Skinner v. HCC Credit Company of Arlington, Inc.

498 S.W.2d 708, 1973 Tex. App. LEXIS 2859
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 22, 1973
Docket17425
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 498 S.W.2d 708 (Skinner v. HCC Credit Company of Arlington, 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
Skinner v. HCC Credit Company of Arlington, Inc., 498 S.W.2d 708, 1973 Tex. App. LEXIS 2859 (Tex. Ct. App. 1973).

Opinion

OPINION

MASSEY, Chief Justice.

Plaintiff HCC Credit Company of Arlington, Inc., brought suit against defendants Oscar H. Skinner et ux. for specific performance of a lease contractual provision relative to the obligation to pay damages in the event of an action by the sovereign whereby condemnation proceedings should inhibit plaintiff’s retention of leased premises for the period contracted. Thereby was additional provision for a contractual rather than a common law measure of damages.

There occurred a taking of the leased premises prior to the end of the lease period under the sovereign’s right of eminent domain. Thus the provision made contingent upon such an occurrence became effective. Actually there is no question but that plaintiff is entitled to defendants’ specific performance to pay damages by the contractual provision. The important question relates to the amount the defendants are obligated to pay. Appeal is from the judgment, based on jury verdict, that defendants’ obligation is in the amount of $5,876.67.

We affirm.

The initial period of lease was for five years, beginning January 15, 1965; for total rental of $9,600.00, prescribed to be payable in 60 equal monthly installments of $160.00 each. There was further provision that the Lessee, who is the plaintiff, should have the right to renew the lease for another five years upon the identical terms and provisions. Plaintiff anticipated that it would exercise such option. This is obvious because there were improvements effected upon the premises by the plaintiff after entering into possession, to receive credit for which plaintiff set up an amortization plan for depreciation of its expenditure over a period of ten rather than merely five years.

The expenditure for improvements was in the amount of $10,684.83. The amortization for depreciation of the expenditure was set up by plaintiff on its books at $89.-04 per month. By this plan less than one-half the cost of improvements would have been amortized at the end of the original five year lease period (60 months) from the date the lease went into effect. As a matter of fact there is no question but that only 6 months amortization of depreciation was taken in 1965. This was because the improvements were not made until about March, April and May, 1965, and payment for the improvements did not occur until about June of 1965, and depreciation was begun to be taken after that date. It is obvious that entire credit of $10,684.83, at the rate selected for amortization, would not have occurred by the end of 10 years after the date the lease became effective, for at such time there would have been remaining approximately $534.24 in undepre-ciated value and expenditure as applied to the improvements.

While mathematical calculation might result in a few cents difference, it is infinitesimal. For purposes of the opinion we may take the amount of $5,876.67 as the un-depreciated amount of the initial expenditure (or value of improvements of 1965) as of December 31, 1969. It was this amount to which there was testimony, and the only testimony introduced; and it was this amount which the jury found in answer to Special Issue No. 1.

*710 However, though the evidence showed what plaintiff had charged on its books as “depreciation’' such testimony did not specifically prove that the deduction of depreciation which resulted in the amount of $5,876.67 constituted that portion of the cost of improvements which the plaintiff had depreciated or amortized for tax purposes. This constitutes a situation of which the defendants complain.

The material provisions of the lease contract, by paragraph 17, reads as follows:

“If any improvements placed on the leased premises by the Lessee are taken under or pursuant to the exercise of the right or power of eminent domain instituted against the Lessors, the Lessee shall be paid from the proceeds an amount equal to the cost of such improvements placed on said leased premises by it after first deducting therefrom that portion of the cost •which the Lessee has depreciated or amor-tised for tax purposes.” (Emphasis supplied.)

We exaggerate for purposes of demonstrating the question: “Could it be that the plaintiff had, for tax purposes, depreciated or amortized its expenditure for improvements so that on December 31, 1969, when there was condemnation it had already ‘recovered’ all its expenditure for improvements, or in any event a much greater amount than that to which it testified for purposes of arriving at the $5,876.67 it claims?” Though it constitutes fact of which its knowledge is exclusive plaintiff did not testify that the depreciation in its computation was for tax purposes. Did plaintiff’s proof fall short of that required certainty in the amount of damages? Did plaintiff fail to introduce evidence of probative force and effect thereon requisite to support the verdict and judgment for $5,876.67?

In the above paragraph is to be foúnd the position taken by defendants. Their complaint relates to the form of Special Issue No. 1 as well as to the evidence in support of it and of the jury’s answer. They say that the plaintiff did not discharge its burden of proof. They cite Bittker, Federal Income, Estate and Gift Taxation, 3rd Edition, page 299, as follows:

“9. Differences between Tax Returns and Financial Statements in respect of Depreciation.

“If a business depreciates its assets for income tax purposes faster than it depreciates them in financial statements to shareholders (or, in the case of regulated industries, in financial statements prepared for rate making agencies), its ‘tax return income’ will be lower than its ‘financial statement income’ in early years, but higher in later years. For this reason, the Securities and Exchange Commission has expressed the view that if the amounts are material, investors may be misled: In the early years when ‘financial statement income’ is high an income tax liability is low, may become too optimistic about the company’s financial position, and they will have a rude awakening in later years, when the income tax liabilities will be greater than the ‘financial statement income’ anticipated for those years would seem to warrant.”

At the conclusion of plaintiff’s main case, and before the defendants introduced testimony they dictated into the record their Motion for Instructed Verdict. Therein they made no mention of their contentions as outlined hereinabove. For the first time was the trial court apprised of defendants’ theory when objection and exception was taken to the Court’s Charge to the Jury. The court was so informed by way of the defendants’ objection to Special Issue No. 1.

After verdict the defendants filed their Motion for Judgment in which their defensive theory was elaborated. In support thereof they filed written argument in which they presented to the court the excerpt from Bittker’s text heretofore copied.

Until such time no authority seems to have been presented to the trial court. At *711 no time did defendants tender evidence, or make an offer to tender evidence, tending to contradict the conclusion of the court, evidenced in the language of Special Issue No. 1, that the issue was raised by plaintiff’s testimony.

Special Issue No.

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Bluebook (online)
498 S.W.2d 708, 1973 Tex. App. LEXIS 2859, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/skinner-v-hcc-credit-company-of-arlington-inc-texapp-1973.