Lance Duncan and Mark IV Energy Holdings, LLC, F/K/A Mark III Energy Holdings, LLC v. Gerald B. Hindy Assemblies of God Financial Service Group, D/B/A AG Financial Solutions And Steward Energy Fund, LLC

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 12, 2019
Docket11-17-00283-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Lance Duncan and Mark IV Energy Holdings, LLC, F/K/A Mark III Energy Holdings, LLC v. Gerald B. Hindy Assemblies of God Financial Service Group, D/B/A AG Financial Solutions And Steward Energy Fund, LLC (Lance Duncan and Mark IV Energy Holdings, LLC, F/K/A Mark III Energy Holdings, LLC v. Gerald B. Hindy Assemblies of God Financial Service Group, D/B/A AG Financial Solutions And Steward Energy Fund, LLC) 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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Lance Duncan and Mark IV Energy Holdings, LLC, F/K/A Mark III Energy Holdings, LLC v. Gerald B. Hindy Assemblies of God Financial Service Group, D/B/A AG Financial Solutions And Steward Energy Fund, LLC, (Tex. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

Opinion filed December 12, 2019

In The

Eleventh Court of Appeals __________

No. 11-17-00283-CV __________

LANCE DUNCAN AND MARK IV ENERGY HOLDINGS, LLC, F/K/A MARK III ENERGY HOLDINGS, LLC, Appellants V. GERALD B. HINDY; ASSEMBLIES OF GOD FINANCIAL SERVICES GROUP, D/B/A AG FINANCIAL SOLUTIONS; AND STEWARD ENERGY FUND, LLC, Appellees

On Appeal from the 70th District Court Ector County, Texas Trial Court Cause No. A-16-05-0551-CV

OPINION This appeal arises from a business dispute concerning a large financial investment in oil and gas properties. It involves multiple written agreements executed by the parties as well as litigation between the parties in multiple counties over a period of time. The trial court granted summary judgment in favor of Appellees—Gerald B. Hindy; Assemblies of God Financial Services Group, d/b/a AG Financial Solutions;1 and Steward Energy Fund, LLC—on all of Appellants’

1 We will refer to Assemblies of God Financial Services Group as “AG Financial Solutions” in this opinion. claims. Appellants, Lance Duncan and Mark IV Energy Holdings, LLC, f/k/a Mark III Energy Holdings, LLC, filed the underlying suit asserting numerous causes of action. 2 Appellants contend that the trial court erred by granting summary judgment in favor of Appellees on Appellants’ claims for tortious interference with a contract, wrongful foreclosure, and declaratory relief. We affirm. Background Facts In 2008, Hindy, the president and CEO of AG Financial Solutions, met with Duncan to discuss investing in the oil and gas industry. Duncan identified certain oil and gas properties (the Batson and Wortham leases) for AG Financial Solutions to consider purchasing. AG Financial Solutions formed Steward Energy to purchase the Batson and Wortham leases. Hindy was also the president of Steward Energy. Steward Energy purchased the Batson leases from Shamrock Energy Corporation for $6,000,000 and the Wortham leases from Mark III for $4,500,000. After the sales, Duncan operated the leases through his entity, BHB Operating, Inc., and received a monthly operating fee. Appellees soon discovered that the Wortham leases were producing significantly less oil and gas than what Duncan had represented prior to the sale and that, due to high operating expenses, the Wortham leases were not profitable. In 2009, Mark III agreed to pay Steward Energy $1,080,000 to resolve this dispute. In 2010, AG Financial Solutions and Steward Energy sued Duncan in Freestone County, asserting additional claims related to the Batson and Wortham transactions, including breach of fiduciary duty, fraud based on intentional misrepresentations and failure to disclose, and negligent misrepresentation. In August 2010, Steward Energy, Mark III, BHB Operating, Duncan, and Duncan’s wife, Holly Duncan, entered into a “Settlement Agreement and Release” of the

2 We note that there were additional plaintiffs and defendants in the case below but that those additional parties are not parties to this appeal. 2 Freestone County claims. The Settlement Agreement and Release provided (1) that Steward Energy would convey the Batson and Wortham leases to Mark III, (2) that Appellants and Holly Duncan would execute a promissory note payable to Steward Energy in the principal amount of $9,500,000, (3) that payment on the promissory note would be secured by a deed of trust on the Batson and Wortham leases and on other leases known as the Garner and Sanford Leases, (4) that Mark III would drill five new oil wells on the Batson property, and (5) that Appellants and Holly Duncan would sign a Confession of Judgment for $6,000,000 plus postjudgment interest at an annual rate of five percent. The Confession of Judgment provided that the $6,000,000 principal amount was “subject to a dollar-for-dollar credit and/or offset based upon any and all payments made” by Appellants according to the terms of the promissory note. The Freestone County district court signed the Confession of Judgment on September 14, 2010. On February 28, 2013, AG Financial Solutions and Steward Energy executed a settlement agreement with Appellants, BHB Operating, and Holly Duncan to resolve a dispute arising from a lawsuit in Lubbock County (the February 28 Settlement Agreement). Appellants acknowledged in the February 28 Settlement Agreement that the Confession of Judgment remained unpaid in the amount of $6,000,000 and that interest had accrued on that amount at an annual rate of five percent. The parties to the February 28 Settlement Agreement agreed (1) that the $6,000,000 judgment balance would be reduced only as the unpaid balance on all outstanding sums owed to Steward Energy was reduced below $6,000,000 and (2) that, as Appellants, BHB Operating, or Holly Duncan reduced the unpaid balance owed to Steward Energy below $6,000,000, Steward Energy would provide a corresponding dollar-for-dollar reduction on the Confession of Judgment. On August 2, 2013, Steward Energy, as lender, and Appellants, BHB Operating, and Holly Duncan, as borrowers, signed a Loan Agreement (the 3 Consolidated Loan Agreement), which acknowledged that the promissory note relating to the Confession of Judgment had an outstanding balance of $7,295,044.84, that the Duncans owed Steward Energy $401,521.33 under a separate promissory note, and that both notes were in default. The Consolidated Loan Agreement (1) consolidated the remaining debt of Appellants, BHB Operating, and Holly Duncan into a single loan and deed of trust, (2) waived the existing defaults, and (3) lowered the monthly payments. Appellants, BHB Operating, and Holly Duncan signed a “Deed of Trust, Assignment of Leases, Rents, Revenues, Security Agreement and Fixture Filing” (the Deed of Trust) that secured the Consolidated Loan Agreement. Appellees recorded the Deed of Trust in Ector County on August 28, 2013. In September 2014, Mark III and other companies entered into a purchase and sale agreement (PSA) to sell their collective 70% working interest in certain Ector County oil and gas leases to Ryder Operating, LLC for approximately $7,700,000. The closing date for the transaction was November 28, 2014. On November 19, 2014, a company called Ride the Wave, LLC filed suit against Appellants and BHB Operating, alleging that Duncan had refused to assign a working interest in the Ector County lease that Ride the Wave had purchased two years before. On November 25, 2014, Ryder Operating terminated the PSA, asserting that (1) Mark III breached the PSA by misrepresenting that there were no threatened suits against the Ector County property at the time the agreement was entered and (2) Mark III, a forfeited entity since July 2010, misrepresented in the PSA that it was validly existing and in good standing. Appellants remained in default of the Consolidated Loan Agreement in multiple respects. As a result, Steward Energy foreclosed on Appellants’ assets, including Duncan’s lake house in December 2014, the interest in the Batson and Wortham leases in February 2015, and the interest in the Ector County leases in March 2015. 4 On May 31, 2016, Appellants filed the underlying suit against Appellees. Appellants brought multiple claims against Appellees, including tortious interference with an existing contract, civil conspiracy to tortiously interfere with an existing contract, duress, civil conspiracy to breach a fiduciary duty (aiding and abetting), common law fraud, promissory estoppel, intentional infliction of emotional distress, alter ego liability, fraudulent lien, and wrongful foreclosure. Appellants also sought a declaratory judgment construing the parties’ rights under the February 28 Settlement Agreement and the Consolidated Loan Agreement with respect to the provisions in those agreements that purported to modify the Confession of Judgment. Appellees answered and asserted a number of affirmative defenses, including release and res judicata.

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Lance Duncan and Mark IV Energy Holdings, LLC, F/K/A Mark III Energy Holdings, LLC v. Gerald B. Hindy Assemblies of God Financial Service Group, D/B/A AG Financial Solutions And Steward Energy Fund, LLC, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lance-duncan-and-mark-iv-energy-holdings-llc-fka-mark-iii-energy-texapp-2019.