Great Pines Water Co v. Liqui-Box Corp

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedMarch 10, 2000
Docket98-20198
StatusPublished

This text of Great Pines Water Co v. Liqui-Box Corp (Great Pines Water Co v. Liqui-Box Corp) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Great Pines Water Co v. Liqui-Box Corp, (5th Cir. 2000).

Opinion

Revised March 3, 2000

IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS

FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT

_____________________

No. 98-20198 _____________________

GREAT PINES WATER CO., INC.,

Plaintiff-Appellee,

versus

LIQUI-BOX CORPORATION,

Defendant-Appellant.

_______________________________________________________

Appeal from the United States District Court for the Southern District of Texas

_______________________________________________________ February 29, 2000

Before DAVIS, JONES, and Magill1, Circuit Judges

W. EUGENE DAVIS, Circuit Judge:

Appellant Liqui-Box Corporation (“Liqui-Box”) challenges the damage portion of the

judgment entered against it following a jury trial. Liqui-Box’s principal argument is that the lost

profit and compensatory damage elements of the lump sum award are not supported by sufficient

evidence. Our review of the record leads us to agree that Appellee Great Pines Water Company

1 Circuit Judge of the 8th Circuit, sitting by designation. (“Great Pines”) failed to produce sufficient evidence to establish the number of Great Pines customers

who canceled service due to Liqui-Box’s defective products. Because this fact was essential to Great

Pines’s proof of lost profits and consequential damages, we vacate the judgment and remand for a

partial new trial on damages

I

In 1986, Robert Hammond, Jr. purchased Great Pines, a bottled water distributor for

Ambrosia Water Company in Conroe, Texas. In 1988, Hammond, Jr. moved Great Pines to Houston

where he opened a water bottling plant and began producing and distributing his own bottled water.

Liqui-Box manufactures plastic water bottles, water bottle caps, and related equipment to

dispense bottled water. This line of Liqui-Box products is sometimes referred to as De-Cap systems.

In early 1990, Hammond, Jr. ordered 20 De-Cap systems from Liqui-Box. After inspecting the

sample units, Hammond, Jr. began ordering large quantities of De-Cap systems. Over the next three

and one-half years, Great Pines provided the De-Cap systems to about fifty-percent of its customers.

However, Great Pines experienced severe problems with these systems and determined that the Liqui-

Box products were seriously defective. Great Pines found that the De-cap systems constantly

malfunctioned by allowing excessive water into the coolers’ reservoirs, resulting in repeated overflow

leaks. Moreover, Great Pines asserted that the De-Cap systems failed to use a “check valve” —

commonly used in the industry — to prevent leaks. Finally, they contended that Liqui-Box’s bottle

caps included no “tear strip,” as was common on other manufacturers’ bottles, and thus, could not

be removed without using a utility knife, a process that often resulted in water bottle damage and

additional leaking.

2 Liqui-Box sued Great Pines to recover more than $22,698 in unpaid invoices for goods

purchased and shipped. In response, Great Pines asserted a claim against Liqui-Box for breach of

contract, fraud by misrepresentation, fraud by concealment, breach of warranty, and violation of the

Texas Deceptive Trade Practices Act (“DTPA”).

At trial, the district court submitted a special verdict, consisting of fourteen interrogatories

on liability and damages, to the jury. The jury found in favor of Great Pines on its breach of contract,

fraud by misrepresentation, and DTPA claims. Interrogatory No. 8 addressed actual damages for

the fraud and breach of contract claims. The court instructed the jury that it could consider four

elements of damages under these liability theories: lost profits, consequential damages, costs of

removing Liqui-Box’s products, and costs of replacing the removed equipment. The court defined

lost profits as “the loss of the revenue from the customers that Great Pines lost,” less expenses. The

court defined consequential damages as “the decline in value of the com pany due to loss of

customers.” Thus, the damages for both of these items was based on the number of customers Great

Pines lost as a result of Liqui-Box product defects. In response to Interrogatory No. 8, the jury

awarded damages of $795,870 on the fraud and breach of contract actions. Although the

interrogatory did not ask the jury to specify its award for each damage element, the jury included the

following marginal notes next to each of the four damage elements: “$0.00" for removal costs,

“$0.00" for replacement costs, “$122,531" for lost profits, and “$677,339" for consequential

damages. In answer to a separate interrogatory, the jury awarded Great Pines $1,360,000 in punitive

damages based on Liqui-Box’s fraudulent misrepresentation.

In response to Interrogatory No. 10, the jury awarded Great Pines $132,000 in actual

damages on its DTPA claim, which also included lost profits, consequential damages, removal costs,

3 and replacement costs damage elements. Again, the jury’s answer to this interrogatory included

marginal notes next to each damage element, indicating “$70,000" for removal costs, “$60,000" for

replacement costs, “-0-" for lost profits, and “-0-" for consequential damages.

Great Pines elected to recover on its fraud claim, because it afforded the largest recovery; and

the district court entered judgment against Liqui-Box in the amount of $2,373,285, consisting of the

$799,870 in actual damages (less an offset credit of $27,477 for Liqui-Box’s uncontested unpaid

account claim), $1,360,000 in punitive damages, and $240,892 in interest. In this appeal, Liqui-Box

does not challenge any of the jury’s liability findings. Rather, t he sole issues on appeal relate to

damages.

II

Liqui-Box’s principal argument on appeal is that Great Pines produced insufficient evidence

to support an award for either lost profits or consequential damages. In support of this argument,

Liqui-Box focuses on the inadequacy o f evidence on a fact critical to an award for either of these

elements: the number of cust omers who canceled Great Pines’s water service because of defective

Liqui-Box products.

While recovery of lost profits does not require that the loss be susceptible to exact calculation,

the amount of the loss must be shown by competent evidence with reasonable certainty.2 While this

reasonably certain evidence determination is a fact intensive inquiry, opinions of estimated lost profits

must, at a minimum, be based on objective facts, figures, or data from which the amount of lost profits

2 See Formosa Plastics Corp. U.S.A. v. Presidio Eng’rs & Contractors, Inc., 960 S.W.2d 41, 50-51 (Tex. 1998); Holt Atherton Industries, Inc. v. Hiene, 835 S.W.2d 80, 84 (Tex. 1992).

4 can be ascertained.3 In addition, when lost profits are dependent on a plaintiff’s lost contracts with

customers, Texas law requires that such contracts be proved with reasonable certainty, both as to their

existence and their number.4

At trial, Great Pines presented three witnesses who testified on the issue of how many

customers were lost due to Liqui-Box’s conduct. These included Robert Hammond, Sr., Great Pines’s

plant manager, Robert Hammond, Jr., Great Pines’s majority owner, and David Williams, Great

Pines’s former Chief Financial Officer. Robert Hammond, Sr. and Jr.

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