Craig Wheeler v. Peter Sajovich Nickolas Nowak Austin Advantage, Inc. D/B/A RE/MAX Austin Advantage And eCounty Foreclosures, Inc.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 23, 2010
Docket03-09-00367-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Craig Wheeler v. Peter Sajovich Nickolas Nowak Austin Advantage, Inc. D/B/A RE/MAX Austin Advantage And eCounty Foreclosures, Inc. (Craig Wheeler v. Peter Sajovich Nickolas Nowak Austin Advantage, Inc. D/B/A RE/MAX Austin Advantage And eCounty Foreclosures, Inc.) 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.

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Craig Wheeler v. Peter Sajovich Nickolas Nowak Austin Advantage, Inc. D/B/A RE/MAX Austin Advantage And eCounty Foreclosures, Inc., (Tex. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN




NO. 03-09-00367-CV

Craig Wheeler, Appellant



v.



Peter Sajovich; Nickolas Nowak; Austin Advantage, Inc. d/b/a

RE/MAX Austin Advantage; and eCounty Foreclosures, Inc., Appellees



FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF TRAVIS COUNTY, 353RD JUDICIAL DISTRICT

NO. D-1-GN-07-001535, HONORABLE GISELA D. TRIANA-DOYAL, JUDGE PRESIDING

M E M O R A N D U M O P I N I O N



Craig Wheeler appeals a final summary judgment on claims he asserted against Peter Sajovich, Nickolas Nowak, Austin Advantage, Inc. d/b/a RE/MAX Austin Advantage ("Austin Advantage"), and eCounty Foreclosures, Inc. ("eCounty") (collectively, appellees). In two issues on appeal, Wheeler argues that the district court erred in granting summary judgment because he presented evidence raising a fact issue as to elements of breach-of-fiduciary-duty and breach-of-contract claims he had asserted against appellees. We will affirm the judgment.



BACKGROUND

The following facts are taken from the affidavits, depositions, and other evidence in the summary-judgment record. Appellant Wheeler became interested in purchasing property in Austin for investment purposes. Appellee Sajovich is a real estate investor who is a licensed real estate broker. Appellee Austin Advantage is a real estate brokerage company. Sajovich is Austin Advantage's broker/owner. Appellee eCounty is an entity Sajovich formed to locate property for purchase at foreclosure sales, and he continues to serve as its president and owner. The company offers a group of investors the opportunity to purchase foreclosure properties at the monthly sales by having eCounty bid for the properties on their behalf. Appellee Nowak, at relevant times, worked at Austin Advantage as a licensed real-estate salesperson, operating under Sajovich's brokerage license. Nowak was also the assistant vice-president of eCounty.

Wheeler signed a brokerage agreement with Austin Advantage (the "Advantage Agreement") with an effective date of June 18, 2003 and a stated expiration date of the earlier of either December 18, 2003 or the closing of the last property transaction that Wheeler intended to acquire. The agreement was on a standard Texas Association of Realtors form entitled "Buyer/Tenant Representation Agreement-Residential." The Advantage Agreement provided that it was between Wheeler as the "Client" and Austin Advantage as the "Broker," and it was signed on behalf of Austin Advantage by Sajovich as "Broker/Associate."

Under the Advantage Agreement, Wheeler agreed:



  • to "work exclusively through Broker in acquiring property in the market area [central Texas and surrounding counties] and [to] negotiate the acquisition of property in the market area only through Broker," and


  • to "inform other brokers, salespersons, sellers and landlords with whom [he] may have contact that Broker exclusively represents [him] for the purpose of acquiring property in the market area and [to] refer all such persons to Broker."




Austin Advantage agreed:



  • to "use [its] best efforts to assist [Wheeler] in acquiring property in the market area," and
  • to "assist [Wheeler] in negotiating the acquisition of property in the market area."


The agreement also contained a provision in which Wheeler specifically acknowledged that Austin Advantage:



may represent other prospective buyers or tenants who may seek to acquire properties that may be of interest to [Wheeler]. [Wheeler] agrees that Broker may, during the term of this agreement and after it ends, represent such other prospects, show the other prospects the same properties that Broker shows to [Wheeler], and act as a real estate broker for such other prospects in negotiating the acquisition of properties that [Wheeler] may seek to acquire.



Also, on June 7, 2003, Wheeler signed an agreement with eCounty (1) and subsequently signed addendums on July 24, 2003 and August 30, 2004 (collectively, the "eCounty Agreement"). Under the eCounty Agreement, if Wheeler wanted to bid in a monthly foreclosure auction, he would submit to Nowak or Sajovich in advance a list of properties he had selected, his maximum bid price, and his calculation of a brokerage commission he would owe under the agreement if the property was purchased. Wheeler then would deposit money equal to his maximum bid amounts plus brokerage commissions into eCounty's client account in exchange for a promissory note from eCounty in an amount equal to his deposit with an annual interest rate of 5.00% per annum. (2) Nowak or another investment specialist (a licensed realtor working for Austin Advantage) would then attend the auction and bid on each property up to the maximum bid amounts Wheeler had specified. If the bid was successful, the property was purchased in eCounty's name using the money Wheeler had deposited in eCounty's account. Wheeler would then purchase the property or properties from eCounty, with Sajovich and Austin Advantage acting as the broker and receiving a commission on the sale. If the bid or bids were unsuccessful, Wheeler's money would be returned to him by eCounty. However, eventually, Wheeler testified, he would sometimes just leave his money in the eCounty account because "it became kind of cumbersome . . . to wire the money back and forth" every month.

The eCounty Agreement consisted of a form that provided a number of options from which Wheeler could choose regarding the services eCounty would provide him. Among the choices Wheeler made, he opted not to allow eCounty to use his funds to acquire for him non-foreclosure properties that were not on his bid list. Wheeler also testified that he never gave Nowak the ability to purchase property for him without Wheeler's instructions or permission before each auction.

The eCounty Agreement also disclosed that eCounty represented multiple clients at the auctions. The Agreement further disclosed, in a section titled "Representation and Conflict of Interest" that:



1. [Wheeler] hereby acknowledges that [he has] been notified the Designated Broker [defined as "Peter Sajovich, Broker/Owner, RE/MAX Austin Advantage"] is licensed by the Texas Real Estate Commission (TREC).

2. [Wheeler] understands [Sajovich] represents eCounty Foreclosures, Inc.



3. [Wheeler] understands that [Sajovich] is a key officer of eCounty Foreclosures, Inc.



4. [Wheeler] understands [Sajovich] has financial interest in eCounty Foreclosures, Inc.



5. [Wheeler] understands [Sajovich] may benefit financially from this transaction in addition to the brokerage commissions already stated.



Between June 2003 and mid-2006, eCounty bid on properties for Wheeler at approximately 10 monthly foreclosure auctions, and Wheeler ultimately purchased 4 of these properties through eCounty. Wheeler never purchased any properties through eCounty, Austin Advantage, Sajovich, or Nowak that were listed on the Multiple Listing Service (MLS) or that were not foreclosure properties.

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Craig Wheeler v. Peter Sajovich Nickolas Nowak Austin Advantage, Inc. D/B/A RE/MAX Austin Advantage And eCounty Foreclosures, Inc., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/craig-wheeler-v-peter-sajovich-nickolas-nowak-aust-texapp-2010.