Crain v. Northern

2026 Tex. Bus. 4
CourtTexas Business Court
DecidedDecember 19, 2024
Docket25-BC08A-0014
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

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Bluebook
Crain v. Northern, 2026 Tex. Bus. 4 (Tex. Super. Ct. 2024).

Opinion

FILED IN BUSINESS COURT OF TEXAS BEVERLY CRUMLEY, CLERK ENTERED 1/29/2026 2026 Tex. Bus. 4

THE BUSINESS COURT OF TEXAS EIGHTH DIVISION

MICHAEL D. CRAIN, Individually and § Derivatively on Behalf of NORTHERN § CRAIN REALTY, LLC, NORTHERN § CRAIN PROPERTY MANAGEMENT, § LLC, and NORTHERN CRAIN, LLC § § Plaintiff, § Cause No. 25-BC08A-0014 § v. § § WILLIAM “WILL” NORTHERN. § § Defendant. §

═══════════════════════════════════════════════════════ OPINION AND ORDER ═══════════════════════════════════════════════════════

Syllabus *

This Opinion addresses the enforcement of a mandatory Buy-Sell Option clause and its specific performance remedy after the Offeror tendered the requisite buy/sell notice and the Offeree failed to respond to the notice and claimed the Offeror violated the underlying Company Agreement. The Court ultimately finds the Offeror is entitled to specific performance from the Offeree under the Buy-Sell Option clause. The Court awards the Offeror attorneys’ fees.

* The syllabus was created by court staff and is provided for the convenience of the reader. It is not part of the Court’s opinion, does not constitute the Court’s official description or statement, and should not be relied upon as legal authority. OPINION ¶1 Pending before the Court is Defendant William Northern (“Northern”)’s

Motion for Summary Judgment for Specific Performance of Buy-Sell Purchase (“Motion”),

filed on October 23, 2025. Plaintiff Michael D. Crain (“Crain”) filed his Response to

Defendant’s Motion for Summary Judgment for Specific Performance of Buy-Sell Purchase

(“Response”) on November 27, 2025, and Northern filed his Reply on December 3, 2025.

The Court held a hearing on the Motion on December 3, 2025. Northern timely objected

and moved to strike the Declaration of Garette M. Amis attached to Crain’s Response as

summary judgment evidence. 1 The matter is ripe for review.

I. BACKGROUND

¶2 Crain and Northern shared a business relationship. In 2020, the two created

Northern Crain Realty, LLC (“Realty”) and Realty’s two subsidiaries, Northern Crain

Property Management, LLC (“Property Management”) and Northern Crain, LLC (“NC,

LLC”) (individually, “NC Entity,” and collective with Realty, the “NC Entities”). See

Plaintiff’s Second Amended Petition (“Sec. Am. Pet.”) at 4; see Northern’s Motion for

Summary Judgment (“SJ Mot.”) at 3. Crain and Northern each hold 50% membership

interest in the NC Entities. See SJ Mot. at 5. Each entity is governed by nearly identical

Company Agreements (collectively hereinafter, the “Company Agreements”). See id. at 3.

1 Crain filed the “Declaration of Garette M. Amis” (“Amis Declaration”) as a Response exhibit. See Plaintiff’s Response to Defendant’s Motion for Summary Judgment for Specific Performance of Buy-Sell Purchase (“Resp.”), Ex. A, at 26-28. Amis, as counsel for Crain and the NC Entities, claims to have “personal knowledge of the facts stated herein regarding the information relating to [Crain’s] Response.” Id. at 28. However, for the reasons stated in the Order issued contemporaneously with this Opinion, the Court will not consider the Amis Declaration, as it does not comport with Texas Rule of Civil Procedure 166a(f) and lacks any probative value.

OPINION AND ORDER | PAGE 2 Crain and Northern each signed the Company Agreements. 2 See id at 3. Section 10.08 of

each Company Agreement is the “Buy-Sell Option” clause that provides for a mandatory

buy-sell procedure should Crain or Northern seek to sell or buy membership interest in an

entity. 3 See SJ Mot., Ex. A at 49-50.

¶3 In June 2025, Crain sued Northern claiming, inter alia, Northern breached

fiduciary duties by acquiring the Woodhaven Country Club and adjacent property

(“Woodhaven Project”). See Sec. Am. Pet. at 14. Northern counterclaimed for specific

performance and a declaratory judgment, seeking the following relief:

(1) A judgment of specific performance against Crain and ordering Crain to execute and deliver to Northern the assignment of his membership interests in the NC Entities, (2) a declaration that the purported attempt to expel Northern from the NC entities was invalid, void, and of no force and effect, (3) a declaration that the Woodhaven Project is neither directly competitive with the defined business activity of the NC Entities nor a violation of Section 13.03 of the Company Agreements, and (4) attorneys’ fees.

See Defendant’s Original Counterclaim for Specific Performance and Declaratory Judgment

at 17-18.

¶4 Northern filed the instant Motion seeking an order of specific performance

requiring Crain to sign and deliver to him an “Irrevocable Assignment of Membership

Interest” for each NC Entity with an effective date of December 19, 2024. See Motion at

2 NC, LLC’s Company Agreement on November 30, 2020, Realty’s Amended and Restated Company Agreement on October 22, 2020, and Property Management’s Amended and Restated Company Agreement also on October 22, 2020.

3 Provisions such as Section 10.08 are commonly referred to as “Texas Shootout” provisions. See Wings v. Freedman, No. 05-23-00077-CV, 2024 WL 5066085, at *1, n.2 (Tex. App.—Dallas Dec. 11, 2024, no pet.), citing Douglas G. Baird and Donald S. Bernstein, Absolute Priority, Valuation Uncertainty, and the Reorganization Bargain, 115 Yale Law Journal, 1930, 1953 (2006).

OPINION AND ORDER | PAGE 3 25. Northern argues Crain, as a matter of law, breached the Company Agreements’ Buy-

Sell Option clause and is obligated to sell his membership interests in the NC Entities to

Northern. See SJ Mot. at 2. But Crain contends genuine issues of material fact exist

concerning (1) Northern’s alleged prior breaches that preclude him from enforcing the

Company Agreements’ Buy-Sell Option clause, (2) Northern’s alleged unclean hands, and

(2) Northern’s valuation of the membership interests’ absent the Woodhaven Project’s

potential profit. See Resp. at 5, 13, 21.

II. LEGAL STANDARD

¶5 Summary judgment is governed by Texas Rule of Civil Procedure 166a. To

obtain a traditional summary judgment, the movant “bears the burden to show that no

genuine issue of material fact exists and that it is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.”

ConocoPhillips Co. v. Koopmann, 547 S.W.3d 858, 865 (Tex. 2018) (citing TEX. R. CIV. P.

166a(c)). For a traditional motion for summary judgment, the movant satisfies its burden

by conclusively negating at least one element of the nonmovant’s cause of action or proving

all elements of the movant’s cause of action or affirmative defense. Stanfield v. Neubaum,

494 S.W.3d 90, 96 (Tex. 2016). The burden then shifts to the nonmovant to raise a fact

issue to defeat summary judgment. Id. at 97. This burden requires the nonmovant to

specifically identify the supporting proof it seeks to have considered by the trial court and

explain why it demonstrates a fact issue exists. Cty. of Hous. v. Clear Creek Basin Auth.,

589 S.W.2d 671, 678 (Tex. 1979); see also Baubles & Beads v. Louis Vuitton, S.A., 766

S.W.2d 377, 379 (Tex. App.—Texarkana 1989, no writ).

OPINION AND ORDER | PAGE 4 ¶6 A summary judgment response that relies on conclusory assertions, broad

record references, and fails to pinpoint evidence tying particular facts to particular defenses

is not sufficient. See Nguyen v. Allstate Ins. Co., 404 S.W.3d 770, 776-77 (Tex. App.—

Dallas 2013, pet. denied) (general reference to voluminous exhibits and other supposed

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Crain v. Northern
2026 Tex. Bus. 4 (Texas Business Court, 2024)

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