OPINION ON REHEARING
Appellees Nabors Drilling USA, L.P., NDUSA Holdings Corporation, and Bruce Wilkinson filed a motion for rehearing and a motion for en banc reconsideration of our opinion issued on April 7, 2011. We grant rehearing, deny as moot their motion for reconsideration en banc, withdraw our opinion and judgment, and issue this opinion.
Robert Earl Warnke filed negligence, fraud, and negligent misrepresentation claims against Nabors Drilling USA, L.P., NDUSA Holdings Corporation, and Bruce Wilkinson arising out of his workplace injury and his claim for workers’ compensation. 1 The trial court granted a traditional summary judgment against Warnke disposing of all claims and all parties. Warnke contends the trial court erred in granting summary judgment because (1) Nabors and NDUSA Holdings failed to establish that they provided him with pre-injury notice of coverage and such notice is required for it to claim subscriber status under the Texas Workers’ Compensation Act (the “Act”); (2) a genuine issue of material fact existed whether Wilkinson was an independent contractor and therefore covered under the Act’s exclusive remedy provision; and (3) his claims for injuries arising from Nabors’s alleged fraudulent and negligent misrepresentation constituted separate injuries from his on-the-job injury and fell outside the protection of the Act’s exclusive remedy provision.
We affirm in part, reverse in part, and remand for further proceedings.
Background
In December 2006, Warnke suffered an on-the-job injury at Nabors’s yard when a pipe connected by a co-worker, Bruce Wilkinson, came free and crushed his hand. In his affidavit, Warnke testified that his supervisor told him before his injury that he was not covered by workers’ compensation insurance and that after his injury an *342 employee in Nabors’s human resources department, Brandon Cannady, denied Na-bors’s responsibility for Warnke’s medical expenses. 2 Warnke’s wife testified by affidavit that Cannady told her that Warnke was not a Nabors employee and Nabors would not provide him workers’ compensation coverage. Warnke also alleged that Nabors and NDUSA Holdings never provided him written notice of coverage under workers’ compensation insurance before his injury. Eight months after the accident and about three months after filing suit, Warnke began receiving workers’ compensation benefits from Nabors’s workers’ compensation carrier.
Warnke filed suit against Nabors for negligence, fraud, and negligent misrepresentation, against NDUSA Holdings for negligence, and against Wilkinson for negligence. 3 In his original petition, Warnke claimed that he and Wilkinson were both employees of Nabors. He later amended his petition to plead in the alternative that Wilkinson was an independent contractor.
Nabors, NDUSA Holdings, and Wilkinson filed a traditional motion for summary judgment arguing that no genuine issue of material fact existed because the Act’s exclusive remedy provision bars Warnke’s recovery. Nabors, NDUSA Holdings, and Wilkinson argued that subscriber status does not depend on providing the employee with pre-injury notice of coverage. Na-bors — the only defendant sued for fraud and negligent misrepresentation claims— also asserted that the exclusive remedy provision barred Warnke’s fraud and negligent misrepresentation claims. Warnke responded that (1) Nabors and NDUSA Holdings were not subscribers because they failed to give Warnke notice of coverage and their insurance provider was not authorized to act in Texas; (2) a fact issue exists regarding whether Wilkinson was an independent contractor and therefore not covered by the exclusive remedy provision; and (3) his fraud and negligent misrepresentation claims arise from a separate injury from the on-the-job injury covered by the Act. The trial court granted summary judgment in favor of Nabors, NDUSA Holdings, and Wilkinson on all claims.
Summary Judgment Standard of Review
We review a trial court’s summary judgment de novo.
Valence Operating Co. v. Dorsett,
Exclusive Remedy Under the Workers’ Compensation Act
The Act is the exclusive remedy for non-intentional, “work-related injuries” of an employee, and exempts the employer, its agents, and its employees from common-law liability claims based on negligence or gross negligence.
See
Tex. Lab.Code Ann. § 408.001(a) (West 2006);
4
Reed Tool Co. v. Copelin,
The exclusive remedy provision is an affirmative defense that the defendant must plead and prove.
See Exxon Corp. v. Perez,
A. Notice and Subscriber Status
Warnke contends that Nabors is not entitled to the exclusive remedy defense unless it provides its employees with pre-injury notice of workers’ compensation insurance coverage. He asserts that Nabors and NDUSA Holdings failed to give such notice, and thereby lost their subscriber status and the protection of the exclusive remedy provision. The Act requires employers to notify “each employee ... whether or not the employer has workers’ compensation insurance coverage.” Tex. Lab.Code Ann. § 406.005 (West 2006). Failure to give notice constitutes an administrative violation punishable by a fine.
See id.
§ 406.005(e);
Wesby v. Act Pipe & Supply, Inc.,
Courts in this state, including this court, have held that the exclusivity bar does not hinge on whether notice has been
*344
provided to the employee.
See, e.g., Wesby,
Nabors presented sufficient evidence otherwise to demonstrate subscriber status under the Act. Neither party contests Warnke’s status as an employee at the time of his injury. Further, Nabors attached an affidavit from its insurance carrier’s managing director stating that his company provided workers’ compensation insurance to Nabors at the time of the accident. Nabors also attached the Texas Department of Insurance’s certification of the carrier’s authority to provide insurance in Texas. Nabors therefore satisfied its burden to demonstrate subscriber status and triggered the exclusive remedy provision of the Act. Accordingly, we hold that the exclusive remedy provision bars Warnke’s common law negligence claims against Nabors and NDUSA Holdings for the on-the-job injury of his hand.
We overrule Warnke’s complaint as to pre-injury notice and Nabors and NDUSA Holding’s subscriber status.
B. Employee or Independent Contractor
Warnke next contends the Act’s exclusive remedy provision does not apply to his negligence claim against Wilkinson because Wilkinson failed to prove conclusively that he was an employee of Nabors.
See
Tex. Lab.Code Ann. § 408.001(a);
see Hughes Wood Prod. v. Wagner,
The only summary judgment evidence Nabors and Wilkinson submitted for Wilkinson’s employment status was their second amended answer and Warnke’s amended petition. Nabors and Wilkinson argue that Warnke made a judicial admission that Wilkinson was an employee in his amended petition. “Assertions of fact, not plead in the alternative, in the live pleadings of a party are regarded as formal judicial admissions.”
Holy Cross Church of God in Christ v. Wolf,
As summary judgment proof, Na-bors and Wilkinson also relied on their second amended answer, which named Wilkinson as a “co-employee.” A movant’s own pleadings do not constitute summary judgment evidence as a general rule.
Powell v. McCauley,
On rehearing, Nabors and Wilkinson rely on (1) Wilkinson and Warnke’s identical agreements with Re-Cal Services, Inc. and (2) their 1-9 forms that identified Wilkinson and Warnke as Na-bors’s employees. While these documents were not incorporated into Nabors’s summary judgment motion, Warnke included them in the summary judgment record as part of his response. The trial court, therefore, could rely on the entire record, including these documents, as a basis for ruling on the summary judgment motion.
See Wilson v. Burford,
Nabors and Wilkinson assert that because Warnke and Wilkinson signed identical employment documents, and it is undisputed that Warnke is Nabors’s employee, Wilkinson must also be Nabors’s employee. All of the summary judgment evidence demonstrates that Wilkinson was employed in the same manner as Warnke. Therefore, it is contradictory to say that Warnke is an employee but a fact issue exists on Wilkinson’s employment status.
We overrule Warnke’s complaint with regard to his common law negligence claim against Wilkinson.
C. Fraud and Negligent Misrepresentation
Warnke next contends that his fraud and negligent misrepresentation claims against Nabors are for injuries separate from his on-the-job hand injury and, therefore, are not covered by the Act or its exclusive remedy provision. In his amended petition, Warnke claims that Nabors committed fraud and made negligent misrepresentations by deceiving him about his coverage under workers’ compensation insurance. In his petition, he also alleges that he “suffered great anxiety and emotional distress upon learning that he did not have coverage,” that he had to take out “a loan against his home to obtain funds to pay for his medical and living expenses,” and that he suffered unspecified “economic and emotional damage” as a result of Na-bors’s fraudulent and negligent misrepresentations. 6
Nabors raised three arguments in its traditional summary judgment motion. First, Nabors asserted that none of its employees made any fraudulent misrepresentations to Warnke about his insurance coverage. Second, even if its employees made misrepresentations, Nabors contended that it conclusively negated the specific intent requirement of the intentional tort exception to the Act’s exclusivity defense— an element for which Warnke would bear the burden of proof at trial. Third, Na-bors maintained that Warnke’s fraud and negligent misrepresentation claims do not fall within intentional tort exception to the exclusivity defense. We address each of these defenses in turn.
1. No Misrepresentations
Nabors denies that it made any fraudulent misrepresentations to
*346
Warnke. In a summary judgment appeal, however, we must take as true all evidence favorable to the nonmovant, Warnke, and indulge every reasonable inference and resolve any doubts in the nonmovant’s favor.
See Dorsett,
2. Nabors’s Intent
Nabors contends that Warnke presented no evidence of any intent by any Nabors employee to commit fraud. Nabors, however, filed a traditional summary judgment motion instead of a no-evidence motion. Nabors therefore had the burden of disproving Warnke’s claim as a matter of law.
See Sci. Spectrum,
Nabors next contends that it satisfied its burden of disproving Warnke’s fraud claim by conclusively negating intent through the testimony of one of its managers, Duke Dixon. Dixon’s testimony is not disposi-tive of Nabors’s intent. Dixon denied speaking with Mrs. Warnke. He also denied telling Warnke that he was not covered by insurance, and testified that he told Warnke to “check with his supervisor.” Warnke did not rebut this denial, but offered affidavit evidence of misrepresentations by another Nabors employee, Cannady. Nabors contends that Cannady was not its employee, or was not a managerial employee, but without citing to evidence in the record to support this contention. 8
3. Intentional Torts, Separate Acts, & Independent Injuries
In its summary judgment motion, Na-bors contended that Warnke’s fraud and negligent misrepresentation claims do not fall within the intentional tort exception to the exclusivity defense, and that the exception is limited to direct assaults by the employer on the employee.
See Medina v. Herrera,
*347 a. The Intentional Tort Exception
Nabors attempts to reshape Warnke’s arguments in terms of the intentional tort exception to the Act’s exclusive remedy provision. Warnke’s separate-injury argument, however, goes to the applicability of the Act in its entirety, not to an exception to the exclusivity remedy.
Under the intentional tort exception, “an employer can, under certain circumstances, be sued at common law for its own intentional torts, even though it provides insurance under the Act.”
Urdiales v. Concord Techs. Del., Inc.,
Nabors’s reliance on Medina conflates the intentional tort exception with the separate injury issue. In Medina, both the physical assault and the resulting injury were the same for the intentional tort claims and the compensation claim under the Act. See id. at 598. Here, the record contains evidence of two different acts— the crushing of Warnke’s hand and the misinformation regarding insurance coverage — and allegations of injuries separate from his on-the-job injuries.
b. Separate Acts & Independent Injuries
Warnke contends that the Act does not apply to his fraud and negligence misrepresentation claims. Texas courts have recognized the limitations of the exclusivity defense regarding separate wrongful conduct from the acts that caused the on-the-job injury and an employee’s resulting distinct injuries.
In
Aranda v. Insurance Co. of North America,
the Texas Supreme Court upheld an employee’s right to bring a claim for the breach of the duty of good faith and fair dealing against a workers’ compensation insurance carrier.
[T]he remedies afforded by the statute are exclusive only if the injury complained of is an injury contemplated by the Act — a personal injury sustained in the course of employment. The Act was not intended to shield compensation carriers from the entire field of tort law.
Id.
In analyzing whether the Act barred the employee’s claim, the Court in
Aranda
noted that the employee’s liability claim was based on acts “distinct” from the acts that formed the basis of the on-the-job injury.
Id.
Additionally, when the claim is for a second injury in the form of impairment of legal rights, that injury occurs “after the job-related injury.”
Id.
(citing
Massey v. Armco Steel Co.,
This court adopted the language in
Aranda
and recognized that “injured employees ‘may in the interim incur substantial damages because of an inability to meet basic living expenses or pay for medical
*348
care.’ ”
Tex. Mut. Ins. Co. v. Ruttiger,
Warnke’s claims are similar to those in Aranda, though he alleges wrongful conduct against his employer instead of an insurance carrier. Warnke’s petition identifies injuries he allegedly suffered as a result of Nabors’s misrepresentations, separate from his personal injury claims, including economic damages as a result of a loan. Warnke also claims that the financial stress caused mental anguish and that this stress constituted an independent injury. 10
i. Fraudulent Misrepresentations
While
Aranda
and
Ruttiger
were suits against insurance carriers,
Harris v. Varo,
We are not bound by
Blazik
or
Harris. See
Tex.R.App. P. 47.7 (stating opinions published before January 1, 2003 and designated “do not publish” are not binding precedent);
In re Budzyn,
Additionally, a majority of jurisdictions have found that deceit by the employer or
*349
insurance carrier that impairs an employee’s legal rights under workers’ compensation law constitutes a claim separate from the on-the-job physical injury.
See
6 Arthur Larson & Lex Larson, Larson’s Worker’s Compensation Law, § 104.03[3], 104.03 D[3] n. 6, 7 (2010). As summarized by Professor Larson, these cases distinguish between the employee’s physical injuries and injuries that impair the employee’s legal rights. These courts hold that, as a result of the separate injury, the workers’ compensation statutes do not bar recovery for these fraudulent acts.
See, e.g., Persinger v. Peabody Coal Co.,
ii. Negligent Misrepresentations
Neither party argues below or in their briefs that a claim of negligent misrepresentation against the employer should be treated differently than a claim of fraud. Thus, we do not address whether negligent misrepresentation claims should be barred on other grounds.
12
See State Farm Lloyds v. Page,
iii. Warnke’s Claims
That brings us to the evidence in this case. Nabors contends on rehearing that Warnke had the burden to rebut the exclusivity defense by offering summary judgment evidence that he suffered injuries separate from the hand injury for which he received workers’ compensation benefits. In essence, Nabors asserts that Warnke must set forth a counter-affirmative defense to its exclusivity provision affirmative defense. 13 Warnke contends *350 that Nabors, as the movant for a traditional summary judgment relying on an affirmative defense, had the burden to demonstrate that the Act and its exclusive remedy provision applies. Thus, Warnke asserts Nabors had the burden to show that he suffered a work-related, physical injury under the Act. See Tex. Lab.Code Ann. § 408.001(a).
Neither party offered any proof on this issue. Nabors merely argued Warnke’s injured hand and the misrepresentations of his insurance coverage amounted to the same injury. Employing a “but for” analysis, Nabors asserted that if Warnke “had not received the hand injury, the discussion of workers’ compensation benefits would have never occurred.” Warnke relied on his pleadings that described Na-bors’s alleged hostility to his claim and the eight month delay before he received benefits. Therefore, the allocation of the burden of proof is critical to determining the propriety of the trial court’s summary judgment.
We reject Nabors’s contention that Warnke’s failure to prove a separate act resulting in a separate injury justifies the trial court granting its traditional summary judgment motion for two procedural reasons. First, Nabors did not argue to the trial court or in its original brief on appeal that Warnke bore the burden of proving a separate injury or that Warnke failed to prove a separate injury. Instead, it argued that the injuries would not have occurred but for his hand injuries and therefore were “directly related” to Warnke’s compensation claim as a matter of law. Because this issue was not presented to the trial court, the motion did not inform Warnke that he needed to present evidence of a separate injury. See Tex.R. Civ. P. 166a(c);
KPMG Peat Marwick,
A second procedural reason is that Na-bors filed a traditional summary judgment motion and not a no-evidence motion. Therefore, regardless of the ultimate burden of proof at trial, it was Nabors’s burden in its motion to prove that Warnke did not suffer an independent injury.
See
Tex.R. Civ. P. 166a(c);
KPMG Peat Marwick,
We sustain Warnke’s complaint as to his fraud and negligent misrepresentation claims against Nabors.
Conclusion
We affirm the trial court’s judgment regarding Warnke’s negligence claim against all parties. We reverse the trial court’s judgment on his fraud and negligent misrepresentation claims against Na-bors. We remand to the trial court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Notes
. Appellees assert that NDUSA Holdings is the general partner of Nabors. Warnke never disputed the contention that both Nabors and NDUSA Holdings are employers within the Workers' Compensation Act's exclusive remedy provision.
. In the first report of injury, Nabors stated that Warnke was a third party contractor working for Express Payroll. Express Payroll entered into a "contractor agreement” with Nabors to act as a "payroll source” for Na-bors.
. Section 408.001(a) provides, “Recovery of workers’ compensation benefits is the exclusive remedy of an employee covered by workers' compensation insurance coverage or a legal beneficiary against the employer or an agent or employee of the employer for ... a work-related injury sustained by the employee.” Tex. Lab.Code Ann. § 408.001(a) (West 2006).
. Warnke asserts we should follow
Ferguson v. Hosp. Corp. Int’l Ltd.,
. While Warnke made these allegations in his pleading, he did not include evidence to support his assertions in his response to Nabors and Wilkinson’s summary judgment motion.
. On rehearing, Nabors alternatively asserts that even if Cannady told Warnke that Nabors was not responsible for his medical expenses, then that statement was not a misrepresentation because the insurance company, not Na-bors, was responsible for payment of benefits. Nabors did not raise a "truth” defense in its summary judgment motion and therefore cannot rely on this ground to support summary judgment.
. Nabors stated in its response to Warnke's summary judgment reply that its attorney informed Warnke in a letter that Cannady was never employed by Nabors. No summary judgment evidence, however, was attached to support this contention.
.We recognize that the Texas Supreme Court has been asked to overrule
Aranda,
but the case is still Texas law. Petitioner's Brief on Merits at 27-29,
Tex. Mut. Ins. Co. v. Ruttiger,
No. 08-0751 (filed Apr. 15, 2009). Moreover, even if it were to limit
Aranda,
we would still have to consider
Aranda's
underlying precedent in
Massey v. Armco Steel Co.,
. In oral argument, Warnke acknowledged that the jury should be instructed to only consider mental anguish from the withholding of benefits and not mental anguish associated with the physical injury of his hand.
. Contrary to Nabors’s contention on rehearing, we are not recognizing a duty of good faith and fair dealing for an employer in responding to its employees' workers’ compensation claims.
. Nabors on rehearing relies on
Hair v. Pillsbury Co.,
No. 05-01-01354-CV,
. A counter-affirmative defense does not seek to overcome the affirmative defense by denying the affirmative defense, but seeks to establish an independent reason why the affirmative defense does not bar the plaintiff’s
*350
claim.
See Walters v. Cleveland Reg’l Med. Ctr.,
