OPINION
I. Introduction
In this аppeal, we address whether the trial court exceeded our mandate by awarding on remand prejudgment interest to Joe Robertson (“Robertson”) for a period from June 29, 1998 tо August 6, 2001, and whether the trial court properly calculated this interest award. We will affirm.
II. Background Facts
A. The first appeal
Robertson successfully prosecuted an underinsured motorist (“UIM”) claim against his carrier, Truck Insurance Exchange (“Truck”). A jury returned a verdict for Robertson on June 29, 1998. The trial court entered a February 25, 1999 judgment and, subsequently, a May 5,1999 judgment for Robertson. The final May 5, 1999 judgment included an award of prejudgmеnt interest calculated from the date Robertson gave notice of his claim, approximately seven and one-half years earlier. Truck appealed. Truck clаimed that the trial court erred by awarding Robertson prejudgment interest because “Robertson had no right of recovery under his insurance policy until such time as liability and damage had been judicially determined.”
1
We sustained Truck’s issue. Citing
Henson v. Southern Farm Bureau Casualty
B. The second appeal
On remand, the trial court entered an August 7, 2001 amended judgment for Robertson. The amended judgmеnt awards Robertson prejudgment interest from the date of the jury’s verdict for him, June 29, 1998, through the day before the entry of the amended judgment, i.e., through August 6, 2001. Truck now appeals the amended judgment, аsserting in two issues that the trial court exceeded the mandate of this court by awarding Robertson prejudgment interest and, alternatively, that the trial court miscalculated the interest it аwarded to Robertson.
III. Trial Court Did Not Exceed This Court’s Mandate
In its first issue, Truck focuses on two sentences in our prior opinion and argues that because of this language, the trial court was not authorized to make any аward of prejudgment interest to Robertson in the amended judgment on remand. Truck points out that our prior opinion states, “As a result, Allstate and Truck Insurance could not be accountable for prejudgment interest” and that the opinion in one of the other sections, not dealing with Truck’s prejudgment interest issue, states, “there should never have been any prejudgment interest on which the trial court could have awarded postjudgment interest.” Id. at 6 (emphasis added). Truck argues that the amended judgment’s prejudgment interest award on remand exceeds this court’s mandate and violates the law of the case as established by this court’s prior opinion.
In interpreting the mandate of an appellate court, the trial court looks not only to the mandate itself but also to the appellate court’s opinion.
Hudson v. Wakefield,
Here, our judgment and mandate remanded the case to the trial court “for further proceedings cоnsistent with this opinion.” Our opinion likewise remanded the case for “further proceedings, specifically entry of judgment consistent” with our opinion. Truck Ins. Exch., No. 2-99-186-CV, slip op. at 21. The trial court, in accordance with our mandatе and consistently with our opinion, entered an amended judgment on remand. The amended judgment, consistent with our opinion, deleted the award of approximately seven and onе-half years of prejudgment interest. The amended judgment, however, awarded Robertson prejudgment interest from the date of the jury’s verdict, June 29, 1998, through August 6, 2001, the day before the entry of the amеnded judgment.
Our opinion, viewed as a whole, prohibited only an award of prejudgment interest for any time period prior to a determination of the underinsured motorist’s liability and the extent of Robertson’s resulting
When the jury found Contreras at fault for the accident and found Henson damaged by her negligence, Henson became legally entitled to recover from her. And because the damages exceeded Contreras’ liability policy limits, Henson became entitled to the uninsured/under-insured motorist policy benefits, up to the policy limits. By the terms of the policies, no obligation to pay the claim existed until the jury established Contreras’ liability. And the insurers paid the claim promptly after the jury made its findings.... Therefore no compensation [prejudgment interest] is due for lost use of the funds.
Id.
at 654 (emphasis added). Thus, nothing in our opinion, judgment, or mandate prohibited the trial court’s award of prejudgment interest from the date of the jury’s verdict for Robertson, i.e., the date the jury determined the liability of the underinsured motorist, through the day before entry of the amended judgment on remand. The trial court here did not, as in the cases cited by Truck, exceed the scope of our mandáte.
See, e.g., Seale,
Truck also contends that the law of the case prohibited any award of prejudgment interest on remand. The “law of the case” doctrine is defined as that principle under which questions of law decided on appeal to a сourt of last resort will govern the case throughout its subsequent stages.
Hudson,
• The law of the case established by our prior opinion is that Truck was not liable for prejudgment interest on Robertson’s claim for UIM benefits prior to the jury’s determination that the underinsured motorist was liable and that Robertson’s damages exceed the available insurancе limits. Therefore, the trial court’s amended judgment on remand awarding Robertson prejudgment interest for the period of time from the jury’s verdict on June 29, 1998 through August 6, 2001, the day before entry of the amended judgment, does not violate the law of the case established by our prior opinion.
Moreover, Truck’s argument that the trial court lacked authority to award prejudgment interest to Robertson in the judgment on remand is really an argument of semantics. The original judgment awarded Robertson postjudgment interest beginning on the date of the judgment. Truck did not complain of this award of postjudgment interest in its first appeal.
IV. Calculation op Prejudgment Interest
In a portion of its second issue, Truck complains that the trial court miscalculated the prejudgment interest awarded in the amended judgment on remand. Truck argues thаt prejudgment interest should not begin to run from the date of the jury’s verdict, June 29, 1998, but instead should begin to run on the date of the original judgment, February 25, 1999.
Henson
dictates that prejudgment interest begins running on an insured’s contractual claim against its carrier for UIM benefits when the liability of the underinsured motorist is established and that liability is established by a jury’s verdict.
Henson,
In the remainder of its second issue, Truck argues that the interest awarded to Robertson should be suspended during periods of delay allegedly attributable to Robertson. Truck dоes not indicate that its request for suspension of accrual of interest was presented to the trial court. The record before us likewise does not demonstrate presentation of this issue to the trial court. Therefore, it is not preserved for our review. Tex.R.App. P. 33.1(a). We overrule this portion of Truck’s second issue.
V. Conclusion
Having overruled Truck’s issues, we affirm the trial court’s judgment.
