Jennifer K. Malone Hester v. Friedkin Companies, Inc., Gulf States Toyota, Inc., Gulf States Financial Services, Inc., and Gulf States Marketing Services, and Assumed Name of Friedkin Companies, Inc.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 25, 2004
Docket14-02-01154-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Jennifer K. Malone Hester v. Friedkin Companies, Inc., Gulf States Toyota, Inc., Gulf States Financial Services, Inc., and Gulf States Marketing Services, and Assumed Name of Friedkin Companies, Inc. (Jennifer K. Malone Hester v. Friedkin Companies, Inc., Gulf States Toyota, Inc., Gulf States Financial Services, Inc., and Gulf States Marketing Services, and Assumed Name of Friedkin Companies, Inc.) 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.

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Jennifer K. Malone Hester v. Friedkin Companies, Inc., Gulf States Toyota, Inc., Gulf States Financial Services, Inc., and Gulf States Marketing Services, and Assumed Name of Friedkin Companies, Inc., (Tex. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

Affirmed and Opinion filed March 25, 2004

Affirmed and Opinion filed March 25, 2004.

In The

Fourteenth Court of Appeals

____________

NO. 14-02-01154-CV

JENNIFER K. MALONE HESTER, Appellant

V.

FRIEDKIN COMPANIES, INC., GULF STATES TOYOTA, INC., GULF STATES FINANCIAL SERVICES, INC., AND GULF STATES MARKETING, AN ASSUMED NAME OF FRIEDKIN COMPANIES, INC., Appellees

On Appeal from the 80th District Court

Harris County, Texas

Trial Court Cause No. 98-17896

O P I N I O N


Appellant Jennifer K. Malone Hester appeals from a judgment notwithstanding the verdict.  Hester sued her former employer, Friedkin Adventure Companies (AFriedkin Adventure@), for breach of a contract to pay her a bonus for a business suggestion.  She also sued Friedkin Companies, Inc. (AFriedkin Companies@), Gulf States Toyota, Inc. (AGulf States Toyota@), Gulf States Financial Services, Inc. (AGulf States Financial@), and Gulf States Marketing, an assumed name of Friedkin Companies, Inc., asserting a quantum meruit claim against them.  A jury returned a verdict for Hester against all the defendants.  The defendants accepted the verdict against Friedkin Adventure, but moved to set aside the verdict against the other defendants. The trial court granted the judgment notwithstanding the verdict and this appeal followed.  We affirm.

I.  Factual Background

Friedkin Adventure employed Hester as a reservationist.  She booked photographic safaris in Africa and Nepal.  During the time period relevant to this lawsuit, Thomas Friedkin was the sole shareholder of Friedkin Adventure as well as appellee Friedkin Companies.  He was a joint owner of Gulf States Toyota, along with his son, Dan Friedkin.  Dan Friedkin was the sole shareholder of Gulf States Financial.  Hester was not employed by any defendant except Friedkin Adventure.  Hester contends that Friedkin Adventure is a separate company and not part of any other defendant.

In an August 30, 1994 memorandum distributed to AAll FAC Staff@CFriedkin Adventure Staff, David Marek, a vice president of the company, wrote, AYour suggestions to reduce costs can earn you additional cash as well.  Just submit your written suggestion, [sic] to your supervisor or to Trish, [sic] for evaluation.  All employee=s [sic] suggestions utilized, which result in a cost savings, will be awarded a bonus.  The amount of the bonuses will vary according to the size of the savings.@ 

Hester submitted a suggestion to Mark Brady, another Friedkin Adventure vice president, in September 1994. Her memo reads, in relevant part, as follows:

In response to your memo dated 9/2/94 and that of David Marek dated 8/30/94 I would like to submit the following suggestions for cost reductions.  I believe my suggestions can be tested on a Apilot@ basis at little or no cost to prove its worth and can save substantial costs for all The Friedkin Companies (TFC) as well as FAC [Friedkin Adventure Company].

. . .


SUGGESTION:       Use the E-mail services of the information highway (Internet) via high speed fax/modems instead of fax machines to substantially reduce the cost of telephone charges, staff costs and related miscellaneous costs for TFC [the Friedkin Companies].  In the interim, while verifying the cost savings of the Internet, . . . have TFC [the Friedkin Companies] personnel use E-Mail daily in lieu of the fax machine.

Your memo identified international phone charges as the major culprit in our communications costs and staff costs as another major cost.  This suggestion can substantially reduce both.  The total savings to all TFC [the Friedkin Companies] could conceivably be in the millions of dollars over the next few years.  (Sounds like a new Lexus!!)    

Hester discussed her idea with Marek and Brady, and Marek reported the suggestion to Frank Gruen, Friedkin Adventure=s president.[1]  Thereafter, in a October 14, 1994 memo distributed to AAll FAC Staff,@ Marek wrote, A[Hester] has submitted the idea with potentially the greatest cost savings to us.  Her idea is to access the >Internet= information highway for our overseas communications.  This idea has great potential.  We=ll keep you informed as we work with [Hester] to see if we can make it happen.@  Hester subsequently engaged a consultant, and the consultant met with Hester, Brady, Marek and two other Friedkin Adventure employees to discuss the use of the internet.  Gruen sent Marek to talk with Robert Asbill, an employee of Gulf States Toyota, who had been researching use of the internet by Gulf States Toyota.  Marek testified at trial that Hester was the first person to suggest the use of the internet for e-mail by Friedkin Adventure or the other companies.

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Jennifer K. Malone Hester v. Friedkin Companies, Inc., Gulf States Toyota, Inc., Gulf States Financial Services, Inc., and Gulf States Marketing Services, and Assumed Name of Friedkin Companies, Inc., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jennifer-k-malone-hester-v-friedkin-companies-inc-gulf-states-toyota-texapp-2004.