Cash America International, Inc. v. Hampton Place, Inc.

955 S.W.2d 459, 1997 WL 672542
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 4, 1997
Docket2-96-223-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 955 S.W.2d 459 (Cash America International, Inc. v. Hampton Place, Inc.) 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
Cash America International, Inc. v. Hampton Place, Inc., 955 S.W.2d 459, 1997 WL 672542 (Tex. Ct. App. 1997).

Opinion

OPINION

DAUPHINOT, Justice.

BACKGROUND FACTS

Cash America International, Inc. (“Cash America”) 1 and Cash Venture, a joint venture of Sid Whitener and Dick Allen, entered, into an agreement under which Cash Venture would build a building with the understanding that Cash America would lease a portion of it for a pawn shop. 2 The lease was signed in June 1985. It obligated Cash America to pay $3,000 monthly rent for fifteen years and provided Cash America with an option to buy after the fifth year.

The construction of the building was delayed, and when it was completed it did not meet the specifications of Cash America. Cash America then met with Cash Venture to renegotiate the lease. The parties agree that the monthly rent was reduced to $2,500, but they disagree on whether other modifica *461 tions were made. Cash America contends that the lease term was reduced to six years; Hampton Place, Inc. (“Hampton”), who bought the building in 1991, asserts that the lease term remained at fifteen years. Cash America moved in to the building after the meeting.

Cash America vacated the building in May 1992, six years after it moved in. Hampton then brought this action, claiming that Cash America anticipatorily breached the lease. The trial court refused to submit jury questions on mitigation. The jury returned a verdict in favor of Hampton, from which Cash America appeals.

In eleven points, Cash America complains that the trial court erred by

• admitting a handwritten note because it was not properly authenticated and it contained inadmissible hearsay (points one and two);
• refusing to submit a jury question on whether Hampton undertook a duty to mitigate (point four);
• refusing to submit jury questions on whether Hampton breached a duty to mitigate and on the amount of damages Hampton could have avoided if it had mitigated (points five and six);
• allowing Hampton to change its theory of recovery after irrevocably electing a remedy (point three);
• refusing to submit a jury question on Hampton’s waiver of its right to reject lease proposed by Cash America (point seven);
• submitting the first jury question so that a modification could only be found as of April 1,1986 (point eight); and
• not making the jury’s consideration of damages conditional on positive answers to liability questions (point nine).

Cash America further complains that there is insufficient evidence to support the jury finding that there was not a modification on April 1, 1986 (point 10) and that there is no evidence, or, alternatively, insufficient evidence, to support the jury award of damages (point 11).

DECISION

We hold that Hampton had a duty to mitigate as a matter of law. We further hold that the failure to mitigate was sufficiently pled and that evidence on the issue was before the jury. We therefore hold that the trial court reversibly erred by refusing to submit juiy questions on mitigation. As a result, we sustain the fifth and sixth points and reverse and remand this ease for a new trial. Because we are remanding, we also hold, in the interest of judicial efficiency, that the trial court’s error, if any, in admitting the handwritten note was waived because the substance of the evidence complained of was admitted earlier with no prior objection. Error, if any, was harmless for the same reason.

Because our resolution of the points on mitigation is dispositive, we do not reach the remaining points.

MITIGATION

In two points, Cash America complains that the trial court erred by failing to submit the following jury questions:

JURY QUESTION NO. 8: Do you find that Plaintiff used reasonable care to relet the property after Defendant vacated it?
You are instructed that if a landlord undertakes an obligation to relet the property, the landlord must use reasonable care to lessen or mitigate its damages, if any.
Answer ‘YES” or “NO.”
ANSWER:_
[[Image here]]
IF YOU ANSWERED JURY QUESTION NO. 8 “YES”, AND ONLY IN THAT EVENT, THEN ANSWER QUESTION NO. 9.
JURY QUESTION NO. 9: What amount of damages, if any, do you find that Plaintiff could have avoided if it had utilized reasonable care to lessen its damages and relet the property?
Answer in dollars and cents.
ANSWER: _

*462 Standard of Review

If there is some evidence to support the submission of a jury question, the trial court’s refusal to submit it, if tendered in substantially correct form, is reversible error. 3

Substantive Law

The Texas Supreme Court has recently held that a landlord “must have a duty to mitigate when suing for anticipatory repudiation. Because the cause of action is contractual in nature, the contractual duty to mitigate should apply.” 4 The Court also held that the duty to mitigate “requires the landlord to use objectively reasonable efforts to fill the premises when the tenant vacates in breach of the lease.” 5 The Court further held (1) that an allegation that the landlord failed to mitigate “is similar to an avoidance defense; evidence of failure to mitigate is admissible only if the tenant pleads the failure to mitigate as an affirmative defense;” and (2) that the tenant has the burden of proof on the issue. 6 In Austin Hill Country, the Court pointed out that Austin Hill Country pled failure to mitigate in its first amended answer, introduced evidence that Pacific Palisades rejected two offers from different members of Hill Country to lease the building, and tried to prove that Pacific Palisades did not advertise for tenants in a commercial publication, even though that had been its practice in the past. 7 The Court then reversed and remanded the case for new trial because the trial court had refused to submit a mitigation instruction. 8 The instruction requested by Austin Hill Country was:

“Consider the following elements of damages, if any, and none other: You are instructed that the Landlord can recover as damages the present value of the rentals that accrue under the lease, reduced by the reasonable cash market value of the lease for the unexpired term.... Do not include in your answer any amount that you find ... [Palisades] could have avoided by the exercise of reasonable

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Bluebook (online)
955 S.W.2d 459, 1997 WL 672542, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cash-america-international-inc-v-hampton-place-inc-texapp-1997.