OPINION
This is an appeal from a wrongful discharge case in which a jury awarded the Plaintiff/Appellee, Patsy E. Burnett, $7,980.00 in lost wages, $2,184.00 for lost insurance benefits, $75,000.00 in past mental anguish and $250,000.00 in exemplary damages. We reverse and remand.
Following the unfavorable verdict and judgment, The Southland Corporation (“Southland”) perfected this appeal, bringing fourteen points of error. Points of Error Nos. One through Eight challenge the legal and factual sufficiency of the evidence as it relates to the jury’s verdict. In Points of Error Nos. Nine through Twelve, Southland complains of procedural errors, and in the final two points, it claims the court erred in its submission of instructions in connection with the exemplary damages question and the causation between the compensation claim and the employee’s discharge.
We turn first to Point of Error No. Nine which we have concluded will require reversal and remand for a new trial. Under this point, Southland contends that the trial court erred by admitting into evidence a Texas Employment Commission Appeal Tribunal Decision (TEC decision) on the grounds that it was hearsay, it was not authenticated and it had not been disclosed in response to a discovery request. A copy of the TEC decision in question was offered into evidence during Burnett’s direct examination and subsequently admitted over vigorous defense objections, the court stating only that it was relevant and “no secret.”
In its pretrial interrogatories filed July 28, 1987, Southland had requested Burnett to identify, inter alia, any document or writing that she claimed was relevant to the issues raised in her pleadings (with a reminder of her duty to supplement). In her supplemental answers to the interrogatories, Burnett not only identified but also furnished copies of a number of documents, letters and writings, but neither mentioned nor furnished a copy of the TEC decision. (It appears that a copy of the TEC decision had been mailed by TEC to Southland on April 28, 1986.)
Under Tex.R.Civ.P. 166b(6), a party to whom interrogatories have been submitted has a duty seasonably to supplement the answers given if he obtains information or otherwise determines that the answers are no longer correct or complete, and the circumstances are such that the failure to amend or supplement would be misleading. A party who fails to supplement his response to a request for discovery shall not be entitled to present that evidence which the party was under a duty to provide in his response or supplemental response, unless the trial court finds that good cause exists sufficient to require the admission. Tex.R.Civ.P. 215(5).
The exclusion of evidence is automatic under Rule 215(5) unless good cause is found by the trial court.
Morrow v. H.E.B., Inc.,
Having found that the court below erred by admitting the document in question, the judgment can be reversed only if it is shown “that the error was reasonably calculated to cause and probably did cause rendition of improper judgment.”
Gee v. Liberty Mutual Fire Insurance Company,
In Point of Error No. Twelve, Southland claims that the trial court erred in admitting evidence of a 7-11 store’s gross monthly receipts and the number of stores owned by Southland. The highly speculative evidence, admitted over proper relevancy objections, was to the effect that Southland had 4,000 stores and that each store had $35,000.00 to $38,000.00 gross sales per month. Based on such evidence, plaintiff’s counsel argued (in his closing argument):
Each store grosses, at least that they’re willing to admit, $30,000 a month, $40,-000 a month. You multiply that by only the stores of — 4,000 stores and you’re up there in the millions per month. I almost died ... Do you think these big money magnates buy things to lose? ... We’re talking about a lot of money....
While evidence of a defendant’s net worth is admissible in a case where exemplary damages are in issue,
Lunsford v. Morris,
Of Southland’s remaining points of error, it is unnecessary for us to consider the legal and factual sufficiency Points of Error Nos. One through Eight since the case is to be retried. Points of Error Nos. Ten, Eleven, Thirteen and Fourteen are without sufficient merit to require reversal and are accordingly overruled.
Reversed and remanded for new trial.
