NFTD, LLC F/K/A Bernardo Group, LLC Bernardo Holdings, LLC Peter J. Cooper And Jacquiline Miller v. Haynes & Boone L.L.P. and Arthur L. Howard

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 17, 2019
Docket14-17-00999-CV
StatusPublished

This text of NFTD, LLC F/K/A Bernardo Group, LLC Bernardo Holdings, LLC Peter J. Cooper And Jacquiline Miller v. Haynes & Boone L.L.P. and Arthur L. Howard (NFTD, LLC F/K/A Bernardo Group, LLC Bernardo Holdings, LLC Peter J. Cooper And Jacquiline Miller v. Haynes & Boone L.L.P. and Arthur L. Howard) 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.

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NFTD, LLC F/K/A Bernardo Group, LLC Bernardo Holdings, LLC Peter J. Cooper And Jacquiline Miller v. Haynes & Boone L.L.P. and Arthur L. Howard, (Tex. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

Reversed and Remanded and Opinion filed December 17, 2019.

In The

Fourteenth Court of Appeals

NO. 14-17-00999-CV

NFTD, LLC F/K/A BERNARDO GROUP, LLC; BERNARDO HOLDINGS, LLC; PETER J. COOPER; AND JACQUELINE MILLER, Appellants V.

HAYNES & BOONE, LLP AND ARTHUR L. HOWARD, Appellees

On Appeal from the 269th District Court Harris County, Texas Trial Court Cause No. 2015-10626

OPINION

Appellants, NFTD, LLC f/k/a Bernardo Group, LLC, Bernardo Holdings, LLC, Peter J. Cooper, and Jacqueline Miller appeal the grant of (1) a summary judgment and (2) a plea to the jurisdiction in favor of Appellees, Haynes & Boone, LLP and Arthur L. Howard. We reverse and remand, holding that attorney immunity does not apply in a business transaction. BACKGROUND

I. The Parties

This appeal stems from a lawsuit relating to business asset sales and involving, among other parties, three consecutive owners of the Bernardo women’s footwear company, investor Jacqueline Miller, attorney Arthur Howard, and the law firm Haynes and Boone, LLP (who represented the first owners in the sale of the company’s business assets to the second owners).1 Appellants and Appellees refer to the relevant parties as follows:

 Bernardo 1 (Owner No. 1): TEFKAB Footwear, LLC f/k/a Bernardo Footwear, LLC, Wilma Jean Smith, and Cynthia Smith (third-party defendants in the trial court);

 Bernardo 2 (Owner No. 2): NFTD, LLC f/k/a Bernardo Group, LLC, Bernardo Holdings, LLC, and Peter J. Cooper (defendants and third- party plaintiffs in the trial court and Appellants herein);

 Bernardo 3 (Owner No. 3): JPT Group, LLC (plaintiff);

 The Lawyers: Haynes and Boone, LLP and Arthur Howard (third-party defendants in the trial court and Appellees herein); and

 The Investor: Jacqueline Miller (intervenor in the trial court and an Appellant herein).

II. Factual Background

Bernardo 1 was owned by Roy R. Smith, Jr., his wife Wilma Jean Smith, and designer Dennis Comeau. Roy R. Smith, Jr. died in 2002, leaving one half of his

1 This opinion will not address all the parties and claims involved in the underlying lawsuit; instead, we limit our discussion to parties and claims in the instant appeal.

2 estate to his daughter Cynthia Smith and the other half of his estate to his son Roy R. Smith, III (known as “Trae”) and Trae’s three children. After Roy Smith, Jr.’s death, Trae started managing the company.

By 2008, Jean, Cynthia, and Dennis were concerned about Trae’s management of the company. In August 2009, they hired Haynes and Boone and Howard to “represent the Company and communicate concerning any and all business, financial and legal matters related to the Company.” On the same day, Howard terminated Trae’s employment with the company. Dennis and Jean removed Trae as the managing member of Bernardo 1, and they started serving as managers.

Bernardo 1’s managers engaged Howard to conduct an internal investigation of the company and prepare an “investigative report.” Bernardo 1’s outgoing attorney, James Hanson, sent a memorandum to Howard to provide an “update/status of legal matters and issues of client [Bernardo 1]” in September 2009. In the memorandum, Hanson disclosed, among other things, that another attorney (who is not a party to this case) had brought a “design infringement claim relating to Olem’s knock off of [Bernardo 1]’s Miami sandal” on behalf of Bernardo 1, but had to dismiss the suit after learning in discovery that Bernardo 1’s “patent applic[ation] filing was tardy.” Hanson also disclosed that another attorney had filed a legal malpractice suit in Maryland against attorneys “on the Miami Sandal late filing,” and Hanson advised Howard to check with Trae whether the suit was still pending.

Dennis averred in an affidavit that he discussed Bernardo 1’s legal malpractice suit against its former patent and intellectual property attorneys on several occasions with Arthur Howard in August and September 2009. Specifically, he alleged Bernardo 1’s “former patent/IP lawyers had messed up several design patents, of which [Dennis] was the inventor, by filing the patent applications too late.” Howard

3 denied that he had knowledge about the allegations Bernardo 1 made in the Maryland malpractice suit or that there were potential issues with several of Bernardo 1’s design patents.

In August 2010, managers Dennis and Jean signed a resolution to sell Bernardo 1’s assets and authorized Dennis and Haynes and Boone to “immediately pursue the potential sale of the Company or its assets.” Howard prepared a confidential business profile in November 2010. The profile contained statements about Bernardo 1’s intellectual and intangible property, such as, “Bernardo Footwear owns intellectual property in many forms, including patented, trademarked, and copyrighted properties.” The profile also listed numerous trademarks and patents, including patents that were allegedly unenforceable and “worthless” because the applications were filed late.

Cynthia knew Bernardo 2 co-owner Peter Cooper from college, so a business profile was sent to Peter and Todd Miller (the other co-owner of Bernardo 2), in February 2011. Bernardo 2 was interested in buying Bernardo 1’s assets and negotiations continued for several months; Bernardo 1 was represented by Howard while Bernardo 2 was represented by its own counsel. According to Bernardo 1, with regard to due diligence surrounding the 2011 asset sale, Bernardo 2 had access to records, including a box of materials related to the Maryland malpractice suit, during the negotiation process.

According to Todd Miller, he had many conversations with Bernardo 1 and Howard and he was never told “Bernardo 1 had filed a malpractice lawsuit against its Maryland patent lawyers, alleging that a number of its valuable patents were filed too late and [were] thus unenforceable and/or invalid.” Todd Miller averred in his affidavit that Howard never told him “there were issues with several of Bernardo 1’s design patents that would have prevented a future owner of those assets from being

4 able to enforce the patent rights for various sandals that it sold.” He also averred Howard told him several times “that he wanted to represent Bernardo 2 if Bernardo 2 ended up acquiring the Bernardo assets.”

Bernardo 1 and Bernardo 2 signed an asset purchase agreement in September 2011 (the “2011 APA”), under which Bernardo 2 acquired all of Bernardo 1’s assets for a $3 million payment at closing and potential earn-out payments based on Bernardo 2’s performance over several years. Bernardo 2 ran the business for a few years and then sold the assets (including “all of the copyrights, trademarks, patents, and other intellectual property”) to Bernardo 3 in early 2014. Later that year, Bernardo 3 allegedly attempted to enforce its rights for seven women’s shoes design patents that it purchased as part of the asset sale, but “it discovered that five of those seven patents were worthless, having previously been declared invalid years before” its asset purchase from Bernardo 2 in 2014.

III. Procedural Background

Bernardo 3 sued Bernardo 2 in February 2015 for breach of contract and breach of warranty. It alleged that despite Bernardo 2’s warranty that all its patents were enforceable and valid, the five most valuable design patents were all invalid based on untimely patent applications.

Bernardo 2 then asserted third-party claims against Bernardo 1 for, among other things, breach of the 2011 APA, misrepresentation, and fraud.

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NFTD, LLC F/K/A Bernardo Group, LLC Bernardo Holdings, LLC Peter J. Cooper And Jacquiline Miller v. Haynes & Boone L.L.P. and Arthur L. Howard, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nftd-llc-fka-bernardo-group-llc-bernardo-holdings-llc-peter-j-cooper-texapp-2019.