Jerry Scarbrough, Denise Steele, and Melissa Victoria Deaton v. Helen Purser Sue E. Purser A/K/A Sue E. Van Zanten Gary W. Purser, Jr. JoAnn M. Purser And Elizabeth H. Tipton ( 2016 )


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  •       TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN
    NO. 03-13-00025-CV
    Jerry Scarbrough, Denise Steele, and Melissa Victoria Deaton, Appellants
    v.
    Helen Purser; Sue E. Purser a/k/a Sue E. Van Zanten; Gary W. Purser, Jr.;
    JoAnn M. Purser; and Elizabeth H. Tipton, Appellees
    FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF BELL COUNTY, 146TH JUDICIAL DISTRICT
    NO. 236,117-B, HONORABLE ALAN MAYFIELD, JUDGE PRESIDING
    MEMORANDUM OPINION
    Attorney Jerry Scarbrough and his former clients, Melissa Victoria Deaton1
    and Denise Steele,2 appeal from a jury verdict in favor of Helen Purser, Sue E. Purser a/k/a
    Sue E. Van Zanten, Gary W. Purser Jr., JoAnn M. Purser, and Elizabeth H. Tipton (the Purser
    Family) on claims of fraud, defamation, and defamation per se. The Purser Family’s suit asserted
    defamation and fraud claims arising from allegations that Deaton and Steele initiated an
    inappropriate relationship with family patriarch Gary W. Purser, Sr.3 and financially exploited him
    1
    Appellants’ counsel filed a suggestion of death for Deaton, stating a presumption that
    Deaton would want this appeal to continue.
    2
    Counsel for appellants stated at oral argument that Steele’s last name has changed to Pierce.
    For clarity, we will refer to this appellant by her former last name, consistent with the evidence, jury
    charge, and judgment in this case.
    3
    Purser Sr. was Helen’s husband, the father of Elizabeth, Gary Jr., and Sue, and the
    father-in-law of JoAnn, who is married to Gary Jr.
    while he suffered from dementia. The suit alleged that Scarbrough, the attorney who represented
    Deaton and Steele, conspired with his clients and also that he defamed the Purser Family by accusing
    them of abusing and murdering Purser Sr. The jury’s final judgment held Scarbrough, Steele, and
    Deaton jointly and severally liable for defamation and fraud based on the jury’s findings that they
    acted in concert or in conspiracy. The jury also found that appellants acted with malice or gross
    negligence and awarded exemplary damages of $13.5 million. Additionally, the court ordered
    sanctions totaling $54,261.50 against Scarbrough and $5,000 against Deaton for discovery abuse.
    In a voluminous and rambling appeal, Scarbrough raises 26 issues and Steele and
    Deaton raise 14 overlapping ones, primarily challenging the sufficiency of the evidence supporting
    the jury’s findings.4 They contend that the district court lacked jurisdiction over the Purser Family’s
    claims and that the court should not have given a spoliation instruction. They also contend that there
    was no evidence to support a variety of the jury’s findings and no clear-and-convincing evidence of
    appellants’ actual malice or gross negligence.
    Scarbrough separately contends that the court erred by denying his requested question
    and instruction on his claim that, as an attorney, he should have qualified immunity, and that there
    was no clear-and-convincing evidence he made any statement that was perceived as tending to affect
    a person injuriously or charging a person with illegal or immoral conduct. Scarbrough also contends
    that there was no basis for the discovery sanctions awards against him, that the Purser Family lacked
    standing to seek sanctions, that the exemplary damage and sanctions awards against him are
    4
    Steele and Deaton’s brief identifies fifteen issues but skips number thirteen, lists the
    “fourth issue” twice, and wholly omits their fraud-by-failure-to-disclose issue.
    2
    excessive and unconstitutional, that the court abused its discretion by denying his requested Rule 13
    sanctions, and that he was entitled to “immunity from prosecution” for his report about Purser, Sr.
    to Adult Protective Services.
    For the reasons that follow, we will reverse the portions of the judgment awarding
    compensatory damages to the Purser Family on their defamation and fraud claims against
    Scarbrough, Steele, and Deaton, with the exception of the unchallenged awards of past mental
    anguish damages for defamation; reverse the exemplary damages awards against Steele and Deaton;
    modify the exemplary damages award against Scarbrough by applying the statutory cap; and affirm
    the district court’s orders imposing sanctions against Scarbrough and Deaton.
    BACKGROUND5
    Purser Sr. meets Steele, Deaton, and Olvera
    Gary Purser Sr., a successful land developer and owner of several construction
    companies in Killeen, was in his late 70s and alleged to be in the early stages of Alzheimer’s disease
    when he met then 29-year old Denise Steele at the Red Lobster where she worked. Steele introduced
    Purser Sr. to her live-in boyfriend, Clayton Olvera, and to her friend, Melissa Deaton. Purser Sr.
    eventually hired Olvera to manage a business called Freytag Irrigation. According to Olvera,
    Purser Sr. and Steele began a romantic relationship and met weekly at a hotel, then later at Deaton’s
    home. Olvera testified that over time, Purser Sr. gave Steele jewelry, weekly payments of $500,
    $5,000 every other week for a car, money for attending real-estate classes and starting a sports bar,
    5
    The background is summarized from evidence in the record of this appeal.
    3
    and money to pay for cosmetic surgery. Steele admitted that Purser Sr. gave her money, but she
    denied that he paid for any medical procedures. She testified that Purser Sr. told her he had made
    several men into millionaires and he wanted “to make [her] the first woman millionaire.” Steele and
    Deaton were recorded discussing a property-development scheme with Purser Sr. in which the
    women would split $2.5 million each (the “secret recording”). In that recording they also discussed
    having Purser Sr.’s children and a fantasy of traveling to Las Vegas together. During that same
    discussion they told Purser Sr. that when he died, he should not do as some people who leave all
    their money to a dog because he had Steele and Deaton. Steele and Olvera later broke up, and
    Olvera was eventually fired from Freytag. During this time, Purser Sr.’s family alleges that his
    deteriorating health caused memory loss, disinhibition, hypersexuality, and behavior that was out
    of character for him.
    Olvera sues Purser Sr. and Purser Family files third-party claims
    In a demand letter to the Purser Family after his firing from Freytag, Olvera
    threatened to file a lawsuit—and in it revealed that Purser Sr., who was highly regarded in the
    community, had carried on a secret affair with Steele and lavished money and gifts on her—unless
    the family paid Olvera hundreds of thousands of dollars. Deciding to investigate the truth of
    Olvera’s allegations, the Purser Family monitored Purser Sr.’s location through his phone and
    discovered his numerous meetings with Steele at Deaton’s house. Before one such meeting,
    Purser Sr. told his family that he was going to Killeen, but his phone showed that he was on IH-35
    driving to Temple. Tracking his travel, Purser Sr.’s daughter-in-law JoAnn arrived at Deaton’s
    house and called her husband Purser Jr. and her sister-in-law Elizabeth, who both joined her there.
    4
    They heard Purser Sr.’s voice outside the house, and they confronted Steele and Deaton in the
    backyard. JoAnn videotaped the confrontation. When Steele told JoAnn that she and Purser Sr.
    were “just friends,” JoAnn became upset and cursed at her, believing that the “two women were
    taking advantage of an old man.” Deaton called 911, reporting that people were attacking her.
    JoAnn also called 911 to clarify that Deaton was not being attacked, that Steele and Deaton “were
    taking advantage of an older man with a problem” and that his family was trying to get him away
    from them.
    About two months later, after the family told Purser Sr. that they had put a GPS
    device on his vehicle, Helen Purser called JoAnn to report that money was missing from their safe,
    that Purser Sr. had driven away, and that she wanted to know where Deaton lived. JoAnn testified
    that she did not want her 75-year-old mother-in-law driving to Temple, so she told Helen that she
    would follow up on the matter. GPS showed JoAnn that Purser Sr. drove to his business office.
    When JoAnn arrived, staff told her that Purser Sr. had borrowed keys to a truck he did not usually
    drive. Thinking that he had switched vehicles to avoid the GPS, JoAnn drove to Temple and parked
    across the street from Deaton’s house, waiting to confirm whether that was Purser Sr.’s destination.
    Purser Sr. arrived in the truck and parked in Deaton’s driveway. JoAnn walked up
    to the driver’s side window of the truck where she saw Purser Sr. counting out $100 bills into three
    piles on his lap, $9,300 in all, which she presumed he planned to give to Steele or Deaton. After
    Purser Sr. refused to exit the truck, JoAnn knocked at Deaton’s door, identified herself, and stated
    that Purser Sr. was there with money and she wanted to know what was going on. Deaton did not
    answer and JoAnn walked back to the truck, where she did not see the money. Purser Sr. told her
    that he had hidden it and she would not find it. JoAnn entered the passenger side of the truck, found
    5
    the money in an envelope in the glove compartment, and struggled with Purser Sr., telling him that
    they needed to go home and sort things out. Eventually, JoAnn took the envelope and got into her
    car with Purser Sr. at her window demanding the money. JoAnn had begun to “creep away” in the
    car when the police arrived. Deaton had called 911 reporting that JoAnn was dragging Purser Sr.
    down the street with her car and probably had weapons. JoAnn testified that no charges were filed
    because the first-responding officer’s dash-cam video, reviewed by all three responding officers at
    the scene, showed that JoAnn had not dragged Purser Sr.6
    Before confirming Purser Sr.’s meetings with Steele and Deaton, the Purser Family
    had noticed Purser Sr. doing some unusual things: attempting to sell the same property to two
    different buyers, losing his way home from a funeral (while driving through the town in which he
    had developed several subdivisions), and giving faulty instructions to employees. His family took
    him to a doctor who diagnosed Purser Sr. with early signs of Alzheimer’s, a form of dementia.
    Olvera eventually followed through on his litigation threat, filing a breach-of-contract
    and tortious-interference suit against Purser Sr., Freytag Irrigation, and the Purser Family Trust. The
    Purser Family subsequently filed third-party claims against Steele and Deaton. Lawyer Scarbrough
    represented Steele and Deaton in the suit, but he withdrew from that representation after he was also
    named a defendant.
    6
    Deaton made other 911 calls accusing JoAnn of threatening to kill her and assaulting her.
    Police investigations determined that Deaton’s allegations were false and phone records tended to
    disprove the alleged death threat.
    6
    Defamation allegations and discovery sanctions
    During the litigation, Purser Sr. developed pneumonia and died at a hospital. The
    next day, Scarbrough sent a letter to Jack Crews, one of the lawyers for the Purser Family, requesting
    that an autopsy be performed to confirm whether Purser Sr. had dementia.7 Scarbrough also
    contacted Dan Carter, the director of the funeral home where Purser Sr.’s arrangements were
    underway; Bill Cooke, a justice of the peace in Killeen; the Temple Police Department; and the
    Texas Rangers, all to discuss Purser Sr.’s death. In each of these conversations, Scarbrough accused
    the Purser Family of murdering Purser Sr. Scarbrough also reported to Adult Protective Services that
    the Purser Family abused Purser Sr., and later in open court Scarbrough accused Purser Jr. and
    JoAnn Purser of being drug addicts. While JoAnn was running for election as a trustee on the
    Killeen Independent School District board, Scarbrough posted to YouTube a video of the backyard
    incident at Deaton’s house and audio of the 911 call that JoAnn placed during that incident.
    Unknown to the Purser Family, before Purser Sr. died, Steele and Deaton told him
    in a recorded conversation that his family was after his money, that he could not trust his family, and
    that the family wanted him institutionalized. The women urged him to put his money in a safe in
    Deaton’s house and come live with them. Purser Sr. allegedly began to believe what the women told
    him and became suspicious of his family.
    During discovery, Scarbrough had given a digital recorder that contained the
    above-mentioned conversation to Shawn Richeson, his “IT guy,” to enhance clarity by removing
    7
    Scarbrough acknowledged that when he was serving as counsel for Deaton, he filed a
    motion for appointment of a guardian ad litem contending that Purser Sr. was a mentally
    incapacitated person who lacked a guardian (even though Purser Sr. was represented by counsel at
    the time). Also, in an accidental recording Scarbrough made while carrying a recorder Deaton gave
    him, Scarbrough told his wife that Purser Sr. had dementia.
    7
    static and background noise. Richeson connected the recorder’s USB drive to his computer,
    downloaded the contents of the recorder, and returned the recorder to Scarbrough. When Richeson
    listened to the recording, he was concerned about what he heard and thought he recognized
    Purser Sr.’s voice. He told a Purser Family friend, John Fisher, that the recording sounded like a
    couple of women trying to take advantage of an old man, and Richeson gave Fisher access to the
    audio file through the Internet, allowing Fisher and the Purser Family to listen to it. Fisher heard the
    recording of the women telling Purser Sr. that his children were turning against him and intended
    to institutionalize him and testified that they sounded to him like “gold diggers.”
    Scarbrough, Steele, and Deaton repeatedly denied the existence of this recording in
    their discovery responses, depositions, and in sanctions hearings. Scarbrough initially told the Purser
    Family’s counsel that all the tapes and audio recordings he had were already produced in discovery.
    But during Deaton’s third deposition,8 Scarbrough stated that at one time Deaton had given him
    possession of a digital recorder, which he gave to his “IT guy” and returned to Deaton after
    producing one recording from that device in discovery—and that he was now aware of another
    recording on the device that he had not heard and had not yet produced. Deaton later told the court
    that she had disposed of Steele’s digital recorder by giving it to Goodwill or throwing it in the trash.
    At the subsequent sanctions hearings arising from this situation, Richeson testified
    that without the digital recorder he could not confirm what recordings had been on it and that he no
    8
    Deaton’s deposition was taken three times, on December 14, 2010, January 7, 2011, and
    June 29, 2011. Her first deposition ran for several hours but was suspended by agreement of counsel
    for the re-taking of Clayton Olvera’s deposition. After Deaton’s second deposition, Elizabeth Tipton
    was added to the lawsuit, resulting in the third setting. Her third deposition was ultimately
    suspended because of Scarbrough’s announcement that Deaton had additional recorded witness
    statements of Purser Sr. that had not been produced in discovery.
    8
    longer had on his server all that he had recovered from the recorder. At the end of the hearing, the
    district court imposed $25,000 in sanctions against Scarbrough, $5,000 against Deaton for her
    disposal of the digital recorder, and ruled a spoliation instruction could be included in the court’s
    charge if the evidence at trial supported it (the court later determined that it did and gave the
    instruction at trial). Scarbrough was also ordered to pay sanctions of $11,000 and $15,959.50 for
    violating the court’s confidentiality order twice by disclosing information from Purser Sr.’s medical
    records to the Temple Police Department and to Purser Sr.’s niece, Carolyn Bolling (to whom
    Scarbrough had misrepresented himself as Purser Sr.’s lawyer).
    The case proceeded to a jury trial, resulting in a unanimous verdict for the Purser
    Family, with a total of $19,440, 000.00 awarded. The lengthy jury trial gave rise to an even lengthier
    appeal, the numerous issues of which we address in turn.9
    DISCUSSION
    I. Defamation issues
    A. Defamation of appellees individually
    None of the appellants challenge the jury’s finding that they each made statements
    that were defamatory and false. Rather, appellants contend that there is no evidence that such
    defamatory statement identified any member of the Purser Family individually—i.e., appellants did
    not specifically name each individual family member that they defamed—and that a defamatory
    statement must be directed at the plaintiff as an ascertainable person to be actionable. However,
    9
    A bankruptcy court subsequently ruled that the judgment and sanctions orders against
    Scarbrough are nondischargeable debts. In re Scarbrough, 
    516 B.R. 897
    , 924 (Bankr. W.D. Tex.
    2014), aff’d, Scarbrough v. Purser, 
    836 F.3d 447
    (5th Cir. 2016).
    9
    when a group is named and the plaintiff is a readily identifiable member of the group, a cause of
    action for defamation exists if those who know and are acquainted with the plaintiff understand that
    the statement refers to the plaintiff. See Levine v. Steve Scharn Custom Homes, Inc., 
    448 S.W.3d 637
    ,
    651-52 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 2014, pet. denied); Sellards v. Express-News Corp.,
    
    702 S.W.2d 677
    , 680 (Tex. App.—San Antonio 1985, writ ref’d n.r.e.); see also McGregor v. Vela,
    No. 03-01-00299-CV, 2002 Tex. App. LEXIS 1131, at *12 (Tex. App.—Austin Feb. 14, 2002, no
    pet.) (not designated for publication) (“Publication does not require that the plaintiff be named, if
    those who know the plaintiff and are acquainted with him understand that the defamatory publication
    referred to him.”).
    Here, Elizabeth testified that Bill Cooke, a justice of the peace in Killeen, told the
    Purser Family that Scarbrough had accused them of Purser Sr.’s murder. Cooke plainly understood
    who Scarbrough was referring to when he accused the Purser Family of murder. Scarbrough himself
    testified that he reported to the funeral home director Dan Carter, the Temple Police Department and
    the Texas Rangers his accusation that the Purser Family had murdered their husband and father.
    Scarbrough’s murder accusations against the Purser Family included Purser Sr.’s daughter-in-law,
    JoAnn. Scarbrough referred to the incident in which JoAnn struggled with Purser Sr. in the truck
    outside Deaton’s house as “evidence” supporting his accusation that JoAnn murdered her
    father-in-law.
    Under these facts, there was no misunderstanding that Scarbrough’s defamatory
    statements were directed at each of the Purser Family appellees. See 
    Levine, 448 S.W.3d at 651-52
    .
    As to Steele and Deaton, the jury heard the recording of the women telling Purser Sr. that his family
    could not be trusted and wanted to institutionalize him or put him in a home because they wanted
    10
    his money. The women referenced Purser Sr.’s wife, his children, and his daughter-in-law when
    making these statements. We overrule appellants’ complaint that none of the defamatory statements
    on which the jury assessed liability identified any member of the Purser Family individually.
    B. Publication of defamatory or false statement
    As we have noted, none of the appellants challenge the jury’s finding that they each
    made statements that were defamatory and false. However, appellants contend that there is no
    evidence that their defamatory statements about the Purser Family were published. “Publication of
    defamatory words means to communicate the words, either orally, in writing, or in print, to a third
    person capable of understanding their defamatory import and in such a way that the third person
    would understand.” Double Diamond, Inc. v. Van Tyne, 
    109 S.W.3d 848
    , 854 (Tex. App.—Dallas
    2003, no pet.). The instruction on publication in the charge required communication to a
    person—other than the appellees—who is capable of understanding its meaning.
    As to Scarbrough’s statements, the jury heard Scarbrough himself testify that he told
    the Texas Rangers, the Temple Police Department, and Dan Carter, the director of the funeral home
    where Scarbrough’s arrangements were being made, about his accusation that the Purser Family had
    murdered Purser Sr. Elizabeth testified that Bill Cooke, a justice of the peace in Killeen, told the
    Purser Family that Scarbrough had accused them of Purser Sr.’s murder. The jury heard the
    recording of Scarbrough talking to Carolyn Bolling—a nonparty to the suit and niece of
    Purser Sr.—in which Scarbrough claimed that he represented Purser Sr. and stated that Purser Sr.’s
    family intentionally misled doctors and caused his death.
    11
    As to Steele and Deaton, the jury heard the recording of the women telling
    Purser Sr.—a person other than the appellees—that his family could not be trusted and wanted to
    institutionalize him or put him in a home because they wanted his money, causing Purser Sr. to
    become very suspicious of his family members. Appellants’ contention that there is “no evidence”
    that any defamatory or false statements about the Purser Family were published is not supported by
    this record as the evidence shows the statements were made to Purser Sr. We overrule appellants’
    complaint that none of their defamatory statements were published.
    C. Clear-and-convincing evidence that Scarbrough committed defamation per se
    The jury found that Scarbrough, in lodging his accusations against the Purser Family,
    committed defamation per se. Scarbrough contends that there is no clear-and-convincing evidence
    that he made any statement that a witness perceived as tending to affect a person injuriously or
    charging a person with illegal or immoral conduct. A false accusation of the commission of a
    criminal act is defamatory per se. Leyendecker & Assocs., Inc. v. Wechter, 
    683 S.W.2d 369
    , 374
    (Tex. 1984).
    Here, the jury’s affirmative finding of defamation per se against Scarbrough is
    supported by Scarbrough’s own testimony. He acknowledged his statements to Dan Carter accusing
    the Purser Family of murdering Purser Sr. by overdosing him with drugs. Scarbrough also testified
    that nothing in the record from any medical professional stated that the Purser Family was providing
    Purser Sr. too much medication, that he had no direct causation evidence of the Purser Family’s
    involvement with Purser Sr.’s demise, and that he had no opinion from an expert medical
    professional supporting his suspicion that the family had anything to do with Purser Sr.’s demise.
    12
    The jury also heard Scarbrough’s recorded conversation with Carolyn Bolling, the Pursers’ niece,
    in which Scarbrough accused the Purser Family of Purser Sr.’s murder. Finally, the jury heard the
    testimony of Dr. Sharon L. Barber, M.D., who treated Purser Sr. during his last hospitalization and
    stated that she saw no signs that Purser Sr. was abused or neglected, that he had been cared for
    “[e]xceptionally well” by family members and a caregiver who was present twenty-four hours a day,
    and that there was no indication that Scarbrough was correct in his accusation about the Purser
    Family having murdered Purser Sr. This evidence was sufficient to produce in the minds of the jury
    a firm belief or conviction as to the truth of the Purser Family’s allegations—that Scarbrough
    committed defamation per se by falsely accusing the Purser Family of committing the crime of
    murder. Further, there is no argument that the murder accusations Scarbrough communicated to
    Carter and Bolling were in any way privileged.10 We overrule Scarbrough’s complaint that there is
    no clear-and-convincing evidence of his committing defamation per se.
    D. No immunity from defamation for Scarbrough’s report to Adult Protective Services
    Scarbrough contends that he was entitled to statutory immunity for his report to Adult
    Protective Services that Purser Sr. was a victim of elder abuse. However, the record contains a letter
    from the Texas Department of Family and Protective Services stating its finding that “the allegations
    of Exploitation and Physical Abuse” of Purser Sr. “were INVALID.” The Department also stated
    that “[a]ll allegations have been investigated and APS has no concerns at this time.”
    10
    Scarbrough contends for the first time in his post-submission briefing that his statements
    about Purser Sr. were protected by “litigation immunity” because, as a pro se defendant, he had an
    attorney-client relationship with himself. That contention is novel but waived. See Romero v. State,
    
    927 S.W.2d 632
    , 634 n.2 (Tex. 1996) (concluding that argument raised for first time in
    post-submission briefing was waived); City of Houston v. Precast Structures, Inc., 
    60 S.W.3d 331
    ,
    340 n.4 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] 2001, pet. denied) (same).
    13
    The Texas Human Resources Code requires a report if there is “cause to believe” that
    an elderly person is in the state of abuse, neglect, or exploitation. Tex. Hum. Res. Code § 48.051(a).
    The statute includes an affirmative defense providing protection for such reports unless they are
    made in bad faith or with malice. 
    Id. § 48.054(a)
    (“A person filing a report under this chapter or
    testifying or otherwise participating in any judicial proceeding arising from a petition, report, or
    investigation is immune from civil or criminal liability on account of his or her petition, report,
    testimony, or participation, unless the person acted in bad faith or with a malicious purpose.”);
    see Miranda v. Byles, 
    390 S.W.3d 543
    , 552 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 2012, pet. denied)
    (concluding that similar protection in section 261.106 of Texas Family Code for reporting child
    abuse is affirmative defense); Howard v. White, No. 05-01-01036-CV, 2002 Tex. App. LEXIS 4891,
    at *18-20 (Tex. App.—Dallas July 10, 2002, no pet.) (not designated for publication) (concluding
    that appellant was not entitled to statutory protection from defamation claims based on her report of
    child abuse because she failed to prove that her report was made in good faith).
    In raising statutory immunity as an affirmative defense, Scarbrough had the burden
    of showing that he was not acting “in bad faith or with a malicious purpose”—i.e., in good
    faith—when he made his report of elder abuse. See Tex. Hum. Res. Code § 48.054(a); 
    Byles, 390 S.W.3d at 552
    ; Howard, 2002 Tex. App. LEXIS 4891, at *18-20. Scarbrough failed to meet that
    burden. He contends that “there was no evidence that [he] knew that Mr. Purser was not in trouble.”
    (Emphasis added.). But that contention impermissibly shifts the burden of proof for his affirmative
    defense and is no evidence of his good faith. Further, Scarbrough admitted in his September 26, 2011
    deposition that he had not seen Purser Sr. for about five months before making the report and that
    14
    his report was based on a remark from David Pace, his process server, who allegedly told him that
    Purser Sr. “was in real poor condition.” Scarbrough testified:
    after David told me that, I was really shocked. And I was saddened. And I called the
    Adult Protective Service, which is a State agency that has the job of
    overseeing—protecting elderly people and adults. I called them . . . And I reported
    it to them. . . . I reported that Mr. Purser was doing very poorly, according to my
    process server, and that he seemed inappropriate—untimely for me—to me that he
    would be acting or feeling that bad. And then I asked them to look into it or told
    them about it.
    Information in Pace’s alleged remark provided Scarbrough no “cause to believe” that the Purser
    Family was abusing and exploiting Purser Sr., as Scarbrough reported to the Texas Department of
    Family and Protective Services, and Scarbrough testified about no other basis for his report. See
    Tex. Hum. Res. Code § 48.051(a). With no showing of good faith, we overrule Scarbrough’s
    complaint that he was entitled to statutory immunity for his report of elder abuse.
    E. Scarbrough was not entitled to his requested qualified-immunity instruction
    Scarbrough contends that the district court erred by denying his requested question
    and instruction on qualified immunity for actions taken in his capacity as a lawyer for Steele and
    Deaton during his investigation and defense of the case including, in his view, the defamatory
    statements he made against the Purser Family. We review a trial court’s decision to submit or refuse
    a particular instruction for an abuse of discretion. Shupe v. Lingafelter, 
    192 S.W.3d 577
    , 579 (Tex.
    2006). Omission of an instruction is reversible error only if the omission probably caused the
    rendition of an improper judgment. 
    Id. 15 Scarbrough’s
    requested instruction stated, “Attorneys have qualified immunity from
    a suit arising from their discretionary duties in and out of the courtroom in good faith within the
    scope of their legal representation of respected [sic] clients.” This proposed instruction required a
    “good faith” element that was negated by the jury’s finding that Scarbrough acted maliciously or
    with conscious indifference toward the Purser Family.11 Thus, the court’s declining to submit the
    instruction as worded was harmless. See 
    id. at 580
    (holding that omission of instruction was
    harmless because jury’s answer to submitted question negated unsubmitted issue); Laughman v. Sun
    Pipe Line Co., 
    114 S.W. 451
    , 453 (Tex. Civ. App.—Galveston 1908, no writ) (concluding that any
    error in omitting issue from charge would be harmless where jury’s verdict against appellants on
    issues that were submitted necessarily includes finding against appellants on omitted issue); see also
    James v. Easton, 
    368 S.W.3d 799
    , 803 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] 2012, pet. denied) (“An
    attorney generally has immunity from claims by an opposing party based upon conduct the attorney
    undertook in the representation of a client, but this immunity does not apply to alleged torts based
    upon the attorney’s fraudulent or malicious conduct.”); McGregor, 2002 Tex. App. LEXIS 1131,
    at *15-16 (“Because the jury found that the communication was made with actual malice,
    McGregor’s claim of qualified privilege would have failed even if the jury had found that the
    privilege applied.”). We overrule Scarbrough’s complaint that the court refused his requested
    qualified-immunity instruction.
    11
    That finding was supported by legally sufficient evidence, as we note later in
    our discussion.
    16
    F. Defamation damages
    The jury was instructed, without objection, that they could award damages if they
    found defamation committed by any appellant or defamation per se committed by Scarbrough. The
    jury found that all three appellants committed defamation and that Scarbrough also committed
    defamation per se. Based on these findings, the jury awarded the Purser Family damages for injury
    to reputation in the past and future and for mental anguish in the past and future. Appellants do not
    challenge the jury’s awards to the Purser Family for past mental anguish. In fact, their briefing
    concedes that “[t]he record is replete with evidence of past damages.”
    For injury to reputation, the jury awarded the Purser Family the following damages:
    HELEN                            Steele                  Deaton                 Scarbrough
    past reputation                 $25,000                 $25,000                   $150,000
    future reputation               $25,000                 $25,000                   $150,000
    SUE                              Steele                   Deaton                Scarbrough
    past reputation                 $25,000                  $25,000                   $50,000
    future reputation               $30,000                  $25,000                   $50,000
    PURSER JR.                       Steele                   Deaton                Scarbrough
    past reputation                 $25,000                  $25,000                  $150,000
    future reputation               $25,000                  $25,000                  $150,000
    JOANN                            Steele                   Deaton                Scarbrough
    past reputation                 $25,000                  $50,000                  $150,000
    future reputation               $25,000                  $25,000                  $150,000
    17
    ELIZABETH                         Steele                   Deaton                  Scarbrough
    past reputation                      0                         0                     $150,000
    future reputation                    0                         0                     $150,000
    Appellants contend that there is no evidence that the Purser Family sustained any injury to their
    reputations in the past and no evidence that they will likely sustain injury to their reputations in the
    future. We agree that there was no evidence that the defamatory statements by Steele and Deaton,
    consisting of their statements to Purser Sr., caused injury to the Purser Family’s reputations in the
    past or future, and we sustain their issue.
    As to Scarbrough’s statements that were defamatory per se—accusing the family of
    elder abuse and murder—evidence of injury to reputation was unnecessary. Texas law presumes that
    defamatory per se statements cause reputational harm and entitle a plaintiff to general damages,
    including loss of reputation and mental anguish. Burbage v. Burbage, 
    447 S.W.3d 249
    , 259 (Tex.
    2014). However, that presumption yields only nominal damages. 
    Id. The Texas
    Supreme Court has
    instructed that beyond nominal damages, presumed damages are reviewed for evidentiary support.12
    
    Id. Nominal damages,
    such as $1, are a trivial sum of money awarded to a litigant who has
    established a cause of action but has not established that he is entitled to compensatory damages.
    Hancock v. Variyam, 
    400 S.W.3d 59
    , 65 (Tex. 2013). In defamation per se cases, nominal damages
    are awarded when there is no proof of serious harm resulting from the defendant’s attack on the
    plaintiff’s character and reputation or when they are the only damages claimed, and the action is
    12
    Appellants do not challenge the amounts the jury awarded as damages for defamation, i.e.,
    for injury to reputation and mental anguish.
    18
    brought to vindicate the plaintiff’s character through a jury verdict establishing the falsity of the
    defamatory matter. 
    Id. Here, because
    the jury awarded more than nominal damages as to defamation per se,
    there must be legally sufficient evidence to support the jury’s findings of damage to the Purser
    Family members’ reputations in the past and future. See 
    Burbage, 447 S.W.3d at 259
    . When
    conducting a legal-sufficiency review, we consider the evidence in the light most favorable to the
    challenged finding and indulge every reasonable inference that would support it, disregarding
    contrary evidence unless reasonable jurors could not. City of Keller v. Wilson, 
    168 S.W.3d 802
    , 822,
    827 (Tex. 2005). To prevail, an appellant must show that no more than a scintilla of evidence
    supports a finding on which the opponent had the burden of proof. See Waste Mgmt. of Tex., Inc.
    v. Texas Disposal Sys. Landfill, Inc., 
    434 S.W.3d 142
    , 156-57 (Tex. 2014); City of 
    Keller, 168 S.W.3d at 826
    . More than a scintilla of evidence exists to support a finding when the evidence
    enables reasonable and fair-minded people to differ in their conclusions. Gharda USA, Inc.
    v. Control Sols., Inc., 
    464 S.W.3d 338
    , 347 (Tex. 2015). We may not substitute our judgment for
    that of the jury when the evidence falls within the zone of reasonable disagreement, and the jury is
    the sole judge of the credibility of the witnesses and the weight to be given to their testimony. See
    City of 
    Keller, 168 S.W.3d at 816-17
    , 819-20, 822.
    1. No evidence supporting injury to reputation
    The Texas Supreme Court has cautioned that in defamation cases our review of a
    jury’s discretionary damage awards remains important to protect free speech, and we must ensure
    that noneconomic damages are not simply disguised disapproval of defendants, but compensation
    19
    for actual injuries. 
    Burbage, 447 S.W.3d at 259
    . In Burbage, the Court noted that while some
    evidence suggested community awareness and discussion of the defamatory statements, there was
    only vague testimony about the actual impact of the defamation, the basis for which the damage
    award compensated. 
    Id. at 262.
    Similarly here, despite the appalling nature of Scarbrough’s assertions, we conclude
    that there was no evidence supporting the jury’s findings of injury to the Purser Family’s reputations
    in the past and future. The evidence at trial did not demonstrate the actual impact of the defamation
    on the Purser Family that would meet the Burbage standard. See 
    id. We sustain
    Scarbrough’s
    complaint that there is no evidence his defamatory statements caused the Purser Family to sustain
    injury to their reputations in the past and no evidence that they will likely sustain injury to their
    reputations in the future.
    2. No evidence supporting damage amounts for future mental anguish
    The jury also awarded the Purser Family damages for mental anguish in the past and
    future on their defamation claims. As noted above, the jury’s awards for mental anguish in the past,
    which total $1,060,000, will stand and none of the appellants challenge them.13 However, appellants
    do contend that there is no evidence to support the jury’s award based on the Purser Family suffering
    13
    Appellants complain that the Purser Family did not segregate “mental disturbances” they
    sustained as a result of Purser Sr.’s death from “mental disturbances” caused by the appellants’ acts.
    However, it was appellants’ burden to object if they perceived that a broad-form damages question
    mixed valid and invalid elements of damages. See Burbage v. Burbage, 
    447 S.W.3d 249
    , 255-56
    (Tex. 2014). Appellants’ failure to make that objection below waives this complaint. Even if it were
    preserved, appellants acknowledge that no Texas court has required such a segregation of
    mental-anguish damages.
    20
    mental anguish in the future. The jury awarded the following damages to the Purser Family for
    future mental anguish:
    HELEN                            Steele                 Deaton                  Scarbrough
    future mental anguish           $25,000                 $25,000                  $150,000
    SUE                               Steele                 Deaton                Scarbrough
    future mental anguish            $25,000                 $25,000                  $50,000
    PURSER JR.                        Steele                 Deaton                Scarbrough
    future mental anguish            $25,000                 $25,000                 $150,000
    JOANN                             Steele                 Deaton                Scarbrough
    future mental anguish            $25,000                 $25,000                 $150,000
    ELIZABETH                         Steele                 Deaton                Scarbrough
    future mental anguish            $25,000                 $25,000                 $150,000
    Because the jury awarded more than nominal damages, there must be legally sufficient evidence to
    support the jury’s findings of the Purser Family members’ future mental anguish. See 
    id. at 259.
    To
    support an award for future mental anguish, a plaintiff must demonstrate a reasonable probability of
    suffering compensable mental anguish in the future. Adams v. YMCA of San Antonio, 
    265 S.W.3d 915
    ,
    917 (Tex. 2008). Mental anguish is compensable only if it causes a substantial disruption in daily
    routine or a high degree of mental pain and distress. 
    Hancock, 400 S.W.3d at 68
    . Evidence of the
    nature, duration, and severity of the mental anguish is required. 
    Id. A plaintiff’s
    evidence of
    continuing depression, humiliation, sleeplessness, headaches, and detrimental effects on daily
    21
    activities and relationships can be legally sufficient to support an award of damages for future mental
    anguish. Fifth Club, Inc. v. Ramirez, 
    196 S.W.3d 788
    , 791 (Tex. 2006). Mental anguish awards are
    noneconomic damages that must be compensation for actual injuries and not simply a disguised
    disapproval of the defendant. 
    Burbage, 447 S.W.3d at 259
    .
    We conclude that the evidence at trial did not show demonstrate a reasonable
    probability that appellants’ defamatory statements would cause the Purser Family to suffer
    compensable future mental anguish—i.e, a substantial disruption in daily routine or a high degree
    of mental pain and distress. See 
    Adams, 265 S.W.3d at 917
    . We sustain appellants’ complaint that
    there is no evidence to support the jury’s award of damages for the Purser Family’s suffering of
    mental anguish in the future.
    II. Fraud issues
    The jury found that each of the appellants committed fraud against Helen, Purser Sr.’s
    widow, in two ways: (1) fraud by misrepresentation and (2) fraud by failure to disclose.
    A. Steele and Deaton waived fraud-by-failure-to-disclose issue
    Steele and Deaton waived their issue regarding the jury’s finding of “fraud by failure
    to disclose” by wholly omitting any briefing of it. See Tex. R. App. P. 38.1(i). The jury was
    instructed without objection that they could award damages based on a “Yes” answer for either the
    “fraud by misrepresentation” or “fraud by failure to disclose” theory. But Steele and Deaton failed
    to address the fraud-by-failure-to-disclose theory, which was an independent basis supporting the
    jury’s answer to the fraud question. Thus, the liability finding against Steele and Deaton for fraud
    is unchallenged and must stand.
    22
    B. No evidence of Scarbrough’s fraud by misrepresentation or failure to disclose
    Scarbrough contends that there is no evidence supporting the jury’s finding that he
    committed fraud by misrepresentation against Helen because there is no evidence he ever said
    anything to her. The charge instructed the jury that “fraud by misrepresentation” occurs when:
    (A)     a party makes a material misrepresentation,
    (B)     the misrepresentation is made with knowledge of its falsity or made
    recklessly without any knowledge of the truth and as a positive assertion, and
    (C)     the misrepresentation is made with the intention that it should be acted on by
    the other party, and
    (D)     the other party acts in reliance on the representation and thereby
    suffers injury.
    We agree that there was no evidence at trial of Scarbrough saying anything directly
    to Helen, or that he made any misrepresentation to her. To the extent that the misrepresentation at
    issue here was the existence of the tape-recorded statements during litigation, that issue is covered
    in the sanctions analysis below. We sustain Scarbrough’s complaint that there is no evidence
    supporting the jury’s finding that he committed fraud by misrepresentation against Helen.
    Scarbrough further contends that there is no evidence supporting the jury’s finding
    that he committed fraud by failure to disclose against Helen. The charge instructed the jury that
    “fraud by failure to disclose” occurs when:
    (A)     a party fails to disclose a material fact within the knowledge of that party,
    (B)     the party knows that the other party is ignorant of the fact and does not have
    an equal opportunity to discover the truth,
    23
    (C)     the party intends to induce the other party to take some action by failing to
    disclose the fact, and
    (D)     the other party suffers injury as a result of acting without knowledge of the
    undisclosed fact.
    Scarbrough contends there is no evidence that as opposing counsel for Steele and Deaton (or later
    as a defendant) he had a duty to disclose anything to Helen. Scarbrough notes that there is no private
    right of action for violation of the Texas attorney disciplinary rules, thus, any failure to produce
    witness-statement recordings in discovery was not a “failure to disclose” that would support Helen’s
    fraud claim against him. See Jones v. Blume, 
    196 S.W.3d 440
    , 450 (Tex. App.—Dallas 2006, pet.
    denied). He also notes that there is no cause of action for “fraud on the community” based on any
    fraudulent transfer of marital assets in this context, which does not involve a divorce or probate suit.
    Cf. Chu v. Hong, 
    249 S.W.3d 441
    , 445 (Tex. 2008); Schlueter v. Schlueter, 
    975 S.W.2d 584
    , 589
    (Tex. 1998). We agree that there was no evidence at trial that Scarbrough had a duty to disclose
    anything to Helen independent of her complaints about his discovery abuse, which were addressed
    by sanctions. We sustain Scarbrough’s complaint that there is no evidence supporting the jury’s
    finding that he committed fraud by failure to disclose against Helen.
    C. Fraud damages
    Based on its finding of fraud, the jury awarded Helen damages for loss of community
    property and mental anguish (problematically, the jury was not asked to answer with amounts as to
    each appellant):
    24
    loss of community property        past mental anguish       future mental anguish
    HELEN                  $1.5 million                    $500,000                   $250,000
    Appellants challenge the sufficiency of the evidence to support the jury’s findings of loss of
    community property and mental anguish, contending that there is no evidence that Helen sustained
    these damages due to any fraud by appellants.
    Based on our conclusion that there is insufficient evidence supporting the fraud claim
    against Scarbrough, the fraud damages for loss of community property and mental anguish against
    him cannot stand.
    As to Steele and Deaton, although they failed to brief the issue of liability, there is
    no evidence of any damages resulting from alleged fraud had they committed it, thus there are no
    fraud damages for loss of community property and mental anguish. While Steele and Deaton appear
    to have taken advantage of Purser Sr., the evidence is not sufficient to prove the elements of fraud.
    We sustain Steele’s and Deaton’s complaint that there is no evidence supporting the jury’s damage
    findings of loss of community property and mental anguish based on fraud.14
    III. Conspiracy issues on defamation and fraud
    No evidence of conspiracy
    The jury found that appellants were part of a conspiracy that damaged Helen Purser.
    Appellants contend that there was no evidence of conspiracy because there was “no evidence of any
    14
    Based on our resolution of the fraud issue, we need not address appellants’ contention that
    there was no evidence that they acted in concert with one another in committing fraud.
    25
    underlying tort.” However, as we have noted, none of the appellants challenged the jury’s finding
    that they each made statements that were defamatory and false (they argued only that their statements
    did not name specific individuals, were not published, and were not defamatory per se). Thus, the
    underlying torts of defamation and defamation per se—for which the jury made an unchallenged
    award of past mental anguish damages—survive this appeal.
    The conspiracy question in the charge (conditioned on a finding of defamation,
    defamation per se, or fraud) instructed the jury that:
    To be part of a conspiracy, more than one person must have had knowledge of,
    agreed to, and intended a common objective or course of action that resulted in the
    damages to Helen Purser. One or more persons involved in the conspiracy must have
    performed some act or acts to further the conspiracy.
    Each co-conspirator is responsible for all acts done by any of the conspirators in
    furtherance of the unlawful combination.
    Although appellants do not challenge the jury’s finding that they made false and defamatory
    statements, the evidence showed that Steele and Deaton made their defamatory statements in a
    recording with Purser Sr. around May 2010, before they met Scarbrough, and that Scarbrough made
    his defamatory statements after Purser Sr.’s death in July 2011. Neither the evidence nor the timing
    of their statements supports a finding that when the statements were made, appellants had a common
    objective to commit defamation.       We sustain appellants’ issue that there was no evidence
    of conspiracy.15
    15
    Based on our resolution of this issue, we need not address appellants’ contention that there
    was no evidence that they acted in concert with one another in committing defamation.
    26
    IV. Exemplary damages issues
    A. Malice or gross negligence
    The jury found that the harm to the Purser Family resulted from malice or gross
    negligence. Appellants contend that there is no clear-and-convincing proof supporting the jury’s
    finding. The jury was instructed to answer the question on malice or gross negligence only if they
    unanimously answered “Yes” to the questions on defamation, defamation per se, or fraud. The
    charge defined “clear and convincing evidence,” “malice,” and “gross negligence”:
    “Clear and convincing evidence” means the measure or degree of proof that produces
    a firm belief or conviction of the truth of the allegations sought to be established.
    “Malice” means a specific intent by Melissa Deaton, Denise Steele or
    Jerry Scarbrough, to cause substantial injury or harm to Helen Purser,
    Sue Van Zanten, Gary “Bubba” Purser, Jr., JoAnn Purser, or Elizabeth Tipton.
    “Gross negligence” means an act or omission by Melissa Deaton, Denise Steele or
    Jerry Scarbrough,
    (a)     which when viewed objectively from the standpoint of Melissa Deaton,
    Denise Steele or Jerry Scarbrough at the time of its occurrence involves an
    extreme degree of risk, considering the probability and magnitude of the
    potential harm to others; and
    (b)     of which Melissa Deaton, Denise Steele or Jerry Scarbrough has actual
    subjective awareness of the risk involved, but nevertheless proceeds with
    conscious indifference to the rights, safety, or welfare of others.
    See Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code §§ 41.001 (defining “clear and convincing,” “malice,” and “gross
    negligence”), 41.003 (setting forth standards for recovery of exemplary damages). Because we have
    already sustained appellants’ no-evidence issues as to the jury’s damage awards for injury to
    reputation (past and future) and for future mental anguish, what remains are the unchallenged awards
    27
    on the defamation claims for past mental anguish. Exemplary damages based on these awards could
    have been supported if the Purser Family showed by clear-and-convincing evidence that the harm
    from appellants’ defamatory statements was the result of gross negligence or malice. See Pitts
    & Collard, L.L.P. v. Schechter, 
    369 S.W.3d 301
    , 331 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 2011, no
    pet.); see also Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code § 41.003(a). A defendant’s repetition of false and
    defamatory accusations about plaintiff’s “dishonest, unethical, and illegal behavior” can show
    “specific intent to injure” and support a jury’s finding of malice. 
    Pitts, 369 S.W.3d at 331
    .
    1. Steele and Deaton waived issue of gross negligence
    Here, the jury made the unchallenged finding that Steele and Deaton made statements
    about the Purser Family that were false and defamatory. The statements included telling Purser Sr.
    that he could not trust his family, that his family was after his money, and that his family wanted him
    institutionalized. Steele and Deaton waived any issue as to whether there was clear-and-convincing
    evidence that they made these defamatory statements with gross negligence by failing to brief this
    issue. See Tex. R. App. P. 38.1(i). The jury was asked whether the harm to the Purser Family
    resulted from malice or gross negligence. But on appeal, Steele and Deaton failed to brief any issue
    as to gross negligence, which was an independent basis for the awards of exemplary damages against
    them. Thus the jury’s finding of gross negligence against Steele and Deaton is unchallenged and
    must stand.
    2. Clear-and-convincing evidence of Scarbrough’s malice
    As to Scarbrough, the evidence supports the jury’s finding of malice because he
    showed a “specific intent to injure” through his repeated false and defamatory statements accusing
    28
    the Purser Family of elder abuse and murder. Cf. 
    Pitts, 369 S.W.3d at 331
    . The jury heard
    deposition testimony from Scarbrough about his murder accusations and a recording of a phone call
    to Carolyn Bolling that Scarbrough made two months after his deposition. In the recording—after
    stating that he represented Purser Sr.—Scarbrough told her that the Purser Family abused Purser Sr.,
    intentionally misled his doctors, and caused his death.
    Scarbrough’s testimony showed that he persisted in making accusations that Purser
    Sr. did not have dementia and was murdered by his family despite a lack of evidence and even
    Scarbrough’s own admission that he had no medical evidence or medical-expert opinion to support
    those accusations. And long before he made his accusations to the Pursers’ niece, a funeral director,
    and law enforcement, Scarbrough accidentally recorded himself admitting to his wife that Purser Sr.
    had dementia. In addition to that recorded admission, the jury heard Scarbrough acknowledge during
    his deposition that Purser Sr. had been diagnosed by his doctors with dementia. The jury also heard
    that Scarbrough propounded interrogatories to the deceased Purser Sr.—more than a month after
    Purser Sr.’s death and knowing Purser Sr. was deceased—asking about Purser Sr.’s sexual activities
    and affairs, and that Scarbrough questioned Helen in a lengthy deposition—held just two months
    after her husband’s death—about irrelevant matters such as her medical history and private
    intimacies with Purser Sr. The jury further heard Scarbough’s statement to his wife, which he
    inadvertently recorded, discussing certain Purser Family members and stating his intent to get “a
    million dollars from every one of those sons of bitches” in the lawsuit.
    The evidence at trial, viewed in the light most favorable to the jury’s finding of
    malice, shows that Scarbrough chose to defame the Purser Family with repeated murder accusations
    and attempted to obtain an autopsy to “disprove” Purser Sr. had dementia, despite Scarbrough’s own
    29
    opinion that Purser Sr. suffered from that condition. The evidence is sufficient to support the jury’s
    finding of Scarbrough’s willfulness, and not that Scarbrough had a good-faith belief in his
    statements. Further, the evidence was sufficient to produce in the minds of the jury a firm belief or
    conviction as to the truth of the allegations of malice—that Scarbrough, by making repeated
    accusations of illegal behavior against the Purser Family, had a specific intent to cause
    substantial injury or harm to them. See 
    id. We overrule
    Scarbrough’s complaint that there is no
    clear-and-convincing proof that he made his defamatory statements with malice.
    B. Exemplary damage awards
    The jury unanimously awarded these exemplary damages:
    HELEN                             Steele                  Deaton                 Scarbrough
    exemplary damages             $1.5 million               $500,000                 $2 million
    SUE                               Steele                  Deaton                 Scarbrough
    exemplary damages               $500,000                 $250,000                 $1 million
    PURSER JR.                        Steele                  Deaton                 Scarbrough
    exemplary damages               $500,000                 $500,000                 $2 million
    JOANN                             Steele                  Deaton                 Scarbrough
    exemplary damages               $500,000                 $500,000                 $2 million
    ELIZABETH                         Steele                  Deaton                 Scarbrough
    exemplary damages               $500,000                 $250,000                 $1 million
    30
    In determining what amount of exemplary damages to award against appellants, if
    any, the jury was instructed to consider:
    (1) the nature of the wrong;
    (2) the character of the conduct involved;
    (3) the degree of culpability of Melissa Deaton, Denise Steele, or Jerry Scarbrough;
    (4) the situation and sensibilities of the parties concerned;
    (5) the extent to which such conduct offends a public sense of justice and propriety; and
    (6) the net worth of Melissa Deaton, Denise Steele, or Jerry Scarbrough.
    See Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code § 41.011(a) (setting forth evidence factfinder should consider in
    determining amount of exemplary damages award); Service Corp. Int’l v. Guerra, 
    348 S.W.3d 221
    ,
    238 (Tex. 2011) (noting these statutory factors); Alamo Nat’l Bank v. Kraus, 
    616 S.W.2d 908
    , 910
    (Tex. 1981) (providing analysis of first five factors).
    1. Net worth
    Scarbrough, Steele, and Deaton contend that the jury’s award of exemplary damages
    is excessive and unconstitutional because “[i]f a judgment is so large, in relation to a party’s net
    worth, that it is impossible to pay, and it converts the proceeding into a criminal proceeding, wherein
    the party is subject to being in jail for an interminable time due to inability to pay.” They cited no
    authority in support of this contention.16
    16
    Scarbrough contends that he has a “negative” net worth. However, there was no evidence
    at trial of his negative net worth.
    31
    While evidence of net worth is one factor that the jury considers in its determination
    of the proper amount of exemplary damages, introduction of such evidence is not mandatory.
    Barnhart v. Morales, 
    459 S.W.3d 733
    , 751-52 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] 2015, no pet.)
    (citing Durban v. Guajardo, 
    79 S.W.3d 198
    , 210-11 (Tex. App.—Dallas 2002, no pet.)). Parties
    may discover and offer evidence of a defendant’s net worth in cases in which punitive or exemplary
    damages may be awarded, Lunsford v. Morris, 
    746 S.W.2d 471
    , 472 (Tex. 1988), but a jury is not
    required to consider evidence of a defendant’s net worth before imposing exemplary damages,
    
    Barnhart, 459 S.W.3d at 752
    . Because evidence of a defendant’s net worth is not a prerequisite to
    a jury’s imposition of exemplary damages, we conclude that this factor was not determinative of the
    awards of exemplary damages against Scarbrough, Steele, and Deaton. See 
    Barnhart, 459 S.W.3d at 752
    .
    2. Excessiveness
    Scarbrough, Steele, and Deaton also contend generally that courts “must consider a
    punishment that would deter and punish without being gratuitously excessive.” Bennett v. Reynolds,
    No. 03-05-00034-CV, 2010 Tex. App. LEXIS 9213, at *13 (Tex. App.—Austin Nov. 18, 2010, no
    pet.) (mem. op. on remand); see also Bunton v. Bentley, 
    153 S.W.3d 50
    , 54 (Tex. 2004) (“Ideally,
    the court of appeals should automatically reevaluate exemplary damages whenever compensatory
    damages are reduced.”). The Texas Supreme Court has stated that exemplary damages should be
    “reasonably proportioned to actual damages” and provided the five factors in Alamo National Bank
    v. Kraus for courts to consider in determining the reasonableness of an award of exemplary damages.
    Dillard Dep’t Stores v. Silva, 
    148 S.W.3d 370
    , 373 (Tex. 2004) (citing 
    Kraus, 616 S.W.2d at 910
    ).
    In addition to net worth (which we have addressed above), the charge instructed the jury to consider
    32
    the five Kraus factors: (1) the nature of the wrong; (2) the character of the conduct involved; (3) the
    degree of appellants’ culpability; (4) the situation and sensibilities of the parties concerned; and
    (5) the extent to which such conduct offends a public sense of justice and propriety.
    A. Kraus factors as to Scarbrough
    As to Scarbrough, the wrong was his false and defamatory murder accusation. The
    jury found by clear-and-convincing evidence that the character of Scarbrough’s conduct was
    malicious and as part of its finding, that Scarbrough had a high degree of culpability based on his
    “specific intent” to cause substantial injury or harm to the Purser Family. We have concluded that
    the evidence, detailed above, was sufficient to support that finding. The evidence at trial on the next
    factor, the situation and sensibilities of the parties, also supports the jury’s award of exemplary
    damages. The Purser Family, having endured the loss of Purser Sr., then had to deal with the
    humiliation of being falsely and repeatedly accused by Scarbrough of causing Purser Sr.’s death.
    Scarbrough’s own briefing concedes that this record is “replete with evidence of past damages” that
    the Purser Family sustained based on defamation. Finally, regarding the last factor, we conclude that
    Scarbrough’s repeatedly making false and defamatory murder accusations against the Purser Family
    in this case “offends a public sense of justice and propriety.” Scarbrough claimed to have made his
    accusations in an attempt to obtain an autopsy on Purser Sr. “disproving” his dementia. But
    Scarbrough believed, as he told his wife, that Purser Sr. had dementia. No medical evidence or
    expert supported Scarbrough’s murder accusations, and Scarbrough admitted in his deposition that
    Purser Sr. had been diagnosed by his doctors with dementia. Further, Scarbrough told Purser’s niece
    four months after Purser Sr. died—when an autopsy was unlikely—that the Purser Family abused
    Purser Sr., intentionally misled his doctors, and caused his death.
    33
    A rational jury could have found that Scarbrough’s repeated defamation of the Purser
    Family was not designed to obtain an autopsy disproving Purser Sr.’s dementia, but rather to
    leverage his position in the underlying lawsuit. The jury heard Scarbrough admit that he made his
    accusations of abuse and exploitation to Adult Protective Services while he was representing Deaton
    and seeking a substantial sum of money from Purser Family members. The jury also heard
    Scarbrough’s statement to his wife, which he inadvertently recorded, about his intent to get “a
    million dollars from every one of those sons of bitches.”17
    B. Kraus factors as to Steele and Deaton
    As to Steele and Deaton, the wrong was their defamation of the Purser Family in
    communicating to Purser Sr. Steele and Deaton told Purser Sr. that his family was after his money,
    that his family wanted him institutionalized, and that his family could not be trusted. Steele and
    Deaton have not challenged the jury’s finding by clear-and-convincing evidence that their false and
    defamatory statements were made with gross negligence. Further, there was sufficient evidence at
    trial concerning the nature and character of Steele’s and Deaton’s conduct—i.e., defaming the Purser
    Family to Purser Sr. to secure further financial gain—and the high degree of Steele’s and Deaton’s
    culpability for that conduct to support the jury’s award of exemplary damages. The evidence at trial
    on the next factor, the situations and sensibilities of the parties, also supports the jury’s award of
    17
    The record shows that Scarbrough engaged in other conduct offensive to a public sense
    of justice and propriety, including: (1) his propounding interrogatories to the deceased Purser
    Sr.—more than a month after Purser Sr.’s death and knowing Purser Sr. was deceased—asking about
    Purser Sr.’s sexual activities and affairs; and (2) his questioning of Helen—in a lengthy deposition
    held just two months after her husband’s death—about irrelevant matters such as her medical history
    and private intimacies with Purser Sr.
    34
    exemplary damages. The jury had sufficient evidence to find that the situation and sensibilities of
    the parties involved Steele’s and Deaton’s receiving money from Purser Sr., who was alleged to be
    suffering from dementia, planning of further financial gain through a real-estate development scheme
    that would net them $2.5 million each, and encouraging Purser Sr. to leave his money to
    them—meanwhile persuading him that his family members were the ones scheming against him.
    This evidence also supports the jury’s findings that Steele’s and Deaton’s conduct of defaming the
    Purser Family to Purser Sr. to secure further financial gain “offended a public sense of justice
    and propriety.”
    C. Statutory cap
    In addition to the Kraus factors, we must consider application of the statutory cap on
    such awards in addressing Scarbrough’s, Steele’s, and Deaton’s complaints about the excessiveness
    of the jury’s exemplary-damages award. Decisions about whether exemplary damages should be
    awarded and the amount of exemplary damages awarded are reserved to the discretion of the trier
    of fact, Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code § 41.010(b), but an exemplary damage award may not exceed
    the cap set forth in section 41.008 of the Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code, 
    id. § 41.008(b).
    In the absence of certain types of criminal conduct not implicated here, section 41.008 limits an
    award of exemplary damages to the greater of:
    (1) (A) two times the amount of economic damages; plus
    (B) an amount equal to any noneconomic damages found by the jury, not to
    exceed $750,000; or
    (2) $200,000.
    35
    
    Id. § 41.008(b).
    After reviewing the entire record, analyzing the evidence under the Kraus factors,
    considering the amount of compensatory damages, and applying the statutory cap, we conclude
    that exemplary damages are recoverable against Scarbrough, Steele, and Deaton. However,
    the exemplary-damage awards against them are excessive in light of the statutory cap in
    section 41.008(b).
    As to Scarbrough, the jury awarded the Purser Family $8,000,000 in exemplary
    damages. Applying section 41.008 to the jury’s unchallenged award of $700,000 in noneconomic
    damages for past mental anguish results in a maximum award of $700,000 in exemplary damages.
    See 
    id. (authorizing award
    for greater of $200,000 or “an amount equal to any noneconomic damages
    found by the jury, not to exceed $750,000”). Because the $8,000,000 exemplary damages award
    against Scarbrough exceeds the statutory cap by $7,300,000, we modify the exemplary damage
    award to $700,000 to comply with the cap, and affirm the award as modified.
    As to Steele, the jury awarded exemplary damages of $3,500,000. Applying section
    41.008 to the jury’s unchallenged award of $180,000 in noneconomic damages for past mental
    anguish results in a maximum award of $200,000 in exemplary damages. See 
    id. (authorizing award
    for greater of $200,000 or “an amount equal to any noneconomic damages found by the jury, not to
    exceed $750,000”). Because the $3,500,000 exemplary damages award against Steele exceeds the
    statutory cap by $3,300,000, we modify the exemplary damage award to $200,000 to comply with
    the cap, and affirm the award as modified.
    As to Deaton, the jury awarded exemplary damages of $2,000,000. Applying section
    41.008 to the jury’s unchallenged award of $180,000 in noneconomic damages for past mental
    36
    anguish results in a maximum award of $200,000 in exemplary damages. See 
    id. (authorizing award
    for greater of $200,000 or “an amount equal to any noneconomic damages found by the jury, not to
    exceed $750,000”). Because the $2,000,000 exemplary damages award against Deaton exceeds the
    statutory cap by $1,800,000, we modify the exemplary damage award to $200,000 to comply with
    the cap, and affirm the award as modified.
    V. Spoliation and discovery-abuse sanctions issues
    A. Spoliation instruction as to Scarbrough
    Scarbrough contends that the district court erred in giving a spoliation instruction
    against him regarding the digital recorder because there is no evidence that he failed to preserve the
    digital recorder or had a duty to preserve it when he returned it to Deaton. When conducting a
    legal-sufficiency review, we consider the evidence in the light most favorable to the challenged
    finding and indulge every reasonable inference that would support it and disregard contrary evidence
    unless reasonable jurors could not. City of 
    Keller, 168 S.W.3d at 822
    , 827. To prevail, an appellant
    must show that no more than a scintilla of evidence supports a finding on which the opponent had
    the burden of proof. See Waste Mgmt. of 
    Tex., 434 S.W.3d at 156-57
    ; City of 
    Keller, 168 S.W.3d at 826
    . More than a scintilla of evidence exists to support a finding when the evidence enables
    reasonable and fair-minded people to differ in their conclusions. Gharda 
    USA, 464 S.W.3d at 347
    .
    We may not substitute our judgment for that of the jury when the evidence falls within the zone of
    reasonable disagreement, and the jury is the sole judge of the credibility of the witnesses and the
    weight to be given to their testimony. See City of 
    Keller, 168 S.W.3d at 816-17
    , 819-20, 822.
    37
    We review a trial court’s submission of a spoliation instruction to the jury for an
    abuse of discretion. Brookshire Bros., Ltd. v. Aldridge, 
    438 S.W.3d 9
    , 27 (Tex. 2014). Under that
    standard, we will reverse only if the court acted “without regard for guiding rules or principles.”
    U-Haul Int’l, Inc. v. Waldrip, 
    380 S.W.3d 118
    , 132 (Tex. 2012). Spoliation of evidence requires two
    affirmative findings from the trial court: (1) that the nonproducing party had a duty to preserve the
    evidence, and (2) that the nonproducing party breached its duty to preserve material and relevant
    evidence. 
    Aldridge, 438 S.W.3d at 20
    . A spoliation instruction is an appropriate remedy when a
    party’s spoliation of evidence is intentional. 
    Id. at 24.
    Intentional spoliation “includes the concept
    of ‘willful blindness,’ which encompasses the scenario in which a party does not directly destroy
    evidence known to be relevant and discoverable, but nonetheless allows for its destruction.” 
    Id. at 24-25
    (citing Andrew Hebl, Spoliation of Electronically Stored Information, Good Faith, and
    Rule 37(e), 29 N. Ill. U. L. Rev. 79, 97-98 (2008)).
    Because Scarbrough does not contend that the spoliation instruction was legally
    incorrect, we analyze the sufficiency of the evidence based on the charge given. See Kia Motors
    Corp. v. Ruiz, 
    432 S.W.3d 865
    , 875 (Tex. 2014). The charge stated:
    You are instructed that Denise Steele, Melissa Deaton and Jerry Scarbrough
    intentionally did not preserve or failed to produce the digital recorder when they
    knew or should have known that a claim had been filed and that the digital recorder
    in their possession or control would be material and relevant to that claim.
    Under such circumstances, the failure of Denise Steele, Melissa Deaton and
    Jerry Scarbrough to preserve or produce evidence within her or his control raises
    the presumption that if such evidence were produced, it would operate against
    Denise Steele, Melissa Deaton and Jerry Scarbrough.
    38
    Scarbrough does not dispute his knowledge that a claim had been filed by the Pursers and that
    discovery was ongoing. His contention is that he had no duty to preserve the recorder because the
    Pursers did not show that he knew or should have known that the recorder would have been
    “material and relevant to that claim.”
    Scarbrough acknowledged on the record at Deaton’s third deposition that he had a
    duty to determine what was on the recorder. He knew that appellees had requested production of
    witness statements, and he stated that Deaton had produced the recorder to him shortly after her
    second deposition, representing to him that it contained a recording of a conversation that she and
    her sister Kathy Perdue had with Purser Sr., i.e., a recording with statements from two parties to the
    lawsuit (the “sister recording”). Deaton’s recollection differed. In her second deposition, Deaton
    testified that she had given a tape recording to Scarbrough shortly before that deposition began18 and
    that she could not remember what was on that recording: “I would have to relisten to it. I do not
    remember what all is on it.” Scarbrough produced that recording and acknowledged that he had a
    duty to find out what was on “the tape” (“I think I have an obligation to my client and to you to see
    whether or not . . . there are recordings on there that are pertinent to this lawsuit that are not
    frivolous”).19 Scarbrough further said it was “absolutely true” that if a lawyer is holding onto
    evidence, he is charged with knowledge of what is in that evidence.
    18
    Deaton changed her testimony in her third deposition, stating that she could not remember
    when she gave the recorder to Scarbrough.
    19
    Deaton also identified a separate recording of Purser Sr. that was made at her request by
    her first attorney, John Redington. The “Redington recording” was not made with the digital
    recorder but on an analog (microcassette) recorder.
    39
    But the record shows that Scarbrough failed to perform any inquiry into how many
    recordings were on the device and “just assumed that there was one.” He testified that having the
    recorder “sure would be helpful” and “it would be really great if we could find that recorder and see
    what, if anything, was on it.” He never asked Steele, the owner of the device, about the recorder or
    any recordings she had previously made with it: “I don’t know that Ms. Steele ever talked to me
    about it.”20 He never asked his IT tech, Shawn Richeson, how many files or recordings were on the
    device. But Richeson’s January 11, 2011 billing states “7 individual audio files recovered from USB
    digital recorder and returned recorder to Jerry.” Scarbrough testified that he paid Richeson.
    Scarbrough did not ask Deaton to preserve the recorder when he returned it to her.
    Although the recorder was in good working condition, was not “cheap,” and belonged to Steele,
    Deaton testified that sometime between March and April 2011 the recorder “either went to Goodwill
    or it went in my trash.” Meanwhile, Scarbrough continued insisting that as far as he knew, he had
    produced everything appellees requested. For over six weeks between the time that Deaton told him
    that she had disposed of the recorder and the time of the first sanctions hearing, Scarbrough said
    nothing to opposing counsel about the lost recorder. When Scarbrough was asked what actions he
    took to preserve it, he testified that he asked Richeson to make a CD of it and that he wrote a letter
    to Deaton in July 2011 (after she had already disposed of it) asking her to preserve the recorder.
    1. The recorder was material
    Scarbrough contends that the recorder was duplicative of information already
    provided to appellees from Richeson’s server and was not material. “Material evidence” has been
    20
    This is consistent with Steele’s testimony that she did not converse with Scarbrough about
    the recorder.
    40
    defined as “[e]vidence having some logical connection with the facts of the case or the legal issues
    presented.” Material Evidence, Black’s Law Dictionary 676 (10th ed. 2014). Contrary to
    Scarbrough’s view, the recorder was material evidence and was not merely duplicative. No witness
    who had possession or control of the digital recorder confirmed that the recordings on Richeson’s
    server duplicated everything that had been on the recorder. In fact, there was evidence suggesting
    files were deleted from the recorder. Steele testified that she had taped “several” real estate classes
    she was attending “on that particular recorder” and none of those recordings were included in what
    Richeson recovered from it. Another recording that was not among the files that Richeson recovered
    was one that Deaton testified she had made of Purser Sr. making a settlement offer to her to drop her
    counterclaims. Richeson testified that files could be deleted from the recorder, that it is possible to
    recover deleted files from the recorder, that he did not attempt to recover any deleted files because
    he was not asked to check for files that were deleted, and that determining what had been on the
    digital recorder required the recorder itself. Testimony about another claimed discrepancy came
    from Scarbrough, who stated that the CD that Richeson provided to him differed from the CD with
    the recordings provided to the appellees. Only with the recorder, Richeson said, could he confirm
    whether Scarbrough’s CD contained all of the recordings that were recovered from the device.
    Based on this evidence, the trial court would not have abused its discretion in finding that the
    recorder was evidence that had a logical connection with the facts of or legal issues presented in the
    Purser Family’s suit and Scarbrough knew or should have known the recorder was material.
    2. The recorder was relevant
    Scarbrough next contends that the recorder was not relevant. “Relevant evidence”
    is evidence having any tendency to make the existence of any fact that is of consequence to the
    41
    determination of the action more probable or less probable than it would be without the evidence.
    Tex. R. Evid. 401. If there is a logical connection either directly or by inference between the
    evidence and a fact to be proved, the evidence is relevant. Clark v. Randalls Food, 
    317 S.W.3d 351
    ,
    357 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 2010, pet. denied). The Purser Family’s suit alleged in part
    that Scarbrough’s clients Deaton and Steele initiated an inappropriate relationship with Purser Sr.
    and financially exploited him while he suffered from dementia. Portions of the recordings that
    Richeson obtained from the recorder depicted conversations between Deaton, Steele, and Purser Sr.
    supporting the Purser Family’s allegations.
    Based on the witness statements that were recovered from the recorder, all of the
    evidence presented during the three-day hearing, and reasonable inferences drawn from that
    evidence, the district court would not have abused its discretion in determining that evidence not
    recovered from the recorder before Deaton disposed of it was at least potentially relevant to the
    Purser Family’s claims and that Scarbrough knew or should have known that the recorder was
    relevant.   See IQ Holdings, Inc. v. Stewart Title Guar. Co., 
    451 S.W.3d 861
    , 868 (Tex.
    App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 2014, no pet.) (concluding that appellee’s attorney had duty to preserve
    documents that were at least potentially relevant to appellant’s claims against appellees); 
    Clark, 317 S.W.3d at 357
    .
    The evidence in this record, considered in the light most favorable to the trial court’s
    ruling, contains more than a scintilla of evidence showing that Scarbrough knew or should have
    known that he had a duty to preserve the digital recorder, which was material and relevant to the
    lawsuit, and that he failed to do so. The evidence further shows that the district court’s spoliation
    instruction was based on more than a scintilla of evidence that Scarbrough failed to preserve the
    42
    digital recorder and had a duty to preserve it when he returned it to Deaton. There is proof of
    Scarbrough’s willful blindness as to the recorder, i.e., that he did not directly destroy evidence
    known to be relevant and discoverable, but nonetheless allowed for its destruction. See 
    Aldridge, 438 S.W.3d at 24-25
    . Scarbrough avoided knowledge of what was on the digital recorder by failing
    to perform any inquiry into its contents, not even asking Steele, the owner of the recorder, or
    Richeson, who recovered the information for Scarbrough from the recorder, what recordings had
    been on it or recovered from it. Scarbrough knew from Deaton’s deposition that the recorder
    contained statements from parties to the lawsuit (herself and Purser Sr.), and that she did not
    remember “what all was on it.” Despite that testimony, Scarbrough “just assumed that there was
    one,” choosing not to confirm whether other recorded statements might be on the device. Then
    while discovery was ongoing, Scarbrough returned the recorder not to its owner but to Deaton,
    saying nothing to her about preserving it until his letter months later, ultimately allowing for her
    disposal of it. Because this record disproves it, we overrule Scarbrough’s complaint that “no
    evidence” supported the spoliation instruction.
    B. Sufficient evidence of recordings that were not produced
    Scarbrough contends that there is no evidence that he destroyed evidence or that the
    Purser Family was deprived of evidence he was accused of spoliating. However, as previously
    discussed, there was evidence indicating that files were deleted from the recorder: Steele testified
    that real-estate classes she recorded were not among the files that Richeson recovered, and Deaton
    testified that her recording of a settlement offer that Purser Sr. made to her was not recovered either.
    As Richeson made clear, there is no way to determine what had been on the recorder, i.e., what
    evidence the Purser Family was deprived of, without the device itself. We overrule Scarbrough’s
    43
    complaint that there is no evidence that he destroyed evidence or that the Purser Family was deprived
    of evidence he was accused of spoliating.
    C. Discovery-abuse sanctions against Scarbrough
    In five separate orders, the district court awarded Helen monetary sanctions totaling
    $54,261.50 for Scarbrough’s discovery abuse, pursuant to the court’s inherent authority and Texas
    Rule of Civil Procedure 215. Scarbrough’s final set of issues challenges the imposition of sanctions
    against him in three of those orders, which imposed sanctions of $25,000, $15,959.50, and $11,000.21
    Scarbrough contends: (1) sanctions imposed for failure to produce all the requested recordings were
    not “just”; (2) sanctions imposed for disclosure of Purser’s medical records were not “just” and his
    disclosure to Bolling was minimal and inconsequential; and (3) the Purser Family lacked standing
    to request sanctions for disclosure of Purser Sr.’s medical records.
    A trial court may impose sanctions on any party that abuses the discovery process in
    seeking, making, or resisting discovery.        See Tex. R. Civ. P. 215.3; Wein v. Sherman,
    No. 03-10-00499-CV, 2013 Tex. App. LEXIS 10666, at *39 (Tex. App.—Austin Aug. 23, 2013, no
    pet.) (mem. op.) (noting that Rule 215 sanctions are not damages for harm alleged in underlying
    lawsuit but are used to punish parties who violate discovery rules). A trial court also has inherent
    power to sanction to the extent necessary to deter, alleviate, and counteract bad faith abuse of the
    judicial process. IFC Credit Corp. v. Specialty Optical Sys., Inc., 
    252 S.W.3d 761
    , 772 (Tex.
    App.—Dallas 2008, pet. denied) (citing Eichelberger v. Eichelberger, 
    582 S.W.2d 395
    , 398 (Tex.
    21
    Scarbrough failed to brief and has waived any challenge to two other sanctions orders:
    (1) an order imposing sanctions of $1,150 against him for filing a frivolous motion for sanctions, and
    (2) an order imposing sanctions of $1,152 against him for filing a frivolous motion for leave to
    designate responsible third parties.
    44
    1979)). We review sanctions imposed under Rule 215 or the court’s inherent power for an abuse of
    discretion. Koslow’s v. Mackie, 
    796 S.W.2d 700
    , 704 (Tex. 1990). We reverse the trial court’s
    ruling only if the court acted without reference to any guiding rules or principles, such that its ruling
    was arbitrary or unreasonable. American Flood Research, Inc. v. Jones, 
    192 S.W.3d 581
    , 583 (Tex.
    2006). Imposition of sanctions is appropriate (1) if there is a direct relationship between the
    improper conduct and the sanctions imposed—i.e., the sanctions must be directed against the abuse
    and abuser and be tailored to remedy any prejudice the abuse caused—and (2) if the sanctions are
    not excessive—i.e., the punishment should fit the crime. TransAmerican Nat. Gas Corp. v. Powell,
    
    811 S.W.2d 913
    , 917 (Tex. 1991).
    1. Sanctions for failure to produce requested recordings were “just”
    Scarbrough contends that the $25,000 sanctions award was not “just” because he did
    not know that the recorder was relevant and material, requiring preservation. However, as we have
    discussed, the recorder was material evidence and was not merely duplicative—no witness who had
    possession or control of the digital recorder confirmed that the recordings on Richeson’s server
    duplicated everything that had been on the recorder, and there was evidence indicating that files were
    deleted from the recorder. We have also discussed that the evidence not recovered from the recorder
    before Deaton disposed of it was at least potentially relevant to the Purser Family’s claims, as
    indicated by the recordings that were recovered, and that Scarbrough knew or should have known
    that the recorder was relevant. See IQ Holdings, 
    Inc., 451 S.W.3d at 868
    ; 
    Clark, 317 S.W.3d at 357
    .
    Scarbrough attempts to shift the blame to others for failure to produce recordings
    during discovery. However, the court’s order specified that Scarbrough was also being sanctioned
    45
    for “his intentional concealment and deception regarding the existence of audio recordings,” conduct
    that did not implicate anyone else. Actions that callously disregard the rules of discovery warrant
    a presumption that the actor’s claims are meritless because the very purpose of discovery is “to seek
    the truth, so that disputes may be decided by what the facts reveal, not by what facts are concealed.”
    Khan v. Valliani, 
    439 S.W.3d 528
    , 533 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] 2014, no pet.). With
    regard to the order’s omission of reference to consideration of lesser sanctions, we note that
    Scarbrough did not raise that complaint below and he has waived it here. See Tex. R. App. P.
    33.1(a); Werley v. Cannon, 
    344 S.W.3d 527
    , 535 (Tex. App.—El Paso 2011, no pet.) (concluding
    that appellant waived his complaint that trial court did not consider less stringent sanctions by failing
    to object on that basis below); see also Bell v. Doreman, No. 94-50358, 
    1994 U.S. App. LEXIS 42994
    ,
    at *4 (5th Cir. Aug. 15, 1994) (stating court need not address issues that were not considered by
    district court and noting, “Bell’s argument, that the district court failed to consider lesser sanction,
    was not presented to the district court.”); The Shops at Legacy (Inland) Ltd. P’ship v. Fine
    Autographs & Memorabilia Retail Stores, Inc., No. 05-14-00889-CV, 2015 Tex. App. LEXIS 4724,
    at *5-6 (Tex. App.—Dallas May 8, 2015, pet. denied) (mem. op.) (collecting cases on waiver of
    appellate complaints about sanctions).
    Further, the fees awarded were not excessive. Crews and Ray, the Purser Family’s
    attorneys, testified about their hourly rates and detailed their nearly year-long efforts in obtaining
    discovery, resulting in their request for fees totaling $53,000. The court’s award of $25,000 was far
    less than the total amount of those fees. Scarbrough failed to demonstrate that the court acted
    without reference to guiding rules and principles in issuing these sanctions. See American Flood
    
    Research, 192 S.W.3d at 583
    . We overrule Scarbrough’s complaint that the $25,000 sanctions
    46
    award was not “just” because he did not know that the recorder was relevant and material,
    requiring preservation.
    2. Sanctions for disclosure of Purser’s medical records were “just”
    Scarbrough’s next two issues complain about the court’s orders imposing sanctions
    of $15,959.50 and $11,000 for twice violating the court’s order on the confidentiality of Purser Sr.’s
    medical records: once to Officer Sharon Brank of the Killeen Police Department and then to
    Carolyn Bolling, Purser Sr.’s niece. During the sanctions hearings, Scarbrough admitted he was
    bound by the court order, but he claimed he had to divulge the medical records to a law-enforcement
    expert to obtain the autopsy he wanted performed on Purser Sr. However, Scarbrough testified that
    the medical records “were of limited value.” Scarbrough minimizes his disclosure to Bolling as a
    “slip of the tongue.” The trial court was not persuaded that Scarbrough’s disclosure was inadvertent.
    After listening to Scarbrough’s entire recorded conversation with Bolling, the court stated that
    Scarbrough had quoted from the medical records in an apparent attempt to prejudice a witness.
    Significantly, both of these medical-record disclosures were made along with Scarbrough’s false and
    defamatory statements about the Purser Family in an alleged attempt to prove that Purser Sr. did not
    have dementia. But Scarbrough’s recorded conversation with his wife revealed that not even
    Scarbrough himself believed that theory. Scarbrough failed to demonstrate that the court acted
    without reference to guiding rules and principles in issuing these sanctions. See 
    id. We overrule
    Scarbrough’s complaint that the $15,959.50 and $11,000 sanctions awards were not “just.”22
    22
    Scarbrough’s argument about the order’s omission of a reference to consideration of lesser
    sanctions was not raised below and is waived. See Tex. R. App. P. 33.1(a); Werley v. Cannon,
    
    344 S.W.3d 527
    , 535 (Tex. App.—El Paso 2011, no pet.); see also Bell v. Doreman, No. 94-50358,
    
    1994 U.S. App. LEXIS 42994
    , at *4 (5th Cir. Aug. 15, 1994); The Shops at Legacy (Inland) Ltd.
    47
    3. Standing to seek sanctions
    Scarbrough cites no authority for his argument that a violation of a court’s
    confidentiality order is unenforceable unless the violation causes injury to someone, thereby
    providing them with standing to seek sanctions, and that Helen lacked such standing. See Tex. R.
    App. P. 38.1(i). This argument also overlooks the fact that Helen’s confidential information was
    also included in the records, including marriage counseling and other personal incidents between
    them, and she would have standing to protect the confidentiality of her own information. Scarbrough
    failed to demonstrate that the court acted without reference to guiding rules and principles in issuing
    these sanctions. See American Flood 
    Research, 192 S.W.3d at 583
    . We overrule Scarbrough’s
    complaint that Helen lacked standing to seek sanctions for his violations of the court’s
    confidentiality order.
    VI. Waiver of remaining appellate issues
    Of the 40 or so appellate issues that Scarbrough, Steele, and Deaton raise, a number
    are waived.
    A. Appellants waived misjoinder complaint
    Appellants contend that the district court lacked jurisdiction over the Purser Family’s
    third-party claims against them because they were not liable for all or part of Olvera’s claims against
    Purser Sr. in the original lawsuit. However, the Purser Family correctly notes that misjoinder of
    actions is a procedural, not jurisdictional matter. See Allison v. Arkansas La. Gas Co., 
    624 S.W.2d 566
    ,
    P’ship v. Fine Autographs & Memorabilia Retail Stores, Inc., No. 05-14-00889-CV, 2015 Tex. App.
    LEXIS 4724, at *5-6 (Tex. App.—Dallas May 8, 2015, pet. denied) (mem. op.).
    48
    568 (Tex. 1981); Ford Motor Co. v. Texas Dep’t of Transp., 
    936 S.W.2d 427
    , 432 (Tex.
    App.—Austin 1996, no writ) (noting that any impediments to joining administrative claims with
    counterclaims would not be jurisdictional); see also University of Tex. at Austin v. Hinton,
    
    822 S.W.2d 197
    , 200 (Tex. App.—Austin 1991, no writ) (concluding that misjoinder complaint
    raised for first time on appeal was waived). Under Texas Rule of Civil Procedure 41, misjoinder of
    parties may be addressed on a party’s motion or on the court’s own initiative before submission of
    the case, allowing improperly joined actions to be severed and each ground of recovery improperly
    joined to be docketed as a separate suit between the same parties. Tex. R. Civ. P. 41. Steele and
    Deaton raise the issue of misjoinder for the first time on appeal and have waived it. See Tex. R.
    App. P. 33.1(a); 
    Hinton, 822 S.W.2d at 200
    .23
    Unlike Steele and Deaton, Scarbrough filed a motion for severance. But it did not
    raise his appellate complaint—that the Purser Family’s third-party claims against him were
    improperly joined because he was not liable for all or part of Olvera’s claims against
    Purser Sr.—rather, the motion contended only that severance was proper because he had inadequate
    time to prepare his defense. With this motion, Scarbrough preserved nothing about his misjoinder
    complaint. See Tex. R. App. P. 33.1(a); 
    Hinton, 822 S.W.2d at 200
    . Scarbrough’s misjoinder
    complaint is waived.24
    23
    We note that the case appellants cite in support of their contention that misjoinder is a
    jurisdictional issue was decided before the promulgation of Rule 41.
    24
    Even if he had preserved this issue, we review a trial court’s severance ruling for an abuse
    of discretion, see Liberty Nat’l Fire Ins. Co. v. Akin, 
    927 S.W.2d 627
    , 629 (Tex. 1996), which is not
    shown on this record. Scarbrough’s motion for severance was denied on the same day that the
    district court signed Olvera’s nonsuit and dismissal with prejudice of his claims against Purser Sr.,
    leaving only the Purser Family’s third-party claims against appellants in the suit. Thus, there was
    nothing for the district court to sever.
    49
    B. Scarbrough waived Rule 13 sanctions complaint
    Scarbrough contends that the trial court abused its discretion by denying his motion
    for Rule 13 sanctions, but the record shows that Scarbrough withdrew that motion:
    THE COURT:            Okay, the next matter has to do with Mr. Scarbrough’s Motion
    for Sanctions for allegedly filing frivolous pleadings under
    Rule 13. I’ve read the motion. I’ve read the response.
    Mr. Scarbrough, did you wish to make argument?
    SCARBROUGH:           Your Honor, I’m going to withdraw that motion.
    THE COURT:            The motion is withdrawn. The Court grants you[] permission
    to withdraw the motion.
    Scarbrough waived his Rule 13 sanctions complaint. See Tex. R. App. P. 33.1(a).
    C. Scarbrough waived issue that discovery sanctions restricted his access to the courts
    Scarbrough contends for the first time on appeal that the sanctions imposed against
    him for discovery abuse were excessive and unconstitutional because they restricted his access to the
    courts. He contends, citing no authority, that the post-judgment filing of his affidavit of net worth,
    while “not a formal notice that the sanctions assessed precluded access to the courts, [] should be
    considered such a request.” Scarbrough waived his complaint that the discovery sanctions restricted
    his access to the courts. See 
    id. 50 D.
    Steele and Deaton waived spoliation-instruction issue
    Steele and Deaton contend that the district court erred in giving a spoliation
    instruction because there is no evidence that Steele had custody of the digital recorder or failed to
    preserve it, and because there is no evidence that Deaton had a duty to preserve the recorder when
    she disposed of it. However, they did not raise the arguments they are making here in their motion
    for judgment notwithstanding the verdict and failed to otherwise preserve them for appellate review.
    See id.; B & W Supply, Inc. v. Beckman, 
    305 S.W.3d 10
    , 14 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 2009,
    pet. denied) (concluding that issue in JNOV differed from issue asserted on appeal and was waived);
    Lee v. Lee, 
    47 S.W.3d 767
    , 776-77 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] 2001, pet. denied) (refusing
    to consider appellate complaint distinct from complaint in JNOV that there was no evidence to
    support jury’s finding). Steele and Deaton waived their complaint that the district court erred in
    giving a spoliation instruction. See Tex. R. App. P. 33.1(a).
    CONCLUSION
    We affirm the awards of past mental anguish damages for defamation totaling
    $1,060,000 ($180,000 against Steele, $180,000 against Deaton, and $700,000 against Scarbrough),
    reverse the portions of the judgment awarding the other compensatory damages to the Purser Family
    against Scarbrough, Steele, and Deaton, and render judgment that as to the compensatory damages,
    the Purser Family take only the $1,060,000 awarded for past mental anguish for defamation. We
    modify the exemplary damages awarded against Scarbrough to $700,000, against Steele to $200,000,
    and against Deaton to $200,000 by applying the statutory cap and affirm the awards as modified.
    Finally, we affirm the district court’s orders imposing discovery-abuse sanctions against Scarbrough
    51
    in the amounts of $25,000, $15,959.50, $11,000, $1,150, and $1,152 and its order imposing
    discovery-abuse sanctions against Deaton in the amount of $5,000.
    __________________________________________
    Jeff Rose, Chief Justice
    Before Chief Justice Rose, Justices Field and Bourland
    Affirmed in Part; Modified and, as Modified, Affirmed in Part; Reversed and Rendered in Part
    Filed: December 30, 2016
    52