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

CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 14, 2022
Docket20-0396
StatusPublished

This text of Signature Industrial Services, LLC and Jeffry Ogden v. International Paper Company (Signature Industrial Services, LLC and Jeffry Ogden v. International Paper Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Signature Industrial Services, LLC and Jeffry Ogden v. International Paper Company, (Tex. 2022).

Opinion

Supreme Court of Texas ══════════ No. 20-0396 ══════════

Signature Industrial Services, LLC and Jeffry Ogden, Petitioners,

v.

International Paper Company, Respondent

═══════════════════════════════════════ On Petition for Review from the Court of Appeals for the Thirteenth District of Texas ═══════════════════════════════════════

Argued September 16, 2021

JUSTICE BLACKLOCK delivered the opinion of the Court.

Justice Huddle and Justice Young did not participate in the decision.

The principal question in this breach-of-contract case is how to measure consequential damages. A jury found that the defendant breached by failing to pay $2.4 million as promised. The jury awarded the $2.4 million as direct damages, but it also added more than twenty times that amount in consequential damages. The plaintiff’s primary theory of consequential damages was that the defendant’s failure to pay the $2.4 million caused the abandonment of a deal in which the plaintiff company would have been sold for $42 million. According to the plaintiff, its “company value” on the open market declined to zero after the breach. The court of appeals rejected this basis for consequential damages. 628 S.W.3d 541, 578 (Tex. App.—Corpus Christi–Edinburg 2020). It nevertheless accepted another theory under which a precipitous decline in the plaintiff company’s “book value” following the breach authorized consequential damages of $12.4 million. Id. at 579. In this Court, the plaintiff seeks reinstatement of the jury’s award of $56.3 million in consequential damages, while the defendant argues that none of the proffered theories of consequential damages is valid. The parties also dispute the direct damages. Texas law requires that consequential damages be both (1) foreseeable at the time of contracting, and (2) calculable with reasonable certainty. Phillips v. Carlton Energy Grp., LLC, 475 S.W.3d 265, 279 (Tex. 2015); Stuart v. Bayless, 964 S.W.2d 920, 921 (Tex. 1998). Applying these bedrock principles of contract law, we conclude that neither the jury’s award of $56.3 million nor the court of appeals’ reduced allowance of $12.4 million can stand. A catastrophic decline in the plaintiff company’s overall market value was not, at the time of contracting, a consequence of breach foreseeable to the defendant. Nor was a decline in the accounting measure of the plaintiff company’s “book value” a reasonably certain way to measure its damages. Because legally insufficient evidence supported the award of consequential damages and the plaintiff advances no valid theory of consequential damages in this Court, we render judgment against the plaintiff on that point. As for the direct damages, we affirm a portion of

2 the award. We also affirm the court of appeals’ rejection of the defendant’s indemnification claim and its rendition of judgment against co-plaintiff Jeffry Ogden. The judgment of the court of appeals is reversed in part and affirmed in part. Judgment is rendered consistent with this opinion, and the case is remanded to the district court for any further proceedings that may be necessary. I. Background Founded in 2010, Signature Industrial Services, LLC (SIS) performed maintenance, construction, and other tasks for International Paper Company (IP) and other industrial clients. SIS and IP contracted in March 2014 for SIS to upgrade a slaker—a large vessel that recycles chemicals used to make paper—at IP’s mill in Orange, Texas. The initial agreement obligated IP to pay just over $775,000. Other costs could be billed to IP as they arose. Following a series of delays and disputes, including a chemical spill that prevented work on the slaker, the cost of the project exceeded initial expectations. IP instructed SIS that it could complete the work and bill IP at the end. After SIS finished the work, the parties disputed the amount IP owed. IP thought its previous payment of $1.1 million would suffice, but SIS wanted another $2.4 million. The parties failed to reach an agreement. SIS sued IP, alleging fraud and breach of contract. After litigation began, SIS submitted two invoices intended to cover the remaining $2.4 million it believed it was owed. Jeffry Ogden, SIS’s President, intervened as a plaintiff in his personal capacity, raising essentially the same fraud and breach-of-contract claims as SIS.

3 Meanwhile, SIS had planned to be acquired by a third party, Primoris Services Corporation. Before litigation began, SIS received an offer from Primoris of $42 million. The negotiations were confidential. After IP refused to pay the amount SIS demanded, the negotiations between SIS and Primoris foundered. Facing a cash-flow crunch, SIS failed to fully pay its federal payroll tax, for which the IRS imposed penalties. The penalties led to more debt, and SIS then began to lose customers. Ogden, who had personally guaranteed much of SIS’s debt, faced mounting financial difficulty. The company all but collapsed. The contract for work on the slaker was worth, at most, $3.5 million. SIS sued IP for $56.3 million. Primoris made another offer to buy SIS after the lawsuit began. The offer price remained $42 million, though with less cash up front. SIS declined the offer. It later turned down two more offers, both for around $10 million. At trial, an SIS expert witness testified about the company’s lost value. The expert’s testimony consisted of three components: the lost Primoris offer, the company’s lost book value, and the tax penalties SIS incurred after its IRS trouble began. First, the expert calculated $42 million in damage to the company because, in his view, the $42 million Primoris offer was lost due to the breach. Second, he demonstrated that SIS’s “book value” dropped by $12.4 million after the breach. He did this by looking at balance sheets from before and after the breach and subtracting SIS’s liabilities from its assets to arrive at a bottom-line measure of its pre- and post-breach book value. He attributed the drop in book value to IP’s non-payment, but he did not specifically analyze

4 any particular devalued asset or increased liability. Other witnesses testified that SIS lost contracting opportunities because of its precarious financial situation, which rendered the company’s value “less than zero” by the time of trial. Finally, the expert opined that IP was responsible for $1.9 million in penalties incurred by SIS for non-payment of payroll taxes. The expert added the three figures—$42 million, $12.4 million, and $1.9 million—to arrive at a total damages figure of $56.3 million. On SIS’s breach-of-contract claim, the jury awarded the $56.3 million recommended by SIS’s expert for “[d]amages to [SIS]’s company value.” It also awarded $2.4 million in direct damages. The jury awarded identical amounts to SIS on its fraud claim. As for Ogden, the jury awarded a total of $4.2 million in breach-of-contract damages. It also awarded $63 million for mental anguish to Ogden on his fraud claim. All told, the jury awarded over $125 million due to IP’s failure to pay $2.4 million. The district court rendered judgment for both plaintiffs on both the breach-of-contract and fraud claims. The court of appeals reversed the district court’s judgment as to all the fraud claims. As for SIS’s breach-of-contract claim, the court of appeals reduced the consequential damages award from $56.3 million to $12.4 million, excising the damages for the lost $42 million sale and for SIS’s tax penalties. The court of appeals upheld the $2.4 million in direct damages to SIS and $12.4 million in consequential damages for lost book value. It rendered judgment against Ogden on his breach-of-contract claim because it found he was not authorized to sue in his individual capacity for breach of a contract between SIS and IP. The court of appeals rejected IP’s claim that SIS was contractually

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Signature Industrial Services, LLC and Jeffry Ogden v. International Paper Company, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/signature-industrial-services-llc-and-jeffry-ogden-v-international-paper-tex-2022.