OPINION
In this appeal, we consider whether a plaintiff who obtains a breach-of-contraet judgment against one defendant is prohibited from later bringing tort claims against other defendants for the same damage after it is unable to collect on the breach-of-contract judgment. On the facts presented in this case, we reverse and remand.
BACKGROUND
In an effort to upgrade one of its oil drilling rigs, Krobar Drilling, L.L.C. [“Krobar”] purchased a 1300-horsepower mud pump from Kenner Manufacturing, Inc. [“Kenner”]. The mud pump, which was manufactured in China, arrived in Texas in April 2007. Under the sales agreement, Krobar was responsible for the cost of shipping the mud pump to its drilling site in Riverton, Wyoming. After the mud pump arrived, however, Krobar agreed to allow Kenner to keep the mud pump in Texas to be used for demonstration purposes at the Offshore Trade Conference. In return, Kenner would pay to ship the mud pump to Wyoming after the conference.
During the time period that Kenner retained control over the mud pump, it was operating its business out of a warehouse in Katy, Texas, that was owned by Fred Ormiston. The mud pump was stored in Ormistoris warehouse. On July 5, 2007, Kenner was evicted from the warehouse for failing to pay rent in accordance with his lease with Ormiston. Thereafter, Or-miston exercised a landlord’s lien and sold the property in the warehouse at auction. The mud pump was included in the seized property and was eventually sold at auction to Applied Machinery Corporation [“Applied”].
In November 2007, Krobar sued Kenner in contract for failing to deliver the mud pump. In September 2009, after a trial on the merits, Krobar recovered a judgment against Kenner for $274,237.24, which included the $175,000 purchase price of the mud pump, $62,487 for the cost of refurbishing a replacement pump, and $36,750.24 for expenses incurred by the delay, plus attorneys’ fees.
After it was unable to collect on the judgment against Kenner, Krobar filed this suit against Ormiston, Applied, and Ormiston Family Properties, L.L.C., a corporation to which Ormiston had conveyed his assets, including the warehouse involved in this suit. The suit against Ormi-ston and Applied was based on tort claims, including conversion and causes of action under the Texas Theft Liability Act. See Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem.Code Ann. *111 §§ 134.001-.005 (Vernon 2005). The suit against Ormiston and Applied sought to recover damages in the amount of $274,-237.24 — the same amount obtained in the Kenner judgment.
The case went to trial before a jury in June 2010, and, at the close of Krobar’s case, all defendants moved for a directed verdict based on the doctrine prohibiting a double recovery and the doctrine of judicial estoppel. The trial court granted the motion for directed verdict, and subsequently signed a final judgment that Kro-bar take nothing on its claims against Or-mison, Ormison, L.L.C., and Applied. This appeal followed.
PROPRIETY OF DIRECTED VERDICT
In three related issues on appeal, Kro-bar contends the trial court erred in granting the motions for directed verdict. Specifically, Krobar claims that (1) the doctrine of double recovery does not apply; (2) defendants waived the affirmative defense of double recovery; and (3) the doctrine of judicial estoppel does not apply-
Standard of Review
When reviewing the grant of a directed verdict, we follow the usual standard for assessing the legal sufficiency of the evidence.
See Hunter v. PriceKubecka, PLLC,
Double Recovery
In its first issue, Krobar contends the trial court erred in granting a directed verdict on the basis of the doctrine prohibiting a double recovery. Specifically, Kro-bar contends that it is permitted to have multiple judgments, and that only the satisfaction of one judgment will bar further judgments.
The one-satisfaction rule applies to prevent a plaintiff from obtaining more than one recovery for the same injury.
Stewart Title Guar. Co. v. Sterling,
Here, we clearly have one injury — the loss of the mud pump and associated expenses — even though Kenner’s liability is based in contract and Ormiston’s and Applied’s liabilities are alleged in tort.
See
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Oyster Creek Fin. Corp. v. Richwood Investments II, Inc.,
The question is whether Krobar may bring a second suit to recover for the single injury when the first judgment remains unsatisfied. We answer that question affirmatively. It is well-settled that an injured party may sue and proceed to judgment against all joint tortfeasors together, or any number less than all, or each one separately in successive suits; and that an unsatisfied judgment recovered against one of them will not operate as a bar to an action against another; provided, however, the plaintiff may finally satisfy only one judgment.
McGehee v. Shafer,
In
T.L. James & Co., Inc. v. Statham,
Nevertheless, Ormiston argues that the cases cited above are applicable only to joint tortfeasors, and are not applicable here because the liability of the alleged wrongdoers arises out of contract and tort. We disagree. As Statham makes clear, the “one-satisfaction rule” is applied to joint tort-feasors “because of the fundamental fact that there is but a single injury, in itself and of itself indivisible, and constituting an indivisible cause of action for which both in law and good conscience there can be but one satisfaction^]” Id. at 869.
When, as here, it is alleged that a breach of contract and a tort caused a single injury, the rationale behind the “one-satisfaction” rule permitting successive suits against joint-tortfeasors until a judgment is satisfied is equally applicable.
We note that defendants’ motion for directed verdict was based on judicial estoppel and double recovery or the “one-
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satisfaction” rule. However, the gist of their argument on appeal relies on the “election-of-remedies” doctrine, which differs from the “one satisfaction rule.”
See Horizon Offshore Contractors, Inc. v. Aon Risk Servs. of Tex., Inc.,
An election of remedies is the act of choosing between two or more inconsistent but coexistent modes of procedure and relief allowed by law on the same state of facts. When a party thus chooses to exercise one of them he abandons his right to exercise the other remedy and is precluded from resorting to it.
Custom Leasing, Inc. v. Tex. Bank & Trust Co.,
However, the election-of-remedies doctrine does not apply to “the assertion of distinct causes of action against different parties arising out of independent transactions with such parties. There is no election where the remedies are neither inconsistent nor repugnant.”
Haskell v. Border City Bank,
An election between remedies occurs, at the latest, when a party proceeds to final judgment on one claim with knowledge of an inconsistent claim or remedy.
Sheffield,
In
Sheffield,
a case cited by defendants, the plaintiff sued the city alleging that a zoning change passed by the city was an unconstitutional taking of his property.
*114 Sheffield’s claim for permanent damages in Sheffield I is clearly inconsistent with Sheffield’s ... claim in this case. There, Sheffield obtained a final judgment for permanent damages resulting from the City’s taking of Sheffield’s property through the passage of the new zoning ordinance. In this case, however, Sheffield claims that chapter 245 allows it to develop the subject property with the smaller sized lots that were allowed by the older ordinance, notwithstanding the City’s zoning change.
Id. Thus, Sheffield’s two lawsuits were inconsistent because, in the first he alleged and was awarded damages because the new’ ordinance was an unconstitutional taking, and in the second suit he alleged that the new ordinance had no effect on him and there was no taking. The court held that “because that remedy [electing to obtain damages based on a taking claim which resulted from the passage of the new ordinance] is inconsistent with obtaining declaratory and injunctive relief from the application of that ordinance, Sheffield’s claims ... are barred by the election of remedies doctrine.” Id. at 168.
In
B.L. Nelson & Assocs., Inc. v. City of Argyle,
another election-of-remedies case citied by defendants, the plaintiff sued the defendant for breach of contract, but did not allege a cause of action for quantum meruit.
No such inconsistency is presented in this case. In the breach-of-contract case against Kenner, Krobar was required to prove that it purchased the mud pump from Kenner, but that Kenner failed to deliver it as promised. In the present suit against Ormiston and Allied, Krobar was required to show that it owned the mud pump and that Ormiston wrongfully seized and sold it to Allied. The second suit against Ormiston and Allied does not require repudiation of any facts relied on to prove breach of contract in the first suit. In fact, but for the purchase of the mud pump from Kenner, Krobar would have no claim against Ormiston and Allied. Thus, the second suit does not repudiate a fact necessary to prove the first suit, but in fact relies on a fact proved in the first suit, i.e., the purchase of the mud pump.
Defendants argue that it was inconsistent for Krobar to argue that Kenner was 100% liable for its damages in the first suit and that they are 100% liable for its damages in the present suit. We see no inconsistency. A single injury may be caused by multiple defendants committing the same act, as well as defendants committing technically different acts.
Cromi Life Ins. Co.,
We sustain Krobar’s first issue on appeal.
Judicial Estoppel
In issue three, Krobar contends that the trial court erred by granting a directed verdict based on the doctrine of judicial estoppel. Specifically, Krobar contends that it has not taken inconsistent positions in the two lawsuits.
The doctrine of judicial estop-pel “precludes a party from adopting a position inconsistent with one that it maintained successfully in an earlier proceeding.”
Pleasant Glade Assembly of God v. Schubert,
The species of judicial estoppel alleged in this case is “based on the principle that
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a party should not be permitted to abuse the judicial process by obtaining one recovery based first on affirming a certain state of facts, and then another recovery based on denying the same set of facts.”
Metroflight, Inc. v. Shaffer,
Ormiston cites
Mosher Mfg. Co. v. Eastland, W.F. & G.R. Co.,
As discussed in our analysis of issue one above, there is no such inconsistency in the present case. Krobar alleged in its petition in the Kenner suit that “upon information and belief, Kenner did not instruct its landlord that the mud pump belong to Krobar and not to Kenner. If Kenner had relayed this information, the landlord may not have sold the mud pump pursuant to a purposed landlord’s lien.” However, this petition was not a sworn statement. Further, the allegation was made in connection with a fraud claim against Kenner, and Krobar did not recover on its fraud claim; it recovered in breach of contract. Thus, the allegation in the petition did not benefit Krobar. Finally, the statement in the petition was not unequivocal, but was made upon information and belief. Because the statement in Krobar’s petition in the Kennar suit was not an inconsistent sworn statement, did not benefit Krobar, and was not unequivocal, the doctrine of judicial estoppel does not apply.
We sustain issue three. In light of our dispositions of issues one and three, we need not address issue two, and decline to do so.
CONCLUSION
Because the doctrines of double recovery and judicial estoppel do not entitle Ormiston and Allied to judgment as a matter of law, the trial court erred in granting a directed verdict in their favor. Accordingly, we reverse the judgment of the trial court and remand for further proceedings.
