Allseas USA, Inc. v. Ps Fabricators, L.L.C. F/K/A Ps Fabricators & Constructors, L.L.C. ( 2012 )


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  •                              NUMBER 13-11-00186-CV
    COURT OF APPEALS
    THIRTEENTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS
    CORPUS CHRISTI - EDINBURG
    ALLSEAS USA, INC.,                                                                 Appellant,
    v.
    PS FABRICATORS, L.L.C. F/K/A PS
    FABRICATORS & CONSTRUCTORS, L.L.C.,                                                Appellee.
    On appeal from the 269th District Court
    of Harris County, Texas.
    MEMORANDUM OPINION1
    Before Justices Rodriguez, Garza, and Benavides
    Memorandum Opinion by Justice Rodriguez
    1
    This case is before the Court on transfer from the Fourteenth Court of Appeals in Houston
    pursuant to an order issued by the Supreme Court of Texas. See TEX. GOV'T CODE ANN. § 73.001 (West
    2005).
    In this breach of contract case involving the construction and testing of underwater
    oil and gas pipeline equipment, appellant Allseas USA, Inc. challenges the jury's verdict in
    favor of appellee PS Fabricators, L.L.C. f/k/a PS Fabricators & Constructors, L.L.C.
    (PSF). By three issues, Allseas argues that: (1) the evidence was factually insufficient
    to support the jury's apparent finding that Allseas did not pay approximately $190,000 in
    factory acceptance testing charges to PSF; (2) the evidence was factually insufficient to
    support the total amount of damages awarded in light of PSF's failure to provide adequate
    documentation of its charges under the contract; and (3) the trial court abused its
    discretion in denying Allseas's motion for new trial based on newly discovered evidence.
    In the event the Court sustains its factual sufficiency challenges, Allseas requests that we
    suggest remittitur of the jury's damages and attorney's fees awards and, in the alternative,
    remand for a new trial. We affirm.
    I. Factual Background
    Allseas is in the business of constructing underwater oil and gas pipelines. PSF is
    a contractor that fabricates the structures that are used in the construction of underwater
    pipelines. In August 2006, Allseas contracted with PSF to build a series of structures
    that would be used in Allseas's construction of an underwater pipeline in the Gulf of
    Mexico for Discovery Producer Services, LLC. 2                     Allseas and PSF's contractual
    relationship was governed by a Master Services Agreement (MSA).
    At the end of September 2006, a work order was issued, pursuant to the MSA, for
    the fabrication of two of the structures—in-line sleds, or ILSs, that were to be installed at
    2
    Discovery Producer Services, LLC was not a party to the underlying lawsuit or this appeal.
    2
    designated points along the pipeline to allow future pipelines to connect to the existing
    pipeline through a prefabricated valve. At the end of October 2006, the parties executed
    a variation order, pursuant to the MSA, that governed the fabrication of a third
    structure—a pipeline end sled, or PLES, which would be installed to connect the pipeline
    to Discovery's floating production facility.
    There were three phases in the fabrication projects. First, PSF fabricated the
    structures.    Second, PSF would run the structures through factory acceptance
    testing—or FAT—to ensure that the structures performed as designed. Third, PSF
    would run the structures through system integration testing—or SIT—in which PSF woud
    attempt to duplicate the seafloor conditions on which the structures would be resting and
    ensure that the structures, as fabricated, would be able to be installed and function under
    those conditions.
    Under the work and variation orders, which, pursuant to the MSA, set the price
    schedules, the fabrication work for each structure was to be billed at a set price, and both
    FAT and SIT were to be billed at cost plus five percent (also known as cost-plus charges).
    Under the MSA, any invoice containing charges based on costs associated with a rate
    sheet must be submitted with "appropriate documentation." FAT and SIT were charges
    based on rate sheet costs, and therefore, the MSA required that any invoice including
    FAT and SIT costs be supported by appropriate documentation.
    PSF began working on the contract in September 2006, with fabrication and then
    testing continuing through February 2007.          Throughout this time period, PSF sent
    Allseas periodic invoices for the work performed. Allseas paid the invoices through
    3
    March 2007 but, at that point, began having questions about the testing charges. 3 PSF
    revised the questioned invoices and provided Allseas documentation supporting the FAT
    and SIT cost-plus charges, but ultimately, Allseas was unsatisfied with the documentation
    PSF provided and refused to make further payments on the invoices.
    The final total amount of SIT charges invoiced by PSF was $1,655,053.81; the final
    total amount of FAT charges invoiced by PSF was $210,924.71. It is undisputed that
    Allseas paid $768,795.62 in SIT charges; it remains disputed by the parties whether
    Allseas made any payments for the FAT charges.
    II. Procedural Background
    In May 2008, PSF filed suit against Allseas, alleging that Allseas breached the
    MSA and associated work orders by failing to pay the invoiced SIT and FAT charges in
    full. 4       PSF prayed for $886,258.19 in damages for the unpaid SIT charges and
    $210,924.71 in damages for the unpaid FAT charges. Allseas answered, asserting as
    an affirmative defense that PSF's invoices did not comply with the parties' agreement as
    they were not accompanied by the required documentation. Allseas also asserted three
    counterclaims:        breach of contract, alleging that PSF's failure to provide adequate
    documentation to support its invoices resulted in overpayment by Allseas; fraud, alleging
    that PSF charged Allseas for costs PSF knew were false; and a request for various
    declarations regarding the terms of the contract between the parties.
    PSF's breach of contract claim and Allseas's breach of contract and fraud
    3
    The fixed costs for fabrication of the ILSs and PLES, and Allseas's payment of those fixed costs,
    are not at issue in this case.
    4
    PSF also alleged claims under the Theft Liability Act and for quantum meruit and unjust
    enrichment.
    4
    counterclaims were tried to a jury August 2-6, 2010. After the close of evidence, the jury
    was asked, in relevant part: (1) whether Allseas failed to comply with its agreement with
    PSF, to which the jury answered "yes"; (2) whether Allseas's failure to comply was
    excused, to which the jury answered "no"; (3) what sum of money would compensate PSF
    for Allseas's failure to comply, to which the jury answered $316,509 for "SIT-related
    services" and $88,000 for "FAT-related services"; (4) whether PSF failed to comply with
    its agreement with Allseas, to which the jury answered "no"; (5) whether PSF committed
    fraud against Allseas, to which the jury answered "no"; and (6) what a reasonable fee for
    PSF's attorneys would be, to which the jury answered $254,305. The trial court entered
    judgment on the jury's verdict, awarding PSF a total of $404,509 in damages, $254,305 in
    attorney's fees, and prejudgment interest. Allseas filed a motion for new trial, which was
    denied by the trial court. This appeal followed.
    III. Evidence of Damages
    By two issues, Allseas argues that the evidence was factually insufficient to
    support the FAT and SIT damages awarded by the jury. 5 Allseas urges us to suggest
    remittitur of the amounts awarded by the jury or, in the alternative, remand for a new trial.
    See TEX. R. APP. P. 46.3.
    A. Factual Sufficiency and Remittitur of Damages
    Where there is insufficient evidence to support the full amount of damages
    awarded but sufficient evidence to support a lesser award, the court of appeals may
    suggest a remittitur. Bechtel Corp. v. CITGO Products Pipeline Co., 
    271 S.W.3d 898
    ,
    5
    Allseas does not challenge the jury's liability findings.
    5
    922 (Tex. App.—Austin 2008, no pet.); see TEX. R. APP. P. 46.3. The party prevailing in
    the trial court should be given the option of accepting the remittitur or having the case
    remanded for a new trial. Bechtel 
    Corp., 271 S.W.3d at 922
    .
    "Factual sufficiency is the sole remittitur standard for actual damages." Pope v.
    Moore, 
    711 S.W.2d 622
    , 624 (Tex. 1986).          In determining whether damages are
    excessive, we use the same test as for any factual insufficiency question. 
    Id. Under a
    factual sufficiency review, we "examine all the evidence in the record to determine
    whether sufficient evidence supports the damage award, remitting only if some portion is
    so factually insufficient or so against the great weight and preponderance of the evidence
    as to be manifestly unjust." 
    Id. Generally, the
    amount of damages awarded is a matter
    uniquely within the jury's discretion. McGalliard v. Kuhlmann, 
    722 S.W.2d 694
    , 697
    (Tex. 1986); Mo. Pac. R.R. Co. v. Roberson, 
    25 S.W.3d 251
    , 257 (Tex. App.—Beaumont
    2000, no pet.). "[I]t is only when [a jury's] award of damages is 'flagrantly outrageous,
    extravagant, and so excessive as to shock the judicial conscience,' that it may be
    disturbed." Mo. Pac. R.R. 
    Co., 25 S.W.3d at 257-58
    (quoting Am. Bank of Waco v. Waco
    Airmotive, Inc., 
    818 S.W.2d 163
    , 175 (Tex. App.—Waco 1991, writ denied)).
    B. Supporting Documentation for SIT and FAT Costs
    We first address Allseas's second issue, in which it argues that PSF failed to meet
    its burden under the contract to provide supporting documentation for its invoiced SIT and
    FAT costs. Allseas argues that its expert evidence went largely uncontested by PSF and
    that the jury's SIT and FAT damages awards, based on PSF's inadequate documentation,
    were therefore so against the great weight and preponderance of the evidence as to be
    6
    manifestly unjust.
    1. The Evidence
    At trial, PSF offered the testimony of three witnesses with regard to the costs and
    billing involved with the Allseas project.   Steven Collins testified that he worked in
    accounting and bookkeeping for PSF; he created the payroll, billing, and invoices.
    Collins described PSF's time clock system, stating that employees were to punch in and
    out when they began and ended work on a particular project. This allowed PSF to keep
    track of labor costs on each of the several projects they were working on at the same time.
    Gloria Bray, who was employed by PSF as vice-president of operations, sales, and
    marketing, testified that she oversaw "the administration of basically everything that went
    on in the company, project managers, more or less reported to me as well as the
    administrative side, the purchasing side, the financial side, the sales side and then up to
    fabrication." Bray testified that at some point during the Allseas project, she began
    keeping spreadsheets to document the labor and equipment costs PSF was incurring.
    She began keeping the spreadsheets because the "time clock plus system" that
    employees were supposed to use "did not go over so well" and was not consistently and
    correctly used by employees, so she felt she needed an additional method to document
    PSF's costs on the project. Bray testified that the data she entered in her spreadsheets
    was based on time sheets generated from the time clock system, interviews with
    employees in the yard about their hours and equipment use, and daily job reports
    generated by supervisors. Bray testified that when Allseas began to dispute the invoiced
    SIT and FAT costs, she sent Allseas her spreadsheets as documentation for the costs.
    7
    Finally, Bray testified to the amounts PSF believed it was still owed by Allseas for SIT and
    FAT costs. Bray testified that the total amount of SIT costs incurred was approximately
    $1.65 million. She conceded that Allseas had paid $768,795.62 toward the SIT charges,
    so PSF was seeking the balance due of $880,257.19. Bray then testified that the total
    amount of FAT costs incurred were $210,924.71. Bray testified that Allseas had made
    no payments toward FAT, and therefore, PSF was seeking that entire amount.
    Finally, Cecil Randall Porter, the owner of PSF, testified generally about project
    conditions that affected the amount billed for FAT and SIT costs. Porter testified that the
    testing costs on the Allseas project were higher than projected because Allseas caused
    lengthy delays during the project. Porter testified that PSF "ramped up" for the Allseas
    project—including hiring hard-to-find welders and engineers, preparing the yard to store
    equipment, and beginning to grade the yard for testing—and, then, when Allseas failed to
    deliver certain equipment it was required to provide under the contract, PSF was left in a
    holding pattern, incurring costs during the delay.
    In its case-in-chief, Allseas presented the testimony of two expert witnesses whom
    Allseas engaged to analyze the documentation provided by PSF to justify its invoiced
    testing costs. 6       First, Allseas presented Michelle Delehanty, who worked in the
    construction and real estate advisory services division at Ernst and Young. Allseas
    presented Delehanty as an expert on cost-plus contracts. Allseas hired Ernst and Young
    after PSF filed suit to review the invoices and documentation provided by PSF and
    determine whether the documentation provided justified the amounts invoiced. Ernst
    6
    PSF did not challenge either expert's qualifications.
    8
    and Young sent Delehanty to PSF's offices to perform the audit. Delehanty testified that
    she worked with Bray to obtain supporting documentation for the SIT and FAT labor and
    equipment costs invoiced by PSF. Delehanty was provided with Bray's spreadsheet that
    logged labor and equipment hours. With regard to the labor costs, Delehanty was
    provided with backup documentation, including daily job reports, which were hand-written
    logs of the hours employees worked on specified projects, and QuickBooks payroll
    records. Later in the litigation, Delehanty was also provided with time sheets that she
    also included in her analysis. Delehanty then compared the entries on the spreadsheet
    with the backup documentation and gave PSF credit for any labor costs that were justified
    by the documentation.
    With regard to the equipment costs, Delehanty testified that she was never
    provided with backup documentation for costs documented in Bray's spreadsheets. To
    analyze the equipment costs logged by Bray in her spreadsheet, Delehanty testified that
    she used the daily job reports provided by Bray and work progress reports prepared by
    Moody International, a company Allseas hired to monitor the fabrication and testing work
    at PSF's yard. Delehanty compared the activities reflected in those reports with the
    equipment use logged in the spreadsheets to determine if the equipment was being used
    at the time indicated.
    After completing her audit, Delehanty concluded that $977,912 of the
    approximately $1.9 million sought by PSF (SIT plus FAT costs) was questionable or
    unsupported by the backup documentation. This left approximately $882,000 as the
    amount of SIT and FAT appropriately documented by PSF.
    9
    Next, Allseas called Gregon Gant, a marine insurance loss adjuster, whom Allseas
    presented as an expert in cost-plus contracts for marine and offshore equipment. Gant
    reviewed, as supporting documentation for SIT and FAT costs, the Moody inspector's
    reports and reports by an inspector that Discovery kept onsite at PSF.            Gant also
    reviewed drawings, cost estimates, procedure outlines, and change orders, all provided
    by Allseas, Discovery, and PSF. Using these documents, Gant arrived at what he
    believed were reasonable prices for PSF's testing work:           $801,322.41 for SIT and
    $41,972.38 for FAT. Gant attributed the greater amount invoiced by PSF mainly to
    billing irregularities in PSF's labor cost calculations and excessive facility charges.
    On cross-examination, both expert witnesses admitted that certain reports on
    which their analyses were based may not have given a complete picture of the work done
    by PSF. Specifically, Gant acknowledged that Discovery's site representative, whose
    reports he used as part of his analysis, was not at PSF's yard every day. Also, both
    experts acknowledged that the Moody inspector was not at PSF's yard every day. As a
    result, both experts conceded that their conclusions, based partly on these reports, could
    be faulty.
    Finally, we note that the jury was presented with the following documentary
    evidence, available as exhibits admitted by both parties: the MSA; the ILS and PLES
    work orders, which included the labor and equipment rate sheets; PSF's invoices to
    Allseas; all of Bray's spreadsheets; the daily job reports used by both Delehanty and
    Gant; invoices from PSF's third-party vendors; computerized time records; and daily
    safety meeting checklists, including employees in attendance.
    10
    2. Analysis
    The crux of Allseas's argument is that its expert testimony—showing that a
    majority of the testing costs invoiced by PSF were questionable or unsupported by the
    documentation provided by PSF—was never countered by PSF. Allseas argues that the
    jury's damages verdict exceeded the amount justified by the only credible evidence at trial
    and was therefore against the great weight and preponderance of the evidence. We
    disagree.
    While we agree with Allseas that the testimony of Delehanty and Gant was strong
    evidence that PSF's documentation may have been imperfect, there was other evidence
    before the jury of PSF's attempts to document its invoiced testing charges. Allseas's
    primary complaint regarding the documentation was that Bray's spreadsheets, PSF's first
    attempt to document its charges, were inadequate because they were merely numbers
    typed into an Excel spreadsheet without any backup paperwork.            But at trial, Bray
    explained that the numbers she typed into the spreadsheet, representing labor hours and
    equipment use, were based on daily job logs kept by supervisors in the yard and her own
    interviews with employees working in the yard. In addition to Bray's testimony, the jury
    had before it hundreds of pages of exhibits, including the contracts and labor and
    equipment rate sheets, all of Bray's spreadsheets, the daily job logs, computerized time
    records, invoices from third-party equipment vendors, and attendance information for
    daily safety meetings. Cecil Porter also testified about project conditions that potentially
    inflated the testing costs, namely delays by Allseas in providing equipment that forced
    PSF to incur excessive labor and preparation costs. Finally, the basis of both Delehanty
    11
    and Gant's expert opinions was called into question during cross-examination.
    In short, there was ample evidence at trial in addition to Delehanty and Gant's
    testimony from which the jury could have calculated the damages award.              As is its
    prerogative, the jury was free to disregard the expert testimony and, instead, give PSF
    credit for the testing costs it found to be adequately documented in the weighty volume of
    exhibits admitted at trial. See 
    McGalliard, 722 S.W.2d at 697
    ("It has long been the rule
    of this State that opinion testimony does not establish any material fact as a matter of law.
    Further, the judgments and inferences of experts or skilled witnesses, even when
    uncontroverted, are not conclusive on the jury or trier of fact, unless the subject is one for
    experts or skilled witnesses alone . . . ." (internal citations omitted)). In fact, we believe
    that the jury's damages verdict—which, at $403,509, was $686,491 less than the nearly
    $1.1 million PSF asked for—demonstrates that the jury engaged in a thoughtful and
    deliberate analysis of all of the evidence, likely including the expert testimony of
    Delehanty and Gant.       Clearly, the jury bought neither party's argument wholesale,
    instead parsing through the available evidence and delivering a measured verdict. In
    other words, we disagree with Allseas's apparent contention that the jury must have
    entirely disregarded the expert testimony; if it had, its damages award would surely have
    been higher.
    In the end, we are especially mindful of the principle that juries have considerable
    latitude in determining the amount of damages. See 
    id. And having
    reviewed the entire
    record, we cannot conclude that the jury's damages award in this case was flagrantly
    outrageous, extravagant, and so excessive as to shock the judicial conscience, and as
    12
    such, we will not disturb it. See Mo. Pac. R.R. 
    Co., 25 S.W.3d at 257-58
    . We conclude
    that the jury's damages verdict was supported by factually sufficient evidence. See
    
    Pope, 711 S.W.2d at 624
    . Allseas's second issue is overruled.
    C. Pre-Payment of FAT Costs
    By its first issue, Allseas argues that the jury's apparent conclusion that Allseas
    made no payment toward FAT costs was supported by factually insufficient evidence. At
    trial, PSF asked the jury for $210,924.19 as damages for unpaid FAT costs; the jury
    awarded $88,000 as FAT damages.                    Allseas argues that the testimony and
    accompanying documentary evidence at trial clearly shows that it pre-paid approximately
    $190,000 for FAT costs. For this reason, Allseas argues that the jury's $88,000 award
    was excessive.
    Allseas points to a series of emails between its project manager, Douglas Gorman,
    and PSF's project manager during the last part of 2006, Douglas Gleason. In the emails,
    Gorman and Gleason agreed on an estimated budget for FAT that would be included in
    the milestone payments Allseas was making on the project.7 According to the emails
    and Gorman and Gleason's testimony at trial, the estimated FAT budget for the ILSs
    would be $130,000, and the estimated FAT budget for the PLES would be $60,000. In
    the emails, the two men discussed that the estimated FAT budgets were "already being
    addressed" in the invoices for the ILSs and PLES.
    Allseas next points us to a series of documents admitted as exhibits. First, the
    work order governing the PLES fabrication included a total price of $435,041. The fixed
    7
    For both the ILS and PLES parts of the project, Allseas made payments in three thirty-percent
    installments and one final ten-percent installment.
    13
    price for the fabrication work listed on the work order was $375,041. The difference
    between the price for the fabrication work and the total price was $60,000.          It is
    undisputed that Allseas paid all of the invoices for the PLES fabrication, totalling
    $435,041. Next, the work order governing the ILSs included a fixed price of $367,464 for
    the fabrication. Allseas then admitted PSF's first three milestone invoices for the ILSs,
    invoices of $148,789.20, representing ninety-percent of the ILS fabrication.          The
    remaining ten percent, $49,569.40, led to a total of $495,964 invoiced for the ILS
    fabrication. The difference between the fixed price for the ILS fabrication work and the
    total price was approximately $130,000. It is undisputed that Allseas paid a total of
    $495,964 for the ILS fabrication.
    Considering the emails and exhibits together, Allseas then argues that there was
    conclusive evidence that it already paid $190,000 toward FAT costs—i.e., the $60,000
    excess represented in the total price on the PLES work order, and the $130,000 excess
    represented in the ILES milestone invoices. Allseas argues that this was evidence the
    jury could not have reasonably ignored.
    Even assuming that the foregoing evidence conclusively proves that Allseas made
    payments of $190,000 in excess of the fixed fabrication costs, we disagree that the jury's
    verdict demonstrates that they ignored this evidence.      At trial, when questioned by
    Allseas's counsel regarding the amounts invoiced in excess of the fixed costs, Bray
    testified that any excess would have been applied against outstanding SIT charges and
    denied that Allseas had made any payments toward FAT. In light of this testimony, we
    disagree with Allseas's threshold premise that the jury's verdict demonstrates an implied
    14
    finding that Allseas failed to pay the $190,000. Instead, it is entirely possible that the jury
    did as Bray suggested and credited the $190,000 toward outstanding SIT costs and then
    separately determined the amount of FAT it believed to be due to PSF. To alter the FAT
    damage award based on the record before us, as Allseas urges, would be to speculate as
    to the mental processes of the jury in composing its damages awards, something we
    decline to do here where, as previously discussed, the evidence supports both the FAT
    and SIT awards made.             See Ponce v. Sandoval, 
    68 S.W.3d 799
    , 806 (Tex.
    App.—Amarillo 2001, no pet.) ("The mental processes by which a jury determines the
    amount of damages is ordinarily not cognizable by an appellate court.") (citing Thomas v.
    Oldham, 
    895 S.W.2d 352
    , 359-60 (Tex. 1995); First Nat'l Bank v. Zimmerman, 
    442 S.W.2d 674
    , 678 (Tex. 1969); Prati v. New Prime, Inc., 
    949 S.W.2d 552
    , 555 (Tex.
    App.—Amarillo 1997, writ denied)).
    In sum, having reviewed the entire record, we cannot conclude that the jury
    impliedly found that Allseas failed to make $190,000 in excess payments. And, as
    previously determined, we also cannot conclude that the evidence was factually
    insufficient to support the amount of FAT damages awarded by the jury. Allseas's first
    issue is overruled.8
    IV. Motion for New Trial
    By its third issue, Allseas argues that the trial court erred in denying its motion for
    new trial based on newly discovered evidence. See TEX. R. CIV. P. 324. Allseas moved
    for a new trial based on the discovery of David Porter, a witness who Allseas alleges
    8
    Having determined that the evidence was factually sufficient to support the amount of damages
    awarded by the jury, we decline to reach Allseas's remittitur request. See TEX. R. APP. P. 47.1.
    15
    came to light after trial and would have provided material testimony that would likely have
    changed the outcome of the trial.
    A party seeking a new trial on grounds of newly-discovered
    evidence must demonstrate to the trial court that (1) the evidence has
    come to its knowledge since the trial, (2) its failure to discover the evidence
    sooner was not due to lack of diligence, (3) the evidence is not cumulative,
    and (4) the evidence is so material it would probably produce a different
    result if a new trial were granted.
    Waffle House, Inc. v. Williams, 
    313 S.W.3d 796
    , 813 (Tex. 2010) (citing Jackson v. Van
    Winkle, 
    660 S.W.2d 807
    , 809 (Tex. 1983), overruled in part on other grounds by Moritz v.
    Preiss, 
    121 S.W.3d 715
    , 721 (Tex. 2003)).
    The granting or denying of a motion for new trial is a matter within the sound
    discretion of the trial court, and we will not disturb the trial court's decision absent a
    manifest abuse of that discretion. 
    Jackson, 660 S.W.2d at 809
    ; Cantu v. Butron, 
    921 S.W.2d 344
    , 353 (Tex. App.—Corpus Christi 1996, writ denied). Specifically,
    "[t]he inquiry [is] not whether, upon the evidence in the record, it apparently
    might have been proper to grant the application in the particular case, but
    whether the refusal of it has involved the violation of a clear legal right or a
    manifest abuse of judicial discretion." San Antonio Gas Co. v. Singleton,
    
    59 S.W. 920
    , 922 (Tex. Civ. App. 1900, writ ref'd). Every reasonable
    presumption will be made on review in favor of orders of the trial court
    refusing new trials. Hartford Accident and Indemnity Co. v. Gladney, 
    335 S.W.2d 792
    , 795 (Tex. Civ. App.—Waco 1960, writ ref'd n.r.e.).
    
    Jackson, 660 S.W.2d at 809
    -10.
    David Porter is the brother of PSF owner Cecil Porter. It is undisputed that David
    contacted the office of Allseas's counsel and left a message that he had information
    relevant to the case. The parties dispute the exact date that David made this contact.
    In an affidavit attached to Allseas's motion for new trial, counsel for Allseas averred that
    16
    the message was left with an associate in his office on Monday, August 2, 2010, the first
    day of trial. Allseas's counsel averred that he "was in trial all day August 2 through
    August 5, 2010, with the case going to the jury in the afternoon of August 5, 2010." He
    averred that he contacted David Porter "for the first time, via telephone . . . the evening
    [of] August 5, 2010." In the August 5 phone call, counsel "advised David Porter that the
    case was sent to the jury and there is nothing we can do at this time." Counsel averred
    that "[o]nce the jury returned its verdict," he "contacted David Porter a second time and
    thoroughly discussed the matter regarding the new evidence and had him sign an
    affidavit."
    In its response to Allseas's motion for new trial, PSF included affidavits by Cecil
    Porter and Andre De Hart, a PSF employee, in which they recounted a conversation
    between Cecil and counsel for Allseas on the first day of trial. Both Cecil and De Hart
    averred that Allseas's counsel approached Cecil after the first day of trial and stated that
    counsel spoke with David over the weekend and "he sure doesn't like you a lot." Cecil
    then responded to counsel, "I don't like him a lot either" and "you better be careful, he is a
    dangerous man and will turn on you too."9
    Evidence may be considered newly-discovered if discovered either after the
    conclusion of trial or so late in trial that it was impossible to present the evidence before
    trial closed. See 
    Cantu, 921 S.W.2d at 353
    ; see also In re Thoma, 
    873 S.W.2d 477
    , 512
    (Tex. Rev. Panel 1994, no appeal) (citing 
    Jackson, 660 S.W.2d at 809
    ). Here, even
    9
    Allseas argues in its brief that the affidavits of Cecil Porter and Andre De Hart are incompetent
    evidence as they were not properly sworn to and verified and relied entirely on hearsay. But having
    reviewed the appellate record before us, we find no objection to the trial court regarding the affidavits and,
    as such, will not address this argument for the first time on appeal. See TEX. R. APP. P. 33.1(a).
    17
    assuming that the first contact by David was made on Monday, August 2, 2010, as
    Allseas alleges—i.e., the first day of trial—we believe it was within the trial court's
    discretion in this case to determine that David Porter's testimony became available to
    Allseas early enough in trial that it was not impossible to present before trial closed. In its
    brief, Allseas suggests that because of the frenzied nature of a jury trial, it was a practical
    impossibility for counsel to incorporate David Porter's evidence once trial started.
    Although we are sympathetic to the harried circumstances faced by counsel during trial,
    whether the evidence was discovered too late was a factual determination best made by
    the trial court. And especially in light of the conflicting evidence regarding the timing of
    the discovery of David Porter, we will not disturb the trial court's determination in that
    regard.
    Moreover, even if the evidence could be considered newly discovered, it would not
    have been an abuse of discretion for the trial court to determine that Allseas did not act
    with diligence in failing to immediately investigate the nature and strength of David
    Porter's testimony. See Waffle 
    House, 313 S.W.3d at 813
    . With regard to its diligence,
    Allseas contends that David Porter's message was taken by an associate not involved
    with the trial and was not communicated to counsel trying the case until August 5, 2010.
    Allseas then suggests that because counsel was preoccupied with the on-going trial,
    counsel acted as soon as reasonably possible in waiting until the jury returned its verdict
    before investigating the potential evidence provided by David Porter. Again, we believe
    that whether Allseas acted with sufficient diligence was a factual matter best left to the
    trial court's discretion. Specifically, it would not have been unreasonable for the trial
    18
    court to conclude that the associate who took the message could have communicated it
    to counsel trying the case earlier than the last day of trial. See In re O'Connor, 
    92 S.W.3d 446
    , 449 (Tex. 2002) (orig. proceeding) (holding that an attorney's knowledge is
    imputed by law to every other attorney in the firm). And, regardless, there was evidence
    that counsel trying the case knew of David Porter as early as the first day of trial. The
    trial court could have reasonably concluded that counsel did not act diligently in failing to
    seek a continuance or otherwise attempting to incorporate David Porter's evidence before
    trying the entire case.
    In short, we cannot conclude that it was a manifest abuse of discretion for the trial
    court to deny Allseas's motion for new trial. There was evidence both that David Porter
    was not newly-discovered and that Allseas did not act with diligence in investigating the
    evidence once it came to light. Allseas's third issue is overruled.
    V. Conclusion
    We affirm the judgment of the trial court.
    NELDA V. RODRIGUEZ
    Justice
    Delivered and filed the 28th
    day of December, 2012.
    19