Cooperative Computing, Inc. v. Joe Komar and Paul Masnyj

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 25, 1995
Docket03-94-00205-CV
StatusPublished

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Bluebook
Cooperative Computing, Inc. v. Joe Komar and Paul Masnyj, (Tex. Ct. App. 1995).

Opinion

CCI v. Komar & Masnyj
IN THE COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT OF TEXAS,


AT AUSTIN




NO. 3-94-205-CV


COOPERATIVE COMPUTING, INC.,


APPELLANT

vs.


JOE KOMAR AND PAUL MASNYJ,


APPELLEES





FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF TRAVIS COUNTY, 126TH JUDICIAL DISTRICT


NO. 92-08278, HONORABLE MARGARET A. COOPER, JUDGE PRESIDING




Cooperative Computing, Inc. ("CCI"), appellant, sued N.I.P.Y. Enterprises, Inc. ("NIPY") and two of its officers, Paul Masnyj and Joe Komar, appellees, on various claims of fraud, breach of contract, and violations of the Deceptive Trade Practices Act ("DTPA"), Tex. Bus. & Com. Code Ann. §§ 17.41-.63 (West 1987 & Supp. 1995), stemming from the failure to deliver modular furniture components. Following a ten-day trial, the jury returned a general verdict finding that NIPY, Masnyj, and Komar had each knowingly engaged in wrongful conduct that caused actual damage to CCI. In addition to assessing the amount of damages, however, the jury was also asked to allocate the damages among the three defendants. The jury allocated the entire damage award against NIPY alone. Based on this verdict, the trial court rendered judgment against NIPY for the full damage award; it rendered a take-nothing judgment against Masnyj and Komar. CCI perfected a limited appeal from the judgment, raising essentially four grounds of error: failure to render judgment against Masnyj and Komar for joint and several liability; miscalculation of prejudgment interest; refusal to render judgment on DTPA violations; and refusal to admit certain evidence. Finding merit in the joint-liability complaint, we will reverse and render.



FACTUAL (1) AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

In early 1992 CCI wanted to buy sufficient modular office furniture to assemble 100 computer workstations at a new facility. NIPY was a dealer in used modular office furniture. NIPY's president, Paul Masnyj, and vice president, Joe Komar, expressly represented to CCI that NIPY possessed and owned sufficient components to fabricate the needed workstations. CCI vice president Phillip Walters flew to New York City to inspect NIPY's inventory, located in a Bronx warehouse. At that time, Komar again represented that NIPY owned the inventory and that it was available for sale to CCI. Based upon these representations, CCI contracted to purchase 100 workstations from NIPY's New York City inventory for $85,000 and made a deposit of $8,500.

In March 1992 CCI attempted to pick up the workstations from a Bronx warehouse. After CCI representatives arrived in New York, Komar and Masnyj confessed to CCI for the first time that the workstation inventory Walters had inspected was not available. Apparently the Bronx inventory never belonged to NIPY in the first place. Masnyj and Komar assured CCI that substitute inventory of equal or better quality was available from another inventory stored at the Pan Am hangar at JFK airport. For two weeks, CCI tried unsuccessfully to fill its order from the airport inventory. Masnyj and Komar repeatedly claimed to be able to meet the order, and the parties set a final deadline of March 20, 1992. After this deadline passed and it became clear that NIPY did not have the inventory to complete the order, CCI directed its representatives to take what they had and truck it to Austin for an accurate accounting to determine the shortage. Despite representations from Masnyj that the order was almost complete, the shipment proved to be forty to fifty percent short. Masnyj and Komar continued to make assurances that the balance would be delivered. Although NIPY made five additional shipments to CCI after the original shipment, much of what was delivered was of unacceptable quality. Ultimately, NIPY failed to supply substantial amounts of the order. To complete the project, CCI was forced to purchase substitute products at a cost of approximately $44,107.

CCI then sued NIPY, Masnyj, and Komar for breach of contract, fraud, negligence, negligent misrepresentation, and DTPA violations. CCI alleged that all three defendants were liable for the torts and wrongdoings because Masnyj and Komar were acting as corporate agents in the fraud, and their fraudulent acts were committed in the course of their service to NIPY. Alternatively, CCI alleged that Masnyj and Komar were individually liable for their own negligence, fraud, deceptive trade practices, misrepresentations, and other wrongdoings.

At the trial, the first question of the court's charge to the jury was simply: "Do you find that the conduct of any of the following was wrongful?" The jury answered "yes" to NIPY, Masnyj, and Komar. In Question 2, the jury found that CCI had suffered actual damages as a result of the wrongful conduct of each of the three defendants. In assessing damages, however, the court included Question 2A: "How much in actual damages, if any, should CCI recover as a result of the wrongful conduct, if any, of each of the following." The question then listed NIPY, Masnyj, and Komar separately, with a space for an answer beside each name. The jury answered $43,500 as to NIPY and zero as to Masnyj and Komar. In answer to subsequent questions, the jury found that both NIPY and Masnyj had acted knowingly, with conscious indifference, and with gross negligence; they found Komar had acted knowingly. The jury then assessed exemplary damages of $20,000 against NIPY, $20,000 against Masnyj, and zero against Komar. Finally, they found attorney's fees of $68,000.

The trial court rendered judgment on the jury's verdict for CCI against NIPY for breach of contract, fraud, negligence, and negligent misrepresentation for $43,500 in actual damages, prejudgment and postjudgment interest, $20,000 in exemplary damages, and $68,000 in attorney's fees. Because of the answer to Question 2A, the trial court rendered a take-nothing judgment against Masnyj and Komar. Likewise, since no actual damages were assessed against Masnyj, the court did not award the $20,000 exemplary damages that the jury originally assessed against him. Finally, the court concluded that CCI had not established that the defendants committed DTPA violations.

CCI objected to the judgment primarily on the ground that Masnyj and Komar were joint tort-feasors and, therefore, were jointly and severally liable for the damages found by the jury. CCI filed a notice of limitation of appeal referencing the limited appeal to the matters delineated in its objections to the judgment. Tex. R. App. P. 40(a)(4). CCI then filed a partial statement of facts, consisting only of the direct examination of four witnesses. Tex. R. App. P. 53(d). Masnyj's position on appeal (2) is that CCI failed to comply with the requirements of rule 53(d) and, therefore, that this appeal, which depends on a complete record for sufficiency-of-the-evidence review, must fail.



DISCUSSION


A. Compliance with Rule 53(d)

Rule 53(d) allows an appellant to prepare a partial statement of facts. Tex. R. App. P. 53(d). The purpose of the rule is to reduce the length of statements of facts, thereby minimizing the expense and delay often associated with the appellate process. Steger & Bizzell, Inc. v.

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