L Series, L.L.C. CKDH, L.L.C. VUE, L.L.C. And CKDH Investments, L.L.C. v. Conrad Holt

571 S.W.3d 864
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 28, 2019
Docket02-17-00415-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 571 S.W.3d 864 (L Series, L.L.C. CKDH, L.L.C. VUE, L.L.C. And CKDH Investments, L.L.C. v. Conrad Holt) 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
L Series, L.L.C. CKDH, L.L.C. VUE, L.L.C. And CKDH Investments, L.L.C. v. Conrad Holt, 571 S.W.3d 864 (Tex. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

In the Court of Appeals Second Appellate District of Texas at Fort Worth ___________________________ No. 02-17-00415-CV ___________________________

L SERIES, L.L.C.; CKDH, L.L.C.; VUE, L.L.C.; AND CKDH INVESTMENTS, L.L.C., Appellants

V.

CONRAD HOLT, Appellee

On Appeal from the 348th District Court Tarrant County, Texas Trial Court No. 348-289417-16

Before Kerr and Birdwell, JJ. 1 Opinion by Justice Birdwell

Justice Sue Walker was a member of the original panel but has since retired. 1

Therefore, the two remaining justices decided the case. See Tex. R. App. P. 41.1(b). OPINION

When an entity’s members collectively agree to provide a statutorily authorized

and enforceable contractual right to the individual members in the entity’s documents,

and effective enforcement of that remedy curtails the entity’s normal rights to appeal

and supersedeas, whose interests should yield: the individual member’s or the entity’s?

To answer that question, we examine and carefully balance the bedrock––and in this

case competing––principles of freedom of contract and Texas procedural safeguards

in a case of first impression for this court. Trial court plaintiffs L Series, L.L.C.,

CKDH, L.L.C., VUE, L.L.C., and CKDH Investments, L.L.C. (the Companies)

appeal, and alternatively seek mandamus relief, from the trial court’s order requiring

them to advance to defendant Conrad Holt, a member of all of the Companies, his

fees and expenses pending trial of their suit against him. Because the trial court’s

order is not one for which the legislature has authorized an interlocutory appeal, and

because we conclude that mandamus relief is not warranted, we dismiss the appeal

and deny the alternative request for mandamus relief.

I. The Companies Sue Holt, Who Obtains an Order Requiring the Companies to Advance His Fees and Expenses Pending Trial

The underlying suit arose primarily from Holt’s employment as the general

manager of a group of Metroplex-area car dealerships––Arlington Saturn, Ltd., Fort

Worth Saturn, Ltd., and Hurst Saturn, Ltd. (the Dealerships). Each of the Companies

is a general partner of one of those Dealerships: L Series is Hurst Saturn’s general

2 partner; CKDH is the general partner and one-percent owner of Fort Worth Saturn;

and VUE is the general partner and one-percent owner of Arlington Saturn. CKDH

Investments owns and leases the real estate occupied by the Dealerships. Holt has

been a member of L Series, CKDH, and VUE since their formation in 2005 and a

member of CKDH Investments since 2007. Holt was also a manager of CKDH

Investments 2 and had served as the president of all of the Companies. As general

manager of the Dealerships, Holt supervised salesperson Shawn Andrus.

In December 2016, the Companies and Dealerships sued Holt and Andrus,3

claiming that from around 2014–2016, both of them had engaged in numerous types

of fraudulent activity and “financial abuse” toward the Companies and Dealerships:

fraudulently recording sales to receive bonuses from car manufacturers, fraudulently

booking sales, making unlicensed insurance sales, and engaging in various kinds of

financing fraud, to name a few. The Companies and Dealerships identified their

causes of action against Holt as breach of the general manager’s contract, breach of

fiduciary duty, fraud, unjust enrichment, money had and received, aiding and abetting,

assisting and participating, and civil conspiracy. Before suing, the Companies and

Dealerships terminated Holt’s and Andrus’s employment and ordered Holt to stay

away from the Dealerships’ premises.

CKDH Investment’s Regulations provided that managers, rather than the 2

members, would manage the entity. 3 The Companies and Dealerships eventually nonsuited Andrus.

3 Holt answered and counterclaimed for breach of contract against all of the

plaintiffs. After the Companies and Dealerships filed an amended petition adding

factual allegations and a claim that Holt had breached his fiduciary duty to the

Companies “due to his position as an officer/manager” of the Companies, Holt filed

an amended counterclaim as well as third-party defendant claims not relevant here. In

his amended counterclaim, Holt alleged that each of the Companies’ Regulations

entitle him to advancement of fees and expenses and indemnity for all of the claims

against him. He alleged that the Companies had breached the Regulations by failing to

provide him advancement and indemnity and refusing to make distributions to him.

He also sought statutory indemnity and distributions. See Tex. Bus. Orgs. Code Ann.

§§ 8.051(a), 101.203, 153.208(b). He further pleaded for money had and received and

an accounting.

Almost a month after filing his amended counterclaim, Holt moved for partial

summary judgment seeking a court order requiring the Companies to reimburse him

for all fees and expenses he had already incurred in the suit and to pay him for future

fees and expenses in the suit, in advance, on a monthly basis, in accordance with the

Companies’ Regulations. Holt alleged that the Companies and Dealerships had sued

him because of his “position as president, manager, general manager, and/or officer,”

thus triggering the Companies’ advancement obligations under the Regulations.

According to Holt, that those advancement obligations were “neither dependent on

the merits nor negated by [the Companies’] allegations of wrongdoing.”

4 After a nonevidentiary hearing, the trial court granted Holt’s motion and

ordered the Companies to pay Holt’s past “reasonable attorney fees and expenses”

through November 1, 2017, and his “future reasonable attorney fees and expenses”

on a monthly basis thereafter upon the submission of “summary invoices.” The

Companies filed a notice of interlocutory appeal, citing civil practice and remedies

code section 51.014(a)(4), which permits an interlocutory appeal of an order granting

or denying a temporary injunction. Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code Ann. § 51.014(a)(4).

After we questioned our jurisdiction over the appeal, the parties briefed the

jurisdictional issue, which we carried with the appeal. If we determine that we do not

have jurisdiction over the appeal, the Companies alternatively seek a writ of

mandamus ordering the trial court to vacate its advancement order.

II. No Interlocutory Appeal Lies From the Advancement Order

We have jurisdiction only over final judgments that dispose of all parties and

issues in a case unless a statute authorizes review of a particular type of interlocutory

order. See Lehmann v. Har-Con Corp., 39 S.W.3d 191, 195 (Tex. 2001); Wyrick v. Jayson,

No. 02-18-00104-CV, 2018 WL 3385870, at *3 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth July 12,

2018, no pet.) (mem. op.). Civil practice and remedies code section 51.014 lists certain

types of interlocutory orders from which a party may immediately appeal; among

these is a trial court’s order granting or refusing a temporary injunction. Tex. Civ.

Prac. & Rem. Code Ann. § 51.014(a)(4). The Companies contend that the trial court’s

order is a temporary injunction order––albeit an invalid one––appealable under

5 section 51.014(a)(4) because it (1) is immediately effective during the pendency of the

underlying litigation and (2) commands the Companies to take certain actions.

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571 S.W.3d 864, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/l-series-llc-ckdh-llc-vue-llc-and-ckdh-investments-llc-v-texapp-2019.