Humberto Saenz, Jr. v. Jose Gomez

899 F.3d 384
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedAugust 7, 2018
Docket17-41004
StatusPublished
Cited by52 cases

This text of 899 F.3d 384 (Humberto Saenz, Jr. v. Jose Gomez) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Humberto Saenz, Jr. v. Jose Gomez, 899 F.3d 384 (5th Cir. 2018).

Opinion

EDITH H. JONES, Circuit Judge:

Appellants Humberto Saenz, Jr. and Estrella Ventures, LLC appeal the bankruptcy court's decision, affirmed by the district court, holding them liable for a $412,500.00 non-dischargeable judgment stemming from Appellee's fraudulent misrepresentation, breach of contract, and common law fraud claims. For the reasons explained below, we AFFIRM the district court's affirmance of the bankruptcy court's judgment.

I. Background

On September 7, 2004, Appellant Humberto Saenz, Jr. ("Saenz") entered into a Franchise Development Agreement with Pizza Patrón, which granted him the exclusive right to develop Pizza Patrón restaurants within a certain development area. 1 Saenz signed the document in his capacity as President of Estrella Ventures, LLC ("Estrella"), a company he created for the purpose of operating Pizza Patrón franchises. The Franchise Development Agreement prohibits voluntary transfers of the franchise without the prior written consent of the franchisor, explicitly providing any such transfer "will be ineffective ... and will constitute a default" under the Agreement.

By 2009, Saenz owned at least four Pizza Patrón locations, which he financed with three loans from the International Bank of Commerce ("IBC"). The three loans, in the principal amount of $480,500.00, were cross-collateralized and secured by blanket liens over the accounts receivable, inventory, equipment, furniture, and fixtures for three of the four locations, including the Rio Grande City location. By November 2009, Saenz owed IBC $335,880.00.

Jose Maria Gomez, individually, and JMG Ventures, LLC (collectively, "Gomez" and "Appellee") approached Saenz about purchasing a Pizza Patrón franchise in 2009. Gomez was introduced to Saenz by a close friend, Jesús Ortiz ("Ortiz"), Saenz's brother-in-law and a manager at a separate Pizza Patrón location, who told Gomez that Saenz was the corporate representative for Pizza Patrón in the South Texas region. Although Saenz denies it, Gomez testified that Saenz made the same representation to him several times.

*388 Gomez and Saenz reached a preliminary agreement for Gomez to purchase the Rio Grande City Pizza Patrón franchise for $350,000.00 in August 2009. To facilitate the purchase, Gomez applied for a Small Business Administration loan from Lone Star National Bank ("Lone Star") for $287,200.00. In connection with the loan application, Lone Star requested certain documentation, which Gomez asked Saenz to provide. The documentation included profit and loss income statements whose accuracy is called into question based on discrepancies in the documentary evidence. 2 For example, a Net Sales Report lists sales in an amount significantly lower than the income statements, and the October and September income statements list identical numbers for the cost of goods sold-a near impossibility. Additionally, the income reported in the profit and loss statements does not comport with the tax returns Saenz was required to provide for Estrella Ventures.

In order to obtain the loan from Lone Star, Gomez also had to provide a Certification of No Change or Non-Material Change. In 2005, Saenz had received a Certification of No Change or Non-Material Change in connection with his original purchase of the Rio Grande City franchise. Although Saenz denied sending the document, the Certification received by Lone Star was dated November 10, 2009 and was signed by Charlotte Hargrove ("Hargrove"), the authorized representative for Pizza Patrón, Inc. A comparison of this 2009 Certification with the previous 2005 Certification confirms the Certification provided to Lone Star was copied from the earlier document, with only the date being altered. Indeed, Hargrove's signature and handwriting are identical in both documents, and even share the same copying imperfections.

By October 2009, Gomez and Estrella Ventures entered into a Purchase-Sale Agreement whereby Estrella Ventures agreed to sell all equipment and inventory for the Rio Grande City location for $350,000.00, a purchase price just over the amount Saenz owed IBC. 3 Neither Gomez nor Saenz obtained written consent from Pizza Patrón approving the transfer. But the Rio Grande City location had to continue making royalty payments to Pizza Patrón, so to circumvent this obstacle Saenz asked Gomez for his account information at Lone Star in order to send Pizza Patrón the money directly. Saenz then faxed an authorization form to Pizza Patrón that contained Gomez's account number and wrote, "I need to change my acct. because existing bank is returning some items." Saenz admitted this was a lie and claimed he "wasn't ready" for Pizza Patrón to find out about the sale of the store to Gomez. 4

Although Saenz testified that he received all but $20,000.00 of the purchase price, Saenz told Gauna the sales proceeds *389 only totaled $150,000.00. This caused IBC to allow Saenz to keep the supposed remaining balance of $66,777.00 after he paid down the loan on the store. Gauna testified she only found out the purchase price was actually $350,000.00 a few weeks before trial, and had she known the true amount of the purchase price, she would have paid off the two remaining loans because of their cross-collateralized nature. Saenz ultimately defaulted on the two remaining loans, and as a result IBC lost nearly $200,000.00.

Gomez's loan from Lone Star closed on February 8, 2010, and he took possession of the Rio Grande City store the following month. During Gomez's tenure, the numerical grade the store received from Pizza Patrón corporate improved significantly. 5 But in November 2010, Gomez learned he had developed an eye abnormality whose condition was exacerbated by the heat in the kitchen. Together with this health concern, the fact that the actual net sales of the restaurant were in decline led Gomez to close the store in March 2011, after he had already lost approximately $70,000. When Gomez relayed his decision to Saenz, Saenz told him he had already found a new tenant for the building.

Upon receiving the keys to the store from Gomez, Saenz delivered all of the restaurant's equipment to Lone Star, which put it up for auction. Saenz told Rikk Grant ("Grant"), a project manager at Pizza Patrón corporate, that the Rio Grande City stored closed on March 7, 2011 because of a failure in the roof structure. Emails between Saenz and Grant show Saenz told Pizza Patrón he had to close the store for roof and floor repairs; in truth, Saenz had cleared out all of Gomez's equipment and installed new equipment. Saenz was unable to corroborate the alleged needed repairs and never informed Pizza Patrón of the real reason the store closed and the equipment was replaced. Instead, Saenz reopened the store for business under the Pizza Patrón name. 6

On September 11, 2011, Appellee filed suit against Appellants, alleging causes of action for (1) fraudulent misrepresentation, (2) breach of contract, (3) common law fraud, and (4) conversion. 7

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