Jang Won Cho v. Kun Sik Kim and Veronica Young Lee, Legal Heir to Patrick Hiy Chang Lee

572 S.W.3d 783
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 2, 2019
Docket14-16-00962-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 572 S.W.3d 783 (Jang Won Cho v. Kun Sik Kim and Veronica Young Lee, Legal Heir to Patrick Hiy Chang Lee) 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
Jang Won Cho v. Kun Sik Kim and Veronica Young Lee, Legal Heir to Patrick Hiy Chang Lee, 572 S.W.3d 783 (Tex. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

Motions for En Banc Reconsideration Denied as Moot; Opinion of December 28, 2018 Withdrawn; Affirmed as Modified in Part, Reversed and Rendered in Part, Reversed and Remanded in Part, and Substitute Opinion Filed April 2, 2019.

In The

Fourteenth Court of Appeals

NO. 14-16-00962-CV

JANG WON CHO, Appellant

V. KUN SIK KIM AND VERONICA YOUNG LEE, LEGAL HEIR TO PATRICK HIY CHANG LEE, Appellees

On Appeal from the 61st District Court Harris County, Texas Trial Court Cause No. 2013-06274

SUBSTITUTE OPINION We deny as moot the motion for en banc reconsideration filed by Appellant, Jang Won Cho, and the motion for en banc reconsideration filed by Appellees, Kun Sik Kim and Veronica Young Lee, legal heir to Patrick Hiy Chang Lee. We withdraw our opinion dated December 28, 2018, and issue the following substitute opinion.

Jang Won Cho appeals from a judgment against him and in favor of Appellees Kun Sik Kim and Veronica Young Lee in connection with claims for breach of fiduciary duty and fraud arising from an unsuccessful real estate project.

BACKGROUND

This appeal stems from a project to acquire land along Homestead Road in Houston; build a retail strip shopping center called “Pandel Plaza;” and lease storefronts in the center to commercial tenants.

The center was built but failed to generate enough rental income to cover property taxes and other expenses. Two of the three investors in the project sued the third investor alleging that the shopping center’s failure is attributable to tortious conduct by the third investor.

All of the project’s investors pursued business and professional activities in Houston after coming to the city from South Korea. One of the investors was Mr. Patrick Hiy Chang Lee, a CPA. His wife is Veronica Young Lee, who is referred to as “Veronica” Lee in this litigation. She took over her husband’s participation and interest in the project after his health began to decline in 2005; he died in 2013.1 The other investors are Kun Sik Kim and Jang Won Cho, a businessman with experience in the construction industry.

The investors created two entities to accomplish this project. One entity is “Pandel, Inc.,” which was incorporated in 2000. Kim, Lee, and Cho each own one third of the corporation. Cho signed the corporation’s bylaws as a director and “secretary of Pandel, Inc.” with an effective date of November 20, 2000.

1 Unless otherwise specified, all references to “Lee” in this opinion refer to Veronica Lee.

2 The other entity is a limited partnership called “Pandel Holdings, L.P.” The limited partnership’s general partner is Pandel, Inc., which has a one percent interest in the limited partnership; Kim, Lee, and Cho are limited partners, each with a 33 percent interest in the limited partnership. The parties planned to transfer ownership of Pandel Plaza from the corporation to the limited partnership, but the transfer did not occur.

The three investors contributed capital to buy the land in 2001, followed by construction of a 9,000-square-foot building. Pandel, Inc. borrowed $500,000 from American First National Bank in 2004 as a construction loan. The investors also made subsequent individual capital contributions.

The project generated revenue from rent paid by tenants. Additional revenue resulted from selling an easement covering a portion of the land to the City of Houston; however, the city later constructed a ramp that impeded access to the shopping center and hid it from view.

The shopping center’s occupancy and rent revenue dwindled over time, and relations between the three investors became strained to the point where Kim and Lee sued Cho, the limited partnership, and the corporation in 2009. In July 2012, all parties filed a Rule 11 agreement under which they agreed to file a joint motion to dismiss the 2009 suit without prejudice. The dismissal order was signed on August 30, 2012, but acrimony among the investors continued unabated.

The parties offer sharply different explanations for the shopping center’s demise.

According to appellant Cho, appellees Kim and Lee refused to contribute any funds to the business after 2008; refused to participate in managing the property or addressing its problems; and thereby put the burden entirely on Cho to manage the

3 property and make further contributions from his personal funds to keep the business afloat as he struggled to reverse the shopping center’s sagging fortunes. Acting as Pandel, Inc.’s president, Cho took out a short term loan in October 2012 for $161,071.88 from Apex Star Properties, Inc. at an 18 percent annual interest rate. Cho contends Pandel, Inc. needed to borrow this sum to keep the property out of foreclosure because Kim and Lee refused to contribute additional capital.

In contrast, Kim and Lee contend that Cho “abused their trust and confidence by secretly gaining personal benefits at their expense and driving the business off of a financial cliff.” According to Kim and Lee, Cho did so by

 refusing “to contribute his fair share of capital, opting instead to freeride on the resources others supplied;”

 awarding Pandel Plaza’s construction contract to a company he owned;

 promising “that building construction costs would amount to no more than $423,000,” which equates to $47 per square foot multiplied by the shopping center’s 9,000 square foot capacity, and then charging $67 per square foot for a total construction cost of $629,630;

 constructing the shopping center badly, which made finding and keeping tenants more difficult;

 entering a subsequent construction contract without their knowledge;

 paying excessive monthly management fees to a company owned by Cho;

 refusing to “disclose critical financial information about what the business was doing and why;”

 failing to explain why Kim and Lee needed to make capital

4 contributions;

 failing to notify Kim and Lee of the easement sale to the City of Houston, or to obtain their approval; and

 using the shopping center’s accounts to pay for his own attorney’s fees incurred in the ongoing legal disputes with Kim and Lee.

Kim and Lee contend that Cho’s mismanagement and self-dealing caused the shopping center to lose tenants, fall into disrepair, and become “unmarketable at present.”

Kim and Lee sued Cho again in February 2013; among other things, they asserted claims for breach of fiduciary duty, fraud, breach of contract, negligent misrepresentation, and conversion. Kim and Lee removed Cho as an officer and director of Pandel, Inc. in 2015, after which the shopping center “became vacant, fell to ruin, and has been subjected to fines from the City of Houston.”

The case proceeded to trial in 2016. The trial court submitted the claims against Cho to the jury, which answered a series of charge questions in favor of Kim and Lee.

 The jury answered “No” in response to Question 1, which asked: “Did Jang Won Cho comply with his fiduciary duty to Kun Sik Kim and Veronica Young Lee?” Question 1 identified five requirements for the jury to consider in deciding whether Cho complied with his fiduciary duty.

 The jury answered “Yes” in response to Question 4, which asked: “Did Jang Won Cho fail to comply with the agreement to create a partnership owned equally by Jang Won Cho, Kun Sik Kim and Veronica Young Lee for the purpose of holding the real estate located at 8213

5 Homestead Road, Houston, Texas 77028?”

 The jury answered “Yes” in response to Question 7, which asked: “Did Jang Won Cho commit fraud against Kun Sik Kim and Veronica Young Lee?” This question was accompanied by instructions defining fraud in two ways — once as the making of an affirmative “material misrepresentation,” and then as a “failure to disclose a material fact.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
572 S.W.3d 783, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jang-won-cho-v-kun-sik-kim-and-veronica-young-lee-legal-heir-to-patrick-texapp-2019.