Edward Malone v. Firdosh Patel

397 S.W.3d 658, 2012 Tex. App. LEXIS 2670, 2012 WL 1142251
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 5, 2012
Docket01-10-00739-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 397 S.W.3d 658 (Edward Malone v. Firdosh Patel) 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
Edward Malone v. Firdosh Patel, 397 S.W.3d 658, 2012 Tex. App. LEXIS 2670, 2012 WL 1142251 (Tex. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

OPINION

SHERRY RADACK, Chief Justice.

Appellee Firdosh Patel sued appellant Edward Malone under contract and tort theories, alleging that Malone reneged on their agreement to be equal partners with a third person in a new company, Prescen-do Consulting, LP. The trial court entered judgment in favor of Patel on the jury’s verdict, and Malone appeals that here. By conditional cross-appeal, Patel challenges the trial court’s granting directed verdict on his quantum meruit claim. We affirm the trial court’s judgment.

BACKGROUND

Patel came to the United States as a student from India in 1994 at the age of 22 to study at Rice University, where he earned an MBA degree. After completing' his degree, he embarked on a career in the energy sector while seeking permanent residency. His immigration status was a focus at trial because it was cited as a reason that the parties’ disputed business relationship was not documented in writing earlier. Patel’s theory was that he and Malone always agreed to be equal partners in Prescendo upon its inception, but that Malone represented that until Patel completed the process of securing a green card, they could not reduce that agreement to writing because he was prohibited from owning equity. Malone on the other hand testified that there was never an agreement to be equal partners, and that Patel was simply an at-will employee who had been told he might be granted some ownership in the future.

A. Patel’s and Malone’s Relationship

After graduating from Rice, Patel first went to work for Coral Energy, a gas and power trading business that initially sponsored his green card application through an H1B petition. To gain permanent residency status, Patel needed the' Department of Labor to issue a certification approving him as an eligible immigrant to fill a particular position with a sponsoring employer, and then Patel could apply for residency. Once certification by the Labor Department was cleared and his green card application was pending, Patel was portable, meaning that he could work for any employer as long as he stayed in a similar position. Athough Patel did not receive his permanent residency until December 2004, he was able to change employers several times before then because he remained in similar positions.

Malone was Patel’s boss at Coral and became his close friend and mentor. Patel also recruited his Rice classmate, Meng Choo, to Coral where Choo worked with Malone and Patel as a team. • When Malone left Coral, Patel also left, taking a job with Sabre in 1998. Athough they worked in different cities for different employers, Patel and Malone stayed in contact with monthly telephone conversations.

Within a year, Malone called Patel with a job opportunity for them to provide consulting services on a project at a Shell company, Equiva. Malone worked as a consultant through OpenLink Financial, and Patel became a direct OpenLink employee. At OpenLink, Patel earned a $90,000 salary with a potential additional 10% bonus.

Malone then left to become a partner with MRE Consulting and continued to work on the same Shell project. He recruited Patel with the promise of a potential future partnership position at MRE. *662 Choo joined them later. Malone eventually left the Shell project, but Patel continued his Shell work through MRE with an annual salary of $100,000 and potential additional 75% bonus.

B. Prescendo Consulting

After Malone had a falling out with his partners at MRE, he began discussions with Patel and Choo about leaving MRE. Eventually the three started a new business — Prescendo Consulting. Patel and Choo testified that Patel, Malone, and Choo agreed that the three would be equal owners of Prescendo. When Patel left MRE, Shell asked Patel to come to work for it directly, but Patel declined that offer and told Shell that he was starting his own company and that Shell could contract with Prescendo for Patel’s services. In addition to the job offer from Shell, Patel and Choo both had other lucrative job opportunities at this juncture, including staying at MRE or going to work for OpenLink Financial. Patel turned down an offer from Openlink because he was committed to building Prescendo.

In December 2003, Patel signed a letter accepting a salary of $24,000 as an at-will employee of Prescendo with a potential for a merit-based bonus dependent on Pres-cendo’s overall performance. Choo signed a similar letter. Patel and Choo testified that they decided on this salary amount together with Malone, and that it was so much lower than they would make elsewhere because, as owners, they were more concerned about the company building up cash reserves than drawing large salaries.

According to Patel and Choo, Malone told them that Patel’s and Choo’s ownership could not be documented in writing until their green cards were finalized and that their employment letters were necessary paperwork. There was trial testimony by Ken Harder, a board certified immigration lawyer, that Malone was actually mistaken about this, as Patel could own his own company and file on his own behalf— rather than rely on his employer to file for him — to maintain his status as a green card candidate beginning March 25, 2003. 1 Patel and Choo both testified that they understood they were employees, but understood the agreement to be that they also each owned one-third of Prescendo. Several documents were introduced into evidence that reflected Malone as 100% owner of Prescendo, including an insurance application and service mark application signed by Patel. Patel testified that he followed Malone’s guidance when it came to documents related to starting the business and how paperwork was filled out related to reflecting ownership percentages. Malone told him that such documents had to reflect Malone as the owner “until we got a partnership in writing.”

Malone, Patel, and Choo at the onset decided bring on an employee to Prescen-do as well — Raymond Zhau — at a salary of $62,500 a year. All three also agreed to make the commitment to sponsor Zhau’s green card — an approximately three year process under which they basically guaranteed his employment and salary. Patel and Choo testified that they drew a much smaller salary than Zhau, despite his being junior to them in experience, because as owners of Prescendo they wanted to be conservative with their own salaries so that the company could cover its expenses, prosper and grow. An email from mid-2004 was introduced at trial in which Malone proposed raising their salaries to *663 $50,000, but Patel responded that he was fine leaving it at $24,000.

Malone, Patel, and Choo split up both the start-up and ongoing responsibilities at Prescendo. Patel researched cellphone plahs, 401(k) plans, and was in charge of marketing and keeping timesheets for himself and others from Prescendo working with him on particular projects. Choo handled the website and technical issues, such as setting up the computer server and e-mail accounts. Malone was in charge of the paperwork for setting up the company and also Prescendo’s banking and accounting, including billing clients and paying bills.

Prescendo did not have separate office space. Most work was done on site at the clients’ offices, and they all worked sometimes from their homes.

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397 S.W.3d 658, 2012 Tex. App. LEXIS 2670, 2012 WL 1142251, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/edward-malone-v-firdosh-patel-texapp-2012.