FONTENOT PETRO-CHEM & MARINE SERVICES, INC. v. LaBono

993 S.W.2d 455, 1999 WL 304280
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 1, 1999
Docket13-97-420-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 993 S.W.2d 455 (FONTENOT PETRO-CHEM & MARINE SERVICES, INC. v. LaBono) 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
FONTENOT PETRO-CHEM & MARINE SERVICES, INC. v. LaBono, 993 S.W.2d 455, 1999 WL 304280 (Tex. Ct. App. 1999).

Opinion

*457 OPINION

NOAH KENNEDY, Justice (Retired).

Appellee, Linda LaBono (hereinafter either LaBono or appellee), in her Eighth Amended Original Petition sued for slander and slander per se. She named as defendants an individual, Darill Fontenot, and two corporations, Fontenot Petrochemical and Marine Services, Inc. (Fon-tenot) and F.P. & M. Services, Inc. (F.P. & M.). She alleged that a vice-president and officer of both corporations, Dale Cormier, had made statements in the presence of employees of both corporations and customers of the corporations that appellee had been a prostitute in the past and had gained her wealth as a result of this activity. She further alleged that defendant Darill Fontenot made similar statements to employees of both corporations.

Her petition alleges that the original statements by Cormier were made in November of 1998 and that the further statements of this nature were made in the “break room” of both corporations in June of 1994. The “further statements” were alleged to have been made by Cormier and Darill Fontenot, the owner of F.P. & M.

There was no dispute that at the time of the alleged slanderous statements LaBono worked for F.P. & M. She maintains that she worked for both appellants. The alleged statements were originally made at a crawfish boil which was a part of a convention event attended by people in appellants’ line of work.

Trial was to a jury which found:

Question No. 1 — Appellee was slandered by Dale Cormier but not by Darill Fon-tenot.
Question No. 2 — The slanderous statements made by Dale Cormier were slanderous per se.
Question No. 8 — Fontenot Petro-Chemical and Marine Services, Inc. and F.P. & M. Services, Inc. were operating as a single business enterprise or an alter ego at the time of the slanderous statements.
Question No. 4 — Dale Cormier was a vice-principal of both Fontenot and F.P. & M.
Question No. 5 — Not answered.
Question No. 6 — The slanderous statements of Dale Cormier were made in the scope of employment.
Question No. 7 — Actual damages to La-Bono totaled $265,000.
Question No. 8 — The slander committed by Dale Cormier was committed with malice.
Question No. 9 did not award any exemplary damages against Darill Fontenot. Question No. 10 — Neither corporation was reckless in employing Dale Cormier. Question No. 11 awarded $50,000 against each corporation as exemplary damages.

The court’s judgment granted recovery to LaBono in the amount of $265,000 as actual damages against both corporations, jointly and severally, together with post-judgment interest and prejudgment interest. In addition, the court awarded $50,-000 against each corporation as exemplary damages and ordered that the two corporations shall be jointly and severaly liable for the exemplary damages. 2

Prior to the trial before the jury, F.P. & M. pleaded the statute of limitations and requested summary judgment on the issue which was denied by the court. This denial of summary judgment is the básis of F.P. & M.’s first issue.

LaBono does not contest the fact that her suit against F.P. & M. was brought after the statute of limitations had run, ie., more than one year after the day the cause of action accrued. 3 She alleges, for the *458 first time in her brief, however, that she was misled as to the existence of an additional party (F.P. & M.) through “false, sworn, discovery and affidavit testimony” which disclosed facts about the “employment involved in the occurrences made the basis of the suit.”

The statute of limitations is an affirmative defense. The defendant thus bears the initial burden to plead, prove, and secure findings to sustain its plea of limitations. Tex. Rules Civ. Proc. Rule 94 (Vernon 1979); Woods v. William M. Mercer, Inc., 769 S.W.2d 515, 517 (Tex.1988). The plaintiff may raise the discovery rule as an excuse for its failure to file suit within the appropriate period of limitations. Id at 517. A party seeking to avail itself of the discovery rule must therefore plead the rule in response to defendants assertion of the defense as a matter of avoidance. Id at 518.

Woods further stated:

A defendant who has established that the suit is barred cannot be expected to anticipate the plaintiffs defenses to that bar. A matter in avoidance of the statute of limitations that is not raised affirmatively by the pleadings will, therefore, be deemed waived.

Woods, 769 S.W.2d at 518.

In the case before us, appellee relies upon Palmer v. Enserch Corporation, 728 S.W.2d 431 (Tex.App.-Austin 1987, writ ref'd.) and Continental Southern Lines, Inc. v. Hilland, 528 S.W.2d 828 (Tex.1975). Continental Southern was a case similar to the one before us. Plaintiff first sued Continental Trailways, Inc. The bus and station were marked in large letters “Continental Trailways.” On one side, near the rear of the bus, is the information, in one inch letters, that the bus was owned by Continental Southern Lines. Continental Southern moved for summary judgment after the limitations had run. The trial court denied defendant’s limitation plea, which action was affirmed by the court of appeals. The supreme court reversed these judgments, the result of which affirmed defendant’s plea of limitations, however, in the interest of justice, it remanded for a new trial to permit plaintiff to prove that defendant was cognizant of the facts, was not misled, or placed at a disadvantage. Continental Southern, 528 S.W.2d at 831. Palmer was a case where, in response to a motion for summary judgment based upon limitations, plaintiff amended his pleadings before the hearing, alleging liability of defendant in an additional capacity as the surviving corporation following a merger. Judgment for defendant was reversed and remanded for trial on its merits. In our case, appellee filed nothing in response to the motion for summary judgment. In addition, we note another difference between our case and those cited by appellee. Mr. Palmer was a total stranger to Enseareh as was Mrs. Hilland to Continental Southern Lines. LaBono, by her testimony, was an employee of both Fontenot and F.P. & M. She must have had some knowledge that they were interrelated before the lapse of the one year limitation following her first knowledge of the statements made about her.

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993 S.W.2d 455, 1999 WL 304280, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fontenot-petro-chem-marine-services-inc-v-labono-texapp-1999.