Dale Roush Farms of Texas, and Tejas Farms, Ltd. v. Pantex Sales, Inc., Dba Graphic Equipment and Supply

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 6, 2000
Docket07-00-00178-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Dale Roush Farms of Texas, and Tejas Farms, Ltd. v. Pantex Sales, Inc., Dba Graphic Equipment and Supply (Dale Roush Farms of Texas, and Tejas Farms, Ltd. v. Pantex Sales, Inc., Dba Graphic Equipment and Supply) 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
Dale Roush Farms of Texas, and Tejas Farms, Ltd. v. Pantex Sales, Inc., Dba Graphic Equipment and Supply, (Tex. Ct. App. 2000).

Opinion

ROUSH FARMS AND TEJAS FARMS V. PANTEX

NO. 07-00-0178-CV

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS

FOR THE SEVENTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS

AT AMARILLO

PANEL A

DECEMBER 6, 2000

______________________________

DALE ROUSH FARMS OF TEXAS, AND TEJAS FARMS LTD, APPELLANTS

V.

PANTEX SALES, INC., D/B/A GRAPHIC EQUIPMENT AND SUPPLY, APPELLEE

_________________________________

FROM THE 69 TH DISTRICT COURT OF SHERMAN COUNTY;

NO. 4318; HONORABLE RON ENNS, JUDGE

_______________________________

Before BOYD, C.J., and REAVIS and JOHNSON, JJ.

In this appeal, appellants Dale Roush Farms of Texas (Roush Farms) and Tejas Farms challenge a default judgment in favor of appellee Pantex Sales, Inc. d/b/a Graphic Equipment and Supply (Pantex Sales), for breach of contract, conversion, an accounting,  injunctive relief and declaratory relief.  Because the second of appellants’ three issues presents reversible error, we reverse and remand.

To explain the relationship between the parties, it is necessary to review the factual background giving rise to the underlying suit.  Tejas Farms is a Texas limited partnership consisting of Jon Hart, Jeff Hart and Joel Hart.  Roush Farms was formed in 1997 as a general partnership consisting of Dale Roush, Jon Hart, Jeff Hart and Joel Hart.  Pantex Sales is a corporation owned by Don Grimm. In 1998, Pantex Sales made a payment of $201,006.17 to Tejas Farms, assertedly as a loan.  However, no promissory note was ever executed in connection with the transaction.  Also in 1998, Pantex Sales purchased four sections of land and a portion of a fifth section in Sherman County.  Those sections are referred to as sections 3, 5, 175, 408, and part of section 407.  Some time in the same year, Pantex Sales orally leased this property to Roush Farms.  Under this lease agreement, Roush Farms was to pay Pantex Sales 20 percent of the crops grown on the land as rental.  The agreement was reduced to writing in January 1999.

On September 13, 1999, by letter, Jeff Hart notified Dale Roush that because of an alleged transfer of funds from the partnership account to his personal account, pursuant to the partnership agreement, Roush’s interest in their partnership had been terminated.  The following month, Pantex Sales brought suit against Roush Farms and Tejas Farms.  In the suit, Pantex alleged breach of contract for failing to properly farm the land, conversion of Pantex Sales’ portion of the 1998 crop, sought an accounting, a declaration that the lease had terminated and Roush Farms had committed fraud, and finally, an injunction directing Roush Farms to vacate the property.  As regarding Tejas Farms, Pantex Sales sought recovery of the 1998 loan, principal and interest.

On October 25, 1999, process was served on Dale Roush for Roush Farms.  After failed attempts to serve Tejas Farms by delivery of citation to Joel Hart, Pantex Sales sought and obtained permission under Rule 106 of the Rules of Civil Procedure (footnote: 1) for alternative service by delivery to any employee of Tejas Farms.  A new citation was issued directing delivery to “[a]ny employee of Tejas Farms Ltd. at the offices of Tejas Farms Ltd.”  That citation and a copy of the plaintiffs’ petition was delivered to Sherri Partain on November 4, 1999.  However, Partain returned the citation and the petition to the clerk the following day with a handwritten letter denying she was an employee of Tejas Farms.  Neither defendant filed an answer and the case was set for trial on January 5, 2000.

At trial, Dale Roush averred that when process was served upon him, he informed the other members of the Roush Farms partnership, and delivered copies to the partnership office and to Van Northern,  an attorney who had represented the partnership on other matters.  In his opinion, the Roush Farms’ failure to file an answer was intentional.  He also testified that he was familiar with Tejas Farms and Sherri Partain was an employee of both Tejas and Roush Farms.

Don Grimm, the president and sole shareholder of Pantex Sales, testified that the $201,006.17 payment to Tejas Farms in 1998 was a loan for “a 12 to 18 month period” and it had not been repaid.  He further testified in support of each of Pantex Sales’ other causes of action.  He said that Roush Farms was no longer farming the land now being farmed by Horizon Farms, a partnership composed of Jon Hart, Joel Hart, and Jeff Hart.

During the trial, Jeff Hart appeared, identified himself as a partner in Roush Farms, (footnote: 2) and sought to present testimony controverting that of Roush and Don Grimm.  However, because no answer had been previously filed, the trial court did not permit him to do so.  Jeff Hart denied that the Roush Farms Partnership had been served with process and sought a continuance.  The trial court denied a continuance, again because no answer had been filed.

At the completion of the hearing, the trial court rendered judgment for Pantex Sales. As against Roush Farms, it awarded $105,291.20 for breach of contract damages, $15,000 damages for conversion, $20,000 for an accounting, and possession of certain personal property.  It also terminated the lease, issued a permanent mandatory injunction evicting Roush Farms from the property, and awarded $10,500 in attorney fees.  On the same day as the hearing, Jeff Hart filed a handwritten general denial.

On February 8, 2000, appellants filed a motion for new trial challenging the validity of the process service and asserting they met the requirements explicated in Craddock v. Sunshine Bus Lines, Inc. , 134 Tex. 388, 133 S.W.2d 124 (1939), for a new trial.  In support of that motion, appellants attached excerpts of the January 5, 2000 hearing, Jeff Hart’s handwritten answer, a November 9, 1999 letter from Pantex Sales’ attorney agreeing that Pantex Sales “will not pursue its temporary injunction against Dale Roush Farms at this time,” and an affidavit from Sherri Partain stating she had never been an employee of Tejas Farms.  Inasmuch as the record does not show an express ruling by the trial court on this motion, we will presume it was overruled by operation of law.

In appellants’ three issues, they ask for a decision whether they are entitled to a new trial 1) when they sought to participate in the trial and were denied that opportunity, as well as denied a continuance; 2) whether the citations themselves and/or their service and return were defective and appellants had no proper notice of the trial; and 3) whether their motion seeking a new trial satisfied the three elements explicated in Craddock .  Because we find it is dispositive of this appeal, we will proceed directly to discuss appellants’ second issue concerning the issuance and service of process.

Unlike a conventional trial, in a default judgment context, there are no presumptions in favor of a valid issuance or service of citation.   Barker CATV Const., Inc. v. Ampro, Inc. , 989 S.W.2d 789, 792 (Tex.App.--Houston [1 st Dist.] 1999, no pet.).

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Dale Roush Farms of Texas, and Tejas Farms, Ltd. v. Pantex Sales, Inc., Dba Graphic Equipment and Supply, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dale-roush-farms-of-texas-and-tejas-farms-ltd-v-pa-texapp-2000.