Appellants OCA, Inc. and Orthodontic Centers of Texas, Inc. (collectively, “OCA”) appeal the district court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of Robert Packard, D.M.D., M.S. and Packard Orthodontics, P.A., doing business as Apple Orthodontix (collectively, “Packard”) on its counterclaims for unjust enrichment and money had and received. The district court ruled, as a matter of Texas law, OCA could not pursue its equitable counterclaims to recover benefits conferred pursuant to the illegal contract. We AFFIRM.
FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS
This appeal arises out of an illegal business relationship between a corporation from Delaware and a dentist from Texas. The facts underlying this relationship are complicated, but largely undisputed.
Dr. Packard, his former partner, and their professional corporation entered into a long-term service agreement with Apple Orthodontix, Inc. (“Apple”). Apple provided “practice management services” to orthodontic practices in seventeen states before filing for bankruptcy in 2000. With the bankruptcy court’s blessing, Apple sold some of its assets, including the Packard-Apple contract, to OCA. Shortly thereafter, Packard and OCA entered into several agreements. OCA paid to Packard almost five million dollars in exchange for, among other things and relevant here, the entry into a long-term management services agreement that superseded the Packard-Apple contract. This new agreement, the Business Services Agreement (“BSA”), included a twenty-five year term for which OCA would provide Packard with business and administrative support and services. 1 The BSA also called for OCA to develop up to seven new offices with Packard, with OCA agreeing to advance Packard the money needed to develop the new offices.
Five years into the BSA, Packard terminated the BSA and sued for a declaratory judgment that the Packard-OCA agreements were illegal, and therefore void. OCA counterclaimed for breach of contract, conversion, unjust enrichment, promissory estoppel, money had and received, account stated, declaratory judgments that the contracts were legal, breach of warranty and indemnity, and attorney’s fees. OCA introduced evidence that it had paid Packard approximately $4,992,674.00 in up-front affiliation payments and advances, and argued that — • taking into account the sums Packard paid OCA during the five years of the BSA — ■ Packard retained a net benefit of approximately $2,279,275.00. Packard moved for summary judgment as to the illegality of contract.
The district court then stayed the proceedings pending the outcome of a related appeal to this court that required us to pass on the legality of OCA’s standard contracts. In December 2008, this court declared OCA’s standard contracts illegal under Texas law, concluding that the
OCA conceded the illegality of the agreements, leaving its equitable counterclaims as the only remaining issues for resolution. Packard moved for summary judgment as to the counterclaims, and the district court referred the matter to a magistrate judge for preparation of a report and recommendation (“R&R”). The magistrate judge reasoned that, under Texas law, the general rule is that a court will not assist parties to an illegal contract. Recognizing several narrow exceptions to the general rule, the magistrate judge concluded that no evidence supported the application of any exceptions, and recommended that summary judgment be granted in favor of Packard on OCA’s counterclaims. 2 The district court adopted the amended report and recommendation over OCA’s objections. OCA timely appealed as to its counterclaims for unjust enrichment and money had and received. OCA does not appeal the district court’s grant of summary judgment on the illegality of the contract or the remaining counterclaims.
DISCUSSION
A. Standard of Review
“We review a grant of summary judgment de novo and apply the same legal standard as the district court.”
Maverick Recording Co. v. Harper,
Because this court’s jurisdiction is predicated on the federal diversity statute, Texas substantive law governs this dispute.
Gasperini v. Ctr. for Humanities, Inc.,
B. Illegal Contracts Under Texas Law
The general rule under Texas law is that “no accounting or recovery of profits can be had by one party to an illegal transaction against another.”
Lewis v. Davis,
Texas law recognizes limited exceptions to the general prohibition. First, “[a] test, sometimes used in determining whether a demand connected with an illegal transaction can be enforced, is whether the plaintiff requires any aid from the illegal transaction to establish his case.”
Lewis,
It is undisputed that the Packard-OCA contract is illegal,
see In re OCA,
1. Whether OCA Can Establish a Right to Recover Independent of the Illegal Transaction
Texas law distinguishes between a party who must rely on an illegal contract to establish his right to recover and a party that merely needs to incidentally refer to an illegal contract to explain the transaction, allowing the latter to recover.
See, e.g., Beer,
A brief review of Texas cases allowing parties to an illegal contract to recover under this exception is instructive.
Norman v. B.V. Christie & Co.
involved two contracts — a contract between two venturers, B.V. Christie (Christie) and Norman, and a contract between Christie and a Water District.
OCA finds support for its position in
City of Denton v. Municipal Administrative Services, Inc.,
Texas courts have allowed parties to recover monies paid pursuant to illegal contracts where the illegal act has not been consummated.
Compare Lewy v. Crawford,
Where only payment has been made, but no other performance under the illegal contract has been rendered, the plaintiff can establish his right to recover without relying on the illegal contract — the court need not examine the contract, its terms, or the value of any services performed under the contract. In
Lewy,
for example, a group of men illegally wagered on the outcome of a gubernatorial election in violation of a Texas penal statute, placing their wagers with Lewy, a stakeholder.
Lewy,
In this appeal, OCA asserts that it paid almost five million dollars in affiliation payments and advances to Packard, and that Packard retained over $2.2 million
We agree with the district court that, under these facts, any recovery by OCA would be intertwined with the illegal contract and hold that the first exception to the general prohibition against recovery by parties to an illegal contract is inapplicable in this case.
2. Whether the Parties are In Pari Delicto
“Texas courts recognize that where parties to an illegal contract are not
in pari delicto,
the party least culpable may recover.”
Villanueva v. Gonzalez,
In
Bateman Eichler, Hill Richards, Inc. v. Berner,
the Supreme Court addressed the contours of the
in pari delicto
doctrine.
Courts have traditionally applied the in pari delicto doctrine to allow plaintiffs who engaged in illegal acts to recover when:
One party may act under circumstances of oppression, imposition, hardship, undue influence, or great inequality of condition or age; so that his guilt may be far less in degree than that of his associate in the offence.
1 Joseph Story, Commentaries on Equity Jurisprudence 300 (1886). Texas courts have applied the exception “where one party is unaware of the true facts and believes the contract is lawful, the general rule that an illegal contract is unenforceable does not apply.”
Int’l Bank of Comm. v. Int’l Energy Dev. Corp.,
The relevant issue is whether there is any genuine issue of material fact as to whether OCA and Packard do not bear “substantially equal responsibility” for the illegal contract, such that they are not in pari delicto. Specifically, the critical issue is the relative culpability of the parties as to the illegal contract. OCA sets forth two arguments in support of its claim that it is not in pari delicto with Packard: (1) that OCA subjectively believed that the contract was legal; and (2) that Packard, as a licensed dentist, had a heightened obligation under the Texas Administrative Code to prevent the unlicensed practice of dentistry.
As to OCA’s first argument, the district court properly noted that “there has been no showing, and none is alleged, that Packard had knowledge of peculiar facts not known to OCA. Both parties were aware of the facts surrounding the entering of the contract.”
Packard,
.
As to Packard’s alleged violation of the Texas Administrative Code section requiring dentists to prevent the unauthorized practice of dentistry, OCA argues that “the Packard Contract would have never been consummated if Packard had simply followed the proscriptions [the code] mandated.”
9
We find this argument unpersua
Next, “[w]here the contract is illegal because of statutory prohibition, the plaintiff is not
in pari delicto
if the statute
is for his protection.”
Recent Cases, 11 Tex. L.Rev. at 129 (emphasis added). The prefatory language contained in the Texas Administrative Code section OCA relies upon makes clear that the statute is designed to protect
the public from
the illegal practice of dentistry, not corporations who engage
in
the illegal practice of dentistry.
See
22 Tex. Admin. Code § 108.1 (“In order to safeguard the dental health and welfare of the public and the dentist-patient relationship and fix professional responsibility for dental services, no dentist or any other licensee or certificate holder of the Board shall....”).
Cf. Am. Nat’l Ins. Co. v. Tabor,
In
Plumlee v. Paddock,
Plumlee, an owner of an ambulance company, entered into an illegal referral contract with a law firm.
As a matter of law, OCA and Packard bear “substantially equal responsibility” for the illegal contract and are therefore in pari delicto. We hold that the second exception to the general prohibition against recovery by parties to an illegal contract is inapplicable in this case.
3. Whether Public Policy Demands Relief for OCA
“[E]ven where the parties are
in pari delicto
relief will sometimes be grant
“It is true that as between parties in pari delicto relief will be granted if public policy demands it. In such cases the guilt of the respective parties is not considered by the court, which looks only to the higher right of the public; the guilty party to whom relief is granted being only the instrument by which the public is served. The relief is granted to discourage such transactions by others.”
Wright v. Wight & Wight,
OCA asserts that three factors weigh in favor of allowing it relief based upon the public policy exception: (1) Packard’s heightened duty under the Texas Administrative Code; (2) Packard’s status as a wrongdoer; and (3) the fact OCA acquired its interest in the Packard contract pursuant to an order of the bankruptcy court. We find these reasons unpersuasive.
The “higher public right” at the center of this case is the public’s interest in the prevention of the unlicensed practice of dentistry. Indeed, the very reason this contract was deemed illegal is because its terms allowed OCA to engage in the illegal practice of dentistry.
In re OCA,
Allowing OCA to recover might provide a disincentive for dentists to enter into these types of affiliation agreements, thereby “discouraging such transactions by others.”
Wright,
Finally, the public policy exception to the general prohibition requires us to determine whether the policy against assisting a wrongdoer outweighs the policy against permitting unjust enrichment. We note that the “wrong” here is the unlicensed practice of dentistry. Under the “peculiar facts and equities of the case,” we find a situation in which one of two parties,
in pari delicto
and substantially equally guilty of the wrong, has allegedly been unjustly enriched at the expense of the other. We hold that allowing that party, OCA, to recover from Packard would not serve the “higher public right” by discouraging future illegal arrangements like the one before us. Therefore, we cannot say that “public policy demands [OCA’s recovery].”
Lewis,
CONCLUSION
The judgment of the district court is AFFIRMED.
Notes
. These services included employment, scheduling, and training of non-licensed office staff; provision and maintenance of the offices, telephones, utilities, furniture, fixtures, and equipment; bookkeeping and accounting services; billing and collection services; administration and disbursement of funds; installation of computer hardware and software, and training staff; ordering and management of supplies and inventory; preparation of statistical data and analyses of operations; legal services for routine operations; consulting advice on efficiency and productivity, marketing, office locations and set-ups, and staff salaries, benefits, and performance and incentive plans, as requested; marketing and advertising services; and all other business services reasonably required for routine business operations.
. In its briefing, OCA highlights a "procedural irregularity” that occurred prior to the district court's decision. The magistrate judge initially issued a R&R recommending that the district court grant Packard’s motion, but apparently relied on a clearly erroneous reading of the record in so doing. OCA highlighted the magistrate judge’s error in its objections to the R&R to the district court. Before the district court ruled on OCA’s objections, the magistrate judge withdrew, sua sponte, his initial R&R and submitted an amended R&R that reached the same conclusion without relying on the erroneous facts. OCA exercised its right to raise objections to the amended R&R, and those objections were considered and ultimately overruled by the district court. OCA’s argument — or observation — as to the "procedural irregularity” does not affect this court’s jurisdiction and OCA does not assert that it was deprived of due process as a result of the substitution.
. In
Morrison v. City of Fort Worth,
an illegal contract between a firefighter and the city of Fort Worth did not bar a fireman's widow from recovering wages due her deceased husband.
. "[T]he general rule [is] that where a party sues to recover money paid under a void instrument,
he cannot seek rescission,
but must recover in Quantum valebant for money had and received.”
Country Cupboard, Inc.
v.
Texstar Corp.,
. In this context, a stakeholder is "[o]ne who holds the money or valuables bet by others in a wager.” Black's Law Dictionary 1535 (9th ed.2009).
. The reason courts allow a plaintiff to recover what he has paid under an illegal contract
before
any other act occurs is "that the plaintiff's claim is not to enforce, but to repudiate, an illegal agreement ... In such case, there is a locus penitentiae; the wrong is not consummated, and the contract may be rescinded by either party.”
Bernhard v. Taylor,
. In light of our disposition of this case, the dispute over the precise amounts paid by each party is irrelevant.
. We acknowledge that a case where one party repudiates an illegal contract immediately upon the commencement of performance presents a different and more troubling application of this rule. That would be different case and might produce a different result. Here, however, OCA enjoyed the benefits of its affiliation payment for several years and nothing in the record suggests Packard knowingly drew OCA into an illegal contract with the purpose of securing a windfall. As a result, we need not address that more difficult question.
. In relevant part, the administrative code states:
A licensed dentist shall conduct his practice on the highest plane of honesty, integrity, and fair dealing. In order to safeguard the dental health and welfare of the public and the dentist-patient relationship and fix professional responsibility for dental services,no dentist or any other licensee or certificate holder of the Board shall:
(4) permit or allow himself, his practice of dentistry, his professional identification, or his services to be used or made use of, directly or indirectly, or in any manner whatsoever, so as to create or tend to create the opportunity for the unauthorized or unlawful practice of dentistry by any person, firm, or corporation or for the practice of dentistry in violation of any provision of the Texas Dental Practice Act or any rule, regulation, or order of the Board;
22 Tex. Admin. Code § 108.1 (2010).
. Although we are not entirely certain, given the unresolved dispute as to the amounts paid by Packard to OCA during the life of the illegal contract.
