Can I challenge a damage award on appeal in Texas?

This question has been addressed in 2 Texas court opinions:

Landry v. Currie

COA10January 29, 2026

After a catastrophic motor vehicle accident involving an intoxicated employee, the Tenth Court of Appeals affirmed findings of negligent entrustment and respondeat superior liability against a business owner and his entity. The court analyzed whether the owner's direction for the employee to return a vehicle to a "company yard" fell under the "mission" exception to the coming-and-going rule, concluding the employee was acting within the scope of his employment. Ultimately, the court held that the owner was individually liable for negligent entrustment because the duty of care extends to the specific circumstances of the entrustment, and it upheld multi-million dollar noneconomic damage awards for physical impairment and mental anguish.

Litigation Takeaway

Business owners and their spouses must be aware that individual liability for 'negligent entrustment' can create massive community debts that may liquidate family assets during a divorce; however, an innocent spouse may have a claim for 'waste' or 'reconstitution' if the other spouse's gross negligence led to the liability.

Graybar Electric Company, Inc., Appellant v. Buying Power, Inc., Appellee

COA14January 29, 2026

In Graybar Electric Company, Inc. v. Buying Power, Inc., the Fourteenth Court of Appeals addressed whether a business expert's model for lost profits was too speculative to be legally sufficient. Buying Power sued Graybar for breach of contract, and their expert calculated damages using Graybar's actual historical sales to specific customers. Graybar argued the model was based on the unfounded assumption that they would have accepted every order and that the contract itself was an unenforceable 'agreement to agree.' The court affirmed the trial court's judgment, holding that the expert’s reliance on objective historical data and the parties' expressed contractual intent provided the 'reasonable certainty' required by law.

Litigation Takeaway

When valuing a business or proving 'waste' of community assets in a divorce, expert testimony is legally sufficient if it is tethered to objective historical data and the expressed intent found in business contracts, even if the business owner claims future performance was discretionary.