JSC Neftegas-Impex v. Transcontinental Products and Services, Inc. and Citibank, N.A.--Appeal from 152nd District Court of Harris County
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Opinion issued February 10, 2011
In The
Court of Appeals
For The
First District of Texas
____________
NO. 01-07-00397-CV
____________
JSC NEFTEGAS-IMPEX, Appellant
V.
CITIBANK, N.A., Appellee
***
CITIBANK, N.A., Appellant
V.
JSC NEFTEGAS-IMPEX, Appellee
On Appeal from the 152nd District Court
Harris County, Texas
Trial Court Cause No. 1998-37793
OPINION ON REHEARING
The Court’s opinion and judgment in this case issued on April 16, 2010. JSC
Neftegas-Impex (“JSCNI”) moved for rehearing, and Citibank, N.A. (“Citibank”)
responded to that motion. After due consideration, the Court grants JSCNI’s motion
for rehearing, withdraws its opinion and judgment dated April 16, 2010, and issues
today’s opinion and judgment in their stead.
A jury rendered judgment in favor of JSCNI and against Transcontinental
Products and Services, Inc. (“TPS”) for fraud and breach of fiduciary duty. The jury
also rendered judgment in favor of JSCNI and against Citibank for fraud, knowing
participation in TPS’s breach of fiduciary duty, and conspiracy. The jury awarded
actual damages against both defendants and exemplary damages against Citibank.
The trial court granted in part Citibank’s motion for judgment non obstante verdicto
(“JNOV”), rendering a take-nothing judgment on the claims for knowing participation
in TPS’s breach of fiduciary duty and conspiracy and the award of exemplary
damages. Both JSCNI and Citibank appeal. We modify the judgment and affirm it
as modified.
BACKGROUND
OAO Neftegas (“Old Neftegas”) was founded in 1991 by Leonard Rafikov, its
president, an experienced business person who had been the director of Cbnefteprovd
and the First Deputy Prime Minister of the Oil Industry of the former Soviet Union.
2
Over the course of the events relevant to this suit, Old Neftegas went bankrupt and
assigned certain of its rights and liabilities to ZAO Neftegas (“New Neftegas”). In
1997, New Neftegas entered into a joint venture with TPS and another company as
part of a later phase of a refinery project (“the Project”). This joint venture was
JSCNI, the only of the Neftegas entities that is a party to this appeal. Nikolai
Kashuro was the Director of Economy and Finance for Old and New Neftegas.
TPS, a Houston-based company, was interested in doing business by
facilitating projects in Russia. Its co-owners were Irfan Abji, its president and a
former loan executive with Citibank; Peter Karber, its executive vice-president; and
Manuel Santos, who, along with his family, were important clients of Citibank.
Karber and Abji met Edward Sartan, a Russian-born American who had been working
in Russia, who would later become TPS’s consultant and an interpreter and translator
for the Neftegas entities for the project described below. Sartan introduced Abji and
Karber to Rafikov.
The Project involved the development of mini-refineries in Siberia, Russia,
something that Old Neftegas desired. Rafikov proposed the Project to TPS. TPS
introduced Rafikov to John Kermath, a Citibank vice-president, as part of these
discussions. In June 1994, Old Neftegas contracted with Avanti International
(“Avanti”), a Houston company, for equipment, installation, and related training
needed for the Project. The Avanti-Old Neftegas contract required letters of credit
3
from a prime bank. Also in June 1994, Old Neftegas engaged TPS to initiate and to
conduct discussions for financing for the Project with third-party financial institutions
for up to $60 million. The same month, TPS engaged Citibank to structure the
transaction and to provide financing because TPS did not have the experience to do
so itself. The principal Citibank representative interacting with TPS and the Neftegas
entities throughout the transaction was Kermath.
Over the next three and a half years, the Project and its proposed financing
underwent three phases:
1.
2.
1
Phase I: this phase was structured to be a credit facility with Old
Neftegas as the borrower and with the Exim Bank, pursuant to the
Oil and Gas Framework Agreement (“OGFA”) between Russia
and the United States, as guarantor.
Phase II: this phase was structured to be a 36-month “pass
through” revolving credit facility1 in which TPS was Citibank’s
borrower and Old Neftegas was TPS’s borrower.
Generally speaking, a revolving credit facility is “one that goes up and down as the
needs of the borrower vary. Typically, there is a maximum borrowing amount and if
the loan is asset based then a formula for how much of that line is available . . . is set
forth . . . . The revolving credit line will terminate on a date certain; however, within
that time frame the borrower may pay down the loan and/or borrow at any time.”
Robert J. Ingato & Maury B. Poscover, Commercial Finance, S UCCESSFUL
P ARTNERING B ETWEEN INSIDE & O UTSIDE C OUNSEL, § 53:21 (Robert L. Haig ed.,
West & ACCA 2010) (2000); see also D ICTIONARY OF L EGAL T ERMS: S IMPLIFIED
G UIDE TO THE L ANGUAGE OF L AW 431 (3rd ed. 1998) (defining revolving credit as
“renewable credit over a set period of time. The term refers generally to credit
extended by a banker or merchant for a certain amount that can be paid off
periodically.”). R ANDOM H OUSE W EBSTER’S U NABRIDGED D ICTIONARY 1649 (2nd ed.
2001) (defining revolving credit as “credit automatically available up to a
predetermined limit while payments are periodically made”).
4
3.
Phase III: this phase was structured so that the joint venture
JSCNI would enter into a lease with TPS, which as lessor would
assume the Avanti contract and be Citibank’s borrower under a
three-year, revolving credit facility.
The transaction’s phases, and the operative documents for Phase III (which is at issue
here), are set out in detail later in the opinion. Over the Project’s three phases, the
Neftegas entities periodically paid fees to, or expenses of, TPS and Citibank.
The closing on the Phase III operative contracts took place in Houston, Texas
on August 15, 1997. Present at the closing were Kermath, Rafikov, Sartan, and TPS
representatives, among others. The parties disputed at trial whether, before the
contracts were signed, Rafikov and Kermath negotiated a security-deposit schedule
for collateral different from the one contained in the contracts signed that day,
including an initial security deposit of $550,000. JSCNI’s evidence, however,
showed that this verbal discussion and agreement occurred. The parties also disputed
at trial whether Kermath represented, both at the closing and at a post-closing dinner,
that financing would be provided shortly after JSCNI sent Citibank the first security
deposit of $550,000. Again, however, JSCNI’s evidence showed that Kermath made
such statements.
The Phase III contracts signed on August 15 made JSCNI the lessee of the
Project equipment, made TPS the equipment’s lessor, made TPS the borrower of
Citibank, and authorized TPS to pursue financing on terms and conditions acceptable
to it. Pursuant to that authority, TPS and Citibank agreed to a revolving credit facility
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that contained two aspects at issue in this appeal: (1) a $40-million facility limit,
which was less than the facility limits in Phases I and II; (2) collateral consisting
entirely of cash investments or United States government obligations;2 and (3) a
prerequisite to financing that TPS, which had a negative net worth, maintain a
minimum net worth of $500,000 and an asset-to-liability ratio of 1:1.
On November 5, 1997, Kermath sent TPS a commitment from Citibank for
financing Phase III (“the Commitment Letter”). The Commitment Letter indicated
that financing was conditional on several things. One of the conditions to the
facility’s effectiveness was “initial funding of at least $550,000” in an account
designated by the Phase III contracts. The evidence favorable to JSCNI is that this
“initial funding” was the initial security deposit that Kermath and Rafikov had
negotiated at the August 15 closing. All parties knew that the $550,000 security
deposit would come from JSCNI because TPS had a negative net worth at the time.
The Commitment Letter also recited the $40-million credit-facility limit and the fullcash-collateral requirement. TPS solicited the $550,000 payment from JSCNI, but
forwarded only part of the Commitment Letter to it, omitting the pages on which the
credit-facility limit and full-cash-collateral requirement appeared.
JSCNI paid the $550,000 to Citibank. Unbeknownst to JSCNI, some of these
2
JSCNI refers to the requirement for cash-investment and government-obligation
collateral as the “full-cash-collateral requirement.” We adopt JSCNI’s terminology
for ease of reference.
6
funds were spent on repayment of Santos, payment of Citibank’s legal and advisory
fees, draws to Karber and Abji, and payment of certain of TPS’s expenses.
In December 1997, Citibank revoked the Commitment Letter, stating that the
sole basis for the revocation was its having learned that Karber had a criminal history.
The parties disputed at trial whether Kermath knew from the Project’s start that
Karber had a criminal history, but JSCNI’s evidence showed that he did. Although
JSCNI contended below that Citibank’s revocation was pretextual, it has abandoned
on appeal any theory of recovery based on Citibank’s failure to finance the Project.
At the end of the day, not only did the Project fail, but TPS reimbursed JSCNI only
$100,000 of its $550,000 security deposit.
Avanti was the first to file suit, alleging claims against TPS and Citibank.
Avanti’s claims were disposed of in ways that are immaterial to this appeal. JSCNI
intervened in Avanti’s suit, alleging claims against TPS and Citibank. By the time
of trial, JSCNI was alleging the following claims:
!
fraud against Citibank and TPS,
!
negligent misrepresentation against Citibank and TPS,
!
breach of fiduciary duty against Citibank and TPS,
!
knowing participation in breach of fiduciary duty against
Citibank, and
!
conspiracy.
The trial court charged the jury on all claims except the negligent-misrepresentation
7
claims against both TPS and Citibank. The jury found TPS liable for fraud and
breach of fiduciary duty and awarded actual damages of $315,000 (70% of $450,000)
for fraud and $1,181,000 for breach of fiduciary duty. The jury found Citibank liable
for fraud, knowing participation in TPS’s breach of fiduciary duty, and conspiracy in
TPS’s breach of fiduciary duty and fraud. It awarded actual damages of $135,000
(30% of $450,000) for fraud and exemplary damages of $2.25 million against
Citibank. The trial court rendered judgment on all aspects of the verdict against TPS
and rendered judgment against Citibank on the jury’s finding of fraud and the related
actual damages. The trial court granted Citibank’s motion for JNOV on the jury’s
findings against it for knowing participation in TPS’s breach of fiduciary duty, for
conspiracy, and for exemplary damages.
JSCNI and Citibank appeal, but TPS does not.
CITIBANK’S APPEAL
In three issues, Citibank argues that it is entitled to a take-nothing judgment as
a matter of law on JSCNI’s claim for fraud. Specifically, Citibank argues that the trial
court erred in denying its motions for directed verdict and JNOV on this claim
because (1) no evidence supports the jury’s damages finding because the evidence
conclusively proved that the disputed $500,000 payment was made not by JSCNI, but
by a separate entity; (2) no evidence supports the jury’s fraud finding; and (3) the
verbal representations upon which JSCNI’s fraud claim relies cannot support, for
8
various reasons, the jury’s finding or judgment.
Standard of Review
When made on an evidentiary basis, rulings on a motion for JNOV and directed
verdict are reviewed under the same legal-sufficiency test as are appellate
no-evidence challenges. See City of Keller v. Wilson, 168 S.W.3d 802, 823, 827 (Tex.
2005). When, as here, an appellant attacks the legal sufficiency of an adverse finding
on an issue for which it did not have the burden of proof, it must demonstrate that
there is no evidence to support the adverse finding. Croucher v. Croucher, 660
S.W.2d 55, 58 (Tex. 1983). Such a no-evidence challenge will be sustained when
“‘(a) there is a complete absence of evidence of a vital fact, (b) the court is barred by
rules of law or of evidence from giving weight to the only evidence offered to prove
a vital fact, (c) the evidence offered to prove a vital fact is no more than a mere
scintilla, or (d) the evidence conclusively establishes the opposite of the vital fact.’”
King Ranch, Inc. v. Chapman, 118 S.W.3d 742, 751 (Tex. 2003) (quoting Merrell
Dow Pharms., Inc. v. Havner, 953 S.W.2d 706, 711 (Tex. 1997)).
In our legal-sufficiency review, “we must view the evidence in a light that
tends to support the finding of disputed fact and disregard all evidence and inferences
to the contrary.” Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. v. Miller, 102 S.W.3d 706, 709 (Tex. 2003).
Nonetheless, “[t]he final test for legal sufficiency must always be whether the
evidence at trial would enable reasonable and fair-minded people to reach the verdict
9
under review. . . . [L]egal-sufficiency review in the proper light must credit favorable
evidence if reasonable jurors could, and disregard contrary evidence unless
reasonable jurors could not.” City of Keller, 168 S.W.3d at 827.
Particularized forms of this general standard of review apply in certain cases.
For example, in cases “involving what a party knew or why it took a certain course,”
a court “cannot review whether jurors could reasonably disregard a losing party’s
explanations or excuses without considering what they were,” although the reviewing
court may nonetheless not “credit a losing party’s explanations or excuses if jurors
could disregard them.” Id. at 817–18. Additionally, “when the circumstantial
evidence of a vital fact is meager”—that is, when “‘the circumstances are equally
consistent with either of two facts’”—we “must consider not just favorable but all
circumstantial evidence, and competing inferences as well.” Id. at 813–14 (quoting
Tubelite, a Div. of Indal, Inc. v. Risica & Sons, Inc., 819 S.W.2d 801, 805 (Tex.
1991)). “Properly applied, the equal inference rule is but a species of the no-evidence
rule, emphasizing that when the circumstantial evidence is so slight that any plausible
inference is purely a guess, it is in legal effect no evidence. But circumstantial
evidence is not legally insufficient merely because more than one reasonable
inference may be drawn from it. If circumstantial evidence will support more than
one reasonable inference, it is for the jury to decide which is more reasonable . . . .”
Lozano v. Lozano, 52 S.W.3d 141, 148 (Tex. 2001) (Phillips, C.J., concurring &
10
dissenting, joined by 4 JJ).
If more than a scintilla of evidence supports the jury’s finding, “the jury’s
verdict . . . must be upheld.” Miller, 102 S.W.3d at 709. “[M]ore than a scintilla of
evidence exists if the evidence ‘rises to a level that would enable reasonable and
fair-minded people to differ in their conclusions.’” Ford Motor Co. v. Ridgway, 135
S.W.3d 598, 601 (Tex. 2004) (quoting Merrell Dow Pharm., Inc. v. Havner, 953
S.W.2d 706, 711 (Tex. 1997)). Conversely, evidence that is “‘so weak as to do no
more than create a mere surmise’” is no more than a scintilla and, thus, no evidence.
Id. (quoting Kindred v. Con/Chem., Inc., 650 S.W.2d 61, 63 (Tex. 1983)).
The jury is the sole judge of witnesses’ credibility, and it may choose to believe
one witness over another; a reviewing court may not impose its own opinion to the
contrary. City of Keller, 168 S.W.3d at 819. Because it is the jury’s province to
resolve conflicting evidence, we must assume that jurors resolved all conflicts in
accordance with their verdict. Id. at 819–20. Likewise, “[e]ven if evidence is
undisputed, it is the province of the jury to draw from it whatever inferences they [sic]
wish, so long as more than one is possible and the jury must not simply guess.” Id.
at 821.
JNOV or directed verdict is also proper when a legal principle precludes
recovery.
See John Masek Corp. v. Davis, 848 S.W.2d 170, 173 (Tex.
App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 1993, writ denied). To the extent that such a ruling is
11
based on a question of law, we review that aspect of the ruling de novo. See In re
Humphreys, 880 S.W.2d 402, 404 (Tex. 1994) (“[Q]uestions of law are always
subject to de novo review.”); Elliott v. Whitten, No. 01-02-00065-CV, 2004 WL
2115420, at *3 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] September 23, 2004, pet. denied)
(memo. op.).
Damages
Under issue three, Citibank argues that the trial court erred in denying its
motion for JNOV because “[t]here is no evidence that [JSCNI] incurred expense
damages of $450,000 attributable to the $550,000 payment” to Citibank. In support,
JSCNI points to evidence that an entity named Sunflower Business Group
(“Sunflower”) paid the $550,000, that neither the payment nor any obligation of
Sunflower appears on the financial statements or general ledger of JSCNI, and that
no assignment concerning the funds between the two entities appears in the record.
However, (1) JSCNI’s written instruction for Sunflower to pay the $550,000 recited
that the payment be made “in accordance with the terms and conditions of obligation
taken to implement the function of financial agent . . .” (emphasis added) and (2) a
March 1998 agreement between TPS and JSCNI required that TPS transfer the entire
$550,000 back to JSCNI (not Sunflower) if the loan did not close by March 31, 1998.
This is some evidence that the $550,000 was JSCNI’s and that Sunflower paid it as
JSCNI’s agent.
12
We overrule issue three.
Legal and Evidentiary Challenges to Liability
Under issue one, Citibank argues that “there is no evidence to support the
jury’s finding of fraud against Citibank . . . .” Under issue two, Citibank argues that
Kermath’s verbal representations could not support JSCNI’s fraud claim for various
reasons and, alternatively, that JSCNI could not reasonably have relied on those
representations given the application of the statute of frauds.
A.
The Allegations, Charge, and Verdict
JSCNI alleged that Citibank had committed fraud by making false statements
of fact, promises of future performance without intent to perform, and failure to
disclose information when there was a duty to disclose. Specifically, JSCNI alleged
that:
1.
Citibank had falsely represented that it would arrange financing
for the project;
2.
Citibank had terminated its financing commitment for pretextual
reasons, i.e., because of Karber’s criminal history; and
3.
Citibank had a duty to disclose, but failed to disclose, the
following facts: (a) that financing was still dependent upon due
diligence relating to Karber’s history, when Citibank (through
Kermath) had represented that the deal was done and (b) that the
$550,000 would be used in ways contrary to the way in which
Citibank had represented that it would be used (as a security
deposit).
JSCNI sought actual and exemplary damages.
13
The jury was charged:
[F]raud occurs when:
a.
a party makes a material misrepresentation,
b.
the misrepresentation was made with knowledge of its
falsity or made recklessly without any knowledge of the
truth as a positive assertion,
c.
the misrepresentation is made with the intention that it
should be acted on by the other party, and
d.
the other party relies on the misrepresentation and thereby
suffers injury.[3]
Misrepresentation means:
a.
a false statement of fact, or
b.
a promise of future performance made with an intent, at the
time the promise was made, not to perform as promised.
You are further instructed that fraud occurs when:
a.
b.
3
a party fails to disclose a material fact within the
knowledge of that party,
the party knows that the other party is ignorant of the fact
and does not have an equal opportunity to discover the
truth,
Under the common law, the plaintiff’s reliance must be justifiable to support a fraud
claim. See, e.g., Ernst & Young, L.L.P v. Pac. Mut. Life Ins. Co., 51 S.W.3d 573, 577
(Tex. 2001). The charge omitted the “justifiable” qualifier. However, Citibank
objected to this omission, and the trial court overruled the objection. We thus
measure the sufficiency of the evidence against the legally correct charge, which
would include the omitted qualifier. See St. Joseph Hosp. v. Wolff, 94 S.W.3d 513,
530 (Tex. 2002).
14
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.
The jury (1) found Citibank liable; (2) awarded actual damages of $450,000 to
JSCNI, apportioning 30% responsibility ($135,000) to Citibank and 70% ($315,000)
to TPS; and (3) having found clear and convincing evidence of fraud, awarded
exemplary damages of $2.25 million against Citibank alone. The trial court denied
Citibank’s motion for JNOV on fraud liability and actual damages, as it had done in
denying Citibank’s earlier motion for directed verdict, but granted its JNOV on
exemplary damages.4
B.
The Bases for JSCNI’s Fraud Claim
On appeal, JSCNI admits that its fraud claim “is based upon Citibank’s
misrepresentations and failures to disclose information that caused [JSCNI] to
transmit $550,000 to Citibank as an initial security deposit for the Transaction.” In
support of this fraud theory, JSCNI identifies only three bases comprising its claim:
(1) that Citibank made false statements of fact through Kermath in connection with
the use of the security deposit; (2) that Citibank made false statements of fact through
Kermath that the transaction was complete after the negotiation of the scheduled
4
The ruling granting the JNOV on exemplary damages is the subject of JSCNI’s
separate appeal.
15
amounts of security deposit at the August 15, 1997 closing; and (3) that Citibank
failed to disclose material information that made earlier representations misleading
or untrue. JSCNI further expressly rejects that it pursued or is pursuing any theory
of fraud based upon “Citibank’s failure to provide funding for the Project.” We
construe JSCNI as having abandoned on appeal any theory of fraud other than those
relating to the $500,000. See Martin v. Martin, Martin & Richards, Inc., 991 S.W.2d
1, 4 n.1 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth 1997) (noting that appellees abandoned summaryjudgment ground of collateral estoppel by stating in appellate brief that “they do not
rely upon that doctrine”), rev’d on other grounds, 989 S.W.2d 357 (Tex. 1998);
Commercial Ins. Co. of Newark, N.J. v. Williamson, 328 S.W.2d 796, 797 (Tex. Civ.
App.—San Antonio 1959, no writ) (noting that appellee had abandoned sole ground
that his controverting plea to plea of privilege had raised in trial court and not
considering that ground on appeal). Because we no longer need to reach them, we
overrule those challenges of Citibank’s under issues one and two that attack the
rendition of judgment on any fraud theory not relating to the $550,000 security
deposit—specifically, that Citibank committed fraud by having structured an unfair
transaction and by falsely having promised to arrange financing.
C.
Citibank’s Statements Concerning the Use of the $550,000
In the remainder of its issues one and two, Citibank challenges the legal
sufficiency of the evidence supporting the jury’s implicit findings of intent and
16
reliance. We begin with the theory that Citibank committed fraud by misrepresenting
the $550,000’s use.
What the parties believed the nature of the $550,000 to be, and how they
believed that it would be used, must be gauged in light of any applicable contractual
terms to which they agreed. We thus begin with the pertinent language of the Phase
III contracts and of the agency contract between Old Neftegas and TPS (“the
Engagement Agreement”) before turning to the remaining evidence.5
1.
The 1994 Engagement Agreement
The June 14, 1994 Engagement Agreement between TPS and Old Neftegas
engaged TPS on an exclusive basis to provide financial advisory services for the
project to Old Neftegas, with financing being up to $60 million. TPS was empowered
to initiate and to conduct discussions for financing with third-party financial
institutions. As for TPS’s agency, the agreement provided:
Except as expressly empowered in writing to do so by [Old Neftegas],
TPS will not have authority to accept any offer or proposal of Financing
from, or enter into any commitment with, third parties on behalf of [Old
Neftegas]. . . . [Old Neftegas] agrees to indemnify, defend, and hold
harmless TPS from and against all losses, costs, expenses (including
attorneys’ fees) and liabilities arising in connection with (1) TPS’s
performance of its services hereunder and (2) the Financing obtained in
connection herewith, except to the extent such losses are the result of the
sole negligence or misconduct of TPS.
5
In its appellee’s brief, JSCNI relies in part upon terms from agreements from Phases
I and II. These contracts were superseded by the Phase III contracts. We thus do not
consider those earlier contractual terms.
17
2.
The Participation Agreement
The Participation Agreement—which TPS, JSCNI, and the guarantors (named
below) signed—provided that “Deposits” would be made to a “Designated Account”
at Citibank “for the benefit of [TPS].” “Deposits” were defined as any sums paid as
guarantor under the transaction to TPS, and “Designated Account” was defined as
“an account maintained by [TPS] at [Citibank] and to which the Deposits will initially
be transferred.” (Emphasis added.) The agreement also provided for an “Initial
Deposit,” in the aggregate amount of $350,000, which the guarantors agreed to pay.
This Initial Deposit was due on the first “Deposit Date,” which was then set at
September 1, 1997 (and later extended). The payment of this Initial Deposit was the
“Trigger Date,” within two days after which TPS was to authorize Avanti to begin
construction.
TPS was to be paid a “Transaction Fee”—totaling $1.8 million—as
compensation for arranging the lease financing. The Transaction Fee would be paid
in six $300,000 installments, under a schedule starting 30 days after the date that an
Initial Deposit was made by any guarantor, i.e., the Trigger Date. With five days’
written notice to the guarantors, TPS could take from the Deposits any of the
Transaction Fees as they became due, even without an event of default. The
agreement also provided that JSCNI would pay “Transaction Costs” to TPS, any
credit provider, and the guarantors—in an aggregate of $100,000—which were
18
described as certain attorney’s fees of TPS, Citibank, and JSCNI and certain other
transaction costs. Citibank’s referenced attorney’s fees were those accrued “in
connection with [TPS’s] financing of the purchase price of the Equipment” under the
lease. JSCNI’s obligation to pay Transaction Costs applied “without regard to
whether the transactions contemplated hereby are consummated.” However, anyone
requesting payment of these costs had to submit its invoices to JSCNI, and JSCNI had
the right to review and to approve any bills for legal expenses.
If the Participation Agreement or any other operative contracts were terminated
because the Trigger Date did not occur, then JSCNI and the guarantors were required
to hold harmless and to indemnify TPS for all losses, costs, expenses, claims,
damages and liabilities incurred as a result of its being a party to the Participation
Agreement and any other operative contract or its being engaged in the transaction,
and JSCNI would still be liable for the Transaction Costs of up to $100,000. A
similar covenant applied if the termination occurred after the Trigger Date, although
TPS also agreed to apply all of the Deposits held in the Designated Account first,
among other things, to repayment of itself for any amounts owed it by JSCNI under
the Participation Agreement and the Equipment Lease. Finally, if termination
occurred because of the failure of all conditions precedent to any operative document,
then JSCNI would still be liable for the Transaction Costs, and the guarantors were
required to hold harmless and to indemnify TPS for all losses, costs, expenses, claims,
19
damages and liabilities incurred as a result of its being a party to the Participation
Agreement and any other operative contract or its being engaged in the transaction.
3.
The Guaranty Agreements
The Guaranty Agreements were executed by TPS and New Neftegas, Rodos
International Ltd. (“Rodos”), and Donaclove Ltd. (“Donaclove”), the last two of
which companies were affiliated in some way with New Neftegas. The Guaranty
Agreements contained complementary provisions and adopted the other Phase III
contracts’ definitions.6 The Guaranty Agreements required each guarantor to provide,
as security for the guaranteed obligations, an “Initial Security Deposit” of $350,000.7
(This appears to correspond to the Participation Agreement’s Initial Deposit.) The
guarantors were also required to collaterally assign certain product sales agreements
to TPS and to make scheduled deposits of the proceeds generated under those
contracts. Like the Participation Agreement, the Guaranty Agreements required the
guarantors to pay the Initial Deposit and all subsequent Deposits to TPS into the
6
JSCNI was not a signatory to the Guaranty Agreements, but this contract was part of
an overall structure to which JSCNI was a party, and the Participation Agreement,
which JSCNI did sign, required that the Guaranty Agreements be executed.
Moreover, Rafikov received the Guaranty Agreements as part of the August 15, 1997
closing, and he admitted that these agreements, along with the Equipment Lease and
Participation Agreement, “were all executed as part of one transaction.”
7
Evidence favorable to JSCNI discussed further below shows that the security-deposit
schedule and amounts were changed verbally by Kermath and Rafikov and were
memorialized in a document signed by JSCNI and TPS. Other evidence indicates that
even this later security-deposit schedule was later amended.
20
Designated Account maintained by TPS at Citibank. The agreement clearly made all
Deposits the property of TPS. TPS was further authorized to apply the Deposits to
the payment of its obligations under the “Credit Agreement” (which was never
executed), to any payments due under the Equipment Lease Agreement (which never
became effective), to the Participation Agreement’s Transaction Fees (which were
dependent upon the Trigger Date’s occurrence), and to the acquisition and lease of
the equipment under the lease (which never transpired). Any portion of the Deposits
remaining after such obligations had been paid in full and the lease had been
terminated were to be returned to the guarantors.
4.
The Equipment Lease Agreement
The Equipment Lease Agreement—which TPS and JSCNI signed—likewise
defined “Deposits” as any deposit made by a guarantor. Under its terms, TPS could
tap into Deposit funds when an “Event of Default” occurred under the agreement.
One of the conditions precedent to this agreement’s effectiveness was that TPS
receive financing “on terms and subject to considerations acceptable to [TPS].”
(Emphasis added.)
5.
The Commitment Letter
Pursuant to TPS’s authority under the Equipment Lease Agreement to obtain
21
financing, Citibank issued the November 5, 1997 Commitment Letter to TPS.8 Under
the heading “Collateral,” the letter provided that Citibank would receive a first
priority security interest in “one or more investment management accounts at Citibank
. . . owned by [TPS] or shareholders of [TPS] acceptable to [Citibank].” The letter
defined these accounts as “Investment Accounts.” As a condition to the facility’s
effectiveness and to the initial advance of letters of credit, the letter required that
“initial funding of at least $550,000” be made “in the Investment Accounts”; that the
Trigger Date described in the Participation Agreement have occurred; and that TPS
pay “all outstanding legal and other expenses incurred by [Citibank] in connection
with the transaction.”
(Emphasis added.) Additionally, the Commitment Letter
provided that “[a]ll reasonable expenses, including legal expenses, for the account of
[TPS] and Manuel Santos” be paid, providing that “[t]hose expenses incurred and
billed before closing are payable at closing.” (Emphasis added.)
6.
The Remaining Evidence
The remaining evidence, either undisputed or viewed in the light most
favorable to JSCNI, shows the following. At the August 15, 1997 closing, Kermath
for Citibank and Rafikov for JSCNI negotiated the amount and schedule of all of the
8
JSCNI was not a party to the Commitment Letter. Citibank issued the letter pursuant
to TPS’s authority to obtain financing acceptable to it, and that authority came from
the Equipment Lease Agreement, which JSCNI had signed.
22
security deposits for the transaction.9 The negotiated security deposits included the
$550,000, which Sartan described as “the initial security deposit.” Sartan, Kashuro,
and Rafikov understood the $550,000 to be a security deposit, and they believed that
it would be spent only for a default under the lease and not, for example, to pay
Citibank’s legal fees or to fund an account for Santos. In later correspondence to TPS
soliciting the $550,000, Kermath described the $550,000 as “the initial funding . . .
in the Investment Accounts” as the latter were defined in the Commitment Letter
(TPS accounts in which Citibank would have a first priority security interest, i.e.,
collateral accounts), and Citibank’s internal confirmation of the payment’s receipt
described the payment as a security deposit. TPS’s and JSCNI’s November 1997
correspondence leading up to the payment described the $550,000 as a security
deposit or “the first security deposit,” as did Rafikov’s confirmatory letter to TPS
advising that payment had been made. Rafikov opined that “Citibank is supposed to
control [the accounts containing the security deposits] as its own.”
There was no testimony that any Citibank representative made oral
representations distinguishing the nature or use of the $550,000 security deposit
(other than its source being JSCNI and that it was the initial deposit) from the nature
or use of the other security deposits under the Guaranty Agreements. For example,
9
Kermath denied that this conversation occurred, but the standard of review precludes
our considering his testimony.
23
Rafikov opined that the $550,000 was “supposed to stay in that has been touched [sic]
until it grew til $3 million” in total security deposits and admitted that he did not have
a discussion with Kermath about the $550,000 security deposit’s use because “it is
recorded in the documents” and “[e]verything was written.” Rafikov’s testimony
corresponds to an August 27, 1997 schedule that TPS’s Abji sent to JSCNI’s
Kashuro, showing revised “minimum security deposit amounts as agreed.”10 Rafikov
and Kashuro testified that the revisions in Abji’s August 27 correspondence reflected
the security-deposit agreement that Rafikov and Kermath had reached at the August
15 closing, modifying the Guarantee Agreements’ schedule of deposits.11 The
attached revised schedule showed an initial “minimum security deposit” of $550,000
in July 1997—with a Transaction Fee of $300,000 payable during the same month
(and a $1.8 million total fee)—followed by four more minimum security deposit
10
Kermath contended that this revised schedule was inaccurate because, among other
things, its deposit schedule contravened what the intended build up of cash collateral
was supposed to be. Kermath also denied that the revised schedule was a product of
the August 15 closing discussions, and he denied that security-deposit discussions
occurred at that closing. However, the standard of review precludes our considering
his testimony on these points.
11
The record indicates that the minimum security-deposit schedule agreed on August
15 and memorialized in Abji’s August 27 correspondence was later altered. For
example, Abji himself testified that, according to the latest schedule agreed before the
Commitment Letter's issuance, the initial $550,000 was due in September, followed
by deposits of $144,000 each month through February. And Citibank’s November
1997 internal request for approval of financing indicates still another collateral
schedule. These later alterations to the August 15 minimum security-deposit schedule
agreed to by Kermath and Rafikov do not affect Kermath’s representations at the
August 15 closing, on which JSCNI’s fraud claim is based.
24
payments of $612,500 each over an 18-month period. Rafikov testified that the five
scheduled payments together equaling $3 million were all security deposits. JSCNI
relied on the August 27 revised security deposit schedule at trial.
The $550,000 was deposited into an account styled the “Transcontinental
Products & Services No. 2” account. An internal Citibank email dated November 19,
1997 stated that the wired funds had been credited to “TPS #2 DDA Account” and
noted that the funds “will be transferred today into TPS’s Landmark account until
further distribution at closing” of the loan. Kermath believed that the receiving
account was a checking account of TPS. However, the account information instead
corresponds to a TPS account at Citibank that was established in Phase II to serve as
a receiving point for “cash payment credit payments”—for which TPS would lend up
to $9 million to JSCNI through reimbursement of letters of credit—under a
Transaction Agreement that never came to fruition. Because the Phase II contracts
were superseded by those of Phase III, it is unclear what the designated purpose of
this account was when it received JSCNI’s $550,000, except that it was in TPS’s
name. However, the evidence does not indicate that it was the collateral Investment
Account for which the Commitment Letter provided.
One hundred thousand dollars of the $550,000 was ultimately reimbursed to
JSCNI, but the remainder was used for things such as repayment of Santos (TPS’s
shareholder and an important client of Citibank’s apart from this transaction),
25
payment of Citibank’s legal and advisory fees, draws to Karber and Abji, and
payment of certain of TPS’s expenses. The evidence viewed in the light most
favorable to JSCNI indicates that Citibank advised TPS to make at least some of these
payments. For example, on November 21, 1997, two days after JSCNI’s payment of
the $550,000 and in response to an internal Citibank email asking for account
information for “accounts that will hold collateral,” Kermath advised by internal bank
email that an “‘Investment Account’” would be opened and that it would “hold part
of the initial funding of $550,000” (emphasis added), but that “the rest” of this money
would “be in [Manuel Santos’s] account—another ‘Investment Account.’” Abji
testified that it was “Citibank’s”—specifically, Kermath’s—“advice that part of [the
$550,000] go to Manuel Santos’s account” and that TPS reimbursed Santos from the
$550,000. Likewise, according to Karber’s recollection of a November 24, 1997
meeting between TPS and Citibank, Kermath stated that “we need to change this
550.”12 Karber understood that the “change” that Kermath meant was that “the money
was not going to be retained by Citibank” or to “remain in the collateral account.”
Instead, Karber understood that the $550,000 would be used to pay Citibank’s and
TPS’s attorneys, to pay TPS’s overhead, and to reimburse Santos and that “TPS could
12
Karber’s testimony indicates that the referenced change was interlineated on the
Commitment Letter. The interlineation corresponds to the insertion of the word
“initial” before the phrase “funding of at least $550,000” in that document. The word
“initial” was omitted from the truncated version of the Commitment Letter that TPS
sent to JSCNI.
26
use all the money under . . . this $550,000 because the bank knew that we needed the
money and we had to have the $550,000”—all understandings that Karber got from
Kermath and Roberts.13 Karber testified that he heard Kermath say that “this is what
we are going to do here” with the $550,000. A summary of some of the uses of the
$550,000 indicated that, from TPS’s account into which the $550,000 was sent,
$23,842 was paid the very next day (on November 25, 1997) to Citibank’s legal
counsel; $10,000 was paid on December 19 to TPS’s legal counsel; and $1,625 in
expenses and reimbursements were paid on November 25 and December 19 and 30.
The summary also indicated that $20,500 of the $550,000 was paid to Manuel Santos
in late December 1997, although the summary shows this money coming from
another account.
The total payments indicated—several clearly paid to TPS
representatives—were $185,870.14
Abji and Karber understood the $550,000 to be a partial payment or
prepayment of the total $1.8 million in Transaction Fees that the Participation
Agreement allowed TPS. However, nothing indicates that TPS gave JSCNI the fiveday notice to guarantors required for taking Transaction Fees from the security
13
Kermath denied that Citibank instructed TPS on the $550,000’s use for these or any
other things and testified that Karber had wanted to use $250,000 of the $550,000 to
fund an account for Santos because Santos “had asked that that be done that way.”
However, the standard of review precludes our considering this testimony of Kermath.
14
Citibank does not complain that the amount of payments shown on JSCNI’s summary
does not equal $135,000, the amount for which the jury found Citibank liable.
27
deposits. Likewise, Kermath’s testimony could be read to imply that the $550,000,
like all security deposits, was useable at that time to pay transaction expenses,
including Citibank’s attorney’s fees; however, nothing shows that Citibank submitted
its attorney’s fees bills to JSCNI for review and reimbursement as Transaction Costs,
as required by the Participation Agreement.
7.
Citibank’s Arguments
Citibank argues that any oral representations that the $550,000 would be held
only as a security deposit or would be under Citibank’s sole control cannot support
the fraud judgment because the Phase III contracts contradicted any such
representations. Specifically, Citibank contends that
1.
the Guaranty Agreements allowed for these funds to be used as
authorized by the Participation Agreement;
2.
the Participation Agreement provided that this deposit become
TPS’s property upon deposit;
3.
the Participation Agreement, the Guaranty Agreements, and the
Commitment Letter allowed for TPS to apply the funds to creditagreement obligations, to acquire and to lease equipment, or to
pay itself the $1.8 million Transaction Fee and Transaction Costs;
4.
the June 1994 “Engagement for Financial Services” agreement
between TPS and Old Neftegas required the latter to reimburse
the former promptly for all out-of-pocket expenses incurred in
negotiating financing; and
5.
Citibank had no right to interfere with TPS’s use of the funds
unless and until the transaction closed. In this last regard,
Citibank urges that even if TPS misspent JSCNI’s funds, there is
no evidence that Citibank did so or that it “directed TPS to make
28
[the] distributions” of which JSCNI complained.
Citibank contends that JSCNI’s reliance on any oral statements concerning the
$550,000’s use and Citibank’s control over it that differed from the contractual
provisions was, as a matter of law, unreasonable. Citibank further contends that,
because the Phase III contracts authorized TPS’s use of the funds when they were
spent, there is no evidence of materiality or scienter by Citibank. Finally, Citibank
argues that reliance on any oral representations contrary to the Phase III contracts was
unreasonable given the application of the statute of frauds and the contracts’ merger
clauses.
8.
Discussion
The parties point us to no evidence that any Citibank employee represented that
the $550,000 security deposit would be treated differently, once placed in TPS’s
account, from the remaining security deposits required under the Guaranty
Agreements. It thus appears that the only representations by Citibank concerning the
$550,000’s use or Citibank’s control over it were made in (1) Kermath’s November
9, 1997 correspondence about the Commitment Letter and the Commitment Letter
itself, the payment requests that Kermath expected TPS to convey to JSCNI, and (2)
Kermath’s statements at the August 15 closing concerning a minimum securitydeposit schedule, the terms of which were memorialized in Abji’s August 27
29
schedule, sent to Kashuro, that TPS and Rafikov signed.15 We thus focus on these
representations.
Nothing in these representations indicates that Citibank would have sole
control over the $550,000 until closing. In fact, the account into which the funds
were deposited was in TPS’s name, this was a TPS account other than the Investment
Account for holding collateral, and TPS was not contractually required to assign
Citibank a security interest in its funds until after closing.
But this does not necessarily insulate Citibank from liability. First, and
contrary to Citibank’s assertions, the evidence favorable to JSCNI does show that
Citibank advised TPS on the nature of the funds and how to spend them. For
example, Citibank advised TPS to use these funds to reimburse Santos—who was,
along with his family, a very important, preexisting client of Citibank independent of
this transaction—and to pay Citibank’s attorney’s fees. Within days of receiving
JSCNI’s money, Kermath told TPS’s Abji and Karber that “we need to change this
550” thousand dollars, advising TPS on how to spend the money.
Second, Kermath’s cited representations indicated that the $550,000 would be
held under the same terms as would all other security deposits. It was thus reasonable
15
Citibank’s only statements to JSCNI were made or memorialized in these documents,
which were (1) writings signed by Kermath for Citibank or (2) a written modification
to the Guaranty Agreements that TPS’s Abji signed, when the Guaranty Agreements
permitted modifications if in writing and signed by TPS. We thus overrule Citibank’s
challenges based on the statute of frauds and the parol evidence rule.
30
for JSCNI to rely on its $550,000’s being treated the same as the other security
deposits under the Phase III contracts, even though JSCNI was not a guarantor.
Citibank contends that TPS spent JSCNI’s deposit as the Guaranty Agreements and
the Participation Agreement allowed, but the evidence viewed in the light most
favorable to JSCNI shows that TPS did not. For example, although the Participation
Agreement defined the Trigger Date as the date on which an Initial Deposit was made
by a guarantor, TPS and Citibank did not treat the date of JSCNI’s $550,000 payment
as the Trigger Date—as evidenced by, among other things, TPS’s failure to instruct
Avanti to begin construction. In any event, the Participation Agreement did not allow
TPS to withdraw its Transaction Fee until 30 days after the Trigger Date had
occurred.16 The Participation Agreement thus did not allow TPS to use JSCNI’s
funds to pay itself a portion of the Transaction Fee at that time. The jury could have
reasonably discredited Abji’s and Karber’s testimony that the $550,000 was
disposable as part of the Transaction Fee when the contracts did not then allow it.
Additionally, although the Guaranty Agreements allowed TPS to apply security
deposits toward certain obligations of JSCNI under other Phase III contracts (credit
agreement obligations, lease agreement obligations, leasing of equipment, and
16
Citibank does not argue that the amendment to the Guaranty Agreement memorialized
in Abji’s August 27, 1997 letter, showing the first installment of the Transaction Fee
being due the same month as JSCNI’s $550,000 security deposit payment, allowed
TPS to withdraw its fee before the Trigger Date’s occurrence.
31
Transaction Fees), those obligations were not triggered because the operative events
or contracts never occurred or became effective.
Furthermore, although the
Participation Agreement obligated JSCNI to pay Citibank’s and TPS’s Transaction
Costs, whether or not Phase III came to fruition, JSCNI’s liability was limited to
$100,000 total (here, $450,000 was spent), and JSCNI was given the opportunity to
review and to approve submitted expenses from both Citibank and TPS (which did
not occur here).
Third, Citibank argues that the Commitment Letter—between only Citibank
and TPS, not JSCNI—authorized the use of JSCNI’s security deposit to pay TPS,
Citibank’s, and Santos’s expenses. The Commitment Letter contained a condition
precedent that TPS pay all reasonable expenses (including attorney’s fees) of itself
and Santos and all outstanding legal and other expenses of Citibank arising from the
transaction. However, the Commitment Letter established only the obligation to pay;
it did not establish from what source those payments would come. If the Equipment
Lease and Guaranty Agreements (to which JSCNI was a direct or indirect party) did
not authorize the use of this security deposit for such reimbursements at the time that
it was used, then neither could the Commitment Letter.17 We have already concluded
17
Likewise, the 1994 Engagement Agreement, which Old Neftegas signed and which
allowed TPS to be reimbursed costs and expenses from JSCNI, did not speak of the
source, method, or timing of their reimbursement. In contrast, the Phase III contracts
did specify when, how, and for what purposes funds (like JSCNI’s $550,000) paid
according to their terms could be used, and we have already explained how these
32
that neither the Equipment Lease nor the Guaranty Agreements then authorized these
disbursements in this manner. Moreover, regarding TPS’s reimbursement of itself
and Santos, the Commitment Letter also provided that those expenses incurred and
billed before financing’s closing were not payable until closing, i.e., they were not
payable at the time that Citibank advised TPS to pay them. Roberts confirmed that
“it is customary for us to have the borrower pay for all the outstanding expenses
incurred in that transaction at the time of closing.” (Emphasis added.) A jury could
have reasonably discredited Kermath’s testimony that he believed the $550,000 to be
so useable because the Commitment Letter did not then allow it.
The jury could have reasonably viewed this evidence as showing that Citibank
advised TPS to use JSCNI’s funds in ways that the Phase III contracts did not then
allow, despite Kermath’s representations to JSCNI that the funds would be treated as
any other security deposit under the Phase III contracts. Accordingly, we reject
Citibank’s argument that the Phase III contracts’ terms negate, as a matter of law,
reasonable reliance by JSCNI that the $550,000 would be treated in the ways that
Kermath represented.
There is also some evidence that Kermath’s statements were promises of future
performance made with the intent, at the time that they were made, not to perform as
promised, i.e., there is evidence of scienter. See Spoljaric v. Percival Tours, Inc., 708
contracts did not allow these uses at this time or in this manner.
33
S.W.2d 432, 434 (Tex. 1986) (“A promise to do an act in the future is actionable
fraud when made with the intention, design and purpose of deceiving, and with no
intention of performing the act.”). For example—only 12 days after Kermath sent the
Commitment Letter, only two days after JSCNI sent the funds in response, and only
three days before Kermath advised TPS to use the $550,000 to pay Citibank’s fees
and to reimburse its important client Santos—Kermath was already advising by
internal Citibank email that (1) part of the funds would be placed in Santos’s account,
rather than in an Investment Account for the transaction, and (2) TPS would “give
[Citibank] the check for the legal fees and retainer” very shortly thereafter. Kermath
also testified at trial that if TPS—which he knew had a negative net worth at the
time—spent the $550,000 before closing and did not replenish it, the financing could
not close. There was also evidence that at the November 24 meeting at which TPS
signed the Commitment Letter, Kermath indicated that a “change” to the $550,000
would need to occur and advised TPS how those funds should be used. A jury could
reasonably have believed that these actions, which occurred very shortly after
Kermath solicited the $550,000, reflected a prior intent to do other than was
represented, with an intent that Citibank and its major client be reimbursed before any
further risk attached. See id. at 434–35 (“While a party’s intent is determined at the
time the party made the representation, it may be inferred from the party’s subsequent
acts after the representation is made. . . . ‘Slight circumstantial evidence’ of fraud,
34
when considered with the breach of promise to perform, is sufficient to support a
finding of fraudulent intent.”).
Furthermore, an email from Citibank’s internal credit documents—dated after
the August 15 closing but before Kermath sent the Commitment Letter—explained
that “John Kermath tells me the company [TPS] will earn a $1.8MM fee [the
Transaction Fee] upon the [final] closing of the deal from [JSCNI] which is payable
over 5 months . . . .” This indicates that Kermath knew before he sent the
Commitment Letter that the $550,000 would not form part of TPS’s Transaction Fee
when it was paid. Finally, by internal Citibank memorandum dated September 19,
1997 (after the August 15 closing but before the Commitment Letter), Kermath
advised that “[i]n light of the fact that the TPS transaction appears to be coming to
fruition, we will reestablish a relationship with Manuel [Santos] via a $250,000 time
[sic] deposit that will be rolled over on a periodic basis but will not be available for
personal liquidity purposes.” Although nothing shows that JSCNI’s $550,000 was
actually used to establish such an independent account for Santos—as opposed to the
funds’ use to reimburse Santos for expenditures—Abji testified that Kermath advised
TPS to use the $550,000 deposit to establish this account. A rational jury could view
this as evidence of Kermath’s intent, before issuance of the Commitment Letter, to
use the $550,000 to establish an account totally unrelated to the JSCNI transaction,
for the benefit of an important client of Citibank’s.
35
Given all of the circumstantial evidence of scienter, the jury could have
reasonably discounted any of Abji’s, Karber’s, and Kermath’s testimony implying
that the money was solicited without such intent. See id. at 434 (“Intent is a fact
question uniquely within the realm of the trier of fact because it so depends upon the
credibility of the witnesses and the weight to be given to their testimony.”).
We overrule Citibank’s challenges under issues one and two to this theory of
fraud liability. Having found legally sufficient evidence of one theory that will
support fraud liability, we normally would not need to examine any other supporting
theory. However, because the remaining two fraud theories require discussions
relevant to claims or theories raised in JSCNI’s appeal, we discuss them briefly
below.
D.
Kermath’s Statements That the Transaction Was Complete
For this theory of fraud liability, we need examine only the element of
justifiable reliance. JSCNI presented the following evidence to show reliance on
Kermath’s oral statements. At the August 15, 1997 closing, Kermath said, “You send
that money and you—and the transaction will be funded within 30 days”; “now we
are going to give you financing”; and “we’ve been working on it for four years, we
want to close it, and we are finally done with it.” At a post-closing meeting in TPS’s
offices, Kermath told Rafikov that “this is the final issue. You give me money. I give
you whatever. I finance the project . . . .” At the post-closing celebratory dinner the
36
same night, Kermath congratulated everyone, indicated that he was satisfied with the
transaction’s completion, and said things like “this time we finally . . . did it” and
“this is done and now the rest of the projects will just fall into place.” Trey Roberts,
Citibank’s Team Leader in Investment Finance, testified that any statement on August
15, 1997 that the transaction was complete but for the $550,000 payment would have
been untrue.
However, it was undisputed that the later-issued November 5, 1997
Commitment Letter, which TPS signed as borrower, recited that financing (and thus
the Phase III transaction) was conditional upon, among other things,
1.
Citibank’s “completion of and satisfaction in all respects with our
due diligence investigation,” which was described as “[d]ue
diligence on the identity and corporate documents of all parties to
the Participation Agreement”;
2.
the “occurrence of the Trigger Date as defined in the Participation
Agreement”;
3.
payment by TPS “of all outstanding legal and other expenses
incurred by [Citibank] in connection with the transaction”;
4.
the absence of a material adverse change in the financial
condition, operations, or prospect of TPS since its June 30, 1997
financial statements; and
5.
Citibank’s “not becoming aware after the date of any information
or other matter affecting [TPS] or the transactions inconsistent in
a material and adverse manner with any such information or other
matter disclosed to us prior to the date hereof.”
It was undisputed that TPS faxed to Rafikov—and that Rafikov saw—the pages of
37
the Commitment Letter containing these terms after Kermath’s August 17 statements
and before JSCNI paid the $550,000 to Citibank. It was thus undisputed that Rafikov
was advised, after Kermath’s oral statements, that the transaction was incomplete
because contingencies existed—regardless of how likely they were to transpire or for
what reason Citibank ultimately refused funding.
For purposes of a fraud claim, a party cannot justifiably rely on a representation
when that party has actual knowledge before its reliance of that representation’s
falsity. See Mayes v. Stewart, 11 S.W.3d 440, 451 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.]
2000, pet. denied) (“Actual knowledge is inconsistent with the claim that the
defrauded party has been deceived, and it negates the essential element of reliance
upon the truth of the representation.”); see also Prospect High Income Fund v. Grant
Thornton, L.L.P., 203 S.W.3d 602, 614 (Tex. App.—Dallas 2006, pet. granted)
(holding that summary judgment was properly rendered on fraud claim because
element of justifiable reliance was defeated by evidence that sophisticated third-party
business plaintiffs knew, before purchasing certain bonds, that statements in audits
were inaccurate). Accordingly, we hold that there was no evidence that JSCNI
justifiably relied on Kermath’s oral representations that the transaction was complete.
We thus hold that this theory of fraud cannot support the judgment.
We sustain the challenge under Citibank’s issues one and two to this theory of
fraud liability.
38
E.
Citibank’s Failure to Disclose Various Matters Relating to the $550,000
Payment
The jury was instructed that fraud 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,
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.
The first element is triggered only if the defendant had a legal obligation to disclose
the fact.18 See, e.g., Bradford v. Vento, 48 S.W.3d 749, 755 (Tex. 2001). Whether a
duty exists is a question of law. Id. Absent a formal or informal fiduciary or
confidential relationship—which JSCNI expressly disavows on appeal as a basis for
Citibank’s duty to disclose—a duty to speak may arise in the following situations: (1)
one who voluntarily discloses information has a duty to disclose the whole truth; (2)
one who makes a representation has a duty to disclose new information when he is
18
Citibank objected to the charge on the grounds that (1) no evidence supported the
fraud question’s submission and (2) the failure-to-disclose instruction within the fraud
question should not be submitted because “there is no duty to disclose as a matter of
law either for TPS or Citibank. That is a matter for the Court to decide, and we
believe the Court has erred in including that as a matter of law there was a duty to
disclose.” The trial court overruled the objection.
39
aware that the new information makes the earlier representation misleading or untrue;
and (3) one who makes a partial disclosure and conveys a false impression has a duty
to correct it. Anderson, Greenwood & Co. v. Martin, 44 S.W.3d 200, 212–13 (Tex.
App.—Houston [14th Dist.] 2001, pet. denied).
1.
The Parties’ Arguments
Citibank argues that it disclosed the facts upon which JSCNI’s claim was based
to TPS in the Commitment Letter and that it was TPS’s duty, as the borrower in Phase
III and as JSCNI’s agent for communications for the Project, to convey this
information to JSCNI. That is, Citibank contends that it had no duty to JSCNI.
Citibank also notes that TPS sent a portion of the Commitment Letter to JSCNI, that
JSCNI did not request a full copy of the Commitment Letter from Citibank when it
saw that TPS had sent only three of five numbered pages, and that no evidence
showed that Citibank attempted to conceal the Commitment Letter’s terms from
JSCNI. Additionally, Citibank urges that there was no evidence that Citibank
intended to deceive JSCNI when TPS sent only a partial copy of the Commitment
Letter to JSCNI.
JSCNI responds that Citibank’s duty to disclose arose because it failed to
disclose the whole truth and to correct a false impression arising from a partial
disclosure. Specifically, JSCNI contends
1.
that “when Kermath represented that the Transaction was
complete and solicited $550,000 from [JSCNI], he failed to
40
disclose to [JSCNI]” that the loan had been reduced to $40
million;
2.
that “given Citibank’s direct communications with [JSCNI]
regarding the collateral requirements, Citibank had a duty to
inform [JSCNI] that it would only advance funds equal to 96% of
the value of cash on deposit with the bank”;
3.
that “[b]ased upon Citibank’s direct representation to Neftegas
that the transaction was complete,” Citibank had a duty to
disclose to JSCNI that financing was subject to a satisfactory
investigation of Peter Karber, individually, and TPS establishing
a minimum net worth of $500,000; and
4.
that “[g]iven Citibank’s representations that the security deposits
would be used as collateral for the lease/loan payments and
subject to the exclusive control of Citibank, Citibank had a duty
to disclose that part of the $550,000 would be used to fund an
investment account for Manuel Santos.”
(Emphasis added.)
2.
Discussion
We agree that Citibank had no duty to disclose the terms of financing
memorialized in the Commitment Letter directly to JSCNI. The jury found that
Citibank was not JSCNI’s agent, but found that TPS was. Under the Phase III
Equipment Lease Agreement, which JSCNI signed, TPS was authorized to obtain
financing “on terms and subject to considerations acceptable to [TPS].” (Emphasis
added.) Pursuant to that authority, and after the August 15, 1997 closing, TPS and
Citibank reached the terms set out in the Commitment Letter. Citibank sent the entire
Commitment Letter to TPS, which Kermath anticipated that TPS would forward to
41
JSCNI. TPS then forwarded only part of the Commitment Letter to JSCNI. Rafikov,
realizing that the Commitment Letter that TPS had sent was incomplete, asked TPS,
its usual agent for communications with Citibank throughout the Project, for a
complete copy. When TPS responded that the omitted pages did not concern JSCNI,
Rafikov accepted that explanation and did not then ask Citibank for a complete copy.
Kashuro agreed that the reason that he did not ask Citibank for a complete copy of the
Commitment Letter was that in “the ordinary course of communication,” JSCNI
corresponded with TPS, who had “its own dealings with.”19 The Commitment Letter
contained all information that JSCNI contends that Citibank failed to divulge except
19
Kashuro agreed that “it’s the general course of business for [JSCNI] to deal with TPS
and then TPS would deal with [Citibank] . . . .” Sartan also testified that “98% of the
time,” communications went from TPS to Rafikov (or Sartan, for Rafikov) or from
Rafikov (or Sartan) to TPS. This arrangement is corroborated by JSCNI’s
communications directly with TPS concerning the terms of financing. This also
comports with the 1994 Engagement Letter, in which TPS was made JSCNI’s agent
to initiate and to conduct discussions for financing with third-party financial
institutions. Finally, the jury found that TPS was JSCNI’s agent. JSCNI points to
several instances in which Citibank communicated directly with JSCNI. Several of
these occurred before Phase III, when a completely different structure was
contemplated—including that JSCNI would open an escrow account directly with
Citibank, if JSCNI obtained the Russian Central Bank’s approval. JSCNI also relies
on (1) discussions between Citibank and JSCNI about the transaction’s overall
structure, when Citibank was acting as advisor, but not concerning the terms of the
loan under Phase III, when Citibank was acting as lender to TPS; (2) Kermath’s
telling Sartan “many times” over the parties’ entire relationship that Citibank would
look out for JSCNI’s best interests in structuring the transaction; and (3) Kashuro’s
testifying that JSCNI took “advice” directly from Citibank and Citibank Moscow,
without specifying time periods. The fact that Citibank spoke directly with JSCNI on
certain occasions about various structuring matters, or that Kermath and Rafikov
discussed security deposits at the closing, does not preclude Citibank’s using the usual
channel of communication with JSCNI’s agent for communications, TPS, who was
also Citibank’s contractual borrower at the time.
42
for the revelation that the funds would be used to reimburse Santos.20 The record is
devoid of evidence, direct or circumstantial, that Kermath knew that TPS sent JSCNI
a truncated version of the Commitment Letter or that anyone at Citibank made any
misleading statements to JSCNI about the terms memorialized in the Commitment
Letter after Kermath had sent that letter to TPS.
To hold Citibank liable after the Commitment Letter’s issuance to TPS would
be to hold that it continued to have a duty to a non-client, to which it had made
misleading statements in a transaction, even after it had corrected those statements
to the non-client’s designated agent for communications concerning the transaction.
JSCNI cites no authority that would impose this kind of duty on Citibank in such
circumstances, and we decline to recognize one here—especially when the parties to
the transaction were sophisticated business people.
We sustain Citibank’s challenge under issues one and two to this theory of
fraud liability.
JSCNI’S APPEAL
By three issues,21 JSCNI argues that the trial court erred in granting Citibank’s
20
We have already held that the jury could rationally conclude that Citibank committed
fraud by affirmative misrepresentation when it solicited the $550,000 as a security
deposit, but later used that sum to reimburse Santos. We thus do not need to examine
whether Citibank had a duty to divulge this one matter.
21
After oral argument, JSCNI abandoned its issues four and five, concerning the
exclusion of certain testimony. We thus do not reach these issues.
43
motion for JNOV on its request for exemplary damages against Citibank and its
claims against Citibank for knowing participation in TPS’s breach of fiduciary duty
and civil conspiracy.
“We review the grant or denial of a motion for judgment notwithstanding the
verdict under a legal-sufficiency standard.” Whitney Nat’l Bank v. Baker, 122 S.W.3d
204, 207 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 2003, no pet.). “Generally, a JNOV can
be rendered only when there is no evidence to support one or more of the jury’s
findings that are necessary . . . .” Triumph Trucking, Inc. v. S. Corporate Ins.
Managers, Inc., 226 S.W.3d 466, 470 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 2006, pet.
denied).
Knowing Participation in Breach of Fiduciary Duty
In issue one, JSCNI argues that the trial court erred in disregarding the jury’s
verdict against Citibank for knowing participation in TPS’s breach of fiduciary duty
because legally sufficient evidence exists in support of the claim. “When a third party
knowingly participates in the breach of a fiduciary duty, the third party becomes a
joint tortfeasor and is liable as such.” Kastner v. Jenkens & Gilchrist, P.C., 231
S.W.3d 571, 580 (Tex. App.—Dallas 2007, no pet.) (citing Kinzbach Tool Co. v.
Corbett-Wallace Corp., 138 Tex. 565, 574, 160 S.W.2d 509, 514 (1942)).
A.
The Pleadings, Charge, and Rulings
JSCNI pleaded that TPS had breached its fiduciary duty to JSCNI. JSCNI also
44
pleaded that Citibank had “knowingly participated in a breach of fiduciary duty by
TPS to [JSCNI].”
Although the trial court granted Citibank’s directed verdict on the knowingparticipation claim, the court nonetheless submitted the claim to the jury:
If the answer to Question No. 10 is “yes”, then answer the following
Question. Otherwise do not answer the following question.
QUESTION NO. 18
Did Citibank knowingly participate in TPS’s breach of Fiduciary
Duty to [JSCNI]?
You are instructed that “knowingly” means actual awareness, at
the time of the conduct, that TPS owed [JSCNI] a fiduciary duty, and
that TPS was breaching that fiduciary duty. Actual awareness may be
inferred where objective manifestations indicate that a person acted with
actual awareness.
The jury answered affirmatively.
The predicate for the above question was an affirmative answer to Jury
Question No. 10, which was the liability question against TPS for breach of fiduciary
duty:
If your answer to Question No. 7 is “yes”,[22] then answer the following
question. Otherwise, do not answer the following question.
QUESTION NO. 10
Did TPS breach its fiduciary duty to [JSCNI]?
22
Jury Question No. 7 asked whether TPS was the agent of JSCNI. The jury answered
this question affirmatively, and no one challenges that finding on appeal.
45
As [JSCNI’s] agent, TPS owed a fiduciary duty to [JSCNI]. To
prove that it complied with its duty, TPS must show:
a.
The transaction in question was fair and equitable to
[JSCNI];
b.
TPS made reasonable use of the confidence that [JSCNI]
placed in [TPS];
c.
TPS acted in the utmost good faith and exercised the most
scrupulous honesty toward [JSCNI];
d.
TPS placed the interests of [JSCNI] before its own, did not
use the advantage of its position to gain any benefit for
itself at the expense of [JSCNI], and did not place itself in
any position where its self-interest might conflict with its
obligations as a fiduciary; and
e.
TPS fully and fairly disclosed all important information to
[JSCNI] concerning the transaction.
(Emphasis added.) The jury answered Jury Question No. 10 affirmatively, and no one
challenges that finding on appeal.
Citibank moved for JNOV on the affirmative answer to Jury Question No. 18
(knowing participation) on the basis that there was no evidence that Citibank knew
that TPS was breaching a fiduciary duty to JSCNI or that it intentionally assisted TPS
in breaching that duty. Citibank further moved for JNOV on the $1,181,000 awarded
on Jury Question No. 12 (damages related to TPS’s breach of fiduciary duty) because
there was no evidence that JSCNI (as opposed to another corporate entity) suffered
any damages and because evidence of those damages should have been excluded.
The trial court granted JNOV on JSCNI’s knowing participation claim, but denied
46
JNOV on the basis of no evidence of damages.23
B.
Discussion
On appeal, JSCNI argues that Citibank knowingly participated in the breach
of fiduciary duty that TPS committed by (1) failing to fully and fairly disclose
material information concerning the transaction to JSCNI and (2) participating, as the
transaction’s advisor, in the structuring of a transaction that was simultaneously
unfair and inequitable to JSCNI, did not make reasonable use of JSCNI’s confidence
in TPS, and placed TPS’s interests before those of JSCNI.
We begin with the uncontested jury findings that TPS was JSCNI’s agent and
that it breached its fiduciary duty to JSCNI. JSCNI’s appellate challenges relating to
the latter finding are based solely on Citibank’s knowing participation in (1) TPS’s
23
By cross-point in JSCNI’s appeal, Citibank reurges its JNOV grounds concerning
damages as a basis for affirming the JNOV on all of the jury’s liability answers on
which JNOV was rendered. See T EX. R. A PP. P. 38.2(b)(1) (“When the trial court
renders judgment notwithstanding the verdict on one or more questions, the appellee
must bring forward by cross-point any issue or point that would have vitiated the
verdict or that would have prevented an affirmance of the judgment if the trial court
had rendered judgment on the verdict.”). Given our disposition of JSCNI’s issues one
and two, and because we have already ruled against Citibank on one of these damages
contentions in its appeal (that relating to Sunflower’s payment of the $550,000
security deposit), we need not reach Citibank’s cross-points in this appeal.
47
failure to divulge key information24 and (2) TPS’s structuring an unfair transaction.25
1.
Participation in TPS’s Failure Fully and Fairly to Disclose Certain
Information to JSCNI
JSCNI argues that Citibank participated in TPS’s failure fully and fairly to
disclose (1) the full-cash-collateral requirement and (2) Karber’s criminal history.26
In support, JSCNI merely reurges an argument akin to that made with respect to the
fraud-by-failure-to-disclose liability theories that we have already addressed: that
Citibank’s prior, direct communications with JSCNI through certain phases of the
transaction created a duty for Citibank to disclose these specific matters directly to
JSCNI, despite the jury’s finding that Citibank was not JSCNI’s agent, and despite
the parties’ usual arrangement for TPS to be JSCNI’s agent for communications. This
is, in its substance, a direct-liability argument based on the failure to disclose various
matters despite an independent duty to do so, not an argument that Citibank can be
24
JSCNI bases this challenge on one of the five possible implicit findings that could
have supported the jury’s affirmative answer to Jury Question No. 10: that TPS did
not fully and fairly disclose to JSCNI all important information concerning the
transaction.
25
JSCNI bases this challenge on other of the five possible implicit findings that could
have supported the jury’s affirmative answer to Jury Question No. 10: that the
transaction was unfair and inequitable to JSCNI, that TPS did not make reasonable
use of JSCNI’s confidence in it, and that TPS placed its interests before those of
JSCNI.
26
In one sentence, JSCNI also mentions the decrease of the credit facility amount to $40
million. To the extent that JSCNI may be asserting this as a basis for Citibank’s
vicarious liability, we reject it for the same reasons stated herein.
48
vicariously liable by participation in the violation of another’s duty. Moreover,
JSCNI cites no authority that would support recognizing such a vicarious-liability-byomission knowing-participation claim under facts like these.
In any event, as discussed in relation to Citibank’s appeal, the undisputed
evidence is that Citibank did divulge the full-cash-collateral requirement in its
Commitment Letter to TPS, which was JSCNI’s agent authorized to receive such
communications for the Project, and there is no evidence that Citibank knew that TPS
failed to disclose the full letter to JSCNI or that Citibank instructed TPS to disclose
only part of it. Likewise, JSCNI points only to evidence that Kermath knew of
Karber’s criminal history; JSCNI does not point to any evidence that Kermath knew
that JSCNI was ignorant of this fact, that he knew that TPS had not revealed same,
or that Citibank did anything that would have aided any such conduct by TPS.
We overrule this argument under JSCNI’s issue one.
2.
Participation in TPS’s Structuring an Unfair and Inequitable
Transaction
JSCNI’s arguments
In the remainder of issue one, JSCNI argues that Citibank participated in TPS’s
structuring an unfair and inequitable transaction. Specifically, JSCNI contends that
TPS breached its fiduciary duty by accepting the Phase III transaction because
!
the loan would allow TPS to borrow only the lesser of $40 million
or the borrowing base—an amount “clearly less than the amount
needed to fund the Project” and
49
!
JSCNI would pay TPS and Citibank high fees, the transaction
would be “free of risk” for both TPS and Citibank, and TPS
would share in the joint venture’s profits, while JSCNI “would
essentially receive nothing . . . other than the ability to borrow its
own money.”
(Emphasis in original.) JSCNI argues that Citibank knowingly participated in this
breach because TPS, which lacked experience in this type of transaction, hired
Citibank to structure the transaction. JSCNI’s reply brief clarifies that the focus is on
Citibank’s role as advisor, not on its role as lender.
Citibank’s and TPS’s roles
It was undisputed that Old Neftegas engaged TPS as its agent to initiate and to
conduct discussions for financing with third-party financial institutions up to $60
million and that Citibank knew of this agency. TPS hired Citibank, and relied on it,
to advise and to structure this complex, international transaction because TPS did not
have the experience to do so itself. According to Sartan, although “Citibank and TPS
both were going to be advising [JSCNI] how to structure the transaction for it to be
funded,” “TPS was . . . a conduit in [the] transaction just to facilitate it [and] to make
it happen easier.” The record supports that Santos and Abji’s prior connections with
Citibank were a major reason for TPS’s involvement as a “conduit” in this
transaction, as TPS had experience neither in the oil and gas business nor in
structuring complicated international financing.
The transaction’s three phases
50
JSCNI complains only about the structure and financing in Phase III; it does
not complain that Phases I and II were unfair or inequitable to it. One cannot
understand Phase III without understanding the structures that preceded Phase III or
the circumstances surrounding all phases, however. We turn to these now.
Phase I, begun in 1994, was to be a $51 million credit facility (85% of the total
funding), with the borrower being Old Neftegas. The Exim Bank, pursuant to the
OGFA, would guaranty 100% of the principal and interest. TPS would complete the
financing by arranging, without Citibank’s assistance, a 15% downpayment ($9
million) from a consortium of investors. The borrower was to be Old Neftegas, not
TPS. The collateral would consist of an assigned term oil delivery contract; hard
currency contracts for the sale of oil to creditworthy purchasers outside Russia (to
represent sales in excess of 150% of the debt servicing); and collateral accounts, at
a New York bank approved by the Exim bank, into which all oil-sale proceeds would
be deposited and pledged. Citibank was to receive both a commitment fee and a
structuring fee and was to be reimbursed certain expenses. TPS’s expenses were also
to be reimbursed. Phase I fell apart because the Exim bank would not guaranty the
financing.
Phase II, begun in 1995, was far more complex and roughly took the form of
a “pass through” loan from TPS (Citibank’s borrower) to Old Neftegas (TPS’s
borrower). It came into being, in the words of Kermath, because “through some
51
financial engineering, a slow down of equipment purchases and an increase in crude
oil sales, the actual Russian risk in the deal diminished such that TPS was willing to
commit more resources to close the gap to do an Exim-styled financing—without an
Exim guarantee.” The structure called for a 36-month revolving credit facility that
would be available for draw-downs and for Citibank’s issuance of letters of credit to
Avanti for manufacture. The “Amount/Availability” was to be the lesser of $60
million “or the Lendable Value of the Collateral . . . ,” which was to be composed of
four different things:
1.
“Investment Accounts” of no less than $10 million (which could
include securities and instruments) owned by TPS or acceptable
third parties for the first year of the facility, to which standard
advance rates would be used to determine Lendable Value;
2.
a “Special Deposit Account” held by Citibank Moscow for Old
Neftegas, to which a 98% advance rate would be applied to its
“funds” to determine Lendable Value;
3.
any account into which TPS received any payment from Old
Neftegas, to which a 98% advance rate would be applied to its
“funds” to determine Lendable Value; and
4.
the pledge of two promissory notes that Old Neftegas would issue
to TPS, one for $51 million and the other for $9 million, which
were not assigned Lendable Values.
That is, the facility made available the lesser of $60 million or the Lendable Value
(some at a 98% advance rate) of funds, securities, and instruments in certain pledged
accounts. Old Neftegas contemplated executing and pledging to TPS an export-sales
52
agreement with a company called Phibro, under which Old Neftegas would sell $200
to $250 million of crude oil, with part of the proceeds from those sales being
deposited into one of these accounts. Under this structure, TPS would commit to lend
monies to Old Neftegas to purchase equipment over 18 months, followed by a sevenyear “fully amortizing payback period.” TPS would in turn borrow against the cash
build-up in the Collateral Account and against $10 to $20 million in investment
management accounts that Santos and his family would pledge. TPS’s individual
payments to Avanti, through letters of credit issued by Citibank, would constitute
disbursements to Old Neftegas. Given the facility structure, Citibank would issue
letters of credit only against the collateral accounts. Citibank was granted various
fees, including an origination fee, a structuring fee, and fees for monitoring the
collateral and issuing letters of credit. TPS’s and Santos’s expenses were payable at
closing.
Phase II failed for several reasons. To begin with, although the Russian
Central Bank issued a license to Old Neftegas, that license did not allow Old Neftegas
to hold accounts in its name outside Russia. Also, the Phibro contract that was to
fund the collateral account was never executed because a sale price could not be
agreed. Additionally, various tax issues arose during Phase II: (1) a value added tax
(“VAT”) of about 15% to 20%, in JSCNI’s counsel’s opinion, which applied because
TPS, a non-bank, was the borrower; (2) an excise tax of about $12 million, which
53
Abji testified that Old Neftegas would have to pay if it purchased the equipment
directly; and (3) a newly enacted customs tariff that JSCNI’s counsel opined could
have led to an increase of about 25% in the project’s initial cost. To avoid these
taxes, a possible joint venture involving Old or New Neftegas and TPS and a lease
structure with TPS as lessor were discussed. Furthermore, around January 1997, the
Russian taxing authorities seized Old Neftegas’s Russian bank accounts to satisfy
liability imposed retroactively by new taxation laws. Finally, around June 1997, Old
Neftegas declared bankruptcy, at a time when it still had about $25 million in loans
outstanding. New Neftegas was formed in mid-1996 in response to some of these
problems, but it had no activity until 1997.
Phase III saw the implementation of both the joint venture and the lease
structure. At this point in the transaction, in the words of an internal Citibank
memorandum, the facility had “evolved from a trade finance structure to [a] cash
secured facility.” The financing and underlying transaction documents have been set
out in detail above, but some important terms are summarized here. As for the
financing, according to the Commitment Letter that TPS and Citibank signed, Phase
III’s financing involved a three-year revolving credit facility for the lesser of $40
million of the “Borrowing Base,” which was defined as 96% of the “Loan Value,”
which was in turn defined as “market value times advance rate” of the collateral. The
4% discount on the Loan Value “accommodate[d] the interest reserve (a collateral
54
reserve for up to 180 days of past due interest).” The collateral was to consist entirely
of T-bills with maturities less than 12 months or cash investments. Kermath advised
TPS of this full-cash-collateral requirement as early as May 1997 and again in the
Commitment Letter.
Under the Guaranty Agreements, the source of the collateral was intended to
be the guarantors’ security deposits, which the contract permitted TPS to use for,
among other things, its obligations under any credit agreement.27 The deposits were
to be supported by proceeds of oil-and-gas sales contracts that would be assigned to
TPS.
Letters of credit could be issued only within the facility’s first 27 months, and
draws under letters of credit would be reimbursed automatically with a draw under
the facility. No letters of credit would be issued unless fully supported by the
Borrowing Base, i.e., 96% of the collateral value. Internal Citibank correspondence
from May 1997 sets out this requirement, as well, indicating that “any outlays to
[Avanti] are fully supported by advance deposits made by [JSCNI] and affiliates on
behalf of the Joint Venture . . . .”
If the financing had closed, Citibank would have received an origination fee
of $50,000, letters-of-credit fees, a collateral monitoring fee, and fees on the undrawn
27
JSCNI refers to all of these funds as its “own money,” but the guarantors were New
Neftegas, Rodos, and Donaclove, not JSCNI, and Donaclove was not a joint-venture
participant.
55
portion of the commitment amount of the facility.
The $40 million revolving credit facility
By one sentence in its opening brief, JSCNI contends that TPS breached its
fiduciary duty by seeking a credit facility of only $40 million, an amount that was
“clearly less than the amount needed to fund the Project,” rendering the transaction
fundamentally unfair. By reply brief, JSCNI supports this brief argument by citing
correspondence between Citibank and the Overseas Private Investment Corporation
(“OPIC”) in Phase II to demonstrate Citibank’s knowledge that expenditures would
be $56 million within the loan’s first seven months.
The facilities in prior phases had been $51 and $60 million, respectively.
Kermath’s preliminary Phase III financing correspondence with TPS in April and
May 1997 likewise indicated that financing would be in the amount of $60 million.
JSCNI’s witnesses opined that $60 million was still needed even in Phase III to buy
the equipment and to build the infrastructure. Rafikov testified that $48 million was
required for just the equipment, as contracts with Avanti reflected. The evidence in
the light most favorable to JSCNI shows that JSCNI would not have pursued the deal
if it had known that the financing facility was only $40 million.
Nonetheless, the above evidence concerned the total sums needed for
equipment, building, and fees. In contrast, the only evidence of why the revolving
credit facility amount was reduced to $40 million is that (1) that was the amount that
56
was expected to be outstanding at any one time, from the projections that TPS
provided Citibank, and (2) reducing the facility to that amount “saved . . . money on
the unused fee [on which Citibank] charged a percentage against the amount of
facility that is not used.”28 That is, because this was a revolving facility, the total
letters of credit that Citibank would issue could surpass $40 million over time
depending on repayment, but could not exceed $40 million at any one time.
JSCNI contends that correspondence between Citibank and OPIC indicates
Citibank’s knowledge that expenditures would be $56 million within the loan’s first
seven months. This schedule was generated in Phase II, not Phase III. JSCNI points
to no equivalent evidence from Phase III. Moreover, Citibank’s internal creditapproval application adopted a collateral schedule showing direct-product sale
proceeds and security deposits that would exceed costs for equipment, infrastructure,
and design costs at all times. Finally, as discussed earlier, although there is evidence
that TPS withheld the new $40 million amount from JSCNI by failing to fax the page
of the Commitment Letter that memorialized that change, there is no evidence that
JSCNI did so or knew that TPS did.
Under these circumstances, Citibank’s agreeing to $40 million says nothing
28
One of JSCNI’s complaints about the transaction’s structure is that under the
Commitment Letter, Citibank would be paid fees “on the unused borrowing base for
the term of the credit facility.” Reducing the revolving borrowing base $40 million
would have lessened that fee.
57
about its knowledge of whether TPS was breaching its fiduciary duty to JSCNI by
requesting that facility amount.
The risk allocation, fees to Citibank and TPS, and what JSCNI
received
The crux of the remainder of JSCNI’s challenge is that the structure of Phase
III was unfair to JSCNI because it required full cash or government-obligation
collateral, made the borrowing base only 96% of that collateral, gave large fees to
TPS and Citibank, removed all risk to them, and allowed TPS to share in 15% of
JSCNI’s profits from the underlying transaction. In support, JSCNI contends that it
“essentially receive[d] nothing . . . other than the ability to borrow its own money.”
(Emphasis in original.)
In support of its complaint that Citibank knew that the structure of Phase III
was unfair because the structure gave TPS “15% of the profits from the Project,”
JSCNI relies on the May 1997 joint-venture agreement among New Neftegas, TPS,
and Donaclove. Nothing shows that the agreement was drafted by Citibank, and it
was Old Neftegas’s counsel that proposed a joint venture. The agreement divided
property and profits among the three participants: 15% to TPS, 45% to Donaclove,
and 40% to New Neftegas. JSCNI does not direct us to evidence that Citibank
determined how profits would be shared among the joint-venture participants.
Additionally, all three participants received profit shares under their agreement—with
TPS receiving the smallest share. JSCNI does not explain how the division to which
58
it agreed was unfair; why it was unfair for a joint-venture participant (TPS) to receive
a share of profits, especially when that share was the smallest; or how Citibank could
be charged with any unfairness when nothing shows that it drafted the joint-venture
agreement.
As for JSCNI’s other arguments, the evidence on which it relies shows the
following. In Phase III, Citibank would not issue any letters of credit without cash
or government securities as collateral to back them. Kermath opined that the
“transaction was structured to avoid [Citibank’s] taking any kind of . . . trade finance
risk.” Roberts opined that “on a deal like this we weren’t going to take any credit risk
other than fully backed by cash and marketable securities” and that Citibank “was
never interested in underwriting . . . credit, against any kind of foreign assets or cash
flows” because of the risks in Russia. Similarly, an internal Citibank memorandum
supporting the credit-approval request recited that JSCNI would “essentially be
prepaying a large part of the equipment purchase,” a financing term that “[Citibank]
and TPS negotiated . . . to reduce TPS/Santos family risk in the transaction.” The
same internal memorandum indicated:
The current structure resembles “typical” trade finance transactions with
a domestic company selling manufacturing equipment cross-border. The
equipment is then used to produce a product to be sold to off-shore
buyers. The proposed transaction differs from “traditional” trade
finance deals in the fact that this transaction will be 100 percent secured
by Treasury and short-term Government obligations (in New York)
whereas “typical” trade finance transaction [sic] are reliant on cash
flows from the subject equipment for repayment/collateral.
59
Robert Lynch, Citibank’s Senior Managing Director for Credit and Banking Services
in 1997, opined that the great majority of transactions that Citibank financed did not
employ this full-cash-collateral requirement, but instead employed marketable
securities, real estate, and business assets as collateral—although he explained that
Citibank had used the full-cash-collateral requirement before. T h e P h a s e I I I
contracts, as had those in Phase II, undisputably provided for fees to Citibank and
TPS upon and after the transaction’s closing. Had the Phase III deal gone through,
Citibank would have earned hundreds of thousands of dollars in fees for collateral
management and issuance of letters of credit, and TPS would have earned its
Transaction Fee and a success fee that it would have split with Citibank. As for fees
payable before closing, Abji estimated that Citibank was paid $50,000 for its
structuring and advising on the project.
This evidence must nonetheless be understood in the context of undisputed
background evidence, especially because it concerns a highly complex and lengthy
transaction and Citibank’s intent and knowledge. See City of Keller, 168 S.W.3d at
811, 817–18. First, the evidence undisputably demonstrated the financial risk in
conducting business in Russia at this time: retroactive application of tax laws that had
already resulted in asset seizures; several devaluations of the ruble in the 1990s,
which would result in 1998 alone in a loss to New Neftegas of about $200,000 in
accounts; periodic high interest rates and inflation since 1991; and a newly emerging
60
free-market system. JSCNI was not licensed to hold funds in its name outside Russia,
and its funds held in accounts in Russia had already been seized once in January
1997. Old Neftegas had gone bankrupt in 1997, at a time when it had about $25
million in loans outstanding, and New Neftegas had no activity until 1997.
Furthermore, as JSCNI has consistently observed here and below, TPS had a negative
net worth. Citibank also recognized this fact because the same internal Citibank
documents on which JSCNI relies in support of its issue one discuss TPS’s negative
net worth, its having no financial capacity outside of the transaction, and the resultant
“specter of insolvency and possible fraudulent conveyance claims” involving TPS
(this being the stated reason for the $500,000-net-worth and 1:1-asset-liability-ratio
conditions precedent to financing). It was also undisputed that there was no Exim
guarantee at Phase III. Additionally, Citibank documents revealed that the Santos
family had expressly declined, for the first time in the transaction, to be guarantors
in Phase III. Citibank’s identified “way out” in case of default was solely the
liquidation of collateral—not the transaction’s success, not TPS’s net worth (because
it had none), and not recourse to the Santos family (because that family would no
longer guarantee financing). Additionally, it was undisputed that Avanti required
letters of credit from a prime bank and would not accept other forms of payment. The
credit facility at all stages enabled the various Neftegas entities to comply with this
aspect of their contract with Avanti. Furthermore, JSCNI does not complain on
61
appeal that similar Citibank fees to which it agreed in Phase II were unfair, nor does
it argue here that the Phase II credit facility that limited issuance of letters of credit
to the amount of collateral in the form of funds, securities, and instruments—so as
fully to protect Citibank upon issuance of the letters of credit—was unfair. Finally,
the leasing and joint-venture structures that Citibank established in Phase III allowed
JSCNI and TPS to avoid heavy VAT, excise tax, and import tariffs.
No one contests the jury’s finding that Citibank was not JSCNI’s agent and
thus did not breach a fiduciary duty directly to it. What JSCNI had to show, then, was
that Citibank intentionally aided TPS in what it knew was a breach of the latter’s own
fiduciary duty. Against the above, undisputed backdrop, JSCNI did not show this.
It is clear that Phase III’s financing was structured to avoid risk to Citibank, to reduce
risk to TPS and the Santos family, and to require high quality collateral, which was
unusual but not unprecedented. But the record also indicates that TPS had no net
worth and was a financial risk, no Exim bank guarantee or Santos family collateral
was available, and the Russian economy and taxation system were risky at the time.
It is also clear that Citibank structured Phase III as a lease under which the
guarantors’ payments became TPS’s property, for pledge to Citibank as collateral.
But the record again explains why this was so: JSCNI could not hold collateral in
accounts under its name outside Russia (as had been contemplated in Phase II), its
funds held inside Russia were subject to a risky economy and taxation system, and
62
a leasing and joint-venture structure prevented high VAT, excise tax, and import
tariffs that would have increased the project’s cost significantly. Against the
undisputed backdrop, Citibank’s cited actions are no evidence that it knew that
structuring Phase III in the way that it did assisted TPS in violating any duty that it
had to JSCNI. Moreover, some of the pre-closing fees that Citibank received arose
in phases predating Phase III, about which phases JSCNI does not complain, and
Citibank could not have received any fees contingent upon the Phase III’s success
because the deal failed. Finally, JSCNI makes no complaint of the requirement from
Phase II that issuance of letters of credit be fully backed by high-quality collateral
(cash, securities, and instruments), a term very similar to the full-cash-collateral
requirement of Phase III about which JSCNI does complain.
C.
Conclusion
We hold that the trial court did not err in rendering JNOV on JSCNI’s claim
that Citibank knowingly participated in TPS’s breach of fiduciary duty. We overrule
JSCNI’s issue one.
Civil Conspiracy
In its issue two, JSCNI asserts that the trial court erred in disregarding the
jury’s finding that Citibank was part of a civil conspiracy because legally sufficient
evidence exists in support of this claim. Specifically, JSCNI contends that Citibank
conspired with TPS on two matters: (1) acquiring the $550,000 security deposit to
63
divert to their own uses and (2) “procuring payment of fees and expenses while
concealing important information from [JSCNI] in order to structure a transaction that
[was] risk-free, but extremely lucrative, for Citibank and TPS,” i.e., they structured
the transaction unfairly at Phase III.
A.
The Charge, Verdict, and Motion
The trial court charged the jury as follows:
If you answered “yes” to Question No. 1 or Question No. 10,[29]
then answer the following Question. Otherwise, do not answer the
following Question.
QUESTION NO. 19
Was Citibank part of a conspiracy with TPS that damaged
[JSCNI]?
To be part of a conspiracy, Citibank and TPS must have had
knowledge of, agreed to, and intended a common objective or
course of action that resulted in damages to [JSCNI]. One or
more persons or entities involved in the conspiracy must have
performed some act or acts to further the conspiracy.
The jury answered in the affirmative.
Citibank moved for JNOV on the jury’s answer to Jury Question No. 19,
arguing that there was no evidence of any of the elements.
29
Jury Question No. 1 asked if TPS committed fraud against JSCNI. Jury Question No.
10 asked if TPS breached its fiduciary duty to JSCNI. The jury answered “yes” to
both predicate questions. No one challenges on appeal the jury’s answers to those
predicate questions, although the parties do address in this challenge whether one of
the means of committing a breach of fiduciary duty on which the jury was instructed
(unfairness of the transaction) was supported by the evidence.
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B.
The Law
“‘Civil conspiracy is a derivative action premised on an underlying tort.’” Gary
E. Patterson & Assocs., P.C. v. Holub, 264 S.W.3d 180, 204 (Tex. App.—Houston
[1st Dist.] 2008, pet. denied) (citing Gonzales v. Am. Title Co. of Houston, 104
S.W.3d 588, 594 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 2003, pet. denied)). “The required
elements of a civil conspiracy are (1) two or more persons; (2) an object to be
accomplished; (3) a meeting of the minds on the object or course of action; (4) one
or more unlawful, overt acts; and (5) damages as a proximate result.” Id. A “‘civil
conspiracy requires specific intent’ to agree ‘to accomplish an unlawful purpose or
to accomplish a lawful purpose by unlawful means.’” Juhl v. Airington, 936 S.W.2d
640, 644 (Tex. 1996) (quoting Triplex Communications, Inc. v. Riley, 900 S.W.2d
716, 719 (Tex. 1995)).
C.
The Acquisition and Use of the $550,000 Security Deposit
The same evidence discussed above with respect to the fraud theory based on
Kermath’s misrepresentations of the $550,000’s use supports the elements of a civil
conspiracy. For example, both TPS and Kermath represented before the $550,000
was paid that it was a security deposit, and the jury could rationally have believed that
this meant that it would be treated as any other security deposit under the Phase III
contracts. Internal Citibank documents support an inference that Kermath intended
to use these funds in ways other than this and that he had discussed the payment of
65
Citibank’s legal fees with TPS. The use of the funds benefitted both TPS and its
representatives and Citibank and its major client. Furthermore, the funds’ use was not
in accordance with the Phase III contract’s terms for use of security deposits. Against
this backdrop, the jury rationally could have viewed TPS’s and Citibank’s accusing
the other of having decided or instructed how the funds would be used as evidence
that both parties had conspired to use the funds in ways beneficial to them both, only
to point the finger at the other party when the deal fell through. That is, from this
evidence, a rational jury could have discerned a meeting of the minds between
Citibank and TPS to obtain the $550,000 for use in ways contrary to their
representations and contrary to the Phase III contracts’ terms, i.e., to harm JSCNI by
the funds’ use, so that they would be reimbursed with JSCNI’s money for expenses
that were not then allowed.
D.
The Structure of the Transaction at Phase III
JSCNI relies on the very same evidence in support of this theory of conspiracy
as it did in support of its knowing-participation claim. We have already held that that
evidence is insufficient to support a claim for knowing participation in TPS’s breach
of fiduciary duty. For the same reasons as stated in that discussion, we hold that the
trial court properly rendered judgment on this theory of civil conspiracy.
E.
Conclusion
We hold that the trial court erred in granting JNOV on the jury’s answer to Jury
66
Question No. 19, but only to the extent of fraud liability based on the $550,000
security deposit. We hold that the trial court did not err in granting JNOV on the
jury’s answer to Jury Question No. 19 to the extent that it was based on TPS’s breach
of fiduciary duty. We sustain in part and overrule in part JSCNI’s issue two.
Exemplary Damages
In issue three, JSCNI contends that the trial court erred in rendering JNOV on
the jury’s finding of exemplary damages against Citibank.
A.
The Law
Section 41.003 of the Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code allows for the
award of exemplary damages if the claimant proves by clear and convincing evidence
that the harm with respect to which he seeks recovery resulted from, among other
things, fraud. TEX. CIV. PRAC. & REM. CODE ANN. § 41.003(a)(1) (Vernon 2008).
“‘Clear and convincing’ means the measure or degree of proof that will produce in
the mind of the trier of fact a firm belief or conviction as to the truth of the allegations
sought to be established.” Id. § 41.001(2) (Vernon 2008).
In conducting a legal-sufficiency review of a jury finding made on clear and
convincing evidence, we employ an elevated standard of review:
In a legal sufficiency review, a court should look at all the
evidence in the light most favorable to the finding to determine whether
a reasonable trier of fact could have formed a firm belief or conviction
that its finding was true . . . .
67
If, after conducting its legal sufficiency review of the record
evidence, a court determines that no reasonable factfinder could form a
firm belief or conviction that the matter that must be proven is true, then
that court must conclude that the evidence is legally insufficient.
Southwestern Bell Tel. Co. v. Garza, 164 S.W.3d 607, 627 (Tex. 2004) (quoting In
re J.F.C., 96 S.W.3d 256, 266 (Tex. 2002)) (considering legal-sufficiency review of
jury finding of malice made upon clear and convincing evidence). “This intermediate
standard falls between the preponderance standard of civil proceedings and the
reasonable doubt standard of criminal proceedings.” Citizens Nat’l Bank v. Allen Rae
Invs., 142 S.W.3d 459, 483 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth 2004, no pet.).
“‘To give appropriate deference to the factfinder’s conclusions and the role of
a court conducting a legal sufficiency review, looking at the evidence in the light
most favorable to the judgment means that a reviewing court must assume that the
factfinder resolved disputed facts in favor of its finding if a reasonable factfinder
could do so.’” In re J.O.A., 283 S.W.3d 336, 344 (Tex. 2009) (quoting In re J.F.C.,
96 S.W.3d at 266). “‘A corollary to this requirement is that a court should disregard
all evidence that a reasonable factfinder could have disbelieved or found to have been
incredible.’” Id. “‘This does not mean that a court must disregard all evidence that
does not support the finding.’” Id. “Disregarding undisputed facts that do not
support the finding could skew the analysis of whether there is clear and convincing
evidence.” Id.; see also City of Keller, 168 S.W.3d at 817 (“[W]e have held that a
legal sufficiency review must consider all the evidence (not just that favoring the
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verdict) in reviewing cases of . . . punitive damages. In such cases, again, evidence
contrary to a verdict cannot be disregarded.”) (emphasis in original).
B.
The Charge, Verdict, and Motions
The jury was charged:
If you answered “yes” to Question No. 5,[30] then answer the following
Question. Otherwise do not answer the following Question.
QUESTION NO. 6
What sum of money, if any, if paid now in cash, should be
assessed against Citibank and awarded to [JSCNI] as exemplary
damages, if any, for the conduct [sic] found in response to Question No.
5?
You are instructed that “exemplary damages” means an amount
that you may in your discretion award as a penalty or by way of
punishment.
....
The jury awarded $2.25 million in response to this question.
JSCNI moved for entry of judgment on the exemplary-damage award, seeking
$270,000—twice the amount of actual fraud damages awarded against Citibank—so
as to comply with the statutory cap. See TEX. CIV. PRAC. & REM. CODE ANN.
30
Jury Question No. 5 asked if the jury found by clear and convincing evidence that the
harm to JSCNI resulted from fraud. “Clear and convincing evidence” was defined
as “the measure or degree of proof that produces a firm belief or conviction of the
truth of the allegations sought to be established.” Jury Question No. 5 was predicated
on an affirmative answer to Jury Question No. 2, which asked if Citibank had
committed fraud against JSCNI. The jury answered “yes” to both of these predicate
questions.
69
§ 41.008(b)(1) (Vernon 2008). Citibank moved for JNOV on the jury’s answers to
both Jury Question Nos. 5 and 6 on the basis that there was no evidence of fraud or,
alternatively, any evidence of fraud did not meet the clear-and-convincing burden of
proof. The trial court granted Citibank’s JNOV motion on the jury’s award of
exemplary damages.
C.
Discussion
We have already discussed in detail the evidence supporting the jury’s finding
of fraud under the theory that Citibank misrepresented the $550,000’s use as a
security deposit, concluding that there was some evidence more than a scintilla to
support this theory of fraud.31 This holding was made pursuant to the review standard
for findings proved by a preponderance of the evidence, under which standard “any
evidence that does not merely create surmise or suspicion can be used to show that
something is more likely than not.” Garza, 164 S.W.3d at 621. “But when proof of
an allegation must be clear and convincing, even evidence that does more than raise
surmise and suspicion will not suffice unless it is capable of producing a firm belief
or conviction that the allegation is true.” Id. “Evidence of lesser quality is, in legal
31
We have also already sustained Citibank’s legal-sufficiency challenges to the other
fraud theories on which JSCNI relies on appeal—(1) that Kermath falsely stated that
the transaction was complete after the negotiation of the scheduled amounts of
security deposit at the August 15, 1997 closing and (2) that Citibank failed to disclose
material information that made earlier representations misleading or untrue. These
fraud theories thus cannot support the award of exemplary damages.
70
effect, no evidence.” Id. To be entitled to exemplary damages, JSCNI had the burden
of showing by clear and convincing evidence that, among other things, Kermath
intended to defraud JSCNI at the time that he solicited the $550,000 as a security
deposit. Although the circumstantial evidence viewed in the light most favorable to
JSCNI that we discussed above constitutes more than a scintilla of evidence that
Kermath intended to defraud JSCNI at the time of his representations, it simply is not
capable of producing a firm belief or conviction of that intent. Compare, e.g.,
Mustafa v. Matrut, No. 01-08-00985-CV, 2010 WL 1492419, at *10 (Tex.
App.—Houston [1st Dist.] Apr. 15, 2010, no pet.) (memo. op.) (upholding clear and
convincing evidence of fraudulent intent not to perform in future when defendant
repeatedly promised to repay plaintiff, wrote checks for which funds were
insufficient, moved funds among accounts to ensure insufficient funding for checks,
did not use line of credit to pay checks despite having done so with other parties in
past, and changed trial testimony when confronted with inconsistencies); Citizens
Nat’l Bank, 142 S.W.3d at 483 (upholding finding of clear and convincing evidence
of fraudulent nondisclosures based on much more extensive circumstantial evidence);
Gibson v. Fauber, No. 12-02-00249-CV, 2004 WL 2002560, at *9–10 (Tex.
App.—Tyler Sept. 8, 2004, pet. denied) (memo. op.) (same, regarding fraudulent
intent to induce plaintiff into payment).
We hold that the trial court properly granted Citibank’s JNOV motion on the
71
jury’s exemplary damages finding. We thus overrule JSCNI’s issue three.
Joint and Several Liability for Interest
On rehearing, JSCNI argues that when we modified the judgment to
incorporate the jury’s civil conspiracy finding, we should have made Citibank jointly
and severally liable both for the fraud damages awarded against TPS (which we did)
and for the pre-judgment interest awarded against TPS on those damages (which we
did not). Although JSCNI did not expressly mention in its opening brief that it
sought joint and several liability on this pre-judgment interest, we conclude that such
a request was implicit in its challenge to reverse the JNOV rendered on its conspiracy
claim.
See Sterner v. Marathon Oil Co., 767 S.W.2d 686, 690 (Tex. 1989)
(instructing liberal construction of appellate challenges in order to obtain just, fair,
and equitable adjudication of litigants’ rights); see also TEX. R. APP. P. 38.1(f), 38.9.
We thus modify the judgment to make Citibank jointly and severally liable for this
one pre-judgment-interest award.
We distinguish two of the cases on which Citibank relies to argue that JSCNI’s
pre-judgment interest requests comes too late because, in them, pre-judgment interest
was not requested in the trial court. See S. Pac. Transp. Co. v. Luna, 730 S.W.2d 36,
40 (Tex. App.—Corpus Christi 1987) (pre-judgment interest not requested until
remand from Texas Supreme Court), rev’d on other grounds, 724 S.W.2d 383 (Tex.
1987); Houston Lighting & Pow. Co. v. Reynolds, 712 S.W.2d 761, 773–74 (Tex.
72
App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 1986) (op. on reh’g) (pre-judgment interest not requested
until rehearing on appeal), rev’d on other grounds, 765 S.W.2d 784 (Tex. 1988). In
contrast, JSCNI asked the trial court to award this interest by motion for judgment,
and the only reason that the trial court denied the request was that it rendered JNOV
on the only finding that could have supported it (civil conspiracy). We also
distinguish Washington v. Walker County—on which Citibank relies and in which
this Court held that a party could not challenge the denial of a request for prejudgment interest first on rehearing—because we have already construed JSCNI to
have raised this issue implicitly in its opening brief. See 708 S.W.2d 493, 497 (Tex.
App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 1986, writ ref’d n.r.e.). Moreover, Walker failed to brief
his entitlement to pre-judgment interest in the first instance, whereas here, JSCNI
briefed its challenge concerning conspiracy, which had as its natural consequence
joint and several liability both for damages and pre-judgment interest, which JSCNI
had requested below.
Finally, JSCNI also argues on rehearing that we should further modify the
judgment to recite expressly Citbank’s joint and several liability for any postjudgment interest for which TPS is liable. We deny this request because the trial
court adopted in its judgment the very post-judgment-interest provision that JSCNI
proposed, and that its motion for entry of judgment requested, which did not
expressly recite that liability for this interest would be joint and several.
73
Conclusion
Based on our holding that the trial court erred in granting JNOV on the jury’s
finding that Citibank conspired with TPS to defraud JSCNI of its $550,000 security
deposit, we modify the trial court’s judgment to provide that, based on that jury
finding, Citibank be jointly and severally liable with TPS for (1) the $315,000 actual
damages awarded against TPS for TPS’s fraud and (2) the $244,744.50 in prejudgment interest awarded against TPS on the those fraud damages. We affirm the
judgment as so modified.
Tim Taft32
Justice
Panel consists of Chief Justice Radack and Justices Sharp and Taft.
Justice Sharp, dissenting. Dissent to follow.
32
The Honorable Tim Taft, retired justice, Court of Appeals for the First District of
Texas, participating by assignment.
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