This appeal arose out of the 1984 sale of the 100-unit Colony North Apartments, located in Austin, from appellant John E. Grooms to appellee, DRG/Colony North, Ltd. An addendum to the contract of sale obligated Grooms to make certain roof repairs to the complex either before or after the closing. When Grooms failed to make the repairs to appellee’s satisfaction, appel-lee began its own efforts at repairs, which Grooms initially paid for. When those efforts also failed to cure the problem, appel-lee had all the roofs of the apartment complex replaced and, pursuant to a provision in the contract of sale, proceeded to offset that expense against its note payments to the trust Grooms had established to receive such payments. Contending that he was not obligated to pay for a complete re-roofing of the complex, Grooms declared the note in default and posted the property for foreclosure. Appellee then instituted this suit to recover damages for breach of contract or alternatively to rescind the purchase. In addition to Grooms, the suit named as defendants Geoffrey R. Ferguson, Trustee; the Grooms Exchange Trust; and Russell G. Ferguson, Trustee. The trial court enjoined the scheduled foreclosure, and the case was later tried on the merits to a jury. After a verdict favorable to appellee on all issues, the trial court ordered the contract rescinded, together with an alternative award of damages, which was to take effect only if the rescission award was later reversed on appeal. This appeal followed.
JURISDICTION
In the last of their thirty-seven points of error, appellants assert that the trial court erroneously entered a conditional judgment that was not final and did not require an election of remedies. Although appellants ask for a reversal rather than dismissal of the appeal, the point does bring to our attention a jurisdictional issue: with certain exceptions not applicable here, appellate courts can review only final and definite judgments.
Hinde v. Hinde,
*878 In its trial petition, appellee alternatively sought rescission of the purchase agreement or damages for its breach. In the judgment, the trial court ordered rescission, allowing as part of that relief a recovery of all sums expended by appellee in connection with the transaction, together with exemplary damages and attorney’s fees. Following this award, the judgment contains the following:
It is further ordered, adjudged and decreed that in the event an appellate court of final review reverses the judgment of rescission set forth above, then plaintiff DRG/Colony North, Ltd. shall have the following judgment of damages: ....
The judgment then proceeded to order a complete damages award for breach of the contract of sale, including exemplary damages and attorney’s fees, to take effect only in the event the award of rescission was later reversed by an appellate court.
A final judgment is one that disposes of all parties and issues in the case.
Koepke v. Koepke,
In more recent years, these general rules have usually been construed and applied narrowly, with the result that finality has often been found where it might not have been in earlier years. It is now established that so long as the judgment definitely settles the rights controverted by the parties, the judgment is final and appealable even though further proceedings will be required to carry the judgment into effect. In
Hargrove v. Insurance Inv. Corp.,
142 Tex. Ill,
The cases most directly on point with respect to the instant case are those dealing with an award of additional attorney’s fees in the event of an appeal. That issue was settled in
Spray,
in which the trial court’s judgment awarded plaintiff attorney’s fees of $1,750, provided, that if defendant did not appeal, the judgment should be credited with $1,000, and if defendant appealed to the court of appeals but not the supreme court, the judgment should be credited with $500. In affirming the trial court’s award, the supreme court stated that it would not be a problem for the court clerk to look at the papers on file to see if application for writ of error had been made, and that the form of the judgment was not controlling as long as certainty was achieved.
Spray,
*879
Cases in which appeals were dismissed on the basis of lack of finality have been more obvious ones, such as those in which the actual effectiveness of the judgment itself, or the very right of plaintiff to recover at all, was conditioned on some future, uncertain event.
See, e.g., Dodd v. Daniel,
The judgment in the present case, on the other hand, is no more indefinite than any judgment that awards additional attorney’s fees in the event of an appeal (and, by implication, on the condition of an affirmance). It is not a truly alternative judgment such as “plaintiff is awarded judgment against defendant for A or alternatively for B,” with no indication of which relief has been selected. Nor is it in the vein of the cases in which the judgment does not actually become effective until the occurrence of some future, uncertain event, and which does not provide for any relief in case the event does not happen. Here the relief granted is clear and definite, and there is nothing left for the trial court to decide. Nor has appellee failed to make an election; it has, by its own admission, elected rescission. The judgment in the instant case simply does not fit into the mold of appeals that have been dismissed because the trial court’s judgment was indefinite, uncertain, or conditional. We hold that the judgment in the instant case was final and appealable.
Determining that the judgment was final and appealable does not, however, end our jurisdictional inquiry. Appellants’ point of error also suggests the question of whether the trial court had judicial authority— i.e., jurisdiction — to grant the alternative award of damages. Accordingly, we will address that question.
In
Morrow v. Corbin,
“Jurisdiction” of a particular court is that portion of the judicial power which it has been authorized to exercise by the Constitution or by valid statutes.
Since the Constitution has erected a system of both trial and appellate courts, it is obvious that it was never the purpose of the Organic Law to permit one tribunal to interfere with the lawful exercise by another of the judicial power allocated to it. It was the purpose of the framers of the Constitution to make each tribunal independent of all others in the exercise of the authority confided to it, except in so far as powers of revision or direction may be given in the Organic Law or valid statutes thereunder to appellate over trial tribunals. This is made plain by the repeated decisions of the appellate courts in mandamus cases to the effect that while they have power to direct a trial *880 court to proceed to trial, they have no authority to and will not direct the inferi- or tribunal how to try or decide a case before it.
The various provisions of the Constitution and laws defining the jurisdiction of courts should be construed “in such manner as to harmonize them, to the end that each court, whether trial or appellate, shall be permitted to exercise the power conferred upon it without conflict with the authority confided to another tribunal.”
City of Tyler v. St. Louis Southwestern Ry. Co. of Tex.,
By constitutional mandate, the jurisdiction of district courts in Texas “consists of exclusive, appellate, and original jurisdiction of all actions, proceedings, and remedies,
except in cases where exclusive, appellate, or original jurisdiction may be conferred by this constitution or other law on some other court, tribunal, or administrative body.”
Tex. Const.Ann. art. V, § 8 (Supp.1989) (emphasis added).
See also
Tex.Gov’t Code Ann. § 24.007 (1988). The various courts of appeals are granted “appellate jurisdiction co-extensive with the limits of their respective districts, which shall extend to all cases of which the District Courts or County Courts have original or appellate jurisdiction, under such restrictions and regulations as may be prescribed by law.” Tex. Const.Ann. art. V, § 6 (Supp.1989).
See also
Tex.Gov’t Code Ann. § 22.220 (1988). “Appellate jurisdiction” has been defined as “the power and authority conferred upon a superior court to rehear and determine — that is to review — causes which have been tried in inferior courts.”
Morrow,
In connection with the exercise of their appellate jurisdiction, courts of appeals have the following duty: “When the judgment or decree of the court below shall be reversed, the court [of appeals] shall proceed to render such judgment or decree as the court below should have rendered....” Tex.R.App.P.Ann. 81(c) (Pamph.1988). The supreme court has essentially the same duty. Tex.R.App.P.Ann. 180 (Pamph.1988). When a particular court is expressly granted jurisdiction over a particular area by the constitution, it is presumed that the jurisdiction so conferred is exclusive.
Eichel-berger v. Eichelberger,
The jurisdiction of courts of appeals to review causes tried in the lower courts includes the authority to reverse the judgments of those courts, if harmful error is found, and the specific duty in such instances to render the judgment that the court below should have rendered, except when it is necessary to remand. Since the appellate jurisdiction of courts of appeals has been defined to include that duty, district courts cannot also have authority to perform the same function. Tex. Const. Ann. art. V, § 8 (Supp.1989). In granting appellee a specific award of damages “in the event an appellate court of final review reverses the judgment of rescission,” the trial court sought to exercise the duty and authority expressly granted to courts of appeals as part of their appellate jurisdiction. The court below was without authority to do so, and that portion of its judgment is erroneous.
Judicial action without jurisdiction is void.
Cleveland v. Ward,
*881 JURY TRIAL
In their first point of error, appellants assert that the trial court erred in granting appellee’s late jury request. Although the case was set for jury trial to begin July 17, 1986, a formal jury request was first made on July 14 and a jury fee paid on July 15. Nonetheless, the trial court allowed a jury.
At the time of this trial, Rule 216 of the Texas Rules of Civil Procedure (1976) provided as follows:
No jury trial shall be had in any civil suit, unless application be made therefor and unless a fee of five dollars ... be deposited by the applicant with the clerk to the use of the county on or before appearance day or, if thereafter, a reasonable time before the date set for trial of the cause on the non-jury docket, but not less than ten days in advance.
Despite the mandatory wording of Rule 216, trial courts have been allowed discretion to grant a late request for jury trial.
Lehman v. Sullivan,
In the instant case the record reflects that the cause had first been set for trial, at appellants’ request, on the
jury docket
for June 9, 1986. The case was then reset twice on the jury docket, both times by the agreement of all parties. It is significant that appellants knew the case was set on the jury docket and so were not surprised.
See McCormick v. Texas Comm. Bank Nat. Ass’n,
EXTRINSIC EVIDENCE
In points of error two, three, four, and fifteen, appellants assert, on several grounds, that the trial court erred in excluding testimony regarding Grooms’s understanding of his contractual obligation to make the roofs “water-tight.”
Appellants first argue that the pertinent contract language is ambiguous and hence the trial court erred in excluding evidence of the parties’ intentions regarding Grooms’s duties under the contract. The contract language in question is as follows: “Furthermore, Seller agrees to repair the roofs of the Property, in a good, substantial and workmanlike manner so that the roofs are ‘water-tight’.” Appellants contend that the term “water-tight” is ambiguous and that they should have been allowed to present extrinsic evidence showing that Grooms’s duty under the contract was simply to repair visible leaks that were present at closing, not to make the roofs literally water-tight.
The general rules of contract construction are well established:
1. The primary concern of the court is to ascertain the true intention of the parties.
2. Courts should examine and consider the entire writing in an effort to harmonize and give effect to all its provisions so that none will be rendered meaningless.
3. No single provision taken alone will be given controlling effect; rather, all the provisions must be considered with reference to the whole instrument.
4. If the written instrument is so worded that it can be given a certain or definite legal meaning or interpretation, then it is not ambiguous and the court will construe the contract as a matter of law.
5. A contract is ambiguous when its meaning is uncertain and doubtful or it is reasonably susceptible to more than one meaning.
*882 6. Whether a contract is ambiguous is a question of law for the court to decide by looking at the contract as a whole in light of the circumstances present when the contract was entered.
Coker v. Coker,
We believe the trial court did not err in concluding that the contract is unambiguous. It is true that the term “watertight” may have different meanings in different contexts. For example, if the contract had been for the construction of a submarine, the term would have one meaning. In the context of a contract for the construction or repair of a residence, however, the term would have a different — but no less clear — meaning. In both cases the term means “constructed so that water cannot enter,” but we think the qualification “when the structure is used in its usual or intended way” is necessarily implied. In the normal way a residence is used, the roof need only repel rain without leaking. Accordingly, considering the contract as a whole and in light of the circumstances present when the contract was signed, we believe the term “water-tight” can be given a definite legal meaning: the roofs of the Colony North Apartments would be put in a condition in which they did not leak when it rained.
Nevertheless, appellants argue that the fact the term was enclosed in quotation marks shows that the parties had a special meaning in mind. Having concluded that the meaning of the word is clear, we may not use punctuation marks to create an ambiguity.
Anderson & Kerr Drilling Co. v. Bruhlmeyer,
We hold the contract was not ambiguous. Accordingly, as to that ground the trial court correctly excluded the proffered testimony of appellants’ witnesses regarding their understanding of the disputed term.
Alba Tool & Supply v. Industrial Contractors,
Appellants next contend that evidence of Grooms’s understanding was admissible because this was an action in which declaratory relief was requested. Appellants' reliance on
Hydro-Line Mfg. Co. v. Pulido,
Appellants also complain that evidence of Grooms’s understanding of the meaning of the term “water-tight” was admissible because it was relevant to his intent to perform under the agreement. On several occasions Grooms testified without objection that he understood the contract to obligate him to repair only leaks existing at the time of closing, not to repair leaks that originated after closing, and certainly not to replace the entire roof. In addition, however, appellants sought to introduce testimony of a conversation in which one of appellee’s principals allegedly concurred in that interpretation. Although such evidence was not admissible to vary the terms of the written agreement, it might have been admissible on the issues of fraud and exemplary damages.
See Anderson v. Anderson,
Finally, appellants argue that evidence of Grooms’s understanding of his contractual obligations was admissible because the trial court admitted such testimo
*883
ny from appellee. Appellee’s witnesses did nothing more than confirm that the deal between the parties was as stated in the written agreement. The parol evidence rule prohibits only extrinsic evidence that tends to
contradict
the terms of a written agreement; it does not prohibit evidence that confirms what the agreement says.
Hubacek v. Ennis State Bank,
PLEADINGS
In points of error five through fourteen, appellants claim that appellee did not adequately plead a cause of action for fraud. As a result, they argue, the trial court erred in admitting evidence of intent, in submitting special issues concerning fraud and rescission, and in awarding rescission and exemplary damages.
Appellee’s second amended petition made no attempt to plead a cause of action for fraud. Appellee’s third amended petition, however, filed two weeks before trial, contained the following relevant changes from the earlier petition:
(1) Various headings were deleted which had clearly labelled the causes of action asserted;
(2) Paragraph VI alleged in part: “The actions of the Defendants were fraudulent as they relate to DRG/Colony North and the purchase of the Property for which DRG/Colony North should be entitled to damages”;
(3) Paragraph VII alleged, in part, that plaintiff was entitled to exemplary damages;
(4) The prayer requested an award of exemplary damages; and
(5) The prayer requested rescission as alternative relief.
Other parts of the petition made it clear that appellee’s main complaint was that “[s]ubsequent to closing, Grooms did not repair the roofs of the Property in a good, substantial and workmanlike manner so that the roofs were water-tight, as required by the First Addendum.” Appellants did not specially except to this pleading.
A petition that gives fair and adequate notice of the facts on which the pleader bases his claim is sufficient, since it provides the opposing party with enough information to enable him to prepare a defense.
Roark v. Allen,
The absence of special exceptions has been a significant factor in the way courts view pleadings. For example, if special exceptions have been sustained and the pleader has refused to amend, it has been held that a petition is inadequate unless it specifically alleges all elements of a cause of action.
Sage v. Wong,
The elements of fraud are: (1) that a material representation was made, (2) that it was false, (3) that when the speaker made it he knew it was false or made it recklessly without any knowledge of the truth and as a positive assertion, (4) that he made it with the intention that it should be acted upon by the party, (5) that the party acted in reliance on it, and (6) that he thereby suffered injury.
Stone,
SUFFICIENCY OF THE EVIDENCE
Points of error sixteen, nineteen, and twenty attack the legal and factual sufficiency of the evidence to support the jury’s answers to special issues one, five, and six. By their answers to those issues, the jury found that Grooms failed to repair the roofs “in a good, substantial, and workmanlike manner so as to make them watertight”; that at the time of the sale Grooms “did not intend to do that which was necessary to repair the roof in a good, substantial, and workmanlike manner so as to make them watertight”; and that appellee reasonably relied on Grooms’s agreement to repair the roofs.
In considering a “no evidence” point, the reviewing court must reject all evidence contrary to the jury’s findings and consider only the facts and circumstances which tend to support those findings.
Renfro Drug Co. v. Lewis,
While acknowledging the existence of evidence that Grooms never succeeded in stopping the roof leaks, appellants attack the answer to special issue one by asserting that Grooms’s only obligation was to repair the roofs in a good, substantial, and workmanlike manner, with no guarantee that his efforts would be successful. We disagree. The language of the agreement, considered in the context of the contract as a whole and the circumstances present when it was signed, clearly obligated Grooms to make the roofs water-tight, which, as discussed above, meant he had to stop the roof leaks. As appellants concede, there was ample evidence that he failed in this regard.
In answer to special issue five, the jury found that at the time he made the promise to repair the roofs, Grooms did not intend to do “that which was necessary ... to make them watertight.” Appellants argue that although Grooms did not intend to replace the roofs, he did intend to repair them. Once again appellants ignore Grooms’s obligation to make the roofs water-tight, i.e., to stop the leaks. There was evidence that Grooms had been told that visible leaks could be repaired with a “patch” method. When, after many attempts by both parties to stop the leaks by using that method, it became apparent that a more comprehensive approach to the problem was required, Grooms refused to do more. From this evidence the jury was entitled to draw the logical inference that Grooms’s intention to make the roofs water-tight was a conditional one: he intended to stop the leaks only if that could be accomplished in short order with a relatively inexpensive spot-patching procedure.
In addition, Grooms refused on numerous occasions to admit that he had made a blanket promise to make the roofs watertight. He consistently stated that he understood his obligation to be only to fix the leaks that existed at the time of closing, not to re-roof. Fraudulent intent may be proved by the breach of a promise plus a denial by the defendant that he ever made the promise.
Duval County Ranch Co. v. Wooldridge,
The jury also found, in answer to special issue six, that appellee reasonably relied on Grooms’s promise to repair the roofs. There was unequivocal testimony *885 that appellee would not have bought the apartment complex without Grooms’s agreement to make the roofs water-tight. This is sufficient to show that the promise was an inducing cause of appellee’s completion of the purchase. Points of error sixteen, nineteen, and twenty are overruled.
EXEMPLARY DAMAGES
In points of error twenty-one and twenty-two, appellants attack the sufficiency of the evidence to support the jury’s exemplary damages finding of $400,000 in answer to special issue eight, and to support the trial court’s finding stated in the judgment that Grooms acted willfully and maliciously-
A finding of conscious indifference to the rights of others, as well as intent to harm, will support an award of exemplary damages.
Spoljaric v. Percival Tours, Inc.,
OTHER DEFENDANTS
By points of error twenty-three and twenty-six, appellants complain of the trial court’s judgment as it relates to Russell G. Ferguson, Trustee, a defendant below who is not an appellant. Although Russell G. Ferguson, Trustee, was named in the trial court as a defendant, was served with citation, answered, and was represented by counsel in the trial, no relief was granted against him. He did not perfect an appeal. Nonetheless, the parties who are named as appellants complain that the trial court erred in failing to render a take-nothing judgment as to him. A party on appeal may not complain of errors which do not injuriously affect him or which merely affect the rights of others.
Jackson v. Fontaine’s Clinics, Inc.,
By points of error twenty-four, twenty-five, and twenty-seven, appellants complain of the trial court’s judgment against Geoffrey R. Ferguson, Trustee, and the Grooms Exchange Trust. In addition to ordering the return of the $1,850,-000 promissory note executed by appellee and the delivery to appellee of a fully executed release, the trial court also awarded appellee the following monetary recovery against Geoffrey R. Ferguson, Trustee, and the Grooms Exchange Trust, as well as John E. Grooms: (1) $1,360,400, represent *886 ing “all sums expended by appellee in connection with the Colony North Apartments”; (2) $181,547.78 as prejudgment interest; and (3) $400,000 as exemplary damages.
Although the deed to appellee was from John E. Grooms, it appears that for tax purposes Grooms directed appellee to make all payments to Geoffrey R. Ferguson, Trustee of the Grooms Exchange Trust. Accordingly, all of appellee’s payments toward the purchase price of the apartment complex, amounting to $781,510 of the $1,360,400, were received by the Grooms Exchange Trust, of which Geoffrey R. Ferguson was trustee and John E. Grooms was beneficiary. To the extent of those payments, and interest thereon, judgment for restoration to appellee was proper against Geoffrey R. Ferguson, Trustee, and the Grooms Exchange Trust.
The remaining actual damages awarded, however, amounting to $578,890 of the $1,360,400, were not paid to or received by the Trustee or the Trust, but were out-of-pocket expenses for such matters as property damage and appellee’s own attempts to repair the roofs. It is true that the accomplishment of full justice being a fundamental principle of equity, special damages in addition to rescission will be allowed where both are essential to accomplish full justice.
Smith v. National Resort Communities, Inc.,
FORM OF SPECIAL ISSUES
In points of error twenty-eight, twenty-nine, and thirty, appellants attack the form of submission of special issues one, five, and six. Chief among the grounds asserted is that each of those issues constituted a comment on the weight of the evidence because the term “watertight” was used in the special issues without quotation marks as it had been in the contract of sale. An issue may not suggest to the jury the trial judge’s opinion concerning the matter about which the jury is asked, nor assume the truth of a material controverted fact. Tex.R.Civ.P.Ann. 277 (Supp.1988);
Alvarez v. Missouri-Kansas-Texas RR Co.,
Appellants also assert that special issues five and six improperly inquired about Grooms’s intention and agreement “to do that which was necessary” to make the roofs water-tight, instead of simply inquiring about his intention and agreement to make the roofs water-tight. In the con: text of the present case, we do not believe there is any significant difference in meaning between the two phrases. Accordingly, we hold that any error was harmless. Tex.
R.App.P.Ann. 81(b)(1) (Pamph.1988). Points of error twenty-eight, twenty-nine, and thirty are overruled.
ADEQUATE REMEDY AT LAW
In point of error thirty-one, appellants assert that the trial court erred in awarding rescission because appellee failed to plead or prove that it had no adequate remedy at law.
There is authority that a party seeking the equitable remedy of rescission must plead and prove the absence of an adequate remedy at law.
See Ryan v. Collins,
Q: If you would just recover the damages that are up on that board there on Plaintiffs Exhibit 35, if you recover these damages and your attorney’s fees that aren’t included in that, and some interest that’s not included in that, will that really make DRG/Colony North whole in this transaction?
A: No, it will not....
We hold that the issue of the absence of an adequate remedy at law was clearly tried by consent, Tex.R.Civ.P.Ann. 67 (1979);
Ranger Insurance Co. v. Robertson,
ATTORNEY’S FEES
In point of error thirty-two, appellants complain of the trial court’s award of attorney’s fees. By statute, attorney’s fees may be recovered if the claim is “for ... an oral or written contract.” Tex.Civ.Prac.
&
Rem.Code Ann. § 38.001 (1986). When a contract is rescinded, however, “it is annulled and abrogated and the rights of the parties under it are extinguished.”
Tuttle-bee v. Tuttlebee,
Appellee attempts to distinguish
Tuttlebee
by asserting that it involved the cancellation of a deed, while the instant case involves rescission of a contract for sale. The terms “rescission” and “cancellation” are virtually synonymous. If there is a distinction, it is only that rescission is a general undoing of an agreement,
Cheek v. Metzer,
ment or rendering of an instrument ineffective as a legal obligation.
Hickox v. Hick-ox,
Appellee argues that
NRC, Inc. v. Pickhardt,
APPELLANT’S REQUESTED ISSUES
In point of error thirty-three, appellants assert as error the failure of the trial court to submit special issues they requested. It is unclear from appellants’ brief if this point refers to all fifteen issues requested by appellants or only to the six issues included in an appendix to their brief. Moreover, other than blanket statements that each issue was raised by the pleadings, was supported by some evidence, and that it was error not to submit them, appellants give this Court no guidance as to why the issues should have been submitted, nor any assistance in determining what harm, if any, resulted from the failure to submit them. No authorities are cited. In light of the above, this Court need not and does not address the point of error.
See Sandler v. Bufkor, Inc.,
OMITTED FINDINGS
By points of error thirty-four and thirty-five, appellants attack appellee’s failure to obtain jury findings on some elements of fraud, as well as the sufficiency of the *888 evidence to support any findings on the unsubmitted issues.
Appellants’ sufficiency complaint anticipates our decision on their complaint as to the lack of jury findings. Appellants neither objected to the failure to submit issues on the missing fraud elements nor requested their submission in writing. Accordingly, the judgment may not be reversed on that ground. Tex.R.Civ.P.Ann. 279 (1977). Moreover, since issues of Grooms’s intent to perform and appellee’s reliance on the promise — both necessarily referable to a fraud action — were submitted to the jury and answered in appel-lee’s favor, Rule 279 requires that the un-submitted elements of the fraud claim be deemed to have been found by the trial court in such manner as to support the judgment.
Appellants also assert there was no evidence to support the deemed findings. The six elements of actionable fraud are stated above.
See Stone,
In addition to the points of error discussed above, appellants’ brief contains a few points that relate exclusively to the trial court’s award of damages for breach of contract. In light of our holding with regard to the alternative award of damages, we need not discuss those points.
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, that portion of the trial court’s judgment which purports to award damages “in the event an appellate court of final review reverses the Judgment of Rescission” is vacated; the remainder of the trial court’s judgment is modified to eliminate any award of attorney’s fees, to eliminate the award of exemplary damages against Geoffrey R. Ferguson, Trustee, and the Grooms Exchange Trust, and to reduce the amount of actual damages awarded against Geoffrey R. Ferguson, Trustee, and the Grooms Exchange Trust to $781,510 plus prejudgment interest on that amount at the rate of ten percent per annum from July 23, 1986, to the date of judgment, and as so modified is affirmed.
Notes
. Appellants do not appear by these points of error to be asserting that the award of exemplary damages is
excessive,
but rather that appellee is not entitled to any such award at all. Nonetheless, we have also reviewed the amount of the exemplary damages award on the basis of the standards set forth in
Alamo Nat. Bank v. Kraus,
. The record indicates that Russell G. Ferguson was the trustee in the deed of trust granted by appellee to secure its note to "Geoffrey R. Ferguson, Trustee of the Grooms Exchange Trust.” Appellee originally sought and obtained a temporary injunction to prevent a threatened foreclosure on the property after appellee ceased making payments on the note. The final judgment neither granted any injunctive relief nor made any mention whatsoever of Russell G. Ferguson, Trustee. It did, however, conclude with the following standard statement: "All relief not mentioned herein is denied.” This had the effect of rendering a take-nothing judgment as to that defendant.
