OPINION
United States Fidelity and Guaranty Company (USF & G) appeals the imposition of a “death penalty” sanction — the striking
*670
of USF & G’s pleadings and the entry of a $1,000,000 default judgment against it — for alleged discovery abuse. Using the guidelines established by the Supreme Court in
Transamerican Natural Gas Corporation v. Powell,
we hold that the sanction was not “appropriate.”
See Transamerican Natural Gas Corporation v. Powell,
BACKGROUND
Tommy Rossa was a passenger in a vehicle involved in an automobile accident with Thad Felton in December 1989. He and Penny, his wife, sued Felton in June 1990. The primary insurance carrier, Farmers Insurance Company, tendered its policy limits of $25,000. While the Rossas’ suit against Felton was pending, they discovered that USF & G had issued a $1,000,-000 commercial-business policy to Felton’s employer, Cletex, and that Felton, who was general manager and secretаry-treasurer of Cletex, may have been listed on the policy as an additional insured.
Barbara Cross, USF & G’s supervising claims adjuster in Fort Worth, interviewed Felton in January 1990. He told her that he had been driving a 1989 Jeep Cherokee owned by Shelly Wood, with her permission, and that when the accident occurred he was not driving in the course and scope of his employment. Thus, Cross believed that Cletex had no liability. She did no further coverage investigation until April, even though Felton had also told her that his 1988 Ford Taurus was listed on the USF & G policy, and she was aware that Tommy Rossa had sustained serious injuries in the accident. Felton also told Cross that his only liability coverage was with USF & G, and she later confirmed that he was an insured under the USF & G policy.
Upon learning of the USF & G policy, the Rossas’ attorney wrote to USF & G offering to discuss a settlement. USF & G then hired a law firm to represent Felton, sent a reservatiоn-of-rights letter to the defense attorney that Farmers Insurance had provided, and hired an accident reconstructionist. On May 4, five days before the scheduled trial, USF & G decided that its policy afforded no coverage for the accident аnd notified all parties that it was withdrawing from Felton’s defense. Under the circumstances, Felton agreed to a $1,500,000 judgment in favor of the Rossas in exchange for their covenant not to execute.
On July 5, the Rossas filed this action, seeking to establish that USF & G’s policy afforded Felton $1,000,000 in liability coverage. They named Felton as a defendant, and he filed a cross-claim against USF & G for breach of its duty of good faith and fair dealing. The Rossas asserted rights as third-party beneficiaries to the USF & G policy proceeds and, as judgment creditors of Felton, to any additional damages Felton might recover on his bad-faith claim. USF & G filed a declaratory-judgment action in federal court against Felton, asking that the federal court declare that the policy did not cover him for the accident. It also filed a petition to remove this case to the federal court, where it remained for eight months before the court remanded it.
The Rossas initiated discovery following the remand, attempting to determine the basis for USF & G’s denial of coverage, whether USF & G had waived or was es-topped to assert a no-coverage defense, and whether it had acted in bad faith toward Felton. After USF & G responded to the discovery requests, the Rossas filed a motion to compel and for sanctions under Rule 215, asserting that the responses were frivolous, evasive, non-responsive, and made for delay only, and that no specific privilege or exemption had been asserted. There had been no other discovery disputes between the parties.
At the hearing in June 1991, Cross was questioned about the facts of the accident, the extent of USF & G’s investigation, and its basis for denying coverage. In some instances, when her responses differed from USF & G’s written responses, she attributed the written answer to the advice of counsel. She also acknowledged that some responses were deficient. For example, Cross testified that, when it withdrew *671 from Felton’s defense, USF & G knew what its position regarding coverage was and what it would be if further litigation was filed. Interrogatory number two asked about USF & G’s contentions regarding coverage. USF & G’s answer referred the Rossas to its pleadings then on file— i.e., a general denial, to the reservation-of-rights letter, and to the policy itself. Although the reservation-of-rights letter was supposed to have been attached to the responses as an exhibit, it was not. Cross admitted that she did not think that the answer to interrogatory number two described in sufficient detail each defense or contention of USF & G or that it set forth a factual basis for every defense or contention. Thе Rossas had requested that USF & G admit that Felton was driving the Jeep Cherokee at the time of the accident with the vehicle owner’s permission. USF & G had responded: “This defendant is unable to admit or deny this request. To this point, sufficient discovery has not yet beеn conducted in this case to determine whether or not Felton had the permission of Shelly Wood to drive the vehicle at the time of the accident.... And this defendant does not have sufficient independent knowledge to admit or deny this request.” However, Cross testified that the statement she took from Felton indicated that he had permission from Wood to drive the Jeep.
At the conclusion of the sanction hearing, the court stated:
I fail to see in this case where you’ve already got a judgment over here for $1,500,000 why we don’t pay a little closer attention to what we’re doing. I think you have been playing hide and seek. You’ve used unnecessarily frivolous, dilatory tactics. You’ve abused your discovery process, and the court hereby strikes your рleadings and enters a default judgment against the defendant USF & G with all interest. That’s all. Draw me up an order.
In the judgment, the court found that USF & G had abused the discovery process by failing to properly and timely comply with the plaintiffs’ discovery requests and that the responses were “evasive, incomplete, unreasonably frivоlous and made for the purpose of delay.” The judgment struck USF & G’s pleadings, deemed the plaintiffs’ material allegations admitted, and awarded liquidated damages in the amount of $1,000,000 — the limit of USF & G’s policy. The Rossas’ claims against USF & G were then severed from the remaining claims.
The Supreme Court issued the opinion in Transamerican one day after the sanctions hearing. Forty-one days later the court made voluminous findings, tracing the language of Transamerican, in support of the judgment imposing the sanction.
RULE 215 SANCTIONS
USF & G attacks the imposition of the “death penalty” sanction and the entry of the default judgment as constituting an abuse of discretion.
A sanction imposed for discovery abuse must always be “appropriate” under the circumstances of the specific case.
See
Tex.R.Civ.P. 215;
Transamerican,
We review a “death-рenalty” sanction by the same standard as any other sanction imposed under Rule 216 — abuse of discretion.
See
Tex.R.Civ.P. 215;
Koslow’s v. Mackie,
Although trial judges have been encouraged to file findings of fact and conclusions of law when sanctions аre imposed, such findings are not the same as those contemplated by Rules 296 and 297 because findings made under those rules are made in a “case tried ... without a jury.” Tex.R.Civ.P. 296, 297;
Transameri-can,
Before choosing a sanction to correct discovery abuse, a court must weigh: 1) the еxtent of the party’s personal responsibility; 2) the prejudice to the adversary caused by the discovery abuse; 3) any history of dilatoriness; 4) whether the offending conduct was willful or in bad faith; 5) the effectiveness of sanctions other than dismissal, which requires аn
analysis
of alternative sanctions; and 6) the merit of the claim or defense.
See Poulis v. State Farm Fire and Casualty Co.,
Although the court pronounced judgment before
Transamerican
set forth the definitive guidelines for imposition of the ultimate sanction, we must use those guidelines in our review of the sanction on appeal.
See Transamerican,
DUE-PROCESS REQUIREMENTS
USF & G also attacks the striking of its pleadings as a viоlation of its state and federal due-process rights. The imposition of sanctions is limited not only by the
Transamerican
analysis under Rule 215 but also by the constitutional requirements of due process. U.S. Const. amend. V, XIV; Tex. Const. art. 1, § 19;
Fjelstad v. American Honda Co.,
Texas courts must afford litigants federal standards of due process.
Peralta v. Heights Medical Center, Inc.,
The death penalty should never be imposed unless a party’s egregious hindrance of the discovery process justifies a presumption that its claims or defenses lack merit.
Transamerican,
CONCLUSION
Imposition of the “death penalty” did not meet the
Transamerican
guidelines.
See Transamerican,
Tactics such as those used by USF & G or its trial counsel only undermine the process that discovery was meant to aid and should not be condoned or go unpunished. Under these circumstances, howеver, the extent of the hindrance to discovery did not justify a presumption that USF & G’s defenses lacked merit, and the discovery sanctions imposed should not have been used to adjudicate the merits of its defenses.
See
U.S. Const. amend. V, XIV; Tex. Const. art. 1, § 19;
Fjelstad,
We reverse the judgment and remand the cause for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
