LCI Equiрments, Inc. (“LCI”), a Texas corporation, imported and sold a Yanmar tractor that had been manufactured and used in Japan and then rebuilt in Vietnam. Rudy Slater subsequently purchased the tractor at auction and was killed in a rollover accident while driving it. His wife, Arkansas resident Wanda Slater, commenced a wrongful death action in state *1134 court, asserting negligence and strict product liability claims against LCI and others, focused primarily on the tractor’s lack of a roll-over protection system (“ROPS”). LCI’s insurer, Republic-Vanguard Insurance Company (“Republic”), also a Texas corporation, dеnied coverage and refused to defend LCI under its Commercial General Liability policy (the “Policy”).
With the wrongful death suit pending, LCI assigned its rights in the Policy to Slater who then commenced this action against Republic in Arkansas state court, joining LCI as a nominal plaintiff and seeking a declaratory judgment that thе Policy covered her claims against LCI.
See
Ark.Code Ann. § 16-lll-103a, -104. Republic removed the action to federal court, alleging diversity jurisdiction because LCI is a nominal plaintiff. Slater neither moved to remand nor questioned federal jurisdiction. The district court
1
granted Republic’s motion for summary judgment, concluding it had nо duty to defend or indemnify LCI because coverage was excluded by the “Products/Completed-Operations” endorsement in the Policy.
Slater v. Republic-Vanguard, Ins. Co.,
No. 09CV-00269,
I. Diversity Jurisdiction
Slater argues on appeal that the district court lacked subject matter jurisdiction because plaintiff LCI, a Texas citizen like Republic, destroyed complete diversity between the parties,
see
28 U.S.C. § 1332(a)(1); therefore, the lawsuit was improperly removed because the district court lacked “original jurisdiсtion,” 28 U.S.C. § 1441(a). We must examine an issue of subject matter jurisdiction
de novo
even when it was not raised in the district court.
Mansfield, C. & L.M. Ry. Co. v. Swan,
On the face of the pleadings, the district court had original jurisdiction when this case was removed, and when judgment was entered. Slater’s state court complaint listed plaintiffs Wanda and Barton Slater “as assignees and real parties in interest,” and joined LCI as “assignor and nominal plaintiff.” The presence of a nondiverse party who is “nominal” may be ignored in determining whether diversity jurisdiction exists.
Salem Trust Co. v. Mfrs’ Fin. Co.,
Slater argues that LCI was not
in fact
a nominal plaintiff because LCI assigned its rights under the Policy for the claim resulting from Slater’s lawsuit “reserving and setting aside $100.00.” But this is not conclusive. The written аssignment went on to grant Slater (i) the “sole right to collect from the Insurer the net proceeds of the Policy,” (ii) the “sole right to exercise all other rights permitted by the terms of the Policy ... and to receive all benefits and advantages derived therefrom,” and (iii) the right to control the exercise of thоse rights “without notice to, or assent by [LCI].”
Compare Navarro Savs. Ass’n v. Lee,
In mаny cases considering whether a partial assignment created or destroyed diversity jurisdiction, federal courts have disregarded assigned or retained interests that were more substantial than the $100 interest retained by LCI.
See Attorneys Trust v. Videotape Computer Prods., Inc.,
Slater contends that LCI’s interest is real and there is no evidence of an improper motive to destroy diversity jurisdiction. But motive is not the dispositive issue. Slater pleaded that LCI is a nominal party. This created diversity jurisdiction, and Republic removed the case in reliance on that status. The district court then had original jurisdiction over the action. Slater could have moved to remand or otherwise denied federal jurisdiction, presenting evidence that LCI was in fact not a nominal party. She did not do so. Instead, she litigated her claim to judgment in the district court and then raised this issue for the first time on appeal, attempting to nullify the district court’s expenditure of scarce judiciаl resources because she lost on the merits of her claim in federal court. While a party may not consent to subject matter jurisdiction that does not exist, “a court will not interfere with the consequences of a plaintiffs selection in naming parties, unless the plaintiff has impermissibly manufactured diversity or used an unacceptable device to defeat diversity.”
Lincoln Prop. Co. v. Roche,
II. The Merits
The Policy provided LCI coverage for “bodily injury,” including death, “to which this insurance applies.” Republic denied coverage based on the “Products/Completed-Opеrations” endorsement, which provided that “no coverage is provided, nor is there any duty to defend, claims, suits, actions or proceedings against the insured arising out of ‘products’ or ‘completed operations’ ____” The relevant Policy definitions were:
ll.a. “Products-completed operаtions hazard” includes all “bodily injury” ... occurring away from premises you own or rent and arising out of “your product” or “your work.”
c. This hazard does not include “bodily injury” ... arising out of:
(2) The existence of tools, uninstalled equipment or abandoned or unused materials....
14. “Your product” means ... a. Any goods or products ... manufаctured, sold, handled, distributed or disposed of by [you]....
“Your product” includes:
a. Warranties or representations made at any time with respect to the fitness, quality, durability, performance or use of “your product;” and
b. The providing of or failure to provide warnings or instructions.
15. “Your work” means ... a. Work or operations perfоrmed by you or on your behalf....
“Your work” includes:
a. Warranties or representations made at any time with respect to the fitness, quality, durability, performance or use of “your work;” and
b. The providing of or failure to provide warnings or instructions.
In the wrongful death lawsuit, Slater alleged that LCI “designed, manufactured, sold, marketed and/or distributed [an unreasonably dangerous] tractor which caused the death of Rudolph Slater.” She further alleged that LCI negligently failed to “design, manufacture, and install [safety features],” to “adequately test and inspect the subject tractor,” and to “adequately warn ... [of] hazards in the use of the subject tractor.” The district court concluded that Republic had no duty to defend or indemnify LCI because these claims were all excluded by the “Products/Completed-Operations” exclusion. The tractor was a product “manufactured, sold, handled, or distributed” by LCI. It had left LCI’s premises at the time of Rudy Slater’s acсident. It was “completed” when it left LCI’s possession, despite lacking a ROPS, because it was put to its intended use by Rudy Slater. The exclusion applied to LCI’s alleged negligent failure to install an ROPS and to provide safety warnings, as well as to the strict product liability claims, because these claims are “grоunded on a defect in [a] product sold
not
to a negligent omission unrelated to any product defect.”
Slater,
On appeal, Slater does not contest the district court’s decision that Texas law governs this dispute. Under Texas law, a liability insurer owes its insured two
*1137
distinct duties, to defend third-party claims and to indemnify covered losses.
D.R. Hortorir-Tex., Ltd. v. Market Int’l Ins. Co., Ltd.,
1. Slater first argues that Republic had a duty to defend LCI in the underlying lawsuit and a duty to indemnify LCI for the judgment in Slater’s favor because LCI’s failure to install ROPS safety equipment on the tractor falls within the exception to the “Products/Completed-Operаtions” exclusion for bodily injury “arising out of ... [t]he existence of ... uninstalled equipment____” Though not raised in the district court, Slater urges us to consider this issue because it is “purely legal and requires no additional factual development.”
Rittenhouse v. United-Health Grp. Long Term Disability Ins. Plan,
Slater relies on two cases from оther jurisdictions concluding that “injury resulting from improperly installed equipment is legally equivalent to an injury resulting from uninstalled equipment.”
Chancier v. Am. Hardware Mut. Ins. Co.,
Slater’s reply brief argues that her interpretation of the uninstalled equipment exception is not unreasonable, and she distinguishes
Saumill Hydraulics
on the ground that the safety features that could have been installed on the Yanmar existed but were not installed. If credited, Slatеr’s fact-intensive contention could have a
*1138
potentially wide-ranging impact, excepting from the “Products/Completed-Operations” exclusion all claims alleging that a completed product caused injury away from the insured’s premises because the insured failed to install a partiсular feature. Such a sweeping interpretation contrasts starkly with the exception’s narrow focus on the “existence of tools, uninstalled equipment or abandoned or unused materials.” Texas law cautions courts not to “ascribe to one word a meaning so broad that it is inconsistent with its aсcompanying words.”
U.S. Fid. & Guar. Co. v. Goudeau,
2. Slater next argues that her claims for bodily injury caused by LCI’s negligent failure to inspect and test the tractor, and to provide adequate safety warnings, are not excluded because those injuries arose out of services LCI was required to perform, not its “product.” The Texas Court оf Appeals rejected a similar argument in LaBatt:
In the instant case, we have allegations of a defective product. The fact that ... plaintiffs have alleged negligence in their petition does not mean that a claim based in products liability becomes one based in negligence. “Produсts liability” is a generic phrase used to describe the liability of a manufacturer or supplier to a person injured by a product. One of the appropriate methods to use, in Texas, when asserting a claim based upon an injury suffered from a defective product is negligence. Furthermore, оne type of product defect complained of in an allegation of negligence is a design defect which may have its inception in poor packaging or inadequate warnings.
Slater argues that the Court in LaBatt did not consider claims of negligent failure to inspect and test, claims that arise out of services LCI negligently performed before the tractor left its premises. Slater did not make this argument in attempting to distinguish LaBatt in the district court, and the court did not address the issue. On appeal, Reрublic argues that these are excluded defective-product claims. Alternatively, Republic argues that the claims for negligent inspection and testing are excluded because they fall within the definition of the “Your work” portion of the Products/Completed-Operations exclusion, which excludes “[w]ork or operations performed by you or on your behalf’ and *1139 “[t]he providing of or failure to provide warnings or instructions.” Slater argues, without citation to Texas authority, that the ‘Tour work” exclusion “encompasses only affirmative work or operations performed by the insured, not omissions.” Republic’s contention is more consistent with the plain language of the Policy. Slater has failed to show plain error.
The judgment of the district court is affirmed.
Notes
. The Honorable James A. Moody, United States District Judge for the Eastern District of Arkansas.
. Alternatively, if LCI's $100 interest made it more than a nominal party, we would exercise our discretionary authority "to dismiss a dispensable nondiverse party.”
Newman-Green, Inc. v. Alfonzo-Larrain,
. See also Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem.Code § 82.001(2) (" 'Products liability action’ means any action against a manufacturer or seller for recovery of damages arising out of personal injury [or] death ... allegedly caused by a defective product whether the action is based in ... strict products liability, negligence, ... or any other theory or combination of theories.”).
