                IN THE SUPREME COURT OF TEXAS
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                                            NO . 12-0485
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                         IN RE TERESA CORRAL-LERMA, RELATOR


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                              ON PETITION FOR WRIT OF MANDAMUS
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                                          PER CURIAM


       This case presents a question recently decided by this Court—whether attorney’s fees are

“compensatory damages” for purposes of calculating the security amount necessary to supersede a

judgment during appeal. The trial court agreed with relator Teresa Corral-Lerma that the supersedeas

statute does not require inclusion of attorney’s fees in calculating the security amount. The court of

appeals, however, granted Border Demolition’s motion to review sufficiency of the security and

ordered the security amount to be increased to include the attorney’s-fees award against Corral-

Lerma. See TEX . R. APP . P. 24.4. After the court of appeals issued its opinion but before this case

reached this Court, we separately held that attorney’s fees are not compensatory damages for

purposes of the supersedeas statute. In re Nalle Plastics Family Ltd. P’ship, 406 S.W.3d 168

(Tex. 2013). In light of that holding, we conditionally grant mandamus relief.

       Eduardo Lerma, Corral-Lerma’s husband, hired Border Demolition and Environmental, Inc.,

to perform demolition work. Border Demolition eventually sued Lerma, claiming he never paid for

the work. Corral-Lerma then filed a separate suit against Border Demolition under the Texas Theft
Liability Act, and Border Demolition counterclaimed for attorney’s fees under the same Act. See

TEX . CIV . PRAC. & REM . CODE § 134.005(b). The trial court granted summary judgment in Border

Demolition’s favor and awarded $78,001 in attorney’s fees through trial and conditional fees for

appeal, as well as court costs and post-judgment interest.

       In lieu of a supersedeas bond, Corral-Lerma deposited $3,599.20, an amount equal to the

court costs awarded to Border Demolition. Border Demolition moved for a review and increase of

the appellate security. But the trial court agreed with Corral-Lerma that attorney’s fees are not an

award of “compensatory damages” under section 52.006 of the Texas Civil Practice and Remedies

Code and therefore were properly excluded from the security amount. In granting Border

Demolition’s motion to review the sufficiency of security, the court of appeals held that an

attorney’s-fees award under the Texas Theft Liability Act “compensates or indemnifies a defendant

for the legal expense he incurs in successfully defending against a claim made against him under the

Act” and therefore “falls within the common definition of compensatory damages.” Corral-Lerma

v. Border Demolition & Envtl., Inc., 420 S.W.3d 59, 64–65 (Tex. App.—El Paso 2012, order).

       After the court of appeals issued its opinion, we held in In re Nalle Plastics that attorney’s

fees are neither compensatory damages nor costs for purposes of superseding enforcement of a

money judgment. 406 S.W.3d at 176. Border Demolition acknowledges our holding in Nalle Plastics

but argues an exception should apply under the Texas Theft Liability Act because a prevailing

defendant must be awarded attorney’s fees even without an award of compensatory damages. See

TEX . CIV . PRAC. & REM . CODE § 134.005(b). Under such circumstances, Border Demolition argues,



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an attorney’s-fees award is more like a compensatory-damages award because it compensates the

defendant for its out-of-pocket expenses in defending against a lawsuit.

        It is true that the Texas Theft Liability Act provides for attorney’s fees even without an

underlying damages recovery whereas the statute at issue in Nalle Plastics provided for attorney’s

fees only if a party had first recovered damages. See Nalle Plastics, 406 S.W.3d at 173. But this

statutory distinction does not undermine the inherent differences between compensatory damages

and attorney’s fees we acknowledged in Nalle Plastics. See 406 S.W.3d at 171–74. On the contrary,

we observed that “[w]hile attorney’s fees for the prosecution or defense of a claim may be

compensatory in that they help make a claimant whole, they are not, and have never been, damages.”

Id. at 173.

        Border Demolition further argues that failure to create an exception to Nalle Plastics under

the facts of this case allows Corral-Lerma to supersede the judgment against her during appeal with

essentially no security against the risk of delay in enforcing the judgment. However, under the

scheme the legislature enacted, Border Demolition is hardly alone. Litigants who receive a

compensatory-damages award that is significantly smaller than an accompanying attorney’s-fees

award likely will feel similarly. The statute also provides that security is capped at the lesser of fifty

percent of the judgment debtor’s net worth or $25 million, and requires trial courts to reduce the

amount of security if a judgment debtor shows he is likely to suffer substantial economic harm. See

TEX . CIV . PRAC. & REM . CODE § 52.006(b), (c). As we recognized in Nalle Plastics, this scheme

“‘reflect[ed] a new balance between the judgment creditor’s right in the judgment and the dissipation

of the judgment debtor’s assets during the appeal against the judgment debtor’s right to meaningful

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and easier access to appellate review.’” Nalle Plastics, 406 S.W.3d at 170 (quoting Elaine A.

Carlson, Reshuffling the Deck: Enforcing and Superseding Civil Judgments on Appeal after House

Bill 4, 46 S. TEX . L. REV . 1035, 1038 (2005)). It is the legislature’s prerogative to strike that balance

and our duty to enforce the statute as we find it.

        Finally, Border Demolition argues that even if Corral-Lerma’s security amount need not

cover the attorney’s-fees award, it nonetheless must include interest on those fees. In support, Border

Demolition points out that the supersedeas statute requires security covering the “interest for the

estimated duration of the appeal” without distinguishing between interest on compensatory damages

and costs or other recoveries provided for by the judgment. TEX . CIV . PRAC. & REM . CODE

§ 52.006(a)(2). Two courts of appeals have agreed, holding a judgment debtor must provide security

for interest on the entire judgment. See Tex. Standard Oil & Gas, L.P. v. Frankel Offshore Energy,

Inc., 344 S.W.3d 628, 629 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] 2011, order [mand. denied]); Shook

v. Walden, 304 S.W.3d 910, 929 (Tex. App.—Austin 2010, pet. denied).

        In a well-reasoned dissent in Texas Standard, now-Chief Justice Frost argued such an

interpretation “contradict[s] the unambiguous language of the applicable statute and violate[s] the

firmly embedded rule that interest follows principal.” 344 S.W.3d at 633 (Frost, J., dissenting). We

agree. Before House Bill 4, the comprehensive tort-reform measure that brought section 52.006 into

law, the security amount was required to cover the entire amount of a money judgment, court costs,

and interest. Nalle Plastics, 406 S.W.3d at 169–70. But since the enactment of House Bill 4, the full

amount of the judgment is no longer protected. Id. at 170. It is unreasonable to construe the current

supersedeas statute to require interest on categories of a judgment the Legislature specifically sought

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to exclude from the security amount. We do not read section 52.006 to require Border Demolition’s

compensation for the time value of an award that was not considered in calculating its appellate

security. Accordingly, we disapprove of Texas Standard and Shook to the extent they hold that a

security amount must include interest on attorney’s fees or any other category of a judgment not

required to be included in the security amount.

                                                 ***

        In light of our holding in In re Nalle Plastics, and without hearing oral argument, TEX . R.

APP . P. 59.1, we conditionally grant mandamus relief and direct the court of appeals to withdraw its

order granting Border Demolition’s motion to increase the amount of security required to supersede

the judgment against Corral-Lerma pending appeal. We are confident the court of appeals will

comply, and the writ will issue only if it fails to do so.



OPINION DELIVERED: November 21, 2014




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