Bear Ranch, LLC v. Heartbrand Beef, Inc. et al
Filing
257
MEMORANDUM AND ORDER denying 247 MOTION for Attorney Fees (Signed by Judge Gregg Costa) Parties notified.(arrivera, 4)
United States District Court
Southern District of Texas
ENTERED
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF TEXAS
VICTORIA DIVISION
BEAR RANCH, LLC,
Plaintiff,
VS.
HEARTBRAND BEEF, INC.,
AMERICAN AKAUSHI
ASSOCIATION, INC.,
and ROBERT BEEMAN.
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March 04, 2016
David J. Bradley, Clerk
CIVIL ACTION NO. 6:12-CV-14
Defendants.
MEMORANDUM AND ORDER
Both parties have requested attorneys’ fees in this case. This order addresses
only Bear Ranch’s motion.
Bear Ranch seeks the $276,456 in attorneys’ fees and $20,998 in expenses
and costs it incurred in obtaining a declaratory judgment in a pretrial ruling. It
seeks fees on a statutory and contractual basis. Both bases turn in large part on
whether Bear Ranch is entitled to fees for a claim that required the court to
interpret a contract but did not involve an attempt by Bear Ranch to enforce a
contract.
The contract is a purchase agreement in which it bought 424 Akaushi
breeding cattle (and 10,000 units of Akaushi semen) from HeartBrand Beef in
2010. The contract contained a number of restrictions which, among other things,
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forbid Bear Ranch from reselling the cattle without HeartBrand’s permission.
Document Entry No. 72–4, at 1-5. Bear Ranch later purchased additional Akaushi
cattle from three other parties that had obtained cattle from HeartBrand. These
were “handshake” deals not governed by a contract. Bear Ranch LLC v.
HeartBrand Beef Inc., 2014 WL 1052515, at *5–7 (S.D. Tex. Mar. 18, 2014).
Bear Ranch filed this lawsuit seeking to invalidate the restrictions in the
2010 contract, which would allow Bear Ranch to sell all the cattle. It also sought a
ruling that most of the restrictions in the 2010 contract did not apply to the cattle
obtained in its three subsequent purchases. In its complaint, Bear Ranch requested
a “judgment adjudging and declaring that the cattle it purchased from sellers other
than HeartBrand, and the descendants of those cattle, are not subject to restrictions
under a contract.” See Docket Entry No. 59 ¶ 52.
Bear Ranch did not achieve its main objective of invalidating the contractual
restrictions. It dismissed its antitrust claims before the summary judgment
deadline, and the court ruled pretrial that invalidation of the restrictions was not an
available remedy for the fraud claim Bear Ranch asserted. Bear Ranch, LLC v.
HeartBrand Beef, Inc., 2013 WL 6190253, at *6 (S.D. Tex. Nov. 26, 2013). As it
turned out, the jury rejected the fraud claim. Document Entry No. 172 at 15.
In a pretrial ruling, however, Bear Ranch did prevail on most of its claim
that the contractual restrictions did not apply to its three subsequent purchases of
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cattle. Bear Ranch LLC, 2014 WL 1052515, at *5. Except for the marketing and
registration provisions, the Court held that the restrictions applied only to the cattle
(and their offspring) obtained “pursuant to the [the] agreement.” Id. at *5–
*7.
The Court also rejected the Defendants’ attempt to nonetheless extend the
contract restrictions to one of the subsequent sales based on an alleged oral
agreement, concluding that a written contract was required pursuant to the Texas
statute of frauds. See id. at *6–*7. The Court thus granted in part Bear Ranch’s
motion for summary judgment seeking this declaratory relief. See id. at *12.
Bear Ranch claims this victory entitles it to attorneys’ fees. Bear Ranch
sought fees under Section 38.001 of the Texas Civil Practice & Remedies Code.
See Document Entry No. 247 at 3. That request appears to have been abandoned,
however, as it does not appear in Bear Ranch’s reply. No such fees are available in
any event. “[T]o qualify for fees under the statute, a litigant must prevail on a
breach of contract claim and recover damages.” Ashford Partners, Ltd. v. ECO
Res., Inc., 401 S.W.3d 35, 40 (Tex. 2012). Bear Ranch did not receive damages.
But more fundamentally, Bear Ranch did not assert a breach of contract claim.
Quite the contrary, Bear Ranch contended that the 2010 contract had nothing to do
with the later sales in seeking a declaration that the restrictions did not apply to
those later-acquired cattle. A declaration that a contract does not apply cannot be
construed as a breach of contract claim.
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That leaves the contractual basis. In Texas, the law which governs the
purchase agreement, (Document Entry No. 72–5 at 6 ¶ 20), parties are “free to
contract for a fee-recovery standard either looser or stricter” than what a statute
may provide.
Intercontinental Grp. P’ship v. KB Home Lone Star L.P., 295
S.W.3d 650, 653 (Tex. 2009). The purchase agreement provides:
If any legal action is brought to enforce this Agreement by either of
the parties hereto, it is expressly agreed that the prevailing party in
such legal action shall be entitled to recover from the other party
reasonable attorney’s fees, expenses, and costs.
Document Entry No. 72–4, at 6 ¶ 20. Under this provision, Bear Ranch can
recover attorneys’ fees only if: (1) it was the prevailing party; and (2) the legal
action was brought to “enforce [the] Agreement.” Id. Bear Ranch was the
prevailing party on its claim. Intercontiental Grp. P’ship, 295 S.W.3d at 659
(finding that a party would be a prevailing party if they sought and obtained a
declaratory judgment). What is less clear is whether Bear Ranch’s suit was
“brought to enforce [the] Agreement.” Document Entry No. 72–4, at 6 ¶ 20.
A claim for breach of contract is the usual way a party seeks to “enforce an
agreement” in litigation. Bear Ranch did not assert a breach of contract claim with
respect to the cattle obtained in the three later sales. To do so would have made no
sense as Bear Ranch’s contention was that those transactions were not governed by
the 2010 contract. In other words, Bear Ranch was not trying to enforce a contract;
it was arguing that the contract had nothing to do with subsequent sales.
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Bear Ranch nonetheless contends that it is entitled to fees because it was
seeking a ruling on the scope of the 2010 contract. No doubt, the merits of Bear
Ranch’s declaratory judgment claim turned on a question of contract
interpretation. Bear Ranch LLC, 2014 WL 1052515 at *5–*7. Bear Ranch thus
contends that this fee request is like the one in Intercontinental Group Partnership.
Document Entry No. 252 at 3. In ruling that the party did not prevail on its breach
of contract claim because it was awarded no damages, the Supreme Court of Texas
noted that had the party sought and won a declaratory judgment it would have been
entitled to fees under the contract. Intercontinental Grp. P’ship, 295 S.W.3d at
660–61. But the contractual fee provision in that case applied if a party brought an
action “to enforce the terms of this Contract or to declare rights hereunder.” Id. at
652 (emphasis added). That alternative basis for fees does not exist in Bear
Ranch’s contract. The Intercontinental Group Partnership fee provision thus
actually undermines Bear Ranch’s request as it reinforces the ordinary
understanding that actions brought to “enforce a contract” are different than actions
to “declare rights” under a contract. Also undermining Bear Ranch’s request are
broader fee provisions at issue in other Texas cases. See Fitzgerald v. Schroeder
Ventures II, LLC, 345 S.W.3d 624, 630–31 (Tex. App.—San Antonio 2011)
(allowing recovery of attorneys’ fees for tort claims when the parties’ contract
applied to “any legal proceeding brought under or with relation to this contract or
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this transaction”); Robbins v. Capozzi, 100 S.W.3d 18, 27 (Tex. App.—Tyler
2002, no pet.) (holding lawsuit was “brought under or with respect to the
transaction” when suit was brought to rescind the contract based on an alleged
misrepresentation in the transaction).
Unlike the provisions at issue in those cases, the agreement in this case
allows recovery of attorneys’ fees for “enforcing” the contract and nothing
more. It thus seems to be of similar scope to the Texas statutory fee provision,
which Bear Ranch now effectively concedes it cannot meet.
Because Bear Ranch prevailed only on a claim in which it argued that the
2010 contract did not apply beyond its express terms, it did not prevail in an
attempt to “enforce” the contract. Its Motion for Attorneys’ Fees (Docket Entry
No. 247) therefore is DENIED.
SIGNED this 4th day of March, 2016.
______________________________
Gregg Costa
United States Circuit Judge*
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Sitting by Designation
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