Imperial Premium v. Khoury ( 1998 )


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  •                                  REVISED
    United States Court of Appeals,
    Fifth Circuit.
    No. 96-20963.
    IMPERIAL PREMIUM FINANCE, INC., Plaintiff-Appellee,
    v.
    John KHOURY, et al., Defendants,
    John Khoury and Southern Assurance Inc., Defendants-Appellants.
    Dec. 1, 1997.
    Appeal from the United States District Court for the Southern
    District of Texas.
    Before DeMOSS and DENNIS, Circuit Judges, and LEE, District Judge.*
    LEE, District Judge.
    Plaintiff Imperial Premium Finance, Inc. filed this suit
    against    appellants   Southern      Assurance,   Inc.    (SAI)      and   its
    president, John Khoury, asserting claims for, inter alia, breach of
    warranty and fraud in connection with a premium finance transaction
    arranged by SAI and Khoury on behalf of SAI's client, Monterrey,
    Ltd., a Nigerian company in the business of providing offshore oil
    rig support for certain American oil companies.            Imperial alleged
    that Khoury and SAI, through Khoury and others, misrepresented the
    identity of Monterrey's insurers, the amounts of the premiums and
    the cancellation terms of the policies that were to be purchased
    with the    funds   advanced    by   Imperial   pursuant   to   the    finance
    *
    District Judge of the Southern District of Mississippi,
    sitting by designation.
    1
    agreement,       which     constituted       fraud         and     breach     of     certain
    agent/broker warranties contained in the agreement.                                Following
    trial, the jury returned a verdict against both SAI and Khoury for
    fraud, awarding actual damages in the amount of $314,000 and
    $490,000 in punitive damages against each defendant. The jury also
    found against both SAI and Khoury on the breach of warranty claim,
    inexplicably assessing damages on that claim in the sum of $44,000.
    Imperial waived          entry    of   judgment       on   the     breach   of      warranty
    verdict, choosing instead to secure judgment against defendants
    only on the fraud claim.1              The district court entered judgment on
    the fraud verdict and denied defendants' motion for a judgment
    notwithstanding the verdict or a new trial.
    On appeal, defendants advance several grounds which they
    contend warrant reversal of the jury's verdict.                      Having considered
    defendants' arguments, we conclude that we must reverse and remand
    the case for a new trial.
    Background
    For several years preceding the transaction at issue, SAI, an
    independent      insurance       agency,     had      used       Imperial   for      premium
    financing for its clients.              For the policy year 1992-93, SAI had
    procured for Monterrey a hull policy and protection and indemnity
    (P   &    I)   coverage    from    "Lloyds      and    ILU       [Institute    of     London
    Underwriters] Companies" for a combined annual premium of nearly $2
    1
    Neither plaintiff, defendants nor the district court were
    able to account for how the jury could have found damages of
    $44,000 on the breach of warranty claim when the parties agreed
    that the amount of compensatory damages at issue was $314,000.
    2
    million, of which approximately $1.5 million was financed by
    Imperial.     When the time came for Monterrey to renew its policies
    or obtain other coverage, SAI again sought premium financing from
    Imperial on Monterrey's behalf. The record reflects that there was
    some question initially as to whether the "London market" would be
    able to provide the necessary coverages as it had for the prior
    policy year, and Imperial was thus advised by SAI that there would
    be "new players."       Ultimately, however, SAI informed Imperial that
    the securities, or insurers, would be the same as in the previous
    year, and a premium finance agreement was prepared by SAI which,
    like    the   premium    finance   agreement       of    the   preceding   year,
    identified Monterrey's insurers as "Lloyds and ILU Companies." The
    agreement further recited January 31, 1993 as the effective date of
    coverage and reflected a combined annual premium of $2,763,000 for
    the two policies.       Imperial financed nearly $2.2 million of that
    amount pursuant to the premium finance agreement which included not
    only the signature of Donald Koehl, Monterrey's president, but also
    reflected     Khoury's     signature       under    a     paragraph    entitled
    "Agent/Broker    Warranty"    which    recited,     in    pertinent   part,   as
    follows:
    By submitting this agreement to Imperial [Plaintiff], the
    undersigned warrants and agrees: 1) That Borrower's signature
    is genuine, ... [that] Borrower has authorized this
    transaction in the manner required by applicable state law ...
    and agrees to the assignment of the security interest as set
    forth herein; 2) that Borrower has received a copy of this
    Agreement; 3) that the policies are in full force and effect
    and the information in the Schedule of Policies [appearing
    immediately above the warranties] and the premium is correct,
    that none of the policies listed is non-cancellable or written
    for a term of less than one year, ... 5) that all unearned
    premiums, dividends and unearned commissions will be paid to
    3
    Imperial, and that any lien on any unearned premium is
    subordinated to Imperial's lien or security interest therein;
    6) that the policy(ies) can be cancelled on 10 days' notice.
    After making a number of the monthly payments required by the
    agreement, Monterrey defaulted.         When Imperial attempted to cancel
    the policies and recover the unearned premiums under the policies,
    which stood as collateral for Imperial's loan, Imperial learned
    that Monterrey's hull coverage had not been obtained from "Lloyds
    and   ILU    Companies,"     as   represented      in    the    premium     finance
    agreement, but had instead been purchased for the same premium from
    North American Casualty Company, S.A., a Costa Rican insurer, and
    it discovered that while the P & I coverage was placed through the
    London     market,    the   premium   for   that    coverage      was   $102,000,
    substantially less than the $238,000 premium set forth in the
    premium     finance   agreement.      Due    to    minimum      unearned    premium
    retention provisions in the policies, the amount of unearned
    premiums which Imperial was able to collect toward satisfaction of
    Monterrey's     remaining     indebtedness    was       not    sufficient    and   a
    deficiency      balance      of    approximately          $314,000        remained.
    Accordingly, Imperial filed this suit against Monterrey and Koehl
    for their default.2         Imperial also sued SAI and Khoury alleging
    breaches of the Agent/Broker Warranty and fraud arguing that
    because these defendants misrepresented the insurers and the terms
    of the policies for which premium financing was sought, plaintiff
    sustained damage when, upon Monterrey's default, it was unable to
    2
    Imperial secured a default judgment against Monterrey and
    Koehl prior to the trial of its claims against SAI and Khoury.
    4
    collect on what it understood was its collateral because the
    policies which were actually issued, as contrasted with those that
    had been represented by defendants, did not have satisfactory
    cancellation terms for plaintiff's protection.
    Validity of the Premium Finance Agreement
    As one basis for reversal of the jury's verdict, defendants
    contend that since the Imperial premium finance agreement form had
    not received approval of the Texas Board of Insurance as of the
    time of the parties' transaction in accordance with TEX.INS.CODE ANN.
    art. 24.11(a) ("A premium finance agreement shall be in writing on
    a form approved by the board"), the agreement was void.             Defendants
    then reason that since the agreement was void, it could not have
    been validly asserted by plaintiff as the basis for any of its
    causes of action against defendants and that consequently, the jury
    verdict   must   be   set   aside.3       The   district    court    rejected
    defendants'   argument,     concluding    by    reference   to   McLaren   v.
    Imperial Casualty & Indemnity Co., 
    767 F. Supp. 1364
    (N.D.Tex.1991),
    aff'd, 
    968 F.2d 17
    (5th Cir.1992), cert. denied, 
    507 U.S. 915
    , 112
    3
    The particular premium finance agreement form used in the
    January 1993 Imperial/Monterrey transaction was first submitted to
    the Board for approval in May 1993.     For more than a year, no
    action was taken by the Board on the form, and in June 1994,
    Imperial submitted a revised form to the Board for approval. At
    that time, the Board advised Imperial there was a problem on both
    forms relating to the statutory requirement that the forms contain
    "the amount or method of computing the amount of any default or
    delinquency charge that is payable in the event of late payment."
    art. 24.11(d)(3).     Imperial submitted a revised form which
    corrected the problem identified by the Board and that form was
    approved by the Board in August 1994.      The form submitted by
    Imperial in May 1993—the form involved in the transaction at issue
    in this case—was never approved or disapproved by the Board.
    
    5 S. Ct. 1269
    , 
    122 L. Ed. 2d 665
    (1993), and Travelers Insurance Co. v.
    Chicago       Bridge         &     Iron      Co.,     
    442 S.W.2d 888
    ,    893
    (Tex.Civ.App.—Houston [1st Dist.1969], writ ref'd, n.r.e.), that
    the finance agreement executed by the parties was not illegal or
    void due to Imperial's failure to secure prior Board approval of
    its form.       The courts in both of the cited cases, considering
    article 5.06 of the Insurance Code which permits insurers to use
    only policy forms approved in writing by the Board, held that the
    insureds could not use the fact of the Board's non-approval of the
    insurers' policy forms to prevent the insurers from enforcing
    exclusions in their policies, reasoning that the insureds could not
    insist on their right to coverage while at the same time denying
    the insurers' right to enforcement of exclusions from coverage.
    Rather, "when an insured seeks to enforce a policy, ... the insured
    cannot select the good and discard the bad.                  Instead, he must take
    or leave the policy in its entirety."                      
    McLaren, 767 F. Supp. at 1376
    .     See    also    Hertz       Corp.    v.    Pap,    
    923 F. Supp. 914
    ,   922
    (N.D.Tex.1995), aff'd, 
    98 F.3d 1339
    (5th Cir.1996) ("The insured
    cannot choose to void only that language in the policy which does
    not favor her and retain the remainder of the policy, including the
    payment provisions.");             cf.    Mutual Life Ins. Co. of New York v.
    Daddy$ Money, Inc., 
    646 S.W.2d 255
    , 257 (Tex.App.—Dallas, 1982,
    writ ref'd n.r.e.) (where insurer had secured approval of policy
    form    but    had     not       obtained    Board    approval      of   conflicting
    endorsement, in violation of Article 3.42 of Insurance Code,
    insurer could not enforce endorsement against insured so as to
    6
    restrict insured's coverage).
    Though     our   rationale   may    be    somewhat    different,    we   are
    convinced, as was the district court, that the premium finance
    agreement is not void.     Nothing in the language of article 24.11 or
    any other provision of the Texas Insurance Code suggests that the
    legislature intended that an agreement executed in violation of the
    statute   be   declared   void.     In      fact,    indications   are   to   the
    contrary.      No penalty provision is included within the terms of
    article 24.11, but article 24.08 makes any violation of Chapter 24
    an "offense" which is a Class B misdemeanor, and article 24.05
    specifically authorizes the Board to revoke or suspend a premium
    finance company's license if, after notice and hearing, the Board
    finds "that the licensee has violated this chapter," which, of
    course, includes article 24.11.          Thus, a penalty for the violation
    is already prescribed by statute.             See Chicago 
    Bridge, 442 S.W.2d at 894
    (fact that Act prescribed penalty for violation—revocation
    of insurer's permit—indicated legislative intention that policy not
    be declared void).
    Furthermore, the legislature explicitly declined to invalidate
    premium finance agreements for more serious violations than the
    mere failure to obtain Board approval.              More to the point, article
    24.08(b) states:
    A premium finance company's taking or receiving from or
    charging an insured a greater charge than authorized by this
    chapter does not invalidate the premium finance agreement or
    the principal balance payable under the agreement but may be
    adjudged a forfeiture of all charges that the premium finance
    agreement carries with it or that have been agreed to be paid
    on the agreement.
    7
    In our opinion, this provision reflects a clear intent that the
    insured/borrower not be permitted to avoid its obligation under a
    premium finance agreement to repay the principal loan amount,
    though it may be relieved of what would otherwise have been its
    contractual             obligation       to   pay   additional         charges   where    those
    charges are imposed in violation of the provisions of Chapter 24.
    This is consistent with the manifest purpose of Chapter 24, and
    article           24.11,       in     particular,       which    is     protection   of    the
    insured/borrower under these types of agreements.                                Indeed, the
    concern to which article 24.11 is directed is evident from the
    language of the statute:                      full and complete disclosure to the
    insured of all terms of the loan, including all applicable charges
    and required payments.                  Where there is a failure of the complete
    disclosure contemplated by the statute, then the proper response
    might           well    be    to    invalidate      those     terms    and   conditions    not
    disclosed, but not avoidance of the agreement in toto.4
    Moreover,                while    we   do   not    suggest       that   defendants    lack
    standing to assert a challenge to the validity of this agreement,5
    the facts              that    these    defendants      are     not    insureds,   for    whose
    protection the statute was drafted, and that the warranties which
    4
    Of course, had the form involved been disapproved by the
    Board rather than simply not affirmatively approved by the Board,
    the court's analysis would no doubt be different. But that is not
    the situation which we confront or the issue we address.
    5
    Imperial argued to the court below that SAI and Khoury, not
    being insureds/borrowers under the premium finance agreement,
    lacked standing to challenge the validity of the premium finance
    agreement. The district court concluded that these defendants'
    interest in the agreement was sufficient to confer standing, and we
    do not disagree.
    8
    they are charged with having breached are not among the matters
    which    article      24.11   mandates   be   included   in   premium   finance
    agreements, tend to further persuade the court that defendants'
    argument in the case sub judice ought to be rejected.6                 Since the
    court concludes that the agreement is not void, the court finds no
    merit to defendants' contention that the lower court erred in
    excluding evidence that the form had not been approved by the
    Board.        The trial court correctly concluded that defendants'
    evidence regarding the failure of approval was irrelevant and
    inadmissible.
    The Fraud Verdict
    Defendants' primary argument on appeal is that the jury's
    verdict for fraud cannot stand in view of the principle espoused by
    the Texas Supreme Court in Southwestern Bell Telephone Co. v.
    DeLanney, 
    809 S.W.2d 493
    , 494 (Tex.1991), that while the acts of a
    party may simultaneously breach duties in tort and contract,
    "[w]hen the only loss or damage is to the subject matter of the
    contract,"      the    plaintiff's   claim    "ordinarily     sounds    only   in
    contract."      The court must reject defendants' argument, however,
    given the Texas Supreme Court's recent clarification in Formosa
    Plastics Corp. v. Presidio Engineers, 40 Tex.Sup.Ct.J. 877, 
    1997 WL 378129
    (Tex. July 9, 1997), that DeLanney does not apply to
    6
    Indeed, Imperial makes a plausible argument that since
    article 24.11 does not include agent/broker warranties among the
    matters which must be included in premium finance agreements, then
    the Agent/Broker Warranty contained in its premium finance
    agreement is severable from the remainder of the agreement and
    enforceable in spite of any defect in the terms of the premium
    finance agreement.
    9
    preclude tort damages in fraud cases.7
    Defendants submit, alternatively, that even if plaintiff's
    fraud claim is not objectionable on DeLanney grounds, it still must
    be reversed inasmuch as it is legally and factually insufficient.
    More to the point, defendants object that the district court erred
    in failing to specifically instruct the jury that defendants could
    be found liable for fraud only if their challenged representations
    were false "when made."     And, seeking relief from the district
    court's denial of their motion for judgment as a matter of law,
    they argue that there was not sufficient evidence from which the
    jury could have found that their representations were false when
    made.
    Contrary to defendants' urging, the record discloses ample
    evidence from which the jury could have inferred that Khoury and
    SAI knew prior to preparing and presenting the premium finance
    agreement to Imperial that the insurance carriers, policies and
    terms reflected therein were not the carriers, policies and terms
    which they, in fact, intended to secure for Monterrey.   And if the
    jury so found, the jury likewise had before it sufficient evidence
    from which it could also have inferred that defendants' purpose in
    misrepresenting these matters was to induce Imperial to loan monies
    7
    In so ruling, the Texas court explicitly disapproved a number
    of state appellate court decisions which held that tort damages
    were not recoverable for a fraudulent inducement claim in the
    absence of an injury distinct from any permissible contractual
    damages. Formosa Plastics, 
    1997 WL 378129
    , at *7. The court thus
    implicitly rejected this court's conclusion in Heller Financial,
    Inc. v. Grammco Computer Sales, Inc., 
    71 F.3d 518
    (5th Cir.1996),
    and Fielder v. King, 
    103 F.3d 17
    , 20 (5th Cir.1997), which adopted
    the view of those disapproved state court decisions.
    10
    which it would not have loaned had it been apprised of the
    defendants' true intentions. Thus, there is evidence in the record
    which would support a verdict for fraud on the basis that Khoury
    and SAI made representations which were false "when made" with the
    intent that Imperial loan money to their client in reliance on
    those representations.8
    However, in addition to its argument at trial that Khoury
    and/or SAI knew when the premium finance agreement was signed that
    the matters reflected therein relating to Monterrey's insurance
    coverage were false, plaintiff also suggested at trial that even if
    the jury were to find that Khoury and/or SAI correctly represented
    these matters in the premium finance agreement, the jury might
    nevertheless     find   SAI   and/or   Khoury    liable     for   fraud   if   it
    determined that subsequent to their representations to Imperial but
    prior to Imperial's disbursement of funds to Monterrey, SAI and/or
    Khoury effected a change in Monterrey's insurance which they failed
    to disclose to Imperial.          In our opinion, this theory of fraud
    liability is legally inadequate.
    Under Texas law, in the absence of a duty to disclose, mere
    silence does not amount to fraud or misrepresentation;              and a duty
    to   disclose     arises   only   where     a   fiduciary    or   confidential
    8
    The only specific evidence to which defendants have pointed
    as having belied plaintiff's allegations of misrepresentation and
    breach of warranty (other than Khoury's denials of wrongdoing) is
    documentation which reflects that in December 1992, a month before
    the premium finance agreement was signed, plaintiff was apprised
    that there might be a "new player." However, when, a month later,
    defendants specifically represented that the players were the same
    as those of the previous policy year, plaintiff reasonably could
    have assumed that there were no new players.
    11
    relationship exists.             Bay Colony, Ltd. v. Trendmaker, Inc., 
    121 F.3d 998
    , 1004 (5th Cir.1997) (quoting Southwest E & T Suppliers,
    Inc. v. American Enka Corp., 
    463 F.2d 1165
    , 1166 (5th Cir.1972)
    ("Texas law is clear that if there is no confidential or fiduciary
    relation between the parties [creating a duty to disclose], mere
    silence does not amount to fraud or misrepresentation."). Imperial
    acknowledges this principle, but pointing out that it adduced
    evidence at trial of its fiduciary relationship with Khoury and
    SAI, submits that defendants' "duties"—referring presumably to
    their alleged duties of disclosure—"arose from a special business
    relationship of reposed trust and confidence which was breached."
    In     Crim   Truck   &    Tractor    Co.    v.     Navistar   International
    Transportation         Corp.,     
    823 S.W.2d 591
    ,    (Tex.1992),   the   court
    explained that "while the existence of a confidential relationship
    is ordinarily a question of fact, when the issue is one of no
    evidence, it becomes a question of law."                   In this case, the jury
    was never called upon to consider whether such a relationship
    existed and consequently never found, implicitly or explicitly,
    that a fiduciary or confidential relationship existed between
    Imperial and SAI and/or Khoury.9                 Neither was the jury apprised
    that       the   existence   of    a    fiduciary    relationship      stood   as   a
    prerequisite to a verdict for fraud premised on a failure by SAI
    and/or       Khoury,    following       execution     of    the   premium   finance
    9
    A review       of the record discloses no basis for the statement
    in Imperial's        brief that "[i]n the case before the Court, the
    evidence amply       supports the jury's finding that Plaintiff Imperial
    and Defendants       SAI/Khoury had a special relationship."
    12
    agreement, to inform Imperial of the changes in carriers and
    coverage.      Thus, even had the evidence tended to show a fiduciary
    or confidential relationship between the parties, the absence of a
    jury instruction on or jury finding of a fiduciary relationship
    would undermine any fraud verdict for plaintiff premised on such a
    duty.    It is manifest, though, that there was no evidence from
    which the jury could have found such a duty had it confronted the
    issue, and therefore, as a matter of law, a jury verdict for fraud
    potentially based on such a duty cannot stand.
    Recently, in ARA Automotive Group v. Central Garage, Inc., 
    124 F.3d 720
    (5th Cir.1997), after surveying pertinent Texas authority
    on the subject of fiduciary and confidential relationships, a panel
    of this court reversed a jury verdict for the plaintiff on its
    claim for      breach   of   fiduciary   duty      upon   concluding   that   the
    plaintiff's evidence was not sufficient to establish a fiduciary or
    confidential     relationship.        This   was    the   court's   conclusion,
    despite extensive evidence of a "long history of "oral and written
    agreements, joint undertakings, shared confidences and cooperative
    ventures'," marked by "cooperation and friendship."                 
    Id. at 724,
    726.     The court noted that in Texas, certain formal fiduciary
    relationships,       such     as      principal/agent,        attorney/client,
    partnership and trustee-cestui que trust, give rise to fiduciary
    duties as a matter of law.            
    Id. at 723
    (citing Crim 
    Truck, 823 S.W.2d at 593-94
    ).      Other    "informal     relationships,"     termed
    "confidential relationships," may also give rise to a fiduciary
    duty "where one person trusts in and relies upon another, whether
    13
    the relation is a moral, social, domestic or merely personal one."
    Crim 
    Truck, 823 S.W.2d at 594
    (quoting Fitz-Gerald v. Hull, 
    150 Tex. 39
    , 
    237 S.W.2d 256
    , 261 (1951)).    But as the court made clear
    in Crim Truck, particularly in the business arena, trust and
    reliance alone are not sufficient ingredients for the relationship,
    for "[t]he fact that one businessman trusts another, and relies
    upon his promise to perform a contract, does not rise to a
    confidential relationship." 
    Id. at 594.
    "Neither is the fact that
    the relationship has been a cordial one, of long duration, evidence
    of   a   confidential   relationship."   
    Id. at 595.
      Rather,   a
    confidential relationship exists only where "one party is in fact
    accustomed to being guided by the judgment or advice of the other,
    or is justified in placing confidence in the belief that such party
    will act in its interest."    Thames v. Johnson, 
    614 S.W.2d 612
    , 614
    (Tex.Civ.App.—Texarkana 1981, no writ).
    We recognize, as did the ARA panel, that under Texas law, "
    "a fiduciary duty will not be lightly created' since "it imposes
    extraordinary duties' and requires the fiduciary to "put the
    interests of the beneficiary ahead of its own if the need arises.'
    "    ARA, at 723 (quoting Floors Unlimited, Inc. v. Fieldcrest
    Cannon, Inc., 
    55 F.3d 181
    , 188 (5th Cir.1995)).     And as was further
    noted in ARA, since the Texas Supreme Court's decision in Crim
    Truck, "few Texas cases have found fiduciary relationships outside
    of legal relationships that carry fiduciary duties as a matter of
    law."     
    Id. at 726,
    and none had found such a relationship in "a
    transactional setting involving experienced managers," 
    id. 14 This
    case now before the court obviously does not involve any
    of   the   formal   relationships   that    automatically   give   rise   to
    fiduciary    duties,    and   therefore,     Imperial   could   only   have
    established a duty of disclosure which might support its claim of
    fraud by adducing sufficient proof of an informal, confidential
    relationship with SAI and/or Khoury.         The only proof presented by
    Imperial toward that end was limited testimony that Imperial had a
    business relationship with SAI, and with Khoury, spanning a several
    year period, and that Imperial had given SAI, through Khoury, draft
    authority up to a certain amount.          The fact that it extended them
    this authority, according to Imperial, clearly establishes the
    trust which it accorded SAI and Khoury.          These facts are plainly
    insufficient to establish a fiduciary or confidential relationship
    between these parties for they would not have warranted Imperial's
    expecting that SAI and/or Khoury would put Imperial's interests
    ahead of their own.     At best, Imperial established that it reposed
    a degree of trust—and not unlimited trust—in defendants' judgment
    and integrity.      We would reiterate, though, "[t]he fact that one
    businessman trusts another ... does not rise to a confidential
    relationship."      Crim 
    Truck, 823 S.W.2d at 594
    .
    For the reason that there was no fiduciary relationship
    between the parties, it follows that there could have been no
    legally sufficient basis for a fraud verdict premised on SAI's
    and/or Khoury's post-representation nondisclosure of the change in
    insurance carriers and coverages.          Because the court submitted to
    the jury a single fraud interrogatory which did not differentiate
    15
    between the theories of fraud liability posited by plaintiffs, it
    is impossible for us to now determine whether or not the jury's
    verdict is legally sustainable.    This court has said that "[w]hen
    a district court submits two or more alternative grounds for
    recovery to the jury on a single interrogatory and the plaintiff
    prevails, we ordinarily order a new trial if one of the grounds for
    recovery is "legally inadequate,' " Reeves v. AcroMed Corp., 
    44 F.3d 300
    , 302 (5th Cir.), cert. denied, 
    515 U.S. 1104
    , 
    115 S. Ct. 2251
    , 
    132 L. Ed. 2d 258
    (1995) (citing Walther v. Lone Star Gas Co.,
    
    952 F.2d 119
    , 126 (5th Cir.1992)), for in such a case, "the
    reviewing court cannot determine whether the jury based its verdict
    on a sound or unsound theory," 
    id. (quoting Pan
    Eastern Exploration
    v. Hufo Oils, 
    855 F.2d 1106
    , 1123 (5th Cir.1988)).
    In most cases, "[w]here two [or more] claims have been
    submitted to the jury ... in a single interrogatory, a new
    trial may be required if one of the claims was submitted
    erroneously," unless we are " "reasonably certain that the
    jury was not significantly influenced by issues erroneously
    submitted to it.' " Braun v. Flynt, 
    731 F.2d 1205
    , 1206 (5th
    Cir.), cert. denied, 
    469 U.S. 883
    , 
    105 S. Ct. 252
    , 
    83 L. Ed. 2d 189
    (1984) (quoting E.I. du Pont de Nemours & Co. v. Berkley
    & Co., 
    620 F.2d 1247
    , 1258 n. 8 (8th Cir.1980)). Thus, if we
    find that the defendants were entitled to a directed verdict
    on any one of the ... theories of liability, we must remand
    the case for a new trial unless we are "reasonably certain"
    that   the   jury's   verdict   was  not   based  upon   the
    erroneously-submitted theory or theories.
    Woods v. Sammisa Co., Ltd., 
    873 F.2d 842
    , 849-50 (5th Cir.1989),
    cert. denied, 
    493 U.S. 1050
    , 
    110 S. Ct. 853
    , 
    107 L. Ed. 2d 847
    (1990).
    Because we cannot be "reasonably certain" that the jury's
    verdict in this case was based on a sustainable theory of fraud,
    rather than on a legally invalid and hence erroneously submitted
    theory, we must reverse the verdict and remand the case for a new
    16
    trial on the plaintiff's charge that defendants SAI and/or Khoury
    made representations to Imperial which were false "when made."             We
    would be compelled to do this even were we of the view that the
    jury's verdict on the breach of warranty claim was proper and could
    be   upheld,   since   the   jury,   in   addition   to   its   verdict   for
    compensatory damages, also awarded punitive damages which, under
    Texas law, are available for fraud but not for breach of contract.
    See Jim Walter Homes, Inc. v. Reed, 
    711 S.W.2d 617
    , 618 (Tex.1986).
    But plaintiff's claim for breach of warranty suffers a shortcoming
    similar to that identified with respect to its cause of action for
    fraud.
    Breach of Warranty
    As with its fraud claim, Imperial urged at trial that SAI
    and/or Khoury knew at the time the Agent/Broker Warranty was
    executed that the identity of the insurers, the terms of the
    policies obtained or to be obtained and the amount of premium for
    those policies which were set forth in the finance agreement were
    not correct.     However, the jury was also permitted to find for
    Imperial on this claim even if it concluded that the matters
    warranted by Khoury and/or SAI were correct when the warranty was
    signed if the jury were to find that Khoury and/or SAI knew, prior
    to Imperial's disbursement of the loan funds, that Monterrey
    planned to purchase alternate coverage.              In support of their
    contention that this latter theory could constitute a valid basis
    for imposing liability, Imperial reasons that because the finance
    agreement executed by the parties specifically requires Imperial's
    17
    written consent to changes in the agreement, then the agreement
    necessarily mandates that Imperial be notified of any changes in
    coverage.10    And while it concedes that Monterrey was not precluded
    by the agreement or otherwise from changing its insurance coverage,
    it maintains that in the event of any change in coverage, it was
    entitled to notice, and that therefore, even assuming that the
    policy information contained in the premium finance agreement was
    correct when the warranty was signed, the failure of SAI and/or
    Khoury to notify it of Monterrey's change of insurers, coverage and
    premium amounts constituted a breach of the contract.      Defendants
    are correct, however, in their contention that any contractual duty
    to notify Imperial of post-execution changes in coverage was
    Monterrey's, not Khoury's or SAI's, and any breach of that duty by
    Monterrey could not provide the basis of a verdict against SAI or
    Khoury for breach of the Agency/Broker Warranty.
    Personal Liability of Khoury
    Khoury argues that there is no factual basis upon which he
    could be held personally liable to Imperial on any theory of
    recovery.     In support of his position, he asserts that there was no
    evidence that he spoke directly with anyone at Imperial concerning
    Monterrey's insurance coverage or the premium finance agreement and
    that instead, all communications between Imperial and SAI were with
    SAI employee Sarah Estep. In response to this contention, Imperial
    10
    The agreement states in relevant part:
    ENTIRE DOCUMENT AND GOVERNING LAW. This document is the
    entire agreement between Imperial and Borrower and can
    only be changed by a writing signed by both parties.
    18
    points to evidence which was presented at trial to demonstrate
    Khoury's intimate involvement in the transaction at issue from
    which, in our opinion, the jury could reasonably have inferred that
    at the time he signed the Agent/Broker Warranty, Khoury knew that
    the information included in the agreement was false, or that he
    made    the   warranty   regarding    Monterey's   insurance   coverage
    recklessly without any knowledge of the truth.
    Khoury insists further, though, that he did not sign the
    warranty in his personal capacity but rather did so solely in a
    representative capacity as an agent for his disclosed principal,
    SAI, as evidenced by the fact that SAI, and not Khoury, was
    identified as the "Agent" in the upper left-hand corner of the
    document.11    It is clear under Texas law that since Khoury's
    signature appears on the Agent/Broker Warranty, unaccompanied by
    any designation to suggest that he was signing on behalf of SAI,
    then at least in the absence of any proof by Khoury that he
    disclosed to Imperial at the time of the transaction that he was
    signing the document in a representative capacity, he cannot escape
    personal liability on the warranty.        See Seale v. Nichols, 
    505 S.W.2d 251
    (Tex.1974); see also Griffin v. Ellinger, 
    538 S.W.2d 97
    (Tex.1976);     A to Z Rental Center v. Burris, 
    714 S.W.2d 433
    (Tex.App.—Austin 1986, writ ref'd n.r.e.).         And this is so even
    11
    Khoury notes that while his signature appears under the
    Agent/Broker Warranty on the premium finance agreement, he did not
    actually sign the document himself but rather his signature was
    stamped on the form by a secretary.      However, Khoury has not
    contended that he did not authorize the placement of his signature
    on the document, and in fact, he implicitly acknowledged at trial
    that his signature was placed on the warranty with his approval.
    19
    though the identity of his principal, SAI, was disclosed in the
    agreement.   Cf. 
    Griffin, 538 S.W.2d at 99
    (fact that name of
    corporation appeared on check and account was that of corporation
    does not establish that signer signed check in representative
    capacity).
    We have considered the other issues raised by the defendants
    and find them without merit.
    Accordingly, we REVERSE the district court's ruling denying
    defendants’ motion for new trial and REMAND this case for a new
    trial consistent with this opinion.
    20
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 96-20963

Filed Date: 1/6/1998

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 12/21/2014

Authorities (21)

john-woods-and-beverly-woods-and-coopert-smith-stevedores , 873 F.2d 842 ( 1989 )

A to Z Rental Center v. Burris , 1986 Tex. App. LEXIS 8327 ( 1986 )

ARA Automotive Group v. Central Garage, Inc. , 124 F.3d 720 ( 1997 )

Southwestern Bell Telephone Co. v. DeLanney , 809 S.W.2d 493 ( 1991 )

Crim Truck & Tractor Co. v. Navistar International ... , 35 Tex. Sup. Ct. J. 342 ( 1992 )

pan-eastern-exploration-co-and-anadarko-petroleum-corp-cross-appellees , 855 F.2d 1106 ( 1988 )

prod.liab.rep. (Cch) P 14,158 Dorothy Marie Reeves v. ... , 44 F.3d 300 ( 1995 )

Melvin WALTHER, Plaintiff-Appellee, v. LONE STAR GAS ... , 952 F.2d 119 ( 1992 )

Fielder v. King (In Re King) , 103 F.3d 17 ( 1997 )

Floors Unlimited, Inc., D/B/A First Floors v. Fieldcrest ... , 55 F.3d 181 ( 1995 )

Southwest E & T Suppliers, Inc. v. American Enka ... , 463 F.2d 1165 ( 1972 )

Ed Braun v. Larry C. Flynt, Chic Magazine, Inc. , 731 F.2d 1205 ( 1984 )

E. I. Du Pont De Nemours & Company v. Berkley and Company, ... , 620 F.2d 1247 ( 1980 )

Heller Financial, Inc. v. Grammco Computer Sales, Inc. , 71 F.3d 518 ( 1996 )

Seale v. Nichols , 17 Tex. Sup. Ct. J. 189 ( 1974 )

Thames v. Johnson , 1981 Tex. App. LEXIS 3486 ( 1981 )

Travelers Insurance Co. v. Chicago Bridge & Iron Co. , 1969 Tex. App. LEXIS 2827 ( 1969 )

Mutual Life Insurance Co. of New York v. Daddy$ Money, Inc. , 1982 Tex. App. LEXIS 5582 ( 1982 )

Griffin v. Ellinger , 19 Tex. Sup. Ct. J. 340 ( 1976 )

McLaren v. Imperial Casualty , 968 F.2d 17 ( 1992 )

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