Henderson v. KRTS, Inc.

822 S.W.2d 769, 1992 Tex. App. LEXIS 126, 1992 WL 4845
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 16, 1992
Docket01-91-00571-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 822 S.W.2d 769 (Henderson v. KRTS, 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
Henderson v. KRTS, Inc., 822 S.W.2d 769, 1992 Tex. App. LEXIS 126, 1992 WL 4845 (Tex. Ct. App. 1992).

Opinion

OPINION

O’CONNOR, Justice.

We are asked to decide if an agreement executed by the parties could be the grounds for issuing a temporary injunction. KRTS, Inc. (KRTS) filed suit against Roy E. Henderson to enjoin him from interfering with KRTS’s move of its radio transmitter to Alvin, Texas, from its present location at Seabrook, Texas. After a hearing, the trial court enjoined Henderson, and he appeals. 1 We affirm.

There are four agreements involved in this dispute, the asset purchase agreement, the upgrade agreement, the amended upgrade agreement, and the assistance and non-competition agreement.

The asset purchase agreement

In March or April 1987 (the parties disagree on the month), Henderson and KRTS executed an asset purchase agreement for the sale of Henderson’s radio station and its assets to KRTS. The purchase price for the station was $2,250,000. The asset purchase agreement was not included in the record on appeal.

The upgrade agreement

In July 1987, KRTS and Henderson executed the upgrade agreement by which KRTS agreed to pay Henderson an additional $4 million if the radio station was “upgraded” from a class A to a class G-2 station before July 1, 1990. “Upgrade” was defined to include the happening of three events:

1. When the Federal Communication Commission (FCC) granted KRTS a Class C-2 construction permit for a transmitter site located within five miles of Alvin, Texas;
2. When the construction permit became a final order of the FCC, not subject to further review; and
3. When the construction of the facilities were completed.

The amendment to the upgrade agreement

On August 22, 1988, KRTS and Henderson executed an amendment to the upgrade agreement. The terms of the agreement that are relevant to this case are:

1. Instead of a contingent payment of $4 million to Henderson, KRTS paid him $2,675,000 in cash and notes.
2. In consideration for the payment of $2,675,000, Henderson executed the assistance and non-competition agreement.
3. When the FCC report and order became final, the upgrade agreement would terminate, “except as hereinafter provided.”
4. If the report and order were not final by September 20, 1988, the maturity dates for the notes would be extended.
5. If the report and order did not become final within one year, or if they became final but were later withdrawn, the upgrade agreement would be deemed in full force and effect.

“Report” and “order” are terms that are not defined in the upgrade agreement. The upgrade agreement adopts the definition for those terms from the asset purchase agreement, which, as stated earlier, was not included in the record.

*772 The assistance agreement

As part of the amended upgrade agreement, Henderson executed an assistance and non-competition agreement (assistance agreement) with KRTS. 2 The terms of the agreement that are relevant to this appeal are:

1. Henderson would use his best efforts to assist the station in its upgrade and relocation.
2. Henderson would be paid $125 per hour for providing his reasonable best efforts to assist KRTS.
3. Henderson agreed that KRTS’s remedy at law would be inadequate; if Henderson breached the agreement KRTS could seek temporary or permanent injunctive relief in any action to enforce the agreement.

The hearing on the TRO

Mike Stude, president of KRTS, testified at the injunction hearing on May 30, 1991, that the FCC had not approved and issued the final order for the move to Alvin. 3 Stude testified that the application for the Alvin location — selected with Henderson’s help — was blocked by transmission from another station, the Rice University Radio, which operated on a similar frequency. With Henderson’s help, KRTS negotiated with Rice University and paid for the move of its transmission tower to a location north of Houston. The cutoff date to object to the Rice move was July 25, 1990. No one objected, and in September of 1990, KRTS filed an application to move to Alvin. During the time KRTS was waiting for the FCC to approve the Rice move, KRTS filed an application for an interim move to Texas City.

Stude testified he first learned Henderson was interfering with KRTS’s application for the move to Alvin in October of 1990, two months after he made the final payment to Henderson. Stude learned that Henderson had applied for a license to operate a radio station on the same frequency as KRTS at New Ulm, Texas. KRTS’s lawyer sent Henderson a letter demanding he withdraw the application, and he withdrew it. In December 1990, Henderson filed another application for a station with the same frequency as KRTS, this time in Somerville, Texas. Again, KRTS’s lawyer wrote him, this time with no effect. Next, Stude learned that Henderson filed an objection with the FCC to KRTS’s application for the Alvin permit. KRTS filed a reply to Henderson’s objection with the FCC, to which Henderson filed another objection. Finally, KRTS filed this lawsuit and asked the court for a temporary injunction. In response, Henderson removed the case to federal court, and after a hearing, the ease was promptly remanded to state court. While' the case was somewhere in the process of removal or remand, Henderson filed another objection to the Alvin permit with the FCC.

Stude testified that the objections filed by Henderson could delay the permit process by as much as six months to two years. Stude testified that the amended upgrade agreement is still a viable document, and only one paragraph of the agreement has terminated. Stude testified that the agreement is still viable because the station has not yet moved to Alvin.

KRTS presented an expert who testified that the site in Alvin would result in a larger audience than the Texas City site by over a million, which will have a dramatic effect on the profitability of the station. The move would give KRTS the opportunity to serve a much larger audience and thus significantly increase revenue and profits.

Henderson testified that he understood the purpose of the amended upgrade agreement was to discount the $4 million price of the upgrade to $2,675,000 and terminate *773 the agreement when the FCC’s report and order for C-2 upgrade in Seabrook, not in Alvin, became final. Henderson testified that the C-2 report and order became final in April 1989. Henderson disputed that his application for a permit in Somerville would interfere with the Alvin location.

The trial court granted KRTS a temporary injunction on May 31, 1991, which specifically ordered Henderson to refrain from filing any FCC license application, objection, or other document that would delay or block the contemplated move of KRTS to Alvin.

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Bluebook (online)
822 S.W.2d 769, 1992 Tex. App. LEXIS 126, 1992 WL 4845, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/henderson-v-krts-inc-texapp-1992.