Source: s3://data.kl3m.ai/documents/govinfo/USCOURTS/USCOURTS-ca5-15-30324/USCOURTS-ca5-15-30324-0/pdf.json

Nature of Suit Code: 110
Nature of Suit: Insurance
Cause of Action: 

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IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS

FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT

No. 15-30324

SEAHAWK LIQUIDATING TRUST,

 as Trustee of Seahawk Drilling, Incorporated,

 Plaintiff–Appellant,

versus

CERTAIN UNDERWRITERS AT LLOYDS LONDON;

ACE EUROPEAN GROUP LIMITED; 

NATIONAL UNION FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY 

 OF PITTSBURGH, PENNSYLVANIA; 

AXIS SPECIALTY EUROPE, LIMITED; 

LANCASHIRE INSURANCE COMPANY, LIMITED; 

SWISS RE INTERNATIONAL SE; 

ASPEN INSURANCE U.K. LIMITED; BERKLEY INSURANCE COMPANY;

ARCH INSURANCE COMPANY; 

INTERNATIONAL INSURANCE COMPANY OF HANNOVER, LIMITED; 

HUDSON SPECIALTY INSURANCE COMPANY; 

NAVIGATORS INSURANCE COMPANY; 

NEW YORK MARINE & GENERAL INSURANCE COMPANY; 

TORUS INSURANCE, 

 Defendants–Appellees.

Appeal from the United States District Court 

for the Middle District of Louisiana

United States Court of Appeals

Fifth Circuit

FILED

January 19, 2016

Lyle W. Cayce

Clerk

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Before SMITH, WIENER, and GRAVES, Circuit Judges.

JERRY E. SMITH, Circuit Judge:

This appeal follows a bench trial and judgment for the defendant insurers on the claims of Seahawk Liquidating Trust (“Seahawk”) for payment of 

insurance proceeds. There is no error, so we affirm. 

I.

Seahawk1 operated a fleet of drilling rigs, one of which was the 

J/U SEAHAWK 3000 (the “Rig”), a three-legged, mat-supported jack-up drilling rig with 375-foot legs used to perform drilling contracts in the Gulf of Mexico beginning in 1974.2 In February 2010, while moving between drilling locations, the Rig encountered severe weather and jacked up out of the water for 

several days to avoid the harsh seas. Despite those efforts, the rough seas still 

caused the legs to become misaligned. 

Between February and April, Seahawk repaired the hydraulic-jacking 

system on several occasions, actions that were consistent with the Rig’s history: It had had consistent wear-and-tear problems with, and required repairs 

to, its hydraulic-jacking system for more than twenty years. In April, the Rig 

traveled to perform a drilling contract for Hilcorp Drilling Company (“Hilcorp”), but Seahawk still did not know that the legs were misaligned. The Rig 

 

1 Seahawk Drilling, Inc. filed for bankruptcy, and its trustee pursued these claims 

against Lloyds. We refer to both as “Seahawk.” 

2 A jack-up drilling rig drills for oil offshore at exploratory and developmental wells. 

These rigs must be towed between drilling locations. Mat-supported jack-up rigs have a hull 

that usually floats on the surface and connects to three or four legs that attach to a mat that

must be extended to the sea floor to raise the hull out of the water in order for the rig to drill. 

A hydraulic-jacking system extends the legs and mat down and elevates the hull using a 

mechanism by which pins that are attached to the hull enter the legs, push the legs down, 

come out of the legs, re-enter, and push down again. The hydraulic-jacking system repeats 

this process until the hull reaches the necessary height. 

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failed to jack up to a sufficient height to perform the Hilcorp contract because 

of other problems with the hydraulic-jacking system, leading Hilcorp to request 

that Seahawk provide a replacement rig, which it did at a cost of $1,092,000. 

Though Seahawk brought in a replacement, the Rig became stuck for 

several days at the Hilcorp location after an incident during the jacking-down 

process caused further damage to the hydraulic-jacking system. That incident

required temporary repairs to the jacking system while the Rig was stuck and 

further such repairs once it successfully jacked down and moved to a dry dock. 

At some point in May, while the Rig was in dry dock, Seahawk learned the legs 

were misaligned but did not fix them because doing so would be too expensive. 

After that dry-dock period, the Rig departed in early July to perform 

another drilling contract, which it completed in calm weather, though the crew 

used an unorthodox method to jack it up—the Rig essentially jacked up one 

side of the hull at a time, rather than jacking up the entire hull uniformly. 

Seahawk’s expert, Crane Zumwalt, testified that the crew developed that procedure to compensate for the misaligned legs and that the Rig always succeeded in jacking up if—as with this drilling contract—the weather and seas 

were calm.

On July 21, 2010, the weather and seas were not calm as the Rig arrived 

to perform a drilling contract at East Cameron Island. In those conditions, the 

Rig’s operating manual forbade its crew from jacking it into or out of the water, 

but the crew attempted to jack it out of the water nonetheless. The hydraulicjacking system became disengaged when the Rig attempted to jack up, causing 

the hull to slide down the legs and float in the sea. The crew, before evacuating, 

attempted to jack the Rig back up to no avail, and the Rig floated in the rough 

seas, sustaining further damage, for nearly thirty hours. Zumwalt testified 

that the Rig would have been able to jack up—and jack back up after sliding 

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down—without incident if the weather had been calm. 

After the July 21 storm, the Rig went to dry dock for further repairs until 

December 2010. The repairs again focused on the hydraulic-jacking system

instead of the misaligned legs; Seahawk never repaired the legs. While the Rig 

was in dry dock, Seahawk submitted a claim to the insurers to cover the cost 

of repairs, alleged to be $16,969,860. The insurers rejected the claim.

II.

Seahawk sued the insurers for proceeds covering the physical damage to 

the Rig and the loss on the Hilcorp contract. Seahawk’s insurance policy (the 

“Policy”)3 included several key provisions:

• The general-coverage provision: “This insurance is against all risks of 

direct physical loss of or physical damage to the property insured, subject 

to the terms, conditions, and exclusions contained herein . . . . This Insurance covers all the hull and machinery of the drilling unit(s) . . . .”

• The $10,000,000-deductible provision: “For the purpose of this [Deductible] Clause, each occurrence shall be treated separately, but it is agreed 

that a sequence of losses or damages arising from the same occurrence 

shall be treated as one occurrence.” 

• The wear-and-tear exclusion: “There shall be no recovery under this Insurance in respect of . . . [the] Cost of repairing or replacing any part 

which may be lost, damaged or condemned solely due to . . . wear and 

tear . . . .”

• The loss-of-contract provision (the “Contract Provision”): “[C]overage 

hereunder shall include the loss of charter hire resulting from the termination and/or cancellation of [Seahawk’s] drilling contract(s) caused 

by the insured drilling units being unable to operate following a claim 

recoverable under [the general-coverage provision] if the deductible were 

nil.”

 

3 Each incident took place during one of two separate policy periods; one ended and 

the other began on June 30, 2010. The content of the policies is identical; Swiss Re International SE was an underwriter of the first policy only, and Hudson Specialty Insurance Company, Navigators Insurance Company, New York Marine & General Insurance Company, 

and Torus Insurance were underwriters on the second policy only.

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Seahawk sought to recover the nearly $17 million for repairs made

between February and December 2010. After a three-day bench trial, the district court determined that the insurers had properly rejected the claim

because they found that there were two occurrences, meaning two $10 million 

deductibles had to be met, so Seahawk could recover nothing.4 There were two 

occurrences, the court reasoned, because the sequence of losses (i.e., the damages and subsequent repairs) between February and July was proximately 

caused by the February storm, but the sequence of losses after the July storm 

was proximately caused by that latter storm. There were two separate proximate causes of two different series of losses, so there were two occurrences. 

Seahawk also sought to recover under the Contract Provision. It maintained that the misalignment of the legs caused the Rig to be unable to operate 

and thereby occasioned the loss of the Hilcorp contract; the misalignment was 

caused by a severe weather event and would have been recoverable if the 

deductible were nil; thus, the loss on the Hilcorp contract was recoverable. 

The district court found, to the contrary, that the misaligned legs (a theoretically covered loss) at most contributed to the defective hydraulic-jacking 

system (an excluded loss, as it was caused by wear-and-tear) in causing the 

loss of the contract. That finding required that the court apply the concurrentcause doctrine.

III.

The Policy provides that it is governed by Texas law, under which the 

interpretation of an insurance policy is a question of law, which we review 

de novo. Ran-Nan Inc. v. Gen. Accident Ins. Co. of Am., 252 F.3d 738, 739 (5th 

 

4 The parties stipulated after trial that Seahawk could not recover if there was more 

than one occurrence. 

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Cir. 2001). The parties agree that Texas substantive law applies. We review 

any underlying factual findings for clear error. Theriot v. United States, 245 

F.3d 388, 394–95 (5th Cir. 1998). A factual finding, such as a causation determination, is clearly erroneous only “when the appellate court, viewing the evidence in its entirety, is left with the definite and firm conviction that a mistake 

has been made.” Manderson v. Chet Morrison Contractors, Inc., 666 F.3d 373, 

376 (5th Cir. 2012). “Re-stated, our court may not find clear error if the district 

court’s finding is plausible in light of the record as a whole, even if this court 

would have weighed the evidence differently.” Id. at 376–77 (alterations 

omitted). 

IV.

Because there were two occurrences, the district court properly denied 

Seahawk’s claim for the cost of repairs between February and December 2010. 

That court’s proximate-cause analysis was the correct legal standard for determining the number of occurrences, and the court did not clearly err in finding 

that the February storm was not the proximate cause of the sequence of losses 

following the July storm.

A.

Under Texas law, we must construe the Policy according to the general 

rules of contract construction to give effect to the intent. Gilbert Tex. Constr., 

L.P. v. Underwriters at Lloyd’s London, 327 S.W.3d 118, 126 (Tex. 2010).5 We 

begin with the policy language, giving the terms their “ordinary and generallyaccepted meaning unless the policy shows the words are meant in a technical 

or different sense.” Id. When an issue of state law is unclear, a federal court 

 

5 Our decisions often refer to Certain Underwriters at Lloyd’s as “Lloyd’s.” In their 

briefs, however, these parties use “Lloyds.” 

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must make an “Erie guess” as to what the state’s highest court would decide.6 

Seahawk’s first claim turns entirely on the meaning of “occurrence,”

which, according to its ordinary and generally-accepted meaning, is “something that occurs”7 or “something that takes place; esp: something that happens unexpectedly and without design.”8 The parties appear not to contest 

that the February storm was an occurrence; under that ordinary meaning, the 

July storm would appear to be an occurrence too. 

Seahawk, however, contends that the Policy gives “occurrence” a technical meaning by defining it to include “a sequence of losses or damages arising 

from the same occurrence.” The February storm, according to Seahawk, was 

an occurrence that damaged the Rig’s legs and was a but-for cause of the 

damages suffered after the July storm because the damaged legs slowed down 

the jacking-up process. Because the Rig’s damaged legs contributed to the 

damages after the July storm, Seahawk characterizes all of the losses between 

February and December as “arising from the same [February] occurrence.”

The insurers maintain, to the contrary, that any damages after the July 

storm arose from that storm, not the February storm. Like the district court,

the insurers interpret the phrase “arising from” to require that the occurrence 

be the proximate cause of the “sequence of losses or damages.” Thus, even if 

the February storm damaged the legs and thereby contributed to the losses

after July, the July storm would be the proximate cause of—and the occurrence 

giving rise to—the sequence of losses thereafter.

The real issue, then, is how to interpret the term “arising from” when

 

6 Farm Credit Bank v. Guidry, 110 F.3d 1147, 1149 (5th Cir. 1997), overruled on other 

grounds by Canfield v. Orso (In re Orso), 283 F.3d 686 (5th Cir. 2002).

7 “Occurrence,” WEBSTER’S NINTH NEW COLLEGIATE DICTIONARY (1984).

8 “Occurrence,” WEBSTER’S THIRD NEW INTERNATIONAL DICTIONARY (1986).

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used to determine the number of occurrences under the Policy. Seahawk 

claims the term requires only a causal link between the occurrence and subsequent losses because Texas law construes “arising from” broadly in favor of 

coverage. The Texas Supreme Court has stated that “arise out of” requires 

“simply a causal connection or relation, which is interpreted to mean that there 

is but for causation, though not necessarily direct or proximate causation.”9 

But the court broadly interpreted “arising from”—or relied on cases broadly 

interpreting that term—only in different contexts in which a broad interpretation would increase coverage.10 The court seems not to have addressed the 

term when used to determine the number of occurrences, so we must make an 

Erie guess as to how the court would interpret “arising from” in this context. 

For two reasons, that court likely would adopt the proximate-cause analysis applied by the district court. First, as the insurers point out, interpreting 

“arising from” broadly to require only a causal link when determining the number of occurrences can expand coverage in one case while contracting it in 

another. For example, Seahawk desires a recognition of only one occurrence 

to avoid the application of multiple deductibles—a broad construction would 

increase coverage. But in another case with identical facts but a slightly different insurance policy, an insured may desire multiple occurrences to avoid 

 

9 Utica Nat’l Ins. Co. of Tex. v. Am. Indem. Co., 141 S.W.3d 198, 203 (Tex. 2004). We 

interpret identically the terms “arising out of” and “arising from.” Am. States. Ins. Co. v. 

Bailey, 133 F.3d 363, 370 n.7 (5th Cir. 1998). 

10 See, e.g., Utica Nat’l Ins., 141 S.W.3d at 203 (interpreting “arising out of” broadly to 

reduce the scope of a policy’s exclusionary provision); Mid-Century Ins. Co. of Tex. v. Lindsey, 

997 S.W.2d 153, 156–59 (Tex. 1999) (broadly interpreting the term “arise out of” with regard 

to the use of a motor vehicle to cover the accidental discharge of a weapon after an attempt 

to enter the vehicle); Amerisure Ins. Co. v. Navigators Ins. Co., 611 F.3d 299, 312–13 (5th Cir. 

2010) (interpreting “arise out of” broadly to find that a conditional exclusion did not apply); 

Red Ball Motor Freight, Inc. v. Emp’rs Mut. Liab. Ins. Co. of Wis., 189 F.2d 374, 378 (5th Cir. 

1951) (interpreting “arising out of” the use of a truck broadly to provide coverage for damages 

from the driver’s negligent refueling). 

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the application of a single policy limit—a narrow construction would increase 

coverage. Although Texas favors broadly construing policies to provide for coverage, there is no reason to predict―given the conflicting effects on 

coverage―that the Texas Supreme Court would broadly construe “arising 

from” in this context.

Second, the proximate-cause analysis is at least implicitly consistent 

with our and Texas’s precedent. Three cases in particular illustrate this 

point.11 In each, the policy defined an occurrence as losses “arising out of” a 

single event or continuous exposure to a condition. And, in each, the court

ignored a but-for cause and focused on the direct, immediate, and proximate 

cause of the losses to determine the number of occurrences. 

In Goose Creek, an arsonist set fire to two schools in the same school 

district. Although the same arsonist was the but-for cause of both fires, the 

fires occurred several blocks and at least two hours apart, and neither caused 

the other. The school district claimed there was one occurrence and thus one 

deductible. According to the court, though, there were two occurrences because 

the “two fires [were] distinguishable in space and time [and] one did not cause 

the other.” Goose Creek, 658 S.W.2d at 341. Though the fires were traced back 

to the same but-for cause, there were two occurrences because the damages

directly arose from two separate fires.

In U.E. Texas, nineteen buildings in an apartment complex suffered 

damage from plumbing leaks. Hoping to pay one deductible, the owner contended there was only one occurrence because the leaks allegedly arose from 

 

11 Goose Creek Consol. Indep. Sch. Dist. v. Cont’l Cas. Co., 658 S.W.2d 338 (Tex. 

App.―Houston [1st Dist.] 1983, no writ); U.E. Tex. One-Barrington, Ltd. v. Gen. Star Indem. 

Co., 332 F.3d 274 (5th Cir. 2003); H.E. Butt Grocery Co. v. Nat’l Union Fire Ins. Co., 150 F.3d 

526 (5th Cir. 1998).

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one defective installation of plumbing. The parties stipulated, however, that 

each leak affected only the specific building under which it occurred. Although 

there was ostensibly one “overarching cause”—the installation—the court instead focused on the “specific event[s] that caused the loss,” U.E. Tex., 332 F.3d 

at 278—the individual leaks—to conclude there were nineteen occurrences:

 To point to the installation of the pipes as a single event which gave 

rise to the damage to the nineteen buildings proves too much. Of course 

it is true that had the plumbing system never been installed the leaks 

would not have occurred. In this sense, it is true that the leaks which 

independently damaged the nineteen buildings arose from the same 

event. However, to look this far back would render any damage to the 

complex occurring at any time related to the plumbing as arising from 

the same event.

Id.

In H.E. Butt, one employee sexually abused two children in the same 

bathroom at the same grocery store but on different occasions. Hoping to limit 

liability under its self-insurance, the insured claimed there was only one occurrence because both incidents arose from its negligent supervision of the employee. The court said that “[t]he question under Texas law becomes whether 

HEB’s negligent employment relationship with its pedophilic employee, rather 

than the two acts of sexual abuse, ‘caused’ the injuries to the two children and 

gave rise to HEB’s liability.” H.E. Butt, 150 F.3d at 530. Although negligent 

supervision plainly was a but-for cause of the children’s injuries, there would 

be no injury or exposure to liability without the intervening sexual abuse. Id.

at 531. There were two occurrences because 

[w]hile a single occurrence may result in multiple injuries to multiple 

parties over a period of time . . . [,] if one cause is interrupted and 

replaced by another intervening cause, the chain of causation is broken 

and more than one occurrence has taken place. Here, it is clear that 

each child’s injuries are independent and caused by the separate acts of 

sexual abuse. 

Id. at 534 (alterations in original) (emphasis added) (internal citations 

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omitted).12 The court discounted a but-for cause and explicitly used the

proximate-cause analysis to determine the number of occurrences.

The proper conclusion here follows naturally from the three above-cited 

decisions: When an occurrence is technically defined to include a series of 

losses arising from the same event, it includes only those losses proximately 

caused by that event. The Policy defines an occurrence as a series of losses 

“arising from” the same occurrence and thereby incorporates the proximatecause analysis.13 Thus, the district court applied the correct legal standard in

determining the number of occurrences by analyzing whether the February 

storm was the proximate cause—not just a contributing or but-for cause—of

the sequence of losses between February and December 2010.

B.

The task remains to review the district court’s factual finding that the 

July storm—rather than the February storm—was the proximate cause of the

sequence of losses after July. Again, we review the district court’s causation 

determinations only for clear error and uphold the same if plausible in light of 

the record as whole. Manderson, 666 F.3d at 376–77.

 

12 The court relied on Appalachian Insurance Co. v. Liberty Mutual Insurance Co., 676 

F.2d 56, 61 (3d Cir. 1982), which held that to determine the number of occurrences “the court 

asks if there was but one proximate, uninterrupted, and continuing cause which resulted in 

all of the injuries and damage.” (Alteration and internal quotation marks omitted.) 

13 Seahawk points to All Metals, Inc. v. Liberty Mutual Fire Insurance Co., No. 3-09-

CV-0846-BD, 2010 WL 3027045, at *1 (N.D. Tex. 2010), for the proposition that we nonetheless might broadly interpret “arising from.” All Metals does not support Seahawk’s argument, because the policy there defined “occurrence” to include all damages at least indirectly 

stemming from the same event. By explicitly defining “occurrence” to include indirect causes, 

the parties had rejected the proximate-cause analysis. Cf. Fed. Ins. Co. v. Bock, 382 S.W.2d 

305, 307 (Tex. App.—Corpus Christi 1964, writ ref’d n.r.e.) (“A proper definition of direct loss 

is loss proximately caused by the peril insured against.” (emphasis added)); Utica Nat’l, 141 

S.W.3d at 203 (equating direct causation with proximate causation). Unlike the parties in 

All Metals, Seahawk and the insurers did not expressly reject the proximate-cause analysis, 

so we apply it. 

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The court noted that a proximate cause is “that cause which in a natural 

and continuous sequence unbroken by any new and intervening cause, produces a loss, and without which the loss would not have occurred.” Bock, 

382 S.W.2d at 307. There was significant evidence to support the determination that the July storm, not the February storm, was the proximate cause of 

the sequence of losses after July. Zumwalt testified that the misaligned legs, 

caused by the February storm, did not prevent the Rig from jacking up in calm 

weather—testimony that was further bolstered by the Rig’s successful completion of a contract in calm weather in early July despite its misaligned legs. 

Moreover, Zumwalt testified that the Rig continued to jack up without incident

for at least three and one-half years after the events at issue, despite Seahawk’s never having repaired the legs. The evidence also showed that the

weather was severe on July 21 before the crew attempted to jack up in violation 

of the operating manual. Finally, the court noted that five months elapsed 

between the February and July storms, and Seahawk knew of the misaligned 

legs for at least two months before the July storm yet did not repair them. 

We cannot say that, given this evidence, the court clearly erred by finding the February storm alone, “in a natural and continuous sequence unbroken 

by any new and intervening cause,” would not have produced the sequence of 

losses after the July storm. See id. The July storm was thus an intervening

and proximate cause of the losses. 

V.

The district court did not err in rejecting Seahawk’s claim under the Contract Provision. The concurrent-cause doctrine applies, and Seahawk could not 

recover because it failed to comply with the requirements of that doctrine. 

Under Texas law, the concurrent-cause doctrine applies any time “covered and non-covered perils combine to create a loss” and limits an insured’s 

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recovery to the “portion of the damage caused solely by the covered peril(s).” 

Wallis v. United Servs. Auto. Ass’n, 2 S.W.3d 300, 302–03 (Tex. App.―San 

Antonio 1999, pet. denied). The doctrine is “a rule which embodies the basic 

principle that insureds are entitled to recover only that which is covered under 

their policy . . . .” Id. at 303. Therefore, “[i]t is essential that the insured 

produce evidence which will afford a reasonable basis for estimating . . . the 

proportionate part of damage caused by a risk covered by the insurance policy.” 

Travelers Indem. Co. v. McKillip, 469 S.W.2d 160, 163 (Tex. 1971). “[A]n insured’s . . . burden of proof on allocation . . . is central to the claim for coverage.” 

Wallis, 2 S.W.3d at 303. “Where a loss, however, is caused by a covered peril 

and an excluded peril that are independent causes of the loss, the insurer is 

liable.” Guar. Nat’l Ins. Co. v. N. River Ins. Co., 909 F.2d 133, 137 (5th Cir. 

1990) (emphasis added). Thus, the concurrent-cause doctrine applies to limit 

recovery only when the loss is caused by two concurrent causes instead of two 

independent causes. 

The district court made a factual finding that the misaligned legs (a covered peril) at most combined with the defective hydraulic-jacking system (an 

excluded peril)14 to cause the loss of the Hilcorp contract. We review that factual finding only for clear error, Manderson, 666 F.3d at 376–77, and conclude 

there was sufficient evidence to support it. For example, Hilcorp requested 

that Seahawk replace the Rig specifically because malfunctions with the 

hydraulic-jacking system were visible; Hilcorp, apparently, did not notice the 

misaligned legs. Further, Zumwalt testified that nobody at Seahawk even 

knew the legs were misaligned at this point and that the Rig had experienced 

problems with its hydraulic-jacking system continuously for over twenty years. 

 

14 Seahawk does not challenge the finding that the hydraulic-jacking system’s problems were caused by wear-and-tear and were thus excluded from coverage. 

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Additionally, the court noted that the Rig continued to complete drilling contracts over the next three and one-half years without Seahawk’s ever repairing 

its misaligned legs. Given that evidence, the court did not clearly err by finding 

the misaligned legs were at most a contributing cause—and certainly not an 

independent cause—of the loss of the Hilcorp contract.

Seahawk advances several unpersuasive theories that even if the misaligned legs and defective hydraulic-jacking system combined to cause the loss 

of the contract, the concurrent-cause doctrine should not apply. First, according to Seahawk, the doctrine should not apply because the Contract Provision 

does not explicitly invoke it. That is a non-starter, because the concurrentcause doctrine applies whenever a policy delineates covered and excluded perils and such perils combine to cause a loss.

Second, Seahawk avers that the loss of a contract is different from physical damages to which the doctrine typically applies. That notion, for which no 

caselaw is cited, overlooks the fact that the Contract Provision requires that 

the loss of contract be the result of physical damages that are recoverable 

under the general-coverage provision. It would be entirely consistent with the 

concurrent-cause doctrine for Seahawk to prove what proportion of the physical damages that led to the loss of contract are attributable to a covered peril

and for the insurers to pay out the Contract Provision according to that 

proportion.

Finally, Seahawk avers that the concurrent-cause doctrine would require it to prove a claim “payable” under the Policy’s general coverage provision 

rather than one “recoverable . . . if the deductible were nil.” Seahawk contends 

that all it must show to recover is some theoretically covered physical damage 

that contributed to a loss of contract. Seahawk elides the principle that compliance with the concurrent-cause doctrine, under Texas law, is a prerequisite 

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to any recovery whatsoever. See Wallis, 2 S.W.3d at 303 (noting that allocation 

of damages is central to the insured’s claim). When, as here, a covered peril 

and excluded peril combine to cause a loss, no amount of damages is even recoverable15—let alone payable—until the insured complies with the concurrentcause doctrine. Id. at 302–03 (“[T]he insured is entitled to recover only that 

portion of the damage caused solely by the covered peril(s).” (emphasis added)). 

The district court properly applied the concurrent-cause doctrine to the Contract Provision.

The final point, that Seahawk did not meet its burden under the 

concurrent-cause doctrine, is without controversy. Seahawk presented no evidence to segregate the damage attributable solely to the misaligned legs (the 

covered peril) as compared to the defective hydraulic-jacking system (the 

excluded peril). “Although [an insured] is not required to establish the amount 

of his damages with mathematical precision, there must be some reasonable 

basis upon which the [fact finder’s] finding rests.” Id. at 304. Seahawk failed 

to meet its burden under the concurrent-cause doctrine because it presented 

no evidence to apportion damages between covered and excluded perils, so the 

district court properly denied the claim under the Contract Provision. 

AFFIRMED.

 

15 See BRYAN A. GARNER, DICTIONARY OF LEGAL USAGE 758 (3d ed. 2011) (“recoverable 

= compensable. . . . ‘capable of being legally obtained.’”). Seahawk’s reference to California 

Insurance Guarantee Association v. Liemsakul, 193 Cal. App. 3d 433 (Cal. Ct. App. 1987),

does not change this conclusion; it stands for the uncontroversial proposition that “recoverable” means “recovery that might have been possible” rather than that which is “actually 

recovered.” Agreeing as we do with that proposition, a claim for damages under Texas law,

where a covered peril and excluded peril combine to cause the loss, is not even recoverable

unless and until the insured complies with the concurrent-cause doctrine. 

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