Downwind Aviation, Inc. v. Orange County

760 S.W.2d 336, 1988 Tex. App. LEXIS 2926, 1988 WL 126015
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 21, 1988
Docket09-87-182 CV
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 760 S.W.2d 336 (Downwind Aviation, Inc. v. Orange County) 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
Downwind Aviation, Inc. v. Orange County, 760 S.W.2d 336, 1988 Tex. App. LEXIS 2926, 1988 WL 126015 (Tex. Ct. App. 1988).

Opinions

OPINION

BROOKSHIRE, Justice.

The County of Orange instituted these proceedings against Downwind Aviation, Inc., to recover rental payments alleging that Downwind had failed to abide by a written lease agreement. Orange County alleged that Downwind remained in possession of the leased premises after the lease had expired under its own terms. The county sued to recover the rentals for the holdover period.

Before the trial on the merits, the district judge struck Downwind’s pleadings for repeatedly failing to follow ordered discovery procedures. The county asked for relief, among other matters, under the declaratory judgment act, TEX.REV.CIV.STAT. ANN. art. 2524-1 et seq. (Vernon 1965), pleading for a construction of the written lease agreement and asking for a declaration, in its original petition, that such lease agreement was terminated. The original petition was filed in October of 1982. The county alleged that the term of the lease ended on August 31, 1982. The county also pleaded that at a regularly scheduled meeting of the Commissioners Court, on September 13, 1982, a written proposal was presented by the county to Downwind which set forth terms and conditions to be included in any renewed written lease, since the lease provided that the landlord and tenant agreed to submit terms and conditions proposed for a negotiation of a subsequent written lease. Downwind advised that it would not negotiate any further. The Commissioners Court voted to terminate the lease agreement and Downwind was instructed to vacate the premises on or before October 1, 1982. The county, in its first original petition, pleaded for compensation based on the reasonable rental value of the leased premises from September 1, 1982, until such time as Downwind vacated the leased premises. In addition thereto, Orange County prayed to receive such other damages as it may be entitled to.

A basic complaint by the Appellant is that Downwind’s pleadings were struck. Later, Downwind amended its answers. The trial court declined to reinstate Downwind’s pleadings. At the trial on the merits, Downwind was not permitted to present evidence. This, Downwind argues, was an abuse of discretion. Also, that striking its pleadings was an abuse of discretion. Another basic gravamen of Downwind’s appeal is that Downwind contends that the rent for each month was to have been based on Downwind’s sales and receipts for that month. The sales and receipts clause of the lease was to govern during the months of a holdover period. However, the trial judge awarded damages based on the fair rental value of the leased premises during the holdover period, this being the measure of damages originally pleaded.

On the other hand, the county argues that the judgment of the trial court should be affirmed but should be greatly increased to order Downwind to pay fines and sanctions that had been previously imposed by the trial court. The trial on the merits was to the bench. A substantial daily monetary fine or sanction had been accumulating beginning in July of 1985. Those fines and sanctions had been imposed by a local district judge. The trial on the merits to the bench was presided over by a visiting district judge.

The reasonable rental value, as the measure of recovery, was clearly set forth in the plaintiff’s original petition for a declaratory judgment. Downwind had notice of that theory of recovery or damages.

The County of Orange filed a reasonable set of interrogatories, addressed to Downwind, in October, 1983. These interrogatories were posed in an effort to make reasonable, necessary discovery in the case in accordance with the terms of the lease as [338]*338now contended by Downwind on appeal. Downwind failed to answer.

Then, in the middle part of December, 1983. a motion was filed by the county to compel the answers to the previously filed set of interrogatories, pointing out that the answers had not been made and that there were no objections to the interrogatories and that they had not been answered timely. About 5 or 6 months passed and they were still unanswered. The presiding judge of the 163rd Judicial District Court entered an order finding that Downwind had failed to file answers to interrogatories that were submitted by the county and that Downwind had also failed to file any objections to such interrogatories.

The regular presiding judge ordered that the answers to the interrogatories should be made fully by Downwind and that such answers mandatorily should be filed on or before February 9, 1984. In this first order, the court reserved the right to invoke and assess sanctions in the event that the answers were not filed by February 9, 1984. A good deal of time passed and the answers were not forthcoming. A second motion for sanctions was filed in June of 1985. A hearing was set for July 2, 1985, before the regular presiding judge.

It must be borne in mind and stressed that the answers to a fairly simple set of interrogatories had not been made for a period of over a year. The answers were to have been filed in February of 1984, but they had not been filed by July 1, 1985. The regular presiding judge had a hearing and specifically found that Downwind had never answered the said interrogatories as ordered, that the information requested was not privileged, and that the information requested was material and essential to the plaintiffs cause of action and that there was no meritorious excuse for the defendant’s failure to obey the court’s orders.

The order provided, along with reasonable attorney’s fees, that Downwind be fined the sum of $100 per day from the date of the order until the date that Downwind filed its correct, complete and proper answers to the plaintiff’s interrogatories. The order involving $100 per day sanction was signed July 15th, 1985. There were some answers filed thereafter but a great majority of them simply stated something to this effect — I do not presently have this information but all these records have previously been furnished to the plaintiff.

In January of 1986, an additional motion for sanctions was filed by the County of Orange stating, in substance, that the county would show the court that the answers of the defendant, Downwind, amounted to no answer at all. On February 26, 1986, a hearing was conducted on the motion for sanctions filed by the county. An order was signed imposing sanctions for the abuse of the discovery process in which the trial court found Downwind Aviation, Inc., in contempt of court for failing to properly answer the interrogatories and that Downwind had 30 days to answer the said interrogatories fully and completely. Downwind was also ordered to produce the records requested or to take affirmative action to produce the records and information by issuing a subpoena requesting the same from any third parties who had the said records in their possession or to show cause why the trial court should not strike the defendant’s pleadings and answers in the pending cause of action. This order for sanctions was dated March 17, 1986.

There was a plaintiff’s third motion for sanctions filed. The attorney for Downwind then made a request of the county and more specifically, the county auditor’s office, to attempt to answer the interrogatories by an examination of the Orange County Auditor’s records. The attorney of record for Orange County was agreeable to that request, stating, however, that it was the county’s belief that the pump readings involving the gasoline sales were not complete.

Thereafter, in the latter part of February, 1987,

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Downwind Aviation, Inc. v. Orange County
760 S.W.2d 336 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1988)

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Bluebook (online)
760 S.W.2d 336, 1988 Tex. App. LEXIS 2926, 1988 WL 126015, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/downwind-aviation-inc-v-orange-county-texapp-1988.