In Re Fh Partners, L.L.C.

335 S.W.3d 752, 2011 Tex. App. LEXIS 1253, 2011 WL 589903
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 17, 2011
Docket03-10-00735-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 335 S.W.3d 752 (In Re Fh Partners, L.L.C.) 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
In Re Fh Partners, L.L.C., 335 S.W.3d 752, 2011 Tex. App. LEXIS 1253, 2011 WL 589903 (Tex. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

OPINION

Relator FH Partners, L.L.C., has filed a petition for writ of mandamus to compel the district court1 to enforce a contractual jury waiver by striking a jury demand of the real parties-in-interest, Superior Funding, Inc.; Wave-Tec Pools, Inc.; Nations *Page 754 Pool Supply, Inc.; Jason B. Herring and Kimberly McCormick a/k/a Kimberly A. Herring (collectively, the Real Parties). We will conditionally grant the writ.

BACKGROUND
The Loan and Security Agreement

Real parties Superior, Wave-Tec, and Nations (the Pool Corporations) are affiliated corporations that formerly were in the business of selling, constructing, and financing customers' purchases of residential swimming pools.2 Real party Jason B. Herring started the business in the 1990s, and at relevant times he and real party Kimberly A. McCormick (or Herring) were officers of the Pool Corporations. The record reflects that the business pursued a strategy of rapid expansion that relied heavily on financing by asset-based lenders, lenders who make extensions of credit secured by loans, accounts receivable, and other business assets. Among these lenders was State Bank. On April 30, 2004, the Pool Corporations, through Jason and Kimberly, 3 entered into a Loan and Security Agreement (Agreement) providing the corporations a $4 million line of credit (later increased to $4.9 million), secured by their customers' loan accounts and other business assets, and personally guaranteed by Jason and Kimberly. The term of the Agreement was for three years, or until April 30, 2007, or such earlier time as State Bank elected to terminate the Agreement in the event of default. Upon termination, any unpaid balance the Pool Corporations owed would become immediately due and payable.

In February 2006, State Bank determined that there was a shortfall of $1.6 million in the amount of security compared to the amount of the debt, constituting an event of default under the Agreement. To secure the shortfall amount, Jason caused Superior to pledge stock, and another corporation he owned or controlled, Grand-view Inc., to pledge real property it owned. Ultimately, however, State Bank ceased to make any further advances under the Agreement after April 2006 and, in May of that year, gave formal notice of default, citing a now-$1.8 million shortfall and the failure to provide State Bank financial statements as required under the Agreement. State Bank gave the Pool Corporations until September 30, 2006, to come into compliance with the Agreement. It also imposed additional requirements for increasing the security for the debt, including delivering at least five new customer accounts each week.

On December 21, 2006, in advance of a January 2007 merger with Prosperity Bancshares, State Bank's parent corporation sold and assigned the Agreement to FH Partners, P.C., the predecessor to relator FH Partners, L.L.C. (collectively and individually FH). FH is apparently an affiliate of FirstCity Servicing Corporation, which specializes in purchasing, servicing and managing distressed debt. It is undisputed that State Bank did not seek or obtain the Real Parties' consent to the assignment.

Following the assignment, FirstCity, on FH's behalf, took the position that the Pool Corporations were in default, as State Bank had, and, like State Bank, did not make further advances under the Agreement. Although the parties proposed various debt restructuring or refinancing arrangements, including a proposal by Jason securitize to Pool Corporation customer loans, no such arrangements were ever agreed to. *Page 755 The First Suit

In February 2007, the Pool Corporations, along with Grandview, sued State Bank, FH, FirstCity, and various individual defendants (the First Suit). They alleged that the defendants had breached contractual and tort duties in inducing the Pool Corporations to enter into the Agreement, declaring the Pool Corporations in default, refusing to make further advances under the Agreement, refusing to release or return collateral that the corporations purportedly could have used to obtain alternative financing, and taking various other actions allegedly restricting their access to cash and financing. They further alleged that these actions, in turn, deprived the business of the working capital and financing necessary to sustain its operations, causing it to cease operations, incur liabilities to multiple customers and vendors, and suffer a mortal loss of goodwill and business reputation. Among numerous theories they advanced, the plaintiffs asserted that State Bank had no right to assign the Agreement to FH without the Pool Corporations' consent and that such consent was never obtained. Consequently, the plaintiffs asserted, the defendants breached the Agreement by purporting to effect the assignment without the Pool Corporations' consent and that State Bank committed fraud and negligent misrepresentation by representing that it had the authority to assign the Agreement when it did not.

The plaintiffs demanded a jury. The defendants filed a motion to strike the jury demand, citing a contractual jury waiver that constituted the last substantive paragraph of the Agreement, concluding on the same page where the Pool Corporations' signature lines began:

24.8 Waiver of Trial by Jury. IN RECOGNITION OF THE HIGHER COSTS AND DELAY WHICH MAY RESULT FROM A JURY TRIAL, THE PARTIES HERETO WAIVE ANY RIGHT TO TRIAL BY JURY OF ANY CLAIM, DEMAND, ACTION OR CAUSE OF ACTION (A) ARISING HEREUNDER, OR (B) IN ANY WAY CONNECTED WITH OR RELATED OR INCIDENTAL TO THE DEALINGS OF THE PARTIES HERETO, OR ANY OF THEM, WITH RESPECT HERETO, IN EACH CASE WHETHER NOW EXISTING OR HEREAFTER ARISING, AND WHETHER SOUNDING IN CONTRACT OR TORT OR OTHERWISE; AND EACH PARTY FURTHER WAIVES ANY RIGHT TO CONSOLIDATE ANY SUCH ACTION IN WHICH A JURY TRIAL HAS BEEN WAIVED WITH ANY OTHER ACTION IN WHICH A JURY TRIAL CANNOT BE, OR HAS NOT BEEN WAIVED; AND EACH PARTY HEREBY AGREES AND CONSENTS THAT ANY SUCH CLAIM, DEMAND, ACTION OR CAUSE OF ACTION SHALL BE DECIDED BY COURT TRIAL WITHOUT A JURY, AND THAT ANY PARTY HERETO MAY FILE AN ORIGINAL COUNTERPART OR A COPY OF THIS SECTION WITH ANY COURT AS WRITTEN EVIDENCE OF THE CONSENT OF THE PARTIES HERETO TO THE WAIVER OF THEIR RIGHT TO TRIAL BY JURY.

The plaintiffs did not dispute that this jury-waiver provision was enforceable and applicable to their claims in the First Suit, and did not oppose the defendants' motion to strike their jury demand. See In re Prudential Ins. Co.,148 S.W.3d 124, 130-35 *Page 756 (Tex. 2004) (compelling enforcement of contractual jury-waiver provision in face of arguments that provision was unenforceable on constitutional or public policy grounds and was not knowingly and voluntarily agreed to). The district court signed an agreed order striking the jury demand in July 2009. The case proceeded toward a bench trial setting during the last week of October 2009.

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Bluebook (online)
335 S.W.3d 752, 2011 Tex. App. LEXIS 1253, 2011 WL 589903, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-fh-partners-llc-texapp-2011.