Narnia Investments, Ltd v. Harvestons Securities, Inc.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 9, 2011
Docket14-10-00244-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Narnia Investments, Ltd v. Harvestons Securities, Inc. (Narnia Investments, Ltd v. Harvestons Securities, Inc.) 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
Narnia Investments, Ltd v. Harvestons Securities, Inc., (Tex. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

Reversed and Remanded and Memorandum Opinion filed August 9, 2011.

In The

Fourteenth Court of Appeals

___________________

NO. 14-10-00244-CV

Narnia Investments, Ltd., Appellant

V.

Harvestons Securities, Inc., Appellee

On Appeal from the 270th District Court

Harris County, Texas

Trial Court Cause No. 2000-39672A

MEMORANDUM OPINION

            In this case arising from the alleged sale of unregistered securities, the defendant moved for summary judgment on traditional and no-evidence grounds.  The trial court granted the motion without stating the grounds for its ruling.  We reverse.

I.  Factual and Procedural Background

            On August 3, 2000, appellant Narnia Investments, Ltd. and Jon Ginder, Narnia’s sole owner, sued appellee Harvestons Securities, Inc. and a half-dozen other defendants for claims connected with Narnia’s 1998 and 1999 purchases of stock in Lexico Energy Exploration, Inc. (“Lexico Energy”).  According to Narnia, Clarey Zingler and James Bischofberger (a/k/a James Bisch or James Bish) told Ginder that Lexico Energy had agreed to sell its assets in exchange for stock in Lexico Resources International Corporation (“Lexico Resources”).  Narnia alleges that Bischofberger and Zingler represented that all shareholders would receive a dividend or distribution of 1.85 shares of Lexico Resources for each share of Lexico Energy owned.  Allegedly based on these representations, Narnia and Ginder purchased Lexico Energy securities from Zingler and from Lex Dolton, both of whom were officers in the two Lexico entities.  Although Lexico Energy transferred its assets to Lexico Resources as agreed, Narnia never received the promised stock in Lexico Resources. 

            Pleading that Harvestons Securities, acting through its registered representative James Sanderson, was the broker in Narnia’s Lexico Energy stock purchases, Narnia asserted claims against Harvestons for deceptive trade practices, gross negligence, fraud, conspiracy, and an assortment of statutory violations.  Narnia additionally pleaded that Harvestons was liable for negligently supervising Sanderson.  Harvestons initially did not file an answer, and at Narnia’s request, the trial court granted default judgment against Harvestons and severed those claims from the remainder of the suit.  Harvestons brought a restricted appeal on the ground that service of process was defective, and we reversed the judgment and remanded the case.  Harvestons Sec., Inc. v. Narnia Invs., Inc., 218 S.W.3d 126, 128 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] 2007, pet. denied) (sub. maj. op.).

            On remand, Harvestons moved for summary judgment on the ground that there was no evidence that it acted as a broker in any of the transactions.  In the same motion, Harvestons sought traditional summary judgment on the grounds that (a) it was not the broker in the stock transactions at issue, (b) Sanderson was not acting within the course and scope of his employment if he performed brokerage services in those transactions, and (c) Harvestons neither was served nor voluntarily appeared in the suit before the applicable statutes of limitations expired. 

Narnia filed a single document that combined its response, objections, and special exceptions to the summary-judgment motion.  In this document, Narnia objected that Harvestons improperly based its summary-judgment motion on unpleaded affirmative defenses.  In addition, Narnia argued that Harvestons failed to eliminate genuine issues of material fact as to its vicarious liability for Sanderson’s acts.  In support of this argument, Narnia produced an affidavit in which Ginder attested that Sanderson was employed by Harvestons at the time of the transactions.  Ginder added that Sanderson “stated to me that he had received a commission on the sale of the securities to Narnia,” but Ginder did not identify the person or entity that allegedly paid the commission.  Narnia also produced a document that appears to be a typed, unsigned letter to Ginder from Zingler, who represented that the letter “identifies to the best of my knowledge Lexico Energy stock that was acquired by Jim Bish and/or Jon Ginder.”  In this letter, Zingler identified Sanderson as the broker in each transaction.  Zingler added, “Mr. Sanderson has always advised me that Mr. Bish is his client . . . .  For the sale of Mr. Dolton’s stock[,] Mr. Sanderson demanded a 10 percent commission from Mr. Dolton.  Mr. Bish, at times, allocated stock to Mr. Sanderson to compensate him for his services.”  Neither Narnia nor Harvestons is mentioned in the letter.  Finally, Narnia attached documents from the State Securities Board providing information about Sanderson’s employment history and his “other business.”  In these documents, Sanderson is listed as Harvestons’s employee and not as an independent contractor.  The entry in which information about Harvestons is listed is followed by an entry providing information about Sanderson’s prior employer, Chatfield Dean & Co.  That entry is followed by the heading, “Other Business,” after which the single word “Lexico” appears.

            After Narnia filed its response, Harvestons filed an answer to the suit in which it asserted the affirmative defense of limitations, and objected to Narnia’s summary-judgment evidence.  Harvestons asserted that Ginder’s affidavit was conclusory, lacked a proper foundation, and was not based on personal knowledge “insofar as it purports to aver that James Sanderson was involved in the stock transactions at issue, that he received a commission, and that he was affiliated with Harvestons or dealt with Plaintiff.”  The trial court sustained these objections, but overruled Harvestons’s objections to Zingler’s letter and to the records from the State Securities Board.  The record contains no ruling on Narnia’s special exceptions and objections.

            The trial court granted Harvestons’s motion without stating the grounds, and Narnia timely appealed.    

II.  Issues Presented

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