Watts v. Green

190 S.W.3d 44, 2005 Tex. App. LEXIS 8290, 2005 WL 2465917
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 6, 2005
Docket07-03-0379-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 190 S.W.3d 44 (Watts v. Green) 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
Watts v. Green, 190 S.W.3d 44, 2005 Tex. App. LEXIS 8290, 2005 WL 2465917 (Tex. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

OPINION

JAMES T. CAMPBELL, Justice.

Appellant Dennis Watts appeals a judgment rendered on a jury verdict in favor of appellee Susan Green awarding actual and exemplary damages arising from Green’s investment in pay telephones promoted by Watts. We affirm the judgment in part and reverse in part.

Factual and Procedural Background

Watts owns and operates a Lubbock insurance business under the name Senior Benefit Plans (SBP), selling health insurance, life insurance and annuities. Watts has “managing general agent” contracts with insurance companies, under which he receives a commission from sales he makes and a percentage “override” on sales made by agents recruited by him and who have contracts “underneath” his contract.

Several agents are associated with SBP. Most rent office space from Watts while a few maintain offices elsewhere. Watts testified the agents are not his employees, but contract directly with insurance companies to offer their products and are paid commissions directly by those companies.

Watts sometimes accompanies agents on sales- calls. On some such occasions, agents will request his assistance with a particular client, and will agree to share with him their commission from sales made to that client.

*46 In 1996 Nathan Grimes became one of the agents associated with SBP. Not long after, he sold Susan Green a health insurance policy. In subsequent conversations, he discussed with her the funds she had invested in certificates of deposit, and suggested annuities as an alternative to her CD’s. She purchased her first annuity from Grimes in the summer of 1997. She eventually placed all of her savings in investments through Grimes.

In the fall of 1999 Watts was introduced to a man named Nino Cimini who represented a marketing company later called TSI Group, Inc. Watts arranged a meeting at SBP offices at which Cimini presented a program TSI was promoting. That program involved the sale of pay telephones by TSI, acting through agents such as Watts and Grimes, to investors who were offered the option of operating the telephones personally or leasing them to a management company who would operate the telephones and make a fixed monthly payment to the lessor. The management company in the TSI program was Phoenix Telecom.

Watts and several agents associated with SBP contracted with TSI to sell its telephones. Several also participated in a second similar program to sell telephones for a company named ATC, Inc. which were then leased to Alpha Telcom.

Among other sales materials, Watts and other SBP agents made use of a flyer to tout the pay telephone investment. The one-page document, introduced as plaintiffs exhibit 6, does not expressly refer to pay telephones but recites several benefits of an unspecified investment. 2 Its heading reads “You Can’t Beat It!!!!” Watts testified he did not draft the document but added the text “Offered by Senior Benefit Plans of Lubbock” to a copy of the flyer he received by fax. Watts said he used the flyer as a direct mail advertisement, mailing it to fifty prospective investors in an effort to generate interest. Grimes, and apparently other agents, used the flyer during sales presentations.

In April 2000 Grimes met with Green concerning the telephone investment program, using in his presentation to her the ‘You Can’t Beat It!!!!” flyer as well as other sales materials. Green agreed to liquidate all the other investments she had made through Grimes, incurring a penalty, and purchased eight telephones from TSI, leasing them to Phoenix. She also purchased five telephones from ATC, Inc., leasing them to Alpha Telcom. Her investments totaled $81,000. In June 2000 Phoenix quit making payments. Through discussions with Grimes or correspondence from Phoenix, Green learned Phoenix was in bankruptcy and lessors could have their telephones managed by a company named ETS. Green agreed to assignment of the Phoenix leases to ETS.

Green testified ETS did not make payments in accordance with the lease agreements and soon was in bankruptcy also. Green continued to receive lease payments for the telephones she purchased from ATC but sought to liquidate that investment because she was concerned about the risk. She testified Grimes told her it was a different situation from that involving Phoenix and “everything would be fine.” When she maintained her desire to liquidate, Grimes persuaded her to keep the telephones by offering documentation of *47 insurance. He provided a document entitled “Equipment Purchaser’s Buy Back Guarantee Certifícate.”

On one occasion Green called SBP, requesting to speak to Grimes or the person “in charge.” She ultimately spoke to Watts, who she had met briefly in 1998 when he accompanied Grimes on a visit to her place of employment. They had a lengthy telephone conversation, and Watts subsequently spoke with her again by telephone. He made efforts on her behalf concerning her ATC phones. 3

Green was not able to recover the capital she invested or any insurance proceeds and received a total of only $2,749.14 in lease payments. She brought suit against Watts and Grimes asserting claims for negligence, fraud, violation of the Deceptive Trade Practices Act, 4 breach of fiduciary duty and negligent representation. She also alleged Watts was liable for Grimes’s conduct under theories of agency, conspiracy and joint enterprise. In response to questions the jury found (1) the negligence of Grimes proximately caused Green’s damages, (2) there was a relationship of trust and confidence between Green and Grimes, (3) Grimes breached a fiduciary duty he owed to Green, (4) both Watts and Grimes committed fraud against Green, (5) both made negligent representations to Green on which she justifiably relied, (6) Grimes engaged in deceptive trade practices which caused damages to Green, (7) Grimes engaged in unconscionable action which caused damages to Green, (8) Grimes’s deceptive practices or unconscionable conduct was intentional, (9) Watts and Grimes were engaged in a joint enterprise, (10) Watts and Grimes were not engaged in a conspiracy, and (11) Grimes had actual or apparent authority to act as Watts’s agent. The jury found Green suffered actual damages in the amount of $25,000, she should be awarded exemplary damages of $27,750 from Watts and $47,250 from Grimes, and her reasonable and necessary attorney’s fees were $30,000. Watts perfected appeal from that judgment. Grimes did not appeal.

Watts challenges the trial court’s judgment in five points of error. He challenges the legal and factual sufficiency of the evidence supporting the jury’s answers finding: (1) he committed fraud against Green, (2) he made negligent misrepresentations to her, (3) he was engaged in a joint enterprise with Nathan Grimes, (4) Grimes had actual or apparent authority to act as his agent, and (5) that Green was entitled to the award of exemplary damages.

Standard of Review

When both legal and factual sufficiency issues are raised, we review the legal sufficiency point first to determine whether there is any probative evidence to support the jury’s verdict. See Glover v. Texas General Indem. Co.,

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Bluebook (online)
190 S.W.3d 44, 2005 Tex. App. LEXIS 8290, 2005 WL 2465917, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/watts-v-green-texapp-2005.