Berryman v. El Paso Natural Gas Co.

838 S.W.2d 610, 1992 WL 142201
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 8, 1992
Docket13-91-313-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 838 S.W.2d 610 (Berryman v. El Paso Natural Gas Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Berryman v. El Paso Natural Gas Co., 838 S.W.2d 610, 1992 WL 142201 (Tex. Ct. App. 1992).

Opinion

OPINION

GILBERTO HINOJOSA, Justice.

This is an appeal from a summary judgment granted in favor of El Paso Natural Gas Company. By one point of error, containing several sub-points, appellant Berry-man argues that the trial court erred in finding that the one satisfaction rule and res judicata barred his recovery, erred in finding that the doctrines of estoppel by judgment or collateral estoppel apply, and erred in applying the law of the case. We reverse and remand.

An abbreviated history of the case is necessary to fully understand our disposition in the present appeal. Phil Berryman was involved in land development. He was contacted by Bill Bates, a real estate agent for El Paso Natural Gas Company, regarding some property for sale. Berryman entered into an earnest money contract with El Paso Development Company for the sale of the land. The agreed price was $7,293,-609.00 or $4,500.00 per acre. Berryman, unable to obtain financing, entered into another contract with El Paso Development Company for a credit purchase price of $10 million. The terms of the new contract were a $1.5 million down payment with a balance of $8.5 million to be repaid at 8% interest over a period of seven years. After purchasing the property, Berryman failed to pay the first installment. After he failed to pay another installment, the parties modified the agreement, raising the interest rate on the note from 8% to 10%. The contract was later modified to increase the interest rate to 12%.

In August 1986, Berryman filed a lawsuit against El Paso Natural Gas Company and El Paso Development Company claiming usury. The pleadings alleged that El Paso Development Company was the alter ego, agent, or conduit of El Paso Natural Gas Company. He contended the $10 million credit price on the July 20, 1978, note included hidden usurious interest on the original $7,293,609.00 loan. The El Paso companies asserted that the increase in price represented a time price differential. The jury found that the amount was interest, and was usurious. The judgment awarded Berryman $6,548,772.80, as a penalty, which represented twice the amount of excess interest which the defendant El Paso Development Company contracted for, charged or received. The trial court directed a verdict that the El Paso Companies were jointly and severally liable.

After the trial court entered judgment, Berryman filed a motion to modify in which he contended for the first time that he was entitled to recover a statutory usury penal *612 ty of three times the amount of excess interest rather than two times the excess interest, which he had requested in his pleadings. The trial court denied the request.

The case was then appealed to this Court. In our opinion 1 , we upheld the jury’s verdict, except for the trial court’s directed verdict which had the effect of adjudicating El Paso Natural Gas Company’s liability based on alter ego and agency. In our opinion, we said that the record showed that all agreements were between Berryman and El Paso Development Company rather than El Paso Natural Gas. We found that there was some evidence of separateness, so an issue on alter ego should have been submitted to the jury.

In Berryman’s brief to this Court in Ber-ryman I, he asserted by cross point that the trial court had erred denying this request for statutory damages of three times the excess interest rate because the Texas usury statutes required the trebling rather than the doubling of penalty damages. We held that the trial court was correct in assessing a double rather than a triple penalty because the pleadings were filed at a time when the statute mandated a double rather than triple penalty.

All parties filed Applications for Writ of Error to the Texas Supreme Court which were denied. We then issued our mandate, reversing and remanding the case as to El Paso Natural Gas Company, and affirming as to El Paso Development Company. After remand, the parties stipulated that Ber-ryman had received $20,013,020.22 from El Paso Development in full payment for those monies due from El Paso Development under the judgment as modified by the appellate court. The stipulation further stated that the receipt of funds would not satisfy any claim that Berryman might have against El Paso Natural Gas.

Berryman then filed new pleadings against El Paso Natural Gas in the remanded case. He alleged that the case involved claims of usury, both under statutory and common law. He alleged, as he had in the pleadings filed in Berryman I, that El Paso Development Company was the alter ego or agent of El Paso Natural Gas. He pleaded that the development company was the mere adjunct of El Paso Natural Gas. In the alternative, Berryman pleaded that El Paso Development’s corporate status should be disregarded because El Paso Natural Gas was attempting to use its corporate status as a sham to perpetrate a fraud. In the further alternative, he alleged El Paso Development was an agent of El Paso Natural Gas Company. In addition, Berryman claimed that El Paso Natural Gas had received monies from the usurious transaction and retained benefits. While it appears that Berryman pleaded derivative liability, there is language in Berryman’s Fourth Amended Petition which gives rise to a suggestion that he is also asserting that El Paso Natural Gas is liable by itself. 2

The crux of Berryman’s pleadings in the case now before us is an attempt to receive those penalty damages for usury which were denied to him in the first trial and in the first appeal. He makes two arguments. First, Berryman claims that El Paso Natural Gas is liable because El Paso Development is its agent or alter ego. At trial, if it is determined that the two El Paso entities are actually one and the same, Berryman urges that he will then be entitled to recover those penalty damages that he is entitled to recover by law, but did not receive in Berryman I. Basically, this would be one times the usurious interest contracted for, charged, or received that he did not receive in Berryman I. Second, Berryman argues that if El Paso Natural Gas Company is truly a separate entity from El Paso Development, then he may be entitled upon proper proof to obtain the full statutory penalties against El Paso Natural Gas. The primary allegation under this theory is that El Paso Natural Gas received usurious interest. The first argu *613 ment asserts derivative liability; the second asserts primary liability.

After Berryman filed his pleadings in the remanded case, El Paso Natural Gas moved for summary judgment on affirmative defenses of collateral estoppel, res ju-dicata, law of the case, and estoppel by judgment. Its summary judgment proof consisted of the following documents from Berryman I: the petition, the judgment, the motion to modify and the order denying it, the brief, the opinion, the motion for rehearing, and the application for writ of error. The proof also included the information concerning the payment of the judgment by El Paso Development after the first case had been through the appellate system.

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Bluebook (online)
838 S.W.2d 610, 1992 WL 142201, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/berryman-v-el-paso-natural-gas-co-texapp-1992.