Estopar Holdings, Inc. v. Advanced Metallurgical Technology, Inc.

876 S.W.2d 205, 1994 Tex. App. LEXIS 1118, 1994 WL 176861
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 11, 1994
Docket2-89-225-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 876 S.W.2d 205 (Estopar Holdings, Inc. v. Advanced Metallurgical Technology, 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
Estopar Holdings, Inc. v. Advanced Metallurgical Technology, Inc., 876 S.W.2d 205, 1994 Tex. App. LEXIS 1118, 1994 WL 176861 (Tex. Ct. App. 1994).

Opinion

OPINION

DAY, Justice.

Estopar Holdings, Inc. and Intertech Venture Corporation (appellants) appeal from a take-nothing judgment for Advanced Metallurgical Technology, Inc., Frankie J. Kelley, Individually and James B. Smith, Jr., Individually (appellees). We affirm.

The suit underlying this appeal arose from a contract dispute. Appellants pleaded four causes of action: (1) a request for declaratory judgment that appellees owed appellants money and that the transaction was not usurious; (2) breach of contract; (3) unjust enrichment and restitution; and (4) entitlement to exemplary damages based on fraud. Ap-pellees entered a general denial and raised the affirmative defenses of usury, waiver, and estoppel. After a bench trial, the trial court rendered judgment that appellants take nothing in their claims against appellees. The court also awarded appellees $8,797 in attorney’s fees. Upon appellants’ request, the court made and filed findings of fact and conclusions of law. Appellants then perfected their appeal to this court.

This court originally affirmed the trial court’s judgment on April 10, 1991. Appellants filed their amended motion for rehearing on May 10, 1991. On January 27, 1992, we abated the appeal and remanded the cause to the trial court for clarification of the findings of fact and conclusions of law. We overruled appellants’ motion for rehearing on August 30, 1993 but withdrew all our previous opinions and judgments on December 1, 1993. The case was resubmitted to this court on March 16, 1994.

A summary of the facts is necessary to a better understanding of our decision. In early 1986, the parties began negotiating a business relationship. Appellants had access to certain German technology; appellees had related technological expertise, as well as numerous marketing contacts in the United States. On May 1, 1986, Kelley, Smith, and Intertech Venture Corporation (Intertech) executed a Letter of Intent to Negotiate (the Letter of Intent). On June 5, 1986, Inter-tech, Fort Worth Heat Treating Company (FWHTC), and Advanced Metallurgical *207 Technology, Inc. (AMT) entered into a formal contract (the Agreement).

Originally, four individuals owned all the stock in FWHTC: Kelley, Smith, Roy J. Grogan, and J.M. Young. In a separate agreement (the FWHTC Agreement), these four individuals agreed that FWHTC would purchase Grogan and Young’s stock, thereby acquiring all of Grogan and Young’s interest in FWHTC. Appellants — who were not parties to the FWHTC Agreement — and appel-lees orally agreed that Estopar Holdings, Inc. (Estopar) would put up the capital necessary to purchase Grogan’s and Young’s stock.

Acting on information Kelley provided, Es-topar purchased three cashier’s checks: two for $25,000 and one for $17,666.59, for a total of $67,666.59. Grogan and Young each received one of the $25,000 checks in full payment for their FWHTC stock. The check for $17,666.59 was made payable jointly to Gro-gan and Young and was used to pay interest on a loan. When Grogan and Young received their money on May 29 or 30, 1986, they executed Agreements of Release. Apparently, they delivered their stock certificates to a banker named Bryans Fitzhugh, who in turn gave the certificates to Estopar and Intertech’s attorney.

After the FWHTC Agreement was fully performed, Intertech, FWHTC, and AMT entered into their June 1986 Agreement. That Agreement provided, in pertinent part:

1. Kelley and Smith, as FWHTC’s and AMT’s only shareholders, would reorganize these two entities into a single Texas corporation referred to in the Agreement as “New AMT.”
2. Kelley and Smith would each receive nineteen percent of New AMT’s stock. Estopar would receive forty-six percent of the stock, and Intertech would receive sixteen percent.
3. Kelley and Smith would receive their New AMT stock in exchange for their AMT stock. Estopar would receive its New AMT stock in exchange for a capital contribution of $145,000. Intertech would receive its stock for services rendered to New AMT. Intertech’s services were defined in the Letter of Intent and included securing new financing and procuring exclusive distributorships for appellants’ German technology.

The record shows that the $67,666.59 Esto-par put up to purchase Grogan and Young’s stock and to make the interest payment on the loan is part of the $145,000 capital contribution Estopar agreed to make in exchange for its share of the New AMT stock. The balance of the $145,000 remained in Esto-par’s holding account or appellants’ lawyers’ trust account. That money was never paid to New AMT.

After the parties executed the Agreement, the arrangements for New AMT’s financing began to founder. Various attempts to finance the business failed, and on August 1, 1986, appellees notified appellants by letter that appellees were immediately terminating all negotiations and agreements between the parties. At that time, neither Estopar nor Interteeh had received any stock in New AMT. Appellants asked appellees to return to them the $67,666.59 that Estopar had put up to purchase Grogan and Young’s stock. Appellees refused to pay appellants any money on the basis that they had never agreed to repay it. As a result, appellants filed the underlying lawsuit.

Appellants raise two points of error on appeal. In point one, they complain the trial court erred in rendering the take-nothing judgment because the court expressly found Estopar made a capital contribution to AMT and concluded that Estopar has an equity investment in AMT. In point two, appellants contend the trial court improperly awarded appellees attorney’s fees.

In their First Amended Petition, appellants asked the trial court to

declare the legal rights and status of the parties, particularly, that the transaction is not subject to the penalties of usury, and that Defendants are liable, jointly and severally, to return to Plaintiff the sum of $67,655.59 which was transferred by Plaintiffs to Defendants, plus interest.

*208 In their prayer, appellants requested damages in the amount of $67,655.59. 1 In the alternative, appellants asked for shares of stock in AMT in the amount of $67,655.59.

Appellants also alleged that appellees had breached an oral agreement to repay the $67,655.59 plus interest; that appellees would be unjustly enriched if allowed to retain the $67,655.59; and that appellees defrauded appellants. The trial court concluded that ap-pellees did not breach any contractual duty to appellants; that appellees were not unjustly enriched at appellants’ expense; and that appellees’ activities did not constitute fraud. Appellants do not complain about any of these conclusions on appeal.

The trial court made the following findings of fact and conclusions of law pertinent to appellants’ first point of error:

Findings of Fact
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7. The three cashier’s checks, totaling $67,666.59, constituted a part of the capital contributed by Plaintiff Estopar Holdings, Inc. pursuant to the ... [Ajgreement.
8. There

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Bluebook (online)
876 S.W.2d 205, 1994 Tex. App. LEXIS 1118, 1994 WL 176861, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estopar-holdings-inc-v-advanced-metallurgical-technology-inc-texapp-1994.