Jady Wings v. Steven J. Freedman and Freedman Metals, Inc. D/B/A FMI Recycling

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 11, 2024
Docket05-23-00077-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Jady Wings v. Steven J. Freedman and Freedman Metals, Inc. D/B/A FMI Recycling (Jady Wings v. Steven J. Freedman and Freedman Metals, Inc. D/B/A FMI Recycling) 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
Jady Wings v. Steven J. Freedman and Freedman Metals, Inc. D/B/A FMI Recycling, (Tex. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

Affirmed as Modified; Opinion Filed December 11, 2024

In The Court of Appeals Fifth District of Texas at Dallas No. 05-23-00077-CV

JADY WINGS, Appellant V. STEVEN J. FREEDMAN AND FREEDMAN METALS, INC. D/B/A FMI RECYCLING, Appellees

On Appeal from the 44th Judicial District Court Dallas County, Texas Trial Court Cause No. DC-21-01163

MEMORANDUM OPINION Before Justices Nowell, Miskel, and Kennedy Opinion by Justice Miskel Jady Wings (“Wings”) and Steven Freedman (“Freedman”) were members of

a Texas limited liability company. They could not agree on major decisions

involving the company. Accordingly, Wings invoked a buy-sell provision in the

company agreement. However, the parties could not agree on the workings of this

provision, and they resorted to litigation to resolve their dispute. They each filed

motions for partial summary judgment asking the trial court to find that the other

party breached the company agreement and to order the other to sell his interest in

the company for the prices set forth in their respective notice letters. The trial court granted Freedman’s motion and denied Wing’s motion, but the court ordered

Freedman to pay Wings’s price. The trial court also awarded attorney’s fees to

Freedman and rendered judgment incorporating its summary-judgment orders. Both

Wings and Freedman have appealed the judgment.1

To resolve this cross appeal, we must construe the terms of the company

agreement and determine whether the trial court erred by (i) requiring Wings to sell

his interest in the company to Freedman, (ii) requiring Freedman to pay a sale price

that he claims was contrary to the agreement’s terms, and (iii) awarding attorney’s

fees to Freedman. For the reasons discussed below, we modify the judgment and

affirm it as modified.

I. Background and Procedural Facts Wings and Freedman formed Freewings Realty, LLC (“Freewings” or the

“Company”), a Texas limited liability company, to serve as a vehicle through which

they could jointly purchase a parcel of real property (the “Property”). Freedman’s

business, appellee Freedman Metals Inc. d/b/a “FMI,” was a tenant of the Property

throughout the period at issue in this case. Wings’s business, GEM Southwest, LLC,

was also a tenant of the Property for part of the relevant period.

1 Freedman Metals Inc. d/b/a “FMI” is also a party in this appeal, but the issues raised in the parties’ briefs pertain solely to the trial court’s rulings that relate to Wings and Freedman. –2– A. The Parties Entered into a Company Agreement that Contained a Buy- Sell Option. To accomplish the formation of Freewings, Wings and Freedman entered into

a Company Agreement. They subsequently signed an Amended and Restated

Company Agreement (the “Agreement”), which is the contract at issue in this case.

Under the Agreement, Wings contributed 77% of the capital and received a 65%

ownership interest (a “Membership Interest”), and Freedman contributed 23% of the

capital and received the remaining 35% Membership Interest.

The parties agreed to a “Buy-Sell” provision in the Agreement, § 12.2, which

either party could invoke if the parties disagreed on a “Major Decision.”

Specifically, § 12.2 provides, in pertinent part:

If the Managers or Members cannot agree on a Major Decision, then either Member, provided such Member is not in default under the terms hereof (the “Offeror”), may offer to buy all but not less than all of the Membership Interest of any other Member (the “Offeree”) by delivering a written notice containing the per Membership unit or percentage of ownership offer price (for example, any offer should be based on 100% ownership so that the unequal Membership Interest is taken into account with such offer) and all essential terms of such offer (the “Offer”) to the Offeree; provided, however, that the Offeror shall allow at least thirty (30) days from its delivery before the Offeree has to perform the first act (other than acceptance of the Offer) or pay the first amount due under the Offer. The Offeree shall have the option to either (i) sell his Membership Interest to the Offeror, pursuant to the terms of the Offer, or (ii) buy the Offeror’s Membership Interest, pursuant to the terms of the Offer. Notice of the Offeree’s election to buy or sell shall be given to the Offeror within twenty (20) days of receipt of the Offer. The failure of the Offeree to give notice of his –3– election within such twenty (20) day period shall be deemed an acceptance by the Offeree to sell his Membership Interest to the Offeror. (underlining added).2

B. Wings Invoked the Buy-Sell Option and Made an Offer to Freedman. The parties disagreed regarding Major Decisions involving the Company. On

December 8, 2020, Wings invoked § 12.2 and notified Freedman that Wings would

“purchase all of [Freedman’s] Membership Interest in the Company” on terms that

included the following:

Upon the execution of the final sale documents by the parties, SJF will be paid the lump sum of $658,485.16 for all of SJF’s Membership Interest in the Company, which includes the return of all monies in SJF’s capital account, which has a current balance of $156,751.49 (the “Purchase Price”). The offer is based on a $4 million fair market valuation of the Company and the valuation of the Membership Interests of Wings and SJF have been calculated as reflected on Exhibit A to this letter.

Exhibit A described a detailed “Valuation of Membership Interests,” under

which Wings proposed a method by which he calculated different “buy” and “sell”

2 Provisions such as § 12.2 are commonly referred to as “Texas Shootout” provisions. Such terms have been described as follows: When two parties enter a joint venture, they recognize that, at some point, one or the other will want to terminate the arrangement. When neither faces any liquidity constraints and both are equally able to run the business, they may agree at the outset that as soon as one of them wants to terminate the venture, she can put a value on the business and the other has the choice to buy or sell the business at this price. This way of dissolving a joint venture is called a “Texas Shootout.” Douglas G. Baird and Donald S. Bernstein, Absolute Priority, Valuation Uncertainty, and the Reorganization Bargain, 115 YALE LAW JOURNAL 1930, 1953 (2006). These provisions are similar to the familiar “I cut, you choose” method of dividing desserts, for example. See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Divide_and_choose (last accessed 10/31/2024).

–4– prices.3 Pursuant to his own calculations, Wings arrived at the following offer

prices: Wings would pay $658,485.16 to purchase Freedman’s 35% Membership

Interest or Freedman could pay $1,470,752.62 to purchase Wings’s 65%

Membership Interest. Effectively, Wings offered to pay Freedman $18,813.86 for

each Membership unit of Freedman’s ownership, while contending that Freedman

must pay Wings $22,626.96 for each Membership unit of Wings’s ownership.

C. Freedman Elected to Buy Out Wings. Under § 12.2, Freedman had twenty days (until December 28, 2020) to

respond to Wings’s offer. On December 17, Freedman requested a two-day

extension to respond to the offer (until December 30), and Wings agreed to

Freedman’s request. On December 30, 2020, Freedman sent an e-mail to Wings in

which Freedman stated that he was electing to buy Wings’s Membership Interest

“pursuant to the terms of the Offer and § 12.2(ii) of the Agreement.”

Based on Wings’s December 8 offer to buy Freedman’s 35% Membership

Interest for a Purchase Price of $658,485.16, Freedman calculated “the per

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Jady Wings v. Steven J. Freedman and Freedman Metals, Inc. D/B/A FMI Recycling, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jady-wings-v-steven-j-freedman-and-freedman-metals-inc-dba-fmi-texapp-2024.