OPINION
This is an appeal from a plaintiff’s judgment entered on a jury verdict in a suit on a lease agreement.
The trial court allowed a post-verdict, pre-judgment amendment of the plaintiff’s pleadings to delete its unproven claim for incremental attorney’s fees in the event of appeal. That action reduced the total monetary claim originally asserted to an amount within county court-at-law jurisdiction.
In 1978, appellant and another person leased space in a Houston office building from TRICO Service Corporation (TSC). In 1979, the lease was assigned by the lessor to David B. Watkins, Trustee, and appellant executed a new lease covering a portion of the original space for an additional term of two years and three months. David B. Watkins, Trustee, signed that lease contract for the lessor, T & W Resources. By a letter agreement dated April 3, 1979, appellant’s former partner retained an option of first refusal on the premises at the end of appellant’s term which expired on July 31, 1981. Under the terms of the second lease contract, appellant was to pay a base monthly rental and operating expense adjustments.
When appellant refused to relinquish possession of the space at the expiration of her lease, appellee, Equity Management Corporation, sought eviction by forcible entry and detainer action in the justice court. An agreed judgment was entered whereby appellant would have until January 2,1982, to vacate and would pay appellee $1,000 monthly until that time. Appellant moved out December 28, 1981.
Appellee sued in the county court-at-law for recovery of (1) appellant’s unpaid pro rata share of 1981 increases in operating expenses, alleged to be $414.37; (2) damages incurred in replacing glass panels removed by appellant, valued at $875; and (3) reasonable attorney’s fees of $2,500 for trial of the suit, with increments of $1,000 each in the event of appeals to the court of *908 appeals and the supreme court. In answer to special issues submitted, a jury found in the appellee’s favor on all issues except the claim for operating expense adjustments. Following the post-verdict amendment of the appellee’s pleadings, deleting its unproved claim for incremental attorney’s fees in the event of appeal, judgment was entered on the verdict awarding appellee $875 plus attorney’s fees of $1,600. Appellant asserts four points of error.
Because appellant’s third point of error is jurisdictional, we consider it first. Appellant urges that the trial court erred in allowing appellee to amend and “plead downward” the amount of attorney’s fees it sought, thus bringing the amount in controversy within the jurisdictional limits of the county court-at-law. To allow such an amendment was error, she urges, because appellee filed its motion in bad faith fraudulently to obtain the court’s jurisdiction.
In its original petition, appellee sued to recover not only the $1,289 alleged due under the lease for operating expenses and damages for removal of fixtures, but also for contractual “reasonable attorney’s fees” of $2,500, plus an additional $1,000 in the event of an appeal to the court of appeals, plus an additional $1,000 in the event of an appeal to the supreme court. The total thus sought by all elements of appellee’s original petition was $5,789.37, while the jurisdiction of county courts-at-law is limited to cases where the amount in controversy does not exceed $5,000. Tex. Rev.Civ.Stat.Ann. art. 1970a (Vernon Supp. 1982).
When the trial judge refused to render judgment on the verdict because of the jurisdictional error shown by appellee’s pleadings, appellee moved to file a post-verdict amendment, pursuant to Tex.R.Civ. Pro. 63, “to comply with the evidence presented and heard by the jury and ... the verdict rendered by said jury.” Appel-lee urged in its motion to amend that by inadvertently including a claim for $2,000 in attorney’s fees contingent upon appeals, it “may have exceeded the jurisdictional bounds of this court.” The court allowed the plaintiff to amend and delete that portion of its pleading requesting specified amounts in the event of appeals. At trial, plaintiff had made no attempt to offer evidence of attorney’s fees on appeal. Neither had appellant filed any objection to the court’s jurisdiction.
Post-verdict, pre-judgment trial amendment is not
per se
improper.
Compare Rotello v. Ring Around Products, Inc.,
We are aware of the rules stating that the good faith allegations of the petition are determinative of whether a cause of action is justiciable by the court whose jurisdiction is sought to be invoked,
Brannon v. Pacific Employers Ins. Co.,
We are also aware of that line of cases holding that a plaintiff in a court of limited jurisdiction may amend the statement of his cause of action by abandoning,
in its entirety,
any severable item that will reduce the claim to an amount within the jurisdiction of that court.
Williams v. Trinity Gravel Co.,
Judicial economy, as well as the avoidance of multiple or repetitous suits over the same subject matter between the same parties, favors the conclusion that incremental attorney’s fees on appeal are a sev-erable item of a plaintiff's claim for jurisdictional purposes. This is particularly so where a defendant has consented to the forum, has remained silent through pre-trial and trial proceedings, and has made no attack on jurisdiction prior to motion for judgment, and also where a plaintiff has not attempted at trial to offer proof concerning incremental attorney’s fees in the event of appeal. Certainly, the spirit of Rule 63, Tex.R.Civ.Pro., favors allowing pleadings to be conformed to the proof when no surprise or harm to the adverse party results, and when retrial can be avoided.
The special treatment required to be given in a judgment to an award of attorney’s fees on appeal supports the conclusion that such fees are a severable item. A correct form of final judgment requires that an award of such fees be couched in the language of remittitur to avoid the objections of lack of finality, lack of definiteness, and the existence of a conditional judgment.
International Security Life Insurance v. Spray,
We hold that under the facts of this case attorney’s fees on appeal are a severa-ble item of a appellee’s contractual claim for attorney’s fees and were properly deleted by amendment to reduce the claim to an amount within the court’s jurisdiction. Appellant’s third point of error is overruled.
Appellant’s first point of error contests the overruling of her motion for an instructed verdict on the ground there was no privity of contract between appellee and appellant. She states that in 1979 she entered into a lease contract with David B. Watkins, Trustee for TRICO Service Corporation (TSC), and at no time ever entered into a lease contract with appellee, Equity Management Corporation. She points to testimony by appellee’s property manager that no assignment or sublet of the lease contract occurred and further argues that appellee offered no evidence to show that it was either a third party beneficiary to the contract or an agent for TSC. The record does not show whether TSC is an assumed name for, or a predecessor in interest of, T & W Resources, the lessor whose name appears on the 1979 lease contract, and appellant makes no mention of that company in her brief.
Appellant is estopped by the record to question on appeal the allegation in appellee’s original petition that appellee is successor in interest to and agent of TSC. First, appellee did not seek recovery in its own right, but in a representative capacity.
Cf. Carr v. Galvan,
*910
Second, appellant admitted in her answer her continued possession of the leased space by virtue of the justice court order resolving the eviction action between herself and appellee. Such a judicial admission removes from controversy any question of privity of contract between the parties.
See Gevinson v. Manhattan Construction Co. of Oklahoma,
Finally, since the suit in justice court was based on the same lease contract, appellant is collaterally estopped by the prior judgment itself to deny appellee’s right to recover in its capacity as successor or agent of TSC.
Olivarez v. Broadway Hardware, Inc.,
Appellant contends by point of error two that the trial court’s award of $1,600 in attorney’s fees was unreasonably disproportionate to the $875 awarded in damages. Additionally, she argues that the fees were “excessive in light of the nature of the case, the amount in controversy, the amount of time and skill needed to litigate the case, and the damages involved.”
Rule 440 of the Rules of Civil Procedure places upon courts of appeals a duty to reverse and remand a case because of an excessive award unless a remittitur is filed.
Graham v. Morris,
Texas & Pacific Railway Co. v. Beck-Mattox Brokerage Co.,
Appellee’s original petition sought reasonable attorney’s fees as provided for in the lease contract, alleging the sum of $2,500, with increments in the event of appeal. Appellee’s attorney testified without objection that he has been practicing law in Harris County since 1970; that he charges $75 per hour and, for trial work, $500 per day; that he considers these charges reasonable; that he spent eight hours in preparation for trial; that this did not include the time in justice court; and that he feels entitled to $1,100 in attorney’s fees in this case. The trial continued another day after this testimony was given. The jury found, in answer to Special Issue No. 6, that $1,600 would be reasonable compensation for the services of appellee’s attorney. Appellant’s attorney, who testified that $1,000 would be a reasonable fee *911 for his representation in this matter, apparently did not think his own compensation should be limited by the amount of damages involved. We find the amount awarded as compensation for appellee’s attorney to be reasonable in the circumstances.
Appellant insists the attorney’s fee award must be apportioned to allow recovery only as to those claims on which the litigant prevails. Since appellee failed to obtain a favorable jury finding on its claim for operating expense charges, appellant urges that the award should be reduced.
Cantrell v. First National Bank of Euless,
Point of error four alleges there is no probative evidence to support a finding by the trial court that the three glass panels were so permanently affixed to the realty as to become a part of the realty. She insists that the panels, installed to preserve confidentiality in her work as an attorney and certified public accountant, were shown to be trade fixtures, and that their removal caused no permanent damage.
This question was presented to the jury as a special issue, and the record shows no objection to its submission. The jury found the large glass panes were not trade fixtures and, as such, were not removable by the tenant. This “no evidence” contention on appeal was not brought to the trial court’s attention by way of appellant’s motion for an instructed verdict or appellant’s motion for new trial, or by any other means. Legal insufficiency points may only be raised on appeal when the proper predicate has been made in the trial court. Cornelius, Appellate Review of Sufficiency of the Evidence Challenges in Civil and Criminal Cases, 46 Tex.B.J. 439, 440 (1983); Calvert, “No Evidence” and “Insufficient Evidence” Points of Error, 38 Tex.L.Rev. 361, 362 (1960). Appellant’s point of error four is overruled.
The judgment is affirmed.
