JACQUES L. WIENER, JR., Circuit Judge:
Cross Claimant-Appellant Ñola Jan Fisher Greaves (“Mrs. Greaves”) appeals the district court’s denial of relief on her claim that her mother, Cross Defendant-
Appellee Ina Earlene Fisher (“Mrs. Fisher”) breached her fiduciary duty as the trustee of two trusts. Despite its determination that Mrs. Fisher had breached her fiduciary duty vis a vis Mrs. Greaves, the trial court refused to grant relief on that claim on the specific ground that Mrs. Greaves had failed to prove damages by a preponderance of the evidence. She appeals that ruling, and Mrs. Fisher counters with potential alternative bases for affirming the district court,
viz.,
that the transactions were either permitted or that they should stand irrespective of her breach. Concluding both that Texas law does not require proof of monetary damages as an element of Mrs. Greaves’s claim for breach of fiduciary duty and that there is no alternative basis for affirmance, we vacate the district court’s judgment and remand to that court with instructions to enter a judgment voiding the challenged self-dealing transactions.
I. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS
Marvin McKinley Fisher, Jr. (the “Decedent”) died on July 6, 2001. His will appointed his widow, Mrs. Fisher, as executrix of his estate and trustee of two testamentary trusts (collectively, the “Trust”). She is the initial beneficiary of the Trust. Her children, Mrs. Greaves and Marvin Dan Fisher (“Dan Fisher”), together with their respective children, are contingent remainder beneficiaries. This appeal concerns claims filed by Mrs. Greaves against Mrs. Fisher, Dan Fisher, his wholly-owned corporation, Marvin Dan Fisher, Inc. (“MDFI”), and Dan Fisher’s son’s company, Vin Fisher Oil Company (collectively, the “Appellees”).
The seeds of this dispute were sown when Mrs. Fisher, Mrs. Greaves, and Dan Fisher (collectively, the “Plaintiffs”) sued Miocene Oil and Gas to terminate an oil and gas lease on property in which the Trust owns a fractional interest in the mineral rights.
On March 24, 2005, the Plaintiffs signed a Mediated Settlement Agreement with Miocene. Together with their attorney, Ted Kerr, the Plaintiffs began negotiations aimed at reaching consensus on the documents required to consummate the settlement with Miocene. Mrs. Greaves objected to several of the draft documents. Despite awareness of these objections, Mr. Kerr, Mrs. Fisher, and Dan Fisher met with Miocene’s president and, on October 18, 2005, executed documents that Mrs. Greaves had never seen, much less consented. These documents had the legal effects of releasing Miocene’s lease and assigning the Trust’s interests in several wells, equipment, and personal property to MDFI.
Mrs. Greaves did not receive copies of these documents until five days after their execution.
In December 2005, Mrs. Fisher executed a new oil and gas lease with MDFI that covered 320 acres in which the Trust owns mineral interests. The Trust received a 25% royalty and a $4,800 bonus. Mrs. Greaves did not learn of these transactions until late in February of 2006. She filed the instant cross claim in August 2006, seeking damages and other relief for breach of fiduciary duty, fraud, and civil conspiracy.
After a four-day bench trial, the district court concluded that Mrs. Fisher violated section 113.053 of the Texas Property Code by selling Trust property to a relative but denied relief because Mrs.
Greaves had failed to prove damages.
Mrs. Greaves filed two motions to alter or amend the judgment, neither of which resulted in her desired changes.
Mrs. Greaves appeals, arguing primarily that proving damages is not a prerequisite to voiding a trustee’s self-dealing transactions for breach of a fiduciary duty.
II. ANALYSIS
A. Standard of Review
In an appeal from a bench trial, we review the trial court’s factual findings for clear error and its legal conclusions
de novo.
In this diversity case, we apply the substantive law of the forum state, here Texas.
B. Whether Proof of Damages Is Required to Void a Transaction for a Breach of Fiduciary Duty
In the instant case, Mrs. Greaves seeks only to
void
the alleged self-dealing transactions; she asks for no monetary relief. Despite having held that Mrs. Fisher breached her fiduciary duty, the district court nevertheless conceived Mrs. Greaves’s cause of action for annulment of self-dealing transactions to be dependent on a showing of damages. Citing the Texas appellate decision in
Punts v. Wilson,
the district court observed that to recover for the breach of a fiduciary duty, Mrs. Greaves had to establish that (1) a fiduciary relationship existed between Mrs. Fisher and Mrs. Greaves; (2) Mrs. Fisher breached that duty; and (3) the breach caused either injury to Mrs. Greaves or benefit to Mrs. Fisher.
As far as it goes, that is a correct statement of Texas law which Texas courts have repeated often.
And, obviously, a plaintiff who seeks to recover monetary damages for the breach of a fiduciary duty must prove not only a breach of that duty but both the causation and quantum of damages as well.
Yet, monetary damages is not the only possible
legal injury that may result from such a breach, so monetary damages is not the only relief available for a fiduciary’s self-dealing. Another available remedy is the avoidance of the fiduciary’s self-dealing transactions, a remedy for which damages simply need not be proved.
“[S]elf-dealing transactions may be attacked by the beneficiary
even though he has suffered no damages
and even though the trustee has acted in good faith,”
viz.,
a self-dealing transaction itself constitutes an injury
vel non,
the undoing of which is an available remedy. A fiduciary’s self-dealing transaction is not void per se, but is instead
voidable
at the election of the beneficiary.
In fact, Texas law appears to entitle a plaintiff to both damages
and
avoidance of the same self-dealing transaction, provided only that the relief does not constitute a double recovery.
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JACQUES L. WIENER, JR., Circuit Judge:
Cross Claimant-Appellant Ñola Jan Fisher Greaves (“Mrs. Greaves”) appeals the district court’s denial of relief on her claim that her mother, Cross Defendant-
Appellee Ina Earlene Fisher (“Mrs. Fisher”) breached her fiduciary duty as the trustee of two trusts. Despite its determination that Mrs. Fisher had breached her fiduciary duty vis a vis Mrs. Greaves, the trial court refused to grant relief on that claim on the specific ground that Mrs. Greaves had failed to prove damages by a preponderance of the evidence. She appeals that ruling, and Mrs. Fisher counters with potential alternative bases for affirming the district court,
viz.,
that the transactions were either permitted or that they should stand irrespective of her breach. Concluding both that Texas law does not require proof of monetary damages as an element of Mrs. Greaves’s claim for breach of fiduciary duty and that there is no alternative basis for affirmance, we vacate the district court’s judgment and remand to that court with instructions to enter a judgment voiding the challenged self-dealing transactions.
I. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS
Marvin McKinley Fisher, Jr. (the “Decedent”) died on July 6, 2001. His will appointed his widow, Mrs. Fisher, as executrix of his estate and trustee of two testamentary trusts (collectively, the “Trust”). She is the initial beneficiary of the Trust. Her children, Mrs. Greaves and Marvin Dan Fisher (“Dan Fisher”), together with their respective children, are contingent remainder beneficiaries. This appeal concerns claims filed by Mrs. Greaves against Mrs. Fisher, Dan Fisher, his wholly-owned corporation, Marvin Dan Fisher, Inc. (“MDFI”), and Dan Fisher’s son’s company, Vin Fisher Oil Company (collectively, the “Appellees”).
The seeds of this dispute were sown when Mrs. Fisher, Mrs. Greaves, and Dan Fisher (collectively, the “Plaintiffs”) sued Miocene Oil and Gas to terminate an oil and gas lease on property in which the Trust owns a fractional interest in the mineral rights.
On March 24, 2005, the Plaintiffs signed a Mediated Settlement Agreement with Miocene. Together with their attorney, Ted Kerr, the Plaintiffs began negotiations aimed at reaching consensus on the documents required to consummate the settlement with Miocene. Mrs. Greaves objected to several of the draft documents. Despite awareness of these objections, Mr. Kerr, Mrs. Fisher, and Dan Fisher met with Miocene’s president and, on October 18, 2005, executed documents that Mrs. Greaves had never seen, much less consented. These documents had the legal effects of releasing Miocene’s lease and assigning the Trust’s interests in several wells, equipment, and personal property to MDFI.
Mrs. Greaves did not receive copies of these documents until five days after their execution.
In December 2005, Mrs. Fisher executed a new oil and gas lease with MDFI that covered 320 acres in which the Trust owns mineral interests. The Trust received a 25% royalty and a $4,800 bonus. Mrs. Greaves did not learn of these transactions until late in February of 2006. She filed the instant cross claim in August 2006, seeking damages and other relief for breach of fiduciary duty, fraud, and civil conspiracy.
After a four-day bench trial, the district court concluded that Mrs. Fisher violated section 113.053 of the Texas Property Code by selling Trust property to a relative but denied relief because Mrs.
Greaves had failed to prove damages.
Mrs. Greaves filed two motions to alter or amend the judgment, neither of which resulted in her desired changes.
Mrs. Greaves appeals, arguing primarily that proving damages is not a prerequisite to voiding a trustee’s self-dealing transactions for breach of a fiduciary duty.
II. ANALYSIS
A. Standard of Review
In an appeal from a bench trial, we review the trial court’s factual findings for clear error and its legal conclusions
de novo.
In this diversity case, we apply the substantive law of the forum state, here Texas.
B. Whether Proof of Damages Is Required to Void a Transaction for a Breach of Fiduciary Duty
In the instant case, Mrs. Greaves seeks only to
void
the alleged self-dealing transactions; she asks for no monetary relief. Despite having held that Mrs. Fisher breached her fiduciary duty, the district court nevertheless conceived Mrs. Greaves’s cause of action for annulment of self-dealing transactions to be dependent on a showing of damages. Citing the Texas appellate decision in
Punts v. Wilson,
the district court observed that to recover for the breach of a fiduciary duty, Mrs. Greaves had to establish that (1) a fiduciary relationship existed between Mrs. Fisher and Mrs. Greaves; (2) Mrs. Fisher breached that duty; and (3) the breach caused either injury to Mrs. Greaves or benefit to Mrs. Fisher.
As far as it goes, that is a correct statement of Texas law which Texas courts have repeated often.
And, obviously, a plaintiff who seeks to recover monetary damages for the breach of a fiduciary duty must prove not only a breach of that duty but both the causation and quantum of damages as well.
Yet, monetary damages is not the only possible
legal injury that may result from such a breach, so monetary damages is not the only relief available for a fiduciary’s self-dealing. Another available remedy is the avoidance of the fiduciary’s self-dealing transactions, a remedy for which damages simply need not be proved.
“[S]elf-dealing transactions may be attacked by the beneficiary
even though he has suffered no damages
and even though the trustee has acted in good faith,”
viz.,
a self-dealing transaction itself constitutes an injury
vel non,
the undoing of which is an available remedy. A fiduciary’s self-dealing transaction is not void per se, but is instead
voidable
at the election of the beneficiary.
In fact, Texas law appears to entitle a plaintiff to both damages
and
avoidance of the same self-dealing transaction, provided only that the relief does not constitute a double recovery.
The Appellees cite no Texas case — and we have found none — in which a plaintiff requested the equitable remedy of rescission for a breach of fiduciary duty and the court ruled for the defendant based only on the plaintiffs failure to prove damages, despite ruling that such breach had occurred. As Mrs. Greaves seeks no monetary damages here, such damages are not an element of her claim for recision for a breach of fiduciary duty.
C. Whether Mrs. Fisher Was Authorized to Enter into Transactions with her Son
Having concluded that the district court erred in requiring proof of monetary damages as a requisite to granting the remedy of recision, we next consider the Appellees’ argument that the district court’s decision should be affirmed on the alternative ground that Mrs. Fisher breached no duty. They offer three principal theories of how the contested transactions might be held to have been entered into properly: (1) the Trust permitted Mrs. Fisher to do so as trustee; (2) the will permitted her to do so as executrix; and (3) the will also permitted her to do so by exercising the special power of appointment that it conferred on her. We reject each theory for the reasons that follow in turn.
1. Mrs. Fisher as Trustee
The district court determined that (1) Mrs. Fisher, as trustee, owed Mrs. Greaves a fiduciary ' duty and (2) Mrs. Fisher breached that duty by selling Trust property to her son. Mrs. Fisher asserts that the Trust permitted her, as trustee, to enter the transactions.
Texas Property Code section 113.053 places unambiguously mandatory restrictions on a trustee’s dealings with trust property: “[A] trustee shall not directly or indirectly buy or sell trust property from or to ... a relative of the trustee....”
A settlor — here, the Decedent — may, however, modify particular default provisions of the Texas Property Code to allow,
inter alia,
transactions between the trustee and his relatives.
A settlor’s mere grant of “broad powers,” however, is insufficient to support the assertion that the settlor intended to circumvent any one or more provisions of the default law.
Unless the settlor’s intention is otherwise clear, modifications of the default law must be in explicit terms.
The Appellees nevertheless contend that the “terms of the Trust”
permit self-dealing transactions. Like the district court before us, we disagree. Although the Trust establishes that the Decedent intended for the trustee to have broad general powers,
it contains no hint that self-dealing with the trustee’s children might be permitted.
In connection with our determining whether Mrs. Fisher, as trustee, had the power to enter transactions with her son, we are asked by the Appellees to consider not only the broad powers conferred on Mrs. Fisher directly in her capacity as trustee, but also those powers conferred on her in her capacity as executrix of the Decedent’s estate and as the holder of a special power of appointment under the will. Stated differently, the Appellees urge us to look beyond the powers that Mrs. Fisher derives directly from her role as trustee. Although we recognize that Mrs. Fisher wears at least three “hats” in the instant appeal (all of which flow from the Decedent’s will), we are chary to infer by reference to a trustee’s other offices that her powers as trustee are somehow expanded thereby. Resorting to such a reference would have the perverse effect of expanding or contracting the powers of the trustee, depending on who is serving as trustee at any given moment. In this case, for example, Mrs. Fisher will not always be the one serving as the trustee; by the will’s terms, once Mrs. Fisher ceases to serve as trustee (presumably by resignation, incapacity, removal, or death) her children will become co-trustees (they could have become the initial trustees if Mrs. Fisher had failed to serve). If we were to rely on Mrs. Fisher’s powers in other capacities to expand her powers as trustee, we would risk conferring too much or too little authority on subsequent trustees who may wear only the “trustee hat.” We conclude that Mrs. Fisher, as trustee, lacked authority to enter into the disputed self-dealing transactions, whether or not she also served as executrix or enjoyed a special power of appointment.
2. Mrs. Fisher as Executrix
The Appellees assert that even if Mrs. Fisher could not enter the disputed
transactions in the capacity of trustee, she validly entered them in her capacity as executrix of the Decedent’s estate, a capacity under which, she claims, she was subject to no self-dealing ban. The Texas Supreme Court has said, however, that “[t]he executor of an estate is held to the same fiduciary standards in his administration of the estate as a trustee.”
Consistent with this statement, the Decedent’s will emphasizes that “[i]n addition to having” the powers and duties of an executor under Texas law “my executrix shall have the same powers, duties, privileges, authorities, and responsibilities of my trustee.” Texas law and the terms of the will thus confirm that the trustee’s duty not to self-deal also applies to Mrs. Fisher as executrix as well.
Even if we were to assume
arguendo
that an executor is permitted to self-deal, we would defer to the district court’s factual determination that in this case Mrs. Fisher acted solely in the capacity of trustee, and neither as executrix nor as special appointee. As that finding is not clearly erroneous — at trial, Mrs. Fisher testified that she,
as trustee,
entered an oil and gas lease with her son’s company — we still would not disturb it.
3. Mrs. Fisher as Holder of a Special Power of Appointment
The Appellees contend — for the first time on appeal — that even if Mrs. Fisher
as trustee
was prohibited from entering the disputed transactions,
as the holder of a special power of appointment
under the will, she not only possessed the power to enter the disputed transactions with her son, but in fact did so pursuant to that authority.
As the Appellees failed to raise this argument adequately in the district court, they waived it, and we do not reach it.
Having considered and rejected each of the Appellees’ proffered rationales for interpreting the will to permit Mrs. Fisher to enter the contested transactions with her son, we hold that when she did so she breached her fiduciary duty to Mrs. Greaves.
D. Other Putative Bases for Ruling in Favor of Appellees
Undeterred, the Appellees urge that, even though Mrs. Fisher breached her fiduciary duty, we should affirm the district court, either by ratifying the prohibited transactions or by preventing their revocation, because Dan Fisher’s company, MDFI, acted as a bona fide purchaser. This argument is unpersuasive under either theory.
1. Ratification of Contested Transactions
A now-repealed Texas statute once gave courts the authority, “for cause shown and upon notice to the beneficiaries,” to “wholly or partly release and excuse a trustee, who has acted honestly and reasonably, from liability for violations of
provisions of [the Trust] Act.”
Contrary to the Appellees’ asserted interpretation, current Texas law does not confer this same power on the courts. Specifically, the statute that the Appellees label as a re-enactment of the repealed statute “with no substantial change” — section 115.001(a)(8) of the Property Code — is not a clone of the repealed law but is merely a jurisdictional statute titled “Jurisdiction.”
It states that “[a] district court has original and exclusive jurisdiction over all proceedings by or against a trustee and all proceedings concerning trusts, including proceedings to ... relieve a trustee from any or all of the duties, limitations, and restrictions otherwise existing under the terms of the trust instrument or of this subtitle.”
The specific proceedings that would modify the terms of the trust instrument are those set forth in section 112.054(a).
This statute provides:
(a) On the petition of a trustee or a beneficiary, a court may order that the trustee be changed, that the terms of the trust be modified, that the trustee be directed or permitted to do acts that are not authorized or that are forbidden by the terms of the trust, that the trustee be prohibited from performing acts required by the terms of the trust, or that the trust be terminated in whole or in part, if:
(1)the purposes of the trust have been fulfilled or have become illegal or impossible to fulfill;
(2) because of circumstances not known to or anticipated by the settlor, the order will further the purposes of the trust;
(3) modification of administrative, nondispositive terms of the trust is necessary or appropriate to prevent waste or avoid impairment of the trust’s administration;
(4) the order is necessary or appropriate to achieve the settlor’s tax objectives and is not contrary to the settlor’s intentions; or
(5) subject to Subsection (d) [which requires unanimous consent of the beneficiaries]:
(A) continuance of the trust is not necessary to achieve any material purpose of the trust; or
(B) the order is not inconsistent with a material purpose of the trust.
Without referring to any of the five exclusive grounds for permitting Mrs. Fisher to engage in otherwise forbidden transactions, the Appellees baldly contend that we should ratify those transactions because Mrs. Fisher acted in good faith and on fair and reasonable terms in preservation of the Trust’s assets. More significantly— and fatal to their argument — the Appellees do not bother to cite section 112.054
at all.
But, even if the Appellees had offered a more structured argument for rati
fying the transactions, we would deny the
retrospective
equitable relief that they seek. Of the five exclusive grounds for permitting an otherwise prohibited transaction, the statute singles out only the tax-objective provision, subsection (a)(4), for such post hoc relief, stating that “[t]he court may direct that an order described by Subsection (a)(4) has retroactive effect.”-
Under the doctrine of
inelusio unius est exclusio
alterius,
only subsection (a)(4)’s tax-provision may be given retroactive effect; relief under all other subsections must be requested and obtained prospectively, which, of course, Mrs. Fisher failed to do. We will not modify the terms of the Trust to permit the disputed transactions.
2. MDFI as Bona Fide Purchaser
The Appellees contend, again for the first time on appeal, that the contested transactions may not be revoked because Dan Fisher’s company, MDFI, was a bona fide purchaser under section 114.081(a) of the Texas Property Code.
“[S]tatus as a bona fide purchaser is an affirmative defense ....”
Although waiver applies to affirmative defenses that are not pleaded,
“a defendant does not waive an affirmative defense if it is raised at a pragmatically sufficient time, and [the plaintiff] was not prejudiced in its ability to respond.”
We hold, however, that by failing to raise the issue at the district court at all, the Appel-lees waived it.
Yet again, even if we were to assume
arguendo
that the bona fide purchaser claim was properly before us, we would reject it as meritless. According to the district court’s findings of fact, to which we would defer as not clearly erroneous, MDFI had prior knowledge of Mrs. Greaves’s interest in the Trust’s property as a beneficiary and of her objection to the transactions.
Even if they had preserved the argument, the Appellees could not prevent revocation of the disputed transactions on the ground that MDFI was a bona fide purchaser.
III. CONCLUSION
The district court concluded correctly that Mrs. Fisher, as trustee, breached her fiduciary duty to Mrs. Greaves and that Mrs. Fisher did not enter into the contested transactions as executrix or as the holder of the special power of attorney. The court erred, however, in holding that proof
of monetary damages was a prerequisite to rescinding the contested transactions. We therefore vacate the district court’s judgment, and remand for entry of judgment voiding those impermissible self-dealing transactions.
The district court’s judgment on remand shall be consistent with those portions of its amended findings of fact and conclusions of law that were not in error, i.e., those unrelated to a putative damages requirement.
VACATED and REMANDED WITH INSTRUCTIONS.