Innovative Block of South Texas, Ltd. v. Valley Builders Supply, Inc. D/B/A Valley Block & Brick

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 19, 2018
Docket13-16-00419-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Innovative Block of South Texas, Ltd. v. Valley Builders Supply, Inc. D/B/A Valley Block & Brick (Innovative Block of South Texas, Ltd. v. Valley Builders Supply, Inc. D/B/A Valley Block & Brick) 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
Innovative Block of South Texas, Ltd. v. Valley Builders Supply, Inc. D/B/A Valley Block & Brick, (Tex. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

NUMBER 13-16-00419-CV

COURT OF APPEALS

THIRTEENTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS

CORPUS CHRISTI – EDINBURG

INNOVATIVE BLOCK OF SOUTH TEXAS, LTD., Appellant,

v.

VALLEY BUILDERS SUPPLY, INC. D/B/A VALLEY BLOCK AND BRICK, Appellee.

On appeal from the 430th District Court of Hidalgo County, Texas.

MEMORANDUM OPINION Before Chief Justice Valdez and Justices Contreras and Benavides Memorandum Opinion by Justice Contreras

This is an appeal from a jury verdict awarding over two million dollars in damages

in a business defamation suit. Appellant Innovative Block of South Texas, Ltd.

(Innovative) raises five issues contesting the judgment rendered in favor of appellee Valley Builders Supply, Inc. d/b/a Valley Block and Brick (Valley Block): (1) there was no

evidence supporting the jury’s finding of non-economic reputational damages; (2) Valley

Block’s reputational damages model “erroneously equated pecuniary harm with

reputational damages”; (3) the testimony of Valley Block’s expert witness was unreliable

and invalid; (4) the statements at issue were not defamatory; and (5) Casteel error

requires remand for a new trial. See Crown Life Ins. Co. v. Casteel, 22 S.W.3d 378, 389

(Tex. 2000). We affirm.

I. BACKGROUND

Both parties are companies engaged in the manufacturing and sale of concrete

blocks for use in the construction industry. Valley Block, established in 1940, was the

leading block manufacturer in the Rio Grande Valley until 2006, when Innovative opened

a manufacturing plant in La Feria, Texas. In the next few years, Valley Block suffered

financial difficulty, and it eventually shut down in 2010. In its live petition, Valley Block

contended that representatives of Innovative caused Valley Block’s demise by defaming

and disparaging it on several occasions.1

Stephen Stange, a sales representative for a supplier of raw materials used for

block production, testified that he met with Ryan Murphy, Innovative’s promoter and

former president. According to Stange, Murphy told him that Innovative would not be

competing directly with Valley Block because Innovative was “going to primarily get into

the . . . paver business” and would be competing with firms that manufactured in Mexico.

1 Valley Block also sued Innovative Block Nevada, LLC (Innovative Nevada). Innovative Nevada was initially a party to this appeal, but it filed an unopposed motion to dismiss noting that the jury’s findings and trial court’s judgment do not pertain to it. We severed Innovative Nevada’s appeal and dismissed that appeal pursuit to its motion. See Innovative Block Nev., LLC v. Valley Builders Supply, Inc., No. 13-17- 00311-CV, 2017 WL 2705036, at *1 (Tex. App.—Corpus Christi June 22, 2017, no pet.) (mem. op.).

2 According to Stange, Murphy showed him a photograph on his laptop and stated

that “this is the kind of quality our competition is making.” Stange was familiar with Valley

Block’s plant, however, and he recognized the photo as showing Valley Block’s “cull pile,”

or collection of blocks that had manufacturing defects and were intended to be sold at a

steep discount. Stange stated that every block manufacturer has a cull pile and so the

existence of one at Valley Block’s plant did not say anything about the quality of its

products in general. Stange advised Murphy that the picture depicted Valley Block’s cull

pile, and Murphy “changed the slide.”

Stange testified that he later met with John Sanchez, Innovative’s sales manager,

and that Sanchez told him: “[W]e are going to be so efficient and make such a good

quality product at a lower cost that—that, you know, we’ll put them out of business.”

According to Stange, Sanchez showed him the same picture of Valley Block’s cull pile

and claimed that “that is what their block looked like and they’re making an inferior block

and so on and so forth.” When Stange corrected Sanchez, noting that Valley Block makes

a “pretty good product,” Sanchez “quit talking” and “flipped the page again.”

Sanchez testified that he and Murphy were involved in setting up the La Feria plant.

In daily meetings with potential customers, Sanchez learned that local masons

“considered [Valley Block] as a standard here in south Texas” but that they wanted

another supplier. Sanchez testified:

At the beginning we purchased a lot of product from Old Castle, which is a company out of Houston. We would purchase it and we would tell customers that that product was being built by us. So at the beginning, customers would say, “Well, this is a superior product. It was something different.”

As I’m aware now, product in north Texas is cleaner, more refined. As you get lower to south Texas to these regions, there’s a lot [of] sodium involved, a lot of aggregate or minerals in the product itself that won’t enable you to 3 produce that product that they look for up in north Texas.

So that was an initial startup for us to say, “Well, this is product that we’re producing,” when, in reality, we were having a lot of issues at the plant producing adequate product. So we would tell our customers, this is product that we’re purchasing—I mean, that we’re selling to you-all.

Sanchez testified that David Riegert became Innovative’s president after Murphy,

and that Riegert had an active role in planning Innovative’s sales methods. Sanchez

believed Riegert was on “a mission” to put Valley Block out of business in part because

he was “desperate” to “guarantee” profits to Innovative’s investors. According to

Sanchez, Riegert told the sales team: “Okay. This is what we’re going to do. You’re

going to go out and tell customers that this product is inferior[, t]hey’re using bad

aggregate, and that’s how we’re going to get customers.” Sanchez opined that this

strategy “worked to a certain point,” though he agreed that he came to regret using

dishonest sales tactics.

In a March 6, 2008 email to Riegert, Sanchez stated in part:

Danny [Luna, an Innovative sales representative] told a customer that Valley Block was using bad product and that they use bad materials. Danny says Meme [Lerma, another Innovative sales representative] told them that they were using bad materials. They both said you told them to tell the customers the truth. We can not be telling customers that Valley Block uses bad materials. We don’t know if they do but we need to be careful.

Sanchez could not recall which customer was told by Luna that Valley Block was using

bad materials. Sanchez said that Luna and other sales staff were willing to use these

tactics because they were told by Riegert that if they did not meet sales quotas, they

would not get paid. According to Sanchez, Riegert initially denied telling Luna and Lerma

to disparage Valley Block’s products, but Riegert later said: “You know what, fine. I’m

not going to do it again.”

Sanchez stated that Innovative had an “internal lab” with a machine that could test

4 block quality and strength. Innovative staff brought customers in to watch while Valley

Block’s products were tested—but they did not tell the customers that the blocks being

tested were from Valley Block’s cull pile, or, in some cases, from unrelated manufacturers

in Mexico. Sanchez observed that “[s]ome customers were very loyal to [John] McCoy,

[Valley Block’s president]. So the only strategy to obtain those customers was, of course,

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Innovative Block of South Texas, Ltd. v. Valley Builders Supply, Inc. D/B/A Valley Block & Brick, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/innovative-block-of-south-texas-ltd-v-valley-builders-supply-inc-dba-texapp-2018.