C. H. Leavell & Co. v. Leavell Co.

570 S.W.2d 404, 1978 Tex. App. LEXIS 3458
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 21, 1978
Docket6773
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 570 S.W.2d 404 (C. H. Leavell & Co. v. Leavell Co.) 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. H. Leavell & Co. v. Leavell Co., 570 S.W.2d 404, 1978 Tex. App. LEXIS 3458 (Tex. Ct. App. 1978).

Opinion

OPINION

WARD, Justice.

This appeal is from the granting of a temporary injunction issued as ancillary relief in a suit for damages for breach of contracts. We will reverse.

In May of 1976, the construction business known as C. H. Leavell and Company entered into a stock purchase agreement with Sarkisian Brothers, Inc. Pursuant to the stock purchase agreement, C. H. Leavell and Company formed a wholly owned subsidiary called Leavell Construction Company to which it transferred the C. H. Leavell and Company’s assets used in its construction operations. C. H. Leavell and Company then changed its name to The Leavell Company. The stock in the subsidiary, Lea-vell Construction Company, was transferred to Sarkisian Brothers, Inc., and Leavell Construction Company then changed its name to C. H. Leavell and Company. Thus, the construction operations and business were thereafter owned and operated by a new corporation known as C. H. Leavell and Company, a wholly owned subsidiary of Sarkisian Brothers, Inc. The Leavell Company, or “Leavell,” then entered into two further agreements known as the management agreement and the consulting agreement with the new C. H. Leavell and Company, which will be referred to as “CHL.” Performance under these two contracts was guaranteed by Sarkisian Brothers, Inc., hereinafter referred to as “SBI,” and its parent corporation, Sarkisian Brothers Holding Company, hereinafter referred to as “SBHC.”

Under the management agreement, CHL agreed to manage the operations of certain construction projects which Leavell had contracted for prior to the sale of the construction operations. The management agreement provided that CHL was to manage these projects on behalf of Leavell and to collect funds for Leavell’s account, but there was no assignment made of these contracts to CHL. Further, the agreement obligated CHL to maintain on Leavell’s behalf all files and records and to deliver the files, books of accounts, and records to Lea-vell upon completion of the contracts. The agreement specifically provided for compensation to CHL and Leavell. CHL was to collect and keep 33⅛ percent of the actual aggregate pre-tax net profits as defined in the management agreement. Leavell was to be compensated with the remaining amount of the pre-tax net profits on each of the contracts at a time and on a formula as set out in the agreement.

Under the terms of the consulting agreement, Leavell, in exchange for an agreement to provide consulting services to CHL, was to receive compensation based on a formula contained in that agreement.

At the time of these transactions, eight construction projects were then in progress and came under the terms of both the management and consulting agreements.

The evidence produced at the hearing for the temporary injunction was undisputed and consisted of three witnesses offered by Leavell and copies of the contracts and correspondence between the parties and others. Leavell established that immediately following the execution of the contracts, Leavell began experiencing payment problems with CHL. Payments were at first late and then, following a payment in October, 1976, no further payments were made *406 to Leavell. Excuses were offered to Lea-vell that miscalculations had been made and that CHL had paid more than was due under the contracts. CHL was obligated under the contracts to provide monthly calculations for Leavell, and these ceased, but at one time it promised to provide quarterly calculations. After May, 1977, the Defendants consistently ignored or disregarded all requests for payment or information from Leavell.

Leavell had received the sum of $275,-000.00 under the management agreement and calculated that through December 31, 1977, there was due an additional sum of about $156,000.00 under that agreement and about $15,000.00 due and unpaid under the consulting agreement. By the spring of 1978, four of the eight contracts subject to the management agreement had been fully completed, but CHL had failed to forward to Leavell the books and records of those projects in violation of the terms of the management agreement. At the time of the hearing on the temporary injunction, only two of the projects were still in the process of being built, two more having been completed but subject to final billing and collection.

Demands for performance and information having been ignored, Leavell notified the three Defendants that all authority granted to CHL by Leavell under the management agreement to act on Leavell’s behalf was revoked. Simultaneously, the owners of the two projects under construction and the two projects which were subject to final billing and collection were notified of the revocation of authority. CHL immediately contacted the owners of the projects and threatened litigation if any payments were made to Leavell. Prior to that notice made by Leavell, the owners had made payments to CHL without problems, and, as far as disclosed, without knowledge that there had ever been any transfer of real ownership in the project management.

On March 16, 1978, SBI filed suit in the United States District Court for the Northern District of Texas seeking, among other things, the right to an offset provided for in the stock purchase agreement, alleging that because of that it had the right to refuse to make payments under the terms of that agreement, the management agreement, or the consulting agreement. It was on the next day that The Leavell Company filed the present suit in the District Court of El Paso County. There it alleged that the Defendants had breached their contracts, that it was entitled to damages, cancellation of the contracts, an accounting, and, as ancillary thereto, a temporary injunction.

At the conclusion of the hearing appealed from, the trial Court issued its temporary injunction which: (1) compelled the three Defendants, CHL, SBI and SBHC, to direct the owners of the four projects not fully completed to make all payments then due or thereafter due under the contracts to The Leavell Company, notices to the four owners to be made no later than April 28, 1978; (2) compelled the Defendants, CHL, SBI and SBHC, to pay to The Leavell Company, no later than April 28, 1978, any and all monies then held by those Defendants which had been paid to them previously by the owners of all eight of the original contracts; and (3) restrained and enjoined the three Defendants, their officers, agents, servants, employees and attorneys from interfering with, participating in, or dealing in any manner with the four projects not completely finished.

The Defendants on this appeal assign five points of error to the effect that the order does set forth the reasons for its issuance as specifically as required by Rule 683, Tex.R. Civ.P.; that the order does not preserve the status quo pending hearing on the merits; that the order is invalid as the trial Court abused its discretion because there was no evidence to show any threat of immediate and irreparable injury, nor the absence of an adequate remedy at law in favor of the Plaintiff; and, finally, that the petition was not properly verified.

The parties agree on the settled rules regarding temporary injunctions that the trial Court has broad discretion in its determination of whether to issue a writ of *407

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
570 S.W.2d 404, 1978 Tex. App. LEXIS 3458, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/c-h-leavell-co-v-leavell-co-texapp-1978.