Bryan Inman v. Henry Loe, Jr., James Morrison and Patrick Henry Medical, LLC

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 20, 2019
Docket05-18-00130-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Bryan Inman v. Henry Loe, Jr., James Morrison and Patrick Henry Medical, LLC (Bryan Inman v. Henry Loe, Jr., James Morrison and Patrick Henry Medical, 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.

Bluebook
Bryan Inman v. Henry Loe, Jr., James Morrison and Patrick Henry Medical, LLC, (Tex. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

REVERSE and REMAND in part; AFFIRM in part; and Opinion Filed February 20, 2019

S In The Court of Appeals Fifth District of Texas at Dallas No. 05-18-00130-CV

BRYAN INMAN, Appellant V. HENRY LOE, JR., JAMES MORRISON AND PATRICK HENRY MEDICAL, LLC, Appellees

On Appeal from the 397th Judicial District Court Grayson County, Texas Trial Court Cause No. CV-14-0482

MEMORANDUM OPINION Before Justices Whitehill, Molberg, and Reichek Opinion by Justice Whitehill

Appellant Bryan Inman and appellees Henry Loe, Jr., and James Morrison jointly formed

a company, appellee Patrick Henry Medical, LLC (PHM). Later, Loe allegedly expelled Inman

from the company. Inman’s live pleadings include claims of contract breach, fiduciary breach,

and civil conspiracy. The trial court granted appellees a take-nothing summary judgment based

on the statute of limitations. Inman appeals the summary judgment as to his contract breach and

fiduciary breach claims.

We reverse in part, concluding that appellees did not conclusively establish that Inman’s

contract breach and fiduciary breach claims accrued more than four years before Inman filed suit.

We affirm the judgment as to Inman’s civil conspiracy claims. I. BACKGROUND

A. Facts

We draw these facts from Inman’s live petition and the summary judgment evidence.

Inman alleged that he, Loe, and Morrison formed PHM in 2007. Each of them owned an

interest in PHM, and Inman’s interest was 33.33%.

Summary judgment evidence showed that Loe changed the locks on PHM’s office twice

in 2009, the second time being on June 19, 2009. There was also evidence that Inman was not

“showing up to work” at PHM at that time. Inman’s attorney sent Loe and Morrison a letter dated

June 26, 2009, complaining that (i) Inman was “at an impasse” with Loe and Morrison and (ii)

Inman was “effectively excluded from the management and ongoing operations of the company.”

The evidence also showed that on August 23, 2010, a special PHM members’ meeting was

held. Neither Loe nor Inman attended. An attorney acting as Loe’s proxy moved that Inman be

removed as a PHM member and director. The motion carried. The meeting minutes recite that

“Inman is no longer a Member or Director of the Company, effective immediately (beginning

August 23, 2010 at 5:34 p.m.).” Inman’s summary judgment evidence included a 2010 Schedule

K-1 tax form that showed Inman as having a 33.33% share in the company’s profits, losses, and

capital at the beginning of the year and a 0% share at the end of the year.

B. Procedural History

Inman sued appellees on March 19, 2014. His original petition alleged few specific facts

(and nothing about the events in 2009), but it specifically complained that “[w]ithout grounds and

without compensation, Plaintiff has been notified that he no longer is considered by Defendant as

a Member of the Company.” Inman sought a declaratory judgment that he was still a PHM member

and 33.33% owner. He also asserted claims for fiduciary breach and “conspiracy/conversion” of

his member units.

–2– Loe and PHM jointly answered Inman’s petition. Morrison, acting pro se, answered

separately.

In May 2017, the trial court conducted a bench trial solely on Inman’s declaratory judgment

claim. In June, the trial court sent the parties a letter advising that it found that Inman remained a

PHM member. It eventually signed an interlocutory declaratory judgment decreeing that Inman

was still a member of PHM and still owned 33.33% of PHM.

Later that month, Loe and PHM filed a combined traditional and no-evidence summary

judgment motion. The no-evidence ground argued that Inman had no evidence that Loe owed

Inman a fiduciary duty. The traditional ground argued that the statute of limitations barred all of

Inman’s claims—fiduciary breach, conspiracy, conversion, and declaratory judgment.

As to fiduciary breach, Loe and PHM argued that Inman’s claim accrued in June 2009

when the locks to PHM’s offices were changed and Inman was excluded from PHM’s operations

and management. Because the fiduciary breach statute of limitations is four years, Inman’s suit

filed March 19, 2014 would be untimely as to that claim if it accrued on that date.

As to conversion, Loe and PHM argued that Inman’s claim accrued in August 2010 when

the special called meeting was held and Inman was removed from PHM. Loe and PHM argued

that Inman’s suit was untimely as to that claim because the conversion statute of limitations is two

years.

Inman filed a first amended petition two weeks before the summary judgment hearing. The

amended petition dropped the declaratory judgment and conversion claims and asserted claims for

contract breach, fiduciary breach, and civil conspiracy to breach the company agreement. Inman

sought monetary relief, a constructive trust, an accounting, rescission of a purported amended

company agreement, and rescission of a purported transfer of Morrison’s company interest to Loe.

Inman timely responded to the summary judgment motion.

–3– After a hearing, the trial court signed a final summary judgment setting aside the

interlocutory declaratory judgment and ruling that limitations barred all of Inman’s claims. The

judgment ordered Inman to take nothing against Loe and PHM, assessed attorney’s fees of $10,000

against Inman if the case were appealed to the court of appeals, and conditionally awarded

additional fees if further appeals were taken to the Texas Supreme Court. Although the judgment

did not mention Morrison, it concluded with

All relief requested [and] not expressly granted by this Final Summary Judgment is hereby expressly denied. This judgment finally disposes of all parties and claims and is appealable.

Thus, the judgment was final. See Lehmann v. Har-Con Corp., 39 S.W.3d 191, 206 (Tex. 2001).

Inman appealed.

II. ISSUES PRESENTED

Inman raises six issues that fall into two categories:

His first two issues challenge the summary judgment as a whole, arguing that the judgment

was erroneous because (i) appellees did not conclusively prove when Inman’s claims accrued and

(ii) the trial court erred to the extent it held that the limitations period was two years rather than

four.

His four remaining issues attack specific parts of the judgment, arguing that (iii) judgment

was improper as to Inman’s claims against Morrison because Morrison did not move for summary

judgment, (iv) judgment was improper as to Inman’s contract breach claims because appellees’

summary judgment motion did not address those claims, (v) the attorney’s fee award was improper

because appellees neither requested their fees nor proved them up, and (vi) the fee award for an

appeal to the court of appeals is improper because it is not conditioned upon the appeal being

unsuccessful.

–4– III. ANALYSIS

A. Issues One and Two: Did the trial court err by holding that Inman’s contract breach and fiduciary breach claims were time barred as a matter of law?

Inman’s first two issues argue that (i) the limitations period applicable to his contract

breach and fiduciary breach claims is four years and (ii) appellees did not conclusively prove that

his claims accrued more than four years before Inman sued on March 19, 2014.

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Bryan Inman v. Henry Loe, Jr., James Morrison and Patrick Henry Medical, LLC, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bryan-inman-v-henry-loe-jr-james-morrison-and-patrick-henry-medical-texapp-2019.