Atkemix Thirty-Seven v. Coastal Prod & Chem ( 2000 )


Menu:
  •                 IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT
    _____________________
    No. 97-20893
    _____________________
    ATKEMIX THIRTY-SEVEN INCORPORATED,
    Plaintiff - Counter Defendant - Appellant,
    v.
    COASTAL PRODUCTS AND CHEMICALS INCORPORATED,
    Defendant - Counter Claimant - Appellee.
    _________________________________________________________________
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Southern District of Texas
    (H-95-CV-1369)
    _________________________________________________________________
    January 14, 2000
    Before KING, Chief Judge, and SMITH and STEWART, Circuit Judges.
    PER CURIAM:*
    Plaintiff-Appellant Atkemix Thirty-Seven, Inc. appeals from
    the district court’s judgment that Defendant-Appellee Coastal
    Products and Chemicals, Inc. did not breach the parties’ real
    estate purchase agreement, and that as a result, it was entitled
    to both the return of its escrow deposit and attorney fees.      We
    reverse.
    I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    *
    Pursuant to 5TH CIR. R. 47.5, the court has determined
    that this opinion should not be published and is not precedent
    except under the limited circumstances set forth in 5TH CIR. R.
    47.5.4.
    During the latter part of 1994, Coastal Products and
    Chemicals, Inc. (“Coastal”) and Atkemix Thirty-Seven, Inc.
    (“Atkemix”) entered into negotiations for the sale of two of
    Atkemix’s Harris County properties: the Greens Bayou Property
    (“Greens Bayou”), a parcel of approximately 110 acres, and the
    Pasadena Property (“Pasadena”), a parcel of approximately 3.5
    acres.   The parties eventually agreed that the properties would
    be sold at fair market value, and had appraisals done to assist
    in finalizing the purchase price.    Appraisals valued Greens Bayou
    at $2 million and at $2.4 million.   Pasadena was not appraised.
    The parties subsequently agreed on a purchase price of $1.5
    million for both properties.   At Coastal’s request, $1.2 million
    of the agreed-upon price was allocated to Greens Bayou and the
    remaining $300,000 was allocated to Pasadena.   Coastal also
    requested that two separate agreements be executed.   The two
    documents, the Greens Bayou Purchase Agreement and Pasadena
    Purchase Agreement, were each effective January 20, 1995.    After
    both were executed, Coastal deposited $100,000 in escrow ($50,000
    for each of the properties) as dictated by the two agreements.
    These funds were held by Stewart Title Guaranty Company (“Stewart
    Title”), the title insurance company involved in the transaction.
    Stewart Title had sent to the parties a Commitment for Title
    Insurance dated January 17 describing the terms under which it
    was willing to provide title insurance covering Pasadena.
    The parties met on February 7, 1995 to close on the two
    properties.   At that time, Coastal brought to Atkemix’s attention
    2
    the fact that the metes and bounds description in a recorded
    easement agreement allowing Atkemix to use a road across adjacent
    property to have access to the landlocked Pasadena did not
    comport with the location of the actual road.   Because the
    “easement problem” raised a question of whether Atkemix was able
    to convey a legal right of access to Pasadena, Coastal refused to
    close on that property.   This caused Atkemix to refuse to close
    on Greens Bayou, as Atkemix’s obligation to convey Greens Bayou
    was expressly conditioned on the completion of the sale of
    Pasadena.
    The parties entered into discussions and on February 10,
    1995, executed a Letter Agreement that dealt with the easement
    problem and the sale of Greens Bayou.   Under the Letter
    Agreement, Greens Bayou would be conveyed to Coastal for $1.2
    million.    Additional language, which is the focus of the instant
    dispute, dealt with the sale of Pasadena.   The Letter Agreement
    contained a “pay or close” provision that required Coastal to pay
    Atkemix $200,000 (the $50,000 in escrow plus an additional
    $150,000) if for any reason Coastal chose not to close on
    Pasadena.   Coastal’s obligation to “pay or close” was contingent
    on Atkemix’s having satisfied requirements set forth in two
    clauses.    One clause gave Atkemix three choices as to the form of
    the documents that it could tender.   Under the first option,
    Atkemix could tender documents in form of exhibits attached to
    the Letter Agreement.   One of those exhibits included language
    that quitclaimed Atkemix’s recorded easement rights.   Under the
    3
    second option, Atkemix could amend the documents described in its
    first option with corrected easement agreements.       Finally,
    Atkemix could tender documents in another form that was agreeable
    to Coastal.   The second clause required Atkemix to meet its
    “other obligations for closing.”       The parties agreed that the
    date for closing on Pasadena would be March 14, 1995, or an
    earlier, mutually acceptable date.       Shortly after February 10,
    1995, the parties closed on Greens Bayou.
    Atkemix attempted to come to an agreement with the owner of
    the adjacent property, Phillips Petroleum, Inc. (“Phillips”),
    over how best to resolve the discrepancy between the location of
    the actual road over its property and the location described in
    the recorded easement.   By March 13, no agreement had been
    reached.   As a result, Atkemix wrote Coastal of its intention to
    tender documents in accordance with the first of the three
    options it had under the Letter Agreement.       In the same letter,
    Atkemix informed Coastal that Phillips had “confirmed orally on
    several instances to Atkemix that the existing roadway location
    is the easement to the Pasadena Property” and that Phillips was
    “willing to execute a document reconfirming the location and
    existence of the access easement if requested by Atkemix or its
    successors in interest.”
    On March 14, Stewart Title submitted to the parties a
    revised Commitment for Title Insurance that included a new
    paragraph describing the easement problem and noting that a new
    recordable easement agreement was needed prior to closing.        The
    4
    parties dispute the implications of Atkemix’s failure to comply
    with this provision.    Later the same day, Atkemix tendered the
    documents it had stated it would.     Coastal refused to close, and
    paid nothing to Atkemix.    Atkemix did not authorize Stewart Title
    to release the $50,000 it still held.
    On May 4, 1995, Atkemix filed this diversity suit against
    Coastal alleging a breach of the Letter Agreement, and seeking
    damages, a declaratory judgment that Atkemix was entitled to the
    $50,000 escrow deposit, and attorney fees.    Coastal
    counterclaimed, alleging breach of contract and tortious
    interference, and seeking the return of its $50,000 escrow
    deposit.   After the case was tried but before the district court
    rendered its judgment, Stewart Title interpleaded the $50,000
    escrow deposit, and filed a summary judgment motion seeking
    release from liability to both Atkemix and Coastal.     Holding that
    Coastal had not breached the Pasadena Purchase Agreement, the
    court’s judgment awarded nothing to Atkemix, awarded Coastal the
    escrow deposit and attorney fees, and released Stewart Title from
    any liability.   The lower court also concluded that the “pay or
    close” provision in the Letter Agreement was unenforceable due to
    a lack of consideration.    Atkemix timely appeals.
    II.   THE ESSENCE OF THE DISPUTE
    The dispute between Atkemix and Coastal has at its center
    the easement problem — the discrepancy between how an easement is
    described in recorded documents and the actual location of the
    5
    road that is used to access Pasadena.    No one contends that the
    discrepancy made Pasadena currently inaccessible.    The two
    corporations are before us because they disagree on whether
    Atkemix was contractually obligated to obtain corrected easement
    agreements, i.e., fix the easement problem, in order to trigger
    Coastal’s obligation to “pay or close.”
    The parties arguments, in a nutshell, are as follows.
    Atkemix, pointing to Coastal’s agreement to allow Atkemix to
    quitclaim its recorded easement rights, maintains it was not
    obligated to fix the easement problem.    Upon tender of documents
    described in the Letter Agreement and the fulfillment of
    Atkemix’s other obligations for closing, Coastal had to pay
    either a total of $200,000 if it chose not to close or $300,000
    if it chose to close.    Atkemix contends that it performed its
    obligations under the Pasadena Purchase Agreement, as amended,
    and thus Coastal’s refusal to pay or close is a breach of
    contract.
    For its part, Coastal admits that it agreed to accept a
    quitclaim of Atkemix’s recorded easement rights.    It insists,
    however, that Atkemix had to fix the easement problem nonetheless
    in order to fulfill its other obligations for closing.    Those
    obligations, Coastal maintains, included ensuring that Stewart
    Title provided Coastal with a title insurance policy that covered
    the easement at issue.    Coastal contends that Stewart Title
    required the easement problem to be fixed before it would issue a
    policy.   Because Atkemix did not fix the easement problem, it
    6
    could not obtain the required title insurance policy.    Therefore,
    Coastal’s obligation to pay or close was not triggered.
    We can resolve the dispute between the parties by answering
    one crucial question: whether Atkemix was obligated under the
    Pasadena Purchase Agreement, as amended, to obtain a title
    insurance policy in Coastal’s name that insured that the easement
    was without defect.   We find, in part because Coastal waived its
    termination right and agreed to allow Atkemix to quitclaim its
    easement rights, that it also agreed to accept a title insurance
    policy that excepted for the easement at issue.   It simply is not
    reasonable to think that Coastal agreed to waive its right to
    terminate the Pasadena Purchase Agreement and to accept a
    quitclaim deed on the easement and at the same time required
    Atkemix to provide a title policy insuring good and marketable
    fee title to the easement in Coastal.   Absent special
    circumstances not present here, a title insurance company will
    not respond to a quitclaim by insuring good and marketable title
    in the buyer.   As a result, we conclude that district court erred
    in holding that Coastal did not breach the parties’ agreement.
    The nuts and bolts of our reasoning follow.
    III. PASADENA PURCHASE AGREEMENT, AS AMENDED
    Resolution of the parties’ dispute requires interpretation
    of the Pasadena Purchase Agreement, as amended by the Letter
    Agreement of February 10.   We review a lower court’s contract
    interpretation de novo, unless that interpretation turns on a
    7
    consideration of extrinsic evidence of the parties’ intent.       See
    Chastant v. Headrick Outdoor Inc., 
    81 F.3d 31
    , 33 (5th Cir.
    1996).    Under those circumstances, we review for clear error.
    See 
    id. Here, the
    district court restricted itself to the
    documents.    It is the case, however, that “[o]ur ‘broad standard
    of review includes the initial determination of whether the
    contract is ambiguous.’” Exxon Corp. v. Crosby-Mississippi
    Resources, Ltd., 
    154 F.3d 202
    , 209 (5th Cir. 1998) (quoting
    American Totalisator Co. v. Fair Grounds Corp., 
    3 F.3d 810
    , 813
    (5th Cir. 1993)).
    The parties’ agreement specified that Texas law would govern
    questions of construction and enforcement.    Under Texas law, the
    primary concern of courts interpreting contracts “is to ascertain
    and to give effect to the intentions of the parties as expressed
    in the instrument.” R & P Enters. v. LaGuarta, Gavrel & Kirk,
    Inc., 
    596 S.W.2d 517
    , 518 (Tex. 1980).    We first consider the
    facts and circumstances surrounding the execution of the
    agreement in order to ascertain whether the agreement is
    ambiguous, or is capable of only a single meaning.    See National
    Union Fire Ins. Co. v. CBI Indus., 
    907 S.W.2d 517
    , 520 (Tex.
    1995)(per curiam); Sun Oil Co. (Delaware) v. Madeley, 
    626 S.W.2d 726
    , 731 (Tex. 1981); City of Pinehurst v. Spooner Addition Water
    Co., 
    432 S.W.2d 515
    , 519 (Tex. 1968).    Only if the contract is
    found to be ambiguous may we consider extrinsic evidence of the
    parties’ intent.    See Sun Oil 
    Co., 626 S.W.2d at 732
    (“Where the
    meaning of the contract is plain and unambiguous, a party’s
    8
    construction is immaterial.”); R & P 
    Enters., 596 S.W.2d at 519
    .
    Under these circumstances, we may take into account parol
    evidence, see Friendswood Dev. Co. v. McDade + Co., 
    926 S.W.2d 280
    , 282 (Tex. 1996), the parties’ behavior under the contract,
    cf. Sun Oil 
    Co., 626 S.W.2d at 732
    (taking issue with lower
    court’s use of one party’s actions under the contract to
    interpret its provisions when the contract was unambiguous), and
    other extrinsic evidence in order to assist us in ascertaining
    the parties’ intent.
    A.   Whether the Pasadena Purchase Agreement, as Amended,
    Is Ambiguous
    Our first task is to determine whether the Pasadena Purchase
    Agreement, as amended, is ambiguous.   In performing this task, we
    must look at the agreement as a whole in light of the
    circumstances existing at the time of execution.    See Reilly v.
    Rangers Mgmt., Inc., 
    727 S.W.2d 527
    , 529 (Tex. 1987).    After
    negotiating over terms for several months, the parties arrived at
    one figure for both properties.   At the request of Coastal, that
    figure was allocated to the two properties in the manner it
    suggested.   Also at the request of Coastal, two agreements were
    executed.    At the same time the original Pasadena agreement was
    executed, the parties signed the Greens Bayou Purchase Agreement.
    That Agreement included a specific provision that required that
    “Buyer shall have . . . (ii) satisfied all of the conditions
    precedent to the closing of the sale of said Pasadena Property as
    set forth in Article 7 of said Purchase Agreement and, the
    9
    Closing of the sale of the Pasadena Property as set forth in
    Article 8 of said Purchase Agreement shall have been completed.”
    By this time, the parties also had received from Stewart Title a
    Commitment for Title Insurance with an issue date of January 17,
    1995 that described the terms of the policy it was willing to
    provide.   That Commitment included three schedules: Schedule A,
    which described the property and the amount of coverage; Schedule
    B, which listed twenty exceptions to coverage; and Schedule C,
    which described eight requirements under a pre-printed
    introduction that stated:
    Your policy will not cover loss, costs, attorney fees,
    and expenses resulting from the following requirements
    that will appear as Exceptions in Schedule B of the
    Policy, unless you dispose of these matters to our
    satisfaction, before the date the Policy is issued.
    Among the items listed on Schedule C was that “[s]atisfactory
    evidence must be provided that . . . there is legal right of
    access to and from the land.”
    The circumstances facing the parties at the time they
    executed the Letter Agreement were different from those that
    existed at the time the Pasadena Purchase Agreement was signed.
    Coastal had discovered the easement problem and had refused to
    close on Pasadena as a result.   With the permission of Atkemix,
    Coastal was in possession of Greens Bayou.   It had begun
    operations there and was facing manufacturing, or other
    deadlines.   But Atkemix had refused to close on Greens Bayou if
    the sale of Pasadena was not first completed.   The parties
    10
    executed the Letter Agreement in an effort to resolve their
    immediate dilemma.
    When viewed in light of these, and the other circumstances
    facing the parties, we do not find the Pasadena Purchase
    Agreement, as amended, ambiguous.    We will therefore restrict our
    review to the agreement and enforce it as written.1
    B.   Whether Atkemix was Required to Fix the Easement Problem in
    Order to Trigger Coastal’s Obligation to “Pay or Close”
    Coastal argues that Atkemix failed to fulfill its “other
    obligations for closing” under the February 10 Letter Agreement.
    For this reason, Coastal contends, it was not required to pay
    anything when it decided not to close on Pasadena.    In order to
    assess the merits of this argument, we must discern what Atkemix
    was obligated to do under the Pasadena Purchase Agreement, and
    how, if at all, its obligations were modified by the Letter
    Agreement.
    1
    In response to Atkemix’s claims, Coastal looks to
    Atkemix’s attempts to fix the easement problem and its request
    for an extension of the contractual closing date as evidence that
    Atkemix knew it was obligated to fix the easement problem. In
    light of our determination that the contract is unambiguous, we
    may not consider parties’ behavior as an indicator of intent.
    See Sun Oil 
    Co., 626 S.W.2d at 732
    . Even if we were to determine
    that the contract was ambiguous, Atkemix’s attempts to fix the
    easement problem would not be conclusive. Atkemix stood to gain
    an additional $100,000 and other benefits if in fact the parties
    closed on Pasadena. Those benefits could easily explain its
    attempts to fix the problem despite not being contractually
    obligated to do so.
    11
    1.   Original Terms of the Pasadena Purchase Agreement
    Under section 4.2 of the Pasadena Purchase Agreement,
    Coastal’s “acceptance of the Grant Deed from [Atkemix] for
    [Pasadena] at the Closing on the Closing Date and the issuance of
    a title insurance policy to [Coastal] by [Stewart Title] on the
    Closing Date . . . [would] conclusively establish that [Atkemix]
    conveyed the Property to [Coastal] . . . and [would] discharge in
    full [Atkemix’s] obligations under § 4.1 . . . .”   Section 4.1
    lays out Atkemix’s obligations with respect to the Grant Deed.
    Atkemix was to
    convey to [Coastal] good and marketable fee title to
    the Property, by a duly executed and acknowledged Grant
    Deed (the “Grant Deed”) in the form of Exhibit B
    attached hereto, free and clear of liens, encumbrances,
    leases, easements, restrictions, rights, covenants and
    conditions, except the following (the “Permitted
    Exceptions”): (a) the title exceptions in the
    Preliminary Report [and approved (or deemed to be
    approved) by Buyer pursuant to section 1.2 hereof],
    (b) title exceptions shown by a correct survey of the
    Property or a physical inspection of the Property, and
    (c) any other matters created, permitted or approved by
    Buyer.”
    The Property is described in section 1.1 as the real property
    “commonly known as 1000 Jefferson Street, together with the
    improvements on such real property, the easements and rights
    appurtenant to such real property”.
    Atkemix’s obligations with regard to title insurance are
    listed in section 7.2(c), under the heading of “Conditions
    Precedent”:
    On the Closing Date, the Title Company shall be
    prepared to issue to Buyer a policy of title insurance
    (or such equivalent title insurance coverage then in
    effect), with liability equal to the total purchase
    12
    price for the Property, insuring Buyer that fee title
    to the Property is vested in Buyer subject only to the
    Permitted Exceptions.
    In summary, under sections 4.1, 4.2, and 7.2(c), Atkemix was
    required to convey good and marketable fee title to the real
    property and to appurtenant easements, and arrange for a title
    insurance policy, with the title and the insurance policy
    subject only to “Permitted Exceptions.”   Because the only
    definition of “Permitted Exceptions” in the Pasadena Purchase
    Agreement occurs in section 4.1, the Permitted Exceptions for
    purposes of section 7.2(c) must be as defined in section 4.1.
    Permitted Exceptions under section 4.1 included those
    exceptions in Stewart Title’s preliminary reports that were
    approved of, or deemed approved of, by Coastal.   Section 1.2,
    referenced in section 4.1, provided Coastal with means of
    terminating the Pasadena Purchase Agreement.   Under
    section 1.2(d), Coastal had until February 27 to object, in
    writing, to title exceptions in Stewart Title’s preliminary
    reports.   If Atkemix received such an objection, it had until
    March 1 to elect either to remove or not remove the objection.
    If it decided to remove the objection, it had until the closing
    date to do so.   If it chose not to remove the objection, Coastal
    could, on or before March 1, terminate the agreement or withdraw
    the objection.   If termination was not chosen, Coastal would be
    deemed to have withdrawn the objection and approved title subject
    13
    to the exception.2    The record provides no indication that
    Coastal had, on or before February 10, exercised its rights under
    this provision.
    2.    The February 10 Letter Agreement
    At issue in this case is how the parties’ Letter Agreement
    of February 10 affected Atkemix’s obligations.    The Letter
    Agreement deals with both the sale of Greens Bayou and the sale
    of Pasadena.   In paragraph 1 of the Letter Agreement, Atkemix
    agreed to the sale of Greens Bayou prior to closing on Pasadena.
    Paragraph 2 of the Letter Agreement provided that, “[e]xpressly
    conditioned on Seller’s compliance with” paragraph 1:
    a.   Coastal agrees to waive Coastal’s right to
    terminate the Pasadena Contract under Sections
    1.2(a) and 1.2(d) of the Pasadena Contract.
    b.   Coastal and Seller agree that the “Closing Date”
    under the Pasadena Contract will be March 14, 1995
    or such earlier date as shall be established by
    written agreement of the parties.
    c.   Coastal agrees that if: (i) Seller is able to
    tender (and in fact does tender) Exhibits A and B
    to the escrow “Grant Deed” under the Pasadena
    Contract in the form attached hereto (or in a form
    substantively identical thereto, which shall
    include tendering of such Grant Deed with one or
    more current or corrected equivalent easements
    which may be added to the Deed and correspondingly
    to the exceptions in Exhibit B but over the road
    described in easement number F-279857 as currently
    existing), or in other form hereafter approved in
    writing by Coastal; (ii) Seller tenders
    performance of its other obligations for closing
    under the Pasadena Contract; and (iii) Coastal
    refuses to or elects not to close the purchase of
    2
    This was not the only means of terminating the Pasadena
    Purchase Agreement. Under section 1.2(a), Coastal could terminate
    the Agreement by providing Atkemix written notice on or before
    March 1, 1995 that Coastal had found the property “unacceptable.”
    14
    the Pasadena Property, then, as an addition to the
    $50,000 Deposit under the Pasadena Contract to be
    delivered and paid to Seller as liquidated
    damages, Coastal shall pay and deliver an
    additional $150,000, for an aggregate payment to
    Seller thereunder of [$200,000].
    Exhibit A attached to the Letter Agreement included the following
    language in addition to a description of the metes and bounds of
    Pasadena:
    Together with   [all grantor’s right, title and interest
    in] easements   as set forth in instruments recorded
    under Clerk’s   File Nos. F-279856, F-279857, and F-
    279859 of the   Real Property Records of Harris County,
    Texas.
    The portion in brackets above was interlineated.
    Paragraph 2(c)(i), as Coastal has admitted,3 gives Atkemix
    the choice of fixing, or not fixing, the easement problem.
    Coastal argues that despite the language in paragraph 2(c)(i),
    Atkemix remained obligated under paragraph 2(c)(ii) to fix the
    easement problem prior to closing.    It contends that under
    sections 7.2(c) and 8.1(e)4 of the Pasadena Purchase Agreement,
    and under the documents provided by Stewart Title, Atkemix was
    required to ensure that Stewart Title was prepared to issue a
    3
    Coastal agreed that pursuant to the terms of the Letter
    Agreement, Atkemix was given “the option of rectifying the
    discrepancy with the access easement, and was provided time to do
    so. However, the Letter Agreement clearly provided that [Seller]
    was not required to rectify that discrepancy.” See Joint Pre-
    Trial Order, R44 at 7.
    4
    Under section 8.1(e) of the Pasadena Purchase Agreement,
    “The Title Company shall issue to Buyer the title insurance
    policy described in section 7.2(c) hereof.” Section 8.1 begins
    with “Seller and Buyer shall cause the following to occur at the
    Closing on the Closing Date,” and thus presents obligations on
    the part of both parties.
    15
    title insurance policy that did not include the easement problem
    as an exception, and that such a policy would be issued at
    closing.
    Coastal believes that the following language in Schedule C
    of Stewart Title’s March 14 revised Commitment5 strongly supports
    its position:
    Both Purchaser, Seller and we have been informed that
    the access easement abutting the property and
    continuing to the dedicated road is different on the
    ground than as set forth in the original easement grant
    of which both are reflected on the current survey.
    Therefore, prior to closing we must be furnished with
    an easement agreement that defines the easement as it
    exists on the ground, in recordable form to be executed
    by the fee estate owner of which the easement tract
    traverses and to be also joined in by any lienholder,
    if any.
    Coastal interprets this language to require that Atkemix fix the
    easement problem (i.e., submit recordable documents that defined
    the easement as it actually existed) in order for a policy to
    issue.   Because Atkemix was required under section 7.2(c) to
    ensure that Stewart Title was prepared to issue a policy, its
    failure to provide the title company with the required evidence
    of legal right of access resulted in its failure to fulfill its
    contractual obligations.   Moreover, because the above language
    was located in Schedule C of the revised Title Commitment, and
    not in Schedule B, Coastal contends that the easement problem was
    not a Permitted Exception under the Pasadena Purchase Agreement.
    5
    The revised Commitment again contained three Schedules
    (A, B, and C). There were seventeen items listed on Schedule B
    (down from twenty), and nine items on Schedule C (up from eight).
    The legal description of the property given on Schedule A
    included reference to recorded easements.
    16
    The district court agreed with Coastal that Atkemix was
    obligated to fix the easement problem before Coastal was required
    to pay Atkemix anything.    Our review of the Pasadena Purchase
    Agreement, as amended, causes us to conclude that the district
    court erred in so deciding.
    3.   Permitted Exceptions Under the Pasadena Purchase Agreement
    We cannot accept Coastal’s interpretation of the Pasadena
    Purchase Agreement, as amended, and of Stewart Title’s documents.
    Contrary to what Coastal urges, language in the Stewart Title’s
    revised Commitment for Title Insurance does not support its
    contention that the title company required Atkemix to fix the
    easement problem prior to closing in order for the policy to
    issue.   The pre-printed portion of Schedule C clearly states the
    implication of Atkemix’s failure to meet the listed requirement
    by fixing the easement problem prior to closing:    The easement at
    issue would be described on Schedule B and exist as an exception
    to coverage.   Thus, the policy would issue, but would issue with
    the additional exception.    This is consistent with Stewart
    Title’s March 15 fax to both parties of revised Schedules A and B
    (but no Schedule C), with Schedule B now including reference to
    the easement problem.
    Because Stewart Title did not require that Atkemix fix the
    easement problem in order for a policy to issue, Coastal must
    17
    find support in the Pasadena Purchase Agreement, as amended, for
    its argument that Atkemix was nonetheless required to correct the
    problem.   As noted above, Atkemix was obligated under
    section 7.2(c) to ensure that Stewart Title was prepared to issue
    a policy “insuring [Coastal] that fee title to the Property [was]
    vested in [Coastal] subject only to the Permitted Exceptions.”
    Coastal argues that it never agreed to allow Atkemix to obtain
    title insurance that included the easement problem as an
    exception.   The dispute between the parties thus reduces to the
    question of whether Coastal agreed to such a policy.
    In order to evaluate Coastal’s contentions regarding the
    nature of the title insurance policy it agreed to accept, we must
    keep in mind the purpose of such policies, and in particular,
    what a company such as Stewart Title agrees to when it issues an
    insurance policy.   The Tenth Circuit, evaluating a claim of
    breach of a title insurance policy, provided the following
    description of the purpose, and limitations, of such policies:
    Title insurance is merely a contract to indemnify the
    insured for any losses incurred as a result of later
    found defects in title. Title insurance does not
    insure the value of the subject property; it insures
    only that the title to such property is unencumbered by
    unknown liens, easements, and the like which might
    affect the property’s value. In other words, a title
    insurance policy is not analogous to a warranty of
    title found in a deed which is breached, if at all, at
    the time it is made.
    First Fed. Sav. & Loan Ass’n v. Transamerica Title Ins. Co., 
    19 F.3d 528
    , 530 (10th Cir. 1994)(citations omitted); see also
    Youngblood v. Lawyers Title Ins. Corp., 
    923 F.2d 161
    , 163 n.2
    (11th Cir. 1991)(“‘[A] title insurance policy is not an agreement
    18
    to guarantee the state of title, but is, rather, an agreement to
    indemnify the policy holder.’” (quoting D. BARLOW BURKE, JR., LAW   OF
    TITLE INSURANCE, § 1.3.1. at 18 (1986))); Martinka v. Commonwealth
    Land Title Ins. Co., 
    836 S.W.2d 773
    , 777-78 (Tex. App. 1992, writ
    denied) (describing law governing the title insurance business).
    Understanding that a title insurance policy does not operate to
    warrant title, but instead indemnifies the insured if
    subsequently discovered title defects result in losses, we can
    now evaluate Coastal’s claims.
    Coastal argues that because the easement problem was not
    listed in Schedule B of Stewart Title’s Commitment prior to March
    15, it did not agree to allow the problem to be excepted from a
    title insurance policy.    This would be a stronger argument were
    it not the case that the appearance in title insurance documents
    of a listed exception was not required in order for a problem to
    be considered a Permitted Exception under the Pasadena Purchase
    Agreement.   Section 4.1 provides three avenues for the creation
    of a Permitted Exception, only one of which deals with exceptions
    listed by Stewart Title.   Coastal could, through operation of
    section 1.2(d), approve, or be deemed to have approved, title
    exceptions listed in the Stewart Title’s Preliminary Report.
    Coastal’s argument focuses on this avenue.    However, Permitted
    Exceptions could also be “title exceptions shown by a correct
    survey of the Property or a physical inspection of the Property.”
    Finally, Permitted Exceptions include “any other matters created,
    19
    permitted or approved by Buyer” (emphasis added).6    Under section
    9.5 of the Pasadena Purchase Agreement, “[t]he words ‘approval,’
    ‘consent’ and ‘notice’ shall be deemed to be preceded by the word
    ‘written.’”    Thus, written approval was required.
    Coastal maintains no such approval was given.    It is clear,
    however, that Coastal entered into certain agreements pertaining
    to the easement problem when it executed the Letter Agreement of
    February 10.    On that date, Coastal knew of the easement problem.
    From the Title Commitment dated January 17, it also had notice
    that Stewart Title would list access-related problems as an
    exception if it was not supplied with evidence of legal right of
    access to and from Pasadena.    Finally, prior to entering into the
    Letter Agreement on February 10, Coastal had the ability, via
    section 1.2(a),7 to terminate the Pasadena Purchase Agreement by
    6
    “Other matters” would cover access issues regardless of
    whether those issues were considered defects in title, per se.
    See LEE R. RUSS, COUCH ON INSURANCE ch. 159, at 78 (3d ed. 1998)
    (“Ability to access a parcel of real estate . . . is not
    technically a ‘defect’ in the title of the property.”).
    7
    Section 1.2(a) provides that:
    Buyer shall, in good faith and with diligence, at
    Buyer’s expense, review and investigate the physical
    and environmental condition of the Property, the
    character, quality and general utility of the Property,
    the zoning, land use, environmental and building
    requirements and restrictions applicable to the
    Property, and the state of title to the Property. . . .
    Buyer shall determine whether or not the Property is
    acceptable to Buyer within the Property Approval
    Period. If, during the Property Approval Period, Buyer
    determines that the Property is not acceptable, Buyer
    shall have the right, by giving notice to Seller on or
    before the last day of the Property Approval Period, to
    terminate this Agreement.
    20
    simply giving Atkemix written notice.    Nonetheless, Coastal
    executed the Letter Agreement.   In it, Coastal allowed Atkemix to
    tender a documents that quitclaimed its recorded easement rights
    and waived its rights to terminate the Pasadena Purchase
    Agreement through the procedures established in sections 1.2(a)
    and 1.2(d) of that Agreement.8
    We find that by agreeing to the terms of the Letter
    Agreement, Coastal approved, in writing, Atkemix’s option to
    arrive at closing without evidence that it had legal right of
    access to and from Pasadena, and thereby made the easement
    problem a Permitted Exception under the third of section 4.1's
    means of creating such exceptions.    Section 4.1 speaks to the
    form of the Grant Deed that Atkemix was to tender; the Letter
    Agreement allows Atkemix to tender documents in the form of
    exhibits attached to it.   Those exhibits included new language
    quitclaiming Atkemix’s recorded easement rights.    Coastal
    therefore agreed, in writing, to allow Atkemix to tender fee
    title to Pasadena, with the exception of its recorded easement
    rights, which Atkemix could quitclaim.
    The Property Approval Period ran from October 7, 1994 to March 1,
    1995.
    8
    Because the Letter Agreement expressly stated that
    Coastal waived its termination rights under sections 1.2(a) and
    1.2(d) of the Pasadena Purchase Agreement, we find the district
    court’s conclusion that “[a]ny preexisting right Coastal had
    under the original Pasadena Purchase Agreement to terminate the
    deal if Atkemix failed to obtain legal access to the Pasadena
    property by the time of closing was not waived by Coastal’s
    execution of the Letter Agreement” in error.
    21
    In addition, Coastal’s waiver of rights under section 1.2(d)
    meant that it would no longer have the ability to terminate if
    Stewart Title included the easement problem (or any other title
    exception) in any revised document submitted to the parties prior
    to February 27.   Although section 1.2(d) required some action on
    the Atkemix’s part to trigger Coastal’s termination rights, this
    was not the case under section 1.2(a).   That section gave Coastal
    the ability to terminate the agreement for virtually any reason
    by merely submitting written notice to Atkemix.   If it did so,
    the Pasadena Purchase Agreement provided that the $50,000
    deposit, plus interest, would be returned to Coastal.   Rather
    than exercising its option to terminate the Agreement under
    section 1.2(a), Coastal agreed to waive that option.    The effect
    of this was to deem the property, with a quitclaim of recorded
    easement rights, “acceptable.”
    Because the lack of evidence of legal access to and from
    Pasadena was a Permitted Exception under section 4.1, it was also
    a Permitted Exception under section 7.2(c).   In this way, Coastal
    allowed Atkemix to not fix the easement problem and nonetheless
    fulfill its obligations under section 7.2(c) by ensuring that
    Stewart Title was “prepared to issue . . . a policy of title
    insurance . . . insuring Buyer that fee title to the Property is
    vested in Buyer subject only to the Permitted Exceptions.”    Once
    Coastal agreed to allow Atkemix to quitclaim its recorded
    easement rights, it could not expect that Stewart Title would
    issue a policy that insured fee title to the easement, free of
    22
    defects, in Coastal.   As we said earlier, a title insurance
    company cannot reasonably be expected to respond to a quitclaim
    by insuring good and marketable title in the buyer.
    This interpretation of the Pasadena Purchase Agreement, as
    amended, also prevents us from having to render portions of the
    Letter Agreement meaningless.   See Balandran v. Safeco Ins. Co.
    of Am., 
    972 S.W.2d 738
    , 741 (Tex. 1998); R & P 
    Enters., 596 S.W.2d at 519
    (“[T]he Court will examine and consider the entire
    instrument so that none of the provisions will be rendered
    meaningless.”).   Coastal’s basic argument is that, despite
    paragraph 2(c)(i)’s language allowing Atkemix to tender documents
    that quitclaimed its easement rights, i.e. allowing Atkemix to
    not fix the easement problem, Atkemix was nonetheless obligated
    under paragraph 2(c)(ii) to fix the easement problem.
    Interpreting paragraph 2(c)(ii) in the manner Coastal urges would
    render meaningless language in paragraph 2(c)(i) that provides
    Atkemix with options regarding the form of documents it could
    tender at closing.
    Once Atkemix tendered the documents allowed under the Letter
    Agreement and ensured that Stewart Title was willing to issue
    title insurance subject only to Permitted Exceptions, Coastal had
    the option of closing on Pasadena or not closing.    If it chose
    the latter option, it was obligated to pay an additional
    $150,000.   There were no other options.   It had waived all its
    rights to terminate the Pasadena Purchase Agreement on February
    10, and even if that had not occurred, the operative deadline for
    23
    terminating the agreement, March 1, had passed.    In failing to
    close or pay, Coastal breached the Pasadena Purchase Agreement,
    as amended.   The district court erred in concluding otherwise.
    The district court also erred in concluding that the “pay or
    close” provision within the Letter Agreement was unenforceable
    because it was not supported by consideration.    It is clear from
    the Letter Agreement itself and the circumstances surrounding its
    execution that the provision does not fail for lack of
    consideration.   The “pay or close” provision was introduced with
    language expressly conditioning the section’s terms on Atkemix’s
    sale of Greens Bayou to Coastal.     Thus, Atkemix agreed to allow
    Greens Bayou to close prior to Pasadena.9    In addition, under the
    terms of the “pay or close” provision, Coastal retained the right
    to choose not to close even if Atkemix had fixed the easement
    problem.   Atkemix agreed that it would have “no recourse against
    Coastal or its assets (other than collection of the above-
    described $200,000 in liquidated damages) for failing to
    consummate the purchase of the Pasadena Property” and expressly
    waived its rights of specific performance and to an action for
    9
    The court below may have based its conclusion in part on
    the misplacement, within the Greens Bayou Purchase Agreement, of
    language tying the Greens Bayou closing to that of Pasadena.
    Rather than being included among the conditions that Seller could
    require as conditions precedent, the paragraph was placed within
    the section listing items that the Buyer could require as
    conditions precedent. The language of the misplaced paragraph
    demonstrates the mistake: It talks entirely of Buyer’s
    obligations, using the phrase “Buyer shall.” Under the
    circumstances, it would be clear error to find that the parties
    intended to allow Coastal to waive the prior closing on Pasadena,
    as would be the case if the paragraph was interpreted as being
    part of the section listing obligations on the part of Atkemix.
    24
    damages other than the $200,000 (and reasonable attorney fees).
    Thus, the provision was supported by consideration and the
    district court erred in concluding otherwise.
    IV.    ATTORNEY FEES
    In light of our conclusions above, we must also reverse the
    portion of lower court’s judgment awarding Coastal attorney fees.
    We remand the issue of Atkemix’s attorney fees, which, consistent
    with the Letter Agreement, it also seeks.
    V.    CONCLUSION
    For the reasons above, we REVERSE the district court’s
    judgment as it pertains to Atkemix and Coastal, and REMAND for
    determination of attorney fees to be awarded Atkemix and for
    entry of judgment not inconsistent with this opinion.   Coastal
    shall bear the costs of this appeal.
    25