Alfredo Flores, Sam Lajzerowicz and Debra Traphagan v. Star Cab Cooperative Association, Inc.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 28, 2008
Docket07-06-00306-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Alfredo Flores, Sam Lajzerowicz and Debra Traphagan v. Star Cab Cooperative Association, Inc. (Alfredo Flores, Sam Lajzerowicz and Debra Traphagan v. Star Cab Cooperative Association, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alfredo Flores, Sam Lajzerowicz and Debra Traphagan v. Star Cab Cooperative Association, Inc., (Tex. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

NO. 07-06-0306-CV


IN THE COURT OF APPEALS


FOR THE SEVENTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS


AT AMARILLO


PANEL B


AUGUST 28, 2008


______________________________


ALFREDO FLORES, SAM LAJZEROWICZ, AND

DEBRA TRAPHAGAN, APPELLANTS


v.


STAR CAB COOPERATIVE ASSOCIATION, INC., AND ALL TAXI DISPATCH SERVICES, INC., PAUL M. FOUTZ, TOM W. JOHNSON, CRUZ S. CHAVIRA,

MARY V. CALK, GREGORIO ZEPEDA, LEANNA JAMIE LOUTIDES,

 RAMON CHAPA, BASHIR A. JAN, AGUSTIN BUDA, OMAR TIRADO,

 ANTRANIK BALDJIAN, WANE BOUBACAR, APPELLEES


_________________________________


FROM THE 131st DISTRICT COURT OF BEXAR COUNTY;


NO. 2003-CI-15869; HONORABLE O. RENE DIAZ, PRESIDING

_______________________________



Before QUINN, C.J., and CAMPBELL and HANCOCK, JJ.

MEMORANDUM OPINION

          Appellants Alfredo Flores, Sam Lajzerowicz, and Debra Traphagan sued Star Cab Cooperative Association, Inc., All Taxi Dispatch Services, Inc., and eleven individuals including former officers and directors of Star Cab and All Taxi alleging tortious conduct and seeking declaratory relief. Attorney Morris J. Kirschberg represented appellants. Appellants appeal a take-nothing judgment and appellants and Kirschberg appeal the judgment’s joint and several award of attorney’s fees in favor of appellees. We will affirm.

Background

          Star Cab is a non-profit cooperative association owning permits from the City of San Antonio for operation of a taxi business. Without a city permit an individual or entity may not lawfully carry passengers for hire in the city. During the times material to the issues in this case, appellants were among the 26 member cab drivers of Star Cab. By regulation, the city required dispatching of cabs by radio.

          By 2001, the membership of Star Cab had become dissatisfied with its existing radio dispatch service. At an August meeting, members voted 25 to 1 to create All Taxi, a for-profit corporation dedicated to the provision of dispatch services for Star Cab and other subscribers. The new entity was owned in equal shares by the 26 members of Star Cab. It began operations in September 2001. To start All Taxi, members of Star Cab agreed to contribute a radio fee in addition to their Star Cab dues. While members generally paid Star Cab dues regularly, payment of All Taxi fees was sporadic. Nevertheless, Star Cab was flexible with its members on financial issues and only one member, who is not a party to the instant litigation, was expelled for non-payment of a monetary obligation.

          Appellants and other members of Star Cab grew dissatisfied with the assessment required to operate All Taxi. Appellants contended officers of Star Cab were not paying their assessments while demanding payment of the other members. Appellants also claimed directors of Star Cab wrongly induced its membership to create All Taxi with representations that the new corporation would decrease radio dispatch costs and make money by serving other taxi services. Appellants hired Kirschberg to negotiate for the transfer of city taxi permits to a new entity. The city refused the request and appellants unsuccessfully sued the city and Star Cab over the issue.

          In November 2003, the members of Star Cab expelled appellants by vote of the cooperative members. The alleged grounds for separation were disparagement, sharing confidential business information, and, according to appellee Calk, appellants’ lack of a “team spirit.”

          Appellants filed the underlying lawsuit in October 2003, variously asserting against Star Cab, its members Paul Foutz, Tom Johnson, Cruz Chavira, Mary Calk, and All Taxi breach of fiduciary duty, fraud, “misappropriation and misuse of funds,” and violations of the DTPA. They also sought declaratory and injunctive relief. Through first and second amended original petitions, appellants added as defendants existing and former officers and directors of Star Cab and All Taxi. They also added claims of insurance fraud, “extortion/duress,” oppression of minority shareholders, “equitable buyout,” “shareholder derivative action,” request for appointment of a receiver over Star Cab, and a request for an accounting of Star Cab and All Taxi. Appellees, as defendants in the trial court, filed motions seeking attorney’s fees as a sanction against appellants and Kirschberg according to Rule 13, chapters 9 and 10 of the Civil Practices and Remedies Code, and the DTPA.

          Trial of the case by jury began on November 28, 2005. At the conclusion of appellants’ case in chief, the court granted appellees’ motions for directed verdict on all appellants’ claims tried with the exception of a fraud count against Foutz, Johnson, Calk, and Chavira. The jury received the case on December 12, 2005, and returned a unanimous verdict finding none of the individuals submitted engaged in fraud. After four post-trial hearings on appellees’ motions for attorney’s fees, the trial court issued an order taxing all appellees’ attorney’s fees jointly and severally against Kirschberg and appellants. The order was incorporated into a judgment that appellants, as plaintiffs, take nothing. Appellants and Kirschberg appealed.


Discussion

Briefing Deficiencies

          Appellees challenge the sufficiency of appellants’ brief on several grounds including the absence of a statement of facts conforming to the requirement of Appellate Rule 38.1(f), insufficient citations to the record and authorities, and the absence of a cogent argument supporting each issue presented. See Tex. R. App. P. 38.1(f), (h).

          The statement of facts in appellants’ brief consists merely of the lengthy factual section of their live petition, complete with argument and qualifying terms such as “on information and belief,” but without record references. This approach does not meet the requirements for an appellant’s brief. Appellate Rule 38.1(f) requires an appellant’s brief present a concise, non-argumentative statement of pertinent facts with record references. Tex. R. App. P. 38.1(f). The statement of facts section of appellants’ brief afforded them a valuable opportunity to present a factual narrative drawn from the testimonial and documentary evidence the trial court admitted and to direct this court to the locations in the record supplying the facts. Because appellants’ brief provides us no assistance in understanding the facts established at trial, we refer to the record and appellees’ statement of facts. See Kelly v. Demoss Owners Assn., 71 S.W.3d 419, 422 n.1 (Tex.App.–Amarillo 2002, no pet.).

          Appellate Rule 38.1(h) provides an appellant’s brief “must contain a clear and concise argument for the contentions made, with appropriate citations to authorities and to the record.” Tex. R. App. P. 38.1(h).

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Alfredo Flores, Sam Lajzerowicz and Debra Traphagan v. Star Cab Cooperative Association, Inc., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alfredo-flores-sam-lajzerowicz-and-debra-traphagan-texapp-2008.