EPG, Inc. & Stanton Holt v. RDM, Inc.
This text of EPG, Inc. & Stanton Holt v. RDM, Inc. (EPG, Inc. & Stanton Holt v. RDM, 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.
Opinion
Reversed and Dismissed and Memorandum Opinion filed February 7, 2008.
In The
Fourteenth Court of Appeals
____________
NO. 14-07-00415-CV
EPG, INC. & STANTON HOLT, Appellant
V.
RDM, INC., Appellee
On Appeal from the 129th District Court
Harris County, Texas
Trial Court Cause No. 2007-16186
M E M O R A N D U M O P I N I O N
This is an accelerated, interlocutory appeal[1] from the granting of a temporary injunction against appellants, EPG, Inc. (EPG) and Stanton Holt, in favor of appellees, RDM, Inc. (RDM), Paul McElroy, Nick Incrapera, Peter Holt, and Judson Holt. After an evidentiary hearing, the trial court entered a temporary injunction requiring Stanton and EPG to turn over or release to RDM all assets and property maintained for and/or belonging to the limited partnerships including but not limited to marketing files and/or records, human relations files and/or record, accounting files and/or records, ledgers, checkbooks, computer equipment, management fees, general fees, and administrative fees. Additionally, Stanton and EPG were prohibited from interfering in any way with RDM=s management and collection of fees. In six issues, appellants contend the trial court abused its discretion by granting a temporary injunction because (1) the trial court altered the status quo between the parties; (2) appellee=s suit was barred by the doctrine of unclean hands; (3) appellee failed to show a probable right of recovery; (4) the injunction awarded appellee all relief requested; (5) the injunction awarded appellee possessory rights; and (6) the trial court failed to balance the equities, burdens, and hardships of the parties.
Factual and Procedural Background
Stanton is the founder of a restaurant chain called Lupe Tortilla. Stanton began his business with one Lupe Tortilla restaurant. The restaurant was a success, so he began considering the idea of expanding his business. In 1995, Stanton formed EPG to serve as the general partner for his expansion restaurants. Stanton was the sole director and a shareholder of EPG. Judson Holt, Peter Holt, Paul McElroy, and Nick Incrapera were also shareholders of EPG and served as officers for the corporation. From approximately 1997 to 2006, EPG developed and opened six more Lupe Tortilla restaurants in the Houston vicinity. Each expansion restaurant was formed as a limited partnership with EPG serving as its general partner. Each limited partnership was named Tres Habaneros followed by a reference to its location.
Around March 2007, disagreements began to form between Stanton and Judson, Peter, McElroy, and Incrapera. On March 7, 2007, McElroy was removed from his position as Chief Executive Officer (CEO) and President of EPG. Each side presented conflicting stories as to why McElroy was terminated. Stanton and EPG alleged that at the meeting on March 7, Judson, Peter, McElroy, and Incrapera insisted Stanton give up his voting control of the corporation. Appellants claimed McElroy advised Stanton he would no longer go forward with the plan to build additional Lupe Tortilla restaurants unless Stanton gave up this control. After hearing this, Stanton felt he had no other choice but to remove McElroy as CEO and President of EPG, but Stanton testified he subsequently offered McElroy a lateral position as Chief Financial Officer, which McElroy refused to accept. According to RDM, McElroy never refused to go forward with the expansion plan, and Stanton unilaterally decided to fire McElroy for no reason during their meeting on March 7.
On March 8, 2007, one day after being removed as CEO and President of EPG, McElroy formed another corporation called RDM. That same day, Judson, Peter, and Incrapera signed the Certificate of Formation as officers of RDM, while still employed as officers of EPG. Judson admitted RDM was formed with the purpose of taking over EPG=s position as general partner. On March 9 and 10, McElroy held meetings with some of EPG=s limited partners, including Judson and Peter. During the meetings, McElroy discussed with the limited partners the idea of replacing EPG with RDM as general partner, and he presented a form for them to sign agreeing to remove EPG. Stanton, as a limited partner, and EPG, as the general partner, never received notice of the meetings. The following week, McElroy worked to secure enough limited partners= signatures to effectuate the removal of EPG as the general partner for each of the Tres Habaneros limited partnerships.
EPG and Stanton were unaware of these actions until March 19, 2007, when RDM delivered a letter to EPG=s corporate office informing it that 75% of the sharing ratio of the limited partners for each Tres Habaneros partnership had voted to remove EPG and replace it with RDM. The letter also demanded EPG to turn over the limited partnerships= assets and property to RDM. Stanton refused to turn over the property and assets. That same day, RDM filed suit against Stanton for conversion and also sought a temporary restraining order and temporary injunction. The trial court signed a temporary restraining order requiring Stanton and EPG to safeguard and maintain the assets and property belonging to the limited partnerships and requiring the information be available to RDM and its designated representatives for inspection. On April 26, 2007, the trial court signed a temporary injunction requiring Stanton and EPG to turn over or release to RDM all assets and property maintained for and/or belonging to the limited partnerships including but not limited to marketing files and/or records, human relations files and/or record, accounting files and/or records, ledgers, checkbooks, computer equipment, management fees, general fees, and administrative fees. The temporary injunction is the basis of this appeal.
Discussion
A. Did the Trial Court Fail to Maintain the Status Quo?
In their first issue, appellants claim the trial court abused its discretion because it altered the status quo by requiring EPG to turn over or release to RDM all of the limited partnerships= assets and property.
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