TIN Inc. D/B/A Temple-Inland, Fromerly Gaylord Container Corpration v. Action Box Co., Inc.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 25, 2010
Docket01-08-00472-CV
StatusPublished

This text of TIN Inc. D/B/A Temple-Inland, Fromerly Gaylord Container Corpration v. Action Box Co., Inc. (TIN Inc. D/B/A Temple-Inland, Fromerly Gaylord Container Corpration v. Action Box Co., 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.

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TIN Inc. D/B/A Temple-Inland, Fromerly Gaylord Container Corpration v. Action Box Co., Inc., (Tex. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

Opinion issued March 25, 2010





In The

Court of Appeals

For The

First District of Texas

____________



NO. 01-08-0472-CV

TIN INC., D/B/A TEMPLE-INLAND, FORMERLY KNOWN AS GAYLORD CONTAINER CORPORATION, Appellant



V.



ACTION BOX CO., Appellee



On Appeal from 234th District Court

Harris County, Texas

Trial Court Cause No. 2003-63481



MEMORANDUM OPINION

Both parties to this appeal contest the trial court's judgment in this case. Appellant, TIN Inc. d/b/a Temple Inland, formerly Gaylord Container Corporation ("Gaylord"), contests the trial court's entry of judgment notwithstanding the verdict ("JNOV"). In four issues, Gaylord contends the trial court erred by entering JNOV in favor of Action Box, Inc. ("Action Box") because (1) there is more than a scintilla of evidence that Action Box committed the first material breach of the Settlement Agreement at issue, causing Gaylord to sustain damages; (2) the evidence conclusively supports a judgment in Gaylord's favor on its "benefit of the bargain" damages; (3) the evidence conclusively supports a judgment for Gaylord on its damages resulting from Action Box's failure to complete the Discount Program; and (4) Action Box failed to present legally sufficient evidence that it complied with the contractually obligated procedure for ordering products.

Appellee, Action Box, contends that the trial court erred by failing to award Action Box its attorney's fees for appeal. Further, Action Box asserts a conditional cross-point arguing that the trial court erred by ruling that, as a matter of law, the Settlement Agreement only obligated Gaylord to fill Action Box's orders that were for products that Gaylord offered and sold to the market in general.

We reverse the trial court's entry of JNOV and enter judgment in favor of Gaylord in the amount of $5,070.00.

BACKGROUND

Action Box manufactures corrugated cardboard boxes. Gaylord is a supplier of raw material from which such boxes are made. Gaylord's Bogalusa, Louisiana plant ("Bogalusa") produces bulk boxes as well as other cardboard-related materials. The plant's primary product is laminated cardboard boxes, a specialty product manufactured by only a few other competitors. The cardboard products produced by Bogalusa vary according to their composition, weight and strength, and are made of various combinations of cardboard components (i.e., walls, sheets, fluting). Bogalusa bases its pricing upon the cost of goods sold as well as upon the distance to the customer, and the market to which it sells varies according to the product produced.

Action Box was a customer of Bogalusa, primarily purchasing solid fiber material to manufacture boxes. Eighty percent of the cardboard materials Action Box uses are single-walled sheets of cardboard.

The Parties' Initial Dispute Leads to a Settlement Agreement

In 2003, Gaylord filed a lawsuit against Action Box in Louisiana (the "Louisiana Lawsuit"), in which Gaylord alleged that Action Box owed it $54,533.24 for four orders of solid fiber cardboard in January and March 2003. Shortly thereafter, Action Box filed a reciprocal lawsuit suit against Gaylord in Harris County, Texas (the "Texas Lawsuit"), alleging that the cardboard it purchased in January and March 2003 from Gaylord was pitted and thus defective, causing Action Box to incur significant damages. Action Box alleged violations of the Texas Deceptive Trade Practices Act and that Gaylord negligently represented the quality of its products.

In May 2004, the parties mediated their dispute regarding the pitted cardboard and reached an agreement by which Action Box would pay Gaylord $54,533.24 by June 15, 2004, and Gaylord, upon receiving such payment, would grant Action Box a 5% discount on certain of its products, up to a total discount of $70,000 (the "Discount Program"). Jim McIntyre, Gaylord's sales manager at the time, testified that this was the first such Discount Program Gaylord had ever entered into. On June 1, 2004, Action Box attempted to place its first order taking advantage of the Discount Program. The order was for a large quantity of single wall sheets--a product that the Gaylord Bogalusa plant did not generally sell and that it had not previously sold to Action Box. The order was rejected by Gaylord. McIntyre stated that the order was rejected because the Gaylord Bogalusa facility, "as a general rule," did not produce single wall sheets in the quantity ordered by Action Box because the plant was "not equipped to handle" the order. McIntyre testified that Action Box was verbally informed that Gaylord would not fill the order for single wall sheets on the grounds that single wall sheets were not usually produced by the Bogalusa plant. At trial, McIntyre testified that, due to the process of manufacturing and the size of the machines at issue, only 1/100th of the Bogalusa plant's output was single wall sheets. McIntyre testified that the small quantities of single wall sheet that were produced went to four customers, and that most of it was sent to local customers. McIntyre explained that these sales were "special deals" to accommodate these customers and that Gaylord sold only a small quantity of single wall board to each of these customers. McIntyre further testified that much of the single wall material sold was taken out of overrun from other products. Rick Bailey, a salesman for Gaylord, also testified that it was "very difficult" to handle sales of single wall sheets and that it was not the normal course of Gaylord's business to do so. Bailey also testified that Bogalusa did not sell single wall sheets in the quantities ordered by Action Box. At trial, purchase orders and testimony showed that Bogalusa sold single wall sheets to other companies during 2004, but that these sales were in smaller quantities than the orders placed by Action Box. McIntyre testified that, if Action Box had ordered a quantity of single wall sheets that he could fill from his overrun supplies, then he would have filled the order.

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TIN Inc. D/B/A Temple-Inland, Fromerly Gaylord Container Corpration v. Action Box Co., Inc., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tin-inc-dba-temple-inland-fromerly-gaylord-contain-texapp-2010.