Williams v. LifeCare Hospitals of North Texas, L.P.

207 S.W.3d 828, 2006 Tex. App. LEXIS 9214, 2006 WL 3028404
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 26, 2006
Docket2-06-046-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 207 S.W.3d 828 (Williams v. LifeCare Hospitals of North Texas, L.P.) 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
Williams v. LifeCare Hospitals of North Texas, L.P., 207 S.W.3d 828, 2006 Tex. App. LEXIS 9214, 2006 WL 3028404 (Tex. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

OPINION

ANNE GARDNER, Justice.

Appellants sued LifeCare Hospitals of North Texas, L.P. d/b/a LifeCare Hospital of Fort Worth (“LifeCare Hospital”) and LifeCare Management Services, L.L.C. (“LifeCare Management”), alleging medical negligence, malice, and single business enterprise and seeking compensatory and exemplary damages. The trial court rendered judgment on a verdict against appel-lees based upon jury findings of negligence of LifeCare Hospital and single business enterprise as to both LifeCare entities, awarding compensatory damages, prejudgment interest, and court costs for a total of $544,795.82, with post-judgment interest to accrue at 6.75%, compounded annually. 1

Appellants filed a notice of appeal stating that they do not seek to appeal the jury’s findings on which the judgment is based but are appealing the trial court’s refusal to submit certain jury questions and accompanying instructions and definitions and seeking a remand and new trial on those issues that are “clearly separable” from the final judgment without prejudice to the parties. 2

Appellees deposited the full amount of the judgment into the registry of the court, including postjudgment interest accrued up to the date the monies were deposited, totaling $547,717.07. The clerk’s record now on file with this court reflects that the trial court ordered *830 $400,000 disbursed from the registry to appellants and subsequently ordered the remainder to be disbursed to appellants’ attorney of record, and appellants accepted those sums on December 21, 2005, and March 2, 2006, respectively. Appellees have filed a motion to dismiss the appeal, contending that appellants have accepted the full benefits of the judgment and are estopped to maintain this appeal. At appellants’ request, we abated the briefing schedule, including the filing of both sides’ briefs, until we dispose of the motion to dismiss.

“ACCEPTANCE OF BENEFITS” RULE

Appellees contend that appellants are barred from appealing because appellants accepted of the full benefits awarded to them in satisfaction of the judgment. Appellees rely upon the well-settled “acceptance of benefits” rule, under which a party who accepts the benefit of a judgment is estopped from challenging the judgment by appeal. 3 A party cannot “treat a judgment as both right and wrong, and if he has voluntarily accepted the benefits of [the] judgment, he cannot afterward prosecute an appeal therefrom.” 4 The doctrine arises most often in divorce cases in which one spouse accepts certain assets awarded by the judgment and then seeks to appeal the remainder of the judgment. 5 The burden is on the ap-pellee to prove that appellant is estopped by the acceptance of the benefits doctrine. 6

Appellees recognize that there are two narrow exceptions to the rule: (1) when acceptance of the benefits is because of financial duress or other economic circumstances; and (2) when the reversal of the judgment on the grounds appealed cannot possibly affect an appellant’s right to the benefits accepted under the judgment. 7 The second exception has also been characterized as applying to situations in which appellant accepts only that which appellee is bound to concede to be due him and the appeal involves only appellant’s right to further recovery. 8

Appellants invoke the second exception, urging that they are not appealing the jury’s findings as to any issue submitted by the trial court, including the jury’s findings as to negligence, single business enterprise, and compensatory damages, nor are they complaining of the amount of the judgment rendered on the jury’s findings. Appellants assert that them only points of eiTor will concern the trial court’s refusal to submit jury questions as to appellee LifeCare Hospital on malice and exemplary damages, on which evidence was submitted and preserved, and accompanying instructions and definitions. 9

*831 Appellants contend that their appeal, confined to malice and exemplary damages regarding LifeCare Hospital, seeks only further recovery and is separable from the remainder of the case and, if they are successful on appeal, reversal and remand will only be required as to those issues that were never submitted to the jury. Appellants also argue, that because malice and exemplary damages as to LifeCare Hospital were not submitted to or found by the judgment, they did not accept any benefits for exemplary damages and are not treating the judgment as both right and wrong as to that part of the case.

Appellants seek to distinguish the cases cited by appellees as involving appeals that potentially affected the benefits received by the appellants in those cases. 10 Appellants rely upon Kline v. O’Quinn, 11 in which the court of appeals denied appel-lee’s motion to dismiss an appeal where, as in this case, appellant had accepted the compensatory damages, plus interest, awarded by the judgment and sought only an additional award of punitive damages.

Kline is inapposite. In that case, an arbitration award ordered both compensatory and punitive damages to be paid to appellant. 12 The trial court modified the award to delete the amount awarded for punitive damages as improperly submitted to arbitration. 13 On appeal, appellant did not seek a remand and new trial but merely sought to reinstate the award of punitive damages. 14 Appellee then paid the compensatory damages, which were accepted by appellant, and moved to dismiss the appeal based on the “acceptance of benefits” rule. 15 In denying the motion to dismiss, the appellate court noted the two narrow exceptions to the rule and held that the second exception applied because a reversal would simply allow appellant to recover a “further” sum of money of the punitive damages deleted by the trial court and would have no effect on the compensatory damages already awarded and received by her. 16 The court of appeals ruled that the arbitrator’s award of punitive damages should be reinstated and rendered judgment for that additional amount but denied the claim for attorney’s fees as having been waived. 17

In this case, unlike Kline, appellants seek a reversal and partial remand and new trial on the issues of malice and exemplary damages that were not submitted to the jury in the first trial. As appellants correctly note, Texas Rule of Appellate Procedure 44.1(b) limits the right to a partial remand as follows:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
207 S.W.3d 828, 2006 Tex. App. LEXIS 9214, 2006 WL 3028404, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williams-v-lifecare-hospitals-of-north-texas-lp-texapp-2006.