Maria Teresa Guerra v. Armengol Guerra III

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 24, 2011
Docket04-10-00271-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Maria Teresa Guerra v. Armengol Guerra III (Maria Teresa Guerra v. Armengol Guerra III) 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
Maria Teresa Guerra v. Armengol Guerra III, (Tex. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION No. 04-10-00271-CV

Maria Teresa GUERRA, Appellant

v.

Armengol GUERRA III, Appellee

From the County Court At Law No. 1, Webb County, Texas Trial Court No. 2007-PB7-000063-L1 Honorable Alvino (Ben) Morales, Judge Presiding

Opinion by: Steven C. Hilbig, Justice

Sitting: Karen Angelini, Justice Steven C. Hilbig, Justice Marialyn Barnard, Justice

Delivered and Filed: August 24, 2011

AFFIRMED IN PART AND REVERSED AND REMANDED IN PART

This appeal arises from Maria Teresa Guerra’s suit against her brother, Armengol Guerra

III (“Armengol”), for breach of fiduciary duty as the independent executor of their father’s

estate, and as an officer, director, and majority shareholder of Laredo Hardware Company. Maria

also sued Armengol for conversion, a declaratory judgment, and a partition of real property

owned jointly by Maria, Armengol and their sister Yolanda Jo Guerra. 1 The trial court granted

1 Armengol did not seek summary judgment on Maria’s partition claim, and the parties agree there must be a remand on that claim. 04-10-00271-CV

Armengol a no evidence and a traditional motion for summary judgment on Maria’s claims.

Maria appeals the summary judgments. We affirm in part and reverse and remand the partition of

real property claim.

BACKGROUND

Factual overview

Laredo Hardware Company is a family-owned business started by Armengol Guerra Jr.

(“Guerra”). Armengol began working at the company in 1971 after he graduated college. Guerra

acted as president of the company until 2002 when Armengol became president. Guerra passed

away in 2007, and Armengol was appointed independent executor of his father’s estate.

Armengol and his sisters, Maria and Yolanda Jo, are the beneficiaries under Guerra’s will.

Guerra owned thirty-seven percent of Laredo Hardware stock at the time of his death.

The other shareholders include Maria, Armengol, Yolanda Jo, Bertha Guerra (Armengol’s wife),

and Armengol’s two sons (Ricardo Xavier Guerra and Carlos Mariano Guerra). Laredo

Hardware’s board of directors includes Armengol, Yolanda Jo, Bertha, Ricardo, and Carlos.

Maria has never been an officer or director of Laredo Hardware, but has been employed at the

company on several different occasions.

On July 30, 2007, Maria was notified that Laredo Hardware elected not to exercise its

option to purchase Guerra’s shares in Laredo Hardware stock and, pursuant to a stock option

agreement, she could purchase the stock for net book value. The record reflects Maria did not

buy the stock, but offered to sell her shares to Armengol on April 9, 2008. Armengol did not

purchase the stock, and Maria filed suit against Armengol and Laredo Hardware on April 25,

2008. Armengol distributed Guerra’s shares pursuant to his will in May 2008.

-2- 04-10-00271-CV

Maria’s and Armengol’s allegations

Maria claims Armengol breached his fiduciary duty as an officer and director of Laredo

Hardware and engaged in minority shareholder oppression by refusing to liquidate Laredo

Hardware after her father’s death. Maria also alleged Armengol breached his fiduciary duty as

independent executor of their father’s estate by not liquidating the company and acted to promote

his own interest. 2

As remedies, Maria sought actual and exemplary damages, attorney’s fees and costs, and

pre- and post-judgment interest. She also prayed that the trial court declare the value of her

Laredo Hardware stock and that the Inventory, Appraisement and List of Claims was “not true.”

Maria also requested the court order Armengol and Laredo Hardware to buy her shares in the

company and order a partition of the jointly owned property. Maria did not seek appointment of

a receiver or any other relief calculated to result in the liquidation of Laredo Hardware. 3

Armengol counterclaimed, alleging conversion, civil theft, and that Maria’s lawsuit was

frivolous, unreasonable, and groundless. Laredo Hardware also filed a counterclaim alleging that

Maria’s suit was frivolous, unreasonable, and groundless.

Armengol’s motions for summary judgment

Armengol filed a no evidence motion for summary judgment, asserting there is no

evidence he owed Maria a fiduciary duty in his capacity as an officer and director of Laredo

2 Maria also sued for conversion and declaratory relief but has abandoned those claims on appeal. 3 Maria states in her amended brief that she asked for a court-ordered liquidation of Laredo Hardware and cites to page 170 of the clerk’s record. However, the third amended petition on page 170 does not contain any request that the court order a liquidation; rather, it states that Armengol has refused to liquidate the company.

-3- 04-10-00271-CV

Hardware. He also asserted there is no evidence he breached his fiduciary duty in his capacity as

independent executor, or that he engaged in minority shareholder oppression. 4

In her response, Maria asserted Armengol breached his fiduciary duties in his capacity as

an officer and director and committed shareholder oppression by :

—usurping a corporate opportunity when he purchased the land on which Laredo Hardware is located, entered a lease with Laredo Hardware, and increased the rent;

—failing to liquidate Laredo Hardware; and

—using Laredo Hardware funds to pay his attorney’s fees.

Maria asserted Armengol breached his executor’s duties to preserve the value of the estate by not

liquidating the company. She argued his refusal to liquidate the company created a conflict of

interest because he preserved his employment and income derived from Laredo Hardware to her

detriment as a devisee of a percentage of the company stock. To support her argument, Maria

relied on an affidavit from her expert Richard Cortez and a report prepared by James Park, an

accountant hired by the estate to value the estate for tax purposes. Maria argued Cortez’s

testimony demonstrated that Armengol had a duty to liquidate Laredo Hardware because as of

April 2007, it was in the best interest of Laredo Hardware and its shareholders to liquidate the

assets of the company. Maria also relied on Armengol’s deposition testimony and documents

from her attorneys. The trial court granted the no-evidence motion for summary judgment.

After the no-evidence motion was filed, Armengol and Laredo Hardware also filed a

traditional motion for summary judgment and urged that (1) Maria did not have standing to bring

a claim against Armengol as officer or director; (2) Maria’s claims are barred by the business

judgment rule; (3) liquidation is an improper remedy; (4) Armengol has not engaged in

4 He also asserted there is no evidence Armengol converted property and Maria does not raise an issue on appeal concerning the conversion claim.

-4- 04-10-00271-CV

oppressive conduct; (5) Armengol, as majority shareholder, does not owe Maria, as a minority

shareholder, a fiduciary duty because there is no special relationship between the two; (6)

Armengol did not usurp the company’s opportunity to buy the property where Laredo Hardware

is located because Laredo Hardware’s board of directors approved the decision not to purchase

the real property in the company’s name and also approved the lease agreement; (7) Maria’s

request for a declaration of the value of her shares is redundant of her claims for conversion and

liquidation of Laredo Hardware because those claims already require valuing the shares; (8)

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