Alma Logan and Logan Real Estate Associates, LLC v. Raynette Randall, as of The Estate of Ray Ellis

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 27, 2020
Docket05-19-00043-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Alma Logan and Logan Real Estate Associates, LLC v. Raynette Randall, as of The Estate of Ray Ellis (Alma Logan and Logan Real Estate Associates, LLC v. Raynette Randall, as of The Estate of Ray Ellis) 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
Alma Logan and Logan Real Estate Associates, LLC v. Raynette Randall, as of The Estate of Ray Ellis, (Tex. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

AFFIRM; Opinion Filed February 27, 2020

In The Court of Appeals Fifth District of Texas at Dallas No. 05-19-00043-CV

ALMA LOGAN AND LOGAN REAL ESTATE ASSOCIATES, LLC, Appellants/Cross-Appellees V. RAYNETTE RANDALL, AS EXECUTOR OF THE ESTATE OF RAY ELLIS, Appellee/Cross-Appellant

On Appeal from the 95th District Court Dallas County, Texas Trial Court Cause No. DC-16-12590

MEMORANDUM OPINION Before Justices Pedersen, III, Reichek, and Carlyle Opinion by Justice Reichek Alma Logan and Logan Real Estate Associates, LLC appeal the trial court’s judgment

awarding Raynette Randall, as executor of the estate of Ray Ellis (the “Estate”), $135,000 in

damages for breach of contract. Bringing three issues with multiple subpoints, Logan essentially

challenges the sufficiency of the evidence to support the trial court’s judgment. In a single cross-

issue, the Estate contends the trial court erred in denying recovery on its claim for breach of

fiduciary duty. We affirm the trial court’s judgment.

Factual Background

This case arises out of an oral agreement between Alma Logan and Ray Ellis. The facts

testified to at trial are as follows. Ellis was the founder and president of Kwik Industries which, among other things,

developed and licensed Kwik Kar automotive oil change and lube shops. Ellis was also a licensed

real estate agent who facilitated the sale of existing Kwik Kar shops to new owners. According to

Logan, Ellis operated as a real estate agent under the auspices of her real estate brokerage.

Logan testified she was a self-employed, licensed real estate broker with Logan Real Estate

Associates, LLC., doing business as RE/MAX Real Estate Associates. Over fifteen years before

Ellis died, Logan and Ellis entered into an oral agreement, the undisputed terms of which were

that, in exchange for working under Logan’s real estate brokerage, Ellis would pay Logan a

monthly “desk fee,” a fee for E&O insurance, and a percentage of the commissions earned on his

real estate transactions. Logan stated that, at the time of Ellis’s death, the agreement was that she

would receive 1% of the broker’s fee commission up to $2,000.

In early 2015, Kelly Privett contacted Ellis and told him he was thinking of selling his

Kwik Kar shop located on Inwood Road in Dallas. Privett and Ellis discussed pricing and Privett

stated he agreed to pay a $150,000 broker’s fee commission with the understanding that the money

would go to Ellis. Privett had previously done about five other transactions with Ellis and he stated

that Ellis always received the commission. Ellis told Privett he had a couple of potential buyers

for the store.

In March 2015, Ellis and Privett signed a “Registration Agreement between Broker and

Owner” listing “Munawar A. Piracha and/or Assigns” as the prospective buyer. The agreement

further listed Privett’s company, K&M Privett, Inc., as the owner of the property and “RE/MAX

the Real Estate Associates” as the broker. Ellis’s name was listed off to the side of the broker

section. According to Logan, the agent usually signed the registration agreement on behalf of the

sponsoring broker and, in this case, Logan specifically testified that, when Ellis signed the

registration agreement, he was “[r]epresenting me, the broker.” The agreement set forth the asking

–2– price for the Inwood Road Kwik Kar shop as $3,650,000 and the broker fee as $150,000. The

agreement further stated that “Owner is not obligated to pay Broker a fee until such time as

Broker’s fee is earned and payable.” (emphasis in original) “Earned” was defined as when the

owner entered into a binding agreement to sell or lease all or part of the property at any price to

the prospective purchaser or if the owner breached the agreement. “Payable” was defined as at the

earlier of the closing and funding of the sale or upon the owner’s breach. Ultimately, no deal

resulted between Privett and Piracha.

Then, in July 2015, James Goff approached Ellis seeking to buy a Kwik Kar. Goff stated

that a friend told him Ellis was the “proper channel” to go through to purchase a Kwik Kar shop.

Ellis, Goff, and Privett met together later that month and Goff and Privett came to an agreement

in principal for the sale of the Inwood store (the “Inwood deal”). Privett testified that, if Ellis had

not brought him and Goff together, the sale would not have occurred.

Ellis died on October 20, 2015. Following his death, Tracey Dunham, who worked for

Kwik Industries at that time, handled all of the negotiations and communications between Goff

and Privett and their attorneys. Her work included processing the file by negotiating the contract,

making sure the due diligence was delivered, and making sure the parties adhered to the timeframes

set out in the contract. Dunham testified she worked with Ellis on at least 160 deals during her

career working at Kwik Industries, and Logan confirmed that Ellis employed Dunham to do this

type of work on his transactions. In addition to being employed by Kwik, Dunham was also a

registered real estate agent with Keller Williams Brokerage. Dunham testified she never worked

for Logan and, although Logan was the sponsoring broker and, as such, “directed” the Inwood

deal, Dunham said she processed the file as an employee of Kwik and not on behalf of Logan. In

an email to Logan, Dunham referred to the Inwood deal as “the deal I have been processing for

–3– Ray.” Logan conceded she had no formal employment relationship with Dunham, but stated she

felt that Dunham was performing the processing work for her as an independent contractor.

On October 23, Dunham sent an email to others working at Kwik about the Inwood deal

stating,

The Registration Agreement executed by Ray and Kelly Privett names Ray’s previous buyer, Munawar Piracha who went away; however, I spoke with Ray’s broker Alma Logan and Kelly can scratch through that name and insert the new buyer’s name. Alma will initial the new buyer’s name change as Ray’s broker. Any commission paid would have the 1% broker’s fee deducted as well as a $75 E&O charge.

When one of the email recipients asked Dunham for a copy of Ellis’s agreement with Logan,

Dunham forwarded the email chain to Logan stating that she could not find the written agreement

“between Ray and RE/MAX” but she knew that “the 1% of each commission with a desk fee of

$500 was a verbal agreement as of years ago.” Logan responded that “[i]t was a hand shake kind

of deal since I have been working with him for over 15 years.”

Several weeks later, Logan sent Dunham an email informing her that she spoke to the Texas

Real Estate Commission about the Inwood deal. She stated,

Since the Registration was completed by Ray and he was the precurring [sic] cause to bring the 2 parties together, our office is protected. However, unfortunately since Ray technically no longer has an active license, the contract cannot have his name on it. Our Brokerage can be entitled to the transaction since the Broker owns any listings, clients, etc but we need to find a solution.

When asked at trial whether, at the time she sent the email, she was trying to find a way to pay the

Estate for the deal, Logan responded, “Correct.” Logan further confirmed that, when she changed

the Registration Agreement to show a different buyer and to add her initials as the broker, she was

not planning to keep the broker fee commission and she did not “form that idea” until later.

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Alma Logan and Logan Real Estate Associates, LLC v. Raynette Randall, as of The Estate of Ray Ellis, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alma-logan-and-logan-real-estate-associates-llc-v-raynette-randall-as-of-texapp-2020.