C & a Investments, Inc. v. Bonnet Resources Corp.

959 S.W.2d 258, 1997 WL 214038
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 24, 1998
Docket05-95-01569-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 959 S.W.2d 258 (C & a Investments, Inc. v. Bonnet Resources Corp.) 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
C & a Investments, Inc. v. Bonnet Resources Corp., 959 S.W.2d 258, 1997 WL 214038 (Tex. Ct. App. 1998).

Opinion

OPINION

HANKINSON, Justice.

C & A Investments is a sophisticated purchaser of real estate assets. It contracted to purchase a loan from Bank One. Bonnet Resources Corporation acted as Bank One’s disclosed agent handling this sale. Relying on one statement included in a bid document and several post-contract statements by Bonnet’s vice-president, C & A claims that Bank One contracted to deliver a “performing” loan but did not. In this case, we must decide whether C & A may rely on those statements to prove that Bank One breached the contract and committed fraud. The trial court determined it could not and granted summary judgment. Because C & A knew statements about the loan’s value might be inaccurate and promised it would independently evaluate the loan’s value without relying on any information provided by Bank One and Bonnet, we agree with the trial court and affirm.

Background

Bank One acquired a portfolio of commercial real estate loans from the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation as receiver for certain MBanks. In April 1994, Bonnet, as Bank One’s agent, began soliciting bids on loan packages from this portfolio. John Harris, one of Bonnet’s assistant vice-presidents, oversaw the loan sale. Initially, Harris sent to all prospective bidders, including C & A, *260 certain bid documents: a Purchaser Eligibility Certificate, a Bidder Qualification Certificate, a Confidentiality Agreement, an Invitation to Bid and Instructions and Conditions of Bid, a Schedule of Loans, a Bid Form, and a Loan Sale Agreement.

C & A regularly bids on, and purchases, loans like those offered for sale by Bank One and has bid on more than one thousand loans. After receiving the bid documents from Harris, C & A entered the bid process. According to C & A, the Schedule of Loans it received from Harris “expressly represented that [Loan E was] ‘performing’.” Relying on this representation, and before doing any due diligence, C & A submitted an irrevocable bid for Loan E that Bank One accepted.

C & A and Bank One executed an agreement entitled “Loan Sale Agreement” in which C & A agreed to purchase Loan E. This agreement obligated C & A to tender earnest money equal to the lesser of one percent of the bid or $100,000. C & A made the required payment. C & A and Bank One then amended the Loan Sale Agreement. C & A tendered an additional $26,578 in earnest money pursuant to this amendment.

After C & A signed the Loan Sale Agreement and the first amendment, Dave Krunic (C & A’s vice-president) performed due diligence on Loan E at Bonnet’s Dallas office. He met with Harris on June 16, 1994 and asked Harris whether Loan E was in default. Harris told Krunic that Loan E was current as of June 16, 1994. Contrary to Harris’s comment, however, the June 1, 1994 loan payment had not been made. No later payments were made either.

One day before closing, Krunic contacted Harris and requested the closing date be extended because C & A had not yet obtained financing. Responding to Krunic’s inquiry at a meeting attended by Krunic, Harris, and Harris’s supervisor David Wiley, Harris again said that Loan E “remained current.” C & A and Bank One then amended the Loan Sale Agreement a second time, extending the closing date, and C & A tendered an additional $26,578 in earnest money.

Yet again, on the day before the scheduled closing, C & A contacted Harris to extend the closing date. After another meeting between the parties’ representatives, Bank One and C & A amended the Loan Sale Agreement a third time, extending the closing date and requiring an additional $46,844 in earnest money. Again, C & A paid the additional earnest money.

Krunic later contacted Harris to arrange closing. Krunic claims that only then did Harris disclose that Loan E was not performing. C & A then notified Bank One that it would not purchase Loan E. Relying on its assertion that Bank One failed to advise it accurately of Loan E’s status, C & A demanded that Bank One return its earnest money. Bank One refused, notifying C & A that it intended to terminate the Loan Sale Agreement and retain the earnest money as damages.

C & A filed this suit to recover its earnest money, alleging that Bank One and Bonnet breached the Loan Sale Agreement by failing to deliver a performing loan as represented in the Schedule of Loans. It also asserted that Bank One and Bonnet committed fraud because C & A relied on the Schedule of Loans and Harris’s statements regarding Loan E’s condition to enter into the Loan Sale Agreement and each later amendment. Bank One and Bonnet moved for summary judgment on both causes of action. C & A filed no response. The trial court granted Bank One and Bonnet summary judgment. This appeal followed.

Discussion

Preliminary Arguments

According to C & A, two preliminary arguments dispose of this matter. First, C & A contends that the summary judgment must be reversed because Bank One and Bonnet admitted they breached the Loan Sale Agreement and committed fraud. To prove this claim, C & A relies on a statement in Bank One and Bonnet’s motion for summary judgment in which they “assume the truth of the allegations set forth in Plaintiffs Second Amended Original Petition.” In that pleading, C & A alleges Bank *261 One and Bonnet breached the Loan Sale Agreement and committed fraud. We disagree with C & A’s argument because “parties cannot validly stipulate to legal conclusions to be drawn from the facts of the case. Such stipulations are without effect and bind neither the parties nor the court.” 1 Consequently, because they are legal conclusions drawn from this case’s facts, we will not give effect to the admissions C & A identifies.

Second, C & A argues that the Schedule of Loan’s absence from the summary judgment record precludes a summary judgment ruling that no breach of contract occurred. We disagree because we assume, as we must at the summary judgment stage, the truth of the facts pleaded by C & A. 2 Therefore, we assume the Schedule of Loans represented that Loan E was performing. Having disposed of C & A’s preliminary arguments, we now review the trial court’s summary judgment de novo to determine whether Bank One and Bonnet established their right to prevail as a matter of law. 3 We follow well-established procedures when reviewing this summary judgment. 4

Breach of Contract

In its first two points of error, C & A claims the trial court erroneously granted summary judgment for Bank One and Bonnet on its breach of contract claim. To support its breach of contract claim, C & A asserts a two-fold argument. First, C & A claims that the Schedule of Loans, which was part of the invitation to bid package Harris forwarded to it, specifically stated that Loan E was performing.

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Bluebook (online)
959 S.W.2d 258, 1997 WL 214038, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/c-a-investments-inc-v-bonnet-resources-corp-texapp-1998.