ASR 2620-2630 Fountainview, LP, Fountainview Park Plaza, LLC, and ASRP Investments, LLC v. ASR 2620-2630 Fountainview GP, LLC, American Spectrum Operating Partnership LP, American Spectrum Realty, Inc., and American Spectrum Realty Management, LLC

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 7, 2019
Docket14-17-00271-CV
StatusPublished

This text of ASR 2620-2630 Fountainview, LP, Fountainview Park Plaza, LLC, and ASRP Investments, LLC v. ASR 2620-2630 Fountainview GP, LLC, American Spectrum Operating Partnership LP, American Spectrum Realty, Inc., and American Spectrum Realty Management, LLC (ASR 2620-2630 Fountainview, LP, Fountainview Park Plaza, LLC, and ASRP Investments, LLC v. ASR 2620-2630 Fountainview GP, LLC, American Spectrum Operating Partnership LP, American Spectrum Realty, Inc., and American Spectrum Realty Management, LLC) 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.

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ASR 2620-2630 Fountainview, LP, Fountainview Park Plaza, LLC, and ASRP Investments, LLC v. ASR 2620-2630 Fountainview GP, LLC, American Spectrum Operating Partnership LP, American Spectrum Realty, Inc., and American Spectrum Realty Management, LLC, (Tex. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

Affirmed as Modified and Opinion filed February 7, 2019.

In The

Fourteenth Court of Appeals

NO. 14-17-00271-CV

ASR 2620-2630 FOUNTAINVIEW, LP, FOUNTAINVIEW PARK PLAZA, LLC, AND ASRP INVESTMENTS, LLC, Appellants V.

ASR 2620-2630 FOUNTAINVIEW GP, LLC, AMERICAN SPECTRUM REALTY OPERATING PARTNERSHIP, LP, AMERICAN SPECTRUM REALTY, INC., AND AMERICAN SPECTRUM REALTY MANAGEMENT, LLC, Appellees

On Appeal from the 270th District Court Harris County, Texas Trial Court Cause No. 2013-25806

OPINION This appeal arises out of a partnership dispute. The limited partnership and the two class A limited partners complain that the trial court erred in rendering judgment in favor of the class B limited partner on its claim against the limited partnership for breach of the limited partnership agreement. They say the general partner, not the limited partnership, had the duty to make the distributions at issue in this claim. The limited partnership and the two class A limited partners also assert that the trial court erred in assessing an offset against their recovery against a former general partner. We modify the judgment and affirm as modified.

I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

In 2010, the general partner and three limited partners executed a Limited Partnership Agreement (the “Agreement”) in which they formed a Delaware limited partnership named ASR 2620-2630 Fountainview, LP (the “Limited Partnership”). Under the Agreement, ASR 2620-2630 Fountainview GP, LLC (the “First General Partner”) was the general partner of the Limited Partnership. Fountain View Park Plaza, LLC and ASRP Investments, LLC (collectively the “Class A Partners”) were the two Class A Limited Partners, and American Spectrum Realty Operating Partnership, LP (the “Class B Partner”) was the sole Class B Limited Partner.

The Class A Partners became dissatisfied with the First General Partner’s performance of its duties as general partner. In April 2013, the Class A Partners removed the First General Partner and selected Fountainview New GP, LLC (the “Second General Partner”) to be the general partner of the Limited Partnership following the removal of the First General Partner.

The Limited Partnership and the Class A Partners (collectively the “Park Plaza Parties”) filed this lawsuit, asserting claims for breach of the Agreement and breach of fiduciary duty against (1) the First General Partner, (2) the Class B Partner, (3) American Spectrum Realty, Inc., a company that is the general partner of the Class B Partner as well as the general partner of the First General

2 Partner’s sole member, and (4) American Spectrum Realty Management, LLC, a property-management company retained by the First General Partner (collectively the “American Spectrum Parties”). Agreed Temporary Injuction The trial court signed an agreed temporary injunction providing that any money received from the sale of two office buildings owned by the Limited Partnership was to be placed in a segregated bank account. The two buildings owned by the Limited Partnership were sold, and the proceeds were placed in the segregated bank account.

A dispute arose over entitlement to the sales proceeds. The Class B Partner filed counterclaims against the Park Plaza Parties alleging, among other things, that the Limited Partnership had breached the Agreement by failing to disburse the sales proceeds. No party, including the Class B Partner, asserted any claim against the Second General Partner, which is not a party in this litigation.

The American Spectrum Parties took issue with a payment made from the segregated bank account by Pamela Castleman, a representative of the Second General Partner. The American Spectrum Parties asserted that Castleman violated the temporary injunction by paying an improper real estate commission in the amount of $266,400 from this account to Victory Realty Solutions, Inc. Neither Castleman nor Victory Realty Solutions, Inc. is a party in this litigation.

The Contempt Order

The American Spectrum Parties filed a motion asking the trial court to hold Castleman in contempt. After a pre-trial evidentiary hearing, the trial court signed an order in which it granted the motion for contempt and found that Castleman caused the payment from the segregated account in violation of the

3 temporary injunction (the “Contempt Order”). The trial court found and ordered “that the appropriate remedy for Ms. Castleman’s conduct is an adjustment to the jury’s verdict in the amount of the funds paid out in violation of the Court orders.”

Jury Findings

In the jury trial that followed, the jury did not find that either the First General Partner or the Class B Partner breached the Agreement. The jury found in favor of the Park Plaza Parties as to liability and damages on their breach-of- fiduciary-duty claims against the First General Partner. The jury found that the Limited Partnership failed to comply with the Agreement by not paying distributions under section 6.2 of the Agreement and that $1,197,866 fairly and reasonably would compensate the Class B Partner for its damages that resulted from the Partnership’s failure to comply.1

Trial Court’s Judgment

After trial, the First General Partner asked the trial court to enforce the remedy announced in the Contempt Order by deducting $266,400 from $371,147 — the total amount of damages found by the jury as to the Park Plaza Parties’ breach-of-fiduciary-duty claims against the First General Partner. The Park Plaza Parties objected and argued that the trial court would err in doing so for various reasons. The trial court rendered a final judgment in which it ordered that the Park Plaza Parties recover $104,747 — the damages found by the jury “less an offset of $266,400 as set forth in the [Contempt Order]” — plus prejudgment interest and court costs. The trial court also rendered judgment that the Class B Partner recover from the Limited Partnership $1,197,866 plus

1 The jury made other findings not relevant to this appeal.

4 prejudgment interest and court costs, in accordance with the jury’s verdict.

II. ISSUES AND ANALYSIS

On appeal from the trial court’s judgment, the Park Plaza Parties assert two appellate issues:

1. Who owes the contractual duty to make distributions under Section 6.2 of the [Agreement]? That is, does the duty fall on the [Limited Partnership], or does it fall on the general partner instead? 2. Did the trial court err when it reduced the [Park Plaza Parties’] recovery on the verdict by $266,400 because of the acts of a non-party?

A. Did the trial court err in rendering judgment against the Limited Partnership because the general partner, not the Limited Partnership, has the duty to make distributions under section 6.2? Under their first appellate issue, the Park Plaza Parties assert that the general partner, not the Limited Partnership, has the duty to make distributions under section 6.2 of the Agreement. The Park Plaza Parties assert that the trial court erred in asking the jury in Question 7 whether the Limited Partnership failed to comply with the Agreement by failing to pay distributions under section 6.2, over the Park Plaza Parties’ objection that the trial court wrongly pinned on the Limited Partnership the general partner’s contractual duty to make any necessary distributions under section 6.2. According to the Park Plaza Parties, only the Second General Partner had any duty to make the distribution that was the basis of the Class B Partner’s breach-of-contract claim, yet the Class B Partner did not assert any claim against the Second General Partner, an entity that is not a party to this litigation. The Park Plaza Parties preserved error in the trial court on their first issue.

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ASR 2620-2630 Fountainview, LP, Fountainview Park Plaza, LLC, and ASRP Investments, LLC v. ASR 2620-2630 Fountainview GP, LLC, American Spectrum Operating Partnership LP, American Spectrum Realty, Inc., and American Spectrum Realty Management, LLC, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/asr-2620-2630-fountainview-lp-fountainview-park-plaza-llc-and-asrp-texapp-2019.