Ernesto C. Castaneda, Individually and D/B/A Castaneda's Nationwide Federal Bonding Company v. Lydia Vasquez D/B/A Vasquez Bail Bond

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 17, 2000
Docket03-98-00713-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Ernesto C. Castaneda, Individually and D/B/A Castaneda's Nationwide Federal Bonding Company v. Lydia Vasquez D/B/A Vasquez Bail Bond (Ernesto C. Castaneda, Individually and D/B/A Castaneda's Nationwide Federal Bonding Company v. Lydia Vasquez D/B/A Vasquez Bail Bond) 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.

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Ernesto C. Castaneda, Individually and D/B/A Castaneda's Nationwide Federal Bonding Company v. Lydia Vasquez D/B/A Vasquez Bail Bond, (Tex. Ct. App. 2000).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN



NO. 03-98-00713-CV



Ernesto C. Castaneda, Individually and d/b/a Castaneda's Nationwide

Federal Bonding Company, Appellant



v.



Lydia Vasquez d/b/a Vasquez Bail Bond, Appellee



FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF BELL COUNTY, 146TH JUDICIAL DISTRICT

NO. 164,218-B, HONORABLE MARTHA J. TRUDO, JUDGE PRESIDING



Ernesto C. Castaneda appeals from a money judgment recovered by Lydia Vasquez in her suit for damages resulting from Castaneda's breach of two indemnity agreements. (1) We will affirm the judgment.



THE CONTROVERSY

At Castaneda's request, Vasquez posted bail bonds for two criminal defendants. By written agreements, Castaneda contracted to indemnify Vasquez, if the defendants did not appear when required, "from any and all losses, court costs, . . . bond forfeitures, investigator fees [,] apprehension fees and expenses of apprehension, . . . or liability of any type, character, or description" resulting from their failure to appear. The two defendants failed to appear when required. As a result, Vasquez suffered the following losses:



Bond forfeitures $43,750.00

Court costs 392.00

Apprehension costs 2,102.71

Other costs 800.00



Total $47,044.71



When Castaneda failed to indemnify her for such losses, Vasquez sued him for breach of the contracts and fraud in their inducement. The jury failed to find the elements of fraud but did find those for breach of contract. On the verdict, Vasquez recovered judgment against Castaneda for breach of contract in the principal sum of $47,295.00, together with post-judgment interest on that sum, costs of court in the present litigation, and attorney's fees in the amount of $15,000. Castaneda appeals on the assignments of error next to be discussed.



DISCUSSION AND HOLDINGS

The Evidence Does Not Support the Jury's Answers to the Damage Question.

In the Alternative, the Answers to Jury Questions No. Two and No. Three Represent a Double Recovery of the Attorney's Fees Sought by Plaintiff.



In Question Number Two, the charge required the jury to find the sum of money, if any, that would fairly and reasonably compensate Vasquez for her damages, if any, resulting from Castaneda's failure to comply with the indemnity agreements. (2) The charge instructed the jury that they might consider only such "reasonable and necessary costs incurred by" Vasquez which "Castaneda was required to pay as a result of the" indemnity agreements. The jury found $47,295.00 in answer to Question Number Two and in answer to Question Number Three, they found $15,000 in attorney's fees.

In his closing argument to the jury, Vasquez's attorney made the following remarks:



There are--in terms of damages, there's a damage question here, if you will recall, Rudolfo Martinez, Ms. Vasquez paid $18,750 and $196 in court costs. Miguel Lopez she paid $25,000, $196 in court costs. $1,102.71 and $1,000 both in bounty hunter fees and another $800 for a total of $47,044.71. And she's incurred attorney's fees and expenses in the case in the amount of approximately $15,100

for a grand total of $62,144.71.



(Emphasis added.) (3)

Notwithstanding the tenor of Castaneda's first assignment of error, quoted above, he does not argue that the $47,295.00 found by the jury is not a reasonable inference from the evidence pertaining to Vasquez's losses. Instead, he points to the argument of Vasquez's counsel, quoted above, and argues as follows:



Such argument improperly permitted the jury to award attorney's fees in response to both Questions Two and Three. [Castaneda's] counsel argued at closing that the $15,000.00 paid as bond fees to [Vasquez] should be deducted from the costs incurred by [Vasquez]. . . . Such sum is the same as the amount of the attorney's fees actually found in answer to Jury Question Three, . . . so there is no way to look at the jury's answers and determine if the jury was misled by the argument of [Vasquez's] counsel.



As these answers may represent a double recovery of [Vasquez's] attorney fees, the award of damages accordingly should be set aside.



If we understand correctly the argument, it postulates that the jury accepted Castaneda's argument that the jury should deduct $15,000.00 from the total losses claimed by Vasquez, that being the payment she received from the criminal defendants for writing their bail bonds; and having done so, the jury improperly reinserted the $15,000 in the form of Vasquez's attorney's fees and expenses because her counsel included the $15,000 in attorney's fees in arguing to the jury that Vasquez's total damages were $62,144.71. And when a recovery of $15,000.00 in attorney's fees was also awarded on the jury's answer to Question Number Three, the result was a double recovery of attorney's fees. We reject the argument.

We find nothing in the record to support Castaneda's theory that the jury accepted his argument regarding the $15,000.00 in bail-bond fees received by Vasquez, a theory that is contrary to the terms of the written indemnity agreements which do not provide for an offset of that character against Castaneda's indemnity undertaking. Castaneda's argument in this particular is simply an argument from silence. And we do not see how the anomaly claimed by Castaneda can be attributed to the remarks made by Vasquez's counsel, which rather clearly distinguished the $15,100.00 in attorney's fees and expenses from the losses for which Castaneda was liable on his indemnity undertaking. And we believe, finally, that any impropriety in such remarks was easily curable by an objection or a motion to instruct the jury, followed by a proper instruction or a withdrawal of counsel's remarks if they were improper. Castaneda made no such objection or motion. We believe the error of which he now complains was therefore waived. See Otis Elevator Co. v. Wood, 436 S.W.2d 324, 333 (Tex. 1968).

We hold there was no error; if there was error, however, we hold it was waived for the reason given.



The District Court Erroneously Denied Defendant's Requested Jury Question No. One Relating to Excuse.



Castaneda pleaded that Vasquez "breached the agreement and [Castaneda] is thereby relieved of liability under" the written indemnity agreements. In this connection, Castaneda refers to a jury question that he contends he presented to the trial judge, which the judge refused. In his brief, Castaneda formulates the question as follows:



Was Defendant Ernesto C. Castaneda's failure to comply excused?



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Ernesto C. Castaneda, Individually and D/B/A Castaneda's Nationwide Federal Bonding Company v. Lydia Vasquez D/B/A Vasquez Bail Bond, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ernesto-c-castaneda-individually-and-dba-castaneda-texapp-2000.