GREGG COSTA, District Judge.
This is the latest—and hopefully near final—chapter in this saga involving Akaushi specialty cattle. HeartBrand Beef, a Texas cattle ranching and beef production company, acquired Akaushi breeding cattle from Japan in the early 1990s and has continued to grow its herd over the years. HeartBrand sells some of its Akaushi cattle to third parties, including Bear Ranch. These transactions are typically governed by contracts with restrictions designed to maintain the breed's purity. The restrictions forbid purchasers from selling cattle to third parties without HeartBrand's permission; require purchasers to register all offspring with the American Akaushi Association (AAA), making them subject to the AAA's regulations; prohibit purchasers from collecting or selling semen from the purchased cattle or its offspring; and prevent purchasers, for fifty years following the contract's termination, from selling the beef under the name "Akaushi," or marketing the beef as having the health benefits of Akaushi. See Docket Entry No. 59 ¶ 22. The purchasers may, however, slaughter the Akaushi and sell the beef under a different name.
The value of these restrictions was thought to be significant enough to prompt Bear Ranch to file this lawsuit seeking to invalidate them. And enough was at stake for both sides to hire some of the best lawyers in Texas. Indeed, for much of this litigation, the parties agreed that the value of Bear Ranch's Akaushi would greatly increase if they were not subject to the tight restrictions. Bear Ranch originally focused on antitrust claims, seeking to invalidate the restrictions as unlawful restraints on trade. HeartBrand vigorously defended against any attempts to invalidate the restrictions, asserting counterclaims also premised on the notion that allowing Bear Ranch to maintain unrestricted cattle—which would essentially allow Bear Ranch to be HeartBrand's full competitor, breeding and selling its own line of Akaushi—would undermine the integrity of the Akaushi genetics it had spent two decades maintaining. That concern animated HeartBrand's final plea at trial, which was to get its cattle back, "to get back what was taken." See Docket Entry No. 188-5, at 25-26.
The jury's verdict—rejecting Bear Ranch's claims and finding in favor of HeartBrand on some of its counterclaims—has changed things. Now, the premium Bear Ranch placed on unrestricted Akaushi when it pursued its rejected claims is gone, as it argues that allowing it to maintain unrestricted cattle would not confer a significant economic benefit. For HeartBrand, the desire to get the cattle back is now secondary to a request for a large monetary judgment based on either its expert's or the advisory jury's valuation.
HeartBrand and Bear Ranch have debated the proper equitable remedy—and the Court has considered the issue—until the cows come home. And finally, they are about to do just that. In this opinion, the Court will explain why it concludes that the original premises of this lawsuit still hold true: the restrictions have value, but the most equitable way to prevent Bear Ranch from obtaining any benefit from their erosion is to give the cattle back to HeartBrand before Bear Ranch realizes any unjust enrichment from unrestricted use of the cattle.
The protean nature of this litigation requires further explanation. Bear Ranch's allegations stemmed from a series of Akaushi cattle purchases it made in 2010 and 2011. Bear Ranch, which is located in Colorado, first purchased 424 Akaushi cattle from HeartBrand in July 2010 pursuant to a written contract (the Full-Blood Contract
Although the lawsuit originally focused on antitrust claims, after Bear Ranch amended its complaint and dropped those claims (apparently it was unable to prove a separate market for this type of specialty beef), it was left relying on its fraud and contract claims. See Docket Entry No. 59. The fraud claim alleged that HeartBrand induced it into entering the restrictive contract by falsely representing that HeartBrand controlled all Akaushi cattle and genetics outside of Japan. It sought a declaration that this fraudulent inducement rendered the restrictions unenforceable. The Court held, however, that even if this fraud occurred, a declaration invalidating part of the contract was not a permissible remedy; rescinding the entire contract was. See Bear Ranch, LLC v. HeartBrand Beef, Inc., 2013 WL 6190253, at *4-*6 (S.D. Tex. Nov. 26, 2013). Bear Ranch also sought two declarations related to its breach of contract claim. First, it sought a ruling that the Beeman, Twinwood, and Spears cattle (those obtained in the handshake deals), as well as their progeny, were not subject to the contractual restrictions that governed the cattle purchased directly from HeartBrand. See Docket Entry No. 59 ¶ 52. Second, it requested a ruling that any offspring of offspring (the grandcalves) and later generations of the cattle purchased directly from HeartBrand were not subject to the contractual restrictions. Id. ¶ 56.
HeartBrand and Beeman (also named as a defendant in the lawsuit) answered Bear Ranch's amended complaint and asserted as counterclaims their own allegations of fraudulent inducement, common law fraud, and breach of contract. See Docket Entry No. 61. HeartBrand's theory of fraudulent inducement was that Bear Ranch had represented that it only intended to produce beef for personal use and that it would comply with the 2010 contractual obligations. Instead, according to HeartBrand, Bear Ranch knew from the beginning that it wanted to become a rival marketer of specialty beef and never intended to abide by the restrictions. Id. at 16. Beeman alleged that his sale of Akaushi to Bear Ranch was also fraudulently induced by oral representations that the contractual restrictions governing the HeartBrand cattle would apply to the Beeman cattle and that Bear Ranch would sell back 30% of the full-blood Akaushi calves to HeartBrand. Id. at 17-18. According to HeartBrand, these and similar empty promises by Bear Ranch—which formed the basis of HeartBrand's common law fraud claims—induced its assent
Both parties moved for partial summary judgment. Bear Ranch sought judgment on its declaratory claim that most of the contract obligations governing the HeartBrand cattle were not applicable to the cattle from the Beeman, Twinwood, and Spears purchases. Bear Ranch LLC v. HeartBrand Beef Inc., 2014 WL 1052515, at *3 (S.D. Tex. Mar. 18, 2014). The Court agreed, finding that the contract restrictions governing the original HeartBrand sale did not extend to the other Akaushi cattle that Bear Ranch subsequently purchased. See id. at *5. Nor was Bear Ranch's alleged oral promise that it would extend the contract restrictions to the Beeman sale enforceable because a written contract was required pursuant to the Texas statute of frauds. See id. at *6-*7 (explaining that a writing is required under the statute of frauds if "any part of an oral agreement cannot be performed within one year" and finding that the written contract between HeartBrand and Bear Ranch contemplated a fifty-year obligation). Thus, none of the contract restrictions governing the HeartBrand purchase, other than those prohibiting Bear Ranch from marketing the beef as Akaushi and requiring Bear Ranch to register the cattle with the AAA,
This summary judgment ruling changed the complexion of the case. It left Defendants with only their fraud-based counterclaims as a basis for any relief related to the three subsequent sales that the Court had found left Bear Ranch with unrestricted cattle. Given this major shift in the landscape of the case, the Court granted a continuance and allowed HeartBrand to revise its expert's report to value the equitable remedy of unjust enrichment on its fraud claims rather than the much less significant out-of-pocket damages. See Docket Entry No. 110 at 1-2; Docket Entry No. 150-1 (Supplemental Expert Report of Jeffrey S. Andrien, May 1, 2014). The revised expert report asserted that unrestricted Beeman, Twinwood, and Spears cattle would provide Bear Ranch with a benefit worth $89.8 million more than it paid for what were believed to be restricted cattle; unrestricted Beeman cattle accounted for the bulk of this figure—$76.7 million.
That value assessed for the Beeman cattle would become the focus based on the verdict the jury returned after an eight-day trial. The jury rejected all of Bear Ranch's claims and some of HeartBrand's counterclaims, including the one that argued its entire relationship with Bear Ranch was tainted with fraud from the beginning.
In oral rulings at a post-trial hearing, the Court denied Bear Ranch's Rule 50(b) motion for judgment as a matter of law as to the jury's liability findings. See Hearing Transcript Sept. 24, 2014 at 62 (Docket Entry No. 225). The Court reserved ruling on HeartBrand's motion for entry of judgment (Docket Entry No. 193) to allow for review of post-trial evidence that was admitted and the parties' briefing and argument.
Defendants now move for entry of final judgment, requesting the Court to defer to the jury's advisory finding that Bear Ranch was unjustly enriched by $23,199,000, or if "the Court is inclined to consider its own remedy," to follow their expert's $76.7 million valuation of unjust enrichment.
Because the award of an equitable remedy falls squarely within the Court's discretion, neither of these valuations is binding on the Court. See Enserch Corp. v. Shand Morahan & Co., Inc., 952 F.2d 1485, 1502 (5th Cir. 1992). And although the Court "may determine the amount of [an] award with the assistance of an advisory jury," see Julian v. City of Houston, Tex., 314 F.3d 721, 728 n.25 (5th Cir. 2002), "it is in [the trial court's] discretion entirely whether to accept or reject, in whole or in part, the verdict or findings of the advisory jury." Charles Alan Wright & Arthur R. Miller, FED. PRAC. & PROC. § 2335 (3d ed.). At trial, the advisory nature of the jury's finding on unjust enrichment was made abundantly clear, see, e.g., Docket Entry No. 187-4 at 28 ("[I]t would be just a — an advisory number."); 187-10 at 10 ("[T]here's not going to be any award unless I find it's appropriate because it's an equitable remedy. . . . I view it as an advisory instruction."), and HeartBrand agreed it sought "just an advisory" damages figure. Docket Entry No. 187-4 at 28. In light of that understanding, the Court allowed ample post-trial briefing and held two hearings—at one of which new testimony was admitted—to address how the Court should exercise its equitable discretion in fashioning a remedy for any unjust enrichment.
That discretion is considerable. "Under the system of blended law and equity prevailing in the State of Texas, a district judge presides in the same capacity as a chancellor under the English equity procedure with full power and authority as such in all proceedings wherein equity is properly invoked." 34 TEX. JUR. 3d Equity § 3 (2015); see also Penick v. Penick, 783 S.W.2d 194, 198 (Tex. 1988) (explaining in the context of a claim for reimbursement that "great latitude must be given to the trial court in applying equitable principles"). Any judgment must capture the unjust enrichment that resulted from Bear Ranch's fraud against HeartBrand, measured by the benefit conferred on Bear Ranch, not any injury to HeartBrand.
What is the benefit conferred on Bear Ranch that allegedly causes it to be "unjustly enriched" from its fraud? By misrepresenting that it would abide by the contractual restrictions from the original purchase when it obtained HeartBrand's approval for the subsequent "handshake" deal with Beeman, Bear Ranch obtained restriction-free Akaushi.
The parties devote much of their briefing to attacking or defending the methodology that HeartBrand's expert applied in trying to calculate this difference. He contends that the unrestricted cattle are worth more than $75 million above the price Bear Ranch paid based on Beeman's mistaken belief that he was selling restricted cattle. At the hearing on this motion, most of the testimony pertained to the proper method for valuing the cattle in dollars. See, e.g., Hearing Transcript Sept. 11, 2014 at 12-13 (Docket Entry No. 223) (valuation testimony of William Koch, owner of Bear Ranch); id. at 102 (valuation testimony of McGrann, Bear Ranch's expert); id. at 199 (valuation testimony of Andrien, HeartBrand's expert). Both parties' experts acknowledge, however, that a nontrivial number of sales of unrestricted Akaushi cattle—which would offer meaningful comparables, a commonly used source for calculating value
The Court need not resolve this debate. Even assuming that Andrien's testimony on valuation passes muster under Daubert and could support a jury verdict, the Court's duty is to fashion the most equitable remedy, not to decide whether another possible remedy might be supported by the evidence. In determining that appropriate equitable remedy, the Court considers the "two principal kinds" of remedies available for unjust enrichment: money judgments in the amount of the unjust enrichment or "asset-based" equitable remedies that permit the "claimant to obtain restitution via rights in specifically identifiable property in the hands of the defendant" through, for example, a constructive trust or rescission. Restatement ch. 7, intro. note.
There are two main reasons why the Court concludes that the latter "assetbased" remedy is appropriate in this case. First is the uncertainty, discussed previously, as to any valuation because of the essentially nonexistent market for unrestricted Akaushi. A nonmonetary remedy removes that speculation and risk of misvaluation. See Restatement ch. 7, topic 2, intro. note ("Asset-based remedies are often simpler to administer, because they avoid the need to litigate valuations and other issues pertaining to the measure of the defendant's enrichment."); see also id. ch.7, intro. note ("If the case is one in which the defendant's enrichment is more easily encompassed by specific restitution than valued in money . . . the same restitution claim will find a more effective remedy if the claimant can identify particular property representing the unjust enrichment in the hands of the defendant.").
Second is another unusual feature of this case: although in theory Bear Ranch has been unjustly enriched because it has the right to do as it wishes with the Beeman cattle in light of the Court's ruling that they are unrestricted, it has not yet exercised any of those rights. Despite strenuously fighting for the right to do so in this litigation, Bear Ranch has never sold the unrestricted Akaushi cattle or their genetics. Bear Ranch has not acted on the Court's summary judgment ruling—and with good reason as that summary judgment ruling is subject to appeal. It has neither bred nor sold any unrestricted cattle. See Hearing Transcript Sept. 24, 2014 at 139-40 ("[A]s we said before, we have abided by every restriction. We've never sold any live animals. We've never marketed them.").
That Bear Ranch has not yet realized any of the gains from its theoretical unjust enrichment presents a sharp contrast with the classic cases of unjust enrichment. In cases such as a painter mistakenly painting the wrong house or a homebuilder building a home on the wrong plot of land, see Restatement § 10, cmt. a, the benefit conferred cannot be undone, leaving monetary compensation to the party providing the benefit as the only means of redress. See Restatement § 49, cmt. f ("Liability in restitution for the market value of goods or services . . . is the usual measurement of enrichment in cases where nonreturnable benefits have been furnished at the defendant's request, but where the parties made no enforceable agreement as to price." (emphasis added)). In contrast, this is an ideal case for a property-based solution as the Beeman cattle are readily identifiable and have been maintained in good condition. The Court therefore concludes that the surefire way to prevent Bear Ranch from being unjustly enriched as a result of obtaining the unrestricted use of the cattle under false pretenses is to keep that unjust enrichment from happening in the first place.
What remedy will accomplish that? As described below, the Court believes that a constructive trust, along with limited injunctive relief, is sufficient and appropriate in these circumstances.
One-half of the Court's proposed remedy is the imposition of a constructive trust over the Beeman cattle.
Thus, Bear Ranch will hold the Beeman cattle in constructive trust for HeartBrand: HeartBrand will have an equitable claim to the cattle, and Bear Ranch must surrender those cattle to HeartBrand upon receipt of payment for Bear Ranch's costs as described below. See Restatement § 55, cmt. b; Ward Farnsworth, RESTITUTION: CIVIL LIABILITY FOR UNJUST ENRICHMENT 119 (2014) ("A constructive trust is an order stating that property to which the defendant holds title should and does belong to the plaintiff and must be delivered to him. It can be used simply to recover property to which the defendant obtained title wrongfully, as by fraud[.]" (emphasis in original)). This remedy of allowing HeartBrand to take possession of the cattle has the added benefit of being identical to the one the parties agreed to in their original contract,
As with that contractual remedy, HeartBrand cannot claim the cattle without first reimbursing Bear Ranch for its acquisition, production, and maintenance costs.
The constructive trust ensures that any increased value once Bear Ranch's purchase price and costs of maintenance are taken into account would flow to HeartBrand, as equitable owner, rather than to Bear Ranch. Cf. Restatement § 55, cmt. i ("The practical advantages of asset-based restitution are particularly apparent when the claimant obtains restoration of appreciated property without the need to prove its value."). Indeed, if HeartBrand chooses to take possession of the cattle, it can resell them with or without restrictions to other buyers. Assuming that its expert's valuation is correct, the market should allow it to sell the unrestricted cattle for hefty sums, including up to $50,000 for full-blood bulls and $35,000 for full-blood cows. See Docket Entry no. 150-1 at 55 (Andrien report).
The constructive trust remedy ensures that no unjust enrichment occurs, avoids valuation difficulties, and is consistent with the parties' desire that the deal be undone if their relationship spoiled, which it undoubtedly has. It does not, however, address one problem. Imposing a constructive trust over the Beeman cattle does not prevent Bear Ranch from selling unrestricted cattle from the Twinwood and Spears sales. There was no finding of fraud specifically related to these two later sales. But any such unrestricted sales undermine the integrity of the Akaushi program and run the risk, given the possibility of intermingling, that Bear Ranch would be unjustly enriched on all the cattle it has obtained, including the Beeman cattle it obtained under fraudulent pretenses.
When the Court inquired at the post-trial hearing about its authority over these non-Beeman cattle, Bear Ranch responded that the Court's "equitable powers are broad." See Hearing Transcript Sept. 24, 2014 at 102; see also id. at 103 ("[W]e think you have the power to say use those cattle for beef."). Bear Ranch also expressed its willingness to comply with an equitable remedy that imposed the contractual restrictions on all Akaushi that Bear Ranch obtained from any of these sales.
To recap, the Court is willing to impose a constructive trust over the cattle from the Beeman sale, requiring Bear Ranch to surrender those cattle to HeartBrand if HeartBrand elects to buy them back on the same terms as the contractual remedy. Alternatively, the Court will consider a judicial sale or auction of the Beeman cattle upon HeartBrand's request. No matter which of these remedies HeartBrand elects, the Court will also issue an injunction requiring Bear Ranch to abide by the 2010 contractual obligations as to any remaining Akaushi cattle.
Aside from its victory on the fraud claim, HeartBrand also obtained a favorable jury verdict on its breach of contract claim. The jury found that Bear Ranch "fail[ed] to comply with the [2010 Agreements]" and that its failure was not excused. See Docket Entry No. 172 at 22-23. HeartBrand now seeks final judgment on the jury's verdict and enforcement of the contractual remedy that entitles HeartBrand to repossess the cattle from the 2010 sale. See Docket Entry No. 211-8 § XVI (Full-Blood Contract).
Bear Ranch objects that it attempted to comply with the AAA requirements by sending the required payment to the AAA but was locked out of the registry and thus could not perform its contractual obligations. HeartBrand points out, however, that Bear Ranch in fact tendered payment only after the lawsuit was filed in 2012. See Docket Entry No. 178-94 at 1-2 (Sept. 27, 2013 letter from Bear Ranch to AAA regarding March 2012 payment). And Robert Gill agreed at trial that the AAA had not locked Bear Ranch out of the reporting portal nor had it threatened to suspend Bear Ranch at any point before Bear Ranch filed its lawsuit in March 2012. See Docket Entry No. 184 at 19-20 (Tr. Transcript May 21, 2014). This issue was aired before the jury, and the Court finds no basis for undoing its determination that this tender does not excuse Bear Ranch's failure to perform its contractual duties.
Bear Ranch's main contention in its post-trial briefing is that it was not provided sufficient notice and opportunity to cure and should thus receive the contractually provided thirty-day opportunity to comply. The notice and cure language is found in HeartBrand's termination clause:
Docket Entry No. 211-8 § XVII. Bear Ranch did not raise the issue of notice and opportunity to cure in its Answer to HeartBrand's Amended Answer, at trial, in its Rule 50(a) or (b) Motions for Judgment as a Matter of Law, nor at any other time in this long-running lawsuit. The Court thus finds that the issue is forfeited.
Even if the argument had been timely raised, however, the Court finds that the HeartBrand termination clause does not apply. An entirely separate provision, entitled "Remedies for Breach," lists the remedies available to HeartBrand "[i]n the event of a breach of any provisions of this Agreement by [Bear Ranch]." Docket Entry no. 211-8 § XVI. The remedies provision does not itself require notice or an opportunity to cure. Id. Nor does it invoke, reference, or incorporate the notice and opportunity to cure requirements in the HeartBrand termination clause which immediately follows. See id. That is not unusual. A termination clause, unless it states that it is exclusive, is generally considered a cumulative remedy that does not bar other breach of contract rights and remedies. See Olin v. Central Indus., 576 F.2d 642, 647 (5th Cir. 1978) (citing Williston, A Treatise on the Law of Contracts, sec. 842, 165 n. 1 (3d ed. 1962)). And HeartBrand had little reason to try and terminate the contract which benefits the terminating party by relieving it of the obligation of further performance. HeartBrand had no substantial obligations remaining under the contract to avoid and had been sued by Bear Ranch for breach of contract. The Court thus concludes that the HeartBrand termination clause was not intended to supersede the breach clause or establish prerequisites for asserting a counterclaim for breach of contract. The contract as written entitles Bear Ranch to notice and opportunity to cure only when HeartBrand attempts to terminate the agreement, but not when HeartBrand seeks injunctive relief for a breach.
Finally, the Court notes the substantial evidence that notice and opportunity to cure was either provided to Bear Ranch, or would have been futile. AAA correspondence from 2011 cited Bear Ranch's noncompliance with the contract requirements. See Docket Entry No. 211-30 (November 4, 2011 letter from AAA Executive Director Bubba Bain notifying Bear Ranch of its failure to timely pay its Whole Herd Reporting Invoice); see also Docket Entry No. 184 at 7-11 (Tr. Transcript May 21, 2014) (testimony by Robert Gill delineating numerous reminders Bain sent Bear Ranch regarding its failure to comply with the AAA rules before January 2012). And Bear Ranch was certainly on notice when HeartBrand filed its counterclaim for breach of contract on May 7, 2012. See Docket Entry No. 7. HeartBrand asserted its breach claim only after Bear Ranch initiated this lawsuit seeking to invalidate key portions of a contract that the jury, by its verdict, enforced.
As for the liability finding, the Court found when it ruled on Bear Ranch's Rule 50(b) motion that there is sufficient evidence to support HeartBrand's claims of breach of contract based on any of the provisions HeartBrand cited to the jury, and that evidence supports the jury's finding to that effect. See Hearing Transcript Sept. 24, 2014 at 61-62; see also Docket Entry No. 192 at 35-45 (Defendants' Response to Bear Ranch's Renewed Motion for Judgment as a Matter of Law) (detailing ample evidence supporting jury's verdict of breach including Bear Ranch's failure to register offspring of its Akaushi cattle with the AAA, failure to participate in the AAA Whole Herd Reporting System, and failure to submit required DNA test results). Therefore, the Court enters judgment on the breach of contract claim and turns now to the remedy.
It is black-letter contracts law that parties to a contract "are free to limit or modify the remedies available for breach of their agreement." See Weaver v. Jamar, 383 S.W.3d 805, 812 (Tex. App.-Houston [14th Dist.] 2012, no pet.); see also Tex. Bus. & Comm. Code § 2.719(a)(1) (allowing parties to a contract in goods to provide for remedies in addition or in place of statutory contract remedies). "If the parties agree to a contractual remedy, that remedy will be enforced unless it is illegal or against public policy." SAVA gumarska in kemijska industria d.d. v. Adv. Polymer Sciences, Inc., 128 S.W.3d 304, 317 (Tex. App.- Dallas 2004, no pet.). The parties agreed in their 2010 arms-length bargain that "[i]n the event of a breach . . . by [Bear Ranch], HEARTBRAND shall be allowed to entitled to [sic] obtain injunctive relief to insure that it obtains possession of all cattle described in this agreement and to prevent [Bear Ranch] from delivering any data obtained under this agreement to any party and to enforce all other provisions of this agreement." See Docket Entry 211-8 § XVI.
There is no allegation that this remedy is either illegal or against public policy. Rather, Bear Ranch concedes that if this Court enters judgment for HeartBrand on its breach of contract claim "then Bear Ranch is prepared to accept termination of the contract upon an appropriate buy-back of cattle." See Docket Entry No. 199 at 52. And Bear Ranch agreed at the post-trial hearing that it was prepared to sell the cattle back to HeartBrand, including offspring related to the original HeartBrand sale, at the jury's price.
Issues concerning the jury's award of exemplary damages remain. The jury found by clear and convincing evidence that Bear Ranch's fraud harmed HeartBrand, the showing required under Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code section 41.003 to obtain exemplary damages. The jury then awarded $1,825,000 to HeartBrand as exemplary damages. See Docket Entry No. 172 at 20-21. Bear Ranch contends that the exemplary damages law bars this award.
HeartBrand asserts that Bear Ranch forfeited this argument because it did not object to the jury questions on exemplary damages or raise the issue in its Rule 50(a) motion for judgment as a matter of law. See Docket Entry No. 208 at 32. To the extent that Bear Ranch's problem with the exemplary damages award is that it exceeds the statutory cap, HeartBrand's forfeiture argument is foreclosed by a recent Supreme Court of Texas opinion. In Zorrilla v. Aypco Construction II, LLC, the Court held that "the exemplary damages cap is not a `matter constituting an avoidance or affirmative defense' and need not be affirmatively pleaded because it applies automatically when invoked and does not require proof of additional facts."
But Bear Ranch raises a more fundamental objection to the exemplary damages award that is not answered by Zorrilla: it contends, based on arguments that will soon be described more fully, that an equitable remedy cannot support any award of exemplary damages. This objection could and should have been raised at the charge conference, as the proposed verdict form made clear that the jury would be asked to award exemplary damages on a claim for which no legal damages had been requested. See Docket Entry No. 18, 20. To the extent an exemplary award based on an equitable predicate remedy required additional findings, raising the issue prior to the jury charge would have allowed for further instructions. The Court thus finds that Bear Ranch's lack of objection in either its Rule 50(a) motion or at the charge conference forfeited this argument.
The Court will nonetheless address the meat of all the exemplary damages issues. Two questions must be addressed: (1) whether, as a matter of Texas common law, a nonmonetary equitable remedy can support an award of exemplary damages and, if so, (2) whether and how the exemplary damages statute applies to such an award.
The Supreme Court of Texas answered the first question long ago. It explained that when "equity requires the return of property, this `recovery of the consideration paid as a result of fraud constitutes actual damages and will serve as a basis for the recovery of exemplary damages.'" Nabours v. Longview Savings & Loan Assoc., 700 S.W.2d 901, 904 (Tex. 1985) (quoting Int'l Bankers Life Ins. Co. v. Holloway, 368 S.W.2d 567, 583 (Tex. 1963)).
Does Texas's exemplary damages statute, which was first enacted in 1987 a couple years after Nabours and then substantially amended in 1995, override Nabours and permit exemplary damages only when a legal remedy of damages has been awarded? Bear Ranch contends that it does, citing the following language: "exemplary damages may be awarded only if damages other than nominal damages are awarded." Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code § 41.004(a). HeartBrand counters that Bear Ranch's argument proves too much. HeartBrand focuses on the provision "appl[ying]" the exemplary damages statute "to any action in which a clamant seeks damages relating to a cause of action." Id. § 41.002(a) (emphasis added). HeartBrand thus argues that the statutory scheme, by its own terms, has no application to an exemplary award supported by an underlying equitable remedy as permitted by Nabours.
Both parties' arguments have some textual force. A leading commentator agrees with Bear Ranch's view that "[e]quitable relief is apparently insufficient to support an award of exemplary damages under the exemplary damages statutes, although under common-law principles, equitable relief that requires the tortfeasor to return property to the injured party will support an exemplary damage award." See William V. Dorsaneo III, Texas Litigation Guide § 20.01[2][c][i] (2015) (citations to statute and Nabours omitted). The treatise cites no cases supporting that view, however, and it is the interpretation that Texas courts have given the exemplary damages statute that matters most for this Erie question. See Fidelity Union Trust Co. v. Field, 311 U.S. 169, 177 (1940) ("An intermediate state court in declaring and applying the state law is acting as an organ of the State and its determination, in the absence of more convincing evidence of what the state law is, should be followed by a federal court in deciding a state question."). In the absence of guidance from the Supreme Court of Texas, federal courts must defer to the prevailing view of the state intermediate courts, even more so if that view is uniform, "unless convinced by other persuasive data that the highest court of the state would decide otherwise." Chaney v. Dreyfus Serv. Corp., 595 F.3d 219, 229 (5th Cir. 2010) (internal quotation marks and citation omitted).
Texas intermediate courts have consistently confirmed Nabours's vitality since the enactment of the exemplary damages statute.
Without any Texas decision lending support to its view,
The Court now turns to the proportionality review that the statute requires. Exemplary damages cannot exceed "two times the amount of economic damages." See Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code § 41.008(b)(1)(A). The jury awarded $1.825 million in exemplary damages to HeartBrand.
The Court concludes that that the record easily supports a valuation of the returned property of at least $912,500. The Beeman cattle were purchased for a total of $2,494,000 ($4,750 per head for cows and $8,500 per head for bulls). Docket Entry No. 72-13. That sale was made with the understanding that the cows would be restricted. Review of the record in this case leaves little doubt that a premium exceeding 36% (the $912,500) would have been charged if this were the first sale of a sizeable number of HeartBrand-bred Akaushi without restrictions. Among other factors, this value is clear from the limited pricing date that does exist, the testimony concerning how an unrestricted herd of this size would enable Bear Ranch to quickly breed a competing line of Akaushi, and the fact that the restrictions were significant enough for Bear Ranch to file this lawsuit and incur hundreds of thousands of dollars in expenses in an effort to invalidate the restrictions.
The Court thus will enter a judgement reflecting the jury's exemplary damage award against Bear Ranch in the amount of $1,825,000.
For these reasons, the Court
Docket Entry No. 211-8 § XVI.