Lauro Chapa SR., Scorpion Exploration & Production, INC., Pintamor, LTD., Piedras Pintas Ranch, LTD., Scorpion Drilling, INC., Scorpion Operating, INC., Scorpion Well Service, INC., and Chapco, INC. v. Lauro Chapa JR.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 28, 2012
Docket04-12-00519-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Lauro Chapa SR., Scorpion Exploration & Production, INC., Pintamor, LTD., Piedras Pintas Ranch, LTD., Scorpion Drilling, INC., Scorpion Operating, INC., Scorpion Well Service, INC., and Chapco, INC. v. Lauro Chapa JR. (Lauro Chapa SR., Scorpion Exploration & Production, INC., Pintamor, LTD., Piedras Pintas Ranch, LTD., Scorpion Drilling, INC., Scorpion Operating, INC., Scorpion Well Service, INC., and Chapco, INC. v. Lauro Chapa JR.) 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
Lauro Chapa SR., Scorpion Exploration & Production, INC., Pintamor, LTD., Piedras Pintas Ranch, LTD., Scorpion Drilling, INC., Scorpion Operating, INC., Scorpion Well Service, INC., and Chapco, INC. v. Lauro Chapa JR., (Tex. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

Fourth Court of Appeals San Antonio, Texas MEMORANDUM OPINION No. 04-12-00519-CV

Lauro CHAPA, SR., Scorpion Exploration and Production, Inc., Pintamor, Ltd., Piedras Pintas Ranch, Ltd., Scorpion Drilling, Inc., Scorpion Operating, Inc., Scorpion Well Service, Inc., and Chapco, Inc., Appellants

v.

Lauro CHAPA, JR., Appellee

From the 229th Judicial District Court, Duval County, Texas Trial Court No. DC-11-111 The Honorable Ana Lisa Garza, Judge Presiding

Opinion by: Phylis J. Speedlin, Justice

Sitting: Catherine Stone, Chief Justice Phylis J. Speedlin, Justice Steven C. Hilbig, Justice

Delivered and Filed: December 28, 2012

VACATED IN PART; AFFIRMED IN PART

Appellants filed this interlocutory appeal seeking to vacate the portion of the trial court’s

August 8, 2012 order that they contend effectively appoints a receiver for Chapco, Inc. as part of

the underlying shareholder-derivative suit involving several related family businesses. We agree

that section 4 of the order appoints a receiver, and we vacate that portion of the court’s order

because there is no evidence in the record to support appointment of a receiver for Chapco, Inc. 04-12-00519-CV

BACKGROUND

Lauro Chapa, Jr., individually and as an officer and 50% shareholder of Chapco, Inc.

(“Chapco”) and 40% shareholder of Scorpion Exploration and Production, Inc. (“Scorpion

E&P”), filed suit against his father, Lauro Chapa, Sr. and several related business entities,

Scorpion E&P, Pintamor, Ltd., Piedras Pintas Ranch, Ltd, Scorpion Drilling, Inc., Scorpion

Operating, Inc., and Scorpion Well Services, Inc., and Chapco (collectively, the “Chapa, Sr.

Defendants”), alleging that Chapa, Sr. was engaged in a scheme to exclude Chapa, Jr. from

participation in and control over the entities and to deprive him of the value of his interests in the

entities. Specifically, Chapa, Jr. sought legal and equitable relief based on several tort theories,

including minority shareholder oppression, breach of fiduciary duties, theft and conversion,

constructive trust, conspiracy, and negligence. Chapa, Jr. sought appointment of a receiver for

Chapco and Scorpion E&P in order to preserve the businesses and their assets.

On November 9, 2011, the court held a hearing on Chapa, Jr.’s application for

appointment of a receiver. As a prelude to a full-blown evidentiary hearing, the court and

attorneys engaged in a lengthy discussion on the record about the alleged transfers of Chapco

assets, failure to pay Chapco’s bills, exclusion of Chapa, Jr. from participation in running

Chapco and sharing in its profits, and threats of violence between Chapa, Jr. and Chapa, Sr., and

both sides represented they would produce evidence to support their arguments. The court

expressed its reluctance to appoint a receiver for Chapco, and indicated its concern that a

receivership would destroy the family businesses. Instead of proceeding to hear evidence, the

court urged the parties to attempt to reach an agreement that would avoid the need for a

receivership. The parties did negotiate an agreement, and the court subsequently signed an

Agreed Temporary Order on January 12, 2012 which memorialized the parties’ agreement with

respect to discovery matters and the operation of the businesses, a monthly accounting to Chapa, -2- 04-12-00519-CV

Jr., and an appraisal of Chapco’s and Scorpion E&P’s businesses with a view toward a buy-out

by Chapa, Jr.; the agreed order also included a temporary injunction governing interactions

between the father and son and protecting the assets and on-going operations of the entities.

Chapa, Jr. subsequently filed a motion for reconsideration of appointment of a receiver,

or alternatively motion to enforce, citing Chapa, Sr.’s failure to comply with several portions of

the Agreed Temporary Order. After a July 11, 2012 hearing, at which the court heard arguments

but received no evidence, the trial court ruled that a special master should be appointed for

Chapco. 1 Chapa, Jr. submitted a proposed order for appointment of the special master. The

Chapa, Sr. Defendants filed a motion in opposition to Chapa, Jr.’s proposed order appointing the

special master for Chapco, asserting that it essentially granted a receivership without due process

in that no evidence was submitted to warrant the extraordinary relief of a receivership; some of

the Chapa, Sr. Defendants submitted their own proposed order.

On August 8, 2012, the trial court signed an “Order Appointing Special Master” in which

the court appointed the Honorable J. Manuel Banales, a Senior Judge, as “Special Master” for

Chapco. Section 4 of the order authorized the Special Master to take possession and control of

Chapco’s accounts receivable, revenues and oil, gas and mineral leases, and to pay all of

Chapco’s expenses, on behalf of the court. Another section of the order referred all matters

related to pre-trial discovery to the Special Master for findings and recommendations. Finally,

other sections of the court’s order instructed the parties to go to mediation, and ordered Scorpion

E&P to make monthly payments on an outstanding loan. The August 8, 2012 order

supplemented and modified the prior agreed order signed on January 12, 2012, which remained

1 The court continued the hearing with respect to the application for receivership for Scorpion E&P and Scorpion Drilling, Inc.

-3- 04-12-00519-CV

in effect except as modified. The Chapa, Sr. Defendants filed a notice of interlocutory appeal

seeking to vacate the portion of the August 8, 2012 order they contend creates a receivership. 2

ANALYSIS

On appeal, the Chapa, Sr. Defendants only challenge section 4 of the August 8, 2012

order, entitled “Control of Chapco, Inc.’s Receivables and Revenues and Payment of Chapco,

Inc.’s Reasonable Expenses.” They do not appeal the other portions of the order, including the

section authorizing the Special Master to oversee all pre-trial discovery disputes. The Chapa, Sr.

Defendants assert the trial court abused its discretion because: (1) it used a “special master” to

take pre-judgment control of Chapco and create a rehabilitative receivership, without considering

any evidence or the mandatory requirements for a receivership under Chapter 11 of the Texas

Business Organizations Code; and (2) none of the mandatory bonding requirements for a

receiver were satisfied. Chapa, Jr. responds that we lack jurisdiction to hear this appeal because

an interlocutory order appointing a special master is not appealable; he also asserts that the

Chapa, Sr. Defendants waived their objections to section 4 of the order and the bonding

requirements, consented to the order, and invited error by submitting their own proposed order to

the court.

Section 4: Special Master or Receiver?

Because appellee Chapa, Jr. has contested our jurisdiction over this appeal, we must

initially determine whether we have appellate jurisdiction to review the challenged portion of the

order. See CMH Homes v. Perez, 340 S.W.3d 444, 447 (Tex. 2011). Absent a statute

authorizing an interlocutory appeal, appellate courts generally only have jurisdiction over final

judgments. Id.; Lehmann v. Har-Con Corp., 39 S.W.3d 191, 195 (Tex. 2001). Interlocutory

2 Maria D. Garcia and James D.

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Lauro Chapa SR., Scorpion Exploration & Production, INC., Pintamor, LTD., Piedras Pintas Ranch, LTD., Scorpion Drilling, INC., Scorpion Operating, INC., Scorpion Well Service, INC., and Chapco, INC. v. Lauro Chapa JR., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lauro-chapa-sr-scorpion-exploration-production-inc-pintamor-ltd-texapp-2012.