Caspary, Delo H. v. William K. Woodruff & Co. and William K. Woodruff

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 31, 2000
Docket13-98-00106-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Caspary, Delo H. v. William K. Woodruff & Co. and William K. Woodruff (Caspary, Delo H. v. William K. Woodruff & Co. and William K. Woodruff) 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
Caspary, Delo H. v. William K. Woodruff & Co. and William K. Woodruff, (Tex. Ct. App. 2000).

Opinion

NUMBER 13-98-106-CV



COURT OF APPEALS



THIRTEENTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS



CORPUS CHRISTI

____________________________________________________________________

DELO H. CASPARY, Appellant,

v.



WILLIAM K. WOODRUFF,

WILLIAM K. WOODRUFF & CO.,

AND WKW HOLDINGS, INC., Appellees.

____________________________________________________________________

On appeal from the 36th District Court of Aransas County, Texas.

____________________________________________________________________

O P I N I O N



Before Chief Justice Seerden and Justices Hinojosa and Yañez

Opinion by Justice Hinojosa



Appellant, Delo H. Caspary, appeals from a final judgment in favor of appellees, William K. Woodruff (Woodruff), William K. Woodruff & Co. (Woodruff & Co.), and WKW Holdings, Inc. (WKW Holdings). We affirm.

A. Background

Caspary and Woodruff met in the late 1970s. Caspary made investments and stock trades through Woodruff, who was a broker in Dallas. In 1981, Woodruff started his own brokerage and investment banking firm called Woodruff & Co. Caspary and Woodruff each invested $40,000 of initial capital in the firm. As the only two stockholders, each man held fifty percent interest. The two men agreed that Woodruff would be the company's president and receive a commission on the revenues he generated for the company and that Caspary would not be an employee of the company, nor would he receive a salary.

As the company began to grow and hire employees, Caspary and Woodruff agreed to allow the employees to purchase an ownership interest in the company. This reduced the ownership interest of Caspary and Woodruff to 26.1 percent each. With this stock purchase option, Caspary became the only shareholder who was not an employee. In the late 1980s, Caspary began to receive a consulting fee of eighty thousand dollars per year.

In 1990, Woodruff formed WKW Holdings. All of the shareholders of Woodruff & Co. agreed to swap their shares for an equal number of WKW Holdings shares. WKW Holdings became the sole shareholder of Woodruff & Co. All of WKW Holdings's shareholders executed a Shareholder's Agreement providing that a shareholder wishing to sell out must first offer his shares to WKW Holdings. WKW Holdings would then have three years to pay the selling shareholder.

In 1993, Woodruff & Co. was approached by Ciena(1) to raise funds for its start-up. Ciena paid Woodruff & Co. with a small cash payment and a warrant in April 1994. The Ciena warrant gave Woodruff & Co. the right to purchase 215,000 shares of Ciena stock at ten cents per share. In December 1994, Woodruff & Co. decided to exercise the Ciena warrant for the benefit of several of its employees. Woodruff directed John Wallace ("Wallace")(2) to prepare a schedule for allocating the Ciena shares, with ten percent of the shares going to Bart Stuck, the consultant who had orchestrated the Ciena deal. The next forty-five percent of the shares were to be split evenly between Woodruff and Wallace, who both had done the majority of the work on the deal. The remaining forty-five percent of the shares were to be distributed to key employees of Woodruff & Co. Ciena was then notified that Woodruff & Co. was exercising its warrant, and was asked to issue the appropriate number of Ciena shares to the Woodruff & Co. employees.

In early 1995, Caspary informed Woodruff that he wanted to be bought out of WKW Holdings. The buy-out deal was completed on May 11, 1995, and Caspary was paid $522,000 for his WKW Holdings shares.(3) In return for the cash Caspary received in the buy-out, Caspary promised in the buy-out agreement that he would not file a lawsuit against Woodruff or any of the Woodruff companies. In the year after the buy-out, the price of the Ciena shares went from ten cents a share to fifty-nine dollars a share.

B. Procedural History

On September 9, 1996, Caspary filed this suit against Woodruff and Woodruff & Co. for discriminatory dividend distribution, malicious suppression of dividends, and fraud. On December 21, 1996, Caspary added a cause of action for statutory fraud. On February 24, 1997, Caspary added causes of action for breach of fiduciary duty, fraud by fiduciary, conversion, and theft of corporate opportunity. On June 3, 1997, an injunction was granted to enjoin Woodruff and Woodruff & Co. from "selling, transferring, hypothecating or otherwise encumbering 171,000 shares of Ciena Corporation . . . through final judgment and collection." On August 26, 1997, Caspary added WKW Holdings as a defendant. On September 10, 1997, Woodruff, Woodruff & Co., and WKW Holdings counterclaimed for breach of contract and requested attorney's fees.

On September 10, 1997, Woodruff, Woodruff & Co., and WKW Holdings filed a motion for summary judgment on all issues. On September 12, 1997, Caspary filed a motion for partial summary judgment seeking a declaration that the pro rata distribution of the Ciena stock was discriminatory. On October 6, 1997, both motions for summary judgment were denied.

On October 15, 1997, the jury returned a non-unanimous verdict finding: (1) the distribution of the Ciena stock was not a dividend; (2) Woodruff breached his fiduciary duty to Caspary, but Woodruff & Co. and WKW Holdings did not; (3) Caspary did not suffer any damages as a result of Woodruff's breach; (4) Caspary was not excused from complying with the agreement not to sue; (5) Caspary failed to comply with the agreement not to sue; (6) Caspary ratified the stock repurchase agreement; (7) Caspary waived his right to any Ciena stock; and (8) Woodruff, Woodruff & Co., and WKW Holdings did not act with malice towards Caspary. On December 2, 1997, the trial court signed the final judgment in favor of appellees, Woodruff, Woodruff & Co., and WKW Holdings, and awarded appellees attorney's fees in the amount of $522,046.22. The trial court denied Caspary's motions for new trial, mistrial, and judgment notwithstanding the verdict on January 28, 1998. Caspary then filed notice of appeal on March 2, 1998.

By eight issues, Caspary contends the trial court erred: (1) by denying his motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict because the Ciena stock distributed to the shareholders of WKW Holdings was a dividend and was discriminatory as to Caspary; (2) by denying his motion for new trial because the evidence was factually insufficient to support the verdict that the pro rata distribution of Ciena stock was not a dividend; (3) by refusing to grant a judgment notwithstanding the verdict, new trial, or mistrial because the answers to jury Question Nos. 2 and 5 were fatally in conflict; (4) by not granting a judgment notwithstanding the verdict, new trial, or mistrial because the evidence is both factually and legally insufficient to show that Caspary suffered no damages from Woodruff's breach of fiduciary duty; (5) by submitting jury Question Nos.

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