Valiant Effort, but no Secondary-Market Damages
February 22, 2023On a second appeal after an earlier remand from the Texas Supreme Court, the once-successful plaintiff in Credit Suisse AG v. Claymore Holdings LLC sought judgment for “an additional $25,235,910.61 for secondary market purchases in addition to the $40 million in damages for fraudulent inducement.” The Fifth Court noted:
- “[t]he jury was not asked to determine liability as to the secondary market purchases; therefore, the record contains no liability or causation finding” to support such damages;
- “Claymore did not object to the absence” of a question on those matters, and did not try to submit one either;
- in the trial court’s findings of fact and conclusions of law, on matters tried to the bench, “[t]here is not a separate section for fraudulent inducement of secondary market purchases”;
- The trial court’s conclusion of law that awarded such damages did not make “an implicit finding and conclusion” about liability and causation;
- The supreme court did not address this topic in its prior opinion, and because “[t]he jury made no liability finding on the secondary market purchases … there was nothing for Credit Suisse to appeal at that stage in the proceedings.”
No. 05-21-00649-CV (Feb. 14, 2023) (mem. op.).