Minchul Ho, Individually and D/B/A EM Tech v. Benco MacHinery, LLC, F/K/A B Tarp Equipment, LLC

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 11, 2020
Docket06-20-00061-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Minchul Ho, Individually and D/B/A EM Tech v. Benco MacHinery, LLC, F/K/A B Tarp Equipment, LLC (Minchul Ho, Individually and D/B/A EM Tech v. Benco MacHinery, LLC, F/K/A B Tarp Equipment, LLC) 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
Minchul Ho, Individually and D/B/A EM Tech v. Benco MacHinery, LLC, F/K/A B Tarp Equipment, LLC, (Tex. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

In The Court of Appeals Sixth Appellate District of Texas at Texarkana

No. 06-20-00061-CV

MINCHUL HO, INDIVIDUALLY AND D/B/A EM TECH, Appellant

V.

BENCO MACHINERY, LLC, F/K/A B TARP EQUIPMENT, LLC, Appellee

On Appeal from the 429th District Court Collin County, Texas Trial Court No. 429-03267-2020

Before Morriss, C.J., Burgess and Stevens, JJ. Memorandum Opinion by Chief Justice Morriss MEMORANDUM OPINION

Benco Machinery, LLC (Benco), paid $460,000.00 to Minchul Ho, individually and d/b/a

EM Tech (Ho), of Allen, Texas, to purchase and have delivered 100 hydraulic fracturing storage

tanks (frac tanks). Unfortunately, only ten frac tanks were delivered. Though much of the

payment was refunded, Benco subsequently demanded that Ho return “$173,173.00, plus

interest.” Because Ho neither refunded that sum nor delivered the remaining tanks, Benco sued

Ho in Collin County,1 Texas. From a summary judgment favoring Benco, Ho appeals.

On appeal, Ho argues that the trial court abused its discretion in granting Benco’s

objections to certain portions of its summary judgment evidence. Ho also argues that summary

judgment was improper because the excluded evidence showed that Benco failed to prove a

meeting of the minds. Because we find that Benco established its entitlement to summary

judgment even considering the excluded summary judgment evidence, we affirm the trial court’s

judgment.

These facts were established by the summary judgment evidence.

On February 24, 2016, a purchase order invoice (Purchase Order) on Ho’s letterhead was

sent to Bennett and reflected that Benco ordered 100 frac tanks, for which Ho invoiced Benco

$370,000.00, and that Ho’s shipping charge to “Oklahoma or Texas” was $90,000.00, for a total

invoice of $460,000.00. It is undisputed that, on February 25, Benco wired $460,000.00 to Ho’s

1 Originally appealed to the Fifth Court of Appeals, this case was transferred to this Court by the Texas Supreme Court pursuant to its docket equalization efforts. See TEX. GOV’T CODE ANN. § 73.001. We follow the precedent of the Fifth Court of Appeals in deciding this case. See TEX. R. APP. P. 41.3. 2 bank account. The Purchase Order showed that the order was placed with salesperson “JF” and

was “[p]repaid” and that the shipping method was “TBD.”

On March 10, Benco received a shipment of ten frac tanks but never received the other

ninety tanks. Benco complained to Ho, who refunded Benco (1) $220,000.00 on April 7, 2016;

(2) $20,000.00 on May 2, 2016; and (3) $827.00 on December 8, 2016, which still left a balance

of $173,173.00. In March 2019, Benco sent a demand letter for that balance, plus interest, and

then sued.

In response to the lawsuit, Ho filed a third-party petition against Eddie Nicholas d/b/a CJ

Equipment (collectively referred to as Nicholas). Ho alleged that he and Bennett had traveled to

Colorado to look at the frac tanks that Nicholas “said he would deliver to Mr. Bennett.” While

Ho acknowledged payment in full by Benco, he alleged that Nicholas had promised to deliver

100 frac tanks and blamed him for failing to deliver the remaining frac tanks to Benco.

After learning that Ho “did not even possess . . . all the [frac tanks] that [Benco]

contracted for” and that it had “resorted to farming out the parties’ contract to deal with a third

party . . . in a last-minute effort to . . . prevent a breach,” Benco filed a traditional motion for

summary judgment on its breach of contract claim. In support, Benco attached Bennett’s

affidavit, the Purchase Order, documentation reflecting the wire transfer to Ho, banking records

showing the partial refunds made by Ho to Benco, and an affidavit from its counsel providing

detailed support of $40,956.86 in attorney fees. Benco also attached Ho’s admissions that

(1) “Benco sought to acquire 100 frac tanks,” (2) Benco paid $460,000.00, (3) “the remaining 90

frac tanks were not shipped,” (4) partial refunds by Ho totaled only $240,827.00, and (5)

3 Nicholas was not mentioned on the Purchase Order. In his affidavit, Bennett stated that Benco

had placed the order with Ho for delivery to Benco’s principal yard located in Oklahoma City

and had never contracted with Nicholas. Bennett also said that Ho had refused to ship the

remaining tanks or refund the full purchase price.

In response to the summary judgment motion, Ho denied the existence of a valid contract

on the ground that there was no meeting of the minds on the allegation that Nicholas, not Ho, had

promised to deliver the tanks. In support, Ho attached his affidavit, which stated that he met

Bennett through a mutual friend, Chad Murrish, and that Bennett told Ho that he needed 100 frac

tanks. In response to the request, Ho “searched on the internet and found Eddie Nicholas’s

information,” spoke with Nicholas, who confirmed that he had 100 frac tanks, and “got back

with Mr. Bennett to let him know . . . that Mr. Nicholas had some available tanks.” Ho and

Bennett traveled to Colorado to see the tanks, but nothing showed that they met Nicholas there.

Instead, they met with David Neilson, Field Supervisor for A & W Water Service, Inc. Ho’s

affidavit included the following:

4. . . . Mr. Bennett identified a specific set of the l00 tanks that he wanted to purchase. I called Mr. Nicholas, and while I was standing next to Mr. [Bennett], negotiated the purchase price between the two of them. I was speaking back and forth with Mr. Nicholas on the phone and Mr. [Bennett] in person next to me. Ultimately a price per tank was agreed on between Mr. Nicholas and Mr. Bennett, which included delivery of the tanks by Mr. Nicholas to Mr. Bennett. The agreed on price was a little less than the price reflected on the February 24, 2016 Invoice.

5. Once the price had been agreed on I discussed Mr. Bennett just paying Mr. Nicholas directly for the tanks, but Mr. Bennett said, no, just send me an invoice and mark up the per tank price by about a couple of hundred dollars each and that will be a commission to split with Chad. Even with the small mark up, Mr. Bennett and I discussed that the price per delivered tank that Mr. Bennett agreed to pay was below the market value for similar tanks at that time. 4 6. Mr. Nicholas and Mr. Bennett agreed that Mr. Nicholas would deliver 10 to 20 tanks per week to Mr. Bennet[t]’s address until all tanks had been delivered . . . . At no time did I ever agree to deliver any tanks. It was specifically agreed between Mr. Nicholas and Mr. Bennett that Mr. Nicholas was responsible for all deliveries.

7. . . . Unfortunately, Mr. Nicholas only delivered 10 tanks, out of the 100 tanks he promised, on March 7, 2016. I had only sent Mr. Nicholas half of the money received from Mr. Bennett, so when it became apparent that Mr. Nicholas would not deliver the rest of the tanks, I refunded the remaining half of the payment to Mr. Bennett.

Ho also attached an email from Ho to Bennett on February 24, 2016, in which Ho wrote, “I have

attached your invoice. The first 20 will be delivered sometime next week. Will need the address

in Beaver, OK.” The next email from Ho to Bennett on April 5 showed that Ho told Nicholas

that he had until Friday of that week to “get all the money,” implying that he had requested some

kind of refund.

Benco moved to strike paragraphs 4 through 6 of Ho’s affidavit on the grounds that it

contained hearsay, statements unsupported by personal knowledge, and statements of an

interested witness not free from contradiction.

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Minchul Ho, Individually and D/B/A EM Tech v. Benco MacHinery, LLC, F/K/A B Tarp Equipment, LLC, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/minchul-ho-individually-and-dba-em-tech-v-benco-machinery-llc-fka-b-texapp-2020.