H.E.B., L.L.C. v. Horace T. Ardinger, Jr. and Westland Capitol Inc.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 22, 2012
Docket02-11-00092-CV
StatusPublished

This text of H.E.B., L.L.C. v. Horace T. Ardinger, Jr. and Westland Capitol Inc. (H.E.B., L.L.C. v. Horace T. Ardinger, Jr. and Westland Capitol 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
H.E.B., L.L.C. v. Horace T. Ardinger, Jr. and Westland Capitol Inc., (Tex. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

02-11-092-CV

COURT OF APPEALS

SECOND DISTRICT OF TEXAS

FORT WORTH

NO. 02-11-00092-CV

H.E.B., L.L.C.

APPELLANT

AND APPELLEE

V.

Horace T. Ardinger, Jr.

and Westland Capitol Inc.

APPELLEES

AND APPELLANTS

----------

FROM THE 141st District Court OF Tarrant COUNTY

OPINION

I.  Introduction

          Appellant and Cross-Appellee H.E.B., L.L.C. appeals the final judgment awarding Appellee and Cross-Appellant Horace T. Ardinger, Jr. $1,300,405.04.  Ardinger appeals the trial court’s denial of his requests for declaratory relief and for attorneys’ fees.  We will affirm the trial court’s judgment in its entirety.

II.  Factual and Procedural Background

          A.      H.E.B., Curtis Somoza, and Envoii Technologies, LLC

          H.E.B. is a limited liability company that was formed in 1997.  Its original members included Scott Haire, Steve Evans, and Frank Barker.[1]  Haire has been H.E.B.’s managing member since 1997.  He owned 98% of H.E.B. at its formation but only 60% at the time of trial.  Haire explained that H.E.B. primarily “manages different businesses” and “invests in distressed companies.”

          In May 2003, Envoii Healthcare, LLC, an entity owned and controlled by H.E.B., acquired certain technology assets from the bankruptcy estate of Envoii, Inc., a company developed by Michael Tolson in the 1990s.  Shortly thereafter, Envoii Healthcare sold most of those assets—the Envoii platform; five patents; and several licensed applications, including a payment processing application, a Fujitsu application, and the “disappearing email” application—to Envoii Technologies, LLC, an entity formed and wholly owned by H.E.B. to acquire and hold the Envoii technology.[2]

          The Envoii platform was not yet “commercially usable” when Envoii Technologies acquired it in the summer of 2003.[3]  Haire realized that he needed to raise capital to get the Envoii platform “up and running,” and it was in this context that he was introduced to Curtis Somoza in August 2003.  Haire met with Somoza on two separate occasions to discuss the Envoii platform—once in Florida and once at Somoza’s 27,000-square-foot house in California.  Somoza claimed to be a “bond trader” and expressed interest in the “disappearing email” application.  Haire came away from his meetings with Somoza with the impression that he was very wealthy and had been successful in his business ventures.

          On October 1, 2003, Envoii Technologies and the Curtis D. Somoza Living Trust[4] entered into a subscription agreement whereby the Somoza Trust agreed to pay Envoii Technologies $1 million in exchange for a 25% membership interest in Envoii Technologies.[5]  The Somoza Trust paid Envoii Technologies $550,000 on October 2, 2003, and agreed to pay the remainder of the funds pursuant to two notes.  The $550,000 paid on October 2, 2003, was the only money paid to Envoii Technologies under the subscription agreement.

          Interested in acquiring control of Envoii Technologies, Somoza approached Haire not long after entering into the October 2003 subscription agreement and inquired about purchasing a greater interest in Envoii Technologies.  In December 2003, the Somoza Trust agreed to pay H.E.B. $9 million in exchange for a 45% equity interest in Envoii Technologies.  Under this letter agreement, the Somoza trust paid H.E.B. $100,000 and H.E.B. credited the Somoza Trust with a prior license payment of $250,000, totaling payments in the amount of $350,000 towards the 45% interest.  The letter agreement also called for the Somoza Trust to pay H.E.B. $650,000 upon the execution of a formal purchase agreement.  Haire executed a formal purchase agreement on behalf of H.E.B. on January 28, 2004, which acknowledged the prior payments totaling $350,000 and also required the payment of $650,000 upon its execution, but Haire rescinded his signature because the Somoza Trust paid H.E.B. only $500,000 of the required $650,000.  The formal purchase agreement thus fell apart, and Haire traveled to California to “throw Somoza out of Envoii Technologies.”

          But Somoza and Haire renegotiated, and H.E.B. and the Somoza Trust entered into a February 9, 2004 letter agreement whereby the Somoza Trust agreed to purchase not just a 45% interest in Envoii Technologies, but the remaining 75% interest held by H.E.B. (70%) and Tolson (5%).  On March 8, 2004, H.E.B. (by Haire) and Digitally Secured Communications, Inc.[6] (DSC) (by Somoza) formalized the February letter agreement by executing an “Agreement and Closing Memorandum for Purchase of Membership Interests” (the March 2004 purchase agreement).[7]  The March 2004 purchase agreement acknowledged that H.E.B. had received “Initial Payments” “from [DSC]” totaling $850,000 (the $350,000 plus the $500,000 paid by the Somoza Trust under the prior agreements that had fallen through), and it credited DSC with that amount towards the purchase price.  In addition to future payments, the March 2004 purchase agreement required DSC to pay to H.E.B.

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Bluebook (online)
H.E.B., L.L.C. v. Horace T. Ardinger, Jr. and Westland Capitol Inc., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/heb-llc-v-horace-t-ardinger-jr-and-westland-capito-texapp-2012.