Lubrizol Corp. v. Exxon Corp.

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedMay 20, 1992
Docket91-2514
StatusPublished

This text of Lubrizol Corp. v. Exxon Corp. (Lubrizol Corp. v. Exxon 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
Lubrizol Corp. v. Exxon Corp., (5th Cir. 1992).

Opinion

The LUBRIZOL CORP., Plaintiff–Appellant,

v.

EXXON CORP., Charles R. Evans, Richard D. Lower, and GATES Data Center, Defendants–Appellees.

No. 91–2514.

United States Court of Appeals,

Fifth Circuit.

April 15, 1992.

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

Before POLITZ, Chief Judge, KING, and EMILIO M. GARZA, Circuit Judges.

PER CURIAM:

The Lubrizol Corporation ("Lubrizol") commenced this action

for fraud against the Exxon Corporation ("Exxon"), two Exxon

employees ("Evans" and "Lower"), and an entity called GATES Data

Center on the grounds that defendants had mishandled confidential

Lubrizol information. Exxon counterclaimed for litigation expenses

incurred because of Lubrizol's breach of a covenant not to sue

entered into as part of a settlement agreement. The district court

granted judgment in favor of defendants as to Lubrizol's claims.

Those claims were separately appealed, and we affirmed the district

court's summary judgment on them.

As for Exxon's counterclaim, the district court, ruling that

Lubrizol's breach of the parties' covenant not to sue was obvious,

granted judgment in Exxon's favor. As a sanction for Lubrizol's

failure to comply with the district court's order directing

Lubrizol to submit specific attorney's fees information, the court accepted Exxon's proof of its attorney's fees and awarded Exxon

judgment for $2,424,462.04. Lubrizol now appeals that judgment.

Finding that Lubrizol's breach was obvious and that the

district court has broad discretion to sanction Lubrizol, we

affirm.

I

This case is the postscript to one we have heard before.1 The

following is a summary of the facts and procedural background

relevant to this appeal.

This action arises out of a lawsuit—the so-called "computer

dispute"—Lubrizol instituted in 1982 against Exxon in the United

States District Court for the District of New Jersey. During

discovery in the New Jersey suit, the parties stipulated to a

protective order requiring identification of all individuals having

access to the confidential information exchanged between the

parties. That order also specified the locations where this

information was to be housed and designated that the Exxon law

department would have exclusive control over the computer system

1 For a full narration of the facts, see Lubrizol Corp. v. Exxon Corp., 871 F.2d 1279 (5th Cir.1989). In that opinion authored by Judge Edith H. Jones, the court firmly rejected Lubrizol's argument that the covenant not to sue did not embrace its fraud claims. The court held that the settlement agreement "is unambiguous insofar as it released any claim that Lubrizol might have brought against Exxon resulting from the computer dispute." 871 F.2d at 1286. Also, the court was highly critical of Lubrizol's arguments to the contrary, saying they were "too contradictory ... to be credited" and had an "air of unreality" that was "too thin." Id. at 1284 n. 7, 1286. storing the confidential information. Asserting that Exxon had

violated this protective order, Lubrizol moved for sanctions. In

September 1984, the parties signed a settlement agreement that

disposed of all claims in the New Jersey case and provided for the

entry of a stipulation of dismissal with prejudice.

Lubrizol then filed a complaint in the United States District

Court for the Southern District of Texas against defendants Exxon,

Lower, and Evans, seeking some $200,000 in compensatory damages

allegedly caused by fraud and violations of the New Jersey

protective order. After two years of hotly contested discovery,

Lubrizol asserted that, because Exxon had deliberately destroyed

evidence, it could prove only about $40,000 in compensatory

damages. Exxon counterclaimed for breach of the settlement

agreement, violation of the New Jersey protective order, and fraud;

Lower and Evans counterclaimed for defamation. Ultimately, the

district court granted Exxon's motion for summary judgment, which

Lubrizol appealed to this court. See generally Lubrizol, 871 F.2d

at 1279.

In considering Lubrizol's first appeal, we held that

Lubrizol's fraud claims had been made in the earlier New Jersey

federal case in the form of motions for sanctions concerning the

computer dispute. Following that decision, and with Exxon's

counterclaim for breach of the covenant not to sue still pending,

Lubrizol—without prior notice to the district court, this court, or

to Exxon—filed a new lawsuit in the New Jersey federal district court seeking reformation of the settlement agreement between

Lubrizol and Exxon to exclude settlement of the computer dispute.

Exxon filed a motion to dismiss the New Jersey action, which was

granted on January 29, 1990. Lubrizol then appealed to the Third

Circuit, which affirmed that dismissal. See Lubrizol Corp. v.

Exxon Corp., 929 F.2d 960 (3rd Cir.1991).

Meanwhile, back in the Texas action, Exxon filed a motion for

summary judgment on its counterclaim for litigation expenses

incurred because of Lubrizol's breach of the covenant not to sue—a

covenant entered into as part of the settlement agreement resolving

Lubrizol's original New Jersey action. Exxon argued that, since

Lubrizol breached the settlement agreement by reasserting claims

that the United States District Court for the Southern District of

Texas and this court found were clearly and unambiguously covered

by Lubrizol's covenant not to sue, Lubrizol's breach was obvious as

a matter of law. Lubrizol filed a counter motion, arguing that its

breach was not obvious and that it had acted in good faith as a

matter of law. In November 1990, the district court granted

Exxon's motion and denied Lubrizol's.2

During a December 1990 conference, Exxon and Lubrizol agreed

2 Lubrizol then filed a motion for reconsideration, or, in the alternative, for certification under section 1292(b) of Title 28 for an interlocutory appeal. In its motion for reconsideration, Lubrizol argued for the first time that Exxon should be estopped from claiming the breach was an obvious one because of statements made by Exxon that allegedly led Lubrizol to believe that the computer dispute had not been settled. The district court denied this motion on that grounds that Lubrizol's assertion of estoppel was untimely. to submit affidavits to support and contest Exxon's litigation

expenses. Exxon filed two affidavits to prove total litigation

expenses of $2,424,462.04, which was accompanied by two volumes of

supporting documentation. Lubrizol then filed a motion to have the

court set a discovery schedule, to which the district court

responded by ordering ("February 1991 order") Lubrizol to file a

statement of any necessary discovery including, but not limited to,

the name of anyone to be deposed and the reason why. Lubrizol

responded by filing a ten-page affidavit and thirty-one page

memorandum that failed to set forth the items and amounts it was

not contesting, the amounts that it considered reasonable for items

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