Helping Hands Home Care, Inc. D/B/A at Home Healthcare, Johnny James Grice v. Home Health of Tarrant County, Inc. D/B/A Home Health Specialties

393 S.W.3d 492, 2013 WL 326319, 2013 Tex. App. LEXIS 820
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 29, 2013
Docket05-08-01657-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by46 cases

This text of 393 S.W.3d 492 (Helping Hands Home Care, Inc. D/B/A at Home Healthcare, Johnny James Grice v. Home Health of Tarrant County, Inc. D/B/A Home Health Specialties) 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
Helping Hands Home Care, Inc. D/B/A at Home Healthcare, Johnny James Grice v. Home Health of Tarrant County, Inc. D/B/A Home Health Specialties, 393 S.W.3d 492, 2013 WL 326319, 2013 Tex. App. LEXIS 820 (Tex. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

OPINION

Opinion by

Justice MOSELEY.

We withdraw our November 21, 2012 opinion in this case and vacate the Court’s judgment of that date. This is now the opinion of the Court.

Home Health of Tarrant County, Inc. d/b/a/ Home Health Specialties (Specialties) sued Helping Hands Home Care, Inc. d/b/a At Home Healthcare (Helping Hands), Laura Delzell, and Johnny James Grice seeking lost profits based on claims of breach of employment contracts, breach of fiduciary duties, and intentional interference with contracts and future business relations. The alleged damages flow from Specialties’s loss of eleven accounts. After suit was filed and before trial, Specialties filed for bankruptcy and, on January 1, 2008, sold its business, except for this lawsuit. The jury found in favor of Specialties and the trial court entered judgment against appellants for $500,000. 2 However, although the jury awarded attorney’s fees to Specialties, the trial court granted Helping Hands’s motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict (JNOV) and Specialties did not receive an award for attorney’s fees.

On appeal appellants complain, among other things, that the evidence is legally *496 and factually insufficient to support the July’s findings that they breached any duties and that any breach caused Specialties’s claimed losses. They also claim there is no basis for awarding damages to Specialties based on evidence of lost profits accruing after Specialties sold its business and, because of the sale, the evidence is legally and factually insufficient to award damages for lost profits after the date of sale. Specialties cross-appealed asserting the trial court erred by granting JNOV and not awarding the attorney’s fees found by the jury.

We conclude the evidence is legally and factually sufficient to support the jury’s findings that appellants were liable for breach of certain employment contracts and intentional interference with agreements for Specialties to provide medical services to its clients. We also conclude the trial court did not err by awarding damages based on lost accounts up to the time Specialties was sold. However, we conclude the trial court erred by awarding lost profits accruing after the sale. Finally, we conclude the trial court did not err by refusing to award Specialties its attorney’s fees. We affirm the trial court’s final judgment in part and reverse and render in part.

I. INTRODUCTION

A. Factual Background

Both Specialties and Helping Hands provided private duty in-home nursing care for seriously ill pediatric patients. In June 2005, Helping Hands hired a former Specialties officer, appellant Johnny James Grice, as its chief operating officer. In February 2006, Helping Hands hired away two more former Specialties employees, Karen Duckworth and appellant Laura Delzell. About one month later, Helping Hands opened a new branch office with twelve patients, eleven of whom were former Specialties clients.

B. Trial

Specialties sued Helping Hands, Grice, Delzell, and Duckworth for breach of employment-related agreements; breach of fiduciary duty; and intentional interference with employment agreements, contracts, and future business relations with its clients. Specialties alleged the appellants and Duckworth utilized Specialties’s confidential information and improperly solicited its nurses and patients, causing the patients to transfer and causing damages of lost profits to Specialties. Specialties also requested attorney’s fees.

The jury was charged on breach of employment-related agreements, breach of fiduciary duty, intentional interference with agreements, conspiracy, damages, and attorney’s fees. The jury retened findings favorable to Specialties on all these issues, with the exception of one breach of contract issue favorable to Grice. The jury also did not find malice and did not award exemplary damages.

The trial court rendered judgment for Specialties against Delzell, Grice, and Helping Hands jointly and severally for $500,000 in lost profits. 3 The trial court denied appellants’ motion for new trial and Specialties’s motion for new trial on the attorney’s fee issue. 4

*497 C. Appeal

Appellants filed separate briefs: Delzell filed one, and Helping Hands and Grice filed another. They generally make the same arguments.

Appellants contend 5 the evidence is legally and factually insufficient to prove both that the appellants improperly solicited Specialties’s patients and that the patients’ subsequent transfers resulted from improper solicitations. As a result, they contend: (1) the jury’s answers to questions establishing liability cannot stand; (2) there is no evidence of intentional, tor-tious interference; 6 (3) the evidence is legally and factually insufficient to support the jury’s findings concerning the existence — and breach — of a fiduciary duty between Delzell, Duckworth, and Grice on the one hand and Specialties on the other; 7 (4) the trial court erred by admitting testimony from the parents of two patients whose children did not transfer from Specialties to Helping Hands; 8 and (5) the evidence is legally and factually insufficient to support the entire amount of damages found by the jury. 9 As to the factual sufficiency of the damages, appellants make two arguments: (1) the evidence is insufficient to prove appellants improperly solicited any of the patients who transferred and their transfers would not have occurred but for such solicitations; and (2) the evidence negates the recovery of any lost-profit damages accruing after the January 1, 2008 sale of the business.

Specialties filed a cross-appeal. In two issues, it argues the trial court erred by granting JNOV on the attorney’s fees awarded by the jury and by denying its motion to sever and motion for new trial on attorney’s fees.

II. THE RECORD

The record includes the following evidence.

A. Specialties’s Personnel and Work

Grice testified he worked at Specialties as the chief operating officer. As part of his employment, he signed a “Confidential and Proprietary Information Agreement” with Specialties’s predecessor company. 10 Grice also had a separate “Employment Termination and Stock Repurchase Agreement” with Specialties that prohibited him from soliciting Specialties’s patients to transfer to another agency and from using Specialties’s confidential information “in any fashion at any time.”

Janice Green was Specialties’s administrator and chief clinical officer. Green oversaw Specialties’s day-to-day operations *498

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
393 S.W.3d 492, 2013 WL 326319, 2013 Tex. App. LEXIS 820, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/helping-hands-home-care-inc-dba-at-home-healthcare-johnny-james-grice-texapp-2013.