Tom Bennett and James B. Bonham Corporation v. Larry Wayne Grant

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 13, 2014
Docket03-11-00669-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Tom Bennett and James B. Bonham Corporation v. Larry Wayne Grant (Tom Bennett and James B. Bonham Corporation v. Larry Wayne Grant) 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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Tom Bennett and James B. Bonham Corporation v. Larry Wayne Grant, (Tex. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN

NO. 03-11-00669-CV

Tom Bennett and James B. Bonham Corp., Appellants

v.

Larry Wayne Grant, Appellee

FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF SAN SABA COUNTY, 33RD JUDICIAL DISTRICT NO. 8086, HONORABLE GUILFORD L. JONES III, JUDGE PRESIDING

OPINION

This suit arises from a now infamous feud between neighboring cattle ranchers in

San Saba, the details of which have been thoroughly relayed in prior opinions of this Court and

the Texas Supreme Court. See Bennett v. Reynolds, 242 S.W.3d 866 (Tex. App.—Austin 2007),

rev’d & remanded in part by 315 S.W.3d 867 (Tex. 2010) (Bennett I). The feud between cattle

ranchers Thomas O. Bennett and Randy Reynolds has many turbulent twists and turns, see id., but

the gist of the dispute and subject of prior appeals involved allegations that thirteen head of cattle

belonging to Reynolds had wandered onto Bennett’s ranch, and that instead of returning them in a

neighborly fashion, Bennett ordered his ranch hand—Larry Grant—to round up the cattle and sell

them at auction. Grant testified that he raised concerns with Bennett that the cattle did not belong

to him, but Bennett ignored his concerns.1 Worried that he could be implicated in cattle theft, Grant

1 The facts recited herein are taken from the record on appeal. purchased a disposable camera and took several photos of the cattle loaded on Bennett’s trailer

prior to the sale. Within two months of the sale, Grant left his employment with Bennett but kept

the secret photos stashed away in a box in his home where they were seemingly forgotten and left

undisturbed for almost a year. Reynolds, however, eventually learned of the secret photos after a

chance encounter with Grant’s brother-in-law and demanded that Grant turn the photos over to the

authorities. What happens next is hotly disputed and the subject of litigation between Bennett and

his former ranch hand, Grant, which gave rise to this appeal.

After Reynolds attempted to obtain the photos, Grant testified that he was distressed

and began drinking beer and smoking marijuana to relieve tension. He then made a series of

phone calls to Bennett and Bennett’s friend and employee, Don “Ex” Rogers. Grant testified that

the purpose of the calls was to inform Bennett of the pictures and give him an opportunity to “make

it right” with Reynolds. Bennett and Rogers’ version, however, depicts Grant as calling to try and

sell the photographs to Bennett. Grant acknowledged he had some discussion with Rogers about

selling the photos to Bennett but testified that they only “joked about it.” It was no joke, however,

when Grant turned the photos over to law enforcement about a month after these conversations

and triggered an extraordinary series of events. First, Bennett was indicted for cattle theft based

in part on Grant’s testimony and photos. Although ultimately acquitted of the criminal charges,

Bennett and his cattle company, the James B. Bonham Corporation, were found liable for conversion

in a civil suit brought by Reynolds resulting in a judgment of $5,327.11 in actual damages. The

actual damages, however, paled in comparison to the combined exemplary damages of $1.25

million awarded amidst allegations that Bennett had willfully sold his neighbor’s cattle to settle

2 a score in a long-standing feud and then attempted to cover his actions by—among other

allegations—threatening and bribing witnesses, tampering with the photographs Grant had taken to

alter the images of the brands on the cattle to look like his own brand, and even attempting to

register his neighbor’s brand as his own with the district clerk of San Saba County. Such allegations

and such a large exemplary damages award are extraordinary by themselves,2 but it is only half of the

story and less than half of the total liability adjudged against Bennett and the Bonham Corporation

from these events.

The other half is the subject of this appeal—a $2.28 million judgment awarded to

Grant for a successful malicious prosecution claim brought against Bennett and the Bonham

Corporation. This claim arose from Bennett’s admitted, yet ultimately unsuccessful, campaign to

have Grant imprisoned after he turned the photos over to authorities. In this appeal, Bennett and

the Bonham Corporation (collectively, Appellants) contest the judgment in Grant’s malicious

prosecution suit, contending: (1) legally insufficient evidence supported the malicious prosecution

claim; (2) legally and factually insufficient evidence supported the $10,703 awarded in compensatory

damages; (3) legally insufficient evidence supported the jury’s findings allowing for the imposition

of exemplary damages over the statutory cap; and (4) the total $2 million exemplary damages award

($1 million against Bennett and $1 million against the Bonham Corporation) violated due process.

Individually, the Bonham Corporation raises several arguments challenging its liability in the suit,

and Bennett challenges a $269,644.50 sanction. We affirm the trial court’s judgment conditioned

2 Indeed, the Texas Supreme Court found the exemplary damages violated due process and remanded the case for remittitur. See Bennett I, 315 S.W.3d at 883.

3 on Grant filing remittiturs in the trial court reducing his exemplary damages award to comport with

due process requirements.

MALICIOUS PROSECUTION

A. Background Facts

On the evening of October 4, 2001, telephone records confirm that Grant called

and spoke with Bennett for thirteen minutes, but the topic of conversation that evening is hotly

disputed by the parties. As previously discussed, Grant testified that he called to inform Bennett

about the pictures and to give him an opportunity to “make it right” with Reynolds. Bennett,

however, testified that Grant called to try and sell the photos to him for $5,000. What is undisputed,

however, is that Bennett waited nearly two years to report his allegations against Grant to the

authorities. Indeed, Bennett testified that it was not until after his criminal trial that he decided to

report the incident to authorities and acknowledged at trial that his sole “goal” in reporting the

incident was to put “Grant in prison . . . for what he’s done to me.” In furtherance of his goal, Bennett

testified he met with law enforcement authorities in four separate counties in an attempt to get

Grant indicted for attempted blackmail. After authorities in San Saba County, Llano County, and

Coleman County refused to prosecute Grant, Bennett met with the district attorney in Navarro County

and requested he prosecute the case.

According to the district attorney’s testimony, the following events then transpired.

After his initial meeting with Bennett, the district attorney believed that if an attempted blackmail

had occurred, it was a federal offense and referred the matter to the federal authorities. Unhappy

4 with this outcome, Bennett again approached the district attorney but this time with a new

theory—requesting that Grant be prosecuted for attempted theft. The district attorney informed

Bennett he could not bring charges for misdemeanor attempted theft because it was barred by the

two-year statute of limitations. Undeterred, Bennett then provided the district attorney with new

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