Dockside Marine, L.L.C. v. Joshua Walker, Bryan Brown, and HTX Watersports, L.L.C.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 27, 2024
Docket09-23-00047-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Dockside Marine, L.L.C. v. Joshua Walker, Bryan Brown, and HTX Watersports, L.L.C. (Dockside Marine, L.L.C. v. Joshua Walker, Bryan Brown, and HTX Watersports, L.L.C.) 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
Dockside Marine, L.L.C. v. Joshua Walker, Bryan Brown, and HTX Watersports, L.L.C., (Tex. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

In The

Court of Appeals

Ninth District of Texas at Beaumont

________________

NO. 09-23-00047-CV ________________

DOCKSIDE MARINE, L.L.C., APPELLANT

V.

JOSHUA WALKER, BRYAN BROWN, AND HTX WATERSPORTS, L.L.C., APPELLEES

________________________________________________________________________

On Appeal from the 457th District Court Montgomery County, Texas Trial Cause No. 20-06-07358-CV ________________________________________________________________________

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Dockside Marine, L.L.C. (“Dockside”) appeals the trial court’s grant of a

Traditional and No-Evidence Summary Judgment for Joshua Walker (“Walker”),

HTX Watersports L.L.C. (“HTX”), and Bryan Brown (“Brown”) (“collectively

Appellees). In five issues, Dockside challenges the trial court’s grant of summary

judgment on the following causes of action: theft of property under the Texas Theft

Liability Act; conversion; breach of fiduciary duty; tortious interference with an

1 existing contract; and civil conspiracy. As explained below, we affirm in part, and

reverse and remand in part.

I. BACKGROUND

Dockside Marine is a boat dealership in Lake Conroe that was granted an

“exclusive license” to sell MasterCraft boats in the Greater Houston area. According

to Dockside, it had an exclusive distributorship agreement with MasterCraft Boat

Company (“MasterCraft”) until 2022 to sell MasterCraft boats in the Greater

Houston area at its Lake Conroe dealership. In 2009, Dockside hired Walker as a

salesperson, and in 2015, promoted him to General Manager. In early 2020, Walker

resigned as Dockside’s General Manager. After resigning from Dockside, Walker

was hired as a General Manager at the newly formed dealership HTX, formed by

Brown. Before forming HTX, Brown had been a customer of Dockside. In March

2020, MasterCraft sent notices of default to Dockside for “refusal to pay for the

Boats and Trailers that Dockside ordered from MasterCraft.” Then, in May 2020,

MasterCraft terminated its relationship with Dockside and contracted with HTX to

be its exclusive MasterCraft dealer. Dockside alleged that HTX began advertising it

was selling MasterCraft boats two days after MasterCraft terminated its relationship

with Dockside.

In its first amended petition, Dockside alleges that after Walker resigned, two

Dockside customers reported that Walker had approached them, while still

2 employed as Dockside’s General Manager, about opening a new boat dealership.

Dockside claims that Walker told the customers he would take the MasterCraft

account with him when he left Dockside. Dockside contends that before Walker

resigned, he had phone calls with Brown, often lengthy. Dockside also alleges that

these calls were notable because they occurred right after Walker had a phone

conversation with a MasterCraft representative. Dockside also contends that while

still working as Dockside’s General Manager, Walker actively solicited two

employees to leave Dockside and work at HTX.

Dockside maintains that in late 2019 through early 2020, they were actively

negotiating with MasterCraft, regarding rebates MasterCraft owed Dockside when

Dockside received Mastercraft’s May 2020 notice terminating Dockside’s

distributorship agreement. During negotiations that involved the notice, Dockside

claimed that it was required to temporarily close because of the COVID-19

pandemic. Dockside alleged that the shutdown tied to the COVID-19 pandemic also

“significantly impaired” these negotiations. While closed for business during the

pandemic, Dockside contends that it sought to delay the delivery of preordered

MasterCraft boats given the economic conditions that existed at that time. Dockside

asserts that during the pandemic and while Walker was acting as its General Manager

that he either failed to communicate or intentionally did not delay the delivery of the

boats, to his advantage.

3 Dockside also alleges that Walker, while employed at Dockside, allowed

MasterCraft to repossess two non-MasterCraft boats (two Nautique boats). 1

Dockside pleaded, “By allowing MasterCraft to unlawfully take possession of these

two boats, Walker created an allegation that Dockside breached its financing

agreement with respect to the boats with a third-party financer and the potential risk

of losing an important source of financing based on incorrect information.” Dockside

alleges that while its General Manager, Walker “knowingly and intentionally

injur[ed] his principal with whom he owed [a] strict duty of loyalty, among other

fiduciary duties.” Dockside also alleges that “Brown was familiar with Walker’s

position as General Manager, and therefore knew or should have known that

Walker’s actions were wholly improper. As Brown is a member of HTX, his

knowledge is imputed to HTX.”

II. PROCEDURAL HISTORY

In its Amended Petition, Dockside sued Walker, Brown, and HTX. As to

Walker, Dockside alleged the following theories:

- Breach of Fiduciary Duty, - Tortious Interference with Existing Contract, - Theft of Property under the Theft Liability Act, - Conversion, and - Conspiracy

As against Brown and HTX, Dockside alleged the following claims:

1 Nautique Boat Company was another boat manufacturer sold by Dockside. 4 - Knowing Participation in Breach of Fiduciary Duty, - Tortious Interference with Existing Contract, - Theft of Property under the Theft Liability Act, - Conversion, and - Conspiracy

In response, Walker filed a First Amended Answer and Original

Counterclaim, denying all allegations. In the response, Walker alleges that he was a

longtime employee of Dockside, and that he never had a non-competition agreement

with Dockside. Walker also claimed that in April 2020, Dockside instructed him to

take titles for the two Nautique boats to a bank and using the titles as collateral, get

loans. Yet, according to Walker’s response, the two Nautique boats already had

third-party liens on them, liens that MasterCraft had authorized. Walker alleged that

when he refused to participate in “bank fraud,” he told MasterCraft the boats in

Dockside’s inventory were “double-liened,” so he resigned. Dockside’s president

denied that the two Nautique boats were “double-liened.” According to Walker,

MasterCraft terminated its relationship with Dockside after discovering Dockside’s

fraud.

After Dockside sued, Walker filed a counterclaim against Dockside for breach

of contract, quantum meruit, unjust enrichment, and money had and received. Brown

and HTX each filed Original Answers and Requests for Disclosures. Additionally,

Walker, Brown, and HTX alleged the affirmative defenses of unclean hands,

estoppel, laches, waiver, privilege, justification, effective consent, failure to

5 mitigate, and Dockside’s own acts and omissions caused or contributed to its

damages.

Walker, Brown, and HTX jointly filed a No-Evidence and Traditional Motion

for Partial Summary Judgment. The exhibits filed to support the combined motion

included: 1) Excerpts from the June 23, 2021 Deposition of Dockside Marine, LLC

Corporate Representative Larry Paul Carlson Jr.; 2) March 19, 2020 Notice of

Default Under MasterCraft Dealership Agreement; 3) Texas Secretary of State

Website Printout; 4) April 17, 2020 Notice of Force Majeure Event and Response to

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Dockside Marine, L.L.C. v. Joshua Walker, Bryan Brown, and HTX Watersports, L.L.C., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dockside-marine-llc-v-joshua-walker-bryan-brown-and-htx-watersports-texapp-2024.