Brian Cweren and the Cweren Law Firm, PLLC v. Eureka Multifamily Group, L.P., Rene Campos, Jimmy Arnold and Chris Robertson

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 18, 2023
Docket01-21-00470-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Brian Cweren and the Cweren Law Firm, PLLC v. Eureka Multifamily Group, L.P., Rene Campos, Jimmy Arnold and Chris Robertson (Brian Cweren and the Cweren Law Firm, PLLC v. Eureka Multifamily Group, L.P., Rene Campos, Jimmy Arnold and Chris Robertson) 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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Brian Cweren and the Cweren Law Firm, PLLC v. Eureka Multifamily Group, L.P., Rene Campos, Jimmy Arnold and Chris Robertson, (Tex. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

Opinion issued April 18, 2023

In The

Court of Appeals For The

First District of Texas ———————————— NO. 01-21-00470-CV ——————————— BRIAN P. CWEREN AND THE CWEREN LAW FIRM PLLC, Appellants V. EUREKA MULTIFAMILY GROUP, L.P., RENE CAMPOS, JIMMY ARNOLD, AND CHRIS ROBERTSON, Appellees

On Appeal from the 55th District Court Harris County, Texas Trial Court Case No. 2021-18448

MEMORANDUM OPINION

In this interlocutory appeal,1 appellants, Brian P. Cweren and the Cweren Law

Firm PLLC (the “Cweren Law Firm”) (collectively, “appellants”), challenge the trial

1 See TEX. CIV. PRAC. & REM. CODE ANN. §§ 27.008, 51.014(a)(12). court’s denial of their motion to dismiss2 the claims of appellees, Eureka Multifamily

Group, L.P. (“Eureka”), Rene Campos, Jimmy Arnold, and Chris Robertson

(collectively, “appellees”), pursuant to the Texas Citizens Participation Act

(“TCPA”).3 In three issues, appellants contend that the trial court did not deny their

motion to dismiss,4 and if the trial court did actually deny their motion to dismiss, it

erred in doing so.

We affirm.

Background5

In their original petition, appellees alleged that Cweren was the founding and

managing member of the Cweren Law Firm and appellants “h[eld] themselves out

as experts in the apartment industry.” Appellants offered “entity formation[]”

services to their clients as well as “defense of entities” services when their clients

were being sued. However, appellants “misrepresent[ed] their credentials and

2 See id. § 27.003(a); see also id. § 27.005. 3 See id. §§ 27.001–.011. 4 See id. § 27.008(a) (“If a court does not rule on a [TCPA] motion to dismiss . . . in the time prescribed by [Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code] [s]ection 27.005, the motion is considered to have been denied by operation of law . . . .”). 5 To the extent that any of the parties have directed this Court to documents attached to their appellate filings that were not otherwise contained in the appellate record, we note that the attachment of documents as exhibits or appendices to an appellate brief does not constitute formal inclusion of such documents in the record for appeal, and we have not considered matters outside of the record in our review. See McCann v. Spencer Plantation Invs., Ltd., No. 01-16-00098-CV, 2017 WL 769895, at *4 n.5 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] Feb. 28, 2017, pet. denied) (mem. op.).

2 affiliations within the Texas apartment industry to induce members of the apartment

industry to retain them,” and then appellants “routinely abuse[d] th[eir]

[apartment-industry] clients” once the clients become dissatisfied. Appellants often

filed lawsuits against their former clients and their principals. Appellants did this to

“extract sums of monies beyond any amount [that appellants] allege[d] to be due and

owing at the end of the[ir] relationship [with a client].” Appellants would accuse

their clients of committing fraud “when[ever] they [would] get into disagreements

with [their] clients and [appellants would] use [such] allegations to shake down

payments from the [clients that] they [had] represented, or any individuals who

[were] associated with the[] [client’s] ownership[] or management.”

Related to appellees, specifically, appellees alleged that on November 1,

2013, appellants and Eureka signed a representation agreement “pertaining to a

particular matter involving a [specific] property in . . . Eureka[’s] manage[d]

portfolio.” Arnold, the president of Eureka, signed the agreement with appellants

on behalf of Eureka. “Managers at other properties within the Eureka managed

portfolio retained [appellants] thereafter, from time to time, to provide property

specific representation, on a matter-by-matter basis, where the designated property

was [appellants’] sole client in the matter.” Because appellants marketed and

advertised their alleged expertise and experience in the apartment industry, appellees

alleged that Eureka was induced to retain appellants to represent Eureka and Eureka

3 managed properties and to continue to allow representation over the course of

several years.

When Eureka initially retained appellants, it agreed to allow Eureka property

managers to also retain appellants thereafter on behalf of Eureka managed

properties, in reliance upon appellants’ ongoing representations to Eureka about

appellants’ “depth of attorney talent, [their] vast experience and supposed expertise

as lawyers for apartments and owners and managers, and the tacit or implicit

endorsement by the Texas Apartment Association of [Cweren] as a go-to attorney

for apartment owners and operators in Texas that [was] implied by Cweren’s

published representations about his significant high-level roles in the [Texas

Apartment] Association.”

Appellees further alleged that in the course of representing Eureka managed

properties, appellants received confidential information about the ownership

entities, their key principals, including Campos, Arnold, and Robertson, and the

operational services of Eureka and its managed properties. Because appellants

viewed appellees as clients, they assumed duties to appellees that were owed by

attorneys to clients. “Loyalty [was] an essential element in [appellants’] relationship

[with appellees], as [was] preservation of [appellees’] confidential information.”

According to appellees, appellants “work product in cases for various

properties in the [Eureka] managed portfolio became increasingly shoddy and more

4 expensive, over time,” and by April 2020, “ [Eureka] property managers who [had]

retained [appellants] to represent the properties they managed” had grown

concerned “about the quality of [appellants’] work and their slow and questionable

billing practices and failures to submit bills in the manner requested and instructed

by the [Eureka managed properties that] were [being] represented.” Appellants also

began groundlessly and “aggressively demanding” payment from individuals who

were not responsible for the payment of invoices, including through the threat of

lawsuits if appellees refused appellants’ payment demands.

In April and May 2020, appellants, while still representing the Eureka

managed portfolio in pending matters, and as appellants claimed, while representing

each appellee, appellants “began an abusive campaign to collect” payment from

appellees for “invoices [appellants] claimed were due and outstanding.” The

invoices were addressed to various Eureka managed properties, and not to Eureka or

Campos, Arnold, or Robertson, and appellants knew so. But appellants nevertheless

harassed appellees, demanded payment from them, and threatened appellees with

lawsuits if appellees did not pay.

For instance, Cweren first approached Arnold and demanded that he pay the

allegedly due invoices, “telling Arnold that he was going to f*** up a bunch of

people if he wasn’t immediately paid, including . . . Campos, and that if [Cweren

was] not paid immediately, his goal was to put Eureka out of business.” Cweren

5 also “boasted about allegedly causing another former client who failed to pay his

bills, to file a bankruptcy case.”

After failing to extract any payment from Arnold, Cweren “reached out . . . to

Robertson[,] . . . threatening a collection lawsuit.” Cweren’s payment demand was

then sent to an operations executive at Eureka, and when the executive attempted to

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Brian Cweren and the Cweren Law Firm, PLLC v. Eureka Multifamily Group, L.P., Rene Campos, Jimmy Arnold and Chris Robertson, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brian-cweren-and-the-cweren-law-firm-pllc-v-eureka-multifamily-group-texapp-2023.