CBS Outdoor, Inc. v. Larry E. Potter

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 24, 2013
Docket01-11-00650-CV
StatusPublished

This text of CBS Outdoor, Inc. v. Larry E. Potter (CBS Outdoor, Inc. v. Larry E. Potter) 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
CBS Outdoor, Inc. v. Larry E. Potter, (Tex. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

Opinion issued January 24, 2013

In The

Court of Appeals For The

First District of Texas ———————————— NO. 01-11-00650-CV ——————————— CBS OUTDOOR, INC., Appellant V. LARRY E. POTTER, Appellee

On Appeal from the 270th District Court Harris County, Texas Trial Court Case No. 2009-54488

MEMORANDUM OPINION

CBS Outdoor, Inc. appeals the trial court’s rendition of judgment after a jury

trial on Larry E. Potter’s claim of breach of contract against CBS Outdoor. In

eight issues, CBS Outdoor argues (1) the trial court erred in granting Potter’s motion for summary judgment on liability and denying its cross-motion for

summary judgment claiming that Potter’s breach of contract claim was barred by

res judicata, (2) an intervening contract controlled the parties’ relationship as a

matter of law, (3) the evidence was legally and factually insufficient to support the

jury’s award of lost profits, (4) Potter failed to mitigate his damages, (5) Potter’s

expert witness’s testimony should have been excluded because the expert

improperly communicated with CBS Outdoor during the lawsuit, and (6) the trial

court improperly refused CBS Outdoor’s proposed jury questions and instructions.

We affirm.

Background

In August 1, 1995, CBS Outdoor and Potter executed three identical ground

leases.1 The leases were for a ten-year term. What happened with the billboards at

the end of the ten-year term was the subject of much dispute between the parties,

finally leading to litigation. Potter brought suit in 2005, ultimately seeking a

declaratory judgment of his and CBS Outdoor’s rights under the original leases.

The trial court declared that CBS Outdoor had exercised its right of first refusal to

1 The leases were, in fact, executed by Viacom Outdoor, Inc. Viacom subsequently changed its name to National Advertising Company. More recently, the company has changed its name to CBS Outdoor, Inc. The parties agreed in a Rule 11 agreement at trial that the company would be regarded as CBS Outdoor, Inc. 2 re-lease the land and that Potter had the right to purchase the billboards from CBS

Outdoor. CBS Outdoor appealed both determinations. We affirmed.2

In December 2006, while the first suit was pending, the parties agreed to

enter into three identical term leases for the billboards until final resolution of the

dispute. Under the term leases, the parties agreed that, until the final resolution of

the first suit, CBS Outdoor could use the billboards and pay rental income in

accordance with the original leases. The term leases also provided, however, that

adoption of the terms of the original leases “shall not be construed to revive [the

original leases] or waive any parties’ rights with respect to” the original leases.

Following the appeal of the first suit, the parties began to dispute how the

value of the billboards would be calculated for the sale to Potter. As a result,

Potter filed a motion to enforce the judgment in the first suit. The trial court again

found in favor of Potter, ordering the sale of the billboards in compliance with the

court’s construction of the contract. The sales were completed May 2009.

The next month, Potter presented a claim for lost profits to CBS Outdoor.

Potter brought the current suit in September 2009, claiming breach of contract and

seeking lost profits from the time that CBS Outdoor had become obligated to sell

the billboards to the time that it actually sold the billboards, a period of almost four

years. Potter subsequently filed a motion for partial summary judgment, claiming

2 See Nat’l Adver. Co. v. Potter, No. 01-06-01042-CV, 2008 WL 920338 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 2008, pet. denied) (mem. op.). 3 that it was entitled to summary judgment on the matter of liability based on the

trial court’s declarations in the first suit. CBS Outdoor filed a cross-motion for

summary judgment, claiming that Potter’s breach of contract was barred by res

judicata. The trial court granted Potter’s motion for partial summary judgment and

denied CBS Outdoor’s motion for summary judgment.

The parties went to trial on damages on February 21, 2011. Potter testified

about his estimated business costs during the time CBS Outdoor retained control of

the billboards after the original leases terminated. Potter also presented Michael

Albrecht as his expert on the amount of Potter’s lost profits. Albrecht is the

president of Freed Advertising, a company that creates advertisements for clients

and works with media outlets, such as CBS Outdoor, to place the advertisements.

He has worked in the advertising business for 30 years.

Albrecht testified about the maximum amount Potter could have received in

revenue from the billboards during the time in question, from 2005 to 2009.

Albrecht used certain sales from CBS Outdoor’s records on actual advertising sold

for the periods available. To determine the value for 2010, he checked on prices

with a couple of billboard companies for similar billboards in the area. For time

periods in between without sales, Albrecht took averages from the available data.

Albrecht used those figures to determine the maximum ideal amount

someone could realize from the billboards. He then made adjustments to this

4 amount to determine a reasonable maximum amount that Potter could have earned.

His first adjustments were for the estimated percentage of days that the boards

would not generate revenue for various reasons, such as client delays,

cancellations, and printing. For the billboard faces that were visible from the other

side of the highway, Albrecht reduced the potential revenue another 10 percent.

Based on these deductions, Albrecht determined that the maximum reasonable

revenue for the billboards for the relevant period was $1,450,829.

During his testimony, Albrecht testified that he had obtained data from CBS

Outdoor on their rates in 2010 for billboards. This testimony arose when Potter’s

attorney was eliciting testimony in order to introduce the relevant document into

evidence. The substance of the document was never discussed. On voir dire,

Albrecht admitted that he had obtained the document from CBS Outdoor during

the course of litigation and that he obtained it for the purpose of litigation. CBS

Outdoor argued the Albrecht had committed discovery abuse and asked the trial

court to strike him as a witness and to instruct the jury to disregard all of his

previous testimony. The trial court denied the motion, but prohibited Albrecht

“from testifying directly or indirectly about any . . . direct contact that he had with

[CBS Outdoor] or anybody acting on [its] behalf or disclosing the source of any

information that he derived from” CBS Outdoor. The document was not admitted

into evidence.

5 CBS Outdoor presented the testimony of two employees and two experts to

counter Potter’s and Albrecht’s testimony. Their main expert on valuation was

Allen Brivic, an owner of a media buying service with almost 40 years of

experience in the advertising business. Brivic did not offer a competing

calculation of Potter’s lost profits. Instead, he testified to multiple ways that he

found Albrecht’s opinions to be unreasonable. Similarly, CBS Outdoor presented

another expert, James Mandel. Mandel is a professor at Rice University and a

consultant in financial strategy. Like Brivic, Mandel testified to what he believed

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