Nueva Generacion Music Group, Inc. v. Isidro Chavez Espinoza, P/K/A Espinoza Paz

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 30, 2015
Docket01-15-00091-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Nueva Generacion Music Group, Inc. v. Isidro Chavez Espinoza, P/K/A Espinoza Paz (Nueva Generacion Music Group, Inc. v. Isidro Chavez Espinoza, P/K/A Espinoza Paz) 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
Nueva Generacion Music Group, Inc. v. Isidro Chavez Espinoza, P/K/A Espinoza Paz, (Tex. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

Opinion issued July 30, 2015

In The

Court of Appeals For The

First District of Texas ———————————— NO. 01-15-00091-CV ——————————— NUEVA GENERACION MUSIC GROUP, INC., Appellant V. ISIDRO CHAVEZ ESPINOZA, P/K/A ESPINOZA PAZ, Appellee

On Appeal from the 281st District Court Harris County, Texas Trial Court Case No. 2015-00749

MEMORANDUM OPINION

This is an appeal from the trial court’s denial of a temporary injunction.

Appellant, Nueva Generacion Music Group, Inc. (“Nueva”), sued appellee, Isidro

Chavez Espinoza, a musician professionally known as Espinoza Paz (“Espinoza”),

for breach of a settlement agreement that attempted to resolve conflicts arising out of Nueva’s professional representation of Espinoza. Nueva sought a temporary

injunction restraining Espinoza from agreeing to bookings for his performances or

accepting payments without notifying Nueva and paying its commissions and from

interfering with Nueva’s efforts to obtain bookings and sponsorships for him. The

trial court denied the temporary injunction. Nueva argues that the trial court

abused its discretion and failed to follow controlling law in denying the application

for temporary injunction and that Espinoza cannot re-litigate settled claims to

defend his alleged breach of the settlement agreement.

We affirm.

Background

Nueva is an artist management company that represents musicians and

obtains recording deals and bookings for performances, negotiates sponsorship

deals, and otherwise develops and manages their artistic careers. In 2009, Nueva

and Espinoza entered into an “Exclusive Personal Representation Agreement”

(“Representation Agreement”).

Under the Representation Agreement, Nueva agreed to provide Espinoza

with “advice, consulting, and instruction” regarding endorsement and sponsorship

agreements, publicity and promotion, “recording, distribution and music publishing

agreements,” scheduling performances and other events, and general “career

decisions, business interests and general practices in the entertainment and music

2 industries.” The Representation Agreement granted Nueva the authority “to act as

the only Attorney in Fact” of Espinoza regarding the authorization to use his name,

likeness, voice, and musical and artistic materials for publicity purposes; “to sign,

execute and deliver for [Espinoza] . . . all and any agreement, document, and Artist

Services contract, of talent and/or artistic, musical, and literary materials and

others (including unlimited recording agreements)”; to collect and receive monies

on Espinoza’s behalf; and to “[m]aintain legal counsel” to collect on or enforce

agreements on Espinoza’s behalf.

In return, Espinoza agreed to pay a commission of 30% of the money he

earned for a period of five years. He also agreed to inform Nueva of employment

offers that he received and “to attend career commitments and to do what is

necessary and desirable to promote [his] career and earning herein implied.” The

Representation Agreement provided Nueva with three “exclusive and irrevocable

option(s) . . . to renew and extend the Initial Period for a term of 5 year(s).”

Espinoza became a successful and sought-after musician. He asserts that in

2012, he realized that Nueva had fraudulently procured the Representation

Agreement and had breached its duties to him. Nueva alleges that as Espinoza

gained exposure in the music industry through its promotion of him, he began to

exclude Nueva from his career decisions. Espinoza subsequently pursued

bookings on his own or through other talent agents.

3 In late 2013, Nueva sued Espinoza in Harris County for breaching the

Representation Agreement. On December 15, 2013, Espinoza informed Nueva by

letter that he was terminating his participation in the Representation Agreement,

and he filed a counter-suit in California, asserting, among other causes of action,

claims against Nueva for fraud and breach of fiduciary duty.

In 2014, Nueva and Espinoza entered into the Final Settlement Agreement

(“FSA”) to resolve both Nueva’s suit against Espinoza and Espinoza’s counter-suit

in California. The FSA provided that Espinoza would pay Nueva $4,500,000 in

three payments: $600,000 due February 28, 2014, $400,000 due March 11, 2014,

and $3,500,000 due by December 31, 2014. It further stated: “Provided that

[Espinoza] faithfully complies with the aforementioned payments in their

entirety . . ., the [Representation Agreement] shall be considered canceled without

the need for [Nueva] to take any action.” The FSA provided that the

Representation Agreement “shall continue in force, with the exception of the 30%

commission,” which Nueva agreed not to charge until December 31, 2014. It

stated, “If the complete payment of $4,500,000.00 is not made before January 1,

2015 by [Espinoza] to [Nueva], then the [Representation Agreement] shall

continue . . . in force and the 30% commission [shall be] payable to [Nueva] by

[Espinoza] until the full $4,500,000 is paid[.]”

4 The FSA also stated that, following Espinoza’s payment of the first

$1,000,000, both parties would non-suit their claims. It provided,

This is the entirety of the agreements between the parties in order to resolve the cases in Texas and California. [Nueva] and [Espinoza] hereby agree to release any claim or lawsuit that exists between the parties, with the exception of the agreements contained in this agreement or the [Representation Agreement], until [Espinoza] pays [Nueva] the amount of $4,500,000.00 according to the terms of this agreement.

The FSA was signed by both parties and their attorneys.

Espinoza paid only the first two payments. He continued to obtain bookings

for performances on his own or through other talent agencies.

Nueva filed the present suit against Espinoza in January 2015, alleging that

he had violated the terms of the Representation Agreement and the FSA by failing

to pay $3,500,000 by December 31, 2014, by using other talent agents and booking

agents to acquire work, and by refusing to participate in opportunities procured for

him by Nueva. Nueva also alleged causes of action for breach of fiduciary duty

and fraud for “depriv[ing] [Nueva] of rightful commissions,” misrepresenting or

concealing his true earnings, and “violat[ing] his duty to properly account for and

timely pay [Nueva] its agreed upon commissions.”

With its petition, Nueva filed an application for a temporary injunction. It

asserted that “[t]he property and rights involved are unique and irreplaceable, so

5 that it will be impossible to accurately measure, in monetary terms, the damages

caused by [Espinoza’s] conduct.” It asked that Espinoza be enjoined from

agreeing to bookings for his performances without notifying [Nueva]; accepting or receiving payments under the [Representation Agreement] without paying the correct commissions to [Nueva]; interfering with [Nueva’s] bookings and tours of [Espinoza’s] performances; interfering with [Nueva’s] negotiated sponsorship opportunities; interfering with [Nueva’s] contract negotiations with third parties under the [Representation Agreement]; attempting to wrongfully prevent [Nueva] from performing under the [Representation Agreement]; continu[ing] his evasion and threats to this Court’s jurisdiction by forum shopping; wrongfully multiplying proceedings with the intent to thwart the Court’s dominant jurisdiction . .

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Nueva Generacion Music Group, Inc. v. Isidro Chavez Espinoza, P/K/A Espinoza Paz, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nueva-generacion-music-group-inc-v-isidro-chavez-e-texapp-2015.