OPINION
Opinion by
W.R. Edwards, Jr. appeals the trial court’s judgment for appellees, Mid-Continent Office Distributors, L.P. and Inwood Office Furniture, Inc., following a bench trial on a claim for money had and received. For the reasons that follow, we affirm.
BACKGROUND
The trial testimony showed that Edwards was a member of an informal lending cartel. He met Matthews through a mutual cartel acquaintance and subsequently loaned him $10,000. Matthews repaid that loan on time. A few months later, Matthews approached Edwards seeking another loan. He told Edwards that his company, MAC Group, L.L.C. (collectively Matthews or MAC), a furniture broker, needed to borrow money in connection with three of its customer orders. He explained that three customers placed furniture orders with MAC, each gave MAC a fifty percent deposit, but his suppliers would not deliver the furniture until MAC paid them the full amount. Matthews proposed to sell the receivables for these customers to Edwards at a discounted value if Edwards would agree to pay off the suppliers so the furniture could be delivered. Together, Matthews and Edwards drafted a “Factoring Agreement” which reflected the terms of their agreement. It listed the three customers, with total payments owed to MAC of approximately $70,000.00; and seven suppliers to whom MAC owed a total of $62,052.93, including $28,272.22 to Mid-Continent, a furniture wholesaler, and $15,292.34 to In-wood, a furniture manufacturer.
At Matthews’ request, Edwards called Pat Henin, an operations manager at Mid-Continent, to verify the amount MAC owed. The telephone conversation lasted five minutes or less, and there is conflicting testimony about what was said. However, Edwards testified that Henin confirmed the balance MAC owed and that he understood her to say Mid-Continent was holding orders for these MAC customers until it received full payment.
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Based on this conversation, Edwards did not think he needed to call Inwood or the other suppliers to confirm that they were also holding orders for these MAC customers,
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Matthews wrote letters to the three MAC customers advising them that their accounts had been sold to Edwards and to forward their payments to Edwards. When Edwards did not receive their payments, he called them to find out why they had not paid him. The customers told him they never received the furniture. Edwards then called Matthews. Matthews admitted he deceived Edwards and told him the payments Edwards made to the vendors were for past-due balances on orders for other customers, not the customers whose receivables Edwards purchased.
Edwards sued Mid-Continent and In-wood for damages. 5 The parties waived a jury and tried the case to the court. Edwards contended that he paid the money to Mid-Continent and Inwood by mistake “based [on] a fraudulent representation of another party” and appellees owed him the money he had paid them. The trial court disagreed and entered a take-nothing judgment in favor of Mid-Continent and Inwood. It subsequently issued findings of fact and conclusions of law. In two issues on appeal, Edwards specifically challenges the legal and factual sufficiency of certain of the trial court’s findings of fact. He contends that he proved the claim for money had and received against appellees and the trial court erred by granting a take-nothing judgment against him.
Standard of Review
Appellant complains about the findings of fact issued by the court to support its judgment denying his claim for money had and received. However, a review of the findings of fact in this case does not end our inquiry. Instead, we review those findings in the context of whether they support the judgment denying him relief. Those reviews involve overlapping standards of review. 6
We review challenges to the sufficiency of the evidence to support findings of fact under the same standards for reviewing evidence to support a jury’s verdict.
Walker v. Cotter Prop., Inc.,
Consequently, we first determine whether the evidence is sufficient to support the challenged findings and then determine whether the trial court’s judgment — as a decision of a claim seeking equitable relief — is arbitrary, unreasonable, or unsupported by guiding rules and principles.
Edwards contends that he established each element of his claim for money had and received. As we noted, a cause of action for money had and received is equitable in nature.
Stonebridge Life Ins. Co.,
The courts describe this claim in general principles. For example, courts have stated that a claim for money had and received seeks to restore money where equity and good conscience require restitution,
see id.;
it is not premised on wrongdoing, but seeks to determine to which party, in equity, justice, and law, the money belongs,
Staats v. Miller,
Texas courts have allowed restitution for these types of claims in a variety of cases: by a defrauded party against the party who committed the fraud,
see Staats,
Conversely, some Texas courts have rejected a claim for restitution and held that money paid under a unilateral mistake of fact cannot be recovered.
See, e.g., Pacific Molasses Co. v. Graves,
In some cases, the trial court’s ruling was reversed because the intermediate court of appeals concluded that the trial court abused its discretion in affording equitable relief.
See, e.g., London v. London,
The common thread in these decisions is that they are all dependent upon a balancing of the equities in each unique case.
Discussion
In two issues, Edwards contends that he established each element of his claim for money had and received. The first issue addresses the evidence relating to Inwood, and the second issue addresses the evidence relating to Mid-Continent.
He first contends that the evidence is insufficient to support factual findings 17, 18, 19, and 23
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insofar as those findings state that Inwood shipped furniture orders
We have reviewed the record and agree with Edwards that the evidence is legally insufficient to show that Inwood shipped furniture orders to MAC after Inwood received Edwards’s check; that Inwood was deprived of other possible remedies by the delay in Edwards seeking a refund; and that Mid-Continent received product for the third order in July 2003, but would not ship the order until Matthews made payment in full. However, we disagree that the insufficient evidentiary support for these findings leads to the determination that there is no support for the trial court’s conclusion that Edwards did not meet his burden of proof.
First, Edwards does not cite, and we have not found, a case stating that a defendant must show detrimental reliance to defeat recovery. And the cases he cites do not apply in an action for money had and received, or are distinguishable.
See, e.g., Bryan,
Additionally, as the claimant, it was Edwards’s burden to prove that appellees held money which in equity and good conscience belonged to him. See id. Because the court concluded that he did not fulfill his burden, we must determine whether the court abused its discretion in making that decision.
It is undisputed that appellees held money. But the issue is whether Edwards also proved that the money, in equity and good conscience, belonged to him. To determine whether the court abused its discretion in deciding that he did not, we first determine whether there was sufficient evidence to support the unchallenged findings that explain the court’s reasoning and analysis. Then we determine, based on the evidence, whether the decision was arbitrary, unreasonable or unsupported by guiding rules and principles. We conclude that there was and it was not.
The undisputed evidence shows that MAC owed money to Mid-Continent and Inwood for furniture orders; Edwards knew MAC owed money to Mid-Continent and Inwood for furniture orders; Edwards agreed to purchase certain of MAC’s receivables even though he knew it was a high-risk transaction; Edwards confirmed the amount owed to Mid-Continent and issued a cashier’s check payable to Mid-Continent for that amount; Edwards did not confirm the amounts owed to Inwood or the other suppliers, but instead paid the suppliers the amounts listed in the agreement he had with MAC; Edwards did not request copies of invoices or orders to compare to MAC’s receivables; Edwards paid Inwood $15,292.22; the check to In-wood contained the notation that it was for “MAC Group Payment”; and Edwards advised Mid-Continent and Inwood to credit the payments to MAC’s accounts without specifying which invoices the payments were intended to cover. This evidence is legally and factually sufficient to support the trial court’s unchallenged findings of fact.
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And these unchallenged findings
Nevertheless, Edwards argues that the trial court erred by not balancing the equities in his favor for several reasons: Mid-Continent and Inwood engaged in business practices whereby they shipped merchandise to MAC before they knew whether or not MAC’s check was covered by sufficient funds; MAC had these unpaid account bal-anees with Mid-Continent and Inwood before Edwards sent his payments to them; requiring Mid-Continent and Inwood to refund Edwards’s money would put them in the position they were in before they received Edwards’s payments; the payments were not used for Edwards’s benefit; Mid-Continent and Inwood did not contact Edwards about how the payments should be applied; Edwards’s check to Inwood was not for the full amount of the account balance, as Inwood had been told it would be; and Edwards was deceived by Matthews. We conclude that, although these are some of several types of factors courts may consider in balancing the equities, they are not determinative of the outcome in this case.
We conclude that the trial court’s decision was not arbitrary, unreasonable or unsupported by guiding rules and principles and, as a result, the court did not abuse its discretion.
We affirm the trial court’s judgment.
Notes
. Henin testified that she would not know the names of MAC’s customers because furniture orders were typically shipped to an installer, not directly to the customer.
. Edwards also reviewed a copy of MAC's invoices to these customers, but Matthews did not provide, and Edwards did not ask to see, the orders MAC placed with Mid-Continent, Inwood, and the other furniture suppliers to compare to MAC's customer invoices. Matthews also provided a copy of "MAC Group’s Income History & Projections” from 2002
. The evidence shows that "908” is Mid-Continent’s customer number for MAC.
. Although the check to Inwood was twelve cents less than the amount listed in the agreement, Edwards testified that the check he wrote to Inwood corresponded to the same payable in the agreement.
. Edwards did not sue Matthews, MAC, or the other five suppliers. He sued both Inwood and Mid-Continent for money had and received. He also sued Mid-Continent for breach of contract, fraud, negligent misrepresentation and unjust enrichment. This appeal involves only the claim for money had and received.
.In cases involving overlapping standards of review, Texas courts have held that a reviewing court must first determine whether the trial court had sufficient information upon which to exercise its discretion and then whether the trial court erred in applying that discretion. See, e.g.,
Reese v. Duncan,
. In fact, many courts use the term “money had and received” interchangeably with other terms for similar claims.
See Friberg-Cooper Water Supply Corp. v. Elledge,
. These factual findings state:
17. On or about August 22, 2003, Edwards issued six other checks to Matthews's creditors:
No. 123 to Inwood Office Furniture for $15,292.22
No. 124 to HBF for $3,075.60
No. 125 to Shelby Williams for $2,659.43
No. 126 to Nienkamper ICF for $1,250.00
No. 127 to Bratrud Furniture for $4,143.40
No. 128 to Mai Space for $7,359.95
None of the foregoing checks were delivered with transmittal letters or letters of instruction.
18. The check Plaintiff sent to Inwood Office Furniture in the amount of $15,292.22, which was the amount (less 12 cents) owed by Hal Matthews d/b/a/the MAC Group for one of two invoices that Inwood shipped after receiving the payment.
19. Inwood Office Furniture was never paid for the second invoice shipped that date, in the amount of $1,960.92, and that amount was written off in December of 2003, so that Inwood remains unpaid for that invoice.
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23. Defendant Inwood manufactured and properly shipped by common carrier the one shipment of two invoices ordered by Hal Matthews d/b/a/ the MAC Group, and it was delivered by Nancy Baer Trucking and accepted.
. Edwards also cites cases from other jurisdictions and an unpublished 1980 Tyler court of appeals case.
See Pickett v. Republic Nat’l Bank of Dallas, Trustee,
No. 1303, 1980 Tex.App. LEXIS 3119 (Tex.App.-Tyler Feb. 28, 1980). The opinion in that case was withdrawn and a new opinion substituted at
Pickett v. Republic Nat’l Bank of Dallas, Trustee,
. This evidence supports the following unchallenged findings of fact:
9. The transaction between [Edwards] and Matthews was a high-risk transaction through which [Edwards] hoped to make a significant profit. Although the transaction was high-risk, [Edwards] neither requested copies of purchase orders that Matthews had submitted to any of his vendors nor did he compare any purchase orders with the accounts that he was purchasing from Matthews.
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13. On August 18, 2003, Matthews and [Edwards] entered into an agreement entitled "Factoring Agreement” whereby Matthews sold the Billingsley, Hance Scarborough, and Senior Management invoices to [Edwards] for the sum of $62,052.81. Matthews did not provide Edwards — nor did Edwards request— copies of Matthews’s purchase orders to or the invoices from Mid-Continent, In-wood Office Furniture, or other vendors. [Edwards] drafted and prepared the Factoring Agreement himself.
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15. On August 18, 2003, [Edwards] telephoned Mid-Continent’s office in Houston and spoke with Pat Henin to inquire whether certain furniture had been shipped. [Edwards] did not request copies of the purchase orders submitted by Matthews or the invoices Mid-Continent had submitted to Matthews to compare the items included in those documents with the accounts he was purchasing from Matthews. [Edwards] did not ask for any written verification or detail concerning the items remaining to be shipped, nor did he specifically ask Henin where the items were being shipped. Other than placing this one call, [Edwards] took no other steps to confirm or verify the accuracy of the accounts that he was purchasing from Matthews.
16. On August 18, 2003, [Edwards] caused a cashier’s check payable to "Mid Continent Furniture Distributors, Inc.” in the amount of $28,272.22 to be issued and delivered to Matthews....
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20.These were the only two invoices In-wood had with the MAC Group. [Edwards] paid Inwood Office Furniture in the amount of $15,292.22 representing that he was paying Inwood on Hal Matthews or the MAC Group’s behalf for the merchandise order placed by the MAC Group. The payment sent by [Edwards] stated on the face of the check that it was a "MAC Group Payment.” No cover letter or instructions were sent accompanying the check sent by [Edwards] to In-wood Office Furniture.
21. Inwood Office Furniture did not represent to [Edwards] that they were holding furniture for shipment, or for a particular destination.
22. [Edwards] knew the amount owed Defendant Inwood by the MAC Group and he asked no questions about any other accounts or invoices.
