Robert Horry Sports Medicine, LLC, Kegis Smith, Robert Horry, Keith & Kerndard Holdings, LLC, and Anastasia Patoka v. Tomur Barnes and Roxanne Calmalet

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 3, 2020
Docket01-19-00256-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Robert Horry Sports Medicine, LLC, Kegis Smith, Robert Horry, Keith & Kerndard Holdings, LLC, and Anastasia Patoka v. Tomur Barnes and Roxanne Calmalet (Robert Horry Sports Medicine, LLC, Kegis Smith, Robert Horry, Keith & Kerndard Holdings, LLC, and Anastasia Patoka v. Tomur Barnes and Roxanne Calmalet) 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.

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Robert Horry Sports Medicine, LLC, Kegis Smith, Robert Horry, Keith & Kerndard Holdings, LLC, and Anastasia Patoka v. Tomur Barnes and Roxanne Calmalet, (Tex. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

Opinion issued December 3, 2020

In The

Court of Appeals For The

First District of Texas ———————————— NO. 01-19-00256-CV ——————————— ROBERT HORRY SPORTS MEDICINE, LLC, KEGIS SMITH, KEITH & KERNARD HOLDINGS, LLC, AND ANASTASIA PATOKA, Appellants V. TOMUR BARNES, Appellee

On Appeal from the 61st District Court Harris County, Texas Trial Court Case No. 2016-69540

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Appellee, Tomur Barnes, invested $100,000 in a business venture with

appellants, Robert Horry Sports Medicine, LLC, Kegis Smith, Keith & Kernard

Holdings, LLC, and Anastasia Patoka. When he did not receive a return on his

investment, Barnes sued the appellants, asserting causes of action for fraud and breach of fiduciary duty. A jury found in favor of Barnes on his claims, and the

trial court rendered judgment on the jury verdict, awarding Barnes $500,000 in

actual damages and a total of $350,000 in exemplary damages against appellees

Smith, Patoka, and Keith & Kernard Holdings. The appellants now complain on

appeal that (1) Barnes’s claims were barred by the statute of limitations; (2) the

evidence was insufficient to support the jury’s finding that Smith breached a

fiduciary duty to Barnes; (3) the evidence was insufficient to support the jury’s

findings on Barnes’s fraud claims; (4) the evidence was insufficient to support the

jury’s award of actual damages; and (5) the award of exemplary damages was

improper. We affirm.

Background

Tomur Barnes is a retired professional football player who eventually began

a second career as an entrepreneur and a personal trainer. Barnes met Anastasia

Patoka at the gym, and she informed him of an opportunity to invest in a physical

rehabilitation center associated with former Houston Rockets star Robert Horry.

According to Barnes, Patoka was looking for other athletes to invest in the

business. Barnes told one of his training clients, Roxanne Calmelet,1 about this

opportunity, and they became interested in making an investment.

1 Calmelet was named as a plaintiff in the lawsuit below, but she was not a party to the final judgment.

2 Around the time Barnes met Patoka, she and Kegis Smith had recently

decided to start a physical rehabilitation center. Smith had been friends with Robert

Horry for a number of years, and he and Patoka believed that they could create a

successful rehabilitation center using Horry’s name to promote the business and

attract clients. Smith started Robert Horry Center for Sports & Physical

Rehabilitation, LLC (Robert Horry Center) and Keith & Kernard Holdings, LLC

(K&K Holdings). Patoka and Smith both stated that the purpose of the holding

company was to protect them from liability associated with the Robert Horry

Center, and they testified that K&K Holdings had a profit-sharing arrangement

with the Robert Horry Center. Although Smith, Patoka, and Horry were all listed

as owners of the Robert Horry Center, Horry was not involved in business

operations, and Patoka and Smith served as the officers and managers of that

business. Smith and Horry were the sole members of K&K Holdings.

Barnes testified that, after he met Patoka sometime in late 2010 or early

2011, they began discussing his making an investment in her business with Smith.

Barnes toured the physical rehabilitation center in Sugar Land, Texas, which had

opened in June 2011. According to Barnes, Patoka and Smith only discussed with

him the Robert Horry Center, and he believed that was the entity in which he

would be investing. Smith and Patoka told him they were looking to expand

beyond the one location that had already opened, and Barnes had connections in

3 Baytown. They told him that he would receive a 12% share in the business in

exchange for making a $100,000 investment. Calmelet loaned Barnes $100,000 to

invest in the business, and Barnes delivered the funds to Patoka and Smith.

Barnes testified that he did not hear anything further about his investment

for months. At some point later in 2011, Barnes received a written agreement from

“the Members of Keith & Kernard Holdings, LLC,” reciting that Barnes had

received a 12% interest in K&K Holdings, while Kegis maintained a 37.9%

interest and Horry maintained a 50.1% interest. This agreement was dated October

7, 2011, and was signed by Smith and Horry.2 This document reflected that Barnes

had invested in K&K Holdings, not in the Robert Horry Center as he had believed

at the time he delivered the funds to Patoka and Smith. Barnes stated that, at the

time this agreement was presented to him, he had never heard of K&K Holdings.

He testified, however, that Smith and Patoka represented to him that K&K

Holdings was a holding company that owned the entirety of the Robert Horry

Center, and, on that basis, he signed the agreement and continued to think that his

investment went to the Robert Horry Center and that he would be entitled to those

profits through the holding company. He testified that he would not have signed

this agreement if he had not believed Patoka’s and Smith’s representations about

the nature of K&K Holdings’ interest in the Robert Horry Center.

2 Horry testified at trial that he did not actually sign the membership agreement, but Smith had signed on his behalf and with his permission. 4 Barnes testified that, following his investment, he made efforts to coordinate

with Patoka and Smith to open a new location of the Robert Horry Center in

Baytown, where Barnes lived, but those efforts fell through. Barnes testified that

he did not hear anything else from Smith, Patoka, or Horry. He became concerned

about his investment and, after doing a little searching on his own, he hired an

attorney to help him protect his investment.

Barnes subsequently discovered that sometime in 2012, the Robert Horry

Center had become a department of University General Hospital (UGH). Patoka

testified at trial that the Robert Horry Center got “into a relationship with the

University General Hospital” and that the business “became a department of

University General Hospital” with the expectation that UGH would help with

billing and collection. Patoka stated that the Robert Horry Center was not sold to

UGH, nor did UGH pay to acquire the Robert Horry Center. Rather, UGH “bought

some of the equipment and then we had a profit-sharing agreement with them.” As

part of this arrangement, the Robert Horry Center separated into two different

entities—the “Robert Horry Center for Sports and Physical Rehabilitation” and the

“Robert Horry Center for Sports and Rehab”—because Smith and Patoka wanted

to continue taking referrals from some doctors with whom UGH would not work.

Despite the existence of two different entities, Patoka testified that they did the

same work in the same facilities and were essentially the same company.

5 The arrangement between the Robert Horry Center and UGH continued for a

“a couple of years” until UGH filed for bankruptcy. Patoka could not recall the

exact date that the Robert Horry Center ceased working with UGH, but she knew

that UGH ultimately ended up owing Robert Horry Centers a “substantial amount

of money.” She believed it was approximately $600,000. She testified that this put

Robert Horry Centers into a difficult financial position.

Also in 2012, Patoka and Smith married, and Patoka was made a member of

K&K Holdings.

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Robert Horry Sports Medicine, LLC, Kegis Smith, Robert Horry, Keith & Kerndard Holdings, LLC, and Anastasia Patoka v. Tomur Barnes and Roxanne Calmalet, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robert-horry-sports-medicine-llc-kegis-smith-robert-horry-keith-texapp-2020.