Hawthorne v. Guenther

917 S.W.2d 924, 1996 WL 99803
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 12, 1996
Docket09-93-221 CV
StatusPublished
Cited by107 cases

This text of 917 S.W.2d 924 (Hawthorne v. Guenther) 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
Hawthorne v. Guenther, 917 S.W.2d 924, 1996 WL 99803 (Tex. Ct. App. 1996).

Opinion

OPINION

STOVER, Justice.

This is an appeal from a judgment against appellant Lyn Hawthorne in the amount of $640,000.00 in actual damages and $850,-000.00 in exemplary damages for breach of an alleged fiduciary duty owed by Hawthorne to appellee Jack Guenther.

Facts

Jack Guenther, an attorney and a certified public accountant, was first involved in certain business investments with Lyn Hawthorne in the 1980’s. Although he testified that he never acted as her attorney or her accountant, he did acquaint her with some of his investments, and she, likewise, informed him of some of hers. Each in turn invested in certain business ventures as the result of the shared information. As a result of some of these investments, Hawthorne sustained losses.

One business venture in which both Hawthorne and Guenther participated in the 1980’s was the acquisition of a cellular franchise. The rights to cellular licenses in cities across the country were the subject of government-sponsored lotteries. In order to obtain the right to participate in the lottery, a person or entity had to pay a substantial filing fee and file an engineering report, along with certain other documents. If one acquired the right to a cellular phone market through the lottery system, that right could be traded or sold.

Initially, Guenther and a friend, Tom Turner, made the decision to participate in the lottery for cellular phone franchises. However, after Hawthorne approached Guenther about joining with her group to invest and participate in the lottery for cellular phone franchises, he, as well as Tom Turner, became part of the partnership.

The venture with Hawthorne involved six (6) partners who invested $12,500 each. Cellular Mole was the name of the partnership, and Lyn Hawthorne (then Lyn Noble) was the managing partner. According to the terms of the partnership, as evidenced in the letter written by Hawthorne to her partners, “the cost of that filing as well as any future *928 renumeration [sic] -will be divided evenly among the [six partners].” The outcome of the lottery was extremely favorable to Cellular Mole; a $12,500.00 initial investment produced a $500,000.00 return for each partner.

In May 1985, Guenther contacted Hawthorne regarding information on Cellular Mole he needed to prepare his income tax return; there was no response at that time. In March 1986, Hawthorne informed the partners by letter of the markets they had won in the lottery. At that time, she made no mention of her later allegation that Guen-ther owed her money. In her letter dated January 1988, Hawthorne wrote Guenther that she mailed him a check of $10,153.71 for one of the markets to which the partnership had acquired the rights. In another letter dated April 16, 1990, Hawthorne declared that all of their interests in cellular markets had been sold and informed Guenther that he would receive a $150,000.00 check. None of the three letters mentions, or even alludes to, any alleged agreement to offset her investment losses against any earnings Guenther had in the partnership.

Guenther testified he was shocked to learn of the August 1989 sale of the largest cellular market which the partnership owned. Guen-ther was never consulted prior to the sale and was not informed of its occurrence until April 1990. When he received his K-l form showing the amount earned by the partnership in that year, it reflected a partnership earning of $400,000.00 plus; however, Guen-ther’s check from Hawthorne had been for only $150,000.00. Although his distribution totalled $150,000, he testified that, based on the K-l form, he would have to pay taxes on $400,000.00 plus, even though he never received that much in income from the partnership.

Guenther further testified that proceeds from the sale of the cellular phone franchise were disbursed in August 1989 to Cellular Mole, the partnership, which, in turn, disbursed funds to two of the partners, namely Lyn Hawthorne and her husband, Monty Hawthorne. However, in Hawthorne’s letter dated May 18,1990, she did not disclose that some of the monies had already been disbursed, albeit not to Guenther. After receiving Hawthorne’s May 18, 1990, letter, Guen-ther wrote her a letter, dated July 26, 1990, demanding an accounting of the proceeds received by the partnership and a date for disbursement of his share to him. Hawthorne did not respond to that request. Instead, in September 1990 she informed him for the first time that he was obligated to reimburse her for her losses in other investments in which both of them had participated. Guenther refused and filed suit.

The accountant, Bert Lynch, whose accounting firm prepared the records and created a set of books for Cellular Mole, testified that his firm prepared the tax returns for the partnership from 1986 through 1990. According to Lynch, the 1986 return reveals that three entities owed money to the partnership: Noble Toyota (of which Lyn Hawthorne was owner) — $189,500.00, Conroe Morning News (in which both Lyn and Monty Hawthorne were stockholders) — $23,-000.00, and Lyn Hawthorne — $166,000.00. There were no promissory notes for these transactions, however. Mr. Lynch classified them as “advances.” According to the 1990 tax return, Hawthorne owed $469,346.00 to the partnership. By the end of 1990, Guen-ther himself was owed $402,658.00, not including interest; and by February 15, 1992, the partnership owed Guenther $440,272.25. However, Hawthorne informed Guenther that he would not receive his distribution because he owed her money. According to Lynch’s testimony, all of the assets of the partnership had been disposed of except for the note receivable of Hawthorne.

The appellant brings forward nine points of error:

POINT ONE
The trial court erred in denying appellant’s motion for continuance.
POINT TWO
The trial court erred in conducting the trial despite appellant’s absence.
POINT THREE
The trial court erred in realigning the parties making appellant the defendant and appellee the plaintiff.
*929 POINT FOUR
The trial court erred in failing to bifurcate the exemplary damage issues from the trial on the merits.
POINT FIVE
There is no evidence to support the finding that appellant breached her fiduciary duty.
POINT SIX
There is insufficient evidence to support the finding that appellant breached her fiduciary duty.
POINT SEVEN
There is no jury finding to support the award of exemplary damage.
POINT EIGHT
There is no evidence to support the award of exemplary damages.
POINT NINE
The amount of exemplary damages awarded is excessive and should be remitted by the appellate court.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
917 S.W.2d 924, 1996 WL 99803, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hawthorne-v-guenther-texapp-1996.