University General Hospital, L.P., University Hospital Systems, LLP, Charo Barnette, in Her Capacity as Independent of the Estate of Guy Barnette, and John E. Udeh v. Siemens Medical Solutions USA, Inc. ( 2017 )


Menu:
  • Opinion issued May 9, 2017
    In The
    Court of Appeals
    For The
    First District of Texas
    ————————————
    NO. 01-14-00678-CV
    ———————————
    UNIVERSITY GENERAL HOSPITAL, L.P.; UNIVERSITY HOSPITAL
    SYSTEMS, LLP; CHARO BARNETTE, IN HER CAPACITY AS
    INDEPENDENT EXECUTOR OF THE ESTATE OF GUY BARNETTE;
    AND JOHN E. UDEH, Appellants
    V.
    SIEMENS MEDICAL SOLUTIONS USA, INC., Appellee
    On Appeal from the 215th District Court
    Harris County, Texas
    Trial Court Case No. 2013-18863
    MEMORANDUM OPINION
    This appeal arises from a dispute over a breach of a settlement agreement.
    Applying the terms of the settlement, we affirm the judgment to the extent it enforced
    the liability of University General Hospital, L.P. and University Hospital Systems,
    LLP, which agreed to be jointly and severally liable for a sum of $5,500,000. We
    reverse to the extent the judgment imposed liability against Barnette and Udeh, who
    were expressly excused from their obligations as individual guarantors, and we
    render a take-nothing judgment in their favor. In light of our holdings, we remand
    for further proceedings relating to the recovery of reasonable and necessary
    attorney’s fees.
    Background
    This lawsuit arises out of the failed settlement of a prior suit. In 2010, Siemens
    Medical Solutions USA, Inc. filed suit against University General Hospital, L.P. and
    University Hospital Systems, LLP, alleging that they breached several contracts
    under which Siemens provided medical equipment, information-technology
    services, and maintenance. Siemens also sued Guy Barnette, John E. Udeh, and
    Moien R. Butt as guarantors. The parties entered into a settlement agreement to
    resolve that lawsuit.
    In their settlement agreement, the parties made several commitments to one
    another. University General agreed to pay Siemens $4,850,000. University General
    was obligated to pay $1,000,000 the day that Siemens signed the settlement papers,
    and the remainder was to be paid in 20 monthly installments. The parties agreed to
    dismiss the 2010 lawsuit with prejudice upon University General’s initial $1,000,000
    2
    payment. University General and Siemens further agreed to execute a new health-
    services agreement and several addenda to existing equipment leases.
    Under the settlement agreement, so long as University General satisfied its
    obligations, none of the other defendants were required to pay any portion of the
    $4,850,000 settlement amount. However, all of the defendants were obligated to sign
    an “Agreed Judgment” that Siemens would hold until University General had made
    all of the installment payments. Execution of this Agreed Judgment extinguished the
    liability of Barnette, Udeh, and Butt as guarantors of the original contracts which
    gave rise to the dispute. However, if University General failed to make the required
    payments or it otherwise breached the agreement and failed to cure its default after
    written notice, Siemens was entitled to seek entry of the Agreed Judgment.
    Under the terms of the Agreed Judgment, University General and University
    Hospital would be jointly and severally liable for $5,500,000 in damages, subject to
    a dollar-for-dollar credit for any payments already made by University General. In
    addition, Barnette, Udeh, and Butt each would be severally but not jointly liable for
    $866,667 of the $5,500,000 owed by University General and University Hospital.
    Barnette, Udeh, and Butt would be entitled to a credit of 12 cents on the dollar for
    any payments already made by University General.
    University General paid Siemens the initial $1,000,000 required under the
    agreement in mid-October 2011. When University General’s first installment
    3
    payment came due on October 31, it failed to pay. On November 2, Siemens notified
    University General and the other parties to the settlement agreement that it intended
    to file and enforce the Agreed Judgment. Nevertheless, in accord with the settlement
    agreement’s terms regarding the effect of the initial $1,000,000 payment, the parties
    filed an agreed motion to dismiss the 2010 lawsuit with prejudice on November 4.
    The trial court dismissed the suit that same day. University General made belated
    payments of $50,000 and $150,000 during November, but it again failed to make its
    installment payment at the end of the month. It failed to make its next installment
    payment at the end of December as well. Siemens made additional demands for
    payment in December 2011 and January 2012; in these notices it restated its
    intention to file and enforce the Agreed Judgment.
    In January 2012, Siemens filed the Agreed Judgment under the same cause
    number as the 2010 lawsuit and sought its entry and enforcement. In February 2012,
    91 days after dismissing the suit, the trial court signed and entered the Agreed
    Judgment. University General and the other defendants appealed from the Agreed
    Judgment to this court. While that appeal was pending, Butt settled with Siemens for
    $722,667 and was dismissed from the suit. This court subsequently vacated the
    Agreed Judgment, holding that it was “void” because it had been entered by the trial
    court after its plenary power expired. See Univ. Gen. Hosp. v. Siemens Med.
    Solutions USA, No. 01-12-00174-CV, 
    2013 WL 772951
    , at *2–3 (Tex. App.—
    4
    Houston [1st Dist.] Feb. 28, 2013, no pet.) (mem. op.). The court, however, noted
    that Siemens was “not left without a remedy—it can file suit to enforce the
    settlement agreement.” 
    Id. at *3.
    Siemens then brought this suit against University General and the other
    appellants. In its petition, Siemens once again sought entry of the Agreed Judgment.
    It also alleged breach of the settlement agreement and requested a declaratory
    judgment of its rights under the settlement agreement, including a declaration that it
    had a right to seek entry of the Agreed Judgment. Siemens eventually moved for
    summary judgment, contending that University General and the other appellants
    were liable for breach of the settlement agreement and that the proper remedy was
    entry of a judgment consistent with the terms of the Agreed Judgment. The trial court
    entered a partial summary judgment finding University General liable to Siemens
    for breach of contract and awarding damages. The remainder of Siemens’s claims,
    including its request for attorney’s fees, were set for trial.
    After a bench trial, the trial court entered a final judgment, which superseded
    the partial summary judgment, in favor of Siemens for breach of the settlement
    agreement. The trial court found that University General and University Hospital
    were jointly and severally liable for $3,577,333, which the trial court calculated by
    subtracting the $1,200,000 already paid by University General and the $722,667 paid
    by Butt from the $5,500,000 in liability imposed by the Agreed Judgment. The trial
    5
    court further found Barnette and Udeh liable for $722,667 each. Consistent with the
    terms of the Agreed Judgment, their personal liability comprised a portion of the
    $3,577,333 award, rather than being in addition to it, and it was calculated by
    applying the 12-cents-per-dollar credit to the $866,667 in individual liability stated
    in the Agreed Judgment. In addition, the trial court awarded Siemens $180,155.66
    for attorney’s fees incurred after University General’s breach of the settlement
    agreement until the filing of the present lawsuit, $271,153.19 in attorney’s fees
    incurred during this suit through summary judgment, and $244,970.03 in attorney’s
    fees incurred after the summary judgment.
    The trial court entered findings of fact and conclusions of law. It concluded
    that University General and the other appellants agreed to the terms of the Agreed
    Judgment in the event of a breach of the settlement agreement, and it therefore based
    its award of damages on the Agreed Judgment’s terms. It further concluded that
    Siemens was entitled to attorney’s fees under Chapters 37 and 38 of the Texas Civil
    Practice and Remedies Code.
    This appeal followed. University General and University Hospital filed for
    Chapter 11 bankruptcy, resulting in an automatic stay. After the bankruptcy court
    lifted the stay, we reinstated the appeal.
    6
    Analysis
    I.    Scope of contractual liability
    University General and the other appellants contend that the trial court erred
    by enforcing the terms of the Agreed Judgment instead of the terms of the parties’
    settlement agreement. Siemens responds that the settlement agreement provides that
    the terms of the Agreed Judgment control if University General breaches the
    agreement, which it did.
    The interpretation of an unambiguous contract is a question of law, which we
    review de novo. Kachina Pipeline Co. v. Lillis, 
    471 S.W.3d 445
    , 449 (Tex. 2015).
    The parties’ intent, as expressed in the language of their agreement, is controlling.
    Plains Expl. & Prod. Co. v. Torch Energy Advisors, 
    473 S.W.3d 296
    , 305 (Tex.
    2015). Extrinsic evidence may not be introduced to prove some meaning other than
    what the contract states. Anglo-Dutch Petrol. Int’l v. Greenberg Peden, P.C., 
    352 S.W.3d 445
    , 451 (Tex. 2011). The contract’s language is considered as a whole,
    attempting to give effect to all of its provisions so that none are rendered
    meaningless. Seagull Energy E&P v. Eland Energy, 
    207 S.W.3d 342
    , 345 (Tex.
    2006). Occasionally, however, the way in which parties draft an agreement may
    unavoidably render a provision inoperative. E.g., Houston Expl. Co. v. Wellington
    Underwriting Agencies, 
    352 S.W.3d 462
    , 473 (Tex. 2011). Unless the contract
    shows that it uses a term in a technical or different sense, we give its provisions their
    7
    plain, ordinary, and generally accepted meaning. Valence Operating Co. v. Dorsett,
    
    164 S.W.3d 656
    , 662 (Tex. 2005). Furthermore, we read the contract’s words and
    phrases together and in context, not in isolation from one another. Hysaw v.
    Dawkins, 
    483 S.W.3d 1
    , 13 (Tex. 2016).
    In a suit for breach of contract, the court is confined to the parties’ bargain; it
    can enforce the contract’s terms but it generally cannot modify them. In re Merrill
    Lynch Tr. Co., 
    235 S.W.3d 185
    , 191 (Tex. 2007). We may not rewrite a contract or
    add to its language in the guise of interpreting it. Fischer v. CTMI, L.L.C., 
    479 S.W.3d 231
    , 239 (Tex. 2016); Gilbert Tex. Constr. v. Underwriters at Lloyd’s
    London, 
    327 S.W.3d 118
    , 126–27 (Tex. 2010). Therefore, if the remedies for breach
    are specified in the contract, the non-breaching party ordinarily is limited to these
    remedies even if another remedy would go further to make it whole. Am. Mfrs. Mut.
    Ins. Co. v. Schaefer, 
    124 S.W.3d 154
    , 162 (Tex. 2003).
    In sum, contract rights ordinarily arise directly from the agreement’s
    language, not principles of equity. Fortis Benefits v. Cantu, 
    234 S.W.3d 642
    , 647
    (Tex. 2007). Thus, unambiguous contracts usually are enforced as written even if
    one or more of the parties made a poor bargain or created hardships for themselves.
    Venture Cotton Coop. v. Freeman, 
    435 S.W.3d 222
    , 228 (Tex. 2014). The role of
    courts is to enforce valid contracts, not to protect parties from their own agreements.
    El Paso Field Servs. v. MasTec N. Am., 
    389 S.W.3d 802
    , 810–11 (Tex. 2012).
    8
    If the terms of the settlement agreement had been fulfilled, University General
    alone would have been obligated to pay Siemens $4,850,000. Of that amount,
    University General had to pay the first $1,000,000 the day that Siemens signed the
    agreement. Upon payment of that $1,000,000, the parties agreed to execute and file
    papers dismissing the 2010 lawsuit with prejudice. University General paid the
    $1,000,000, the parties filed the dismissal papers, and the court dismissed the suit
    with prejudice.
    University General was obliged to pay the remainder of the settlement amount
    over a period of 20 months. So long as University General did so, the other appellants
    had no payment obligations. However, to protect Siemens, under the settlement
    agreement University General and the other appellants were required to sign and
    tender to Siemens an “Agreed Judgment” in the amount of $5,500,000 and in a
    specified form. The Agreed Judgment bore the style and cause number of the 2010
    lawsuit, and it provided that University General and University Hospital would be
    jointly and severally liable for $5,500,000 and that the individual appellants each
    would be liable for $866,667 of this total amount, subject to offsets for any amounts
    previously paid in settlement. Siemens agreed not to file or seek entry of this Agreed
    Judgment unless University General breached the settlement agreement.
    Once University General paid the full settlement amount of $4,850,000,
    Siemens was obligated to return the executed Agreed Judgment to University
    9
    General, and the appellants then would have had no further liability under the
    settlement agreement or the Agreed Judgment. University General, however, failed
    to make the installment payments required by the agreement and litigation ensued—
    first Siemens’s unsuccessful attempt to enforce the Agreed Judgment after the trial
    court’s plenary power in the 2010 suit had expired, and now this suit seeking to
    enforce the terms of the settlement agreement.
    Siemens contends that the plain language of the settlement agreement
    provides it with the same remedy for University General’s breach as specified in the
    Agreed Judgment. We agree with Siemens in part. In the event of a breach, the
    agreement provided without qualification that University General and University
    Hospital “will be jointly and severally liable for the full amount of the Agreed
    Judgment.” By this language, these entities contractually committed to pay Siemens
    $5,500,000 (“the full amount of the Agreed Judgment”) in the event of a breach of
    the settlement agreement, regardless of whether the Agreed Judgment itself
    remained independently enforceable. The subsequent unenforceability of the Agreed
    Judgment due to the expiration of the trial court’s plenary power is immaterial to
    this separate and distinct contractual commitment. Indeed, the settlement
    agreement’s severability clause explicitly provided that if any part is held “void or
    unenforceable for any reason,” the remainder would remain valid and enforceable
    “to the greatest possible degree.” Accordingly, University General and University
    10
    Hospital are jointly and severally liable for the sum of “the full amount of the Agreed
    Judgment”—$5,500,000—notwithstanding the unenforceability of the Agreed
    Judgment document.
    By contrast, in the event of a breach, the settlement agreement did not commit
    Barnette, Udeh, or Butt to pay any amount to Siemens apart from their obligations
    under the Agreed Judgment, which turned out to be unenforceable. The settlement
    agreement expressly provided for the dismissal of the original litigation with
    prejudice. The settlement agreement also expressly specified that Barnette, Udeh,
    and Butt “are not jointly and severally liable . . . for the full amount of the Agreed
    Judgment” along with University General and University Hospital in the event of a
    breach. Instead, the personal liability of Barnette, Udeh, and Butt was repeatedly
    characterized as arising solely “under the Agreed Judgment.” Moreover, under the
    settlement agreement, the execution of the Agreed Judgment expressly extinguished
    their personal liability as guarantors. Accordingly, given that the Agreed Judgment,
    which this court has held to be “void,” was the only source of their continuing
    liability, Barnette, Udeh, and Butt are no longer personally liable for any sum as a
    result of University General’s breach of the settlement agreement.
    Siemens argues that an interpretation of the agreement that does not
    incorporate all of the terms of the Agreed Judgment improperly renders them
    meaningless. We disagree. The settlement agreement required University General to
    11
    make installment payments and provided for dismissal of the underlying suit with
    prejudice once it made the initial $1,000,000 payment. The agreement further
    provided for the execution of the Agreed Judgment and specified the circumstances
    under which Siemens could seek its entry. University General defaulted after making
    the initial payment. Siemens then notified the parties that it would seek entry of the
    Agreed Judgment, but it did not do so during the period in which the trial court
    retained plenary power. See TEX. R. CIV. P. 329b(d), (e). The trial court could have
    entered the Agreed Judgment had Siemens sought this relief within this period; thus,
    the Agreed Judgment’s provisions were not meaningless. Even after the Agreed
    Judgment was no longer enforceable due to the expiration of the trial court’s plenary
    power, Siemens continued to have a contractual remedy against University General
    and University Hospital. Because we cannot rewrite the parties’ settlement
    agreement or add to its terms, we reject Siemens’s position that it continues to be
    entitled to the greater relief that would have been available under the Agreed
    Judgment. See 
    Fischer, 479 S.W.3d at 239
    ; Gilbert Tex. 
    Constr., 327 S.W.3d at 126
    –
    27.
    Accordingly, we hold that the parties’ settlement agreement made University
    General and University Hospital “jointly and severally liable for the full amount of
    the Agreed Judgment.” Calculation of the “full amount of the Agreed Judgment”
    incorporates a dollar-for-dollar credit for any sums already paid by University
    12
    General. The “full amount of the Agreed Judgment” also factors in a deduction for
    any amount paid by Barnette, Udeh, or Butt. Reducing $5,500,000 by the sums
    already paid by University General—$1,200,000—and the amount paid in
    settlement by Butt—$722,667—results in University General and University
    Hospital being jointly and severally liable for $3,577,333 under the parties’
    settlement agreement. Consequently, we overrule the challenge to the portion of the
    trial court’s judgment decreeing that University General and University Hospital are
    jointly and severally liable to Siemens in the amount of $3,577,333. However, we
    sustain the challenge to that portion of the judgment which held Barnette and Udeh
    individually liable.
    II.   Attorney’s fees
    University General and the other appellants contend that the trial court erred
    by awarding attorney’s fees to Siemens for services that were neither necessary nor
    reasonable in amount. Their primary complaint on appeal is that the trial court
    impermissibly awarded attorney’s fees that Siemens incurred in its unsuccessful
    attempt to enforce the Agreed Judgment. Siemens responds that all of the attorney’s
    fees awarded were for necessary legal services and reasonable in amount.
    We review the amount of a fee award for an abuse of discretion. See Ventling
    v. Johnson, 
    466 S.W.3d 143
    , 154 (Tex. 2015). The reasonableness and necessity of
    attorney’s fees generally are questions of fact. Bocquet v. Herring, 
    972 S.W.2d 19
    ,
    13
    21 (Tex. 1998). Under some circumstances, however, attorney’s fees may be
    unreasonable or unnecessary as a matter of law. For example, fees incurred by a
    plaintiff in pursuit of claims against defendants who are not liable under a contract
    may not be recouped from other defendants who are liable because the legal services
    relating to the former were unnecessary to the recovery obtained. See Varner v.
    Cardenas, 
    218 S.W.3d 68
    , 69 (Tex. 2007) (per curiam). Similarly, an award that
    includes fees for legal services performed in pursuit of other parties who settled
    generally is not reasonable. See Stewart Title Guar. Co. v. Sterling, 
    822 S.W.2d 1
    ,
    10–11 (Tex. 1991). A fee also may be unreasonable in amount as a matter of law if
    the plaintiff obtained substantially less relief than it sought but was awarded all of
    the fees it incurred. See Smith v. Patrick W.Y. Tam Tr., 
    296 S.W.3d 545
    , 547–49
    (Tex. 2009).
    The trial court’s judgment subject to this appeal purported to enforce the
    Agreed Judgment and thereby imposed liability on University General, University
    Hospital, Barnette, and Udeh consistent with that document’s terms. Accordingly,
    the trial court’s award of attorney’s fees included fees that Siemens incurred in
    connection with its effort to enforce the Agreed Judgment, including:
    ●   $20,448.21 in fees and expenses incurred after University General’s
    nonpayment under the settlement agreement through original entry of the
    subsequently vacated Agreed Judgment;
    ●   $87,108.47 in fees and expenses incurred in post-judgment activities after
    original entry of the subsequently vacated Agreed Judgment; and
    14
    ●   $68,148.20 in fees and expenses incurred in connection with the previous
    appeal in which this court vacated the Agreed Judgment as “void.”
    “Necessary” ordinarily means “something that is essential or needed for some
    purpose.” Sw. Bell Tele. v. Emmett, 
    459 S.W.3d 578
    , 584 (Tex. 2015). Fees incurred
    in an unsuccessful lawsuit are neither essential nor needed for some purpose.
    Therefore, we hold that the aforementioned fees, which were incurred by Siemens
    in its unsuccessful attempt to enforce the Agreed Judgment, were unnecessary as a
    matter of law. See 
    Varner, 218 S.W.3d at 69
    . It became unenforceable because the
    court lost jurisdiction.
    In addition, the trial court awarded $4,450.78 in fees and expenses relating to
    Siemens’s work obtaining a settlement from Butt during the prior lawsuit. These fees
    ordinarily would not be recoverable from University General or University Hospital,
    because it would be unreasonable to impose on them fees that Siemens incurred
    pursuing a settling party. See Stewart 
    Title, 822 S.W.2d at 10
    –11. These fees also
    were unnecessary as a matter of law. We have held that only University General and
    University Hospital continue to be liable under the settlement agreement. Therefore,
    fees for legal services undertaken in pursuit of the other parties are not recoverable.
    See 
    Varner, 218 S.W.3d at 69
    . Likewise, because the trial court rendered judgment
    against Barnette and Udeh, whom we have held are not liable under the settlement
    agreement on appeal, its fee award included unnecessary fees incurred by Siemens
    for services performed in its pursuit of them. See 
    id. 15 In
    sum, the trial court’s fee award includes attorney’s fees that were neither
    necessary nor reasonable in amount. Therefore, we hold that the trial court abused
    its discretion. However, on this record we are unable to identify all of the
    unnecessary or unreasonable fees. For example, we cannot distinguish the fees
    incurred by Siemens in pursuit of Barnette and Udeh, who are not liable under the
    settlement agreement, from the fees incurred by Siemens in pursuit of University
    General and University Hospital, which are liable under the settlement agreement.
    Nor has the trial court had the opportunity to evaluate the reasonableness and
    necessity of the fees incurred by Siemens under the proper interpretation of the
    parties’ settlement agreement, under which only University General and University
    Hospital are liable for breach of contract. Thus, remand for reevaluation of the
    amount of attorney’s fees recoverable is necessary. See A.G. Edwards & Sons v.
    Beyer, 
    235 S.W.3d 704
    , 710 (Tex. 2007) (remanding for new trial on attorney’s fees
    where recoverable fees were not segregated from unrecoverable ones).
    III.   Prejudgment interest
    The trial court’s judgment references an award of prejudgment interest, but it
    does not award any amount of prejudgment interest in the portion decreeing the relief
    granted to Siemens. University General and the other appellants contend that the trial
    court therefore did not award prejudgment interest. Siemens disagrees with this
    16
    contention. However, no party actually argues that the trial court would have erred
    by awarding prejudgment interest for breach of the settlement agreement.
    To the extent the parties disagree about the meaning of the judgment, the trial
    court will have the opportunity to clarify its meaning on remand. We therefore need
    not reach the parties’ contentions concerning prejudgment interest. See Long v.
    Griffin, 
    442 S.W.3d 253
    , 256 (Tex. 2014) (per curiam).
    Conclusion
    We reverse the portion of the trial court’s judgment awarding damages and
    postjudgment interest against Barnette and Udeh, and we render a take-nothing
    judgment in their favor. We reverse the portion of the trial court’s judgment
    awarding Siemens its attorney’s fees and remand for a new trial on the issue of
    reasonable and necessary attorney’s fees consistent with this opinion. We affirm the
    remaining portions of the trial court’s judgment.
    Michael Massengale
    Justice
    Panel consists of Justices Massengale, Brown, and Huddle.
    17