Jeffrey Bailey v. Shirley Bailey ( 2018 )


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  •      Case: 17-20014      Document: 00514441778         Page: 1    Date Filed: 04/23/2018
    IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT
    United States Court of Appeals
    Fifth Circuit
    No. 17-20014                           FILED
    April 23, 2018
    Lyle W. Cayce
    JEFFREY C. BAILEY; RIG-UP SERVICES, L.L.C.,                                  Clerk
    Plaintiffs - Appellants
    v.
    SHIRLEY BAILEY; ROGER BAILEY; BAILEY CONSULTING, L.L.C.; RIG-
    UP ELECTRICAL SERVICES, INCORPORATED,
    Defendants - Appellees
    Appeals from the United States District Court
    for the Southern District of Texas
    USDC No. 4:12-CV-1711
    Before DAVIS, HAYNES, and COSTA, Circuit Judges.
    GREGG COSTA, Circuit Judge:*
    A near decade-long family dispute involving Jeffrey Bailey and his
    parents, Shirley and Roger Bailey, is before us a second time.                            Jeffrey 1
    purchased the assets of his parents’ company in 2008. Before that sale, Jeffrey
    was in charge of the company’s operations. From the first quarter of 2007 until
    * Pursuant to 5TH CIR. R. 47.5, the court has determined that this opinion should not
    be published and is not precedent except under the limited circumstances set forth in 5TH
    CIR. R. 47.5.4.
    1 Because this case involves three family members with the same last name (Shirley,
    Roger, and Jeffrey Bailey), we will refer to the parties by their first names.
    Case: 17-20014    Document: 00514441778      Page: 2   Date Filed: 04/23/2018
    No. 17-20014
    the execution of the purchase agreement, the company failed to forward its
    employees’ payroll taxes to the IRS. After the sale, Jeffrey sought a declaratory
    judgment that his parents are responsible for the unpaid taxes. In the parties’
    earlier visit to this court, we held that the sales agreement required the
    parents’ company to pay any tax liabilities accruing before the sale. But we
    remanded because Shirley and Roger had argued “the Agreement was
    unenforceable because Jeffrey Bailey induced it through fraud.” Bailey v.
    Bailey, 584 F. App’x 220, 221 (5th Cir. 2014).
    The district court then held a bench trial on that fraudulent inducement
    defense.   It concluded that Jeffrey fraudulently induced his parents into
    entering into the sale because he knew about the outstanding liability but did
    not disclose it to them. As a result, the court declared Jeffrey responsible for
    the unpaid tax liability. Jeffrey now argues that a jury should have decided
    the issue, that the evidence did not support a finding of fraudulent inducement,
    and that in any event the inducement defense would not support an order
    requiring Jeffrey to pay the presale taxes. We reject his first two contentions
    and thus uphold the finding of fraudulent inducement. But we agree that a
    finding of fraudulent inducement does not allow a court to rewrite the contract
    that made the parents liable for those taxes. So we remand to allow Shirley
    and Roger to elect whether they want to rescind the contract, which is the
    remedy they originally sought in asserting fraudulent inducement.
    I.
    We recite the facts in the light most favorable to Shirley and Roger
    because the factfinder ruled in their favor. They owned Rig-Up Electrical
    Services, Inc. (Electrical), an Arkansas corporation with a satellite location in
    Channelview, Texas. Shirley served as Electrical’s president, while her son
    Jeffrey served as Executive Vice President of the Texas location. In 2007,
    Shirley and Roger were considering retirement and no longer wanted to
    2
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    manage Electrical’s operations. They left Jeffrey in charge of managing the
    company.
    Although Shirley retained the title of President, she assumed a smaller
    function at the company and even stopped paying herself. Michelle Reed,
    Electrical’s bookkeeper, was responsible for handling the company’s books,
    including calculating its weekly payroll, tax deposit, and operating expenses.
    With Jeffrey in charge of managing the company, Shirley’s only remaining role
    was to make weekly draws on Electrical’s line of credit at an Arkansas bank
    based on information provided by Reed for the amounts needed to cover the
    company’s expenses. After Shirley would transfer the funds needed on a
    weekly basis from the Arkansas bank to another bank in Texas, Reed would
    disburse the money from the Texas account.
    In January 2008, Jeffrey, who started a new company under the name
    Rig-Up Services, L.L.C. (Services), expressed interest in purchasing
    Electrical’s assets. To help secure financing, Jeffrey hired Roy Johnson to
    serve as Electrical’s Chief Financial Officer. Jeffrey and Johnson then hired
    Harris Arthur, a certified public accountant, to review Electrical’s financial
    records and provide accurate financial reports that a lender would accept.
    Electrical’s payroll and required tax deposits were computed on a weekly basis
    using accounting software.
    In April or May of 2008, Arthur realized that the software showed that
    payroll taxes had been sent to the IRS when bank records showed they had
    not. This concerned Arthur because the “apparent tax liability looked awful[ly]
    high.” He first asked Reed if she had made the payments. After not receiving
    a satisfactory answer, he then talked to Jeffrey and Johnson about the tax
    liability he had discovered. On July 29, with the issue still not resolved, Arthur
    sent a letter to Jeffrey asking him to sign a power of attorney so a request could
    be sent to the IRS for information showing Electrical’s history of payroll tax
    3
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    payments. He confirmed with the IRS a few days later that Electrical owed
    over a million dollars in unpaid payroll taxes.
    Meanwhile, the IRS sent two letters to Shirley and Roger requesting
    Electrical’s tax returns for both unemployment and payroll taxes because they
    had not been timely filed. After receiving the second tax return request in late
    July, Shirley immediately faxed it to Jeffrey at the Channelview office. During
    a phone conversation, Jeffrey assured her that he had taken care of the
    problem.
    On August 12, Jeffrey and his parents executed the asset purchase
    agreement. Shirley sold Electrical’s assets at an $8 million discount ($4 million
    when the asking price on the market was $12 million) to her son because of the
    family tie and her trust in him to run the business. Soon after the sale, Arthur
    sent a letter to Shirley explaining that Electrical had been withholding funds
    from its employees’ paychecks but not transferring the money to the IRS. This
    information had been kept from Shirley until after the deal closed. In an email
    sent six days before the execution of the agreement, Johnson instructed Arthur
    to “[f]ocus on the Cash Flow Budget for Wells Fargo now” and to “leave the tax
    thing alone for now.” Shirley thus was surprised to learn that Electrical had
    an outstanding payroll tax liability. She testified that neither Reed nor her
    son had told her about it.
    Once everyone knew about the problem with the payroll taxes, the
    parties disputed who had to pay them. Jeffrey filed this diversity suit in
    federal court seeking a declaratory judgment that the obligation belongs to
    Shirley, Roger, and Electrical. Under the terms of the agreement, only certain
    preexisting “liabilities and obligations” of Electrical transferred to Services.
    Those specified liabilities did not include payroll taxes, so we held in the first
    appeal that Services and Jeffrey were not contractually liable for the
    outstanding payroll taxes.     See Bailey, 584 F. App’x at 221–22.        But we
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    remanded for consideration of the parents’ defense that they would not have
    sold the assets to Jeffrey at the steep discount had they been told about the tax
    liability. 
    Id. On remand,
    the district court agreed after a bench trial that Jeffrey
    fraudulently induced the sale. As a result of that conclusion, the district court
    entered a final judgment declaring that “Jeffrey C. Bailey and Rig-Up Services,
    LLC, are responsible for the unpaid payroll taxes of Rig-Up Electrical Services,
    Inc., as well as interest and penalties for both taxes and trust funds.”
    II.
    Jeffrey first contends that the district court improperly found that he
    waived his request for a jury trial. The argument focuses on details about the
    timing of Jeffrey’s jury demand and the district court’s notice of the trial
    setting, but we reject the claim for a more fundamental reason: the defense of
    fraudulent inducement is an equitable claim for which there is no right to a
    jury.
    Under Texas law, the right to a jury trial is preserved “without
    distinction, to both law and equity cases.” Franzetti v. Franzetti, 
    120 S.W.2d 123
    , 126 (Tex. Civ. App.—Austin 1938, no writ); see also Humble Oil & Refining
    Co. v. Sun Oil Co., 
    191 F.2d 705
    , 711 (5th Cir. 1951) (explaining that because
    there is no clear distinction between law and equity in Texas, “[a]ll rights and
    remedies are administered together by one civil action and in the same
    proceeding”). But federal law determines the right to a jury trial in diversity
    cases. Simler v. Conner, 
    372 U.S. 221
    , 222 (1963) (“In diversity cases, of course,
    the substantive dimension of the claim asserted finds its source in state law,
    but the characterization of the state-created claim as legal or equitable for
    purposes of whether a right to a jury trial is indicated must be made by
    recourse to federal law.”); Fletcher v. McCreary Tire & Rubber Co., 
    773 F.2d 666
    , 668 (5th Cir. 1985); Humble 
    Oil, 191 F.2d at 718
    .             A fraudulent
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    inducement defense, as opposed to a common-law fraud claim, is a claim in
    equity. Deckert v. Independence Shares Corp., 
    311 U.S. 282
    , 289 (1940) (“That
    a suit to rescind a contract induced by fraud and to recover the consideration
    paid may be maintained in equity, at least where there are circumstances
    making the legal remedy inadequate, is well established.”); Scott v. Sebree, 
    986 S.W.2d 364
    , 368 (Tex. App.—Austin 1999, pet. denied). Indeed, both during
    and after trial Jeffrey acknowledged that fraudulent inducement falls on the
    equity side of the traditional divide. One consequence of that classification is
    that the federal trial right, unlike its Texas counterpart, does not extend to
    equitable claims. Granfinanciera, S.A. v. Nordberg, 
    492 U.S. 33
    , 41 (1989).
    So Jeffrey had no right to demand a jury. As we will discuss later,
    however, the equitable nature of the inducement defense has consequences for
    the remedy the district court ordered.
    III.
    Having determined that the court had the authority to resolve this
    dispute, the next question is whether it resolved it correctly or at least within
    the discretion it receives in deciding the facts. One Beacon Ins. Co. v. Crowley
    Marine Servs., Inc., 
    648 F.3d 258
    , 262 (5th Cir. 2011) (noting that we review
    findings of fact in a bench trial for clear error).
    A party has a “duty to abstain from inducing another to enter into a
    contract through the use of fraudulent misrepresentations.” Formosa Plastics
    Corp. USA v. Presidio Eng. & Contractors, Inc., 
    960 S.W.2d 41
    , 49 (Tex. 1998).
    As a general rule, a failure to disclose information does not constitute fraud
    unless there is a duty to disclose the information. Bradford v. Vento, 
    48 S.W.3d 749
    , 755 (Tex. 2001) (citation omitted). But when there is a duty to disclose
    information and a party fails to do so, the omission is tantamount to an
    affirmative misrepresentation of the facts. See Myre v. Meletio, 
    307 S.W.3d 6
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    839, 843 (Tex. App.—Dallas 2010, pet. denied). This fraud by omission occurs
    when:
    (1) when a defendant conceals or fails to disclose a
    material fact within his knowledge; (2) the defendant
    knows the plaintiff is ignorant of the fact and does not
    have an equal opportunity to discover the truth; (3) the
    defendant intends to induce the plaintiff to take some
    action by concealing or failing to disclose the fact; and
    (4) the plaintiff suffers injury as a result of acting
    without knowledge of the undisclosed fact.
    Holland v. Thompson, 
    338 S.W.3d 586
    , 597 (Tex. App.—El Paso 2010, pet.
    denied).
    Jeffrey first contends that he did not have a duty to disclose Electrical’s
    payroll tax liability before the execution of the agreement. But such a duty
    arises when a fiduciary relationship exists between parties. 
    Holland, 338 S.W.3d at 598
    . Jeffrey concedes that he was an officer and Vice President at
    Electrical. As an officer, he owed a fiduciary duty to the company. See Lifshutz
    v. Lifshutz, 
    199 S.W.3d 9
    , 18 (Tex. App.—San Antonio 2006, pet. denied)
    (“Corporate officers owe fiduciary duties to the corporations they serve.”). He
    therefore had a duty to disclose 2 the unpaid payroll tax liability to Electrical,
    which was owned by Shirley and Roger.
    Jeffrey next argues that there was no evidence that he knew about the
    unpaid payroll taxes before the sale. During that time, Jeffrey was managing
    Electrical and controlling its operations. He hired Roy Johnson to serve as
    Electrical’s CFO.      In April or May 2008, CPA Arthur—whom Jeffrey and
    Johnson hired to review and audit Electrical’s financial records—discovered
    2 Jeffrey also maintains that his company, Services, should not be held accountable
    because it did not owe Shirley, Roger, or Electrical a fiduciary duty. But agency principles
    indicate otherwise. Elliot v. Tilton, 
    89 F.3d 260
    , 264 (5th Cir. 1996). In any event, we do not
    need to decide this question as Jeffrey’s conduct alone would support the rescission remedy
    that is all we find appropriate.
    7
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    that the company had likely not paid its payroll taxes. When asked whether
    he had talked to Jeffrey and Johnson about his discovery, Arthur testified “I
    had verbally talked to them a couple of times, and I think there was probably
    an e-mail where I listed the amount.” It turns out the email sent before the
    sale that lists the amount was not sent to Jeffrey (one sent after the sale was),
    but that does not necessarily undermine Arthur’s testimony that he also twice
    discussed the problem (as opposed to the exact amount) with Jeffrey. Indeed,
    the direct testimony of a single witness, and Arthur was a key one, is enough
    to prove a fact if the factfinder finds the testimony credible. See H & H, LLC
    v. CWI-White Oaks Landfill, LLC, 212 F. App’x 309, 311 (5th Cir. 2007); FIFTH
    CIRCUIT PATTERN JURY INSTRUCTIONS (CIVIL) § 3.4 (2014); cf. United States v.
    Bowen, 
    818 F.3d 179
    , 186 (5th Cir. 2016) (recognizing that, even in criminal
    cases which have a much higher burden of proof, the testimony of a single,
    uncorroborated coconspirator who may receive a benefit from cooperation is
    enough to support a verdict unless that testimony is deemed “incredible”).
    Additional evidence corroborates Arthur’s testimony that he told Jeffrey
    about the tax problem. Jeffrey knew the quarterly payroll tax returns had not
    been filed. Recall that when his mother heard about the failure to file, he told
    her he was taking care of it. A failure to file does not necessarily mean that
    the payroll taxes had not been forwarded to the IRS—as with income taxes,
    the returns determine the final liability and settle up the account by either
    requiring an additional payment to the IRS or giving the taxpayer a refund—
    but one inference to be drawn from it is that there is also a problem with the
    payments themselves. In other words, although a failure to file the returns
    could just be an oversight, it could also be an indication that the company owed
    money and did not want to pay it as the return requires “settling up” and
    paying any outstanding amount. See IRS Form 941, Line 14 (“Balance due”)
    & attached Form 941-V (Payment Voucher). The district court was entitled to
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    draw the latter conclusion, which also happens to be supported by what ended
    up being the case: the company had failed to forward hundreds of thousands
    in payroll taxes taken from employees checks during 2007 and stopped
    forwarding any funds during 2008.
    Further supporting this view is that the notice that returns had not been
    filed led Arthur to ask Jeffrey for a power of attorney to obtain prior returns so
    he could determine “all of 2007 tax deposits received by the IRS.” This letter
    indicates Jeffrey knew not just about the failure to file, but also that there was
    a problem with the money being forwarded to the IRS. If they believed that all
    2007 tax deposits had been made, why ask the IRS for that payment
    information? It also would make little sense for Arthur to ask Jeffrey for that
    power of attorney to help determine outstanding 2007 liability, but then hide
    from Jeffrey what Arthur already knew—that the company had not paid what
    it owed during 2008 and likely had also not paid everything due for 2007—or
    the results of the request Jeffrey authorized. Finally, an email can be read as
    an instruction from Johnson to Arthur not to disclose the payroll tax liability
    to Shirley prior to the sale. Who would benefit from keeping that information
    from Shirley?    Johnson had no apparent personal incentive to keep the
    information under wraps. But the person who hired him, Jeffrey, did. Not
    forwarding the payroll taxes made Electrical’s balance sheet look much better
    than it actually was, which helped in securing the financing Jeffrey needed to
    purchase the assets. A factfinder could thus conclude that someone higher up
    than Johnson was “in the know” and that person was Jeffrey in light of the
    evidence discussed and Shirley being kept in the dark.
    There is a final piece of evidence that supports this view. Johnson sent
    Arthur, Reed, and Jeffrey an email after the sale in early September stating
    “We need to really talk about how to handle [the tax owed] from a financial
    reporting perspective regarding the Wells Fargo.” Even though that email was
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    sent after the sale, its matter-of-fact discussion of the $1 million owed and
    Jeffrey’s inclusion on the distribution list supports the view that this same
    group knew about the tax liability before the sale happened. There is nothing
    in the email, or any response to it, suggesting that the tax liability was being
    revealed to Jeffrey for the first time. We therefore conclude that even if a
    factfinder could have come out either way on this question, there was sufficient
    direct and circumstantial evidence of Jeffrey’s knowledge to support the
    district court’s finding.
    Much of the evidence we have just pointed to also overcomes Jeffrey’s
    objection to the district court’s conclusion that Shirley did not have an equal
    opportunity to learn of the nonpayment. First and foremost, three days before
    the sale, Johnson directed Arthur not to tell Shirley about the tax problem “for
    now.” Reed also never advised Shirley of the payroll liability during any of
    their weekly phone calls. That concealment would only be effective if Shirley
    did not have easy access to records revealing the problem. That Arthur sought
    Jeffrey’s signature for the power of attorney also supports the testimony that
    he rather than Shirley was running the business at this time. And although
    Arthur asked Jeffrey to talk to his mother about the returns, he did not contact
    her. Instead, when she received an IRS notice that a return had not been filed,
    she immediately inquired with Jeffrey who told her that “everything was
    okay.” In addition, the bank statements that revealed nonpayment of the
    payroll taxes were being sent to Channelview, not Arkansas where Shirley was
    during this time. The trial court did not clearly err when it found that Shirley
    did not have an equal opportunity to discover Electrical’s outstanding payroll
    tax liability.
    The final challenge to the liability ruling is Jeffrey’s argument that his
    parents could not allege fraud when they themselves had unclean hands. The
    unclean hands argument relates to the parents’ increasing Electrical’s line of
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    credit by about half a million dollars days before the sales agreement closed (a
    liability that did transfer to Services). But that transfer of funds was at issue
    in a separate lawsuit between these parties in Arkansas state court. That case
    settled.   As part of the settlement, the parties agreed to dismiss most of
    Jeffrey’s claims—breach of contract, fraud, and negligent misrepresentation—
    against his mother in this case. As Jeffrey achieved a settlement in the other
    lawsuit based on these same allegations arising out of the increased line of
    credit, it would be double dipping to use the same conduct as a defense in this
    case. The trial court thus did not abuse its discretion in ignoring this already
    resolved issue. See In re RONFIN Series C Bonds Sec. Interest Litigation, 
    182 F.3d 366
    , 370–71 (5th Cir. 1999).
    We find no error in the district court’s determination that Jeffrey
    fraudulently induced the sale.
    IV.
    An important question remains: what is the consequence of Jeffrey’s
    fraudulent inducement of the sale? In asserting the defense as a ground for
    summary judgment, the parents argued that a finding of fraudulent
    inducement would render the contract unenforceable. Bailey, 584 F. App’x at
    221. That would mean unwinding the sale, in which case Electrical and the
    parents would get back the assets they were tricked into selling under false
    pretenses (they would have to give Jeffrey back the money he paid for those
    assets). It would also mean they still owe the unpaid 2007 and 2008 payroll
    taxes as that was their obligation in the presale state of things.
    The district court did not order that remedy. Instead, it kept the sale in
    place—Jeffrey still had the assets, his parents still had the money he paid—
    but declared that Jeffrey and Services were responsible for Electrical’s unpaid
    payroll tax liability. That effectively reforms the contract, which the previous
    panel held did not transfer the tax liability to Jeffrey. Reformation is not a
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    remedy for fraudulent inducement. 3 27 WILLISTON ON CONTRACTS § 69:55 (4th
    ed.) (“[I]f the contract agreed upon is embodied in the writing, the fact that the
    agreement was induced by fraud is not ground for reformation.”). As a result,
    a judge does not have the power to make a contract to which the parties did
    not agree. Cherokee Water Co. v. Forderhause, 
    741 S.W.2d 377
    , 379 (Tex.
    1987); Fawcett, Ltd. v. Idaho N. & Pac. R.R. Co., 
    293 S.W.3d 240
    , 251 (Tex.
    App.—Eastland 2009, pet. denied) (“Equity cannot be invoked to create a
    contract that the court considers should have been made but was not.”
    (citations omitted)); see also Dan B. Dobbs, HANDBOOK ON THE LAW OF
    REMEDIES: DAMAGES-EQUITY-RESTITUTION § 9.5, 618 (1993). A judge, or the
    parties for that matter, do not know what the effect of the withheld information
    would have been on the deal.
    So rather than imposing on the parties never-agreed-on terms, the
    remedies for fraudulent inducement are either rescission of the contract or
    affirming the contract and recovering for damages flowing from the fraud.
    Dallas Farm Machinery Co. v. Reaves, 
    307 S.W.2d 233
    , 238–39 (Tex. 1957); see
    also Fortune Prod. Co. v. Conoco, Inc., 
    52 S.W.3d 671
    , 676–77 (Tex. 2000).
    Electrical and the parents only asserted fraudulent inducement as a defense,
    never as a claim for affirmative relief, making rescission their only option.
    Indeed, that was the sole basis for our earlier remand: evaluation of the
    parents’ argument that “the Agreement was unenforceable because Jeffrey
    Bailey induced it through fraud.” Bailey, 584 F. App’x at 220, 222. With that
    3 Texas does allow reformation when there is a unilateral mistake coupled with
    fraudulent inducement or other inequitable conduct. Conn v. Hagan, 
    55 S.W. 323
    , 325 (Tex.
    1900); Liu v. Yang, 
    69 S.W.3d 225
    , 228–29 (Tex. App.—Corpus Christi 2001, no pet.); 4
    William V. Dorsaneo, TEXAS LITIG. GUIDE, § 53.02(2)(b) (2017). But as those cases recognize,
    fraudulent inducement does not automatically result in a mistake. Moreover, neither
    Electrical nor the parents asserted unilateral mistake or sought reformation. As our prior
    decision noted, they asserted fraudulent inducement only as a basis for rendering the
    contract unenforceable.
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    fraud now proven, we remand again for the limited purpose of allowing
    Electrical and the parents to elect whether to rescind the contract. All the
    remand should entail is Shirley and Roger’s electing whether to rescind the
    contract based on the fraud. If they elect to do so, they get the assets back but
    return the sales proceeds. 4 If they do not elect rescission, the sale and contract
    remain in force. Either way the payroll taxes are their obligation.
    ***
    We AFFIRM in part and VACATE in part the judgment of the district
    court and REMAND for further proceedings limited to entry of a judgment
    consistent with the election made on remand.
    4If the parents elect rescission, putting the parties back in their presale position
    would require that Jeffrey return the assets in the unencumbered status in which he received
    them. To the extent he is not able to do that, the district court would be able to consider
    other equitable relief that would return the parties to their presale position.
    13