v. Universal Ins. Co.,
Under the English rule, while a showing of an intent to defraud or conceal will obviate the need to demonstrate materiality, “misrepresentation and non-disclosure [are] breaches] of the duty whether due to fraud, negligence, accident, or mistake.” Schoenbaum 15. Which is to say that even “an innocent mistake can give rise to a breach of the duty of utmost good faith.”
Id.; accord Thebes Shipping, Inc. v. Assicurazioni Ausonia SPA,
In the case sub judice, Fenchurch plainly made a misrepresentation to the Underwriters when it presented them Endorsement No. 3. Fenchurch indicated that the Beech policy contained the LSW 507 clause, or a clause “based” thereon, when in fact it did not. 15 That Fenchurch made such a representation without knowing the terms of the Beech policy 16 is no explanation. Surely it is true that the reinsured “ought to ... know[ ]” the terms and conditions of its own underlying insurance policy. It is equally true, then, that itá agent “ought to ... know[ ]” the same, particularly when that agent offers representations thereof. See id. § 19 (“[W]here an insurance is effected for the assured by an agent, the agent must disclose to the insurer (a) [e]very material circumstance which is known to himself, and an agent to insure is deemed to know every circumstance which in the ordinary course of business ought to be known by, or to have been communicated to, him....”).
*804 A misrepresentation such as Fenchurch’s, however, does not automatically entitle the insurer to avoid the policy. The misrepresentation must have been “material,” and it must have “induced the making of the policy.” “Material” is defined by English statute as having the capacity to “influence the judgment of a prudent insurer in fixing the premium, or determining whether he will take the risk.” British Marine Insurance Act § 18(2). Construing that statute, and with it, the common law, the House of Lords in Pan Atlantic Ins. Co. v. Pine Top Ins. Co. rejected the “decisive influence” test of materiality, articulated by Mr. Justice Lloyd in Container Transport Int’l, Inc. v. Oceanus Mut. Underwriting Assoc. (Bermuda) Ltd., [1982] 2 Lloyd’s Rep. 178 (Q.B.), rev’d, [1984] 1 Lloyd’s Rep. 476 (C.A.):
In general I would say that underwriters ought only to succeed on a defence of nondisclosure if they can satisfy the Court by evidence or otherwise that a .prudent insurer, if he had known the fact in question, would have declined the risk altogether or charged a higher premium .... Since the English law is so favourable to the underwriter in this respect, the least that should normally be expected of the underwriter is to show that a prudent insurer would have charged an increased rate.
Id. at 187-88. On appeal, however, the Court of Appeal rejected that interpretation, favoring a more literal construction of “influence,” as that word is used in Section 18(2):
Th[e] duty seems to require full disclosure and full disclosure seems to require disclosure of everything material to the prudent underwriter’s estimate of the character and degree of the risk; and how can that be limited to what can affirmatively be found to be a circumstance which would in fact alter a hypothetical insurer’s decision?
[1984] 1 Lloyd’s Rep. 476, 526-27 (C.A.) (Lord Stephenson). A decade later, in Pine Top, the House of Lords agreed with Lord Stephenson: “ ‘Influence the judgment’ is not the same as ‘change the mind.’ ” [1994] 2 Lloyd’s Rep. at 440 (Lord Mustill). See generally Schoenbaum 17-25.
“Inducement” is to be contrasted with the matter of materiality. “[I]t concerns the actual underwriter rather than the imaginary ‘reasonable’ or ‘prudent’ underwriter, and it is an inquiry into reliance and the causal connection between the misrepresentation or omission and the effecting of the insurance.” Id. at 26. In Pine Top, the House of Lords unanimously held that such inducement was an implied requirement of the British Marine Insurance Act. E.g., [1994] 2 Lloyd’s Rep. at 452 (Lord Mustill).
The LSW 507 clause is a mechanism by which an underwriter is able to exert some control over the adjustment of loss. Clearly its inclusion (or exclusion) in the underlying policy would affect a reasonable and prudent underwriter’s assessment of the character and degree of risk; depending upon the policy’s adjustment provisions, absence of the clause could translate to 'much more extensive exposure for the underwriter. Indeed, objective evidence — namely, Colin Baker’s insistence upon the inclusion of a loss of basis clause the same as or similar to from the outset— demonstrates that the Underwriters considered the clause an important one. HCC has offered no evidence that, had the misrepresentation not been made, the Underwriters’ insistence would have flagged, and the Underwriters have offered testimony indicating just the contrary: “Syndicate 947 has no interest in writing direct or reinsurance with regard to any large fleet of vehicles unless the basis of loss is determined by the language of LSW 507, and Budget RenWa-Car is a large fleet.” Baker Affidavit 2.
17
This uncontradicted
*805
evidence would pass even the “decisive influence” test of materiality,
see supra,
and it sufficiently demonstrates actual inducement. The Court finds, as a matter of law, that Fenchurch’s misrepresentation (1) was material and (2) induced the making of the reinsurance policy.,
See Giroire,
VI. DECLARATORY JUDGMENT
The Underwriters have asserted a counterclaim against HCC, under the Federal Declaratory Judgment Act (the “DJA”), 28 U.S.C. § 2201
et seq.,
and the Texas Declaratory Judgment Act, Tex.Civ. Prac. & Rem.Code Ann. § 37.'Ó01
et seq.
(Vernon 1997), seeking declaration that the Underwriters have no obligation to indemnify HCC under the reinsurance policy. Choice-of-law concerns notwithstanding,
see supra,
the Texas statute has been deemed solely a “procedural mechanism” which does not govern a diversity action.
See Utica Lloyd’s of Tex. v. Mitchell,
In a case of actual controversy within its jurisdiction ... any court of the United States, upon the filing of an appropriate pleading, may declare the rights and other legal relations of any interested party seeking such declaration, whether or not further relief is or could be sought. Any such declaration shall have the force and effect1 of a final judgment or decree and shall be reviewable as such.
28 U.S.C. § 2201. A district court has broad, but not unfettered, discretion to decide, or dismiss, a suit under the DJA.
See Rowan Cos., Inc. v. Griffin,
*806
The Underwriters also seek attorney’s fees and related non-taxable costs under the DJA, which provides that “[f]urther necessary or proper relief based on a declaratory judgment or decree may be granted ... against any adverse party whose rights have been determined by such judgment.” 28 U.S.C. § 2202.
19
Under the well-established American Rule followed by federal courts, “absent statute or enforceable contract, litigants pay their own attorneys’ fees.”
Alyeska Pipeline Serv. Co. v. Wilderness Soc’y,
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, Plaintiffs Motion for Summary Judgment (Dkt.# 34) is DENIED and Defendants’ Motion for Summary Judgment (Dkt.# 32) is GRANTED. In light of this disposition, Third Party Defendant’s Motion to Dismiss and for Summary Judgment (Dkt.# 31) is DISMISSED AS MOOT. FINAL JUDGMENT shall issue.
It is so ORDERED. The Clerk shall enter this order and provide a true copy to both parties.
Notes
. The description in this section is a composite of those included in the parties’ submissions and various judicial opinions.
See generally Indiana Gas Co., Inc. v. Home Ins. Co.,
. The LSW 507 clause provides:
In the event of a total loss to unit(s) insured hereunder Underwriters shall be liable for an amount up to the Assured's original acquisition cost plus documented improvements and betterments, less applicable depreciation (if any).
In the even of a partial loss to unit(s) insured hereunder Underwriters shall be liable for the actual cost of repair. Labor rates will be calculated at seventy five percent (75%) of prevailing local bodyshop labor rates. Parts will be calculated at seventy five percent (75%) of retail cost unless the Assured's cost exceeds seventy five percent (75%) of retail cost in which case settlement will be made at Assured’s cost.
In the event of a partial loss to unit(s) insured hereunder and the Assured chooses not to repair or accept a settlement from Underwriters based on an appearances damage valuation then coverage hereon shall not apply unless the retail sale price of the unit(s), as a direct result of the unrepaired damage is less than the original acquisition cost plus documented improvements and betterments, less applicable depreciation (if any) and the retail sale price equals the actual retail value of the unit(s) as determined by Underwriters at the time of loss.
In the event that retail sale price is less than the original acquisition cost plus documented improvements and betterments, less applicable depreciation (if any); Underwriters hereon shall only be liable for the difference between the two amounts.
Appearance damage shall be deemed to be damage which is cosmetic in nature, impairing only the appearance of the unit.
Ex. 102.
. "The cover note is a broker-produced document that the broker sends to the client before the policy because the policy is generally very slow in coming and it, in effect, is confirmation of coverage subject to the final policy.” Deposition of Stephen Way 43 [hereinafter Way Deposition],
. "As its label implies, the ‘follow the settlements’ doctrine prevents facultative reinsur-ers from second guessing good-faith settlements and obtaining de novo review . of judgments of the reinsured's liability to its insured.”
National Am. Ins. Co. of Cal. v. Certain Underwriters at Lloyd’s- London,
. The Underwriters have devoted a portion of their briefing to the defense of estoppel. Es-toppel is an affirmative defense that must be pled.
See
Fed.RXiv.P. 8(c). In an order dated February 1, 1999 (Dkt.# 46), the Court denied the Underwriters’ motion to amend their pleading to include the defense of estop-pel. "[A]n affirmative defense that is not asserted in a responsive pleading is generally deemed waived.”
Jones v. Miles,
. HCC has raised a number of objections to the summary judgment evidence presented by the Underwriters (Dkt.# 42). The Court emphasizes that in ruling on the parties’ motions for summary judgment, it has ignored that testimony that in fact constitutes incompetent summary judgment evidence.
. The Court observes that the "consumer protection purposes of the Insurance Code,"
Insurance Co. of N. Am. v. Morris,
. The second page of the policy indicates that the vehicles are kept at '‘[v]arious locations in U.S.A.” But the value of the vehicles is listed as $1,631,355,283, a sum that includes the value of the United Kingdom vehicles listed in the attached schedule. HCC’s Ex. A.
. The Underwriters briefed the English common law of equitable estoppel, mistake, and material misrepresentation. Equitable estop-pel, as previously discussed, is an affirmative defense not raised in the Underwriters' pleading. And English law of mutual mistake is in no material way different from that of Texas. According to the Underwriters,
[t]he general rule is that rectification [reformation] will not be granted unless there has been a mistake in an expression which is common to all the parties. In general, a claim will only succeed if it is established, firstly that there was some prior agreement between the parties; second that this was still effective when the instrument was executed; third that by mistake the instrument fails to carry out that agreement; and fourth, that if rectified as claimed, the instrument would carry out the agreement of the parties.
Affidavit of John Hanson 5 [hereinafter Hanson Affidavit] (citing
Agip S.p.A. v. Navigazione Alta Italia S.p.A.,
[1984] 1 Lloyd’s Rep. 353, 359 (C.A.)).
Cf. Cherokee Water Co. v. Forderhause,
. HCC’s characterization of the scope of Fenchurch’s authority is belied by Stephen Way’s failure to object at any time during negotiations to the inclusion of the “Basis of Loss Clause based LSW 507’’ language — language that was absent from the Beech policy. In a fax to Julian Hall on January 1, 1995, Ex. 12, for instance, Way offered a number of amendments to the original slip, adding to several phrases "as original” or "and/or as original”; he did not add such a phrase tó the “based L.S.W. 507” clause, and he did not insist on the clause’s excision. See Hall Deposition 92-93. That he did not understand the contents of the clause is simply- not tenable; the fifth page of a fax Julian Hall sent to Way on January 3, 1995, was a photocopy of the clause itself. Ex. 13. ' And the proposition that the clause was neutralized by other language in the slip, such as "Conditions to follow as original,” Way Deposition 166-68, is simply not supported by the record. See, e.g., Deposition of Brenda Whibley 24-25 [hereinafter Whibley Deposition].
. As discussed, English law of mutual mistake is no material way different from Texas law. See supra.
. The Court believes the Underwriters misinterpret
Enserch Corp. v. Shand Morahan & Co.,
. Compare the two following illustrations in the Restatement.
A and B agree that A will sell and B will buy a tract of land for $100,000 and that B will assume an existing mortgage of $50,-000. In reducing the agreement to writing, B’s lawyer erroneously omits the provision for assumption, and neither A nor B notices the omission. At the request of either A or B, the court will reform the writing to add the provision for assumption.
Restatement (Second) of Contracts § 155 illus. 1.
A contracts to sell and B to buy a debt owed by C to A, and secured by a mortgage. Both A and B believe that there is a building on the mortgaged land so that the value of the mortgaged property exceeds that of the debt, but in fact there is none so that its value is less than half that of the debt. The contract is voidable by B.
Restatement (Second) of Contracts § 152 illus. 4.
. The 1906 Act provides:
(1) Subject to the provisions of this section, the assured must disclose to the insurer, before the contract is concluded, every material circumstance which is known to the assured, and the assured is deemed to know every circumstance which, in the ordinary course of business, ought to be known by him. If the assured fails to make such disclosure, the insurer may avoid the contract.
(2) Every circumstance is material which would influence the judgment of a prudent insurer in fixing the premium, or determining whether he will take the risk.
. Fenchurch posits:
Defendants do not contend, and there is no evidence to suggest, that Fenchurch ever made a false assertion about the content of ’ the original policy. A "misrepresentation” claim must be based on something more than this. At most, Fenchurch’s conduct created a false impression as to the content of the original policy, and there is no legal authority for treating such conduct as a misrepresentation.
Fenchurch's Motion to Dismiss and for Summary Judgment 15. Fenchurch passed to the Underwriters a document that read "Basis of Loss Clause based 507, as original.” This was an assertion, and it was not true.
.Q: At the time that you prepared that endorsement, adding the words "as original” to the clause stating "basis of loss clause based LSW 507,” did you know that the underlying policy did not contain a clause like that?
A: No.
Deposition of Duncan Bennett 56-57; see also Hall Deposition 209.
. Stephen Way has testified, “So [the LSW 507 Clause] doesn’t seem to have been as *805 important as we’re all making out because never did we receive it as part of the policy and never did we receive it amended.” Way Deposition 169. That, however, is no evidence of the clause’s expendability; Way has ignored the fact that HCC's agent represented to the Underwriters that the clause was already in force in the Beech policy.
. While the Underwriters clearly seek to avoid the reinsurance policy in their motion for summary judgment,
see
Hanson Affidavit 7-9, they did not explicitly seek such relief in their answer. From the beginning, however, the Underwriters have alleged that a material misrepresentation resulted in the omission of the LSW 507 clause, or a "substantially similar” clause, from the reinsurance policy — if proven, grounds for avoidance.
See, e.g.,
Second Amended Answer 7. Fed.R.Civ.P. 54(c) provides that "every final judgment shall grant the relief to which the party in whose favor it -is rendered is entitled, even if the party has not demanded such relief in the party’s pleadings.”
See also In re Hannover Corp. of Am.,
. The Underwriters specifically pled attorney's fees in their Second Amended Answer, thereby satisfying any requirement under Fed. R.Civ.P. 9(g).
See United Indus., Inc. v. Simon-Hartley, Ltd.,
