Cates v. International Telephone & Telegraph Corp.

756 F.2d 1161, 1985 U.S. App. LEXIS 28822
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedApril 8, 1985
DocketNo. 83-2138
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 756 F.2d 1161 (Cates v. International Telephone & Telegraph Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cates v. International Telephone & Telegraph Corp., 756 F.2d 1161, 1985 U.S. App. LEXIS 28822 (5th Cir. 1985).

Opinion

GARWOOD, Circuit Judge:

As presented to the district court, this case primarily involved questions relating to the authority of James Cates (“Cates”), as a partner in two Texas general partnerships, to maintain suit on asserted causes of action belonging to the partnerships. The district court ruled that Cates lacked such authority, and ultimately dismissed the suit. Following the perfection of his appeal and initial briefing, but prior to oral argument in this Court, Cates died, and the parties moved that his widow, Judy Nichols Cates, be substituted, in her capacity as Independent Executrix of Cates’ will and estate, as appellant herein in lieu of James Cates, pursuant to Fed.R.App.P. 43(a). We have so ordered. And, for the reasons to be stated, we reverse and remand for further proceedings.

BACKGROUND AND PROCEEDINGS BELOW

An overview of the lengthy and convoluted proceedings in the district court is necessary to an understanding of the issues remaining in the case as we are now called on to dispose of it.

Parties, Original Complaint, and Background

Cates initially filed this suit in September 1979 on behalf of himself and the two Texas partnerships of which he was a member, SanJac International (“SJI”) and San-Jac Association (“SJA”), against defendants-appellees ITT Life Insurance Company («ITT Life”) and certain underwriters at Lloyds of London, Ltd. (“Lloyds”).1

[1164]*1164SJA and SJI were each created by written agreements among the partners expressly reciting that they thereby formed a general partnership pursuant to Article 6132b, Texas Revised Civil Statutes, the Texas Uniform Partnership Act (“TUPA”). SJI was formed in August 1976, and its partners were Cates, Robert Boyer (“Boyer”), Michael Collins (“Collins”), and G.C. Pettey (“Pettey”), all residents of Texas. Each was a twenty-five percent owner. SJA was formed in 1973, and its partners were Cates, Boyer, and Pettey, each a one-third owner. Pettey is named managing partner in the SJA agreement; the SJI agreement does not refer to a managing partner. Boyer withdrew from both partnerships in January 1959, leaving Cates and Pettey each with a fifty percent partnership interest in SJA, and Cates, Pettey, and Collins each with a one-third partnership interest in SJI.2 In June 1979, Pettey and Cates, for SJA and SJI, signed a letter reciting that the partnerships employed the attorney who later filed this suit for Cates “in connection with ... dealings with” ITT Life and Lloyds and agreed to pay him a stated percentage “of all recovery.” In July 1979, Pettey and Cates signed an agreement amending the SJA partnership and providing that “any action utilizing in any way the partnership,” “including, but not limited to, use of name ... or in any other manner whatsoever,” would require the “unanimous consent” of its partners. Collins also signed this document, signifying his agreement thereto “in any manner [as] it may affect that certain partnership known as San Jacinto International.”

The business of SJA and SJI principally related to group life, health, and accident insurance provided through a series of multiple employers’ trusts, called American Employers’ Group Insurance Trusts, designed to bring the advantages of group insurance to smaller employers. SJA and SJI were involved in the formation and administration of the trusts, the design and marketing of the insurance programs, and administrative matters in connection therewith, including premium collection and claims processing. They were not, however, underwriters or insurers. Originally, the insurer was Old Republic Life Insurance Company, but it withdrew in March or April 1976. ITT Life became the insurer and Lloyds the reinsurer, pursuant to a series of written agreements, effective October 1, 1976, between one or both of the partnerships and ITT Life, between ITT Life and Lloyds, and between the partnerships, ITT Life, and Lloyds. In the agreement between SJA and ITT Life, it was provided in substance that in eleven specified states SJA would perform its marketing of the subject insurance through agents selected by ITT Life. In May 1978, this restriction on SJA’s marketing was removed by mutual agreement. The agreements generally provided for cancellation by either party on sixty days’ notice, or on termination of the reinsurance. The agreements essentially terminated in January 1979, when the reinsurance expired, Lloyds having given notice in October 1978 that it would not renew. Some administrative functions continued to be performed, such as processing claims from earlier periods. As this activity phased out, the partnerships became largely inactive, though they did not terminate.

The thrust of the original complaint was that ITT Life and Lloyds breached their obligations to SJA and SJI under these [1165]*1165contracts, and otherwise wrongfully damaged the business of SJA and SJI in reference to the subject matter of the contracts. The principal allegations were that the defendants failed to pay claims promptly, failed to make a good faith effort to market the subject insurance programs in the referenced eleven states “reserved” to ITT Life, and that they entered into the contracts with the fraudulent intent not to perform them in these respects. It was also asserted that defendants unreasonably increased rates on the policies and that, by reason of the way operations were conducted under the agreements, including the provision of one hundred percent reinsurance, the partnerships were forced to perform acts, such as payment of premium taxes and claims, which only a licensed insurance company could lawfully do. Additionally, it was claimed that defendants violated “the Clayton and Sherman Anti-Trust Acts” by the “tie-in” features of the agreements and by attempting to destroy or inhibit the plaintiffs as competition. It is apparent from the face of the complaint, and is otherwise established in the record without dispute, that Cates, individually, was not a party to any of the agreements sued on, and that his only rights in respect to them were those of a partner in the contracting entities, and that he sought recovery, in his name and that of the partnerships, only for the damages sustained by the partnerships.3

Initial Challenges to Partnerships Being Parties

In their answers, ITT Life and Lloyds each alleged, among other things, that the suit was instituted without the authority of SJA and SJI. Cates then engaged in documentary discovery, and took depositions of three executives of defendants in April 1980. Subsequently, in June 1980, Boyer, Collins, and Pettey filed a verified motion to intervene as plaintiffs for the limited purpose of causing the partnerships to be dropped as plaintiffs and enjoining Cates from unauthorized use of the partnership names, and tendered a motion to drop SJA and SJI as parties to the suit. They alleged their respective relationships to the partnerships, stated that the partnerships had not and did not authorize the filing or maintaining of the suit, and that “the filing of such lawsuit in the name of such business entities is not, at this time, in the best interest of such entities.”

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Cates v. International Telephone And Telegraph Corp.
756 F.2d 1161 (Fifth Circuit, 1985)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
756 F.2d 1161, 1985 U.S. App. LEXIS 28822, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cates-v-international-telephone-telegraph-corp-ca5-1985.