Encore Enterprises, Inc. a Texas Corporation, Encore Borderplex, LLC EMF Grand Mission Investments, LP and Encore MF Sendero, L.P. v. Borderplex Realty Trust, a Maryland Real Estate Investment Trust, and BRT Realty Operating Limited Partnership

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedSeptember 28, 2018
Docket08-17-00134-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Encore Enterprises, Inc. a Texas Corporation, Encore Borderplex, LLC EMF Grand Mission Investments, LP and Encore MF Sendero, L.P. v. Borderplex Realty Trust, a Maryland Real Estate Investment Trust, and BRT Realty Operating Limited Partnership (Encore Enterprises, Inc. a Texas Corporation, Encore Borderplex, LLC EMF Grand Mission Investments, LP and Encore MF Sendero, L.P. v. Borderplex Realty Trust, a Maryland Real Estate Investment Trust, and BRT Realty Operating Limited Partnership) 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
Encore Enterprises, Inc. a Texas Corporation, Encore Borderplex, LLC EMF Grand Mission Investments, LP and Encore MF Sendero, L.P. v. Borderplex Realty Trust, a Maryland Real Estate Investment Trust, and BRT Realty Operating Limited Partnership, (Tex. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS EIGHTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS EL PASO, TEXAS

§ ENCORE ENTERPRISES, INC., A TEXAS CORPORATION, § ENCORE BORDERPLEX, LLC, No. 08-17-00134-CV EMF GRAND MISSION § INVESTMENTS, LP, AND Appeal from ENCORE MF SENDERO, L.P., § County Court at Law No. 6 Appellants, § of El Paso County, Texas v. § (TC # 2016-DCV2446) BORDERPLEX REALTY TRUST, A § MARYLAND REAL ESTATE INVESTMENT TRUST, AND § BRT REALTY OPERATING LIMITED PARTNERSHIP, §

Appellees. §

OPINION

In this appeal, we decide if two sophisticated entities under the tenets of Delaware law have

agreed to exclusively arbitrate their disputes. The trial court concluded they did not, and retained

the case for trial in a Texas courtroom. We affirm.

BACKGROUND

Encore Enterprises, Inc. (and its related entities Encore Borderplex, LLC, EMF Grand

Mission Investments, LP, and Encore MF Sendero, LP)(all collectively “Encore”) held five properties that were in various stages of development as multi-family apartments. Borderplex

Realty Trust (and its related entity BRT Realty Operating Limited Partnership)(collectively

“Borderplex”) supposedly had access to available capital. This lawsuit arises from an agreement

between Encore and Borderplex. Under the agreement, Encore for the most part would sell or

contribute its properties to a new entity that Borderplex, for the most part, would fund. The new

entity would then issue to both Encore and Borderplex ownership shares reflective of their

respective contributions. Designated members of both Encore and Borderplex would then manage

the new entity.

The parties’ agreement is memorialized in a December 17, 2015 “Contribution

Agreement.” Under the agreement, on or before the date of an “initial closing,” the new entity

would be formed, and both parties would execute a separate “Operating Agreement,” that as its

name suggests, defined the logistics of developing and managing the properties. An unsigned draft

of the Operating Agreement was attached to the Contribution Agreement. The parties were

obligated to execute the Operating Agreement “in substantially the form” as it was attached to the

Contribution Agreement.

The Contribution Agreement contemplated that there could be several closings, as each of

the five Encore properties were either sold or contributed to the new entity. As it turns out,

however, the initial closing never took place. After Encore placed Borderplex on notice that it is

was in default under the Contribution Agreement for failing to make the initial closing, Borderplex

filed this declaratory judgment lawsuit. The lawsuit principally alleges that the first closing was

prevented by third parties, or conditions precedent that were never met, and that Borderplex did

not breach the Contribution Agreement. In particular, Borderplex claims that one of its investors

2 failed to provide funding under a separate subscription agreement.1 The suit seeks a declaration

that Borderplex was under no obligation to close, that Encore was not entitled to recover damages,

and that Borderplex’s performance was excused by Encore’s material breach of the Contribution

Agreement and/or promissory estoppel.

Conversely, Encore in another forum has alleged that individual members of Borderplex

fraudulently misrepresented, or fraudulently failed to disclose, Borderplex’s financial ability to

fund the projects, and misrepresented how the properties were to be managed. Whatever the truth

of the parties’ competing claims, we face here only the question of whether the parties have agreed

to exclusively mediate, then arbitrate this dispute, verse litigate the matter in a court of law. In

response to Borderplex’s suit, Encore filed a motion to dismiss, or in the alternative, to abate the

suit based on its claim that the parties must arbitrate any dispute. The trial court denied Encore’s

motion, and Encore filed this interlocutory appeal challenging that decision. See TEX.CIV.PRAC.&

REM.CODE ANN. § 171.098(a)(1)(West 2011)(allowing interlocutory appeal of denial of motion to

compel arbitration).

The nub of the dispute is this: the Contribution Agreement itself contains no arbitration

clause, but the unsigned Operating Agreement does. With that in mind, we set forth more of the

parties’ agreement as it pertains to how the Contribution Agreement incorporated the unsigned

Operating Agreement.

THE CONTRIBUTION AGREEMENT

The recital portions of the Contribution Agreement outline the parties’ intended dealings.

Encore through various subsidiaries, owned or controlled five multi-family apartment projects in

various stages of development. The parties contemplated that two of the projects would be sold,

1 Failing that condition, Borderplex was obligated to pay a substantial break-up fee, which it alleges that it has paid to Encore.

3 and three projects would be contributed by Encore to a newly formed company. Borderplex would

come to the table with just over $47 million dollars, used to pay for both the acquisition and

development costs. The newly formed company would then own, develop, and operate each of

the respective properties. It would issue ownership units to Encore and Borderplex in designated

proportion to the parties’ contributions of cash or property.

The properties would be managed and run under the terms of a separate Operating

Agreement. Recital G of the Contribution Agreement provides that:

G. [Borderplex and Encore], upon the issuance of the Units and as owners thereof, shall have such rights, obligations and preferences as holders of Units as set forth in the Operating Agreement of the Company, dated as of the date of the Initial Closing, substantially in the form attached hereto as Exhibit A (the ‘Operating Agreement’).

Section 1.01 of the agreement similarly provided that:

On or prior to the date of the Initial Closing, [Borderplex and Encore] shall (1) cause the filing of a certificate of formation of the Company, in a mutually acceptable form, (2) execute the Operating Agreement, in substantially the form attached hereto as Exhibit A, (3) cause the Company to issue Units as specified in Section 1.05 hereof, and make the other deliveries as specified in Section 5.03 hereof.

No closing was ever held and the Operating Agreement was never executed. And while

the Operating Agreement as attached to the Contribution Agreement details multiple facets of how

the projects would be funded and managed, it was incomplete. It contains a blank for an effective

date (“Effective as of February ___, 2016”) and it omits several schedules, such as those including

a budget, the calculation of incentive fees, and employee compensation schedules.

But central to Encore’s position, Section 9.10 of the Contribution Agreement, which

addresses “Exhibits and Schedules,” states:

All Exhibits and Schedules referenced herein are expressly incorporated into this Agreement. [Emphasis supplied].

4 The incomplete Operating Agreement was one of those exhibits, and it has a section addressing

mediation and arbitration:

15.1 Mediation.

(a) Agreement to Use Procedure. The Members have entered into this Agreement in good faith and in the belief that it is mutually advantageous to them. It is with that spirit of cooperation that they agree to attempt to resolve any legal dispute amicably and without the necessity of litigation.

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Encore Enterprises, Inc. a Texas Corporation, Encore Borderplex, LLC EMF Grand Mission Investments, LP and Encore MF Sendero, L.P. v. Borderplex Realty Trust, a Maryland Real Estate Investment Trust, and BRT Realty Operating Limited Partnership, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/encore-enterprises-inc-a-texas-corporation-encore-borderplex-llc-emf-texapp-2018.