*605 AMENDED MEMORANDUM ORDER 1
Plaintiff-insurer filed this declaratory judgment action against its insured, Defendant Atchley, Russell, Waldrop & Hlavin-ka, et. al. (“Atchley Russell”). Atchley Russell counterclaimed for declaratory judgment. Both parties seek a determination of their rights and obligations under a professional malpractice insurance contract. Now before the Court are the parties’ cross motions for summary judgment on the duty to defend and the duty to indemnify (Dkt. Nos. 33 & 34). Also before the Court is Plaintiffs Motion to Strike the Affidavit of Don Morris (Dkt. No. 40). For the reasons stated herein, Plaintiff-insurer’s Motion for Summary Judgment (Dkt. No. 34) is DENIED. Defendants’ Motion for Summary Judgment (Dkt. No. 33) is GRANTED IN PART and DENIED IN PART. Also, Plaintiffs Motion to Strike (Dkt. No. 40) is DENIED AS MOOT.
I.
PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
Originally, the Court scheduled a hearing for oral argument on the parties’ summary judgment motions. But because this case was set as a bench trial, the Court also gave the parties notice that it would hear and consider evidence on any factual matters that might remain in dispute. At the hearing, Defendants presented live testimony from several witnesses. Plaintiff-insurer insisted that no factual disputes existed on the record and that the motions could be decided as a matter of law; therefore, the company chose not to present any evidence. Instead, it re-urged the Court to enter judgment as a matter of law. The insurer also objected to the taking of any testimony. 2
After the hearing, the Court instructed the parties to submit additional briefing. Those briefs were to aid the Court in determining whether it could decide the indemnification issue, rather than only the duty to defend, before the conclusion of the underlying malpractice litigation in the state court. The Court directed the parties to address Texas law that appeared to restrain the Court from reaching the indemnification issue. The Court has reviewed the additional briefing and the applicable law. Now, the Court issues this Amended Memorandum Order on the parties’ cross motions for summary judgment, both of which focus on interpreting “Exclusion B” under section XIV of the insurance contract.
II.
SUMMARY JUDGMENT STANDARD
Summary judgment is appropriate only “if the pleadings, depositions, answers to interrogatories, and admissions on file, together with the affidavits, if any, show that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the moving party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(c). “A dispute about a material fact is ‘genuine’ if the evidence is such that a reasonable jury could return a verdict for the nonmoving party.”
Sreeram v. Louisiana State Univ. Med. Center-Shreveport,
III.
DISCUSSION
A. Duty to Defend
In Texas, the duty to defend is distinct and separate from the duty to indemnify.
King v. Dallas Fire Ins. Co.,
Generally, Texas state courts analyze whether the duty to defend arises by examining only two things: (1) the insurance contract; and (2) the claimant’s petition in the underlying suit against the insured. As the Texas Supreme Court has stated: “An insurer’s duty to defend is determined solely by the allegations in the pleadings and the language of the insurance policy.”
King,
Texas’s eight corners approach requires the Court to undertake two basic steps to decide whether the insurer must defend its insured in any given case. First, the Court must construe the contract. Second, it must examine the factual allegations made in the underlying suit and determine whether those allegations could possibly state a claim covered by the insured’s policy. The Court now turns to examine the policy language.
1. Step One: Contract Construction
a. General Rules of Construction
When interpreting an insurance contract, Texas law requires that the terms be construed against the insurer to avoid excluding coverage, so long as more than one reasonable interpretation exists.
Nat’l Union Fire Ins. Co. of Pittsburgh, PA v. Willis,
An ambiguity, however, does not arise merely because the parties advance conflicting interpretations.
Columbia Gas Transmission Corp. v. New Ulm Gas, Ltd.,
b. Construing Exclusion B of the Contract
The Court looks first to the policy, which is a “claims-made” policy. The relevant exclusion on which Plaintiff-insurer relies is XIV(B), which reads as follows:
This POLICY shall not apply to any CLAIM based upon, arising out of, attributable to, or directly or indirectly resulting from:
B. any act, error, omission, circumstance ... occurring prior to the effective date of this POLICY if any INSURED at the effective date knew or could have reasonably foreseen that such act, error, omission [or] circumstance ... might be the basis of a CLAIM.
The term “Claim” is defined as:
[A] demand made upon any INSURED for LOSS as defined in each of the attached COVERAGE UNITS, including, but not limited to, service of suit or institution of arbitration proceedings or admin, proceedings against any INSURED.
The term “Loss” is defined as “monetary and compensatory portion[s] of any judgment, award or settlement.” 3
The Court concludes that this language is unambiguous. The exclusion seeks to preclude coverage in two general situations, as follows: (1) when, before the policy period begins, the attorney has subjective knowledge that a claim will be made against him; 4 and (2) when the attorney is *608 engaged in willful blindness by ignoring the high probability that his actions will result in a claim being filed against him. 5 The following discussion explains how the exclusion’s two prongs function, first standing alone, and then in tandem.
(1) subjective component
The policy language excludes the following:
any act, error, omission, circumstance ... occurring prior to the effective date of this POLICY if any INSURED at the effective date knew '... that such act, error, omission [or] circumstance ... might be the basis of a CLAIM.
The policy’s plain language shows that the first prong of Exclusion B applies in three situations. The common denominator in all of these is that the attorney must have had subjective knowledge that his client intended to bring a claim at a point in time prior to the beginning of the policy period. Thus, it does not matter whether any of the following occurred: (1) the attorney did not breach any duty; (2) the attorney did breach a duty but had no knowledge of the breach; or (3) the attorney knew that he had breached a duty. All that matters is that the attorney subjectively knew, prior to the policy period, that his client intended to bring a claim, whether the wrongs alleged were wholly imaginary, were based on a breach of which the attorney was unaware, or were based on breaches of which the attorney was aware. In these situations, the policy provides no coverage.
(2) objective prong
As for the so called “objective prong,” it, too, has a subjective component. This is because the exclusion must be read so as to ask the following question: What would any reasonable attorney expect,
given the facts of which the insured was actually aware?
The inquiry does not turn solely on the insured’s subjective interpretation or understanding of the facts, but at a minimum, facts outside the attorney’s knowledge should not be considered.
See Seiko v. Home Ins. Co.,
Second, once the Court has determined what facts the insured subjectively knew, the exclusion requires the Court to make an objective assessment of those facts. The question becomes whether a reasonable attorney, in possession of the facts that the insured possessed at the time he applied for insurance, would reasonably foresee
both
that a professional breach had occurred
and
that the breach would likely be the basis of a claim against the insured. If the objective calculus indicates that the attorney should have known that his conduct would result in a claim, the policy excludes coverage.
See Coregis Ins. Co. v. Goldstein,
Plaintiff-insurer takes a rather myopic view of this analysis. The insurer insists that the exclusion applies whenever a reasonable attorney, examining those facts known by the insured, would conclude that a professional duty, in fact, had been breached. The insurer’s interpretation would exclude from coverage all possibly wrongful acts that occurred prior to the policy period, even if the attorney was not subjectively aware that his actions were in error and even though the attorney had no indication that his client intended to file a claim against him. Thus, so long as the attorney was conscious, the insurer’s approach would exclude coverage for any error that occurred prior to the beginning of the policy period, which period is invariably for only one year. This is because the “reasonable attorney” would recognize most, if not all, instances in which any duty had been breached, even if many attorneys would not be aware that a breach had occurred. Indeed, the whole question of whether a duty was breached is an objective one, too. In this fashion, the insurer argues that determining the sole issue of whether a breach did actually occur substitutes for deciding whether the attorney should have known a claim would be filed because of the breach.
The Court is mindful that this policy is a “claims-made” policy that is reissued in increments of only one year. In claims-made policies, the insurer must cover only those claims that are actually made against the insured during the policy period. Consequently, the date of the occurrence of the wrongful act on which the claim is said to be based matters less than the date on which the claimant actually makes a claim against the insured for the allegedly wrongful conduct. Thus, the date on which the claim is made against the insured, rather than the date of the allegedly wrongful act, governs whether the policy may provide coverage.
The insurer’s interpretation of Exclusion B, however, effectively bars all occurrences, except possibly wholly frivolous or groundless claims, that took place before the policy period, even if the claim based on that occurrence is filed during the policy period. This is because the exclusion’s objective standard, at least as articulated by the insurer, would be precisely the same standard that will be applied in the underlying malpractice suit to determine whether the attorney actually committed malpractice. If the court hearing the malpractice action determines a breach occurred, then the insurer believes that the objective prong of the exclusion would preclude coverage. Oddly enough, if the objective standard governing whether a breach occurred (as applied in the malpractice suit) indicates that no breach took place, then the policy’s exclusion would not be triggered because the attorneys “should not have known” about a claim not based on an actual breach of duty. Thus, the provision does not exclude frivolous claims, *610 but instead, as interpreted by the insurer, it excludes only successful malpractice claims.
At best, the insurer’s interpretation seems odd, given that this is a malpractice policy, ostensibly meant to cover claims of malpractice. At worst, it looks like an attempt to avoid coverage for any viable malpractice claim that occurred before the policy period, even if it is timely claimed. In effect, as construed by the carrier, the occurrence and the claim would have to take place during the twelve month policy period for there to be coverage. This construction offers the insured little to no coverage in return for the insured’s not insignificant premiums. That the policy period invariably lasts only twelve months underscores this observation. See generally Ballentine & TamboRELlo, PLLF FL-CLE 6-1 (Main Handbook) Professional Liability of Lawyers in Florida § 6.9 (2002) (noting absence of worth of “occurrence /claims-made combination” policies). In light of the policy’s short, twelve-month term, and considering the nature of claims-made policies generally, the parties could not have intended the exclusion to be read so broadly.
Generally, the Court agrees that “a breach of a professional duty and a basis for a claim are thus ‘two peas in a pod.’ ”
Coregis Ins. Co. v. Baratta & Fenerty, Ltd.,
Importantly, some breaches of one’s professional duties are so glaring that the breach itself trumps any other factors. For example, where an attorney fails to prosecute a client’s lawsuit for approximately twelve years and where that failure results in dismissal of the clients suit, there can be no real question that he should expect a claim.
See, e.g., Mt. Airy Ins. Co. v. Thomas,
Following the reasoning outlined above, the Court concludes that the exclusion’s “objective” language denies coverage in two additional situations. In the first instance, coverage does not exist where an insured has knowledge of facts that would indicate to a reasonable attorney that a glaring or blatant breach had occurred. ■Whether the client has expressed dissatisfaction to the attorney or whether the attorney subjectively believes the client might file a claim is of no importance. The severity of the breach, gauged by its deviation from professional standards and the degree of harm it causes, provides the insured with constructive knowledge of an impending claim. All reasonable attorneys would expect a claim to result from such a breach of professional duty.
In the second instance, the exclusion denies coverage where the following two conditions are met. The insured must be aware of facts that would lead a reasonable attorney to conclude that at least some breach of professional duty, even if minor, likely did occur. But the insured must
also
have some indication that his client is dissatisfied enough to suggest that the client likely will file a claim against him. Thus, in the second instance, the policy excludes coverage where the lawyer knows his client is dissatisfied and where it appears that some breach, though slight, did occur.
See, e.g., Goldstein,
In sum, Exclusion B denies coverage in three situations, as follows: (1) when the insured has subjective knowledge of an impending claim; (2) when facts subjectively known to the insured would lead a reasonable attorney to conclude that a grossly flagrant or glaring breach of duty occurred; or (3) where facts subjectively known to the insured would lead a reasonable attorney to conclude that at least some breach of duty occurred and where those same facts also indicate that the client is dissatisfied to a point that would lead a reasonable attorney to conclude that the client likely would file a claim. Having construed the exclusion language, the Court now turns to examine whether any facts trigger the exclusion to deny coverage.
2. Step Two: Considering the Underlying Petition’s Factual Allegations
Before the Court can apply the construed exclusion language to the facts, it must determine against what set of facts the exclusion language should be read. Texas follows the “eight corners rule.”
King v. Dallas Fire Ins. Co.,
However, in this case, the parties submitted extensive stipulations about various facts. These facts do not necessarily originate from the claimant’s petition filed against the insured in the state court. In some instances, these stipulations, while not necessarily inconsistent with the claimant’s state court petition, go well beyond the claimant’s allegations in terms of factual specificity. Therefore, the Court must determine whether it should, or indeed *612 whether it may, consider the stipulations of fact proffered by the insured and the insurer in this coverage dispute. The Court looks to state law for the answer.
a. Whether Extrinsic Evidence May Be Considered in Determining the Duty to Defend?
(1) Texas Supreme Court Authority
As stated in
King,
the Texas Supreme Court does not appear to recognize any exceptions to the strict eight corners rule.
See King,
Additionally, the insured has the initial burden of demonstrating that the claims against it in the underlying lawsuit are potentially covered by its contract for insurance.
Canutillo Indep. Sch. Dist. v. Nat’l Union Fire Ins. Co. of Pittsburgh, PA,
Significantly, the Texas Supreme Court’s straightforward recitation of the eight corners rule — as it relates to considering extrinsic evidence to decide coverage and whether the insurer must defend the insured' — does not wholly square with the practice of the lower state courts, or even the high court’s own analysis. For example, while King uses strong language to embrace the eight corners rule, its own analysis demonstrates that the courts may examine at least some types of extrinsic evidence alongside the allegations in the underlying lawsuit.
King’s analysis makes this point evident, as follows:
King
evaluated an exclusion clause, which contained a subjective element, and the Court distinguished it from an exclusion clause in
Fidelity & Guaranty Ins. Underwriters, Inc. v. McManus,
Critically,
King
fails to illuminate how narrow or broad this exception cuts into the otherwise strict ban on extrinsic evidence imposed by the eight corners rule. The parties have not presented, nor has the Court found, any other Texas Supreme Court authority that is dispositive of this issue. Therefore, in addition to the general trend of Texas Supreme Court jurisprudence,
7
the Court looks also to lower state court rulings to determine what extrinsic evidence should be evaluated in deciding whether the insurer must defend its insured against the underlying claim.
See Lawrence v. Virginia Ins. Reciprocal,
(2) Texas Intermediate Appellate Guidance
Unfortunately, Texas intermediate courts of appeal do not agree on the breadth of extrinsic evidence that can be properly interjected into the duty to defend analysis. Add to that the many federal district courts and Fifth Circuit opinions relying on these disparate state cases, and one faces a cacophonous set of rulings indeed. 8 However, the federal cases each rely on possibly outdated circuit opinions or on state appellate opinions that are at either end of the schism that now divides the Texas state courts. 9
For example, in
Ohio Casualty Insurance Company v. Cooper Machinery Corporation,
However, even if there were allegations of facts that would indicate the existence of coverage, the insurance company would be entitled in the declaratory judgment action to establish that the facts are false and that, therefore, there is no obligation under the policy, either to defend or to pay. See McLaren v. Imperial Casualty & Indemnity Co.,767 F.Supp. 1364 , 1372-75, (N.D.Tex.1991), aff 'd,968 F.2d 17 (5th Cir.1992), cert. denied,507 U.S. 915 ,113 S.Ct. 1269 ,122 L.Ed.2d 665 (1993); Blue Ridge Ins. Co. v. Hanover Ins. Co.,748 F.Supp. 470 , 473 (N.D.Tex.1990). Here, the true facts are that there is no coverage, with the consequence that plaintiff has no duty to defend and no duty to pay.
Id. Thus, based on the Fifth Circuit’s holdings in McLaren and in Blue Ridge, the district court concluded that, even in the context of deciding the insurer’s duty to defend, the courts could always examine extrinsic facts to determine coverage and to contradict the allegations made in the claimant’s underlying petition against the insured.
*615
More recent Texas intermediate court holdings seriously undermine such a broad statement. It is true, as the discussion below reveals, that all state courts would consider it proper to examine extrinsic evidence of fundamental coverage facts, such as whether the party bringing the claim is a named insured under the policy. This is in line with the holding in
Blue Ridge. Cf. Tri-Coastal Contractors, Inc. v. Hartford Underwriters Ins.,
Moreover, in other cases, the Fifth Circuit has not been so keen to ignore the stricter version of Texas’ complaint allegation rale.
See, e.g., Lafarge Corp. v. Hartford Cas. Ins. Co.,
More recently, even the Texas Supreme Court has used stronger and stricter language in applying the eight corners rule than
McLaren
perceived.
See, e.g., King,
Instead of relying exclusively on older circuit opinions, the Court looks to recent trends in the jurisprudence of the Texas Supreme Court and Texas’ lower courts for guidance in making this
Erie
guess. After all, Texas state courts are better positioned than this Court to understand and balance the competing policy issues in contracts for insurance, which are both interpreted by state law and subject to the state’s regulatory schemes.
See Omaha Property and Cas. Co. v. Johnson,
(a) Wade’s Exception to the Eight Corners Approach
Only one line of Texas cases purports to apply a broad exception to the complaint allegation rule. These culminate in
State Farm, Fire & Casualty Co. v. Wade,
In Wade, the insurer brought a declaratory judgment action to determine whether an exclusion applied that would defeat coverage. The insurance policy there covered boat accidents that resulted from specific uses of the boat. The court recognized that, usually, it was constrained to view only the allegations in the claimant’s pleadings and the insurance policy to decide the duty to defend. However, the court also noted: “The problem here is that by reading the underlying petition broadly, in favor of the insured, it is impossible to know how the boat covered by the policy was used when it left the [the dock].” Id. at 451. Thus, the eight corners rule frustrated the court’s inquiry into critical coverage facts.
Nevertheless, instead of resolving these facts, which had not been alleged in the claimant’s petition, in the insured’s favor to find coverage,
see, e.g., Heyden Newport Chemical,
*617 [t]he insurer is not foreclosed from litigating the application of an exclusion by using evidence and facts outside the pleadings in the underlying wrongful death suit.... It makes no sense to us, in light of these holdings, to say that extrinsic evidence should not be admitted to show that an instrumentality (boat) was being used for a purpose explicitly excluded from coverage, particularly when doing so does not question the truth or falsity of any facts alleged in the underlying petition filed against the insured.
Id, at 451, 453. Thus, the court concluded that even in deciding the duty to defend, it could examine and weigh extrinsic evidence relevant to coverage, so long as those extrinsic facts did not overlap or contradict the factual issues that would be determined in the underlying lawsuit between the claimant and the insured.
Significantly,
Wade
relied on three intermediate court cases. In each of these cases,
Int’l Svc. Ins. Co. v. Boll,
In Boll, the insurance policy excluded coverage for accidents involving a certain named person. The underlying petition did not allege that the accident was caused by the named person so excluded; rather, the claimant’s petition merely identified the driver as the “son” of the policy holder. After the conclusion of the underlying suit, the parties stipulated that the policy holder’s only son was the same as the named person excluded from coverage. Thus, the court considered extrinsic evidence of the identity of the son, by stipulation, to conclude that no coverage existed and that no duty to defend or indemnify arose. But it did so only after the underlying suit terminated.
In
Cook,
the court examined
Boll
and
Heyden. See Cook,
Gonzales cites and discusses both Boll and Cook. Based on Boll and Cook, and the distinctions those cases draw between “merits facts” and “coverage facts,” the Gonzales court was able to discern the following rule:
Where the insurance company refuses to defend its insured on the ground that the insured is not liable to the claimant, the allegations in the claimant’s petition control, and facts extrinsic to those alleged in the petition may not be used to controvert those allegations. But, *618 where the basis for the refusal to defend is that the events giving rise to the suit are outside the coverage of the insurance policy, facts extrinsic to the claimant’s petition may be used to determine whether the duty to defend exists.
Gonzales,
In sum, these cases represent the following broad approach to the eight corners rule: an exception to the eight corners ban on extrinsic evidence exists where the insurer either refuses to defend or defends under a reservation of rights. In these cases, the court may determine the insurer’s duty to defend by examining the petition, the policy, and any extrinsic facts relevant to coverage that do not conflict with the liability facts pled by the claimant’s petition against the insured. Thus, these cases indicate that a court may examine a broad range of extrinsic evidence, so long as adjudication of those facts based on that extrinsic evidence would not result in a conflict with the allegations made in the underlying lawsuit by the claimant against the insured. Therefore, if the Court were to follow the Wade line of cases, it could consider evidence of any facts that did not tend to contradict the claimant’s allegations in the state court malpractice action.
(b) TriCoastal Strict Eight Corners Approach
Importantly, no Texas Supreme Court case has followed
Wade. See Tri-Coastal Contractors, Inc. v. Hartford Underwriters Ins.,
Admittedly,
Tri-Coastal
did not face
Wade
on all fours. The court noted that, even if the
Wade
rationale were valid, it did not need to apply it to the case then at hand. This is because the lower court examined evidence that would have barred the claimant (i.e. the party suing the insured) from recovering a judgment, not evidence that would bar only the insured from recovery under the policy. In short,
Tri-Coastal
concluded that the lower court’s decision, which found no duty to defend, would have been reversed under both
Wade
and the strict approach because even
Wade
would prevent a court from admitting extrinsic facts to defeat the claimant’s well pleaded petition (at least as to liability facts).
See id.
at 863;
Wade,
Another case,
Calderon v. Mid-Century Ins. Co. of Tex.,
also explains that
Boll
and
Cook
usually can be distinguished from most duty to defend situations. No. 03-97-00735-CV *3-4 (Tex.App.-Austin 1998, pet. denied) (no publication),
available at
In
City of Dallas v. Csaszar
the Dallas Court of Appeals highlighted the fact that no Texas Supreme Court case has applied the
Wade
exception to the eight corners rule. No. 05-99-00208-CV, n. 2 (Tex. App.-Dallas 1999, pet. denied) (no publication),
available at
Interestingly, the
Csaszar
court even noted that the claimant had not specifically alleged a coverage fact, i.e. that the insured’s employees had acted within the scope of their employment. Still, the court said, “any uncertainty about whether allegations in a complaint state a covered cause of action is resolved in the insured’s favor.”
Id.
at *4 (citing
Heyden,
(c) Reconciling Wade with the Strict Eight Corners Approach
Wade
is undermined by its own concurrence. The concurrence specifically took issue with “the majority’s observations in
dicta
that [the insurer] may present evidence other than the plaintiffs pleadings in the underlying lawsuit.”
See Wade,
Moreover, the Wade concurrence highlights that when Texas courts had previously examined extrinsic evidence in the context of an insurer’s duty to defend, they had done so only for a limited range of purposes. Id. One such purpose was to determine the existence of the contract, e.g. whether premiums had been paid. The concurrence discussed Boll and Cook, and it concluded that both cases inquired into similar fundamental coverage issues. Furthermore, it stated: “No courts have allowed evidence of the specific occurrence to determine whether the occurrence itself is covered by the policy, however.” Id. And to the extent Gonzales might have recognized such a distinction, the concurrence also noted that extrinsic evidence would not be allowed into the equation to contradict allegations of fact by the claimant. Thus, “[e]xtrinsic evidence regarding coverage is admitted in very limited circumstances .... When determining whether the event giving rise to the insured’s liability is covered, we look only to the pleadings of the claimant.” Id.
Also, in
Cook,
the underlying litigation had already come to a conclusion.
See Wade,
The Texas Supreme Court has persistently commanded that all doubts as to coverage are resolved in favor of the in *621 sured; however, these pronouncements can be sharpened and restated. In short, the trends in Texas — as evidenced by state appellate opinions, by repeated similar statements by the Texas Supreme Court, and by academic observation in the journals — show that Texas currently follows a strict eight corners approach. Whether Wade’s analysis is workable or whether it creates an exception to swallow the rule is of no moment. The overwhelming recent trends in state law weigh against the extensive use of extrinsic evidence in deciding the duty to defend. Instead, exceptions to the rule are very rare indeed.
(3) Conclusion: Texas Uses Extrinsic Evidence to Decide the Duty to Defend Only in Very Limited Circumstances.
Accordingly, the Court concludes that the concurrence in
Wade
represents the prevailing trend in Texas state law. “[I]f the petition only alleges facts excluded by the policy, the insurer is not required to defend. Similarly, if the petition only alleges facts that are covered by the policy, a duty to defend exists. Between these two poles, the presumptions of coverage exist.”
See Wade,
Only in very limited circumstances is extrinsic evidence admissible to rebut those presumptions.
Id.
These instances are ones in which “fundamental” policy coverage questions are resolved by “readily determined facts.”
King,
These conclusions are consonant with the burdens that each party bears at this stage in litigation. The insured carries his burden by offering a petition against him that could possibly fall within coverage; so, the insured must demonstrate that the petition triggers the general coverage provisions. This represents the extent of the insured’s burden.
Canutillo Indep. Sch. Dist. v. Nat’l Union Fire Ins. Co. of Pittsburgh, Pa.,
Once the insured has shouldered his burden, presumptions in favor of coverage attach,
14
unless a readily determinable fundamental coverage fact — which must be proven through the use of extrinsic evidence that does not overlap the merits of the claimant’s underlying suit — excludes coverage as discussed above, e.g. no policy in effect between the parties, etc.
See Canutillo,
b. Applying Texas Law to Westport’s Duty to Defend
(1) The Parties Offer No Extrinsic Evidence of Fundamental Coverage Facts.
In this case, the insurer and insured both offer stipulations of fact for the Court’s consideration. The parties argue that the sum total of these stipulations decide whether the insurer has a duty to defend and the ultimate duty to indemnify. However, none of these stipulated facts go only to a fundamental coverage issue, such as the existence of the policy or whether a named insured or specified property has been identified as being specifically excluded from any coverage.
See Tri-Coastal,
Because the stipulations do not go solely to fundamental coverage issues, the Court may not consider the testimony elicited at the hearing held on October 11, 2002. That testimony, to which Westport (apparently correctly) objected, is not relevant when deciding the duty to defend. Because no evidence of basic coverage facts has been presented, the Court may not consider any extrinsic evidence, including the testimony and stipulations, in deciding both duties
before
the conclusion of the state court malpractice action. Therefore, the Court will examine only the facts alleged in the claimant’s petition for malpractice, and it will not imagine, nor will it let the parties suppose, any facts to create coverage or to trigger the exclusion to defeat coverage.
See King,
(2) Claimant’s State Court Petition for Malpractice
The parties submitted the claimant’s state court petition to be considered alongside the insurance policy. See Dkt. No. 46. The “Plaintiffs’ Fifth Amended Original Petition” is the most recent petition of which the Court has been made aware. The Keatons, the state court plain *623 tiffs, allege breaches of fiduciary duties and contract, negligence, and violations of the DTPA. Each of these theories of recovery focuses on the legal advice that the Atchley Russell firm provided the family over the course of several years. The petition specifically avers that distinct acts of wrongdoing occurred in each of the years 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, and 2001.
More specifically, the Keatons allege that their attorneys breached their fiduciary duties in at least one of nine different categories. These include, inter alia, failure to use due care while completing tax forms, estate plans, wills, and in rendering estate planning services. They also allege that the firm failed to use due care in representing the family in negotiations with the IRS. Other allegations include negligent misrepresentation related to the firm’s characterization of IRS assessments of the family’s tax liability, failure to advise the family of potential malpractice claims against the firm, negligently representing the consequences of a settlement with the IRS, and failing to confess to the family all of the firm’s mistakes, transactions, and activities related to the representation of the family. Plaintiffs allege no more specific facts than this.
The Court construed the policy exclusion in a previous section. A summary of how the contract has been construed is this. Coverage is excluded in the following three scenarios:
1. the insured subjectively knew that the client intended to bring a claim, regardless of whether the insured breached a duty or not;
2. the insured subjectively knew of facts
(a) that a reasonable attorney would conclude amounted to a blatant or glaring breach, the severity of which would lead any reasonable attorney to expect a claim; or
(b) that would lead a reasonable attorney to conclude both (1) that some, at least minimal, actual breach of professional duty probably did occur; and (2) that other facts known to the insured, such as a client’s expression of dissatisfaction with the representation, indicated the client’s intent to bring a claim.
First, the petitions’ factual allegations do not trigger the exclusion’s subjective prong. The state court petition does not allege that any member of the firm had subjective knowledge that a claim would be filed against it prior to the policy period. To the extent there are no allegations of the same, the Court will not imagine facts to defeat coverage. Therefore, in the context of the duty to defend, the policy’s exclusion, based on the insured’s subjective knowledge of a claim, must fail. For example, the claimant in the underlying malpractice suit could recover on facts that proved the attorney was aware of a claim, or the claimant could recover on facts that prove that the attorney had no prior knowledge of the claim. Thus, the petition states a claim that would potentially be covered with respect to the subjective knowledge exclusion.
See Chiriboga v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co.,
Second, nothing in the allegations suggests that any of the highlighted wrongs were so blatant that any lawyer would expect to see a claim because of them. The state court proceedings, however, may *624 develop the actual facts in such a way that the exclusion may yet be triggered. But the actual facts are not relevant here; only the facts that are alleged are relevant. The Court will not add detail to the factual allegations to defeat coverage. Therefore, the second scenario explained in the exclusion language has not arisen on the petition’s factual allegations, and the exclusion cannot remove the insurer’s duty to defend. See id. (any potentially covered claim must be defended).
Third, taking the petition’s allegations as true and in the best light as to coverage requirements, it is still clear that the Kea-tons allege that the insured breached their duties before the policy period. This bare observation appears to be the sole foundation for Westport’s Complaint for Declaratory Judgment. The insurer’s Complaint lists the nine categories on which the state court claimants base their claims, and then the insurer concludes:
Upon information and belief all [of the alleged acts] occurred prior to the effective date of the Westport Policy. Therefore, it appears that an Insured knew or could have reasonably foreseen that such acts, errors, omissions or circumstances might be expected to be the basis of a Claim.
Plaintiffs Complaint ¶24. From these two sentences alone, the insurer’s position becomes clear. If an attorney’s client might be able to make out a case for a breach of fiduciary duty based on an act prior to the claims-made policy period, the insurer believes the claim must be excluded. Apparently, only if the claim is groundless or frivolous would the insurer admit coverage. After all, only groundless claims would lead the insurer to conclude that the attorney should not have known about the claim.
While this is a convenient interpretation for the company, it is not consonant with the parties’ reasonable expectations, and as previously explained, it is not in line with the Court’s construction of the exclusion language. The insurer must do more than merely point out that a wrongful act occurred prior to the policy period in order to demonstrate that the insured either subjectively knew or should have known that the action in' question would be the basis of a claim. The insurer cannot make out such proof from the factual allegations in the state court petition. Therefore, the insurer has not proved up the exclusion, and the insurer still must defend its insured.
Moreover, the Keaton family alleges that the firm engaged in distinct and separate wrongful acts during 2001. Thus, they allege that acts occurred both
before
and
after
the inception of the policy here in issue. This allegation alone, if true, would avoid the exclusion in the policy. This is because the policy exclusion applies only to acts that occurred before the policy period, which began in January, 2001. And the clear rule is that where some of the allegations fall inside coverage and some do not, the duty to defend is still triggered.
See Chiriboga,
Westport’s only basis for the Court to grant it relief was that the acts occurred prior to the policy period, and therefore, that they were excluded as outside the policy’s coverage. Aside from arguing that the exclusion applies, the insurer does not allege that the state court petition would not otherwise trigger the coverage provisions of the policy. Therefore, having *625 determined that the exclusion does not defeat coverage and noting that Westport does not otherwise dispute coverage, the Court concludes that the duty to defend has been triggered by the state court petition. For these reasons, Westport’s Motion for Summary Judgment on the duty to defend must be DENIED. Also, Defendant Atchley Russell’s Motion for Summary Judgment on the duty to defend should be GRANTED in PART.
B. DUTY TO INDEMNIFY
1. Westport’s Motion for Summary Judgment
Westport’s Motion for Summary Judgment urges the Court to find no coverage and no duty to defend. If the Court were to find that the insurer had no duty to defend, Westport argues that Texas law would allow the Court also to decide that the same reasons that defeated the insurer’s duty to defend also preclude it from having the ultimate duty to indemnify. After reviewing the insurance policy and the state court petition, the Court now has ruled that the exclusion does not defeat coverage, at least in the context of assessing the insurer’s duty to defend. Thus, the insurer’s duty to defend has been triggered. Therefore, because the Court did not find that the duty to defend was defeated by the exclusion, it cannot find that the same reasons said to defeat the duty to defend also eliminate the duty to indemnify. Therefore, Westport’s Motion for Summary Judgement on the duty to indemnify will be DENIED.
2. Defendants’ Motion for Summary Judgment
Defendants counterclaimed for declaratory judgment. They sought a two-fold declaration: (1) that Exclusion B did not deny coverage for the duty to defend; and (2) that Exclusion B did not defeat coverage as relates to Westport’s duty to indemnify. The' Court has ruled that Exclusion B, at least under a duty-to defend analysis, does not defeat coverage. Therefore, the insurer has a duty to defend. Thus, what remains for the Court to determine is whether Exclusion B defeats coverage under an analysis appropriate for deciding the duty to indemnify.
Importantly, Texas recognizes that the duty to defend and the duty to indemnify are distinct and separate duties.
King v. Dallas Fire Ins. Co.,
Here, the state court action is still pending, and as a result, this Court does not yet have the benefit of the actual facts that will be determined there. However, the insured and the insurer both have agreed on many stipulations of fact. Both parties urge the Court to rule on the coverage *626 issue based on these stipulations. Both parties have represented further that none of these stipulations of fact, nor the conclusions that would be reached by this Court on those facts, could possibly overlap the facts and conclusions that the state court has yet to make in connection with the underlying malpractice lawsuit.
What the parties request presents a difficulty for the Court in attempting to apply state law, pursuant to its obligations under diversity jurisdiction and under
Erie.
This is because Texas state law generally prohibits the determination of the duty to indemnify before the conclusion of the claimant’s underlying litigation against the insured (i.e. the Keatons’ malpractice suit).
See Firemen’s Ins. Co. v. Burch,
Here, the Court has concluded that the state court petition does not allege only those facts that would necessarily preclude coverage. Therefore, the presumptions of coverage remain, and the insurer still bears the duty to defend. The Court has found no Texas case in which the Court announced that, applying Texas state law, the duty to defend was triggered, and simultaneously decided that the duty to indemnify could not arise for lack of coverage. Notably, every case that the Court has found that decides the duty to indemnify before the conclusion of the underlying suit has rejected coverage for both the duty to defend and the duty to indemnify. Those federal courts that do decide such issues before the conclusion of the underlying suit do so on what appears to be two related theories.
1. Whether the Court may Reach the Duty to Indemnify Before the Conclusion of the State Court Proceedings
The first group of federal courts appear to follow Wade. Thus, they consider evidence extrinsic to the underlying petition and the policy, apparently improperly, when considering the duty to defend. This extrinsic evidence invariably leads the court to conclude that no coverage exists for the claim. Because this Court has rejected Wade, it will not now invoke that line of reasoning to decide the duty to indemnify. As a result, the Court necessarily declines to follow those federal cases that examine extrinsic evidence in the context of the duty to defend to determine coverage. See discussion, supra, pp. 611— 613.
(a) Ohio Casualty Insurance Company v. Cooper Machine Company
The second group of federal cases that reach the duty to indemnify before the conclusion of the state court litigation does so by relying on the authority given to the federal courts by the Declaratory Judgment Act. See 28 U.S.C. § 2201. 15 One *627 District Court opinion from our circuit explained its reasoning for reaching the duty to indemnify early as follows:
The circumstance that a state court of Texas would not entertain the action as against the claimant [ ] or for a declaration as to [the insurer’s] payment obligation under the policy does not cause this court, in this federal declaratory judgment action, not to be able to proceed to make a full declaration as sought by the [insurer].
Ohio Cas. Ins. Co. v. Cooper Mach. Corp.,
Under the declaratory judgment practice of courts of the State of Texas plaintiff would not be entitled to a declaration related to its payment obligation, Firemen’s Ins. Co. v. Burch,442 S.W.2d 331 (Tex.1968), nor would plaintiff be entitled to a declaration against [ ] the state court claimant, Providence Lloyds v. Blevins,741 S.W.2d 604 (Tex.App.— Austin 1987, no writ). However, the federal courts have a more sensible view of the goal of declaratory judgment practice and have approved declarations on those subjects, which are essential to a full resolution of insurance coverage disputes of the kind involved in this action.
Ohio Cas. Ins. Co.,
Likewise,
Cincinnati Ins. Co. v. Holbrook,
As for the other case that
Ohio Casualty Insurance Company v. Cooper Machinery Corporation
cites for authority,
Maryland Casualty Company v. Pacific Coal & Oil Company,
(b) Monticello Insurance Company v. Patriot Sec., Inc.
An Eastern District of Texas case also cites
Maryland Casualty Company
for the same proposition.
See Monticello Ins. Co. v. Patriot Sec., Inc.,
Next, the
Monticello
court said: “Because the Texas Supreme Court has established that the
Burch
doctrine is an application of federal constitutional law (namely, Article III), this court is obligated to review that analysis.”
Id.
at 101. Notably, the court did not provide a citation to a case that points out Burch’s purported reliance on federal law. Nonetheless, after making that observation, the court concluded that it must apply the mandate rule.
See Hutto v. Davis,
The Court has reviewed cases discussing the
“Burch
Doctrine.” Contrary to the assertion made in
Monticello,
these cases do not indicate that Burch’s reasoning was based on an incorrect interpretation of the Federal Constitution. For example, in
Texas Ass’n of Business v. Texas Air Control Bd.,
(c) Procedure versus Substance
Federal courts give different degrees of deference to state law, depending on whether the state rule is procedural or substantive. Significantly, the courts recognize that a bright-line, mechanical distinction between procedural and substantive law often does not suffice.
See Allstate Ins. Co. v. Charneski,
Here we are dealing with a right to recover derived not from the United States but from one of the States. When, because the plaintiff happens to be a non-resident, such a right is enforceable in a federal as well as in a State court, the forms and mode of enforcing the right may at times, naturally enough, vary because the two judicial systems are not identical. But since a federal court adjudicating a state-created right solely because of the diversity of citizenship of the parties is for that purpose, in effect, only another court of the State, it cannot afford recovery if the right to recover is made unavailable by the State nor can it substantially affect the enforcement of the right as given by the State. And so the question is not whether a statute of limitations is deemed a matter of ‘procedure’ in some sense. The question is whether such a statute concerns merely the manner and the means by which a right to recover, as recognized by the State, is enforced, or whether such statutory limitation is a matter of substance in the aspect that alone is relevant to our problem, namely, does it significantly affect the result of a litigation for a federal court to disregard a law of a State that would be controlling in an action upon the same claim by the same parties in a State court? ... The nub of the policy that underlies Erie R. Co. v. Tompkins is that for the same transaction the accident of a suit by a non-resident litigant in a federal court instead of in a State court a block away, should not lead to a substantially different result.
Id. In this sense, then, the Court must ask whether making a determination now, as opposed to after the conclusion of the state court proceedings, could lead to a different result in the way the-state’s rules pertaining to insurance are applied. If it could, then the rule is substantive, and the federal Court must follow the state rule. If not, it is procedural, and the Court is not constrained by diversity jurisdiction’s general deference to state law.
Here, Texas has chosen to place certain risks on the insurer. The insured can turn to the insurer for a defense when a claimant sues him. “When an insurer is faced with the dilemma of whether to defend or refuse to defend a proffered claim, it has four options: (1) completely decline to assume the insured’s defense; (2) seek a declaratory judgment as to its obligations and rights; (3) defend under a reservation of rights or a non-waiver agreement; or (4) assume the insured’s unqualified defense.”
See Farmers Texas County Mut. Ins. Co. v. Wilkinson,
Each of these choices incurs certain risks. For example, if the insurer has knowledge of facts to indicate that there is no coverage, but nevertheless proceeds to provide an unqualified defense for the insured, the insurer may be estopped from later raising coverage defenses.
See Katemdahl v. State Farm Fire & Cas. Co.,
On the other hand, the insurer could refuse to provide a defense outright, asserting that no coverage exists.
See, e.g., E & L Chipping Co., Inc. v. Hanover Ins. Co.,
Even where the insurer seeks a declaration of rights, pursuant to providing a defense under a reservation of rights, Texas courts will only provide relief to the insurer in certain situations.
See Firemen’s Insurance Co. v. Burch,
Only in these two situations does Texas find it appropriate to remove the risks inherent in the choices forced on insurers about whether to provide a defense, as noted above. 18 In all other cases, the insurer bears the risk that its choice whether to provide a defense or not to provide a defense will impact it negatively after judgment in the suit between the insured and the claimant is entered. In short, the options open to insurers in Texas appear to encourage only good faith challenges to the duty to defend and also encourages insurers to provide the insured with a defense while coverage issues are resolved.
After all, insurers are in the business of weighing risks, and the choice to place that task in their hands, subject to possible negative consequences for making an incorrect determination on coverage, is no less than a policy choice. 19 To limit *632 what relief is available to insurers by way of declaratory judgment tilts those considerations in favor of the insured by increasing the likelihood that insurers will provide a defense, even if it is provided under a reservation of rights. To allow the insurer to accomplish in the federal forum what the state courts would deny the insurer goes against the teachings in Erie. This is because to do so would change materially the nature of the risks that Texas law imposes on an insurer in deciding whether to admit coverage, to provide a defense or to pay a claim. In some instances, an early declaration of rights could disturb the balance achieved by Texas law. 20 Therefore, the insurer should not be able to achieve in this action prematurely what it would be denied in the state courts under state law. 21
Moreover, to give
Griffin
anything but a narrow interpretation
22
and to reach the duty to indemnify before the conclusion of the underlying suit would be to eviscerate completely Texas’ complaint allegation rule. For if the courts simply could proceed to the indemnification question and examine extrinsic facts to make coverage determinations there before the underlying suit terminates, then the court would never be constrained by the limitations imposed by the eight corners rule in the duty to defend analysis; it would always
*633
be free to examine extrinsic evidence because it would always be free to skip ahead to decide indemnification. And extrinsic evidence of coverage should not be considered unless it relates to a readily determined fundamental coverage fact that has no possibility of overlapping with factual determinations to be made in the claimant’s underlying action against the insured (e.g. the malpractice case).
See King,
In conclusion, Texas state law precludes this Court from deciding the duty to indemnify before the conclusion of the state court proceedings. State law, based on interpretation of the state constitution, does not view these determinations as they are presented in this case as justiciable, regardless of whether they would be considered a “case or controversy” for the purposes of Article III. Therefore, while the Court has jurisdiction by way of diversity to decide the duty to defend, state law will not allow it to decide the insurer’s duty to indemnify at this time in this case. The Court may not examine extrinsic facts to determine coverage issues and the duty to indemnify where the underlying state court petition has been found to trigger the duty to defend under the policy and where that same, underlying litigation has not come to a close.
2. Alternatively, the Court Exercises its Discretion Not to Make a Declaration of Rights as to the Duty to Indemnify at This Time.
Even assuming that the Court could make this determination, it would not. The Court has discretion to decline to grant relief as to the duty to indemnify. While this discretion is not boundless, it is appropriately used in this case.
See, e.g., Wilton v. Seven Falls Co.,
One basis that has been held within the Court’s discretion for declining to declare certain rights is the desire to avoid unnecessary conflict with other courts, be they state or federal forums.
See Employers’ Liability Assur. Corp. v. Mitchell,
Also, the Sixth Circuit has held it an abuse of discretion to grant relief pursuant to the Declaratory Judgment Act where a state law of first impression is presented.
See Omaha Prop. & Cas. Ins. Co. v. Johnson,
Here, neither party has cited, nor has the Court located, any state court opinions construing similar insurance policy exclusion language. The parties do, however, cite .to other federal district court cases construing the policy language. The dearth of state court opinions addressing this exclusion and the relative abundance of federal court opinions on the same underscores the “end run” element of the Sixth Circuit’s considerations, namely, that the state courts were being denied the opportunity to adjudicate previously undetermined questions of state insurance contract law.
See Omaha Prop. & Cas. Ins. Co.,
In conclusion, the specter of conflicting factual determinations, the need to at least provide an opportunity for state courts to determine state law questions of first impression, and for reasons of economy, (i.e. not making a determination if none is ultimately required) convince the Court to exercise its discretion not to decide whether the insurer will ultimately bear the duty to indemnify at this time. To do so would needlessly encourage out-of-state parties to avail themselves of remedies not available under state law to in-state parties. Therefore, Defendants’ Motion for Summary Judgment on the issue of indemnification will be DENIED. Because the only remaining issue is that of indemnification, this action should be stayed pending the conclusion of the claimant’s underlying action against the insured.
IV.
CONCLUSION & RULING
Under the insurance policy and upon reviewing the allegations in the underlying *635 state court petition against the insured, the Court concludes that the insurer’s duty to defend has been triggered. The Court will not consider any extrinsic evidence submitted by the parties in this case. Whether by way of oral testimony or stipulations of fact, the Court is not permitted to review extrinsic evidence outside the policy and the state court petition. This is especially so because the evidence submitted does not go to “fundamental coverage” issues that can be determined by “readily determined facts,” such as the existence of the policy or whether the Defendants in the state court action are named insureds under this policy. Consequently, the Court observes that no allegation in the petition admits of any facts that require the operation of Exclusion B; therefore, for the purposes of the duty to defend, coverage cannot be disproved, and the presumptions of coverage remain.
The Court declines to reach the insurer’s ultimate duty to indemnify. The Court believes that state law, which generally must be applied in diversity actions, prohibits a determination at this time as to whether the insurer must bear this duty. Alternatively, even if the Court were authorized to address the insurer’s duty to indemnify now, several considerations, as noted in this opinion, weigh against reaching that issue. Therefore, as an alternate basis for declining to decide this issue, the Court exercises its discretion to deny the parties declaratory relief on indemnification. Accordingly, it is
ORDERED that Defendants’ Motion for Summary Judgment (Dkt. No. 33) is GRANTED IN PART and DENIED in PART. Furthermore, it is
ORDERED that Plaintiffs Motion for Summary Judgment (Dkt. No. 34) is DENIED. Additionally, it is
ORDERED that Plaintiffs Motion to Strike the Affidavit of Don Morris (Dkt. No. 40) is DENIED AS MOOT because the Court does not rely on any extrinsic evidence offered by the parties in making this ruling. Lastly, the Court directs the parties to file any Rule 54(b) motion, if at all, within 30 days of the issuance of this Order. Lastly, it is
ORDERED that this action is stayed, pending the adjudication of the claimant’s claims against the insured in the underlying state court case.
SO ORDERED.
Notes
. The Court vacates its Memorandum Order, dated March 27, 2003, which previously ruled on the parties’ motions for summary judgment, and substitutes in its place this Amended Memorandum Order.
. Because the Court does not rely upon any of the evidence submitted by the parties to make any of the rulings that follow, the Court will not take up the parties’ objections to the same.
. Thus, reading the exclusion literally produces the following language:
This POLICY shall not apply to any [demand made upon any INSURED for [mone-taiy and compensatory portion[s] of any judgment, award or settlement,] as defined in each of the attached COVERAGE UNITS, including, but not limited to, service of suit or institution of arbitration proceedings or admin, proceedings against any INSURED] based upon, arising out of, attributable to, or directly or indirectly resulting from:
B. any act, error, omission, circumstance ... occurring prior to the effective date of this POLICY if any INSURED at the effective date knew or could have reasonably foreseen that such act, error, omission [or] circumstance ... might be the basis of a [demand made upon any INSURED for [monetary and compensatory portion[s] of any judgment, award or settlement,] as defined in each of the attached COVERAGE UNITS, including, but not limited to, service of suit or institution of arbitration proceedings or admin, proceedings against any INSURED].
.
Coregis Ins. Co. v. Goldstein,
. This part of the exclusion has been called the objective prong, and courts vary in their approaches to it. Apparently, insurers added this type of language to their policies to avoid the difficulties associated with proving intent recision actions based on fraudulent inducement. Under Texas law, proving intent requires applying only a subjective standard to determine whether the insured made a misrepresentation that warrants rescinding the contract and excluding coverage.
See Enserch Corp. v. Shand Morahan & Co., Inc.,
. The concurrence in
State Farm Fire & Cclsualty Co. v. Wade,
notes that
McManus
stands
*613
for the following proposition: “If the petition only alleges facts excluded by the policy, then the insurer is not required to defend.”
. One commentator has characterized the Texas Supreme Court's approach to the issue of whether or not extrinsic evidence can be examined under a duty to defend analysis as follows:
In recent years, the Texas Supreme Court has taken a firm position that no extrinsic evidence is permitted in considering the duty to defend. In doing so, the court has not specifically declined to follow earlier precedent where consideration of extrinsic evidence was permitted and has not necessarily distinguished those cases; instead it has simply repeated the mantra of the "eight corners” rule.
Michael Orlando and Megan Gabel,
The Duty to Defend: What a Difference a State Makes!,
29-SUM Brief 14, *16 (2000)(citing
Farmers Tex. County Mut. Ins. Co. v. Griffin,
Other commentators have made similar observations.
See also
Ellen S. Pryor,
Mapping the Changing Boundaries of the Duty to Defend in Texas,
31 Tex. Tech. L. Rev. 869, 890 (2000) "Texas courts consistently recite a strict eight-corners rule. In addition, the Texas Supreme Court has never issued an opinion that clearly endorses an exception to that approach .... Lower courts and federal courts, however, have modified the strict eight-corners rule for some types of extrinsic evidence.”
Id.
(citing
Ohio Cas. Ins. Co. v. Cooper Mach. Corp.,
. It has been observed that the federal courts tend to apply a more liberal approach to examining extrinsic evidence in evaluating the duty to defend than do the Texas state courts,
see Orlando and Gabel, supra
at * 16. This is so even though the federal courts are purportedly applying Texas law.
See, e.g., Guaranty Nat’l Ins. Co. v. Vic Mfg. Co.,
.
Cf. Guaranty Nat’l Ins. Co. v. Vic Mfg. Co.,
.
See id.
citing,
McLaren v. Imperial Casualty & Indemnity Co.,
.
See, e.g. John Deere Ins. Co. v. Truckin’ U.S.A.,
. Professor Ellen Pryor has argued that the courts should recognize the distinction between coverage-only and merits-only facts when deciding whether an insurance policy, such as malpractice insurance, covers a given claim made against the insured. She believes that courts should examine extrinsic evidence any time that the evidence goes only to coverage issues and does not overlap with the merits of the claimant's underlying liability suit against the insured. This approach, like that in Wade and Gonzales, suggests that where "pure" coverage facts can be proven with extrinsic evidence, the courts should not avoid making critical coverage determinations before the conclusion of the claimant's suit against the insured merely for fear of violating the eight corners rule. See generally, Ellen S. Pryor, Mapping the Changing Boundaries of the Duty to Defend in Texas, 31 Tex. Tech. L. Rev. 869, 890-898 (2000). Interestingly, Professor Pryor also acknowledges the uncertainties that might arise in eventually defining what are or are not "pure coverage facts.” In discussing how courts should approach the duty to defend issue, she makes the following comments about distinguishing between merits-only and coverage-only facts: "The distinction is generally workable and understandable, and declaratory judgment courts in many jurisdictions have been employing it for some time. But abandoning the eight-corners rule for coverage-only allegations would elevate the practical import of the distinction and the uncertainties associated with it.” Id. at 897.
. Some courts do cite the rule in
Wade,
but then they do not apply it.
See, e.g., Utica Lloyd’s of Tex. v. Sitech Engineering Corp.,
Mid-Continent Cas. Co. v. Safe Tire Disposal Corp., 16 S.W.3d 418, 421 (Tex.App.-Waco 2000, pet. denied) is another example of a case that cites the Wade exception but does not appear to apply it. In that case, the court spent the bulk of its efforts construing the policy’s pollution exclusion. But then it looked only to the amended complaint to determine coverage. See id. at 423. Thus, while some state appellate courts may cite Wade and recite its exception, the Court has not located any opinions, other than the ones previously cited in the text, that actually apply the exception.
.
See Wade,
. The Court notes that at least one Fifth Circuit opinion cites
Western Heritage Ins. Co. v. River Entertainment,
. To the extent Monticello meant only to ignore Burch for the purposes of evaluating whether the jurisdictional minimum required for asserting diversity jurisdiction is met in *629 these types of actions, this Court agrees. However, the Court must disagree with Monticello 's derogation of Burch to the extent that the federal court's interpretation interferes with the application of state insurance law, as opposed to federal "amount in controversy” jurisdictional jurisprudence.
. It is true that for some issues Texas will examine how federal courts deal with similar questions under federal law. For example, when addressing standing, the Texas high court first considered its own articles of separation. Then, noting that the separation of powers article was not the only basis for standing, the court noted what Article III requires
in the federal courts. See Texas Ass’n of Business v. Texas Air Control Bd.,
.
See Foust v. Ranger Ins. Co.,
. The Court also notes that Texas requires the insurer to make its decision about whether to provide or deny a defense promptly. This is because the benefits under a policy’s duty to defend represent a type of first party insurance to which Texas prompt payment statutes apply. Tex. Ins. Code Ann. art. 21.55 (Vernon Supp.2000);
see also Mt. Hawley Ins. Co. v. Steve Roberts Custom Builders, Inc.,
. “Secondly, it is most incongruous to attribute to the legislature and judiciary of [Texas] the imposition of a restriction against all its citizens from suing for a deficiency judgment while impliedly authorizing citizens of other States to secure such [declaratory] judgments against [Texans]. * * * The essence of diversity jurisdiction is that a federal court enforces State law and State policy.”
See Allstate Ins. Co. v. Charneski,
. Unlike those opinions that discuss whether coverage cases such as this present an Article III “case or controversy,” such declarations are prohibited here as a matter of state interpretation of the state constitution.
Firemen’s Insurance Co. v. Burch,
.Admittedly,
Griffin
did hold, contrary to
Burch,
that the duty to indemnify is justiciable in some circumstances. However,
Griffin
did not completely overrule
Burch.
Subsequent Texas courts of appeals cases explain that
Griffin
merely carved out an exception to Burch's nonjusticiability holding.
See Foust v. Ranger Ins. Co.,
