in the Matter of the Marriage of Eleanor Fox Davis and William Barnes Davis

418 S.W.3d 684, 2012 Tex. App. LEXIS 4622, 2012 WL 2094408
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 12, 2012
Docket06-11-00127-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 418 S.W.3d 684 (in the Matter of the Marriage of Eleanor Fox Davis and William Barnes Davis) 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 the Matter of the Marriage of Eleanor Fox Davis and William Barnes Davis, 418 S.W.3d 684, 2012 Tex. App. LEXIS 4622, 2012 WL 2094408 (Tex. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinions

OPINION

Opinion by

Chief Justice MORRISS.

Based on a Rule 11 agreement reached in a spirited divorce case between William Barnes Davis and Eleanor Fox Davis, a receiver was appointed to preserve and sell the assets of Fox Crest Farm, LLC— owned and managed solely and informally by William and Eleanor.

The LLC owns and operates a horse farm “intended to be a manager-managed LLC with the two named managers being” Eleanor and William. According to a trial brief filed by William, “[t]he parties did not hold any LLC meetings, did not en[686]*686gage in LLC voting, and did not observe any LLC formalities.” William complains that the trial court erred: (1) “when it did not take evidence of the qualifications of a receiver or require that the receiver take an oath of office before performing his duties as a receiver”; (2) “by issuing a nunc pro tunc order appointing a receiver that makes substantive changes to the previous order, places property of a non-party ... under receivership, and expands the power of the receiver beyond the Rule 11 agreement”; and (3) “by placing property owned by a non-party limited liability company. under a receivership to be sold.” We affirm the trial court’s order because (1) William did not preserve his complaints about the receiver’s authority, (2) William did not preserve his complaint about the order of November 28, and (3) the Rule 11 agreement by William and Eleanor, the members and managers of the LLC, is sufficient to bind the LLC.

Eleanor filed her original petition for divorce January 31, 2011, and requested temporary orders prohibiting her exclusion “from managing and operating the business known as Fox Crest Farm, LLC ... as a profitable business and selling assets of the business, including but not limited to land and animals as necessary to manage same.”

On June 23, 2011, William filed a motion for temporary orders, stating:

1. Petitioner and Respondent have been unable to agree on the temporary use and possession of their community property while this case is pending.
2. There are animals belonging to the business owned by the parties that are in danger of going unfed and uncared for that are in the control of Petitioner. Temporary orders are needed to resolve this immediate problem and other issues.

Eleanor responded by filing a motion for temporary orders, claiming:

Petitioner is unable to continue to make mortgage payments on Fox Crest Farm, LLC property due to lack of income or any financial resources. Respondent abandoned Fox Crest Farm, LLC property in late January 2011, leaving over 50 horses for Petitioner to take care of without providing any financial means for feeding or caring for the animals.... Petitioner requests that she be awarded exclusive use and possession of the land and improvements comprising of 215 acres, more or less in Wood County, Texas, and known as Fox Crest Farm, LLC pending sale and that Craig English of Century 21 First Group, a licensed real estate broker with whom the property is listed, be appointed receiver of that property and empowered to sell it, pay off any liens and the expenses of sale, and deposit the net proceeds realized as directed by the Court.

On September 8, 2011, after a Rule 11 agreement had been discussed, the trial court held a hearing on the temporary orders and announced that it would appoint Reneau Anders as a receiver. William testified, “Reneau Anders and I have a conflict that we’ve had for some time. If you have somebody else, I would appreciate it if you would recommend them.” The court explained, “[H]e’s not going to be dealing with you. He’s just going to be selling the property. He’s reporting to the Court and he’s the court’s appointee.... He’s served as a receiver under court-appointment in the past and that’s who I’m appointing.” William “was agreeable except for Reneau Anders.” The court clarified, “If y’all agree on everything and you don’t need to be back here, that’s fine, just let everybody know.”

A Rule 11 agreement, which was entered into September 8, was filed with the court September 15, 2011. In that agreement, William and Eleanor agreed that:

[687]*687Petitioner shall have the exclusive and private use and possession of the following property while this case is pending: 1336 FM 69, Quitman, TX 75783.
Reneau Anders, Quitman Realty, a licensed real estate broker is hereby appointed receiver of the property currently listed with Craig English, Century 21 and empowered to sell it, pay off any liens and the expenses of sale, and deposit the net proceeds realized as directed by the Court....

On September 30, 2011, William filed an amended counter-petition for divorce asserting breach of fiduciary duty claims and listing Eleanor “[a]s an equal partner in Fox Crest, PLLC.” The trial court held a hearing on this date to discuss the motions for temporary orders. While there was no complaint as to Anders’ qualification to be appointed as receiver, William’s counsel argued:

As far as receivership, I understand— understood you ordered a receiver to sell the property.... But in the order that he drew up, it says to manage, dispose and or — all of the business is in the L.L.C., the corporation, the joint two-member corporation, so this is not your average divorce where everything is ... community property. This is an actual corporation where much of the land was deeded into the corporation as well as all of the horses were owned by this corporation....

Because William “disagree[d] with the ordering of the appointment of the receiver to manage the entire corporation,” the trial court entered an order appointing receiver based on the Rule 11 agreement which omitted language giving the receiver authority to manage and control the property of the LLC.

The September 30, 2011, order appointing receiver found that “proper grounds exist[ed] for the immediate appointment of a receiver” and that “Reneau Anders of Quitman Realty is qualified to serve as Receiver.” Consequently, the court appointed him to take “charge and possession” of the land currently listed by English and authorized him “to dispose of the property as he sees fit in his sole discretion.” The listed real property consisted of three parcels of land, including “11 acres and the five acres that belong[ed]” to the LLC, but the order did not indicate the LLC’s ownership in the two parcels. Anders was directed to “report to the Judge as to the price listed on the property, any reduction in listing price, sales price or any other matters involving the sale of the property.” On October 19, 2011, the receiver’s report of sale was filed with a motion to confirm sale of the real property for a total sales price of $850,000.00 “on the terms and conditions set forth in residential earnest money contract,” which listed Paul and Jennifer Dwyer as the prospective purchasers. An-ders added his “opinion that this sale represented the highest and best sales price readily obtainable.”

In a November 10, 2011, hearing, William complained that the receiver had never contacted him to inquire about his interest in purchasing the property, and testified that he would be willing to pay more for the property than the price offered by the Dwyers. Noting that William had knowledge that the receiver was appointed to sell the property, and could have made an offer, the trial court approved Anders’ report and entered an order confirming sale.

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418 S.W.3d 684, 2012 Tex. App. LEXIS 4622, 2012 WL 2094408, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-the-matter-of-the-marriage-of-eleanor-fox-davis-and-william-barnes-davis-texapp-2012.