International Paper Company v. Signature Industrial Services, LLC and Jeffry M. Ogden

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 30, 2020
Docket13-18-00186-CV
StatusPublished

This text of International Paper Company v. Signature Industrial Services, LLC and Jeffry M. Ogden (International Paper Company v. Signature Industrial Services, LLC and Jeffry M. Ogden) 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
International Paper Company v. Signature Industrial Services, LLC and Jeffry M. Ogden, (Tex. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

NUMBER 13-18-00186-CV

COURT OF APPEALS

THIRTEENTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS

CORPUS CHRISTI - EDINBURG

INTERNATIONAL PAPER COMPANY, Appellant,

v.

SIGNATURE INDUSTRIAL SERVICES, LLC AND JEFFRY M. OGDEN, Appellees.

On appeal from the 60th District Court of Jefferson County, Texas.

MEMORANDUM OPINION Before Chief Justice Contreras and Justices Benavides and Perkes Memorandum Opinion by Justice Benavides By eleven issues, appellant International Paper Company (IP) challenges the jury’s

verdict awarding damages to appellees Signature Industrial Services, LLC (Signature)

and Jeffry Ogden. IP’s first five issues challenge Signature’s claims and allege: (1-3)

Signature failed to present legally sufficient evidence for its breach-of-contract, fraud, and

promissory estoppel claims; (4) legally insufficient evidence supports Signature’s consequential damages award; and (5) a new trial should be granted because the jury

awarded excessive actual damages to Signature. IP’s next three issues relate to Ogden’s

claims and allege: (6) judgment should be rendered for IP on Ogden’s breach-of-contract

claim because Ogden was neither a party to nor a third-party beneficiary to the contract

between Signature and IP; (7) the evidence is legally or factually insufficient to support

Ogden’s fraud claim; and (8) Ogden’s claim for mental anguish damages is not supported

by legally sufficient evidence or in the alternative, a new trial should be granted on mental

anguish damages because the award was excessive. In its ninth issue, IP asserts that a

new trial is warranted in relation to both Signature and Ogden’s claims because the trial

court erred in excluding the testimony of IP’s key expert. Issues ten and eleven relate to

IP’s counterclaims and allege that: (10) judgment should be rendered in favor of IP and

against Signature for IP’s costs incurred defending against Ogden’s claims; and (11)

Signature should indemnify IP in the event that any portion of the judgment in favor of

Ogden, and against IP, survives. We affirm in part and reverse and render in part.

I. BACKGROUND1

The claims in this dispute involve a contract between Signature and IP to build a

slaker for IP’s Orange, Texas paper mill in March 2014. IP asked Signature to assemble

and install a new slaker, a large vessel that recycles certain chemicals used in the

papermaking process, during the annual outage shutdown of the mill. IP initially

approached Signature and other companies and asked them to bid on the slaker project;

1 This case is before this Court on transfer from the Ninth Court of Appeals in Beaumont pursuant to a docket equalization order issued by the Supreme Court of Texas. See TEX. GOV’T CODE ANN. § 73.001.

2 however, Signature was the only company who executed a bid due to the state of IP’s bid

package. The initial bid package lacked drawings and necessary documents, although

seven addendums were later issued by IP. It was debated at trial if the addendums

provided enough detail for Signature to make a complete bid. Nonetheless, Signature

made a bid in the amount of $775,464.30 for the slaker project. It was also agreed that

work that was not contained in the bid package could be paid through field charge orders

(FCOs) that were mutually agreed to in writing and approved prior to work commencing.

Signature began work on the slaker project in February 2014 and work was

completed around early May 2014. The project was fraught with delays, which Signature

attributed to IP. Soon after commencing the project, IP approved and paid FCOs

submitted by Signature. During the course of the slaker project, IP representatives told

Signature’s representatives that instead of submitting each FCO for approval prior to

executing the work, verbal approval would be sufficient and Signature could just submit

one large FCO upon completion of the project. The modification to the FCO procedure

and what was required for payment is the crux of the lawsuit.

Signature submitted multiple FCOs as the project wrapped up, and IP refused to

pay the invoices submitted because the amounts far exceeded what IP had expected. IP

claimed that Signature’s FCOs lacked the appropriate backup documentation needed to

justify the amounts invoiced. After the project was completed in May 2014, IP and

Signature held two meetings between their representatives to try to resolve the unpaid

invoices. Neither meeting was successful and in August 2014, Signature filed this suit

alleging fraud, breach of contract, and promissory estoppel. Signature claimed it had

3 seventeen unpaid invoices that IP refused to pay: ten relating to the slaker contract and

seven related to other non-slaker projects.

Ogden, Signature’s president, intervened in the lawsuit and alleged personal

claims of fraud and breach of contract against IP based on the slaker contract. Ogden

alleged he suffered actual damages because Signature was penalized for failing to pay

its employees’ withheld payroll taxes2 to the Internal Revenue Service (IRS). According

to Ogden, Signature used its employee trust funds to operate its business due to IP’s

non-payment of invoices. Ogden alleged he became personally liable for those amounts

and the IRS penalties on Signature. He also requested damages for mental anguish and

damage to his credit reputation.

A. Signature’s Case-in-Chief

1. Claude Wilhelm

Claude Wilhelm, Signature’s senior vice president, was Signature’s first witness at

trial. Wilhelm testified that he had worked and developed relationships at the Orange mill

before IP bought it and that Signature had worked many projects for IP at the mill, both

before and during the slaker project. Wilhelm explained that the other partners in

Signature wanted to turn down the slaker project initially because the bid documents were

“inadequate.” He identified the different players involved in the slaker project: Steve

Clayton, who was Signature’s project manager; Eddie Edwards, IP’s project manager;

Ray Langley, IP’s construction manager; Greg Bennett, IP’s subsequent construction

2 Payroll taxes are withholdings from an employee’s paycheck that are held in a trust account for

the United States government and paid to the IRS. Signature had used its employees’ withheld payroll taxes for the business’s operating costs and was penalized by the IRS for doing so by the time of trial. 4 manager; Spencer Shawhan, IP’s engineering manager and Edwards’s supervisor; and

Blake Spurlock, Signature’s subsequent project manager.

Wilhelm explained that the bid for $775,464.30 was for the “knowns” on the slaker

project and that Edwards had stated that changes required from the bid could be handled

with FCOs. Wilhelm stated that the bid did not include piping, another source of contention

between the parties. Signature was wary of submitting a bid initially because as Wilhelm

said, “everything was off,” from labor to material, due to the vagueness of the documents

submitted in the bid package. However, IP was on a tight timeline to get the project done

during the shutdown and asked Signature to start before the contract was officially signed.

There were issues from the outset3: the slaker was not clean as promised when Signature

arrived and the cleaning caused delays, the drawings had engineering defects that had

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