All American Telephone, Inc. v. USLD Communications, Inc.

291 S.W.3d 518, 2009 Tex. App. LEXIS 5356, 2009 WL 1996291
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 9, 2009
Docket2-08-092-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by99 cases

This text of 291 S.W.3d 518 (All American Telephone, Inc. v. USLD Communications, 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
All American Telephone, Inc. v. USLD Communications, Inc., 291 S.W.3d 518, 2009 Tex. App. LEXIS 5356, 2009 WL 1996291 (Tex. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

OPINION

TERRIE LIVINGSTON, Justice.

Introduction

Appellants All American Telephone, Inc. (AAT), Nelson Thibodeaux, Jamie Thibo- *522 deaux, and Tony Nowik appeal the trial court’s orders granting appellees USLD Communications, Inc.’s (USLD) 1 and Qwest Services Corporation’s (Qwest) 2 traditional and no-evidence motions for summary judgment. In four issues, appellants contend that the trial court improperly excluded their summary judgment evidence and erred by granting summary judgment for appellees on appellants’ claims for fraud, tortious interference with contract, and malicious prosecution. 3 We affirm.

Background Facts

Appellants’ and appellees’ business relationships

In 1996, Clay Garey, Tony Nowik, and Jamie Thibodeaux formed AAT as a reseller of residential long-distance telephone services. These individuals comprised AAT’s initial board and owned equal shares in the company. 4 Garey served as AAT’s initial president; 5 Nowik and Jamie Thibodeaux were not initially involved in AAT’s day-to-day operations.

Before merging with Qwest, USLD was a long-distance telephone company that provided services for other companies to resell to consumers. AAT was one of those reselling companies. USLD generated call records related to AAT’s customers’ calls; it eventually forwarded these records back to AAT through a Bulletin Board System (BBS). 6

USLD contracted with Multimedia Long Distance, Inc. (Multimedia), also run by Garey, 7 which “rated” call records sent by USLD on AAT’s customers to determine the amount to charge the customers for those calls. 8 Multimedia billed AAT for the wholesale value of the calls, and once AAT paid Multimedia, Multimedia was supposed to make its own payments to USLD. USLD’s contract with Multimedia *523 provided that if Multimedia failed to properly pay USLD, USLD could terminate its services to Multimedia. 9

Once the calls had been “rated” by Multimedia, AAT used a company named Hold Billing Services (Hold) to collect payment from AAT’s customers. 10 Hold advanced funds to AAT based on long-distance calls made by AAT’s customers, and then Hold sent monthly bills to AAT’s customers for those calls through the customers’ local telephone companies. After receiving payment for the long-distance telephone services from the customers’ local companies, Hold reconciled amounts it had advanced to AAT with the actual money it had collected.

To minimize the risk that it might not receive payment equal to the advances it had made to AAT, Hold obtained a security agreement from AAT that attached to AAT’s accounts and its customer base. The security agreement allowed Hold, upon default, to require AAT to deliver all of its books and records relating to its customers; it also allowed Hold to “take control of all ... payments on [AAT’s accounts] and apply them against the obligation.”

The trial court’s proceedings

In 1998, USLD began to allege that Multimedia owed it more than $2 million for its long-distance services. After Garey informed Nowik and Jamie Thibodeaux of this allegation and of AAT’s potential responsibility to pay the money, they demanded to view AAT’s records.

Garey refused to give access to the records and stopped communicating with Jamie Thibodeaux and Nowik; thus, in June 1998, AAT, Jamie Thibodeaux, and Nowik filed their original petition against Garey. Around that same time, because AAT did not agree to pay Multimedia’s debts, USLD blocked Multimedia’s (and therefore AAT’s) access to the BBS. However, according to Nelson Thibodeaux, USLD continued to forward call records to Garey for rating and billing.

In their June 1998 petition, appellants 11 sought a temporary restraining order to prevent Garey from altering AAT’s records or distributing AAT’s assets; they also sought immediate access to the records and damages for Garey’s alleged misconduct. 12 Appellants obtained a temporary restraining order against Garey; however, Garey obtained a temporary restraining order prohibiting appellants from changing AAT’s records or disposing of AAT’s funds.

In July 1998, USLD intervened in appellants’ suit against Garey to collect the more than $2 million allegedly owed to it by AAT. 13 The intervention petition named *524 Nelson Thibodeaux as a third-party defendant; it also requested the trial court to appoint a receiver to take possession of AAT’s assets because of the “unrest and chaos” caused by the countervailing temporary restraining orders.

The same month that USLD filed its intervention petition, appellants and Garey entered into a settlement agreement in which AAT assumed all of Multimedia’s liabilities to USLD and also assumed Multimedia’s contract with USLD. 14 The settlement agreement caused the resignation of Garey as AAT’s president and Jamie Thibodeaux’s and Nowik’s purchases of Garey’s AAT shares for $270,000.

Also in July 1998, the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) issued a Notice of Apparent Liability for Forfeiture (for more than $1 million) against AAT. The FCC alleged that AAT had committed “particularly egregious” violations of federal law by changing the long-distance services of thirteen customers without their permission through forging those customers’ signatures on Letters of Authorization (LOAs). 15 In the summer of 1998, the government seized most of AAT’s files under a warrant.

In August 1998, Hold’s counsel sent ap-pellees’ counsel a letter asserting that AAT owed Hold more than $750,000, noting that appellees were holding AAT’s call records because of appellees’ dispute with AAT and, under Hold’s security agreement with AAT, demanding “immediate delivery to [Hold] of all call records whatsoever attributable to AAT or its customers.” 16 Following appellees’ receipt of that letter, they and Hold entered into a Release and Indemnity Agreement. The agreement recited that Hold had asserted a claim to AAT’s call records and that Hold had warranted that their claim was superior to claims of other entities, including AAT. It then provided that appellees would deliver AAT’s call records to Hold and that Hold would collect money on AA.T’s accounts.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
291 S.W.3d 518, 2009 Tex. App. LEXIS 5356, 2009 WL 1996291, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/all-american-telephone-inc-v-usld-communications-inc-texapp-2009.