Dr. Bradley Boeke and Bayside Dental Mesquite, PLLC v. Scharla Collins and Scharla R. Collins, DDS, PA

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 16, 2023
Docket05-22-01066-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Dr. Bradley Boeke and Bayside Dental Mesquite, PLLC v. Scharla Collins and Scharla R. Collins, DDS, PA (Dr. Bradley Boeke and Bayside Dental Mesquite, PLLC v. Scharla Collins and Scharla R. Collins, DDS, PA) 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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Dr. Bradley Boeke and Bayside Dental Mesquite, PLLC v. Scharla Collins and Scharla R. Collins, DDS, PA, (Tex. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

Reversed and Rendered and Opinion Filed November 16, 2023

In The Court of Appeals Fifth District of Texas at Dallas No. 05-22-01066-CV

DR. BRADLEY BOEKE AND BAYSIDE DENTAL MESQUITE, PLLC, Appellants V. DR. SCHARLA COLLINS AND SCHARLA R. COLLINS, DDS, PA, Appellees

On Appeal from the 68th Judicial District Court Dallas County, Texas Trial Court Cause No. DC-19-11293

MEMORANDUM OPINION Before Justices Partida-Kipness, Reichek, and Breedlove Opinion by Justice Breedlove A jury found that appellants Dr. Bradley Boeke and Bayside Dental Mesquite,

PLLC, made defamatory statements about appellees Dr. Scharla Collins and Scharla

R. Collins, DDS, PA after Boeke purchased Collins’s dental practice. The jury

awarded Collins damages of $150,000 for past mental anguish and $90,000 for past

injury to reputation. In two issues, appellants challenge the sufficiency of the

evidence to support the jury’s damage awards. Concluding that there was insufficient evidence to support the jury’s awards, we reverse the trial court’s judgment and

render judgment that appellees take nothing on these claims.

BACKGROUND

When just out of dental school in 2000, appellee Dr. Scharla Collins went to

work in her father’s small dental practice. Her father retired soon after. Over the next

18 years, Collins formed Scharla R. Collins, DDS, PA (Collins PA), expanded the

practice, and designed and built a new facility for it. Collins PA was serving 600

patients by 2018. Some of these patients traveled from other states and countries for

Collins’s care, and others invited Collins to milestone events in their lives.

In 2018, Collins was contacted by Richard Nicely, a broker, who inquired

about her interest in selling her practice. Collins responded, and as she later testified,

asked Nicely to “give me information so that I can make a decision if this is what I

want to do or not.” She provided comprehensive records from her practice to Nicely

so that he could conduct a detailed appraisal.

Nicely’s appraisal valued the practice at $286,000. Collins then agreed to

proceed with a sale. Nicely connected Collins with appellants Dr. Bradley Boeke

and Bayside Dental Mesquite, PLLC (Bayside). The parties agreed on a price of

$286,000 for the practice and $670,000 for the building. The parties further agreed

that Collins would continue to work part time for Bayside, and would not work at a

competing practice within seven miles. The parties signed a provider agreement and

a restrictive covenants agreement incorporating these terms.

–2– Although the parties signed an asset purchase agreement on February 27,

2019, the actual sale was delayed for some months while Boeke attempted to obtain

financing. Collins was given less than 48 hours’ notice of the final closing, set for

Friday morning, July 19, 2019. Collins attended the closing, then returned to the

office in the afternoon to see patients for their scheduled appointments.

Boeke changed the locks later that evening and closed the building for

renovations. The next morning, Collins contacted Boeke and his wife Carolyn, who

served as Bayside’s “manager of finances, HR, and marketing,” to obtain entry to

pick up some personal items she had left at the office. Boeke did not respond.

Carolyn Boeke responded that she was driving and would contact Collins later, but

she never did. When Collins arrived at the office, she found her personal items, such

as the parking sign given to her by her father, in the trash dumpster.

The closing documents provided that transfer of the office telephone number

would not occur until after the closing. On July 24, 2019, Collins and Carolyn Boeke

communicated about the transfer. Both had contacted AT&T, the service provider.

Carolyn Boeke reported that “ATT is a mess. I spent an hour on the phone with them

yesterday. They told me that the account was in my name, so go figure.” Collins

accordingly concluded no further action was needed on her part to complete the

phone transfer.

On July 31, 2019, Boeke fired Collins by email. He gave no reason. Although

the email stated that she was given 30 days’ notice, Boeke did not permit Collins to

–3– enter the building again. The following day, Collins received a text message from

Boeke threatening to have Collins arrested if she came to the office again. Collins

had no further access to her patient lists or to any other records from her practice.

On Monday or Tuesday, August 5 or 6, Carolyn Boeke noticed the office

phones were down, although they had been working the week before. She called

AT&T and learned that Collins needed to give permission for the transfer. Rather

than contacting Collins directly, Boeke instructed his counsel to send Collins a

demand letter on August 6. On receipt of the demand letter, Collins immediately

contacted AT&T and Boeke’s attorney and attempted to resolve the problem. But

because the problem had not been resolved by August 8, Boeke filed this suit and

set an injunction hearing for the following Monday. After further communications

between Collins, AT&T, the attorneys, and Carolyn Boeke, the problem was

resolved, phone service was restored, and the injunction hearing was cancelled. The

phones were down for less than a week during a time when the office was closed for

renovations.

Boeke and Bayside did not dismiss the lawsuit, however, instead amending

their petition to seek damages for breach of contract arising from the failure to

transfer the phone number. Boeke later testified that he valued the resulting damages

at $657,000 by assigning an “average number” of new and referral patients who, in

his opinion, “would have called” all four of the purchased practices at the closed

–4– office during that week. He continued to claim those damages until the morning of

trial.

In the weeks that followed the phone number transfer, Bayside’s receptionists

told patients that Collins had left her practice without telling her patients. Patients

who called Bayside and asked for Dr. Collins were told that Collins suddenly retired

and had cut off the dental office telephones for two or three weeks.

Although the parties’ agreement provided that they would “jointly notify”

patients about the sale of Collins’s practice, Boeke and Bayside instead sent patients

the following letter:

October 12, 2019 To all patients of Dr. Scharla Collins

Dear Patients:

Thank you for the opportunity to take care of your dental and oral health needs.

Last July, Dr. Collins sold her dental practice and building to me, the owner of Bayside Dental. Some of you have been to the office already, and have been surprised by the remodeling of the building and the fact that Dr. Collins is no longer there.

I sincerely apologize that Dr. Collins did not send out a letter of introduction to me and Bayside Dental, informing you of this change. I understand the resulting confusion—I have personally had this experience with my physician. Please be assured that we have all of your records, and will treat you with superior care. (We have great reviews! Look up www.baysidedentalrowlett.com).

....

–5– Again, I apologize for the lack of communication to you and look forward to having you as a patient of Bayside Dental.

Sincerely, Dr. Brad Boeke

After the sale of her practice, Collins interviewed for positions in the Dallas

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Dr. Bradley Boeke and Bayside Dental Mesquite, PLLC v. Scharla Collins and Scharla R. Collins, DDS, PA, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dr-bradley-boeke-and-bayside-dental-mesquite-pllc-v-scharla-collins-and-texapp-2023.