Rose Tristan, Individually and D/B/A Rose Cleaning Services and Olga Cristan v. C.A. Walker, Inc. and Any Unknown Individuals

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 27, 2003
Docket13-01-00410-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Rose Tristan, Individually and D/B/A Rose Cleaning Services and Olga Cristan v. C.A. Walker, Inc. and Any Unknown Individuals (Rose Tristan, Individually and D/B/A Rose Cleaning Services and Olga Cristan v. C.A. Walker, Inc. and Any Unknown Individuals) 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.

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Rose Tristan, Individually and D/B/A Rose Cleaning Services and Olga Cristan v. C.A. Walker, Inc. and Any Unknown Individuals, (Tex. Ct. App. 2003).

Opinion



NUMBER 13-01-410-CV

COURT OF APPEALS

THIRTEENTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS

CORPUS CHRISTI - EDINBURG




ROSE TRISTAN, INDIVIDUALLY AND D/B/A ROSE CLEANING

SERVICES AND OLGA CRISTAN

, Appellants,

v.



C.A. WALKER, INC. AND ANY UNKNOWN INDIVIDUALS , Appellee.


On appeal from the County Court at Law No. 2

of Nueces County, Texas.


MEMORANDUM OPINION


Before Justices Yañez, Castillo, and Dorsey (1)

Opinion by Justice Castillo



Appellant/cross-appellee Rose Tristan ("Tristan"), the sole proprietor of Rose Cleaning Services, sued appellee/cross-appellant C.A. Walker, Inc. ("Walker"), a general contractor, claiming breach of contract or quantum meruit and fraud. Tristan and appellant/cross-appellee Olga Cristan ("Cristan"), Tristan's sister and an employee of Rose Cleaning Services, also sued Walker for defamation. The jury found in favor of Tristan on her breach-of-contract and fraud claims and against Tristan and Cristan on their defamation claims. The trial court signed a judgment that reflected the jury's findings and awarded $20,411.25 to Tristan for breach of contract, $15,263.00 for fraud, pre-judgment interest on both awards, post-judgment interest on the total judgment, and, pursuant to section 38.001 of the civil practice and remedies code, (2)$5,220.00 in attorney fees plus a conditional attorney-fee award on appeal. Walker appeals the adverse judgment. Tristan and Cristan appeal the take-nothing judgment on their defamation claims. We affirm in part and reverse and render in part.

I. WALKER'S ISSUES ON APPEAL



In three issues, Walker challenges the trial court's: (1) denial of Walker's motion for election of remedies; (2) denial of Walker's motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict; and (3) award of attorney fees.

A. Double Recovery



In its first issue, Walker asserts that the trial court should have granted its motion for election of remedies, arguing that the damages the jury found on Tristan's fraud claim were the same damages the jury found on her breach-of-contract claim, which was the value of her uncompensated services, resulting in a double recovery. (3) Tristan counters that the damages found by the jury for Walker's fraud were distinct and separate from the damages the jury found for Walker's breach of contract, which is not a double recovery.

1. The Trial Court Record


The record shows that Tristan separately pleaded breach of contract, quantum meruit, fraud, and, along with Cristan, defamation. The trial court submitted each theory to the jury in separate liability and damages questions. The jury instructions in the breach-of-contract and fraud questions defined different measures of damages for the two claims:

As to breach of contract:

The difference between the amount paid by C.A. Walker, Inc. to Rose Cleaning Service for performing the work and the amount C.A. Walker had agreed to pay Rose Cleaning Service for such work, less the cost, if any, to C.A. Walker for completing the work or remedying any defect. (Do not deduct cost of completion attributable to C.A. Walker) (4)

As to fraud:

The reasonable and necessary costs of any uncompensated cleaning services performed by Rose's Cleaning Service;

The reasonable value of the business Rose Cleaning Service to Rose Tristan. (5)

Walker did not object to the different measure-of-damages instructions in the questions submitted to the jury on Tristan's breach-of-contract and fraud theories of recovery. Nor did it move for an instructed verdict as to those questions.

With the court's measure-of-damages instructions before it, the jury found different damages for each of the two theories of liability. The judgment separately awarded the damages found by the jury and separately calculated the pre-judgment interest awarded on each. By contrast, in addition to breach-of-contract and fraud damages, the jury also found $20,411.25 in damages for Tristan's quantum-meruit claim, which Tristan had pleaded alternatively to the breach-of-contract claim. However, the judgment did not award Tristan damages on the alternative quantum-meruit claim.

2. Analysis


A double recovery does not occur unless the plaintiff obtains more than one recovery for the same injury. See Waite Hill Servs., Inc. v. World Class Metal Works, Inc., 959 S.W.2d 182, 184 (Tex. 1998) (per curiam) (citing Stewart Title Guar. Co. v. Sterling, 822 S.W.2d 1, 7 (Tex. 1991)). Judgment awarding Tristan damages on both her breach-of-contract claim and her fraud claim is proper because: (1) Tristan pleaded separate theories of liability; (2) the two theories of liability arose from separate injuries; and (3) each theory of liability resulted in a separate finding of damages. See Birchfield v. Texarkana Mem'l Hosp., 747 S.W.2d 361, 367 (Tex. 1987) (discussing factors).

We find this case analogous to Medical Air Services Association v. Kebert, 26 S.W.3d 663, 667-68 (Tex. App.-Corpus Christi 2000, pet. denied). In Keber, a sales representative sued for sales commissions resulting from sales of an insurance product. We allowed recovery of both contract and fraud damages, noting that no double recovery resulted because the fraud damages constituted losses of additional commissions beyond the loss of renewal commissions awarded by the jury for breach of contract. Id. As noted above, the breach-of-contract damages instruction here defined a different measure of damages (the value of uncompensated services) than that defined by the fraud measure-of-damages instruction. The fraud damages instruction included, in addition to the value of Tristan's business to her, only the reasonable and necessary costs of any uncompensated services, not their value. We overrule Walker's first issue. See id.

B. Legal Sufficiency of Damages for Fraud



Walker does not challenge on appeal the legal sufficiency of the evidence to support the jury's fraud damages finding on the basis of "[t]he reasonable and necessary costs of any uncompensated cleaning services performed by Rose's Cleaning Service." Rather, Walker asserts, in its second issue, that the evidence is legally insufficient to show that Tristan's "business would have any value or lost any profits in the future." Walker argues that evidence that Tristan's business would have any future value or lost profits is too speculative to support the jury's fraud damages finding. Tristan counters that the evidence is legally sufficient to establish the value of the loss of her business. We first determine if Walker preserved its legal-sufficiency complaint.

1. Preservation of Error


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