James Terral Lette and Alicia M. Lette, D/B/A Lette Insurance Agency v. Brooke Corporation, First Brooke Insurance and Financial Services, Inc., Austin Agency, Inc. and Bob Austin, Individually

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 12, 2004
Docket13-02-00527-CV
StatusPublished

This text of James Terral Lette and Alicia M. Lette, D/B/A Lette Insurance Agency v. Brooke Corporation, First Brooke Insurance and Financial Services, Inc., Austin Agency, Inc. and Bob Austin, Individually (James Terral Lette and Alicia M. Lette, D/B/A Lette Insurance Agency v. Brooke Corporation, First Brooke Insurance and Financial Services, Inc., Austin Agency, Inc. and Bob Austin, Individually) 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
James Terral Lette and Alicia M. Lette, D/B/A Lette Insurance Agency v. Brooke Corporation, First Brooke Insurance and Financial Services, Inc., Austin Agency, Inc. and Bob Austin, Individually, (Tex. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion





NUMBER 13-02-00527-CV

COURT OF APPEALS

THIRTEENTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS

CORPUS CHRISTI - EDINBURG




JAMES TERRAL LETTE AND ALICIA M.

LETTE, D/B/A LETTE INSURANCE AGENCY,                          Appellants,


v.


BROOKE CORPORATION, FIRST BROOKE

INSURANCE AND FINANCIAL SERVICES,

INC., AUSTIN AGENCY, INC. AND

BOB AUSTIN, INDIVIDUALLY,                                                   Appellees.




On Appeal from the 357th District Court

of Cameron County, Texas.




MEMORANDUM OPINION


Before Justices Rodriguez, Castillo, and Wittig


Opinion by Justice Castillo


         This is an appeal from a judgment confirming an arbitration award. Appellants are James T. Lette and Alicia M. Lette, individually and d/b/a Lette Insurance Agency (collectively, the "Lettes"). Appellees are Brooke Corporation ("Brooke"), First Brooke Insurance and Financial Services Inc. ("First Brooke"), Austin Agency, Inc. and Bob Austin, individually (collectively, "Austin"). By four issues, the Lettes challenge the trial court's: (1) referral of the entire dispute to arbitration; (2) confirmation of the arbitration award without convening an oral hearing; (3) failure to vacate the arbitrator's award as outside the scope of the parties' agreement to arbitrate; and (4) confirmation of the arbitrator's award over non-party Lette Property Partnership (the "Partnership"). We affirm.

I. PROCEDURAL HISTORY OF APPEAL

         The Lettes appealed on September 20, 2002. The record was filed and the briefing complete by March 3, 2003. We submitted the case on April 2, 2003. On April 28, 2003, the Lettes filed a notice of bankruptcy. We abated the case on May 1, 2003. It remained abated until we reinstated the case October 14, 2003 on the appellees' motion to reinstate the appeal. See Tex. R. App. P. 8. The appeal continued.

II. BACKGROUND FACTS

         The relationship between the parties started in 2000 when the Lettes entered into an agreement with Brooke, a Kansas corporation, for the purchase of most of the assets of the Lettes' insurance business. Pursuant to an "Agreement for Purchase of Agency Assets" (the "Purchase Agreement"), the purchase price was $1.2 million. The Purchase Agreement contained a five-year covenant not to compete that restricted the Lettes from selling most types of property and casualty insurance within a fifty-mile radius of each location sold to Brooke. The agreement also gave Brooke a license to use the trade name "Lette Insurance Agency" within the same geographic areas. A related transaction provided that Brooke and Austin would lease the Lettes' former office space from the Lettes' affiliated entity, the Partnership, and continue to operate the insurance business in the same location (the "Lease Agreement"). Also in a related transaction, the Lettes subleased a portion of the same office space from Brooke so they could continue to run a life and health insurance business from the location (the "Sublease Agreement").

         On the dates of these transactions, Brooke was not licensed to do business or sell insurance in Texas. To satisfy Texas insurance regulations, the parties agreed to transfer certain assets directly from the Lettes to First Brooke, Brooke's Texas affiliate. Brooke assigned its rights under the Purchase Agreement and the office lease to First Brooke. First Brooke then entered into a franchise agreement with Austin, an existing insurance agency in Brownsville, Texas. Brooke retained the rights to assign any and all of the Purchase Agreement to one of its franchise agents. It did so when Austin became a Brooke franchise agent contemporaneously with the purchase of the Lettes' insurance business. The parties crafted and specifically included an arbitration agreement in the Purchase Agreement, which was added as a new paragraph 24 in an written addendum.

         Austin took possession of the leased premises and assigned to Brooke the right to renew the property and casualty policies previously sold by the Lettes. The parties' relationship deteriorated. The Lettes filed suit on July 6, 2002 in the form of a declaratory judgment action, seeking a declaration regarding the construction of certain provisions of the Purchase Agreement under the Texas Insurance Code. The Lettes also asked for damages and injunctive relief. They sought to have Brooke, First Brooke, and Austin enjoined from using the Lettes' agency trade name, its insurance license, and its contractual agency appointments with carriers to renew policies or write new ones in violation of state law. The Partnership was not named as a plaintiff in the lawsuit.

         In their petition, the Lettes contended that the defendants were misusing the Lettes' agency trade name for the illegal purpose of writing business with companies with which neither First Brooke nor Austin had agency appointments. Brooke and Austin counterclaimed, alleging that the Lettes were in breach of the parties' agreements and were defaming and disparaging Brooke and Austin by claiming the Lettes still owned the assets. Brooke and Austin also claimed that the Lettes were interfering with the contracts that Brooke and Austin purchased by telling the insurance markets and customers that the Lettes had not sold the business.

         Brooke, First Brooke, and Austin filed a motion to compel arbitration pursuant to the arbitration agreement in the Purchase Agreement. After a failed attempt to resolve the case in mediation on August 29, 2001, the Brooke defendants filed a motion for a temporary restraining order on September 11, 2001. The parties agreed to the entry of a temporary injunction. In addition to the parties to the lawsuit as described above, the Partnership was named in the agreed temporary injunction as a party subject to its injunctions. The agreed temporary injunction stated that it was "binding upon Brooke, Austin, Lette, LLH, [the Partnership], its officers, agents, servants, employees and attorneys."

         The trial court set a hearing on the motion to compel arbitration for September 20, 2001. The Lettes filed a sworn response to the motion to compel, objecting to arbitration. The trial court overruled the Lettes' objections and ordered that "the above entitled and numbered cause is compelled to arbitration before the American Arbitration Association."

         

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James Terral Lette and Alicia M. Lette, D/B/A Lette Insurance Agency v. Brooke Corporation, First Brooke Insurance and Financial Services, Inc., Austin Agency, Inc. and Bob Austin, Individually, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/james-terral-lette-and-alicia-m-lette-dba-lette-insurance-agency-v-texapp-2004.