Miller v. Miller

700 S.W.2d 941, 1985 Tex. App. LEXIS 12887
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 13, 1985
Docket05-83-00827-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by66 cases

This text of 700 S.W.2d 941 (Miller v. Miller) 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
Miller v. Miller, 700 S.W.2d 941, 1985 Tex. App. LEXIS 12887 (Tex. Ct. App. 1985).

Opinion

ON MOTION FOR REHEARING

GUITTARD, Chief Justice.

Our prior opinion of August 30, 1985, is withdrawn and this opinion substituted.

Judy Miller sued her former husband, Howard Miller, to rescind a shareholders’ agreement regarding corporate stock acquired by Howard before their divorce and allegedly not disposed of by the parties’ divorce decree. After a jury trial resulting in some findings favorable to Judy and others favorable to Howard, the trial court denied rescission and granted Howard specific performance of a purchase option provided in the shareholders’ agreement. Judy contends that the trial court erred in refusing to rescind the agreement because of Howard’s nondisclosure of material facts and his failure to establish that the agreement was fair to her. We agree and, consequently, reverse the judgment of the trial court in part, render judgment for Judy in part, and affirm the judgment of the trial court in part.

Factual Background

On July 15, 1978, Judy and Howard separated. Howard was employed as an engi *943 neer. Sometime in 1978, Howard and three other engineers began discussions regarding the formation of a company to design and produce a novel electronic telephone switching system to be known as the “IBX.” Such a company, InteCom, Inc., was eventually formed in January 1979. At that time Howard acquired a twenty-five percent ownership interest in InteCom, represented by 250 shares of stock. Later, additional shares were issued to the founders, ultimately bringing the total shares held in Howard’s name to 710,855 shares. Exxon Enterprises, Inc. was enlisted to provide financial backing. Exxon agreed to invest $1,500,000 in InteCom in exchange for 1,500,000 shares of stock. Exxon’s investment was based almost exclusively on the abilities of the four founding stockholders. For that reason, Exxon demanded that the founders remain in control of InteCom and keep an interest in Inte-Com. Exxon’s demand was embodied in the shareholders’ agreement in question.

The agreement provided that a founder could not sell his shares in InteCom without offering them first to the other founders and then to Exxon. The other founders were to have thirty days in which to exercise their options to purchase the shares of the selling founder. Exxon then had thirty days in which to exercise its option to purchase those shares not sold to the other founders. A formula set out in the agreement determined the purchase price of shares sold by a founder to another founder or to Exxon. If the option was not exercised by any of the other founders or Exxon, the shares could be offered to third parties, but only at the same price the shares were offered to the other founders or Exxon. If they were not purchased by a third party within a certain period of time, they had to be reoffered to the other founders and then to Exxon at a new price determined by the formula.

The agreement also required each founder to cause his wife to sign the agreement “for the purpose of agreeing to be bound by the terms of this Agreement.” The agreement provided that, in the event of a divorce, the wife had to first offer to sell her shares in InteCom, if any, to her husband at a price also to be determined by a formula set forth in the agreement. If the husband did not purchase the wife’s shares within thirty days, then the remaining founders had the right to purchase the wife’s shares for a period of thirty days, and then, if the remaining founders did not purchase the wife’s shares, Exxon had the right to purchase the wife’s shares, again for a period of thirty days. Shares not purchased by the husband, the other founders, or Exxon could then be sold to any third party for a period of ninety days at the same price and on the same conditions and terms initially offered to the founders and Exxon. At the end of the ninety-day period, the wife had to offer her shares again to her husband, then to the other founders, and then to Exxon at a new price determined by formula. Howard contends that the agreement gave him the right to acquire Judy’s community interest in the shares for $2,500.

On April 10, 1979, Howard filed a petition for divorce. On the next day, April 11, 1979, before the parties divorced but after they separated, Howard approached Judy with the agreement. It is undisputed that Howard did not explain the agreement to Judy and that he failed to disclose to her certain information regarding the agreement. Howard testified that he gave the agreement to Judy to take home and asked her to return it to him by the next morning. Judy testified that when Howard handed her the agreement, she read it, signed it, and never asked Howard or anyone else any questions about it. She testified that she considered the agreement binding on her. Later Judy also read and signed another agreement concerning InteCom, a “Stock Purchase Agreement,” dated July 1, 1980, which she testified she also considered binding on her.

Later, on August 23, 1980, Howard and Judy were divorced. At the time of the divorce, Howard’s 250 shares of stock had grown to 710,355 through stock splits, stock dividends, and stock issues. Although there is some dispute about wheth *944 er Howard and Judy discussed the agreement between its signing and the divorce, there is no dispute that Judy did not complain about the agreement until some two years after the divorce when she learned from an electronics magazine that InteCom was worth more than she had previously believed it to be worth. Then, on October 20, 1982, Judy filed this suit against Howard. After Judy’s suit was filed, Howard attempted to exercise his option to purchase Judy’s shares in InteCom.

In Judy’s trial pleadings, she sought rescission of the shareholders’ agreement and partition of the 710,355 shares of Inte-Com owned by Howard at the time of the divorce and alternatively actual and exemplary damages. These requests for relief were based on the theories of actual fraud and constructive fraud by breach of a confidential or fiduciary duty. Howard denied that Judy had any interest in the stock and alternatively counterclaimed for specific performance of the purchase option in the agreement and for attorney’s fees.

Jury Findings

The jury found that Howard made the following representations to Judy:

(1) that the agreement was an agreement between Exxon and the founders that placed certain restrictions on the stock; and
(2) that the agreement was an agreement to get the company started.

The jury found that these representations were false and material, but that Howard did not make them with the intention that Judy rely on them in deciding whether to sign the agreement. Because of these negative answers, other issues related to the fraud claim were not reached. The jury also found that Howard failed to disclose the following to Judy:

(1) that on or about April 11, 1979, Inte-Com, Inc. issued to Exxon Enterprises, Inc. 1,500,000 shares of stock in InteCom at a price of $1.00 per share in return for a capital contribution to InteCom, Inc. of $1,500,000;
(2) that upon divorce the agreement of April 11, 1979, required Judy to sell to Howard and others any and all interest which she had in InteCom, Inc.;

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Bluebook (online)
700 S.W.2d 941, 1985 Tex. App. LEXIS 12887, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-v-miller-texapp-1985.