Mickey v. Elliott v. Rockwood Village Partners, Ltd.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 12, 2012
Docket03-12-00298-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Mickey v. Elliott v. Rockwood Village Partners, Ltd. (Mickey v. Elliott v. Rockwood Village Partners, Ltd.) 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
Mickey v. Elliott v. Rockwood Village Partners, Ltd., (Tex. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN




NO. 03-12-00298-CV

Mickey V. Elliott, Appellant



v.



Rockwood Village Partners, Ltd., Appellee



FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF TRAVIS COUNTY, 200TH JUDICIAL DISTRICT

NO. D-1-GN-11-000450, HONORABLE ORLINDA NARANJO, JUDGE PRESIDING

M E M O R A N D U M O P I N I O N


Mickey V. Elliott sued Rockwood Village Partners, Ltd. ("Rockwood") for breach of a promissory note ("the Elliott Note"). Rockwood asserted various affirmative defenses and counterclaims, including breach of contract and breach of the duty of loyalty by Elliott. After a bench trial, the district court ruled in Rockwood's favor and reformed the Elliott Note's payment term. The court also rendered judgment that the Elliott Note was not yet due and payable and that Elliott's conduct constituted breach of contract and breach of his duty of loyalty as one of Rockwood's limited partners. The court ordered Elliott to pay Rockwood's attorneys' fees. In six issues, Elliott challenges the attorneys' fee award, the trial court's conclusion that the Elliott Note was not due and payable, and the manner in which the court reformed the note's payment term. We will reverse the judgment in part and modify it in part.



FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

Elliott is one of Rockwood's limited partners. In December 2009, Elliott loaned Rockwood $36,000 to enable Rockwood to pay its 2009 property taxes and cover some other minor expenses. In exchange, Rockwood executed the Elliott Note in the principal amount of $36,000, with the following payment term:



Terms of payment (principal and interest): All principal and accrued interest thereon shall be paid in full by Maker to Payee by no later than December 31, 2010.



The Elliott Note identified Rockwood as the "Maker" and was executed by Rockwood's general partner at the time, Rockwood Village Management, Inc.

In January 2011, after the note had not been paid by the due date, Elliott's counsel sent a letter to Rockwood demanding payment. Rockwood took the position that because the Elliott Note had a specific due date, it violated a provision of the Rockwood Limited Partnership Agreement (the "Partnership Agreement") and was therefore unenforceable. The provision Rockwood relied on was section 7.03 of the Partnership Agreement, which provides:



7.03 Distribution of monies. Partnership expenses and mortgages shall be promptly paid in the normal order of business. Loans from limited partners (including interest) shall be repaid quarterly, as net profits are available to do so in the judgment of the general partner.



(Emphasis added.) Rockwood maintained that this provision prohibited a promissory note given in exchange for a loan from a limited partner from having a specific due date and required that the payment term for a limited-partner loan could only state that the loan "be repaid quarterly, as net profits are available to do so in the judgment of the general partner." In other words, Rockwood took the position that not only was it not obligated to make quarterly payments, it never had to repay the Elliott Note unless "net profits" were available. According to Elliott, Rockwood informed him that, in the general partner's judgment, sufficient funds were not available for repayment of the note.

Thereafter, Elliott sued Rockwood alleging that the Elliott Note was due and payable and asserting a breach-of-contract cause of action. Elliott also contended that Rockwood was estopped from refusing to repay the note on its stated maturity date and asserted a cause of action for "money had and received." In its answer, Rockwood asserted as a defense that the Elliott Note was void as written because it "provides for a short-term maturity date in contravention of the requirement that loans from limited partners are to be paid as net profits become available in the judgment of the general partner." Rockwood also asserted counterclaims for: (1) breach of contract, asserting that Elliott breached the Partnership Agreement by taking a promissory note with a short-term maturity date and seeking to collect on it; (2) breach of the duty of loyalty, for essentially the same conduct; and (3) reformation, asking the court "for an order reforming the promissory note to conform to § 7.03 of the [Partnership Agreement] providing for repayment of loans in quarterly payments as net profits are available in the judgment of the general partner." Rockwood subsequently filed an amended answer in which it asserted a new counterclaim for "estoppel," dropped the counterclaim for reformation, and replaced the reformation counterclaim with a "request for declaratory judgment" asking the court to declare that the Elliott Note is "payable quarterly as net profits are available to do so in the judgment of the general partner."

The case was tried to the bench. Rockwood contended that the Elliott Note was not due and payable because the Partnership Agreement prohibits making notes payable on a fixed date, but rather contemplates only that notes from limited partners be repaid as profits become available in the judgment of the general partner. Elliott countered that Rockwood had waived any such prohibition by executing numerous limited-partner promissory notes with specific due dates. These included several notes to limited partners made in exchange for money loaned to Rockwood for the purpose of purchasing its principal asset, a shopping center. The trial court ruled that the Elliott Note was not due and payable and made the following relevant findings of fact and conclusions of law:



FOF 18: The Partnership has had no net profits available to repay the Elliott Note at any time since Mr. Elliott made the loan evidenced by the Elliott Note.



FOF 24: The Elliott Note is valid and enforceable as reformed to comply with § 7.03 of the Partnership Agreement such that it is due and payable when the Partnership has net profits available to pay it.



CL 11: The terms of the Partnership Agreement apply to Mr. Elliott's loan and the Elliott Note.



CL 12: Mr. Elliott's loan is "payable as net profits are available to do so in the judgment of the general partner."



CL 13: The Partnership did not waive the repayment terms of loans as provided in § 7.03 of the Partnership Agreement with respect to Mr. Elliott's loan.



CL 15: The Elliott Note is not due and payable because the Partnership has not had net profits available to pay it, as required by § 7.03 of the Partnership Agreement, and Mr. Elliott is not entitled to recover under the Elliott Note in accordance with his claim.



From these findings and conclusions, it is obvious that the trial court's ultimate ruling that the Elliott Note was not yet due and payable was based on its determination that: (1) section 7.03 of the Partnership Agreement prohibited agreements that would require loans from limited partners to be repaid by a specific due date, and (2) in order to comply with the Partnership Agreement, the Elliott Note's payment term must be reformed to provide that it is due and payable only when and to the extent Rockwood has net profits available to pay it.

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Mickey v. Elliott v. Rockwood Village Partners, Ltd., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mickey-v-elliott-v-rockwood-village-partners-ltd-texapp-2012.