Defendants Market Planners Insurance Agency Inc. (“Market Planners”) and Jimmy Whited appeal from a judgment against them for approximately $150,000 in unremitted insurance premiums plus interest. We affirm.
I
This Circuit has seen this case before, and our prior opinion sets forth the relevant facts.
See Colonial Penn Ins. Co. v. Market Planners Ins. Agency, Inc.,
On remand, the district court stated that “the question presented ... is whether Colonial first knew, or in the exercise of reasonable diligence should have known, of facts giving rise to a cause of action against Market Planners outside of the prescriptive period. The court finds that Colonial did not.”
Colonial Penn Ins. Co. v. Market Planners Ins. Agency Inc.,
II
Defendants argue that the district court on remand again has made erroneous factual findings and misinterpreted Texas law as to when the statute of limitations began to run. This issue requires us to examine two statute of limitations doctrines under Texas law: the discovery rule and fraudulent concealment.
The discovery rule provides a “very limited exception” to statutes of limitations.
Computer Associates International, Inc. v. Altai, Inc.,
A fiduciary relationship between parties sometimes makes the discovery rule applicable where it otherwise would not be. “[I]n the fiduciary context, it may be said that the nature of the injury is presumed to be inherently undiscoverable, although a person owed a fiduciary duty has some responsibility to ascertain when an injury occurs.”
Computer Assocs.,
In tandem with the discovery rule under Texas law is the doctrine of fraudulent cоncealment.
1
Fraudulent concealment tolls the statute of limitations until the claimant discovers or with reasonable diligence should have discovered the fraud.
See, e.g., L.C.L. Theatres, Inc. v. Columbia Pictures Indus., Inc.,
The district court in its ruling on rеmand harmonized the discovery rule, including its fiduciary relationship component, and the doctrine of fraudulent concealment. The court wrote:
[T]he court rejects Market Planners’ argument that Colonial, through the exercise of reasonable diligence, should have known of the facts giving rise to its cause of action prior to their actual discovery. As stated in the initial findings, the court grounds this ruling in the special agency relationship which existed between Colonial and Market Planners. This relationship of trust made it objectively reasonable for Colonial to rely on Market Planners’ representations until Colonial discovered evidence cоntrary to those representations. Colonial, by conducting the [internal] audit, exercised due diligence in discovering evidence of Market Planners’ wrongdoing.
*1036
Colonial Penn Ins. Co. v. Market Planners Ins. Agency, Inc.,
Though we have found that the district court properly applied the law to its findings, one question remains as to this point of error: whether the evidence could support the district court’s factual finding that Colonial Penn hаd no reason to know before November 1989 of the unremitted premiums. The evidence showed that Colonial Penn retrieved most policy files from AOO in 1986. Colonial Penn’s general counsel, Christine Baneherie, testified that only during the discovery process in Colonial Penn’s suit against AOO, filed in March 1987, did Colonial Penn receive the last information it needed in order to reconstruct premiums. Colonial Penn hired an independent agency, Control Risk Services, to work on the files; owing to the files’ disheveled state, Baneherie testified, CRS continued adjusting figures until May or June 1989. Colonial Penn further alleged that Market Planners refused to account for premiums it had collected. Finally, Colоnial Penn’s agency financial audit manager testified that Colonial Penn had .“the complete facts, the reconstructed policy premium from CRS and the receipt document” only just before it sent the November 1989 demand letter. From this evidence, it was not clear error for the district court to conclude that Colonial Pеnn neither knew nor should have known of the unremitted premiums before its November 1989 letter to Market Planners.
Accordingly, we affirm the district court’s ruling that the statute of limitations did not bar Colonial Penn’s action.
Ill
As a second point of error, defendant Jimmy Whited contends that no evidence presented at trial could support a judgment agаinst him individually. Whited apparently raises two separate contentions. First, he argues that none of the district court’s findings of fact could support a judgment against him individually. Second, he argues that to the extent any finding could support a judgment, that finding is clearly erroneous. 2
Appellee Colonial Penn argues that, because Whited raises the issue for the first time on appeal, this Court may review only for “plain error,” if at all, whether the evidence sufficed to support a judgment against Whited. We see no reason why Whited, following a bench trial,
3
cannot argue now for the first time that the court’s findings were clearly erroneous or that they cannot support the judgment. In
Gilbert v. Sterrett,
In actions tried upon the facts to a court, the court must state separately its factual findings and its legal conclusions. Fed.R.Civ.P. 52(a). Th'e findings and conclusions “must be sufficient in detail and exactness to indicate the factual basis for the ultimate conclusion reached by the court.”
Acme Boat Rentals, Inc. v. J. Ray McDermott & Co.,
The parties to this action stipulated that Whited served as president of Market Planners and thаt he participated in running the business, including selling Colonial Penn policies and collecting premiums. The district court could have imposed legal liability upon Whited under two theories: (1) that Market Planners constituted Whited’s alter ego, so' that fairness required piercing the corporate veil and holding Whited liable for Market Planners’ wrоngdoing,
see, e.g., Matthews Const. Co. v. Rosen,
On direct examination at trial, Colonial Penn’s general counsel testified that based on exhibits in evidence, including local recording agent licenses and agent appointment applications, she believed Whited was a local recording agent of Colonial Penn. On *1038 cross examination, however, she testified that Colonial Penn did not receive an appointment form naming Whited individually as an agent of Colonial Penn. Waited himself, on cross-examination, stated variously that he either was not Colonial Penn’s agent or was “probably their agent but not through a contractual agreement.” Although scarce, this evidence provides enough that we cannot say the district court was clearly erroneous to find that Jimmy Whited was an agent of Colonial Penn. 5
IV
Accordingly, the judgment of the district court against Market Planners Insurance Agency Inc. and against Jimmy Whited individually is AFFIRMED.
Notes
. The Texas Supreme Court has said that the discovery rule also applies in cases of fraudulent concealment.
See Murphy v. Campbell,
. Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 52(b) allows an appeal of the district court’s factual findings:
When findings of fact are made in actions tried without a jury, the sufficiency of the evidence supporting the findings may later be questioned whether or not in the district court the party raising the question objected to the findings, moved to amend them, or moved for partial findings.
. In a jury trial, of course, a party must make (and renew at the trial’s conclusion) a Rule 50(a) motion for judgment as a matter of law in order to preserve sufficiency of the evidencе for appellate review.
See, e.g., Polanco v. City of Austin,
. The district court could hardly have escaped the issue, given that, in the Consolidated Pretrial Order, the defendаnts specifically listed as a contested fact whether Whited was an agent of Colonial Penn.
. The court may also have been swayed by closing arguments, in which Colonial Penn referred to Texas Insurance Code Article 21.02 — which defines who are agents for purposes of the liabilities, duties, requirements, and penalties that Texas Insurance Code Chapter 21 imposes on agents — and argued that Whited offered no evidence to rebut his agency status.
