Landmark Land Company, Inc. and William Vaughn III A/K/A William W. Vaughan Iii v. R. Sebastian Bennett, ph.D.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedSeptember 20, 2012
Docket13-12-00117-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Landmark Land Company, Inc. and William Vaughn III A/K/A William W. Vaughan Iii v. R. Sebastian Bennett, ph.D. (Landmark Land Company, Inc. and William Vaughn III A/K/A William W. Vaughan Iii v. R. Sebastian Bennett, ph.D.) 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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Landmark Land Company, Inc. and William Vaughn III A/K/A William W. Vaughan Iii v. R. Sebastian Bennett, ph.D., (Tex. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

NUMBER 13-12-00117-CV

COURT OF APPEALS

THIRTEENTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS

CORPUS CHRISTI – EDINBURG

LANDMARK LAND COMPANY, INC. AND Appellants, WILLIAM VAUGHN A/K/A WILLIAM W. VAUGHAN III,

v.

R. SEBASTIAN BENNETT, PH.D., Appellee.

On appeal from the 404th District Court of Cameron County, Texas.

MEMORANDUM OPINION Before Chief Justice Valdez and Justices Garza and Vela Memorandum Opinion by Justice Garza Appellants, Landmark Land Company, Inc. (“Landmark”) and William Vaughn III

(“Vaughn”) a/k/a William W. Vaughan III, bring this accelerated, interlocutory appeal of

the trial court’s order denying their special appearances. See TEX. CIV. PRAC. & REM

CODE ANN. § 51.014(a)(7) (West Supp. 2011). By three issues, appellants contend that: (1) Vaughn is not subject to the specific jurisdiction of the trial court; (2) the fiduciary

shield doctrine protects Vaughn from the exercise of general jurisdiction over him; and

(3) there is no evidence establishing personal jurisdiction over Landmark under the alter

ego theory. We affirm.

I. BACKGROUND

In August 2011, appellee, R. Sebastian Bennett, Ph.D., sued South Padre Island

Development, L.P. (“SPID, LP”), South Padre Island Development, L.L.C. (“SPID,

LLC”), Landmark, South Padre Island Golf Villas Association (“the Association”), and

Vaughn.1 Bennett alleged that he suffered damages when he was induced to purchase

a home at South Padre Island Golf Course, a development in Laguna Vista, Texas, on

the misrepresentation that the home was covered by “all risk” insurance, when it was

not. Bennett claimed that a misrepresentation was specifically made to him by SPID,

LP through SPID, LLC that the “all risk” insurance coverage covered replacement costs

from any damage to the home, including windstorm and flood damage. The alleged

misrepresentation occurred in Texas. Bennett further alleged that Landmark controls

the operations of SPID, LP and SPID, LLP and makes all contractual decisions for those

entities, including the selection of insurance. Bennett claimed that in February 2010, he

noticed problems with water pooling toward his home after a rain storm. In June 2010,

after a heavy rain storm, Bennett noticed that portions of the drywall and flooring in the

home were saturated with water. In the course of reporting the damage to his insurance

agent, Bennett learned that his insurance claims would not be paid because his

insurance coverage did not cover all risks and did not cover many of the losses he had

suffered. 1 Out of these defendants, only Vaughn and Landmark are parties to this interlocutory appeal.

2 Vaughn filed a special appearance in which he asserted that: (1) Bennett’s

petition alleges that he (Vaughn), as Landmark’s officer and legal counsel, was involved

in the decision not to procure the “all risk” insurance, and therefore, Bennett appears to

be contending that Vaughn is subject to specific jurisdiction; (2) Bennett has not alleged

the type of contacts that would support general jurisdiction over Vaughn; and (3)

Bennett has made no allegations that would support jurisdiction over Vaughn under an

alter ego theory. Vaughn supported his special appearance with his own affidavit, in

which he stated that he is not a resident of Texas, does not individually conduct

business in Texas, owns no property in Texas, has no telephone listing in Texas, and

has no agent in Texas with authority to conduct business on his behalf. He further

stated that he made no representation to Bennett either in his individual or

representative capacity pertaining to Bennett’s claims.

Landmark filed a special appearance in which it asserted that it conducts no

business in Texas, has not entered into a contract with a Texas resident, owns no

property in Texas, has no telephone listing in Texas, and has no employees in Texas.

Landmark further asserted that Bennett failed to: (1) adduce proof that jurisdiction over

Landmark can be sustained on the basis of an alter ego theory, (2) allege that

Landmark is subject to specific jurisdiction, or (3) allege that Landmark is subject to

general jurisdiction. Landmark attached the affidavit of Vaughn, in which he additionally

asserted that the daily operations of Landmark and the other corporate defendants are

separate, that the corporations file separate income tax returns, maintain separate

books and accounts, and conduct separate shareholder and directors’ meetings.

On January 18, 2012, the trial court held a hearing on Vaughn and Landmark’s

3 special appearances. Appellants called one witness, Vaughn; Bennett called three

witnesses: Mark Kerney, Debbie Camacho, and Justin Awtrey. We summarize the

pertinent testimony adduced at the hearing below.

A. William Vaughn

Vaughn testified that he is employed by DPMG, Inc., a Delaware corporation with

its principal place of business in Maryland; DPMG, Inc. is a subsidiary of Landmark.

Landmark is a Delaware corporation with its principal place of business in Maryland.

Landmark is a holding company that has no employees and has been engaged in the

development of property since the early 1970s. Vaughn is an officer and director of

Landmark. SPID, LLC is also a subsidiary of Landmark. According to Vaughn, he has

never been a resident of Texas and has never owned property or conducted business in

Texas. Vaughn testified that he had never made any representations regarding

Bennett’s home and he has never spoken to Bennett.

On cross-examination, Vaughn stated that he is the president, general counsel,

and a member of the board of directors of Landmark. Vaughn testified that SPID, LP

was converted into SPID, LLC in the “mid-2000s.”2 Pursuant to questions from the trial

court, Bennett’s counsel stated that Bennett purchased his condominium from SPID,

LLC, which is a subsidiary of Landmark, but Bennett alleges that the subsidiaries are

controlled and directed by Landmark. Vaughn testified that Mark Kerney, the director of

the SPID golf course, was sent to the site by Landmark. According to Vaughn,

Landmark owns no property and has no employees; its subsidiaries build golf courses.

In the case of the Laguna Vista project, SPID, LP—later changed to SPID, LLC—owned

2 Vaughn testified that the LP was converted into an LLC in 2006 to take advantage of the change in the Texas franchise tax administration.

4 and operated the property.

Bennett’s counsel questioned Vaughn about Plaintiff’s Exhibit 8, a three-page

print-out depicting Landmark’s website. The website identifies Landmark as “Golf,

Resort & Community Developers.” It refers to the experience of “Landmark’s

management team” and states that “Landmark’s greatest asset has always been its

employees,” specifically noting that it “has employed each of the 15 top corporate

officers for over 20 years.” The website identifies Justin Awtrey as project director of

the South Padre Island Golf Club. Vaughn confirmed that Awtrey is in charge of the

operations at the South Padre Island Golf Club in Laguna Vista and serves on the

Association’s board as the representative of the developer, SPID, LLC.

Vaughn said that over the years, he had two or three discussions with Dave Hall,

then an insurance agent with Coleman, Hall & Heinze insurance agency in Port Isabel.

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