DocketNumber: No. 17-0863
Citation Numbers: 563 S.W.3d 216
Filed Date: 11/16/2018
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
Four years ago, we clarified how to determine the accrual date for postjudgment interest when a remand for further proceedings requires new evidence. See generally Long v. Castle Tex. Prod. Ltd. P'ship ,
[P]ostjudgment interest accrues from the final judgment date unless the appellate court can or does render the judgment the trial court should have rendered. If the trial court determines that it must reopen the record on remand based upon the record and pleadings as they existed at the time of the remand, postjudgment interest will accrue from the subsequent judgment. But if the court of appeals can or does render the judgment the trial court should have rendered, postjudgment interest accrues from the original, erroneous trial court judgment.
Here, the court of appeals remanded for the trial court to assess prejudgment interest based upon the date the Long Trusts received joint interest billings. The trial court determined it required additional evidence to decide that issue. Because there was insufficient evidence in the record establishing when the Long Trusts received the billings and because the trial court had no duty to deny Castle's request for prejudgment interest on the existing record, we find no basis to conclude that the trial court's ruling to reopen the record was an abuse of discretion. Accordingly, postjudgment interest must accrue from the *218trial court's final judgment in 2009 . We reverse the court of appeals' judgment and remand for the trial court to render judgment for Castle, with postjudgment interest to accrue in accordance with this opinion .
On remand, however, the trial court issued a letter ruling stating that the record must be reopened to "determine postjudgment interest including the accrual period." Castle petitioned the court of appeals for mandamus relief from the trial court's ruling, arguing that the trial court exceeded the scope of this Court's mandate by indicating its intent to re-open the record. In a split opinion, the court of appeals denied relief. No. 12-17-00178-CV,
A dissenting justice disagreed, arguing that the trial court "exceeded its authority when it ordered the reopening of the record" in light of this Court's "clear instruction for the trial court to render judgment for Castle with postjudgment interest to accrue on March 25, 2009." Id. at *5 (Hoyle, J., dissenting). Justice Hoyle would have held the trial court abused its discretion in reopening the record because (1) there were no outstanding issues requiring additional evidence; (2) the trial court's letter ruling was not vague; it clearly expressed intent to re-open the record to decide the accrual date for postjudgment interest; and (3) mandamus relief is appropriate when a lower court fails to comply with this Court's judgment and to avoid further waste of time and resources. See id. at *5-6.
We agree with the dissenting justice. The scope of our remand, which we think was clear, was simply to render judgment for Castle with postjudgment interest accruing from the trial court's final judgment issued in 2009. Our further instruction for the trial court to proceed "in accordance with this opinion" is not, as the real party in interest seems to suggest, an invitation to raise new arguments that would require re-opening the record. See Phillips v. Bramlett ,
Mandamus relief is appropriate to enforce our mandate. See, e.g. , Wells v. Littlefield ,