CAMP MYSTIC, INC., and Richard G. Eastland, Appellants v. S. Stacy EASTLAND, Appellee

390 S.W.3d 444, 2012 WL 2334604, 2012 Tex. App. LEXIS 4861
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 20, 2012
Docket04-10-00911-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 390 S.W.3d 444 (CAMP MYSTIC, INC., and Richard G. Eastland, Appellants v. S. Stacy EASTLAND, Appellee) 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
CAMP MYSTIC, INC., and Richard G. Eastland, Appellants v. S. Stacy EASTLAND, Appellee, 390 S.W.3d 444, 2012 WL 2334604, 2012 Tex. App. LEXIS 4861 (Tex. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

OPINION

Opinion by:

KAREN ANGELINI, Justice.

This appeal arises from the trial court’s granting of S. Stacy Eastland’s traditional and no-evidence motion for summary judgment. Because we hold that Stacy failed in his burden to prove that he was entitled to summary judgment as a matter of law and because there was evidence in the record sufficient to defeat the no-evidence motion for summary judgment, we reverse the trial court’s judgment and remand the cause for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.

BACKGROUND

Camp Mystic, a camp for girls that is family owned and operated, has been in existence for almost 100 years. Before its reorganization, the shareholders of Camp Mystic, Inc. were Richard G. Eastland (“Dick”) (who owned 38%), S. Stacy East-land (“Stacy”) (who owned 8%), their sister Nancy Leaton (who owned 8%), their mother Anne Eastland as trustee (who owned 42%), and two of their cousins (who each owned 2%). In the late 1990s, after an incident involving a camper, the family became concerned about liability issues. Thus, Stacy, a lawyer, advocated a reorganization of the corporation. Stacy drafted the reorganization documents and represented all sides in the transaction. Under the reorganization, the old corporation, Camp Mystic, Inc., was renamed to Natural Fountains Properties, Inc. (“NFP”), and a new corporation, also called Camp Mystic, Inc. (“New CM”), was created to operate the camp. The shareholders of New CM were Dick and his wife Tweety.

Upon the reorganization, New CM operated the camp and took on the risks of camp operations. NFP continued to own the real estate on which the camp operated and leased the land to New CM pursuant to the Ground and Building Lease (“the Lease”), which was drafted by Stacy. While reducing liability to NFP was one of *449 the goals of the reorganization, it was not the only goal. Other goals included giving Dick and Tweety, the operators of the camp, the ability to have ownership and independence. For example, they were no longer required to approach the Board each year with regard to salary issues. Another goal of the reorganization was to reward Dick and Tweety with profits if they ran the camp well, so that the camp would grow and extend beyond this generation. Another goal was to give the capital owners the same amount of dividends they had previously experienced. Dick and Stacy’s mother wanted reassurance that she would continue to receive the same amount of dividends after reorganization that she had received previously. Thus, a complicated rent formula was created to make sure the dividends continued each year in the same amount as the year of the reorganization.

The parties operated under these agreements without conflict for almost ten years. Each year, Dick approached the Board (which consisted of Dick, Stacy, Nancy, and other family members) and proposed the rent for the following year. Each year the Board agreed to the amount of rent. Then, Dick decided to expand the camp by creating a second camp on the property. When a neighbor heard that the new camp would be near his boundary, he went to Dick and proposed giving the camp money to not put the new camp on the proposed site. In exchange for the camp agreeing to restrictions of use on the property near his land and to put the new camp on a different site, the neighbor offered to pay an amount that would enable the camp to build the second camp without having to obtain a loan. A dispute arose over how much of these proceeds should go to New CM and how much should go to NFP. This dispute then caused Stacy to reevaluate the amount New CM was paying to NFP in rent. He determined that the rent formula, as set forth in the Lease, had not been followed and that New CM was in default on the Lease. In response to these accusations, New CM and Dick filed a declaratory judgment action, seeking a declaration of rights under the Lease. Stacy and other minority shareholders counterclaimed, alleging that Dick had improperly used the Camp Mystic trademark, had breached the Lease and his fiduciary duties owed to NFP, and was in conflict of interest because of his ownership and positions in both New CM and NFP.

A Allegations Against Stacy

New CM and Dick then countersued Stacy for professional negligence, breach of fiduciary duty, and negligent misrepresentation. New CM and Dick had five basic complaints about Stacy’s preparation of the Lease: (1) the lease term; (2) the rent provision; (3) the enforceability of the lease; (4) the Camp Mystic trademark; and (5) conflicts of interest not disclosed by Stacy.

1. The Lease Term

The basis for New CM and Dick’s claims arising from the term of the Lease was Stacy’s advice to Dick that the Lease had a “five-year rollover term.” In his deposition, Dick testified that Stacy repeatedly told him the Lease had a five-year rollover term. He also testified what he understood a five-year rollover term to mean:

Five year rollover lease means that if I got terminated today, I would have five years to operate the camp before I’d have to vacate the premises. And that would give me time to find another place. Now, it also means that every year, when the lease was renewed ... that meant I got an additional five years. That’s what I was led to believe by Stacy.... [Stacy] assured me that I had *450 a five-year rollover lease and I went on that. He’s my brother. He’s my lawyer. That’s what I wanted. I thought that’s what I got.

Thus, according to Dick, Stacy represented to him that his lease was renewed every year for an additional five years and that if his lease was terminated, he would have five years to vacate the premises. The Lease, however, does not state what Dick claims Stacy represented to him:

Section 1.03. TO HAVE AND TO HOLD the Demised Premises unto Tenant, and, subject to the limitations set out in this Lease, to Tenant’s successors and assigns, all subject to the exceptions and reservations set out in this Lease, for a term commencing as of the date hereof [June 1,1998] and ending at midnight on September 1, 2001, or on such earlier date as may be otherwise set forth in this Lease, upon and subject to the covenants, agreements, terms, provi- ' sions and limitations herein set forth, all of which Tenant covenants and agrees to perform and observe.
Section 1.04. The term of this Lease will be automatically extended by one year on each September 1 unless (i) a default by Tenant (or circumstances which, if not cured after notice or opportunity to cure, would become such a default) exists or (ii) written notice by Tenant or Landlord that the term of the Lease will not be extended (such written notice may be given with or without cause has been given not later than the preceding September 1. Any such extension shall be upon the same terms and conditions of this Lease as those applicable during the initial term.) [T]he Demised Premises will be provided in its then existing condition on an “as is” basis at the time the renewal term commences. According to Dick, he did not have reason to suspect that Stacy’s advice that the Lease had a five-year rollover term might be wrong until early 2006, when other counsel he retained reviewed the lease.

2. Rent Provision

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390 S.W.3d 444, 2012 WL 2334604, 2012 Tex. App. LEXIS 4861, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/camp-mystic-inc-and-richard-g-eastland-appellants-v-s-stacy-texapp-2012.