Springs Window Fashions Divisions, Inc. Springs Window Fashions, L.P. And SWF, Inc. D/B/A SC-SWF, Inc. v. the Blind Maker, Inc.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 29, 2005
Docket03-03-00376-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Springs Window Fashions Divisions, Inc. Springs Window Fashions, L.P. And SWF, Inc. D/B/A SC-SWF, Inc. v. the Blind Maker, Inc. (Springs Window Fashions Divisions, Inc. Springs Window Fashions, L.P. And SWF, Inc. D/B/A SC-SWF, Inc. v. the Blind Maker, 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
Springs Window Fashions Divisions, Inc. Springs Window Fashions, L.P. And SWF, Inc. D/B/A SC-SWF, Inc. v. the Blind Maker, Inc., (Tex. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN

NO. 03-03-00376-CV

Springs Window Fashions Division, Inc.; Springs Window Fashions, L.P.; and SWF, Inc. d/b/a SC-SWF, Inc., Appellants

v.

The Blind Maker, Inc., Appellee

FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF TRAVIS COUNTY, 126TH JUDICIAL DISTRICT NO. GN002888, HONORABLE SUZANNE COVINGTON, JUDGE PRESIDING

OPINION

Appellants, Springs Window Fashions Division, Inc., Springs Window Fashions, L.P.

and SWF, Inc. d/b/a SC-SWF, Inc. (“Springs”), appeal a judgment awarding appellee, The Blind

Maker, Inc., $5,167,240 in actual damages and $2,090,000 in exemplary damages. The sole liability

theory submitted to the jury was fraud, and the sole element of actual damages submitted was lost

profits as consequential damages. Springs asserts that the evidence is legally and factually

insufficient to support either a finding of fraud or the damages award. For reasons we explain below,

we conditionally affirm the judgment of the trial court. BACKGROUND

The parties and their businesses

Springs manufactures blinds and similar window coverings and sells its products

under the brand names Graber, Nanik, and Bali. The ultimate consumers of Springs’s products are

persons who purchase the blinds for use in their homes or offices.

Springs distributes its products to consumers chiefly through two channels. First,

Springs sells fully assembled blinds directly to large retail outlets like Home Depot or Lowe’s. This

retail channel of distribution, as well as other lower-priced sales channels like 800 numbers and the

Internet, have put significant downward pressure on prices within the blinds industry. Springs’s

second distribution channel is the “distributor/fabricator” channel. Springs sells component parts

of its blinds to blinds fabricators who have business relationships with retail establishments like

paint and hardware stores, or individual interior designers, decorators, and architects. These retail-

level customers of the blind fabricator, in turn, sell to ultimate consumers. Utilizing samples and

other promotional materials, the retail-level customers obtain from consumers color and style

preferences, window measurements and other specifications and transmit them in orders to the blind

fabricator. The blinds fabricator then “fabricates” custom-made blinds by cutting and assembling

the appropriate Springs components in accordance with consumer specifications.1

Blind Maker is a blinds fabricator based in Austin, with facilities also in Dallas and

Houston. It was established in 1981 by Ray Hicks, its president and sole shareholder. Hicks started

1 Springs apparently would also fabricate some brands of its blinds itself and sell them to blind fabricators for distribution to retail customers and ultimate consumers.

2 the company after earning his M.B.A. The families of both of Hicks’s parents had been involved

in the blinds industry for many years. Blind Maker began fabricating and selling Springs’s Graber

brand in 1983 or 1984. Blind Maker experienced steady growth throughout its history. In its first

year of operation, Blind Maker’s sales totaled $627,656. Ten years later, Blind Maker had over

$11,000,000 in sales. Blind Maker’s annual sales tripled in the 1990s—its 1998 figure exceeded $35

million—ranking it as the largest fabricator of Graber products in the nation. Despite Blind Maker’s

large annual sales figures, the company’s annual net profits during the 1990s averaged around

$37,000, or just over one percent of total sales.2 Blind Maker’s history of small net profits reflects,

among other things, a corporate strategy of financing its rapid and continuous growth through capital

investment and of paying large salaries to its executives, including Hicks, to avoid double taxation.

Hicks testified at trial that, throughout the 1990s, Blind Maker voluntarily chose to

sell almost exclusively Graber products and considered itself the “Graber guys.”3 Blind Maker also

prided itself in being a “full line” Graber fabricator, carrying the components necessary to fabricate

the complete range of Graber products. The company strove to fill and ship orders from its retail-

level customers on the same day they were received. These strategies required Blind Maker to

maintain large inventories—Hicks testified that the company would frequently carry six million

dollars in inventory, which would take roughly two months to turn over through sales. Hicks added

2 The company recorded losses in 1990, 1994, and 1996. In other years of the decade, net income ranged from $132,594 (on sales of over $ 24 million) in 1995 to $23,405 (on sales of over $ 11 million) in 1991. 3 Hicks testified that over 97% of Blind Maker’s sales were comprised of Graber products and that its occasional exceptions typically occurred when it utilized another brand’s product to complement a Graber product.

3 that Blind Maker took around another month to collect its accounts receivable from sales, meaning

that it could take three months or more to realize cash from the sale of inventory it purchased from

Springs.

Throughout Blind Maker’s seventeen-year relationship with Springs, Hicks expressed

concern that Springs’s business practices in the distributor/fabricator channel reduced Blind Maker’s

profitability. Chief among Hicks’s complaints were Springs’s perceived emphasis on its lower-

priced retail channel at the expense of its fabricators, a lack of “price parity” enabling Blind Maker

to compete with large retailers, and sales incentives that Hicks believed rewarded fabricators who

made small or occasional purchases from Springs while penalizing “full line” fabricators like Blind

Maker. Hicks urged a series of changes in Springs’s business practices that he believed would

enhance profitability for both Springs and “full line” fabricators and revisited them periodically

throughout the parties’ relationship. These proposals, which included special incentives for a

designated class of committed “Full Line Graber Fabricators,” became known to both parties as

“Ray’s Obsessions.”

For many years, Springs and Blind Maker did business without a written

contract—Blind Maker would order Springs’s components as needed, Springs would invoice Blind

Maker, and Blind Maker would pay. Hicks testified that Springs always permitted Blind Maker to

pay later than the due date on the invoice. Furthermore, while the invoices stated that Blind Maker

could take a 2% discount if it paid within fifteen or thirty days, Springs “forever” allowed Blind

Maker to take the discount whenever it paid. Hicks explained that Springs did this in recognition

of Blind Maker’s preeminence as a Graber fabricator and the duration of its cash cycle.

4 In 1997, for the first time, Springs and Blind Maker entered into a formal credit

agreement at Springs’s request. In that agreement, Blind Maker acknowledged that Springs “is not

obligated to sell goods to [Blind Maker] or to grant open account payment terms,” and that “[t]he

decision to sell product and extend credit shall be solely within the exclusive discretion of Springs.”

The agreement further provided that Blind Maker “hereby agrees to make payments as necessary to

keep the account balance within terms established by Springs” and that if Blind Maker failed to do

so, Springs “may immediately suspend all future shipments on other than prompt payment terms

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Springs Window Fashions Divisions, Inc. Springs Window Fashions, L.P. And SWF, Inc. D/B/A SC-SWF, Inc. v. the Blind Maker, Inc., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/springs-window-fashions-divisions-inc-springs-wind-texapp-2005.