Bass, Edward and Bass, Cary L. v. Walker, T. Delbert, Walker Sand, Inc., Ellington Dirt, Inc., Camille Butler and Ed Robeau

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 7, 2002
Docket14-01-00532-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Bass, Edward and Bass, Cary L. v. Walker, T. Delbert, Walker Sand, Inc., Ellington Dirt, Inc., Camille Butler and Ed Robeau (Bass, Edward and Bass, Cary L. v. Walker, T. Delbert, Walker Sand, Inc., Ellington Dirt, Inc., Camille Butler and Ed Robeau) 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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Bass, Edward and Bass, Cary L. v. Walker, T. Delbert, Walker Sand, Inc., Ellington Dirt, Inc., Camille Butler and Ed Robeau, (Tex. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

Affirmed and Opinion filed November 7, 2002

Affirmed and Opinion filed November 7, 2002.

In The

Fourteenth Court of Appeals

____________

NO. 14-01-00532-CV

EDWARD BASS AND CARY L. BASS, Appellants

V.

T. DELBERT WALKER, WALKER SAND, INC., ELLINGTON DIRT, INC., CAMILLE BUTLER, AND ED ROBEAU, Appellees

On Appeal from the 269th District Court

Harris County, Texas

Trial Court Cause No. 91-08515

O P I N I O N

Appellants Edward Bass and Cary L. Bass challenge the sufficiency of the evidence supporting the trial court=s determination that they brought this derivative suit without reasonable cause.  Because there was sufficient evidence that appellants filed suit without reasonable cause and because the trial court did not abuse its discretion in ordering them to pay appellees= expenses under the Texas Business Corporation Act, we affirm the trial court=s judgment.


                              Factual and Procedural Background

In 1982, T. Delbert Walker, Ed Robeau, Travis Campbell, Dr. E. C. Butler, Dr. G. H.  Barfield[1], and a group that included several members of the Bass family formed Ellington Dirt, Inc., for the purpose of acquiring two adjacent tracts of land in southeast Harris County (Athe Property@).  In that same year, Ellington Dirt purchased the Property and leased it to Walker Sand, Inc., under a 1982 lease entitled ALease for the Purpose of Removal and Sale of Sand and Related Fill Material@ (Athe Original Lease@).  At all material times, Delbert Walker has been the principal stockholder of Walker Sand and the president of both Walker Sand and Ellington Dirt. 

The Original Lease contained the following terms:

!         The term of the lease was 15 years.

!         During the first four years of the lease, Walker Sand would pay Ellington Dirt $0.50 per cubic yard for all sand, fill dirt, and topsoil removed from the Property.

!         In the fifth year, this royalty amount would increase to $0.60 per cubic yard, and it would increase by five percent for each year thereafter. 

!         If Walker Sand failed to pay the royalties as specified in the lease, Ellington Dirt had the right to immediately terminate the lease, re-lease the Property, and, if it desired, bring suit against Walker Sand.

!         If Walker Sand did not work the lease or move sand, fill dirt, or topsoil for a period of nine months, Ellington Dirt had the option to terminate the lease.

!         Walker Sand agreed to excavate all material on 52 acres of the Property to a depth of 35 feet. 

!         After Walker Sand completed this excavation, Ellington Dirt would have the option to sell these 52 acres to Walker Sand at fair market value or receive one-tenth of all revenues generated from the operation of a landfill on these 52 acres.


!         In connection with the landfill option, Walker Sand agreed to obtain any necessary permits and to comply with the laws applicable to the operation of landfills.

Approximately two years after the Original Lease was signed, a number of problems arose that impacted the operations.  First, the economy suffered a downturn.  Because of the adverse economic conditions and other factors, the Original Lease was not generating much income.  In 1986, Ellington Dirt agreed not to escalate the royalties as provided in the lease.  Delbert Walker testified that he told the shareholders of Ellington Dirt that circumstances made it unlikely that a landfill permit could be acquired for the Property. 

In 1989, the Basses[2] began to suspect that the Property was being used as a dump site. Edward Bass and Travis Campbell found concrete, rebar, pipe, tires, and other materials on the Property.  At a shareholders= meeting in October of 1990, Edward Bass asked Walker about the apparent dumping on the Property.  According to Bass, Walker initially denied it, but later stated that seven to ten acres of the Property had been used for dumping and that permits were unnecessary because he dumped only Adirt and crushed concrete.@  The Basses feared that the material dumped on the Property might be debris from a 1989 explosion at a Phillips Petroleum Plant and, therefore, might contain hazardous waste. 

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Bass, Edward and Bass, Cary L. v. Walker, T. Delbert, Walker Sand, Inc., Ellington Dirt, Inc., Camille Butler and Ed Robeau, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bass-edward-and-bass-cary-l-v-walker-t-delbert-wal-texapp-2002.