Krainz v. Kodiak Resources, Inc.

436 S.W.3d 325, 2013 WL 4819983, 2013 Tex. App. LEXIS 11254
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 30, 2013
DocketNo. 03-11-00454-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 436 S.W.3d 325 (Krainz v. Kodiak Resources, 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.

Bluebook
Krainz v. Kodiak Resources, Inc., 436 S.W.3d 325, 2013 WL 4819983, 2013 Tex. App. LEXIS 11254 (Tex. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

OPINION

JEFF ROSE, Justice.

Michael P. Krainz filed this suit complaining of the failure of Kodiak Resources, Inc. to issue certificates memorializing the transfer of shares of Kodiak stock to Krainz. Matthew J. Telfer is Kodiak’s founder and, he contends, its sole owner. The trial court1 granted summary judgment based on limitations against Krainz’s claim for breach of contract, granted Kodiak’s special exceptions based upon the summary judgment, denied Kodiak’s motion to enforce the special exceptions, and granted Kodiak’s plea to the jurisdiction dismissing for want of jurisdiction Krainz’s tort claims. The trial court also denied Kodiak’s claim for attorney’s fees. On appeal, Krainz contends that the trial court erred by granting the summary judgment, the plea to the jurisdiction, and special exceptions against his pleadings. Kodiak2 contends that the trial court erred by not enforcing the special exceptions, by denying Kodiak’s motion for summary judgment for attorney’s fees, and by denying its claims for attorney’s fees. We will reverse the judgment and remand the cause for further proceedings.

BACKGROUND

Telfer founded and solely owned Kodiak. He hired Krainz as Kodiak’s controller in 1999 to maintain the company’s records and to work with outside accountants to prepare tax returns. Krainz did not have a written employment contract. Krainz contends that Telfer induced him to work for a lower salary by promising to convey ten percent of Kodiak’s stock to him at [327]*327some unspecified time.3 Kodiak denies there was any agreement to transfer stock.

Telfer formed another company named Border to Border Exploration (hereafter, BBX) and in 2001 assigned all Kodiak employees to BBX. As a BBX employee, Krainz continued his duties for Kodiak through mid-2007. During that time, Kodiak filed tax returns that listed Telfer as Kodiak’s sole shareholder.

Krainz contends that Kodiak acted in ways consistent with Krainz’s part-ownership of Kodiak. A limited partnership that Kodiak invested in, Border to Border # 1 LP, paid overriding royalty interest payments to Krainz in an amount consistent with his ownership of 10% of Kodiak. In March 2005, Krainz began receiving directly from Kodiak a payment equal to ten percent of the overriding royalty interest payment Kodiak received based on its ownership interest in Neches Development, LLP. In November 2005, Telfer declined to increase Krainz’s cash compensation in part because, as he explained in a letter to Krainz, “your 10% ownership of Kodiak Resources, Inc. has become more valuable.”

Krainz never received any Kodiak stock certificates. In January 2004, Krainz asked Telfer to “formalize” the transfer of 10% of Kodiak’s stock, but Telfer requested that he sign a “buy-sell agreement,” which Krainz declined to do. In late 2006, Krainz asked that Kodiak issue him stock certificates. In April 2007, Kodiak’s attorney wrote a letter that acknowledged Krainz’s part ownership of Kodiak as well as his ownership interest in other companies owned by Kodiak “through his ownership in Kodiak.” The attorney distinguished between ownership of part of the company and stock ownership and also offered a “retroactive gift of non-voting stock.” In June 2007, Telfer offered on behalf of Kodiak to “retroactively gift” Krainz with shares as “consideration of friendship and not as compensation.”

Krainz sued in August 2007, alleging breach of an agreement to convey the stock. He later amended his petition to request a declaration of his rights as a minority shareholder and sought recovery for minority shareholder oppression, breach of fiduciary duty, malicious suppression of dividends, and related torts.

Kodiak moved for summary judgment against the breach-of-contract claim, urging that the claim accrued in 1999 when Krainz began work for Kodiak and was time-barred in 2007. Despite Krainz’s amendment of his petition to eliminate the allegation that the stock transfer was due upon his employment, the trial court granted the motion. Kodiak then specially excepted to any references to the breach-of-contract claim remaining in Krainz’s petition. Kodiak also filed a plea to the jurisdiction, claiming that Krainz lacked the shareholder status requisite to raising derivative shareholder suits. Finally, Kodiak sought summary judgment on its claim for attorney’s fees.

In addition to the partial summary judgment against Krainz’s breach-of-contract claims based on limitations, the trial court also granted special exceptions requiring deletion from Krainz’s petition of all assertions that he should have been a Kodiak shareholder by virtue of an oral agreement or that he is a shareholder through “equitable ownership.” Kodiak contends that the special exceptions also served to reject Krainz’s theories based on being an equitable shareholder. Kodiak also filed a mo[328]*328tion to enforce the special-exceptions ruling by dismissing Krainz’s remaining claims. The trial court denied that motion, but later granted Kodiak’s plea to the jurisdiction, holding that Krainz lacked standing to assert shareholder claims. The trial court denied both parties’ motions for partial summary judgment on the issue of Kodiak’s request for costs and attorney’s fees, but then signed a judgment that denied the claim for attorney’s fees entirely and declared the judgment final.

DISCUSSION

Both parties appealed the judgment and particular underlying interlocutory orders. Krainz challenges the rulings that rejected the merits of his contract claim and jurisdiction over his derivative tort claims. Krainz contends that the trial court should not have granted special exceptions to his pleadings, and Kodiak contends that the court should have enforced those exceptions. Kodiak also contends that the trial court should have awarded it attorney’s fees.

Breach-of-contract claim

Krainz contends that the trial court erred by granting Kodiak’s motion for a take-nothing summary judgment on his breach-of-contract claim. Krainz pleaded that Kodiak, through Telfer, promised to convey ten percent of its stock as part of his compensation as controller but refused to sign over the stock certificates memorializing the transfer. Krainz also alleged that Kodiak had acknowledged Krainz’s ten-percent ownership despite not transferring the certificates.

Kodiak moved for summary judgment expressly on one ground: that Krainz’s suit for breach of contract was barred because Kodiak’s statute of limitations defense is established as a matter of law. While denying that any stock-transfer agreement existed, Kodiak argued that Krainz’s petition was time-barred on its own terms. Krainz initially pleaded that Kodiak promised and failed to convey the stock upon his employment on April 22, 1999, but he did not file suit to enforce that promise until August 27, 2007 — well more than four years later. Although Krainz filed amended petitions that deleted the “upon employment” date for transfer, the trial court granted the motion.

Summary judgment is proper if the movant establishes that there is no genuine issue of material fact and that it is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. See Tex.R. Civ. P. 166a(c); Southwestern Elec. Power Co. v. Grant, 73 S.W.3d 211, 215 (Tex.2002).

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Bluebook (online)
436 S.W.3d 325, 2013 WL 4819983, 2013 Tex. App. LEXIS 11254, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/krainz-v-kodiak-resources-inc-texapp-2013.