Enrique Cardenas Gonzalez v. Karl R. Lehtinen and Nationwide Services, Inc.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 13, 2008
Docket13-06-00441-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Enrique Cardenas Gonzalez v. Karl R. Lehtinen and Nationwide Services, Inc. (Enrique Cardenas Gonzalez v. Karl R. Lehtinen and Nationwide Services, Inc.) 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
Enrique Cardenas Gonzalez v. Karl R. Lehtinen and Nationwide Services, Inc., (Tex. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

NUMBER 13-06-441-CV

COURT OF APPEALS

THIRTEENTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS

CORPUS CHRISTI - EDINBURG

ENRIQUE CARDENAS GONZALEZ, Appellant,

v.

KARL R. LEHTINEN AND NATIONWIDE SERVICES, INC. Appellees.

On appeal from the County Court at Law No. 1 of Hidalgo County, Texas.

MEMORANDUM OPINION Before Justices Yañez, Rodriguez, and Benavides Memorandum Opinion by Justice Benavides

A citizen and resident of Mexico created and registered a limited liability company

in Texas and served as one of the company's managing members. He now asserts he is

not amenable to the jurisdiction of the Texas courts. We disagree. In this interlocutory

appeal, we find he is subject to jurisdiction in Texas because he "did business" in the

State, as the long-arm statute requires, and because exercising jurisdiction over him would not violate any traditional federal or state guarantees of due process. We affirm the trial

court's denial of his special appearance.

I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND

The appellant is Enrique Cárdenas González, the former governor of Tamaulipas,

Mexico from 1975-81. Cárdenas is a prominent Mexican citizen, but he is also connected

to the United States—specifically, the city of McAllen, Texas—in two significant respects.

First, he owns residential and commercial property in McAllen; second, he established a

limited liability company called Hidalgo Truck & Equipment, LLC ("Hidalgo Truck") in

McAllen on July 14, 2000. Hidalgo Truck’s articles of organization designate Cárdenas and

his associate, Raymond Derr, as the two "managing members" of the company.1 Hidalgo

Truck’s purpose was to acquire and sell trucks and related equipment to customers in

Mexico.

In approximately 2001, Hidalgo Truck entered a business relationship with

appellees, Nationwide Services, Inc. ("Nationwide") and its president, Karl Lehtinen, of

Willow Springs, Illinois. According to Lehtinen, he was induced into the business

relationship, in part, by a personal assurance from Cárdenas that, because Cárdenas was

“a very wealthy man,” there “would be no money problems with this kind of business.”

The business arrangement was simple: Nationwide provided trucks; Hidalgo Truck

provided customers. Nationwide, operating out of Illinois, acquired title and physical

possession of the trucks and transported them to Hidalgo Truck’s offices in McAllen, where

Hidalgo Truck provided storage and maintenance facilities. Hidalgo Truck located the

1 Raym ond Derr, who was also designated as the registered agent, is not a party to this appeal.

2 buyers for the vehicles and negotiated the sale prices, but it was not authorized to transport

the vehicles from its McAllen facilities to Mexico until Nationwide had finalized the sales by

negotiating the transfer of title to the trucks.

In January 2002, Lehtinen began to express frustrations to Cárdenas about not

receiving payments from Hidalgo Truck for procurement services which he estimated to be

worth approximately $500,000. Lehtinen felt that receiving payment was always difficult

with Hidalgo Truck because it did not use standard billing formalities, such as invoices.

“Everything would be either an overpayment or an underpayment,” he testified, “and it was

an accounting nightmare.” Lehtinen wanted to retrieve his trucks from McAllen and take

them back to Illinois, but he attests that he was talked out of this plan by Cárdenas, who

personally told him, “I will pay you for your trucks.”

Lehtinen, however, was not paid for the trucks—he was sued. Hidalgo Truck filed

suit against Lehtinen and Nationwide in 2003. Cárdenas, in his individual capacity, was

not a named plaintiff. The original claim is unclear from the record, but it appears that

Hidalgo Truck may have alleged a partnership with Lehtinen and Nationwide, and it was

seeking wind-up costs.2 Lehtinen and Nationwide responded to the suit by counterclaiming

and by adding Cárdenas as a third-party defendant.3 In the counterclaim, Lehtinen and

Nationwide alleged conversion (among other related claims) contending that Hidalgo Truck,

2 Hidalgo Truck's petition is not in the clerk’s record, but according to a statem ent m ade by Lehtinen's counsel at the special appearance hearing, Hidalgo Truck sued "apparently saying they were in partnership with [Lehtinen] and saying that they did not owe the half m illion that he claim ed he owed, that they owed like 200,000 and they were selling the vehicles and they would get the m oney. . . ."

3 In the oral argum ents before this court, counsel for Cárdenas stated that Cárdenas was not originally a nam ed defendant in this third-party petition. Instead, he claim s that Cárdenas was added in a subsequently am ended version. (His counsel further argued that Nationwide and Lehtinen added Cárdenas, m erely because they sought a solvent defendant.) The appellate record provides no indication of whether or not this is accurate.

3 Derr, and Cárdenas had wrongfully transported the trucks to undisclosed locations in

Cárdenas filed a special appearance with County Court at Law Number One to

contest the trial court's jurisdiction over him. See TEX . R. CIV. P. 120. On April 4, 2006, the

trial court held a hearing to address the issue of personal jurisdiction. Lehtinen was the

only witness called, and he testified that there was no distinction between Cárdenas and

Hidalgo Truck. His testimony, in essence, advanced an alter-ego theory.

Lehtinen testified that “Cárdenas is Hidalgo Truck . . . and there is no LLC.” He

further said that “[Cárdenas] individually was the only thing there. The corporation was

nothing.” Lehtinen emphasized that Cárdenas was “the biggest principal of Hidalgo

[Truck]” and “was the man in charge.” Derr was “the management person there that ran

the place, but he was under the control of Cárdenas. Cárdenas would tell him what he

wanted done.” Although prodded by Cárdenas’s counsel, Lehtinen pointedly refused to

differentiate between Cárdenas and the company: “[Hidalgo Truck] is the dealer name that

they had used . . . [but] it was Cárdenas that [sic] set up all of the deals for anything that

was sold into Mexico.”

In addition to his testimony, Lehtinen provided a sworn affidavit in which he stated

that during the course of his business relationship with Hidalgo Truck between 2001 and

2003, he negotiated directly with Cárdenas, often “at his facility at 5800 South 10th Street”

in McAllen. According to a deed in the appellate record, this address, which was the

property on which Hidalgo Truck operated, was owned by Cárdenas. The property was

also listed in the 2003 Texas Franchise Tax Public Information Report, which is also

available in the record, as Hidalgo Truck's principal office and place of business, and the

4 articles of organization list it as Cárdenas’s mailing address.

Lehtinen further attested that he generally made monthly visits to this address, and

on these occasions, he nearly always encountered Cárdenas. For those occasions when

Cárdenas could not be on the premises, Lehtinen asserted that Cárdenas kept an

accountant at the facility who “reported directly to him.” Regardless of whether Cárdenas

was on the property, however, Lehtinen said that he could usually be reached by phone

when dialing the telephone number for Hidalgo Truck.

Cárdenas submitted an affidavit, via counsel, in which he challenged the

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