Bray v. Squires

702 S.W.2d 266, 1985 Tex. App. LEXIS 12531
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 27, 1985
Docket01-84-0264-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 702 S.W.2d 266 (Bray v. Squires) 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
Bray v. Squires, 702 S.W.2d 266, 1985 Tex. App. LEXIS 12531 (Tex. Ct. App. 1985).

Opinion

OPINION

EVANS, Chief Justice.

This controversy arose when the appel-lees, Messrs. Squires, Walsh, and Tompkins, resigned as associates of the law firm of the appellant, Roy H. Bray, and immediately engaged themselves, as a new firm, in performing legal work for Mr. Bray’s principal client, University Savings Association. Several days later, Mr. Bray sued appellees Squires, Walsh, and Tompkins, alleging that they had breached their fiduciary duty to him and that they had interfered with and damaged his business relationship with University Savings. In this same action, Mr. Bray also sued University Savings, its president and chairman of the board, Mr. Richard Collier, and one of its directors, Mr. Jackson Hinds, who was also chairman of the board and chief executive officer of Entex, Inc. In his petition, Mr. Bray alleged that Messrs. Collier and Hinds had wrongfully induced his former employees, Squires, Walsh, and Tompkins, to terminate their employment, and that in participation with those employees, Messrs. Collier and Hinds had damaged his business relationship with University Savings.

The case was tried before a jury, which answered all controlling issues contrary to Mr. Bray’s position. In response to the *268 issues submitted, the jury failed to find that Messrs. Squires, Walsh, and Tompkins had breached any fiduciary relationship between themselves and Mr. Bray, or that Messrs. Hinds and Collier participated in any breach of such fiduciary relationship. The jury also failed to find that Messrs. Squires, Walsh, or Tompkins, in concert or individually, had interfered with or conspired to interfere with any business or contractual relationship between Mr. Bray and University Savings. The jury further failed to find that either Mr. Hinds or Mr. Collier had wrongfully induced Messrs. Squires, Walsh, and Tompkins to terminate their employment with Mr. Bray.

The jury did find that Mr. Hinds had committed acts that interfered with the business relationship between Mr. Bray and University Savings, and that such interference proximately caused damage to that relationship. However, the jury failed to find that Mr. Hinds’ actions were motivated by malice; to the contrary, it found that such actions were undertaken to achieve legitimate business or personal goals. Based on the jury’s verdict, the trial court entered a take-nothing judgment against Mr. Bray.

Mr. Bray first contends that the evidence established, as a matter of law, that Messrs. Squires, Walsh, and Tompkins breached their fiduciary duty to him, and that the jury’s contrary finding on that issue is against the great weight and preponderance of the evidence.

Mr. Bray testified that his law firm was primarily engaged in real estate matters and that he first performed legal services for University Savings in 1968. This new business resulted from his acquaintance with Mr. John Jobes, then president and chief executive officer of University Savings, and with Mr. Robert S. Lanier, who at that time owned both Main Bank and a controlling interest in University Savings. At the same time that Mr. Bray began to work for University Savings, he hired ap-pellee Miller Walsh as an associate attorney. Mr. Walsh began doing legal work for University Savings, and as the company’s business expanded, Mr. Walsh became engaged in more sophisticated real estate transactions. In 1971, Mr. Bray employed appellee Kenneth Squires, and over the course of his work for University Savings, Mr. Squires developed expertise in dealing with condominium and townhouse transactions. Mr. Bray later retained appellee Jeffrey J. Tompkins, a nephew by marriage to Mr. Jackson Hinds, and Mr. Tompkins also performed legal work for University Savings. There was no written employment contract between Mr. Bray and these associates, and all three lawyers were employed on the basis of an oral understanding. In June 1977, Messrs. Squires, Walsh, and Tompkins advised Mr. Bray that they were resigning from the firm, and that they intended to perform future legal services for University Savings. Although they indicated to Mr. Bray that they would be willing to remain an additional 30 days to wind up pending matters, he instructed them to leave immediately.

Mr. Bray testified that he had no written contract with University Savings, but that he did have a general fee understanding with respect to his legal services. After Messrs. Squires, Walsh, and Tompkins resigned, Mr. Bray found that his firm’s commercial work for University Savings ceased almost entirely, and that within a few months, most of his residential work also terminated. Before then, his firm’s gross revenue from University Savings amounted to $250,000 to $360,000 per year. When Walsh and Tompkins came to his office on Monday, June 6, 1977, they advised him that they were resigning and “taking your largest client with us.” Mr. Bray said he doubted whether they could do that “at that time,” due to his long relationship with University Savings. To that statement, Mr. Tompkins responded, “My Uncle Jackson has called us. Everything is go. He told us we could come in and tell you now that we are leaving and we are taking your largest client.” Several days later, Mr. Bray talked to Mr. Collier at a business reception. He testified that Mr. Collier advised him that there would be no change in the “substantial representation” of Univer *269 sity Savings, and that Mr. Bray’s departing associates would merely be referred some consumer transactions and other matters not then being handled by Mr. Bray’s firm. But later at the same function, Mr. Bray talked to Mr. Hinds and received a different explanation. Bray said that Mr. Hinds made it “absolutely clear” that his firm would not be receiving any more legal business from University Savings.

Mr. Hinds testified that he had talked to his nephew, Mr. Tompkins, some months before his nephew’s resignation from Mr. Bray’s employment. He knew that his nephew was dissatisfied with his situation at Mr. Bray’s firm, and he advised his nephew of the possibility of future legal work from University Savings. But he told his nephew that this arrangement was conditioned on several things. First, Entex would have to acquire the controlling interest in University Savings; second, the proposed arrangement would have to be agreeable to Mr. Collier, the president of University Savings; and finally, the arrangement would have to be fair to both parties, and there would be no guarantee of the amount of future legal business to be referred by University Savings. When Mr. Hinds later learned that the Entex acquisition had been approved and that Mr. Collier had agreed to the proposal, he advised his nephew that he felt the first two conditions had been met. Mr. Hinds further testified that because Mr. Bray had a substantial financial interest in a competing savings institution, San Jacinto Savings Association, he felt that Mr. Bray had a conflict of interest that prevented him from continuing to represent University Savings. Mr. Hinds stated that due to this conflict of interest, he would not have permitted Mr. Bray’s representation of University Savings to continue after Entex acquired the controlling interest in that company.

Messrs. Squires, Walsh, and Tompkins testified they left Mr. Bray’s employment because of their dissatisfaction with the employment relationship. Each felt there was little hope of becoming a partner in the firm, and also felt dissatisfaction about salary and other benefits.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
702 S.W.2d 266, 1985 Tex. App. LEXIS 12531, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bray-v-squires-texapp-1985.