S&B Engineers & Constructors, Ltd. and Zurich American Insurance Company v. Scallon Controls, Inc., 24-0525, March 13, 2026.
On appeal from Court of Appeals for the Ninth District of Texas
Synopsis
The Supreme Court of Texas has clarified that a defendant’s voluntary settlement with an injured third party does not extinguish its right to seek proportional contractual indemnification from a third-party indemnitor. To prevail on such a claim, the indemnitee must demonstrate that the settlement was reasonable, made in good faith, and that the liability is attributable to the indemnitor’s negligence.
Relevance to Family Law
While arising in a commercial construction context, this holding has profound implications for the enforcement of Mediated Settlement Agreements (MSAs) and Final Decrees of Divorce. Frequently, family law practitioners draft indemnity provisions to protect a client from a spouse's undisclosed liabilities, tax deficiencies, or business debts. This ruling confirms that a spouse who settles a third-party claim—such as an IRS audit or a creditor’s lawsuit—does not forfeit their right to seek indemnity under the MSA, provided the settlement was prudent and the liability belonged to the other spouse.
Case Summary
Fact Summary
The litigation originated from a workplace accident where several workers were injured at a refinery. The plaintiffs sued S&B Engineers & Constructors and Sunoco (the indemnitees). S&B had a contract with a subcontractor, Scallon Controls (the indemnitor), which included a provision requiring Scallon to indemnify S&B for losses resulting from Scallon's negligence. Specifically, the contract provided for "comparative" or "proportional" indemnity, meaning Scallon would cover its allocable share of any liability. After four years of litigation, S&B and Sunoco settled with the injured workers for several million dollars. When S&B subsequently sought to recover a proportional share of that settlement from Scallon based on Scallon's alleged negligence, Scallon argued that the "voluntary" nature of the settlement extinguished any right to indemnity. Scallon relied on the theory that a settling party cannot seek contribution or indemnity from a non-settling party because the settlement only resolves the settler’s own liability. The Court of Appeals agreed, effectively barring the claim.
Issues Decided
- Does a defendant’s voluntary settlement with a plaintiff extinguish its right to seek proportional contractual indemnification from a third party?
- Does the "express negligence doctrine" or the Jinkins rule regarding contribution rights apply to bar recovery under a freely negotiated indemnity contract?
Rules Applied
- Beech Aircraft Corp. v. Jinkins: Holds that a settling defendant has no right to contribution from a non-settling party under Texas statutory or common law.
- Ethyl Corp. v. Daniel Construction Co.: Establishes the "express negligence doctrine," requiring that parties seeking indemnity for their own negligence must state so in specific, unambiguous terms.
- Fireman’s Fund Insurance Co. v. Commercial Standard Insurance Co.: Sets the framework for an indemnitee to recover post-settlement by showing the settlement was reasonable, prudent, and made in good faith.
- Freedom of Contract: Texas public policy favoring the ability of parties to allocate risk as they see fit.
Application
The Court dismantled the lower court's reliance on Jinkins, noting that Jinkins was confined to statutory and common-law contribution where no contract exists. In this case, the parties had a "freely negotiated contractual indemnification agreement." The Court emphasized that in a contractual context, the indemnitee is not "buying" the plaintiff's claim to prosecute it against a third party; rather, it is enforcing a bargained-for right to risk allocation. Regarding the "express negligence doctrine" from Ethyl, the Court found it was not a bar here. The contract at issue did not seek to indemnify S&B for its own negligence; rather, it expressly limited Scallon's duty to its own "allocable share" of negligence. Therefore, the concern that a party might be surreptitiously indemnified for its own fault was absent. The Court reasoned that if a party can contract for full indemnity, they can certainly contract for proportional indemnity determined after a settlement.
Holding
The Supreme Court held that neither Jinkins nor the express negligence doctrine precludes a party from invoking contractual indemnity rights following a voluntary settlement. A settling party maintains the right to pursue its indemnitor under the terms of their agreement. To recover on remand, the indemnitee (S&B) must establish two key elements: (1) that the settlement was made in good faith and for a reasonable amount, and (2) that the liability is attributable to the indemnitor’s (Scallon’s) negligence. The voluntary nature of the payment is not a defense to a contractually based indemnity claim.
Practical Application
For family law litigators, this case serves as a shield against "voluntary payment" defenses. If an MSA requires Spouse A to indemnify Spouse B for a specific debt, and Spouse B settles that debt with a third-party creditor to avoid a credit hit or a judgment, Spouse B can still sue Spouse A for the settlement amount. The practitioner must ensure the indemnity language in the MSA or Decree is broad enough to cover "settlements and expenses" and not just "judgments."
Checklists
Drafting the Indemnity Provision
- Include Proportional Language: Explicitly state that the duty to indemnify applies to "proportional" or "comparative" fault.
- Address Settlements: Ensure the clause covers "any and all loss, damage, suit, liability, and expense, including settlements made in good faith."
- Satisfy Express Negligence: If you intend for one spouse to indemnify the other even for the other's own negligence (rare but possible in specific property transfers), use the specific magic words required by Ethyl.
Enforcement Post-Settlement
- Prove Reasonableness: Keep a record of the demand letters, the original petition, and the risks of trial that justified the settlement amount.
- Document Good Faith: Ensure the settlement agreement with the third party is arms-length and well-documented.
- Establish Fault: Gather evidence (financial records, tax returns, or testimony) to prove the underlying liability was actually attributable to the indemnifying spouse.
Citation
S&B Engineers & Constructors, Ltd. and Zurich American Insurance Company v. Scallon Controls, Inc., __ S.W.3d __ (Tex. 2026).
Full Opinion
https://www.txcourts.gov/media/1462452/240525.pdf
Family Law Crossover
This ruling can be weaponized in enforcement actions where an obligor spouse refuses to reimburse the obligee for a settled debt. Often, in the wake of a divorce, a creditor will pursue the spouse with "deeper pockets" for a joint debt that was assigned to the other spouse. If the client settles that debt to protect their credit score, the opposing counsel will invariably argue that the client acted as a "volunteer" and that the indemnity clause only applies to "liabilities" (implying a final judgment). S&B Engineers shuts this door. As long as the settlement is reasonable and the debt was the other spouse's responsibility under the Decree, the right to indemnity remains intact. It transforms the indemnity clause from a reactive tool into a proactive mechanism for financial protection. ~~89bd568e-c7ac-4690-aea0-17fe98304a12~~
