Jeniffer Aloysius v. Mark Kislingbury

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 19, 2014
Docket01-13-00147-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Jeniffer Aloysius v. Mark Kislingbury (Jeniffer Aloysius v. Mark Kislingbury) 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
Jeniffer Aloysius v. Mark Kislingbury, (Tex. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

Opinion issued August 19, 2014

In The

Court of Appeals For The

First District of Texas ———————————— NO. 01-13-00147-CV ——————————— JENIFFER ALOYSIUS, Appellant

V.

MARK KISLINGBURY, Appellee

On Appeal from the 270th District Court Harris County, Texas Trial Court Case No. 2008-23683

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Appellant, Jeniffer Aloysius, challenges the trial court’s judgment, entered

after a trial to the court, in favor of appellee, Mark Kislingbury, in his suit against

her for breach of contract, fraud, conversion, and breach of fiduciary duties. In four issues, Aloysius contends that Kislingbury lacks standing to recover in his

individual capacity, the evidence is legally and factually insufficient to support the

amount of damages awarded, and the trial court erred in awarding Kislingbury

appellate attorney’s fees.

We affirm the judgment of the trial court as modified.

Background

In his third amended petition, Kislingbury alleged that he and Aloysius

organized StenoMaster, Inc. (“Stenomaster”), a Colorado corporation, on October

5, 2004. He and Aloysius were the directors and shareholders, with Kislingbury

owning 75 percent of the issued stock and Aloysius owning 25 percent. In his

individual capacity, Kislingbury sued Aloysius for breach of contract, fraud,

conversion, and misappropriation, alleging that she had “directly and uniquely

injured” him by “maliciously suppress[ing] the payment . . . of monies to which he

was entitled.” As a shareholder, derivatively on behalf of StenoMaster,

Kislingbury sued Aloysius for fraud, breach of fiduciary duty, and negligent

management. He asserted that StenoMaster is a closely held corporation and he

had “not sought to have this suit brought for [StenoMaster] nor made a demand for

accounting by the Board of Directors of [StenoMaster], since any effort would be

futile in that [Aloysius] is an alleged director . . . [and] would not have taken action

against herself.” Aloysius answered with a general denial, asserted various

2 affirmative defenses, and included a verified denial that Kislingbury had capacity

to sue in Texas.

At trial, Kislingbury testified that he has been a court reporter for thirty

years and is engaged in the business of training other court reporters and providing

educational materials through various companies he owns. He met Aloysius, who

is also a court reporter, when he spoke at a convention, and she later asked him to

speak at a convention in Colorado, where she lives. Shortly thereafter, they

decided to form StenoMaster to allow Kislingbury to focus on conducting his

educational seminars and selling court-reporting training materials, while Aloysius

marketed his products and performed the administrative duties.

In February 2004, Kislingbury and Aloysius executed an agreement (the

“Agreement”) to form StenoMaster. Although Kislingbury was a Texas resident,

they filed their articles of incorporation in Colorado, where Aloysius resided.

They appointed Kislingbury as president and chief executive officer, with Aloysius

serving as vice-president. The Agreement provides that StenoMaster’s revenues,

liabilities, and “management and operating expenses” were to be apportioned in

accordance with the ownership ratio, i.e., 75 percent to 25 percent. Further, in

regard to “management and operating expenses,” the parties agreed

to consult with each other prior to committing Corporate funds or extending Corporate liability and [to] do so only upon mutual agreement. Neither party is precluded from contributing to the Corporation without the expectation of remuneration or

3 reimbursement and freely waives the right to recover such remuneration or reimbursement.

The Agreement further provides that intellectual property rights were to “remain

the exclusive property of the originator of the product concept or service.” It is

undisputed that, in 2005, the parties agreed to modify the apportionment of

revenues, liabilities, and expenses to 70 percent owing to Kislingbury and 30

percent to Aloysius.

Kislingbury explained that in 2007, the parties’ relationship began to

deteriorate. He sought to buy Aloysius’s interest in StenoMaster and retained a

business valuator, but Aloysius refused to provide an accounting. Upon

discovering that she had written numerous checks from the StenoMaster account to

herself and to CourtReps, Inc. (“CourtReps”), an independent company that she

owned, Kislingbury brought the instant suit.

Kislingbury further testified that Aloysius had made “improper” payments to

herself, totaling $158,241.74, and to CourtReps, totaling $184,868.69. The

payments included “reimbursements” of $11,000 for “office supplies,” $15,000 for

seminar expenses, $28,000 for “office administration,” $45,000 for

“communications,” and $101,000 for “tech support.” In regard to Aloysius’s

claimed “reimbursements,” Kislingbury had “never seen any checks from

CourtReps or [Aloysius] paying any of the people she claim[ed] to have paid.” He

also noted that Aloysius, without his consent, had made numerous regular

4 payments to herself and to CourtReps for “teaching” and “consulting.” And he

sought to recover “his part of the funds” that Aloysius “had diverted.” In

December 2007, when Kislingbury stopped payment on two checks totaling

$15,000 that Aloysius had written to herself, she “shut down” the StenoMaster

website and redirected its students to CourtReps. Kislingbury explained that this

action “essentially shut down StenoMaster.”

Aloysius testified that she maintained the bookkeeping for StenoMaster,

wrote checks from the StenoMaster checking account, and had a StenoMaster

credit card for expenses. She explained that neither she nor Kislingbury had made

opening capital contributions and, during its operating period, from January 2004

until August 2008, StenoMaster “was not profitable.” Specifically, the total

income during that period was $849,245, and total expenses were $915,282. She

explained that because “StenoMaster consistently didn’t have the funds,” she

would pay its expenses from her personal accounts and “reimburse herself when

funds became available” in the StenoMaster account.

After trial, Kislingbury moved for entry of judgment “in favor of Plaintiff,

Mark Kislingbury.” Without stating the grounds on which he prevailed, the trial

court rendered judgment for Kislingbury against Aloysius for damages in the

amount of $240,177.30, trial attorney’s fees of $98,000, and appellate attorney’s

fees in the event of appeal. The trial court noted that its judgment was final and all

5 other relief was denied. Although the trial court did not issue findings of fact and

conclusions of law, the record does not show that Aloysius filed the requisite

notice of past due findings.1 And her motion for new trial was overruled by

operation of law.

Standing

In her first issue, Aloysius argues that the trial court erred in awarding

damages to Kislingbury individually because “StenoMaster is the only party that

can recover for [her] alleged misappropriation of the corporation’s assets.” She

further argues that because Kislingbury “claim[s] that [she] improperly paid

herself” from StenoMaster’s checking account and “misappropriated”

StenoMaster’s assets, “[t]he damages belong to StenoMaster—not Kislingbury

personally.”

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