No discovery about other claims

March 4, 2018

Continuing to provide practical guidance about discovery requests (see In re: Sting Soccer Group, 2017), and applying the recent Texas Supreme Court cases about discovery of information about other claims, in the context of a dispute over one claim (see In re: Nat’l Lloyds I, 449 S.W.3d 486 (Tex. 2014), and In re: Nat’l Lloyds II, 507 S.W.3d 219 (Tex. 2016)), the Fifth Court addressed these discovery requests in an insurance claim dispute:

(1) the last twenty-five Haag Engineering reports on a storm damage claim in Texas for one of its insureds that Hanover Lloyds Insurance Company had received before August 31, 2015 (the date of its decision letter in this case) plus the decision letters in those claims. . . .

(2) the last twenty-five Haag Engineering reports on a storm damage claim in Texas for one of its insureds that Hanover Lloyds Insurance Company had received after August 31, 2015 (the date of its decision letter in this case) plus the decision letters in those claims.

It granted mandamus relief against an order to respond to them, reasoning: “[A]ccording to Indoor Sports, it is seeking the information to develop and prove the relationship between Hanover and HAAG, Hanover’s reliance on HAAG’s training, investigation and reports, and the unreasonableness of the investigation and decision made by Hanover in light of the HAAG report and lack of contradictory evidence. Although there is a remote possibility the requested discovery could lead to the discovery of relevant evidence, we fail to see how Hanover’s use of HAAG engineering reports on claims of unrelated third parties is probative of Hanover’s conduct with respect to its handling of this claim.” In re: Hanover Lloyds, No. 05-17-00608-CV (March 2, 2018) (mem. op.)