Madison Development Group LLC, Quattro Development, LLC, and Michael Liyeos v. Mattress Firm, Inc.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 6, 2020
Docket01-18-00548-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Madison Development Group LLC, Quattro Development, LLC, and Michael Liyeos v. Mattress Firm, Inc. (Madison Development Group LLC, Quattro Development, LLC, and Michael Liyeos v. Mattress Firm, 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
Madison Development Group LLC, Quattro Development, LLC, and Michael Liyeos v. Mattress Firm, Inc., (Tex. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

Opinion issued August 6, 2020

In The

Court of Appeals For The

First District of Texas ———————————— NO. 01-18-00548-CV ——————————— MADISON DEVELOPMENT GROUP LLC, QUATTRO DEVELOPMENT, LLC, AND MICHAEL LIYEOS, Appellants V. MATTRESS FIRM, INC., Appellee

On Appeal from the 151st District Court Harris County, Texas Trial Court Case No. 2017-73196

OPINION

In this case, appellee, Mattress Firm, Inc., sued multiple defendants, including

appellants Madison Development Group LLC (Madison), Quattro Development,

LLC (Quattro), and Michael Liyeos, arising out of an alleged multi-year fraudulent scheme involving bribes and kickbacks paid to Mattress Firm insiders by real estate

brokers and property development companies in an effort to charge Mattress Firm

artificially inflated rental rates on leases throughout the country. Mattress Firm

brought claims for fraud, civil conspiracy, breach of fiduciary duty, aiding and

abetting breach of fiduciary duty, and negligence. It also alleged that the defendants

had been unjustly enriched, and it sought the imposition of a constructive trust. Most

of the defendants generally appeared in the underlying lawsuit. Madison, Quattro,

and Liyeos, however, are all nonresidents of Texas and they filed special

appearances.

After a hearing, the trial court denied all three appellants’ special appearances.

On appeal, each of the appellants contends that the trial court erred in denying their

respective special appearances because they lack minimum contacts with Texas such

that maintenance of the suit against them in Texas fails to comport with due process.

Madison also argues that exercising personal jurisdiction over it would offend

traditional notions of fair play and substantial justice.

We affirm.

Background

Mattress Firm is a Delaware corporation with its principal place of business

in Houston, Texas, and it sells mattresses and other bedding materials in retail stores

nationwide. Generally, Mattress Firm does not own the real property on which it has

2 retail stores. Instead, “independent real estate developers” own and develop the

property, and Mattress Firm enters into a lease with the developer, or a “special

purpose entity” owned by the developer, to operate a retail store on the property.

Mattress Firm has a Real Estate Committee (the Committee) that regularly meets in

Houston and determines which leases to approve.

In 2009, Mattress Firm embarked on a period of rapid expansion throughout

the United States, and it made several internal hires to facilitate this expansion. It

hired Bruce Levy as Vice President of Real Estate and Construction “to lead the

national leasing efforts,” and it hired Ryan Vinson as Director of New Market

Development. Levy later became Executive Vice President of Real Estate, and

Vinson later became Senior Vice President of Real Estate. On Levy’s

recommendation, Mattress Firm hired Alexander Deitch and the real estate

brokerage firm that employed him, Colliers International—Atlanta, LLC (Colliers

Atlanta), to serve as Mattress Firm’s “Master Broker,” primarily responsible for

“identifying, evaluating, and brokering new site locations and advising and

negotiating new leases and lease renewals on behalf of Mattress Firm.” Levy,

Vinson, Deitch, and Colliers Atlanta were responsible for evaluating potential

locations for new retail stores and for recommending to senior management at

Mattress Firm, including the Committee, which retail stores to open and where, lease

terms for these stores, construction budgets, which leases to renew, and which stores

3 to close. Levy, Vinson, Deitch, and Colliers Atlanta are all defendants in the

underlying lawsuit but are not parties to this interlocutory appeal.

According to Mattress Firm, Levy, Vinson, Deitch, and Colliers Atlanta

joined with real estate development companies and their principals—including

appellants Madison Development, Quattro Development, and Michael Liyeos, one

of Quattro’s principals—to engage “in a nationwide bribery, kickback, and fraud

scheme to financially enrich themselves at Mattress Firm’s expense.” To secure their

position as “Master Broker,” Deitch and Colliers Atlanta paid bribes and kickbacks

to Levy and Vinson. Levy and Vinson also used “preferred developers”—real estate

development companies that were also willing to pay bribes and kickbacks, often

disguised as “brokerage fees” or “development fees,” to Levy, Vinson, and Deitch—

to develop properties nationwide, and these developers “were given the largest

number of Mattress Firm leases with very favorable lease terms, including above-

market rents and longer lease terms.” The developer-friendly leases increased the

value of the properties, allowing the developers (or entities controlled by the

developers) to sell their properties at a substantial profit several months after

entering into a lease with Mattress Firm.

As part of the alleged fraudulent scheme, Levy, Vinson, Deitch, and the

development companies worked together to identify properties for new retail stores,

negotiate long lease terms, and set inflated rental rates for new store locations that

4 were beneficial to the development companies but detrimental to Mattress Firm.

Levy, who “controlled the real estate transactions for the company,” ensured that the

Committee would approve the leases at the agreed-upon terms through

misrepresentations and omissions about the nature of the transactions, including

misrepresenting “[t]he need to pay at the high end of the market, or above, to secure

a lease location,” “the fact that there were no secret side deals to secure the lease

location,” “that there were no conflicts of interests that would require the transaction

to be subject to closer scrutiny,” and “that the lease rates were reasonable and the

best deal possible under the circumstances.”

In October 2017, Mattress Firm filed suit against seventeen defendants,

including the three appellants here—Madison, Quattro, and Liyeos.1 Madison is a

Washington limited liability company with its principal place of business in

Washington. Quattro is an Illinois limited liability company with its principal place

of business in Illinois, and Liyeos is a member of Quattro and an Illinois resident.

1 Mattress Firm also sued Levy, Vinson, Deitch, Colliers Atlanta, Preferred Realty, LLC, Chase Ventures LLC, ABR Investment, LLC, Preferred Developers, LLC, Terra Consulting II, LLC, Win-Development, L.L.C., Owen C. Ewing, and Jesse McInerney. All of these defendants generally appeared and are not parties to this interlocutory appeal. Mattress Firm also sued Oldacre McDonald, LLC and Mark McDonald. These two defendants specially appeared and, after the trial court denied their special appearances, were originally parties to this interlocutory appeal. Oldacre McDonald, LLC and Mark McDonald reached a settlement agreement with Mattress Firm, and a panel of this Court dismissed these two defendants from this appeal on January 24, 2019. 5 Mattress Firm asserted a cause of action for common-law fraud against “all

defendants” named in its petition. Mattress Firm alleged that Levy, Vinson, Deitch,

and Colliers Atlanta knowingly made material misrepresentations and omissions to

Mattress Firm, including failing to disclose kickbacks, using “a network of single

purpose LLCs, partnerships, or other entities intended to conceal the unlawful

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Madison Development Group LLC, Quattro Development, LLC, and Michael Liyeos v. Mattress Firm, Inc., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/madison-development-group-llc-quattro-development-llc-and-michael-liyeos-texapp-2020.