American Pride Express Logistics, Inc. and Thomas E. Flores, Individually v. Joe Jordan Trucks, Inc.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedSeptember 24, 2021
Docket05-20-00281-CV
StatusPublished

This text of American Pride Express Logistics, Inc. and Thomas E. Flores, Individually v. Joe Jordan Trucks, Inc. (American Pride Express Logistics, Inc. and Thomas E. Flores, Individually v. Joe Jordan Trucks, 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
American Pride Express Logistics, Inc. and Thomas E. Flores, Individually v. Joe Jordan Trucks, Inc., (Tex. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

Affirm and Opinion Filed September 24, 2021

In The Court of Appeals Fifth District of Texas at Dallas No. 05-20-00281-CV

AMERICAN PRIDE XPRESS LOGISTICS, INC. AND THOMAS E. FLORES, INDIVIDUALLY, Appellants V. JOE JORDAN TRUCKS, INC., Appellee

On Appeal from the 191st Judicial District Court Dallas County, Texas Trial Court Cause No. DC-15-07192

MEMORANDUM OPINION Before Justices Myers, Partida-Kipness, and Carlyle Opinion by Justice Myers American Pride Xpress Logistics, Inc. and Thomas E. Flores appeal the trial

court’s judgment on a jury verdict in favor of Joe Jordan Trucks, Inc. awarding it

damages of $300,000 plus attorney’s fees. Appellants bring three issues on appeal

contending the trial court erred by (1) denying appellants’ motion to dismiss under

Rule of Civil Procedure 91a, (2) denying appellants’ motion for summary judgment,

and (3) denying appellants’ motion for directed verdict. We conclude the denials of

appellants’ motion to dismiss under Rule 91a and motion for summary judgment are

not orders that can be reviewed on appeal from a final judgment following a trial on the merits at which appellee prevailed. We also conclude appellants failed to show

the trial court erred by denying the motion for directed verdict because they did not

bring a complete reporter’s record of the trial. We affirm the trial court’s judgment.

BACKGROUND In 2006, David Varela and two partners purchased property in Dallas. Varela

formed a corporation, Joe Jordan Trucks, Inc., to manage the property. Although

the name of the company was “Joe Jordan Trucks, Inc.,” Varela testified that he and

others in the business office referred to the company as “Joe Jordan, Inc.”

In 2007, “David Varela and/or assigns” leased the property to American Pride

Xpress Logistics, Inc., a corporation owned by Thomas Flores, for a term ending

October 31, 2011. American Pride was frequently late in paying the rent, and Varela

notified American Pride in 2008 that it was in default and would be evicted if the

default was not cured. The issue was resolved through amending the lease and by

Flores becoming a guarantor of American Pride’s performance of the lease. Varela

testified he assigned the lease to Joe Jordan Trucks, Inc. by 2009, but he did not

make a written assignment of the lease. However, he instructed his CPA to report

income from the property on appellee’s income tax return.

Varela testified that in 2010, he intended to deed the property to appellees,

“Joe Jordan Trucks, Inc.,” but he mistakenly instructed his attorney, Lee Cox, to

make the grantee in the deed “Joe Jordan, Inc.” No such corporation existed at the

time. The mistake was not discovered until late 2016 or early 2017.

–2– Meanwhile, in 2014, Varela learned American Pride was excavating and

selling sand mined from the property. Varela demanded that American Pride cease

and desist from these activities. When American Pride continued excavating, this

lawsuit with “Joe Jordan, Inc.” as plaintiff was filed against American Pride and

Flores in 2015.

American Pride stopped paying rent after December 2016. On December 14,

2016, Flores formed a corporation called “Joe Jordan, Inc.,” and two days later, on

December 16, 2016, Flores signed a quitclaim deed purporting to cause “Joe Jordan,

Inc.” to transfer the property to Flores. Three days later, on December 19, 2016,

Flores signed a special warranty deed purporting to convey the property to Frederick

Brown, Flores’s accountant.

Varela learned in December or January 2016 that Flores was claiming his

accountant owned the property. That was also when Varela learned the 2010 deed

misnamed the grantee. Cox drafted and Varela signed a correction warranty deed

correcting the misnomer on the 2010 deed to show the grantee was “Joe Jordan

Trucks, Inc.”

Varela amended the 2015 petition repeatedly, changing the plaintiff to “Joe

Jordan Trucks, Inc.” and alleging causes of action, including breach of contract,

–3– concerning appellants’ unauthorized mining of the property and their failure to pay

rent.1

Flores testified he had been doing business as “Joe Jordan, Inc.” since 2008

even though the corporation did not then exist. Flores testified he agreed with Varela

and his partners in 2010 to purchase the property by making monthly payments.

According to Flores, they agreed that Flores would own the property when his

monthly payments totaled $600,000. Varela asked Flores who should be the grantee

in the deed, and Flores said “Joe Jordan, Inc.” Flores testified he made the last

payment in December 2016 and then officially formed the corporation Joe Jordan,

Inc. He then transferred the property from Joe Jordan, Inc. to himself and then to

Brown as collateral for the use of a piece of equipment Brown owned.

Flores testified he used the property for parking trucks. He said the property

had been used previously as an auto salvage yard, and there were pieces of metal in

the ground that could damage the trucks. Flores excavated the dirt and sand on one

area of the property down to about twenty feet, sifted out the metal, and then filled

in the hole by combining the removed sand with other materials. He testified this

combination of materials, which he compacted, hardened the surface and made it

better suited for parking trucks. Flores testified he did not sell the sand he removed.

1 Appellee also brought causes of action concerning appellants’ deeding the property from Joe Jordan, Inc. to Flores and from Flores to Brown. Those claims were not part of the motions and orders relevant to this appeal, and those claims were not submitted to the jury. –4– In 2017, appellants filed a motion to dismiss appellee’s breach of contract

claims under Rule 91a, asserting appellee’s petition did not allege that appellee was

a party to or an assignee of the 2007 lease. The trial court denied that motion.

Appellants then filed a motion for summary judgment asserting that because

appellee was not a party to the lease, it could not enforce the lease. Appellee

amended the petition to allege that after the transfer of the property in 2010, “the

lease in question was internally transferred to the corporation, Joe Jordan Trucks,

Inc.”

In 2019, the case proceeded to a jury trial. After appellee rested its case in

chief, appellants moved for a directed verdict on the ground that appellee was never

a party to the dispute. The trial court denied the motion for directed verdict.

Appellants then presented their case in chief.

The jury found there was a lease between appellee and appellants, that

appellants failed to comply with the lease by causing damage to the property and by

failing to make rental payments, and that appellee’s damages for accrued unpaid

rental and for damage to the property were $175,250 and $124,750, respectively.

The trial court rendered judgment on the verdict awarding appellee damages of

$300,000 plus additional amounts for attorney’s fees.

–5– DENIAL OF PRETRIAL MOTIONS

In their first and second issues, appellants contend the trial court erred by

denying appellants’ Rule 91a motion to dismiss and motion for summary judgment

on appellee’s breach of contract claims because appellee was not a party to the lease.

The trial court’s ruling2 denying the motion for summary judgment is not one

we can review. “The denial of a motion for summary judgment when followed by a

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American Pride Express Logistics, Inc. and Thomas E. Flores, Individually v. Joe Jordan Trucks, Inc., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-pride-express-logistics-inc-and-thomas-e-flores-individually-texapp-2021.