Great Hans. LLC v. Liberty Bankers Life Insurance Co.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 15, 2019
Docket05-17-01144-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Great Hans. LLC v. Liberty Bankers Life Insurance Co. (Great Hans. LLC v. Liberty Bankers Life Insurance Co.) 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
Great Hans. LLC v. Liberty Bankers Life Insurance Co., (Tex. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

AFFIRM in part; REVERSE and REMAND in part; and Opinion Filed March 15, 2019

Court of Appeals S In The

Fifth District of Texas at Dallas No. 05-17-01144-CV

GREAT HANS, LLC, Appellant V. LIBERTY BANKERS LIFE INSURANCE CO., Appellee

On Appeal from the 192nd Judicial District Court Dallas County, Texas Trial Court Cause No. DC-14-12254

MEMORANDUM OPINION Before Justices Whitehill, Molberg, and Reichek Opinion by Justice Reichek Liberty Bankers Life Insurance Co. signed a contract to sell property in the U.S. Virgin

Islands to Great Hans, LLC, but ultimately sold the property to another party. LBLIC then sued

Great Hans seeking a declaration that their contract was not valid, binding, or enforceable. Great

Hans counterclaimed for breach of contract, fraud, and conspiracy and sought declarations

invalidating contractual clauses that limited LBLIC’s liability and waived a jury.

The trial court granted LBLIC’s motions for summary judgment and rendered a take-

nothing judgment on Great Hans’s claims.1 In five issues, Great Hans challenges the trial court’s

rulings. For reasons set out below, we reverse the trial court’s judgment on Great Hans’s breach

1 LBLIC nonsuited its claims for declaratory judgment and attorney’s fees, making the judgment final. of contract claim and remand the claim for further proceedings. We affirm the judgment in all

other respects.

FACTUAL BACKGROUND

This case involves two private islands in the U.S. Virgin Islands––Great Hans Lollick

Island and Little Hans Lollick Island––and a third parcel of land, Megan’s Bay Lot (collectively

“Islands”). LBLIC obtained an interest in the Islands through a mortgage loan it extended to an

entity, referred to in the record as the “Tizes group,” that later defaulted on the note. The Tizes

group ultimately filed for bankruptcy, and the loan was modified to give the debtor an opportunity

to sell the properties through a bankruptcy court-approved plan. Under this plan, LBLIC received

the rights to the properties subject to an eighteen-month marketing process. LBLIC had deeds

created conveying the right, title, and interest in the Islands to Liberty Life Service Corporation, a

wholly owned subsidiary of LBLIC. The deeds were held in escrow during the marketing period

and, if there were a default, LBLIC had the right to cause the deeds to be recorded in the U.S.

Virgin Islands.2

The Tizes group did not sell the Islands and failed to pay off the debt. But LBLIC chose

not to exercise its right to record the deeds immediately and take title to the property. Rather, in

January 2013, the Tizes group entered an option agreement with another entity, Archipelago, LLC,

to purchase the property, and LBLIC approved the agreement. So long as timely and regular

payments were made to LBLIC, LBLIC agreed to not record the deeds and take the deeds in lieu

of foreclosure. Ultimately, the sale did not go through because the payments were not timely made

and LBLIC gave notice of default. Shortly after, Archipelago filed notices of interest in the

2 Because the record provided little information regarding the prior bankruptcy, the facts related to the bankruptcy proceeding were taken from Great Hans’s brief only to provide historical context. LBLIC has not challenged the accuracy of any of these facts. See TEX. R. APP. P. 38.1(g).

–2– Islands, claiming an ownership interest in the property pursuant to the option agreement and

creating a cloud on title. The Islands were deeded to LLSC, and LLSC recorded the deeds in lieu

of foreclosure in September 2013.

After the option agreement failed, LBLIC went forward with a proposal by James Eckel, a

real estate developer who expressed interest in purchasing the Islands while it was under option.

Over the next several months, Eckel’s attorney Peter Marullo and LBLIC negotiated several

versions of an agreement, and Eckel formed Great Hans as a single-purpose entity to consummate

the transaction. Although LLSC was actually the title owner, LBLIC and Great Hans signed a

Purchase and Sale Agreement on November 4, 2013. By the date of signing, Great Hans was

aware of the option agreement, Archipelago’s filing of notices of interest, and the previous

bankruptcy, but it was not actually aware that LLSC was the title owner.

Under the PSA, Great Hans agreed to pay $9.35 million for the Islands and the Megan’s

Bay lot with $4.67 million to be delivered to the title company on or before closing and the balance

to be seller-financed. The PSA provided for a sixty-day feasibility period with a closing date to

follow thirty days later. In apparent recognition of the ongoing title issue created by Archipelago’s

filing of notices of interest, the PSA also included a provision obligating LBLIC to use

“commercially reasonable efforts” to defend against claims by a prior owner, option holder, or

debtor or creditor in the original bankruptcy case that asserted a claim, right, or interest to purchase

the Islands. The provision provided an additional year for LBLIC to resolve any title issues and,

if unsuccessful, gave Great Hans the option of terminating the contract or proceeding to closing.

The PSA also contained two other provisions relevant to this appeal: (1) a waiver of jury trial and

(2) a limitation on damages if LBLIC defaulted and specific performance was unavailable.

Great Hans paid $250,000 in escrow as called for by the PSA. Also, in accordance with

the PSA, Great Hans requested a title report. Less than two weeks later, the title company

–3– circulated a title commitment on the transaction. The commitment showed the interest in the

property was vested in LLSC and required an amendment to the PSA correcting the seller’s name

to LLSC. It also contained several exceptions.

Once the PSA was executed, LBLIC notified Archipelago it had a contract with another

buyer, which predictably resulted in litigation between the parties in early 2014. In that suit,

LBLIC took the position Archipelago no longer had a right to put cloud on the title because its

option was gone.

Over the next several weeks, Great Hans and LBLIC twice agreed to amend the PSA to

extend the feasibility and title objection periods.3 The feasibility period was extended to March 7,

2014, which then made the closing date April 6, 2014, subject to any other provisions of the PSA,4

and title objections were due March 4, 2014. On March 3, Great Hans gave written notice of its

objections to certain exceptions in the title report, including the Archipelago litigation. LBLIC,

through its counsel, Jay LaJone, responded in writing. With respect to the pending litigation,

LaJone said “we will need to address how it is to be treated. My initial feeling is that we make it

subject to the same provisions in the Contract regarding the Option Agreement, but I need to

discuss this with my client.” LaJone further stated until the issues were resolved, LBLIC reserved

the right to indicate which objections it could cure.

In March, after the feasibility period expired and Great Hans had not terminated the

transaction, LBLIC requested that $100,000 of the escrow deposit be released to it. Great Hans

authorized the release because it intended to purchase the property. The transaction, however, did

not close on April 6 because LBLIC could not convey good title. Great Hans believed the “contract

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