Thomas O. Bennett, Jr. and James B. Bonham Corporation v. Randy Reynolds

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 18, 2010
Docket03-05-00034-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Thomas O. Bennett, Jr. and James B. Bonham Corporation v. Randy Reynolds (Thomas O. Bennett, Jr. and James B. Bonham Corporation v. Randy Reynolds) 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
Thomas O. Bennett, Jr. and James B. Bonham Corporation v. Randy Reynolds, (Tex. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN

ON REMAND

NO. 03-05-00034-CV

Thomas O. Bennett, Jr. and James B. Bonham Corporation, Appellants

v.

Randy Reynolds, Appellee

FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF SAN SABA COUNTY, 33rd JUDICIAL DISTRICT NO. 8027, HONORABLE V. MURRAY JORDAN, JUDGE PRESIDING

MEMORANDUM OPINION

In this proceeding following remand from the Texas Supreme Court, we reconsider

the amounts of exemplary damages that due process will permit on this record. The underlying

facts and procedural history are detailed in this Court’s prior opinion, 242 S.W.3d 866, and

that of the supreme court. 315 S.W.3d 867. A jury found appellants Thomas O. Bennett, Jr. and

James B. Bonham Corporation jointly and severally liable for conversion of cattle belonging

to Randy Reynolds and awarded Reynolds $5,327.11 in actual damages, plus exemplary damages

of $250,000 from Bennett and $1 million from Bonham Corporation. The district court rendered

judgment based on the jury’s findings. Bennett and Bonham Corporation each appealed to this

Court, challenging, among other things, whether the evidence was legally or factually sufficient to support the actual damage awards or the malice findings that were the predicate for exemplary

damages, whether the size of the exemplary damages awards exceeded due-process limitations, and

whether Bonham Corporation could be held liable for actual or exemplary damages based on acts

by Bennett. 242 S.W.3d at 876. We affirmed the district court’s judgment in full. Id. at 876-907.

Bennett and Bonham Corporation then appealed to the Texas Supreme Court, challenging

the exemplary damages awards on the grounds that (1) there was legally insufficient evidence of

malice; (2) any acts by Bennett that were the basis for exemplary damages could not be imputed to

Bonham Corporation; and (3) the awards exceeded due-process limitations. The supreme court

affirmed this Court with respect to the predicate malice finding and Bonham Corporation’s liability

for exemplary damages, see 315 S.W.3d at 871-72, but held that the size of the awards exceeded

the outermost limits of due process. See id. at 873-83. The supreme court remanded the cause to

us with instructions to “reconsider exemplary damages in line with this opinion and prevailing

ratio analysis.” Id. at 885.

We have done so, and conclude that due process permits an exemplary damages

award against Bennett and Bonham Corporation of not more than $10,000 each.

THE SUPREME COURT’S OPINION AND PREVAILING RATIO ANALYSIS

Three factors guide courts in determining whether an exemplary damages award

exceeds the bounds of due process: (1) the degree of “reprehensibility” of the defendant’s conduct;

(2) the disparity or ratio between the actual or potential harm suffered by the plaintiff and the

exemplary damages award; and (3) the difference between the exemplary damages and the

2 civil penalties authorized or imposed in comparable cases. See State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co.

v. Campbell, 538 U.S. 408, 418 (2003) (citing BMW of N. Am., Inc. v. Gore, 517 U.S. 559,

575 (1996)).

Reprehensibility

The first factor, the degree of reprehensibility of the defendant’s conduct, is the “most

important indicium of the reasonableness of a punitive damages award.” Gore, 517 U.S. at 575. The

U.S. Supreme Court has cautioned that “punitive damages should only be awarded if the defendant’s

culpability, after having paid compensatory damages, is so reprehensible as to warrant the imposition

of further sanctions to achieve punishment or deterrence.” State Farm, 538 U.S. at 419. Where

“a more modest punishment for this reprehensible conduct could have satisfied the State’s legitimate

objectives,” the Supreme Court has further indicated, courts should go no further. Id. at 419-20.

Courts evaluate reprehensibility by considering five nonexclusive factors—whether:

1. “the harm caused was physical as opposed to economic;”

2. “the tortious conduct evinced an indifference to or a reckless disregard of the health or safety of others;”

3. “the target of the conduct had financial vulnerability;”

4. “the conduct involved repeated actions or was an isolated incident;”

5. “and the harm was the result of intentional malice, trickery, or deceit, or mere accident.”

Id. at 419 (citing Gore, 517 U.S. at 576-77). In this case, the supreme court concluded that the

reprehensibility inquiry could consider not only Bennett’s conversion of the cattle—the underlying

3 tort—but certain other conduct by Bennett that “relate[d] back to the underlying theft and sought to

extend and exacerbate harm to Reynolds,” because it “may go to motive, underscore the parties’

animosity, shed light on provocation, demonstrate deliberateness and culpability, and otherwise

show heightened reprehensibility.” 315 S.W.3d at 874-75. The court identified the following

evidence of alleged extra-conversion acts that “may properly inform the reprehensibility analysis:”

Bribing A Witness and Urging Him to Lie. Reynolds offered evidence that when Bennett learned that former ranch hand Larry Grant had taken incriminating photographs of the stolen cattle, Bennett urged Grant to lie about what he had seen. Bennett then offered Grant a lucrative job and later some money under the guise of helping Grant’s family after a car accident.

Threatening a Witness. Reynolds points to testimony that a former Corporation ranch hand attempted to threaten bodily harm to Grant. Allegedly, this former employee tried to call and threaten Grant, but instead reached Grant’s brother-in-law, thinking that person was Grant.

. . . it seems sensible that harm inflicted or threatened on third parties can be part of the reprehensibility equation when such harm actually targets the plaintiff and the instant litigation. Here, though, the alleged threat went off course, and the record does not show it was ever communicated to Grant; in reality no one was actually endangered. Nonetheless, while this misdirected threat threatened nobody, it attempted to cover Bennett’s tracks and foil efforts—not just by Reynolds but by the legal system itself—to unearth the truth.

Photograph Tampering. The evidence at both the civil and criminal trials included some of the photographs taken by ranch hand Grant, who suspected that the trailered cattle were not Bennett’s. Reynolds alleges that Bennett doctored some of Grant’s photographs to bolster his criminal defense and offered perjured testimony in that trial. Moreover, Reynolds asserted in the civil suit that the photographs had been altered to conceal evidence of Bennett’s conversion.

Litigation Against Grant. Bennett filed a $50,000 slander suit against ranch hand Grant. Reynolds says these “intimidation techniques” showed “that Bennett intended to inflict as much financial pain on Grant as possible.” Here, too, the jury could reasonably have deemed this slander suit, though filed against Grant, part of a pattern of intentional malice, trickery, and deceit to cover up Bennett’s wrongdoing and subvert Reynolds’s lawsuit.

4 Meddling With Reynolds’s Brand.

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TXO Production Corp. v. Alliance Resources Corp.
509 U.S. 443 (Supreme Court, 1993)
BMW of North America, Inc. v. Gore
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State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance v. Campbell
538 U.S. 408 (Supreme Court, 2003)
Bennett v. Reynolds
315 S.W.3d 867 (Texas Supreme Court, 2010)
Bennett v. Reynolds
242 S.W.3d 866 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 2007)
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Thomas O. Bennett, Jr. and James B. Bonham Corporation v. Randy Reynolds, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thomas-o-bennett-jr-and-james-b-bonham-corporation-texapp-2010.