Pelican State Physical Therapy, L.P. v. Marc Bratton

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 30, 2007
Docket01-06-00199-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Pelican State Physical Therapy, L.P. v. Marc Bratton (Pelican State Physical Therapy, L.P. v. Marc Bratton) 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
Pelican State Physical Therapy, L.P. v. Marc Bratton, (Tex. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

Opinion issued August 30, 2007





In The

Court of Appeals

For The

First District of Texas



NO. 01-06-00199-CV



PELICAN STATE PHYSICAL THERAPY, L.P., Appellant



V.



MARC BRATTON, Appellee



On Appeal from the 133rd District Court

Harris County, Texas

Trial Court Cause No. 2004-56851



MEMORANDUM OPINION

Appellant, Pelican State Physical Therapy, L.P. ("Pelican State"), appeals from a final judgment dismissing its claims against appellee, Marc Bratton, which judgment the court rendered upon granting Bratton's special appearance. We determine (1) whether the trial court's failure to file fact findings and legal conclusions constitutes harmful error, (2) whether the trial court erred in granting Bratton's special appearance, and (3) whether Pelican State's appeal is frivolous so as to merit sanctions on appeal. We affirm the judgment, and we deny Bratton's motion for appellate sanctions against Pelican State.

Background

The material facts are largely undisputed. Pelican State was a Texas-organized and Texas-registered limited partnership that did business as Audubon Physical Therapy and operated a physical-therapy clinic in Slidell, Louisiana ("the Slidell clinic"). Pelican State maintained its principal office in Houston, Texas. Pelican State was formed by U.S. Physical Therapy, Inc. ("USPT"), a Nevada corporation with its corporate headquarters and principal place of business in Houston, Texas. USPT developed, managed, or operated physical-therapy clinics in 35 states through limited partnerships or other corporate entities. USPT or one of its Texas-based subsidiaries was typically the general partner or a limited partner in the established partnerships. USPT developed the Slidell clinic.

There were two limited partners in Pelican State. The first was U.S. Physical Therapy, Ltd., a wholly owned subsidiary of USPT that was located in Houston. The second limited partner was Joe Zimmerman ("Zimmerman"), who served as the executive director of the Slidell Physical Therapy Clinic in Slidell, Louisiana. Zimmerman was a resident of Louisiana.

Bratton was also a Louisiana resident. He was licensed as a physical therapist in Louisiana and practiced there, not in Texas. Bratton did not have a registered agent for service in Texas, did not have a Texas bank account, did not own property in Texas, and had no employees of his own in Texas.

In the summer of 2000, Bratton responded to a "blind" newspaper advertisement in the Times-Picayune, a New Orleans newspaper, for a physical-therapist position by faxing a copy of his resume to a Mandeville clinic also owned by Pelican State. Bratton was contacted by Zimmerman, and they arranged for a job interview at the Mandeville clinic. Bratton then had a second interview with Zimmerman and Royce Spradlin, whom Zimmerman identified to Bratton as the chief executive officer of USPT, at the Mandeville clinic. Bratton was not offered a position at that time.

In late 2000 or early 2001, Bratton visited the USPT website with the idea of presenting USPT the possibility of opening a second physical-therapy clinic in Slidell. Bratton contacted USPT using its "contact us" link on USPT's website. At the hearing on his special appearance, Bratton testified that he did not recall having seen the location of USPT's corporate headquarters on the USPT website.

In response to his having contacted USPT through its website, Bratton received a telephone call from one of USPT's employees, who stated that opening another clinic in Slidell would be a "delicate" matter and that Bratton would hear from USPT later. Bratton did not hear from anyone at USPT, but Zimmerman did contact Bratton soon afterwards. Bratton and Zimmerman had another meeting, this time at the Slidell clinic. Zimmerman told Bratton that a second clinic was not a possibility, but offered him a staff position as a physical therapist at the Slidell clinic. Bratton accepted and was hired by Pelican State.

After Bratton had verbally accepted the offer, Zimmerman told Bratton that the company would be sending him an employment agreement in the mail. Bratton received the employment agreement in the mail from USPT a few days later, although the agreement recited that it was between Pelican State and Bratton. On appeal and below, the parties dispute whether the envelope in which the employment agreement was sent showed USPT's return address in Houston. However, Bratton, who was the only witness to testify, stated that, although the envelope did have some address with a logo on it, he did not recall whether the mailing came from Houston. However, he acknowledged that he later learned that USPT was a Houston-based company.

Before signing the employment agreement, Bratton questioned Zimmerman and an employee at USPT about the non-competition and non-solicitation provisions in the agreement. In February 2001, Bratton signed the employment agreement. Bratton then mailed the agreement in the provided return envelope so that Spradlin could sign it. Bratton testified that he did not recall the location to which he mailed the employment agreement. Spradlin signed the agreement on behalf of Pelican State.

When he entered into the employment agreement, Bratton knew that Spradlin was the chief executive officer of USPT, that Pelican State had been established as a limited partnership by USPT, and that USPT "operated," was "affiliated with," or "co-owned" the Slidell clinic. However, Bratton was unaware of the location of USPT's principal place of business or that Pelican State was a Texas entity.

The employment agreement contained a one-year non-competition provision (section 6), a one-year employee-and-patient non-solicitation provision (section 7), and a non-disclosure provision (section 8). Under the employment agreement, the initial term of employment was for six months, beginning March 19, 2001 and ending September 18, 2001. After that initial term, the term of employment would extend on a month-to-month basis unless terminated by either party with 30 days' notice. Bratton worked for Pelican State by extending the term month to month until he resigned in June 2004 to pursue his own clinic.

During Bratton's employment with Pelican State, USPT or one of its Houston subsidiaries provided legal, financial, accounting, operations, compliance, and other administrative services to Pelican State and the Slidell clinic. All salary, bonuses, and other payments made to Bratton under the employment agreement were processed and paid by USPT or one of its subsidiaries in Houston. Bratton testified that he did not know that his compensation "was carried out from bank accounts maintained by the company in Houston" because they appeared on his paystubs as having been drawn on a Louisiana bank.

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