Mandell v. Mandell

310 S.W.3d 531, 2010 WL 1006406
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 15, 2010
Docket2-08-290-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by49 cases

This text of 310 S.W.3d 531 (Mandell v. Mandell) 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
Mandell v. Mandell, 310 S.W.3d 531, 2010 WL 1006406 (Tex. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

OPINION

SUE WALKER, Justice.

I. Introduction

Appellant Susan Cohen Mandell challenges the property division made by the trial court in her divorce from Appellee Harold Lance Mandell. The primary issue that we address is whether the trial court erred by excluding all of Susan’s evidence valuing Lance’s interest in Oncology-Hematology Consultants, P.A. (“the Association”). For the reasons set forth below, we will affirm the trial court’s judgment.

II. Background 1

Susan and Lance, both of whom are physicians, married in 1989. During the marriage, Lance entered into an Employment Agreement with the Association. Lance also entered into a Stock Purchase Agreement with the Association. The Stock Purchase Agreement states that the Association would sell Lance 22,000 shares of common stock for $0.50 per share for a total purchase price of $11,000. Lance tendered a check to the Association for $11,000.

Pursuant to certain terms of the Stock Purchase Agreement, the Association also required Lance and Susan to sign a Shareholders Agreement. The Shareholders Agreement specifically addressed stock transfers, including voluntary transfers such as in the event of retirement or withdrawal from the Association and involun *534 tary transfers such as in the event of divorce. In each of these situations, the Association and/or the other shareholders possesses the right to purchase the shares at $0.50 per share. In the event the “marital relationship of a Shareholder is terminated by divorce and such divorced Shareholder does not succeed to his former spouse’s community interest, if any, in his Shares,” the Shareholders Agreement specifically provides that within 180 days, the former shareholder shall purchase “all but not less than all of’ his stock back from his former spouse and sets the purchase price of the stock at $0.50 per share. In the event the former shareholder fails to exercise this right, the right of repurchase for the same price per share is shifted to the Association. According to Lance, the restrictions imposed by the Shareholder Agreement on the transfer of stock and the contractual repurchase rights vested in a former shareholder or in the Association are required by Texas laws providing that only a professional individual may be an owner of the professional association. 2 Neither Lance nor Susan signed the Shareholders Agreement.

Approximately three years after Lance had executed the Stock Purchase Agreement, Susan filed for divorce. During discovery, Susan served a subpoena duces tecum on Dr. Jordan, a shareholder of the Association, seeking payroll records, a list of assets, an inventory, corporate books, and additional documents.

Approximately three months later, the Association refunded the $11,000 that Lance had paid for the 22,000 shares of stock and thereafter wrote him a letter, stating that it had requested on numerous occasions during the three and a half years since he had signed the Stock Purchase Agreement that he provide it with a signed copy of the Shareholders Agreement. The Association’s letter stated that because it had never received a signed copy of the Shareholders Agreement from Lance and Susan, it had never issued Lance a stock certificate and was therefore electing to refund the $11,000 that Lance had previously paid. As a result of these transactions, Lance held no shares in the Association.

Susan thereafter joined the Association, among others, in the divorce suit as a third-party defendant, claiming that it and others had conspired with Lance to defraud her. The third-party defendants answered and filed a motion for summary judgment, which the trial court initially denied because it found that there were genuine issues of material fact.

The third-party defendants filed a motion for reconsideration of their summary judgment motion, urging the trial court to find the following as a matter of law: (1) Lance’s Stock Purchase Agreement with the Association was subject to its accompanying Shareholders Agreement, and (2) the Shareholders Agreement was valid and enforceable against Susan. The trial court reconsidered the third-party defendants’ motion for summary judgment and granted it, ruling that the Stock Purchase Agreement between Lance and the Association was subject to the terms of the Shareholders Agreement and that as a matter of law, the Shareholders Agreement between Lance and the Association was valid and enforceable as to Susan. Prior to trial, Susan settled her claims with the third-party defendants and entered into an agreement on the record that *535 the Association would issue the 22,000 shares of stock to Lance in exchange for an $11,000 check from the community estate. Lance complied by writing the check, and the Association issued the stock to him.

During the trial, Lance objected when Susan’s expert attempted to testify regarding the value of Lance’s stock in the Association. The trial court sustained Lance’s objection, stating that it had previously ruled by granting the third-parties’ motion for summary judgment that pursuant to the terms of the Stock Purchase Agreement and the Shareholders Agreement, the value of the 22,000 shares of stock in the Association was $11,000 and that the parties were bound by the agreements. Outside the jury’s presence, Susan made an offer of proof of her experts’ testimony concerning the valuation of Lance’s interest in the Association.

After a multi-day jury trial, the jury made the following determinations that are pertinent to the issues on appeal: (1) that the marriage between Susan and Lance had become insupportable because of discord or conflict; (2) that the value of the real property at 5017 River Bluff Drive was $244,440; (3) that the amount of attorney’s fees reasonably and necessarily incurred by Susan was $275,000; and (4) that the amount of attorney’s fees reasonably and necessarily incurred by Lance was $0. Lance thereafter filed a motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict, arguing that the uncontroverted testimony and exhibits that were admitted into evidence established that the reasonable and necessary attorney’s fees he had incurred totaled $200,000.

After reviewing the value of the community property assets, the trial court’s final decree of divorce divided the community property as follows:

_Susan_Lance
Residence located at 5017 River Bluff_$244,440,00_
50% Citizen’s Nat’l Bank Money Mkt Acct # \-1 3 $ 18,738.11 $ 18,738.11
50% Wells Fargo Bank Acct # [-1_$ 10,365.32 $ 10,365.32
50% Bank of America Savings Acct # ¡-1_$ 10,165.51 $ 10,165.51
50% Wachovia Investment Acct # T-1_$316,622.56 $316,622,56
50% Fidelity IRA # 1 — —■]_$146,467.23 $146,467,23
50% Fidelity Investments Acct # \-1_$ 60,522,09 $60,522,09
100% Franklin Templeton Mut. Fund Acct # \-1_$126,723.20_
2000 Lexus RX 300$ 14,625.00

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Bluebook (online)
310 S.W.3d 531, 2010 WL 1006406, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mandell-v-mandell-texapp-2010.