Campbell & Son Construction Co. v. Housing Authority of Victoria

655 S.W.2d 271, 1983 Tex. App. LEXIS 4500
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 19, 1983
Docket2865cv
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 655 S.W.2d 271 (Campbell & Son Construction Co. v. Housing Authority of Victoria) 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
Campbell & Son Construction Co. v. Housing Authority of Victoria, 655 S.W.2d 271, 1983 Tex. App. LEXIS 4500 (Tex. Ct. App. 1983).

Opinion

OPINION

GONZALEZ, Justice.

This is an appeal from the overruling of pleas of privilege of defendants Campbell & Son Construction Co., Inc. and Lionel L. Campbell, Jr., to be sued in Bell County, where their office is located rather than Victoria County, where suit was filed. The principal question in this appeal is whether appellants are necessary parties within the meaning of Tex.Rev.Civ.Stat.Ann. art. 1995 subd. 29a (Vernon 1964). We hold that they are not necessary parties and therefore reverse and order the case be transferred to Bell County.

On July 30, 1979, plaintiff-appellee, the Housing Authority for the City of Victoria (hereinafter called plaintiff) sued Bruce Campbell & Son Construction Co., Inc. of Temple, Texas (hereinafter called Bruce Campbell Inc.). Plaintiff sought damages for alleged construction defects arising out of a contract entered into between them in 1974 for renovation of some public housing in the City of Victoria in 1974-75. Plaintiff *273 also sued Transamerica Insurance Company who was the surety on a performance bond for the project.

Bruce Campbell Co. was a family owned corporation chartered in 1964 and engaged in general construction work. It was named for Bruce Campbell, Lionel L. Campbell Jr.’s grandfather. 1

After suit was filed, Lionel L. Campbell Jr.’s deposition was taken and plaintiff learned that he was no longer employed by the Bruce Campbell Inc. but that he had formed his own construction business under the name of Campbell and Son Construction Co., Inc.

In February, 1981, plaintiff filed an amended petition and joined Campbell & Son Construction Co., Inc. (hereinafter called Campbell & Son, Inc.) and Lionel L. Campbell, Jr. (hereinafter called Campbell Jr.) as additional defendants. Plaintiff alleged that Campbell & Son, Inc. was incorporated by Campbell Jr. to prevent plaintiff from reaching the corporate assets of Bruce Campbell, Inc. to satisfy plaintiff’s pending claims on the construction project. Plaintiff also asserted that Campbell Jr. consummated a scheme whereby Bruce Campbell, Inc. ceased doing business and was rendered a shell corporation with no assets while at the same time Campbell & Son, Inc. stepped into the shoes of Bruce Campbell, Inc. and continued the business activity previously conducted by Bruce Campbell, Inc. Therefore, plaintiff asserted a cause of action to pierce the corporate veil of Campbell & Son, Inc. thereby making it liable for the damages that plaintiff was asserting against Bruce Campbell, Inc. and further asserted a cause of action against Campbell Jr. on the basis that both Bruce Campbell, Inc. and Campbell & Son, Inc. were his alter egos.

Bruce Campbell, Inc. and Campbell & Son, Inc. are both Texas corporations with principal offices in Temple, Bell County, Texas. Campbell Jr. is an individual residing in Temple, Texas. Campbell & Son, Inc. and Campbell Jr. filed pleas of privilege to be sued in Bell County, Texas.

Plaintiff filed its controverting pleas to the plea of privilege asserting that venue was proper in Victoria County as to defendant Campbell & Son, Inc. under the provisions of article 1995 subds. 23 and 29a, and to Campbell Jr. under subd. 29a.

On May 17, 1982, a hearing was held on the plea of privilege. At the hearing it was stipulated by counsel for Campbell Jr. and Campbell & Son, Inc. that for the purposes of such plea of privilege hearing, plaintiff had pled and proved its cause of action against Bruce Campbell, Inc.

The evidence which was offered was testimony from oral depositions of Campbell Jr. He testified that Bruce Campbell, Inc. ceased doing work in 1977, although it was still an existing corporation in 1980. Campbell Jr. is president, shareholder and general manager of both corporations. Both corporations have identical officers, and two of the five employees of Campbell & Son, Inc. previously worked for Bruce Campbell, Inc. Campbell & Son, Inc. has its principal office and conducts its business at the same location previously used by Bruce Campbell, Inc. The business premises are owned by Campbell Jr.’s father’s estate.

Campbell Jr. further testified that Campbell & Son, Inc. was formed in January of 1978 because his father died in 1977 and after this, the corporation became insolvent and it was impossible to get bonded. At the time of Campbell Sr.’s death, Bruce Campbell, Inc. owed $300,000 to Temple National Bank. This was an unsecured note but it was guaranteed by Campbell Sr. and Campbell Jr. After his father’s death, Campbell Jr. started his new construction company. In 1979, Campbell Jr. paid the bank the $300,000 and the bank loaned him $200,000 which he invested into his new business. After Campbell Jr. satisfied this loan obligation to Temple National Bank, he was paid $150,000 by his father’s estate for the estate’s share of the $300,000 loan obligation.

Campbell Jr. owned one-half interest in a business named L.C. Trucking Company, *274 with his father’s estate owning the other half interest. He purchased the estate’s one-half interest in all construction equipment owned by L.C. Trucking, and made a capital contribution of such equipment with additional cash for another $70,000 contribution to Campbell & Son, Inc.

In 1977, the corporate income tax return of Bruce Campbell, Inc. reflects that the company had gross receipts in excess of 5 million, a gross profit of $193,000, total assets of almost $70,000, eleven construction jobs totalling over 5 million, insurance deposits of $24,000, and salvageable materials in excess of $35,000. In 1978, the corporate income tax return filed by Bruce Campbell, Inc. reflects that it had gross receipts of $70,000, a profit of $8,000, total assets of $160,000, no insurance deposits and no salvageable materials, and that it sold all of its equipment in January and February of 1978 for $4,000.

In 1978 the corporate income tax return filed by Campbell & Son, Inc. reflects that it had gross receipts of almost 1.7 million dollars, a gross profit of $42,000, assets of $272,000 and an ending asset balance in excess of 4 million dollars.

On January 26, 1978, Bruce Campbell, Inc. sold its interest in a construction contract for the construction of a 100 unit apartment complex to Campbell & Son, Inc. In June, 1978, Campbell & Son, Inc. entered into another construction contract for the construction of 200 unit complex for over 3 million dollars and such project was still in progress at the end of 1978. In early 1979, Campbell & Son, Inc. began construction of a 3.3 million dollar apartment complex.

Plaintiff argued that on the basis of the above facts, they were entitled to pierce the corporate veil and disregard the corporate form of Campbell & Son, Inc. and also argued that the above facts proved that Bruce Campbell, Inc. and Campbell & Son, Inc. were Campbell Jr.’s alter egos, thereby making both Campbell Jr. and Campbell & Son, Inc. liable to plaintiff for the identical damages plaintiff was asserting against Bruce Campbell, Inc.

Following this venue hearing, the trial court severed plaintiff’s claims against Campbell Jr. and Campbell & Son, Inc.

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655 S.W.2d 271, 1983 Tex. App. LEXIS 4500, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/campbell-son-construction-co-v-housing-authority-of-victoria-texapp-1983.