Venture Cotton Cooperative and Noble Americas Corp. v. Shelby Alan Freeman

494 S.W.3d 186, 2015 Tex. App. LEXIS 4399, 2015 WL 1967251
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 30, 2015
Docket11-11-00093-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 494 S.W.3d 186 (Venture Cotton Cooperative and Noble Americas Corp. v. Shelby Alan Freeman) 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
Venture Cotton Cooperative and Noble Americas Corp. v. Shelby Alan Freeman, 494 S.W.3d 186, 2015 Tex. App. LEXIS 4399, 2015 WL 1967251 (Tex. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

OPINION ON REMAND

JIM R. WRIGHT, CHIEF JUSTICE

This is a consolidated interlocutory appeal of the trial court’s orders in which it ■denied Venture Cotton Cooperative’s and Noble Americas Corp.’s motions to compel arbitration under the Federal Arbitration Act (FAA). See 9 U.S.C. §§ 1-16; Tex. Civ. PRAc. & Rem.Code Ann. § 51.016 (West Supp. 2015). We reverse and remand.

Venture is a cotton cooperative-marketing association managed by Noble. • Appel-lees are a group of twenty-eight cotton farmers who each contracted to sell cotton to Venture. In the trial court, there were two separate suits. Two farmers were plaintiffs in one suit, and the twenty-six other farmers were plaintiffs in another suit. Appellees sued Appellants, as well as the cotton gin that acted as Appellees’ agent when Appellees entered into the contracts, and asserted several causes of action, including claims such as fraud, negligent- misrepresentation, and breach of fiduciary duty. Appellants filed a motion to compel arbitration in each case based on the mandatory arbitration agreement contained in the contracts. The trial court found that the arbitration agreement was unconscionable, and it denied Appellants’ motions to compel arbitration.

In a single issue, Appellants argued that the trial court erred when it found that the arbitration agreement was unconscionable and, thus, unenforceable. Specifically, Appellants challenged Appellees’ arguments that the agreement was procedurally unconscionable on one ground and substantively unconscionable on three grounds. In a footnote, Appellants also challenged Appellees’ argument, to the extent that Appellees raised it, that the. agreement was substantively unconscionable because of a conflict of interest or favorable bias present between Appellants and the arbitration committee. Appellants also addressed the issue of whether the underlying controversies were within the scope of an arbitration agreement governed by the FAA; however, Appellees did not dispute that issue.

We initially affirmed the orders in which the trial court denied Appellants’ motions to compel. See Venture Cotton Coop. v. Freeman, 395 S.W.3d 272 (Tex.App.-Eastland 2013), rev’d, 435 S.W.3d 222 (Tex.2014) (V enture Cotton I). In that opinion, based on the arguments, in the parties’ briefs, we set out five arguments 1 that *190 Appellees raised in the trial court and that Appellants challenged on appeal as to whether the agreement was substantively unconscionable. Id. at 274-75. We held that the arbitration agreement was substantively unconscionable on two of the five grounds raised by Appellees. Id. at 274-76. We did not reach the other three grounds raised by Appellees in the trial court and challenged by Appellants on appeal, nor did we reach the argument regarding procedural unconscionability. Id. at 277. Because Appellees did not dispute that the underlying controversies fell within the arbitration agreement, we also declined to address that issue, and we assumed without deciding that the claims fell within the agreement’s scope. Id. at 274. The two grounds that we found to be unconscionable were that certain provisions in the arbitration agreement and in the American Cotton Shippers Association’s (ACSA) rules prevented Appellees from recovering statutory remedies under the Deceptive Trade Practices — Consumer Protection Act, Tex. Bus. & Com.Code Ann. §§ 17.41-17.68 (West 2011 & Supp. 2014), and from recovering attorney’s fees under Tex. Civ. PRAC. & Rem.Code Ann. § 38.001 (West 2015). Id. at 274-76. We also held that the trial court did not err when it did not sever the unconscionable terms from the agreement because Appellants never asked the trial court to sever the terms. Id. at 277. Therefore, we held that Appellants waived that argument. Id.

After it granted Appellants’ petition for review, the Supreme Court of Texas concluded that the limitation on the recovery of statutory remedies and attorney’s fees that we held to be unconscionable was insufficient to defeat arbitration under the FAA. Venture Cotton Coop. v. Freeman, 435 S.W.3d 222, 225, 233 (Tex.2014) (Venture Cotton II). The court opined that Appellees did not contractually waive the DTPA remedies at issue and that, as such, any implied waiver under the ACSA rules was “contrary to public policy and therefore invalid.” Id. at 230. In addition, the court held that we erred when we declined to consider the severability issue even though Appellants did not present the issue to the trial court. Id. at 230. The court reasoned that, because “this is an interlocutory appeal, and the case remains pending in the trial court,” Appellants could raise the severability argument when the case was again before the trial court. Id. “Conservation of time and resources recommend that we consider the issue now because nothing prevents Venture from urging severance in the trial court and, if denied, from renewing its complaint in yet another interlocutory appeal.” Id. The court concluded that the limitation upon recovery of statutory rights and remedies under the DTPA was not an essential purpose of the agreement and that we erred when we “declin[ed] to sever the objectionable limitation on the farmers’ statutory rights.” Id. at 230-31 (relying on In re Poly-America, L.P., 262 S.W.3d 337, 360 (Tex.2008) (orig. proceeding)). Therefore, we now sever the following provision from the ACSA rules: “The awards shall be limited to the monetary damages arising out of the failure of either party to perform its obligations pursuant to the contract as determined by the Arbitration Committee and shall not include attorney’s fees unless provided for in the contract.”

With regard to attorney’s fees, the court concluded “that neither the contract’s attorney’s fee provision nor its effect on attorney’s fees under Section 38.001 is sufficient to invalidate the arbitration agreement as unconscionable.” Id. at 231. The court explained that “a contract that ex *191 pressly provides for one party’s attorney’s fees, but not another’s, is not unconscionable per se”; “the attorney’s fee provision here is not, standing alone, decisive proof of an unconscionable bargain.” Id.

In this court originally, Appellants argued that Appellees had contractually waived their right to recover attorney’s fees and that, because they had, they could not recover attorney’s fees under Section 38.001. However, we disagreed and held that waivers must be specific in order to be effective. Venture Cotton I,

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494 S.W.3d 186, 2015 Tex. App. LEXIS 4399, 2015 WL 1967251, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/venture-cotton-cooperative-and-noble-americas-corp-v-shelby-alan-freeman-texapp-2015.