Robert Parker, Oscar MacIas and Parker Mac, LLC v. HTR, Inc

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 29, 2012
Docket14-11-00940-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Robert Parker, Oscar MacIas and Parker Mac, LLC v. HTR, Inc (Robert Parker, Oscar MacIas and Parker Mac, LLC v. HTR, Inc) 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
Robert Parker, Oscar MacIas and Parker Mac, LLC v. HTR, Inc, (Tex. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

Affirmed and Memorandum Opinion filed November 29, 2012.

In The

Fourteenth Court of Appeals

NO. 14-11-00940-CV

ROBERT PARKER, OSCAR MACIAS, AND PARKER MAC, LLC, Appellants

V.

HTR, INC., Appellee

On Appeal from the County Court at Law No. 3 Harris County, Texas Trial Court Cause No. 947736

MEMORANDUM OPINION Appellants Robert Parker, Oscar Macias, and Parker Mac, LLC assert that the trial court erred in concluding that they breached an oral commission agreement with appellee HTR, Inc. In four issues, they assert that (a) the agreement at issue is unenforceable because it violates the statute of frauds provision of the Texas Uniform Commercial Code—Sales (the ―Texas UCC‖);1 (b) because the agreement is unenforceable, attorney’s

1 See Tex. Bus. & Com. Code § 2.101 (short title), § 2.201 (statute of frauds). fees were not appropriate; and (c) the evidence is legally and factually insufficient to support part of the trial court’s damages award. We affirm.

BACKGROUND

This suit arose because Mike Starling, president of HTC, Inc., discovered that Robert Parker and Oscar Macias sold industrial equipment directly to two customers Starling had referred to them: Morris Industries and Ellison Technologies. HTC sued Parker, Macias, and the company they formed, Parker Mac LLC, in September 2009, seeking a ten-percent commission on the proceeds from these sales. The case was tried to the bench on June 8, 2011. The following evidence was presented.

Parker and Macias began building industrial equipment together in 2005 in the Midland, Texas area, apparently working under the name of ―Parker Mac Fabrication.‖2 Parker primarily managed the financial side of the business, while Macias was tasked with fabrication and some bidding of projects. Macias had been acquainted with Starling since the mid-1980s. Starling’s company, HTR, is located in the Houston area. Starling had referred business to Macias over the course of their acquaintance. Starling continued to refer customers to Parker and Macias once the two went into business together. HTR generally received a commission from the sales Starling referred to Parker Mac Fabrication, although the parties never had any formal, written agreement.

Parker testified that, customarily, when Starling referred sales to Parker Mac Fabrication, he and Macias would submit quotes to HTR based on specifications provided by Starling. HTR would mark up the equipment prices and provide quotes to customers for the equipment. When the bid was accepted by the end customer, HTR would pay Parker Mac Fabrication half for the equipment up-front and the other half when the job was completed. Parker would not see the final invoice provided to the customer, so he was not aware of the exact amount of HTR’s commission on these sales. 2 On January 13, 2009, Parker and Macias completed a certificate of formation of Parker Mac, LLC. This certificate of formation, by its terms, became effective when the document was filed by the Texas Secretary of State on March 27, 2009. The certificate of formation was admitted into evidence. The sales that form the basis of this suit, however, occurred prior to the formation of Parker Mac, LLC.

2 Parker testified that he, Macias, and Starling/HTR had successfully completed about seven or eight jobs working in this manner. Parker agreed that a ten percent commission would not be unreasonable for providing this type of referral service.

Starling described their business together as follows: ―Sometimes they [Parker, Macias, and Parker Mac Fabrication] would send me a quote that was my cost. Sometimes [Macias] would send me a quote and say that your commission of ten percent is built into this price.‖ He stated that they ―had the same terms on almost every deal. It was either 50 percent down and 50 percent upon shipment or 50 percent down and 40 percent upon shipment, 10 percent upon installation.‖ Starling testified that generally, he had been paid a ten percent commission by other industrial manufacturers when he sold their equipment, that he built a ten percent commission into the ―deals‖ he worked with Parker Mac Fabrication, and that he works on a ten percent commission at the present time. He acknowledged on cross examination that he had no records to show that he had ever billed Parker, Macias, or Parker Mac Fabrication directly for his commissions; rather, he testified that he was paid by invoicing the ―end customer.‖ He stated that if he was sent a ―net figure‖ from Macias, he would mark the price up before he sent it to the customer, but that if he was sent a ―gross figure,‖ he would not.

Starling testified that he and Parker Mac Fabrication had an agreement that ―[a]ny deal [he] brought to the table, [he] was entitled to a commission upon.‖ Starling further testified that he had had a conversation with both Parker and Macias in which Parker had assured him that any customer Starling brought to Parker and Macias would ―always‖ be Starling’s. Starling testified that a ten percent commission is ―a common commission paid on machinery sales.‖

Regarding the specific sales in question, the parties testified as follows. Starling testified that in September 2007, he was contacted by Mike Stern of Morris Industries. Morris Industries is located in New Jersey. Morris Industries was looking to purchase pipe feed and turning tables. Starling explained that HTC initially provided the quotes to Morris Industries and that he worked with Macias in preparing several quotes regarding

3 these tables, communicating ―back and forth‖ with Mike Stern. According to Starling, Stern wanted to visit the location where the tables were built. Starling informed Stern that the tables were built in Midland, Texas and told Parker that Stern wanted to visit their site. Stern visited the site where the tables were fabricated.

On November 25, 2008, Gregg Edwards, the office manager for Parker Mac Fabrication, provided an equipment price quote directly to Stern at Morris Industries. This quote was for fabrication and installation of three equipment tables, for a total price of $156,000.00. This quote was sent via email, and a copy of the email was sent to Starling at HTR.3 Morris Industries accepted the quotation, ordered the tables from Parker Mac Fabrication, and paid for them. HTR did not receive any commission on the sale of this equipment. On January 29, 2009, HTR invoiced Parker Mac Fabrication for one-half of ―commission due for Morris Pipe & Supply Co.‖ HTR invoiced Parker Mac Fabrication for $7,800, a ten percent commission on half of the total sale to Morris. HTR invoiced Parker Mac Fabrication for the remaining half of the ten percent commission on March 11, 2009. Both invoices were admitted as evidence.

Parker testified that Starling was not owed any commission for this sale because he had not referred this job to Parker Mac Fabrication. Instead, according to Parker, another individual had referred this job to Parker Mac Fabrication. Parker did not dispute the equipment price reflected in the invoice.

Starling testified that Ellison Technologies was the ―very first customer‖ he brought to Parker Mac Fabrication in 2004 or 2005. Starling received commissions for the Ellison Technologies sales he referred to them. Parker and Macias sold additional equipment directly to Ellison Technologies in 2007 and again in 2008. Starling was not paid a commission on these later sales to Ellison Technologies. The record contains an undated invoice from HTR to Parker Mac Fabrications reflecting commissions due on ―work performed on or about: 03/01-06/01/2007 & 11/24/2008‖ for equipment sold to

3 This email and quote were admitted into evidence.

4 Ellison Technologies.

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Robert Parker, Oscar MacIas and Parker Mac, LLC v. HTR, Inc, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robert-parker-oscar-macias-and-parker-mac-llc-v-ht-texapp-2012.