This appeal involves the scope of an insurer’s duty to its insured in the context of settlement negotiations under- Texas law. Concluding that the Texas Supreme Court would not impose a duty upon an insurer to take into consideration a claim specifically excluded from coverage, we affirm.
I. BACKGROUND
St. Paul Fire and Marine Insurance Company (St.Paul) filed a complaint for declaratory relief pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2201 in federal district court, seeking a determination that it was not liable- for payment of a punitive damages award entered against its insured, Convalescent Services, Inc. (CSI), in a state court action in Harris County, Texas. The following events gave rise to the underlying state court action. Jacob Schultz was a patient at a nursing home owned by CSI called Bayou Glen Nursing Home. Schultz developed decubitus ulcers, which involved complete loss of skin and tissue and exposed bone structure. Recovery from the ulcers required hospitalization, surgery, and skin grafts. Schultz brought suit against CSI in Texas state court, alleging a variety of negligent acts and omissions that resulted in serious personal injury and near death. Schultz sought actual and punitive damages.
Although St. Paul insured CSI against damages arising from its negligence, the policy specifically excluded coverage for punitive damages. Pursuant to that policy, St. Paul defended CSI in the underlying state lawsuit. Prior to trial, Schultz made a settlement demand of $250,000, well within CSI’s policy limits. At that time, Schultz’s medical damages alone were $80,000. St. Paul rejected the demand and made a counteroffer of $35,000. The case proceeded to trial, and ultimately, finding CSI liable for negligence and gross negligence, the jury awarded Schultz $380,000 in actual damages and $850,000 in punitive damages. Although St. Paul paid the actual damages award on behalf of CSI, it refused to pay the punitive damages award based on an exclusion in the policy.
Thereafter, CSI executed an assignment of its rights against St. Paul to Schultz’s estate in exchange for a covenant to delay execution of the underlying state court judgment. 1 CSI filed suit against St. Paul in the district court of Harris County, Texas, alleging that St. Paul had negligently handled the investigation and settlement negotiations in regard to Schultz’s claim against CSI. St. Paul then removed the suit to federal district court and filed the aforementioned complaint seeking a declaratory judgment that it did not breach any duties owed to CSI in connection with the defense and settlement of the underlying state court proceedings.
CSI counterclaimed, asserting that St. Paul breached its duty to exercise ordinary care in the defense, evaluation, and settlement of the lawsuit against CSI in violation of the doctrine set forth in
G.A. Stowers Furniture Co. v. American Indemnity Co.,
II. ANALYSIS
A. Negligent Failure to Settle under Texas Law
CSI contends that the district court erred in granting St. Paul’s motion for judgment on the pleadings with respect to its counterclaim. A judgment on the pleadings pursuant to Rule 12(c) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure is reviewed
de novo. St. Paul Ins. of Bellaire v. AFIA Worldwide Ins.,
Specifically, CSI argues that St. Paul unreasonably refused to accept a $250,000 settlement demand in the underlying state court suit, thereby violating its duty under Texas law. To determine a state law question, federal courts must look to decisions of the highest state court.
Transcontinental Gas v. Transportation Ins. Co.,
In Texas, an insurer must exercise the degree of care and diligence when responding to settlement demands within policy limits that “an ordinarily prudent person would exercise in the management of his own business.”
Stowers,
The Texas Supreme Court has explained that an insurer’s duty to settle under Stowers is not activated unless the following three requirements are met:
(1) the claim against the insured is within the scope of coverage, (2) the demand is within the policy limits, and (3) the terms of the demand are such that an ordinarily prudent insurer would accept it, considering the likelihood and degree of the insured’s potential exposure to an excess judgment.
Garcia,
CSI admits, as it must, that punitive damages are specifically excluded under its insurance policy issued by St. Paul. CSI maintains, however, that it has never asserted that St. Paul had a duty to settle a claim not covered under its policy. Instead, CSI argues that the Stowers duty to settle within policy limits was triggered because St. Paul knew that CSI was willing to pay its share of any demand for non-covered damages in order to avoid exposure to a large award of punitive damages. 2 In other words, if St. Paul had made CSI aware of its internal evaluation that the exposure to a punitive damages award was great, then CSI would have contributed toward a settlement based *343 upon such exposure. CSI asserts that St. Paul knew or had reason to know that CSI would have been willing to contribute toward a settlement because, within the preceding year, at St. Paul’s request, CSI had paid $100,000 of its own money toward settlement of an apparently unrelated action that presented a substantial risk of punitive damages.
CSI asserts that although the Texas Supreme Court has not addressed the merits of this particular type of
Stowers
claim, it specifically mentioned such a potential liability in
Garcia,
and
State Farm Lloyds Ins. Co. v. Maldonado,
As the Texas Supreme Court stated in
Garcia,
“[w]e start with the proposition that an insurer has no duty to settle a claim that is not covered under its policy.”
In short, Stowers holds insurers liable for damages on covered claims above policy limits to ensure that insurers accept reasonable settlement offers (especially ones close to policy limits) that an ordinarily prudent insured would have accepted. Stowers therefore extends the policy limits for covered claims; however, CSI’s interpretation would, in effect, extend the actual coverage of the insurance contract. 5 CSI’s argument wholly ignores the most basic proposition that an insurer has no duty to settle a non-covered claim. Given these circumstances, CSI has failed to establish that St. Paul had a duty under Stowers to accept the $250,000 settlement demand. 6
*344
Nevertheless, CSI argues that, independent of the duty in
Stowers
to accept reasonable settlement demands, St. Paul had a larger duty to handle the claims against CSI in a non-negligent manner. CSI relies on,
inter alia,
the standard of care language , in
Stowers,
CSI also relies on opinions from the Seventh and Eighth Circuits and the Northern District of Alabama to support its claim that St. Paul breached its duty to treat CSI’s interests with equal consideration as its own.
9
Those three cases rely, at least in part, on the insurer’s duty of good faith and fair dealing. In Texas, a
Stowers
claim is not a bad faith claim.
Maryland Ins. Co. v. Head Indus.Coatings and Serv., Inc.,
We also rely on the Texas Supreme Court’s decision in
Texas Farmers Ins. Co. v. Soriano,
Thus, because the Texas Supreme Court does not impose a duty upon insurers to consider other covered claims when faced with a settlement demand by one claimant, we believe that the Court would not impose a duty upon insurers to consider claims that are not covered — here, the punitive damage claims — by its policy during settlement negotiations involving one claimant. While recognizing the expansive language in Stowers regarding an insurer’s duty to the insured, we cannot square the Texas Supreme Court’s recent precedent interpreting Stowers with a holding that the insurer has a duty to consider claims that are excluded from coverage when making its determination of whether a settlement is reasonable.
CSI also cites numerous other cases in support of its various arguments; however, what this Court must do is predict, what the Texas Supreme Court would now hold. Wffien making an
“Erie
guess, it is not our role to create or modify state law, rather only to predict it.”
Lawrence v. Virginia Ins. Reciprocal,
*346 B. Whether CSI Sufficiently Raised Statutory Claims
In its final argument, CSI asserts that St. Paul is liable under the Texas Deceptive Trade Practices Act (DTPA), the Texas Insurance Code, and common law negligence
14
for the damages it caused when it failed to investigate properly the claim and to communicate to CSI its evaluation that CSI was exposed to a substantial risk of punitive damages. St. Paul responds that these statutory claims were not plead. We agree. Although in its answer CSI cursorily mentioned these statutory claims, there is no reference to either the DTPA or the Insurance Code in CSI’s counterclaim. CSI failed to raise properly these statutory claims in the court below, and that is further evidenced by the district court’s complete omission of any reference to such claims in its order granting St. Paul’s motion for judgment on the pleadings. We refuse to consider claims that were not properly raised in the district court.
First United Financial Corp. v. Specialty Oil Co.,
For the above reasons, the district court’s judgment is AFFIRMED in all respects.
Notes
. CSI and Schultz's estate are the appellants on this appeal. For ease of reference, the appellants will be collectively referred to as CSI.
. Although CSI now asserts that St. Paul's knowledge of CSI's willingness to contribute "triggered the classic
Stowers
duty,” in its counterclaim filed in the court below, CSI candidly admitted that "St. Paul's breach of duty is not the classic
Stowers
breach, [because] the damages to which St. Paul has exposed its policyholder are not covered, and
Stowers
is premised upon an insurer's duty to settle a covered lawsuit.” Indeed, the district court, in its opinion granting St. Paul's motion for judgment on the pleadings, took note of CSI's concession "that St. Paul did not breach its
Stowers
duty as set out by the three requirements listed in
Garcia."
Nevertheless, CSI did argue in its counterclaim that the duties set forth in
Stowers
were not so limited, and that St. Paul had breached its duty under
Stowers "
to give the rights of his principal [policyholder] at least as great consideration as he does his own.’ ” (quoting
Stowers,
. In Maldonado, the Court did not reach the question left open in Garcia because there was no evidence that the insurer knew that the insured had made an unconditional offer to pay the amount of the settlement demand above policy limits. In its counterclaim, CSI alleged that St. Paul knew it was willing to contribute. As stated previously, because this case was disposed of on a Rule 12(c) motion, we accept all allegations in the pleadings as true.
. We express no opinion regarding how the Texas Supreme Court would decide the particular type of Stowers claim left open in Garcia and Maldonado, both of which involved claims that were covered.
. CSI argues that both extending policy limits for covered claims and extending actual coverage of the insurance contract involve the insurer being held liable for damages that it was not contractually obligated to pay. Though we understand CSI’s argument, we simply do not believe that the Texas Supreme Court’s precedent allows us to accept that argument.
See Garcia,
.CSI also argues that the $250,000 settlement demand made by Schultz involved only the actual damages and did not encompass the punitive damages. Therefore, the first Stowers prerequisite would be met; i.e., the claim was a covered one. Even if the demand could be so construed, and thus, under Stowers, St. Paul negligently refused to settle the covered claim, CSI suffered no damages *344 in this regard because the actual damages that corresponded to the covered claim did not exceed policy limits, and St. Paul paid the $380,000 in actual damages. Pursuant to Stowers, if the jury had awarded Schultz actual damages in excess of CSI's policy limits, St. Paul would have been liable for the entire amount of actual damages, including the amount in excess of policy limits.
. Certainly, where an insurance company makes such a contract; it, by the very terms of the contract, assumed the responsibility to act as the exclusive and absolute agent of the assured in all matters pertaining to the questions in litigation, and, as such agent, it ought to be held to that degree of care and diligence which an ordinarily prudent person would exercise in the management of his own business.
. Notwithstanding
Garcia,
CSI argues that the Texas Supreme Court's affirmance of a portion of the court of appeals’ opinion in
St. Paul Surplus Lines Ins. Co. v. Dal-Worth Tank Co.,
. Carpenter v. Auto. Club Interins. Exch.,
. This panel is bound by another panel’s previous interpretation of state law absent a subsequent state court decision that renders this Court's previous decision incorrect.
Batts v. Tow-Motor Forklift Co.,
.
Erie R. Co. v. Tompkins,
. The insured also claimed that the insurer breached its duty of good faith and fair dealing in failing to settle certain claims. Because the insurer did not challenge whether the duty of good faith and fair dealing applied in the context of third-party claims, the Texas Supreme Court did not decide that issue. Subsequently, the Court held that such a duty did not apply in the context of third-party claims.
Head,
.Because we determine that St. Paul did not breach any tort duty to CSI, we need not reach St. Paul's argument that Texas public
*346
policy now prohibits insurance companies from paying punitive damage awards.
See Hartford Cas. Ins. Co. v. Powell,
. As set forth above, the only tort duty that St. Paul owed to CSI arises under Stowers.
