Graco Robotics, Inc. v. Oaklawn Bank

914 S.W.2d 633, 1995 WL 764230
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 20, 1996
Docket06-94-00120-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 914 S.W.2d 633 (Graco Robotics, Inc. v. Oaklawn Bank) 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
Graco Robotics, Inc. v. Oaklawn Bank, 914 S.W.2d 633, 1995 WL 764230 (Tex. Ct. App. 1996).

Opinion

OPINION

CORNELIUS, Chief Justice.

GRI sued OaHawn for breach of an escrow agreement executed to ensure GRI’s payment for construction work at Red River Army Depot. GRI alleged that the bank breached the escrow agreement, breached its fiduciary duty, and committed fraud, negligence, negligent misrepresentation, and conversion. The jurors found that the bank breached the contract and committed some of the torts. Because the jurors also found that conditions precedent to the bank’s performance had not occurred, and because they found no tort damages, the trial court rendered a take-nothing judgment.

GRI appeals, alleging that the trial court erred: in rendering a take-nothing judgment on the breach of contract claim based on the jurors’ findings that the bank breached the contract, but that the conditions precedent had failed to occur; in rendering a take-nothing judgment on the tort issues because GRI proved tort damages as a matter of law and because the jurors’ finding of no tort damages was against the great weight and preponderance of the evidence; by instructing a verdict against GRI on its conversion claim; and in admitting in evidence deposition testimony taken in another lawsuit.

*638 Oaklawn Bank has assigned cross-points, alleging that the court erred: in denying its motion to withdraw deemed admissions; in finding that the deemed admissions established the existence of a valid escrow agreement because evidence controverting the admissions was introduced without objection at trial; in not granting the bank a judgment because GRI elected to pursue an inconsistent remedy by obtaining a judgment on the same claim in Michigan; and by failing to give the bank a $419,000.00 credit on any judgment in this case because GRI had previously received that sum in satisfaction of its damages.

We reverse the judgment and render judgment for GRI.

The U.S. Army contracted with Mahon, Inc. of Saginaw, Michigan to build a $2.6 million vehicle paint booth and curing oven at Red River Army Depot near Texarkana. John Frimberger was Mahon’s principle owner. Walter House, Red River project engineer, designed the project and administered the contract. The project was to have a manual conveyor line, Line A, and a robotic conveyor line, Line B. Throughout 1985 and 1986, Mahon worked with Graco,' Inc., of Minneapolis, Minnesota, and Graco Robotics, Inc., a subsidiary owned eighty percent by Graco, Inc. GRI, having never worked with Mahon, requested that an escrow agreement be executed making the bank the escrow agent to receive and pay out the payments to be earned. GRI submitted a draft of the escrow agreement to Mahon, which passed it on to the bank. The bank says it made significant changes in the draft agreement, compiled a Schedule A that listed all the vendors that would be subject to the agreement, and then sought approval from all the vendors. This draft agreement was signed September 25, 1985, by bank officer Gary McCauley and by Frimberger. The bank argues that the escrow agreement never took effect because not all of the vendors approved it. Because of deemed admissions, however, the court found that the escrow agreement became effective on July 26,1985.

Mahon assigned all its contract payments to the bank. The escrow agreement set this procedure for release of funds: Red River would send contract payments to the bank. Vendors would present to Mahon invoices corresponding to the payments set out in Schedule A. Mahon would present to the bank and the vendors written approval for the payments. The bank was to then pay the vendors and itself by cashier’s check as set out in Schedule A. Schedule A listed Graeo’s payment schedule as follows: Line A — pumping equipment payable within 30 days after acceptance by Red River Army Depots (sic) Project Engineer.

Line A $120,000.00
Line B — pumping equipment payable within 30 days after acceptance by Red River Army Depots (sic) Project Engineer.
Line B $602,500.00

During the first half of 1986, GRI installed equipment at Red River. Between April and July 1986, GRI invoiced Mahon for $650,-250.00, in two installments. The bank never paid GRI because it contended that Red River never accepted the work as required by Schedule A of the escrow agreement. From July 1985 to September 1986, Red River sent contract payments to the bank as escrow agent, and the bank placed them in two accounts in the name of Mahon, Inc. The funds were never escrowed. Instead they were disbursed, some by cashier’s cheek to vendors listed on the bank’s list of vendors, and some to other parties not identified as vendors. Some of the funds were transferred directly to Mahon, either to a money market checking account at Oaklawn or to a Mahon account in Michigan. When McCau-ley, for the bank, received checks from Red River, he simply deposited them in the two accounts in Mahon’s name and then disbursed them on instructions from Frimber-ger or someone else at Mahon.

In September 1986, after GRI had delivered most of the required equipment, it still had not been paid. Graco, Inc.’s chief financial officer, Roger King, went to Texarkana in October to meet with bank officials. He discovered that the bank had already disbursed the contract funds. GRI then removed some computer boards from the equipment at Red River to disable the equipment; in effect, it walked off the job. That *639 same month, King and Frimberger met to discuss GRI’s return to the project. Mahon paid GRI approximately $100,000.00. King told Mahon to rescind its assignment of funds to the bank and to execute a new assignment for the remaining funds available under the contract, about $200,000.00 in re-tainage. King prepared and Frimberger signed three letters, dated October 15, 1986. The first directed the bank to pay to GRI all amounts held by the bank under that agreement. The second, which King cosigned, directed the bank to account for Red River money it' received pursuant to Mahon’s assignment. The third, with an interlineation reflecting Mahon’s direct payment of $100,-000.00 to GRI, directed the bank to pay $550,250.00 pursuant to GRI’s invoices of April 25, 1986 and July 17, 1986. King on October 21, 1986, on Graco, Inc.’s letterhead, mailed these three letters to the bank. In November 1986, the bank placed a hold on Mahon’s account and informed GRI it would forward all future deposits to GRI. GRI received no more funds.

In January 1987, GRI sued Mahon and its guarantor, Genevieve Frimberger, in Michigan. The Michigan court gave GRI permission to sue Oaklawn Bank in Texas, and it brought suit in April of 1987, alleging breach of contract and various torts. The case was tried to a jury in late May 1994. At the close of GRI’s case in chief, the court granted directed verdicts for the bank on various causes of action, including conversion. GRI requested one jury question, which the court denied, before the court submitted the charge to the jury. 1

Because of deemed admissions, the court considered the escrow agreement effective as a matter of law. The jurors found that the bank breached the contract, that $550,250.00 would compensate GRI for its contract damages, and that $280,000.00 was a reasonable attorney’s fee, but that conditions precedent to the bank’s obligation to perform under the escrow agreement failed to occur.

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Bluebook (online)
914 S.W.2d 633, 1995 WL 764230, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/graco-robotics-inc-v-oaklawn-bank-texapp-1996.