Richard Eugene Michael and Mike Williams v. NE CS First National, LP

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 8, 2024
Docket02-23-00307-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Richard Eugene Michael and Mike Williams v. NE CS First National, LP (Richard Eugene Michael and Mike Williams v. NE CS First National, LP) 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
Richard Eugene Michael and Mike Williams v. NE CS First National, LP, (Tex. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

In the Court of Appeals Second Appellate District of Texas at Fort Worth ___________________________ No. 02-23-00307-CV ___________________________

RICHARD EUGENE MICHAEL AND MIKE WILLIAMS, Appellants

V.

NE CS FIRST NATIONAL, LP, Appellee

On Appeal from the 48th District Court Tarrant County, Texas Trial Court No. 048-335909-22

Before Bassel, Womack, and Walker, JJ. Memorandum Opinion by Justice Bassel MEMORANDUM OPINION

I. Introduction

Appellants Mike Williams and Richard Eugene Michael have each filed an

interlocutory appeal from an amended temporary-injunction order. The order

restrains the sale of certain condominiums in Mexico that Williams and Michael

allegedly owned and contracted to convey to Appellee NE CS First National, LP.

The order currently before us was amended as a result of our prior opinion in which

we dissolved the trial court’s first temporary-injunction order because it failed to meet

the requirements of Texas Rule of Civil Procedure 683. See Williams v. NE CS First

Nat’l, LP, No. 02-23-00086-CV, 2023 WL 4781174, at *2 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth

July 27, 2023, no pet.) (mem. op.).

Williams raises a host of issues claiming that the trial court abused its discretion

by granting NE injunctive relief. Rather than listing our dispositions by issue, we will

state our holdings based on the topics that are covered in the complaints that were

raised in Williams’s appeal:

• The record supports the trial court’s exercise of its discretion to conclude that NE made a showing of imminent and irreparable injury or harm sufficient to support the issuance of a temporary injunction;

• The contract forming the basis of NE’s claim does not lack consideration;

• The argument that Williams was not a proper party to the contract at issue fails;

2 • The argument that the record conclusively established that the contract at issue was invalid because one of the parties to it could not be a successor in interest that was bound by the contract fails;

• We do not reach Williams’s contention that NE failed to offer proof of a claim under the Texas Theft Liability Act or a conversion claim because the trial court did not predicate its amended injunction order on those claims;

• NE did not make an election of remedies that barred its ability to obtain injunctive relief;

• We sustain Williams’s issue contending that the trial court erred by enjoining the sale of a condominium not referenced in the contract at issue; and

• The contention that NE could have filed a lis pendens notice in Mexico that obviated its need for injunctive relief fails.

Michael, in his appeal, raises a single issue claiming that he is not bound by the

contract at issue because he specifically denied that he had executed it and because

there is no proof that he signed it. However, when the contract was offered into

evidence, Michael’s counsel stated that he had no objection to its admission. Thus,

for purposes of the amended temporary injunction, Michael has waived the argument

that the contract cannot be authenticated because of a lack of proof that he signed it.

Based on our disposition of the issues raised in these appeals, we dissolve the

portion of the amended temporary-injunction order that enjoins the sale of a

condominium not referenced in the contract at issue and affirm the amended

temporary-injunction order as modified.

3 II. Factual and Procedural Background

This controversy turns on a written agreement executed after NE learned of a

defalcation by Williams and his company. Williams was identified in NE’s petition as

a principal of Purchasing Solutions International, Inc. (PSI), and as president of PSI

he signed a contract with NE to provide procurement services for the redevelopment

of a historic property in Oklahoma City; the procurement contract was titled

“Proposal for OFCI, FF&E[,] and OS&E Procurement Services.”

NE learned that approximately $2 million that it had provided to PSI pursuant

to the proposal for the purchase of materials to be used in the redevelopment had not

been paid to the vendors who had supplied the materials. Upon discovery of this

state of affairs, NE; a company named Consultants in Purchasing, Inc. (CIP) (that was

identified in the document at issue as a “successor in interest” to PSI); Williams

(identified in the document as MWilliams); and Williams’s spouse, Michael (identified

in the document as RMichael) entered into an agreement that was titled an

Amendment to the proposal for procurement services.

The Amendment recited as follows how the funds that NE had provided under

the terms of the proposal were misused:

RECITALS:

A. NE and Purchasing Solutions International, Inc. (“PSI”) entered into that certain “Proposal for OFCI, FF&E[,] and OS&E Procurement Services” (“Agreement”) on or about February 23, 2018. On or about December 30, 2020, CIP notified NE that it owned the interest of PSI in the Agreement through a name change of PSI.

4 B. During the course of the performance of the Agreement by CIP, NE made payments to CIP [that] were requested by CIP to pay vendors for delivery of goods procured for NE by CIP and [that], in some cases, have (1) not been paid to vendors but kept by CIP and/or MWilliams[;] (2) used for purposes other than performance of the Agreement and payment to vendors for the benefit of NE, as required by the Agreement[;] and (3) used for the benefit of CIP and/or MWilliams to the detriment of NE. Such payments are referred to herein as the “CIP Retained Funds.”

C. CIP and MWilliams have offered to repay NE the CIP Retained Funds, with interest from the date such amounts were taken by CIP and MWilliams, as well as certain costs incurred by NE or its designee as further described herein, and MWilliams has offered to convey property owned jointly by MWilliams and RMichael to NE (or to a designee of NE) pending repayment of the CIP Retained Funds plus interest thereon and the costs referred to herein.

D. Currently, the total amount of CIP Retained Funds has not been fully established but is estimated to be in the range of $2,000,000.

The body of the Amendment acknowledged (in the following provision) how

CIP and Williams had diverted the funds (described in the quoted recitals as the CIP

Retained Funds) and had

taken the CIP Retained Funds for their own purposes and not for the purpose of performing CIP’s obligations pursuant to the Agreement, without the knowledge, authority[,] or consent of NE or any person acting on behalf of NE, by invoicing NE for items purportedly to be procured pursuant to the Agreement, backed-up by invoices from suppliers, and when NE paid the amounts invoiced to CIP, CIP and/or MWilliams did not use the funds for purposes of paying vendors as invoiced but diverted the funds to other purposes including for the personal benefit of MWilliams . . . .

CIP and Williams agreed to repay the CIP Retained Funds and “to convey certain

property owned by MWilliams and RMichael to NE pending the repayment of the

5 CIP Retained Funds with interest and costs on or before one (1) year from the date of

this Agreement.”

The Amendment also required CIP and Williams to provide records so that the

true amount of the CIP Retained Funds could be calculated, with the calculated

amount being included in what the Amendment defined as the Amount Due. The

Amendment then contained the undertaking that “CIP and MWilliams hereby

unconditionally agree, jointly and severally, to pay to NE the ‘Amount Due’ (as

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Richard Eugene Michael and Mike Williams v. NE CS First National, LP, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/richard-eugene-michael-and-mike-williams-v-ne-cs-first-national-lp-texapp-2024.