Mood v. Kronos Products, Inc.

245 S.W.3d 8, 2007 Tex. App. LEXIS 9243, 2007 WL 4181671
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 28, 2007
Docket05-06-00111-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by58 cases

This text of 245 S.W.3d 8 (Mood v. Kronos Products, Inc.) 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
Mood v. Kronos Products, Inc., 245 S.W.3d 8, 2007 Tex. App. LEXIS 9243, 2007 WL 4181671 (Tex. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

OPINION

Opinion by Justice MORRIS.

This case arises out of the breach and termination of a distributorship agreement for Greek foods between Kronos Products, Inc. and Paul Mood, individually and d/b/a K & M Distributors. After disregarding a portion of the jury verdict, the trial court rendered judgment awarding Kronos $211, 342.70, plus attorney’s fees. The trial court also rendered a take-nothing judgment on Mood’s counterclaim for breach of the agreement. Mood filed this appeal contending the trial court erred in disregarding the jury’s answers to three questions. Kronos filed a cross-appeal asserting the trial court erred in failing to disregard the jury’s answer to another question. For the reasons that follow, we affirm the trial court’s judgment.

I.

In 1992, Kronos and Mood executed an agreement establishing Mood as an exclusive distributor of Central Gyros Company products within a 50-mile radius of Dallas, Austin, and Oklahoma City. Included in the agreement was a sixty-day notice of termination provision. In July 2003, Kro-nos informed Mood that it was going to sell Central Gyros Company products directly to one of Mood’s customers, Dan’s Food Service, in direct violation of the distributorship agreement. Concerned about his future with Kronos, Mood contacted another supplier and purchased products from it in October 2003. Mood also continued to order from Kronos.

On November 18, 2003, Mood placed an order with Kronos. One or two days later, the parties had a telephone conversation. According to Mood, Kronos informed him at that time it was terminating their relationship and would not be shipping his November 18 order. Kronos contends, however, that it refused to ship any more product to Mood after he refused to pay his past due account balance. It also asserts that, according to the agreement, Mood’s purchase of similar products from a competing supplier entitled it to immediately terminate the distributorship without the need for sixty days’ notice.

Kronos filed this suit to recover the balance due on Mood’s account. Mood counterclaimed for breach of the distributorship agreement. At trial, Kronos stipulated that selling Central Gyros brand products directly to Dan’s was a breach of the distributorship agreement. Likewise, Mood stipulated that his failure to pay Kronos’s invoices was a breach of the parties’ distributorship agreement. By answers to the trial court’s questions to them, the jury in question 1 awarded Kro-nos $188,292.55 in damages for Mood’s failure to pay its invoices, awarded Kronos in question 2 attorney’s fees up to and including an appeal to the Texas Supreme Court, awarded Mood in question 3 damages in the amount of $30,000 for Kronos’s sale of Central Gyros brand products directly to Dan’s, found in question 4 that Kronos *11 failed to comply with the sixty-day notice provision for terminating the agreement, awarded Mood in question 5 damages in the amount of $550,000 for Kronos’s failure to comply with the notice provision, and awarded Mood in question 6 attorney’s fees up to and including an appeal to the Texas Supreme Court.

The trial court rendered judgment in favor of Kronos based on the jury’s answers to questions 1 and 2. In response to Kronos’s post-verdict motion, however, the trial court disregarded the jury’s verdict on questions 3, 5, and 6 and rendered a take-nothing judgment on Mood’s counterclaim. This appeal followed.

II.

In his first four issues, Mood asserts the trial court erred in disregarding the jury’s answers to questions 3, 5, and 6. A trial court may disregard a jury finding that has no support in the evidence. See Tex.R. Civ. P. 301; Tiller v. McLure, 121 S.W.3d 709, 713 (Tex.2003). In determining whether there is no evidence to support the jury verdict, we examine the evidence in the light most favorable to the verdict, crediting favorable evidence if reasonable jurors could have done so and disregarding contrary evidence unless reasonable jurors could not have done so. City of Keller v. Wilson, 168 S.W.3d 802, 827 (Tex.2005).

In response to question 3, the jury awarded Mood $30,000 in lost profits for Kronos’s actions in selling Central Gyros brand products to Dan’s, a breach of the distributorship agreement to which Kronos stipulated at the beginning of trial. Mood does not dispute that there was no expert testimony or other evidence that provided a definite lost profit figure or a specific calculation for this breach. Rather, Mood contends the following evidence enabled the jury to derive its own calculation for lost profits and arrive at the $30,000 figure: (1) invoices dated August 2003 through March 2005 from Kronos to Dan’s, (2) evidence that Mood averaged about $255,762 per year in gross sales to Dan’s, (3) Mood’s general assertion that he usually operated on a gross profit margin of twenty percent, and (4) Mood’s expert witness’s acknowledgment that Mood told him eighty percent of his sales were from Central Gyros brand products.

The invoices from Kronos to Dan’s do not support the jury figure as there was no evidence that Mood and Kronos were selling the same Central Gyros brand items to Dan’s at the same volume or at the same pricing scale. In any event, Kronos’s gross sales to Dan’s, as reflected in the invoices, are no evidence of Mood’s lost profits from Kronos’s admitted breach. Mood’s reliance on the $255,762 annual sales figure to Dan’s is similarly misplaced. Kronos’s counsel mentioned this figure during his cross-examination of Mood’s damages expert Harrison Payne. Apparently, counsel’s staff derived the figure from Mood’s invoices to Dan’s that Mood provided to Kronos. Payne acknowledged he had not reviewed these invoices. Counsel simply asked Payne to assume the $255,762 figure was correct for a hypothetical question that followed. Thus, this figure was no evidence to support the jury’s lost profit award in question 3.

Finally, Mood’s general statement that the company operated on a twenty percent gross margin from 1990 through 2004 and evidence that eighty percent of his overall sales came from Central Gyros brand products do not support the jury award because there was no evidence that Mood’s sales to Dan’s were similar to his overall sales percentages for Central brand products or that his gross margin on Central brand products to Dan’s, or anyone one else, was twenty percent. Thus, there was *12 no evidence from which the jury could calculate Mood’s lost profits as a result of Kronos’s sale of Central brand products to Dan’s. See Holt Atherton Indus, v. Heine, 835 S.W.2d 80, 85 (Tex.1992). Because there is no evidence to support the jury’s $30,000 award, the trial court did not err in disregarding the jury’s answer to question number 3.

Mood also challenges the trial court’s ruling disregarding the jury’s $550,000 award in question 5 for Kronos’s failure to comply with the distributorship agreement’s sixty-day notice provision. Question 5 instructed the jury to consider as the only element of damages lost profits that were the natural, probable, and foreseeable consequence of Kronos’s failure to give notice.

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Bluebook (online)
245 S.W.3d 8, 2007 Tex. App. LEXIS 9243, 2007 WL 4181671, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mood-v-kronos-products-inc-texapp-2007.