Pradera SFR v. American Housing Ventures

CourtTexas Business Court
DecidedMay 12, 2026
Docket25-BC04A-0015
StatusPublished

This text of Pradera SFR v. American Housing Ventures (Pradera SFR v. American Housing Ventures) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Business Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pradera SFR v. American Housing Ventures, (Tex. Super. Ct. 2026).

Opinion

FILED IN BUSINESS COURT OF TEXAS BEVERLY CRUMLEY, CLERK ENTERED 5/12/2026 2026 Tex. Bus. 25

The Business Court of Texas, Fourth Division

PRADERA SFR, LLC, § § Plaintiff, § § v. § Cause No. 25-BC04A-0015 § AMERICAN HOUSING VENTURES, LLC, § § Defendant. § §

═══════════════════════════════════════ OPINION ═══════════════════════════════════════

Syllabus ∗ In a plea to the jurisdiction, Defendant challenged the Court’s authority to hear this case by arguing that the Plaintiff’s claims do not meet the statutory amount in controversy required for this court’s jurisdiction. Applying Texas’s well-established plea to the jurisdiction standard, the Court concludes it has subject-matter jurisdiction to hear this case. Accordingly, the Defendant’s plea to the jurisdiction is denied.

∗ NOTE: The syllabus was created by court staff and is provided for the convenience of the reader. It is not part of the Court’s opinion, does not constitute the Court’s official description or statement, and should not be relied upon as legal authority. OPINION ¶1 Before the court is Defendant American Housing Ventures, LLC’s (“AHV”)

Plea to the Jurisdiction challenging the court’s authority to hear this case filed on February

27, 2026. Plaintiff Pradera SFR, LLC (“Pradera SFR”) filed a response on March 16,

2026. The court held a hearing on the matter on April 15, 2026. After considering the

parties’ arguments, the court denies Defendant’s plea.

BACKGROUND

¶2 This case arises out of a real estate development project (the “Pradera

Project”) and subsequent copyright infringement lawsuit. Under the Pradera Project’s

Development Agreement, Pradera SFR was the owner, and AHV was the development

manager of a community of 250 detached single-family rental homes in the Culebra

Corridor in San Antonio, Texas. The Pradera Project was completed in 2020. In 2021, the

Parties in the present case, Pradera SFR and AHV, were sued for copyright infringement by

Kipp Flores Architects (“KFA”), an architectural firm with which AHV had previously

worked, in connection with the Pradera Project. See Kipp Flores Architects, LLC v. Pradera

SFR, LLC et al., C.A. No. 5:21-cv-673-XR (W.D. Tx. 2021).

¶3 As alleged by Pradera SFR, under the Development Agreement, AHV

assumed various obligations related to the management of the project. This included the

obligations to perform the duties of a sophisticated development manager, act in good faith,

act in Pradera SFR’s best interest, and manage project architects and plans in compliance

with the law, including federal copyright law. The Development Agreement also imposed certain insurance obligations and required AHV to indemnify Pradera SFR for losses arising

from AHV’s defaults, gross negligence, or willful misconduct.

¶4 During the project's development, AHV initially approached KFA to be the

architect for the Pradera Project’s architectural drawings and plans. Pradera SFR and KFA

ultimately did not reach an agreement on contractual terms. AHV later engaged KTGY

Group, Inc. (“KTGY”) as the architects for the Pradera Project. KTGY prepared the

architectural drawings and plans for the development of the Pradera Project.

¶5 As alleged by Pradera SFR, discovery obtained during the 2021 copyright

infringement lawsuit showed that AHV shared KFA’s copyrighted plans with KTGY and

instructed KTGY to use KFA’s plans in developing the plans KTGY was contracted to

produce for the Pradera Development. Pradera SFR further alleged that the resulting

derivative plans from KTGY were used in the construction of the rental homes in the

Pradera Project and incorporated in the project’s marketing materials. According to

Pradera SFR, KFA notified AHV of the copyright infringement issue several years before

KFA filed suit, and AHV did not disclose these concerns and represented to Pradera SFR

that KTGY’s plans were independently developed.

¶6 Development of the Pradera Project continued, and KFA filed suit in 2021

against AHV, Pradera SFR, and KTGY, asserting claims for copyright infringement in

connection with the use of KFA’s plans and related marketing materials. Pradera SFR

alleged at the hearing on the present matter that, because the challenged designs had been

used in connection with the construction of the homes in the Pradera Project, it faced a

potential exposure of up to $70,000,000 in disgorgement damages. ¶7 In 2023, all parties to the 2021 copyright infringement suit (Pradera SFR,

AHV, KTYG, and KFA) participated in mediation. As alleged by Pradera SFR, during the

mediation, AHV refused to execute a settlement agreement unless Pradera SFR and AHV

simultaneously resolved all pending crossclaims between them, including indemnity-

related disputes arising under the Development Agreement. According to Pradera SFR, the

Parties negotiated under a mediation deadline requiring execution before midnight that

same day. With the options of either resolving the issue with AHV or remaining exposed to

the potential disgorgement damages in the pending copyright claims, Pradera SFR agreed

to a settlement with AHV.

¶8 All parties to the copyright infringement lawsuit entered into a Settlement

Agreement. Under the Settlement Agreement, Pradera SFR and AHV agreed to a global

settlement that mutually released claims arising from the Development Agreement,

Pradera Project, and 2021 KFA copyright litigation. However, Pradera SFR alleges that

under the Settlement Agreement, it expressly retained certain indemnity claims against

AHV. Specifically, Section 3 titled “Retained Claims” of the Settlement Agreement

provided that any retained indemnification claim would be limited “to the extent of

remaining coverage under the USIC Policy, with any recovery limited to any insurance

proceeds received by AHV from USIC.”

¶9 The Settlement Agreement also contained a forum selection clause

designating the United States District Court for the Western District of Texas as the forum

for disputes arising under the agreement. In 2024, Pradera SFR sued AHV in that court to

enforce the Settlement Agreement and assert the indemnity claims it alleges it reserved seeking fees and costs allegedly incurred in the FKA copyright infringement litigation.

AHV moved to dismiss the action, asserting, among other things, res judicata and

limitations arising from the Settlement Agreement. In 2025, the federal district court

dismissed the action without prejudice, declining to exercise jurisdiction over Pradera

SFR's state-law indemnification claims. Pradera SFR now alleges it incurred approximately

$500,000 in attorneys’ fees and costs in connection with that proceeding.

¶10 Pradera SFR subsequently filed this action in the Business Court, asserting

causes of action for (1) indemnification based on AHV’s breach of duty and gross

negligence, (2) indemnification based on AHV's alleged failure to maintain required

insurance coverage under the Development Agreement, (3) breach of the Settlement

Agreement, and (4) rescission or reformation the Settlement Agreement based on mistake

or fraudulent inducement, or alternatively, mutual mistake. AHV responded by filing the

present Plea to the Jurisdiction.

¶11 In its Original Petition, Pradera SFR alleges that the insurance proceeds

limitation contained in Section 3 of the Settlement Agreement was the product of either

mistake, fraudulent inducement, or mutual mistake. According to Pradera SFR, it was

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Bluebook (online)
Pradera SFR v. American Housing Ventures, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pradera-sfr-v-american-housing-ventures-texbizct-2026.