Raymond Showery and Empresario Investments, L.L.C. v. Jaime Hervella
This text of Raymond Showery and Empresario Investments, L.L.C. v. Jaime Hervella (Raymond Showery and Empresario Investments, L.L.C. v. Jaime Hervella) 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.
Opinion
COURT OF APPEALS
EIGHTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS
EL PASO, TEXAS
RAYMOND SHOWERY and EMPRESARIO )
INVESTMENTS, L.L.C., ) No. 08-02-00390-CV
)
Appellants, ) Appeal from the
v. ) 205th District Court
JAIME HERVELLA, ) of El Paso County, Texas
Appellee. ) (TC# 2002-2523)
MEMORANDUM OPINION
Appellants Raymond Showery and Empresario Investment, L.L.C. (AAppellants@) appeal a judgment entered in favor of Appellee Jaime Hervella in his codefendant cross-claim suit to enforce a settlement and release agreement entered by Appellants and Mr. Hervella. In three issues, Appellants challenge the trial court=s judgment arguing that: (1) they were denied due process because they did not receive timely notice of the trial setting; (2) the trial court erred in concluding they breached the settlement and release agreement; and (3) the trial court erred in its findings of fact and conclusions of law when it erroneously interpreted unambiguous language in the parties= mediated settlement agreement. We reverse and remand for a new trial.
On July 23, 1998, Mr. Hervella, Appellants, and Family Hospital of El Paso, Inc. (AFamily Hospital@) entered into a settlement and release agreement (AAgreement@) to settle all claims and disputes between the parties. As stated in the Agreement, since 1992, Mr. Hervella, a financial consultant and planner, had provided real estate management services and accounting services to Appellant Mr. Showery and Family Hospital. In March 1996, Family Hospital and Mr. Hervella entered into an agreement whereby Family Hospital transferred essentially all of its assets into a newly formed Texas limited liability company, Appellant Empresario Investments, L.L.C. in which Mr. Hervella would own a 20 percent ownership interest in consideration for past uncompensated services rendered. Pursuant to the Agreement, Mr. Hervella transferred to Appellant Empresario his ownership rights in Empresario and relinquished and waived all management rights and powers held in Empresario as a manager. With respect to one asset held by Empresario, a promissory note referred to as the AHernandez Note,@ the parties agreed that legal title and ownership of the Hernandez Note was to remain in Empresario, but Mr. Hervella was to control and manage the Hernandez Note Ato attempt to affect a settlement with HERNANDEZ and or to liquidate, sell or foreclose the HERNANDEZ NOTE.@ The Hernandez Note was a promissory note in default executed by Luis and Victoria Hernandez in October 1994 in the original principal amount of $43,532.70, which was secured by a first lien against their residence, the Paraguay property. Mr. Hervella was obligated to pay all costs and expenses incurred in connection with the sale or liquidation of the Hernandez Note. By the terms of the Agreement, Mr. Hervella was to receive the first $25,000 of the proceeds, plus reimbursement of expenses incurred for the collection and then fifty percent of the remaining proceeds from the Hernandez Note.
After attempting unsuccessfully to collect on the note through direct negotiations with Mr. and Mrs. Hernandez, Mr. Hervella hired attorney Robert Kennedy in December 1998 to assist in pursuing collection. Mr. Kennedy foreclosed on the Paraguay property securing the note, which resulted in Mr. and Mrs. Hernandez filing suit inter alia for wrongful foreclosure against Appellants and Mr. Hervella. In their suit, the Hernandezes sought to enjoin and restrain a foreclosure sale on their residence posted under an allegedly unlawful declaration of default and acceleration of maturity of the promissory note. Mr. Hervella later hired attorney Gregory Pine to replace Mr. Kennedy in collecting on the note and defending the wrongful foreclosure claims. On October 16, 2001, the Hernandezes, Appellants, and Mr. Hervella entered into a Mediation Settlement Agreement (AMSA@). Pursuant to the MSA, Empresario agreed to convey the Paraguay property to the Hernandezes by general warranty deed and the Hernandezes agreed to execute a promissory note in the original principal sum of $49,500, payable to Empresario and secured by a first lien deed of trust bearing an annual interest rate of 9.5 percent for a term of fifteen years. Mr. Hervella and Mr. Showery respectively agreed to pay one-half of the delinquent property taxes on the residence, which amounted to $12,003. Importantly, MSA provided that A[d]isputes between Showery, Hervella, and Empresario are not resolved by this agreement.@
On November 27, 2001, Mr. Hervella filed codefendant cross-claims against Appellants in the Hernandezes= lawsuit, in which he alleged Appellants breached the July 1998 Agreement by refusing to pay him the amounts due to him under that Agreement from the payments received under the new promissory note. Mr. Hervella also sought a declaration that the Agreement was binding and enforceable and he was entitled to an interest in the proceeds of the Hernandez Note and/or the new promissory note in the amount outlined in the Agreement. On February 5, 2002, the trial court entered an order for referral of Appellants and Mr. Hervella to mediation. On the same date, the trial court set the matter for a non-jury bench trial scheduled for March 7, 2002. Mediation proceedings were conducted on February 27, 2002, but the parties did not reach a settlement. On March 4, 2002, Appellants filed a motion for continuance of the March 7, 2002 trial setting because they had not been able to retain counsel and Athe status of this whole matter is uncertain in that the original case is still pending . . . .@ The trial court set a hearing on the motion for continuance for March 7, 2002. The motion was subsequently denied. After a bench trial, the trial court entered a judgment in favor of Mr. Hervella.
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