Don Dean v. Jimmy Dean

821 F.2d 279, 1987 U.S. App. LEXIS 9235
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedJuly 13, 1987
Docket86-1261
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 821 F.2d 279 (Don Dean v. Jimmy Dean) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Don Dean v. Jimmy Dean, 821 F.2d 279, 1987 U.S. App. LEXIS 9235 (5th Cir. 1987).

Opinion

*280 ROBERT MADDEN HILL, Circuit Judge:

In this appeal we are faced with the issue of whether Texas law permits the recovery of damages for mental anguish that results from the breach of a settlement agreement. We hold that it does not.

I.

Jimmy Dean and his brother, Don Dean, have been feuding for a number of years. Their animus originates from the time when they were co-adventurers in the Jimmy Dean Meat Company, Inc. Jimmy, a former entertainer, provided the money to open the operation and gave Don an interest in the company. Don served for several years as the president of the company and, as such, took primary responsibility for running its day-to-day operations. Jimmy and Don both sat on the company’s board of directors.

The brothers strongly disagree about the true source of their conflict. Jimmy contends that he was forced to take control of the company because Don’s mismanagement and dishonest dealings were turning a prosperous enterprise with excellent growth potential into a dying proposition with which other companies were growing increasingly unwilling to bargain. Don asserts that the company was profitable and growing under his management and that Jimmy’s only real motive for forcing Don out of his job was the fact that Jimmy’s entertainment career was floundering and Jimmy’s inability to accept receding importance. Whatever the true reason for the move, it is agreed that in March 1977 Jimmy seized control of the company from Don, and Don sold his interest in the company back to the corporation.

First Party and Second Party do hereby mutually agree and bind themselves and their respective agents, representatives, and employees to entirely refrain from making either public or private statements about the other party, at ail times subsequent to the execution of this Agreement. In this connection, the parties mutually agree that neither of them will directly or indirectly initiate comments or statements, whether public or private in nature, to any third persons, wherein one party makes, or induces or encourages another person or persons to make, any statements whatever about the other party, whether derogatory in nature or not, and whether referring to the other party as brother, relative, associate, partner, fellow shareholder, employee, officer or manager, or otherwise, as to any past, present or future business enterprise or entity; or to refer to the other party's activities, conduct, personal or business integrity, honesty, dishonesty, ability, lack of ability, or responsibility in any of the preceding capacities; or in ascribing blame or fault as to any past acts, past financial condition or operations and any future financial condition and operations of The Jimmy Dean Meat Company and any of its affiliates. The parties further mutually agree that, in the event at any time in the future, any direct or indirect inquiry is made by a third person to one party hereto about the past, present or future conduct, character, ability, reputation, or honesty of the other party, or as to the terms of this settlement, then the party to whom the inquiry is made can only refer, verbatim, to the *281 Order of Dismissal attached hereto as Exhibit "B”.

*280 Having taken control of the company, Jimmy then began a campaign of disparaging its former management in general, and Don in particular. His comments were made to people in the meat marketing business and to national audiences watching television or listening to the radio. Jimmy contends that he found such action necessary to regain the confidence of business people whom Don had alienated and to convince them that problems that had plagued the company had been corrected. Don maintains that the attacks he endured were simply another part of Jimmy’s efforts to justify his action and to tear down his brother so that he could magnify his own importance. Because Don had opened another meat business upon being removed from the Jimmy Dean Meat Company, he felt that he could not afford to have his reputation as a businessman tarnished. Therefore, in 1978 he filed a libel and slander suit against Jimmy seeking $9 million in damages.

That suit was settled in February 1980 in an agreement which awarded Don $148,000 for damage to his reputation and provided that both Don and Jimmy were prohibited from making or authorizing, directly or indirectly, statements about the other after the date of the settlement. 1

*281 On December 26, 1982, The Dallas Morning News published a feature article about Jimmy which made references to Don that violated the terms of the settlement agreement. Don was very upset and concluded that if Jimmy had violated the agreement right in Don’s own “backyard,” he must have been violating it elsewhere as well. His suspicions were confirmed by two former employees of the company who said that Jimmy had “bad-mouthed” Don in their presence. Don contended that this discovery placed a tremendous emotional strain on him because he felt that he had sacrificed a winning libel suit in 1980 for an apparently worthless agreement to stop the behavior that upset him so much.

After his suspicions about the newspaper article were confirmed by Jimmy’s two former employees, Don filed suit in federal district court. In the course of discovery, he learned that Jimmy had made similar statements to other people. At trial, Don brought forth six witnesses who testified that they had heard Jimmy recite a slanderous poem about Don. He also produced some evidence from doctors and friends that the discovery of Jimmy’s infraction severely distressed Don and caused him noticeable physical harm, including aggravation of a nervous condition and premature aging.

This suit was tried purely on the basis of a breach of contract theory. Jimmy moved for a directed verdict, contending, inter alia, that damages could not be recovered for injuries based on emotional harm suffered as a result of contractual breaches. The district court denied this motion. The jury was then instructed on the law regarding the recovery for such damages. The jury returned a verdict in Don’s favor for $500,000 ($350,000 for emotional suffering and $150,000 for extreme injury to physical health). An award of $80,000 was also made for Don’s attorneys’ fees.

It is the express intention and agreement of the parties that neither of the parties at any time hereafter, shall make or permit to be made any statements about the other party’s conduct, character, ability, reputation or honesty, except as expressly permitted in this paragraph nor authorize, approve or knowingly permit their agents, representatives, employees or spokesmen to do so. Settlement Agreement, Paragraph 4 (emphasis represents a handwritten insertion in the agreement).

Jimmy sought a judgment notwithstanding the jury’s verdict with regard to both the damage awards and the attorneys’ fee award and alternatively a remittitur for reduction of the award or a new trial. Each motion was rejected by the district court.

On appeal, Jimmy raises a number of issues.

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Bluebook (online)
821 F.2d 279, 1987 U.S. App. LEXIS 9235, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/don-dean-v-jimmy-dean-ca5-1987.