Ron L. Fraze and Eastern Development No. 1, Inc. v. Joey Pfleider D/B/A Joey Pfleider Logging

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 26, 2005
Docket09-04-00189-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Ron L. Fraze and Eastern Development No. 1, Inc. v. Joey Pfleider D/B/A Joey Pfleider Logging (Ron L. Fraze and Eastern Development No. 1, Inc. v. Joey Pfleider D/B/A Joey Pfleider Logging) 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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Ron L. Fraze and Eastern Development No. 1, Inc. v. Joey Pfleider D/B/A Joey Pfleider Logging, (Tex. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

In The

Court of Appeals



Ninth District of Texas at Beaumont



____________________



NO. 09-04-189 CV



RON L. FRAZE and EASTERN DEVELOPMENT NO. 1, INC., Appellants

V.



JOEY PFLEIDER D/B/A JOEY PFLEIDER LOGGING, Appellee



On Appeal from the 260th Judicial District Court

Orange County, Texas

Trial Cause No. D-030184-C



MEMORANDUM OPINION

Joey Pfleider, d/b/a Joey Pfleider Logging, sued Ron L. Fraze and Eastern Development No. 1, Inc., for breach of contract and fraud. The jury found the contract was breached and Fraze committed fraud. Exemplary damages were assessed against Fraze. Fraze and Eastern raise fourteen issues in this appeal. We reverse the trial court's judgment and remand for a new trial on all claims.



The Dispute

The contract at issue concerns the clearing by Pfleider of land owned by Fraze. Fraze directs the operations of Eastern. He operates several companies at the same street address in Plano, using eight different phone lines. Eastern was involved in building the first phase of two planned apartment complexes in Orange, Texas. The corporation has little present value. Fraze individually owned the land where phase two of the project was to be built. He intended to sell the land to the Orange Housing Authority, and to begin phase two of the apartment project with the financing obtained from the land sale. According to Fraze, the first step was to obtain approval of the apartment project from the Housing Authority. Engineering and architectural work could then commence, bonds would "close," and the project would begin.

Pfleider, a logging contractor, purchased the timber on Fraze's land. Fraze then hired Pfleider by separate contract to clear the land of stumps and debris. Pfleider drafted the clearing contract that is the subject of this litigation. (1) When Fraze received the proposed contract, he added a handwritten provision that stated "First payment made after closing of land and project started."

Fraze did not speak with Pfleider during the contract negotiations. Instead, Don Kreymer, Eastern's liaison in Orange, negotiated with Pfleider. Pfleider testified he believed Kreymer was the agent of Fraze and Eastern. Kreymer testified he performed site work, zoning, and land work for Eastern and two other companies owned by Fraze. His duties included arranging for the clearing to be done by Pfleider.

As instructed by Fraze, Kreymer told Pfleider to prepare the contract for "Ron Fraze, president, Eastern Development." Kreymer knew Eastern's name to be "Eastern Development." Fraze testified that, although Eastern was often called "Eastern Development," it is a corporation and its official name is Eastern Development No. 1, Inc. The timber contract was with Fraze individually, and Pfleider believed the clearing contract was also with Fraze. Pfleider testified Kreymer told him Ron Fraze owned the property "and that's who I was dealing with." Pfleider had never heard of a corporation called "Eastern Development No. 1, Inc." before the lawsuit. He testified Kreymer did not tell him Eastern Development was a corporation.

When Pfleider received the contract with Fraze's handwritten addition, he asked Kreymer to explain the addition. Pfleider testified Kreymer told him "they had not . . . had their closing and that they had to shuffle some paperwork around or do something to get prepared to close and it would be 60 to 90 days." Pfleider testified: "And then I asked him -- I said, 'Now, look, I can't drag this thing out forever. Is it going to be 60 or 90 days for sure?' And he said 'It's not going to be any problem. You'll have your money in 60 to 90 days.' And so, with his assurance, I said 'Fine.'" Pfleider believed he would be paid sixty to ninety days after he finished the work. He testified: "Mr. Kreymer, Mr. Fraze's employee or agent or whatever, told me it would be 60 or 90 days; and I trusted him. He seemed like a reasonable guy. They had apartments . . . all over. And I assumed that they did this all of the time and it wouldn't be a problem getting paid." In his deposition testimony, Kreymer denied making any representation to Pfleider concerning when he would be paid. He testified payment on this type of agreement typically occurred within sixty to ninety days. At trial, however, Kreymer said "I don't know if it was exactly that day; but right around that time, I did make the comment that -- because that was typically how they were done and closed in the past and that it was 60 to 90 days is the norm because he -- he did ask. I don't know if it was that day or the next day or within a couple of days." Fraze denied authorizing Kreymer to tell Pfleider when he could expect to be paid.

Testifying by deposition, Frank Anderson, the executive director of the Housing Authority, said that in October, 2001, the Authority did not have any plans to develop the property. Anderson also testified there have been no negotiations since then between Fraze or any of his companies and the Housing Authority to build any apartment project. Anderson further stated there was currently no plan to develop the project. Financing could not be obtained. On cross-examination, Anderson qualified his statement, saying

what I meant by plans was, you know, something concrete to know exactly when we were going to do what from there because right now, everything that was discussed was just trying to find a way to finance it. And when I say plans, I meant, you know, actually to start, . . .to get the bonds sold and financing mechanism.



At trial, however, Anderson testified he has been involved in discussions about obtaining financing for phase two. He estimated he had met with Fraze three times in the last three years. When asked whether the Housing Authority would be willing to contract with anyone other than Fraze, Anderson responded "Well, I can't really say that because I have been talking to him all along about that; and, you know, we somewhat had an agreement." Anderson testified two market studies had been done in an attempt to obtain financing for phase two. According to Anderson, the last meeting with Fraze's company regarding the project was six to eight months before trial.

Anderson testified nothing could be done toward completing the project because of the pendency of Pfleider's lawsuit. Anderson said the Housing Authority would not have purchased the land from Fraze if it had not intended to develop apartments. He also testified the Housing Authority never had a contract with Fraze to build phase two. No plans exist to develop the property within the year.

Pfleider was unable to begin the clearing work for several months due to weather conditions. He hired workers and rented a trackhoe, a six-inch water pump, two timber jack log skidders, and a D8 dozer with a rake to complete the job. After completing the work on May 29, 2002, he called Kreymer and asked him to inspect it. Kreymer told Pfleider the work looked fine, and Pfleider began asking Kreymer when he would be paid.

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Ron L. Fraze and Eastern Development No. 1, Inc. v. Joey Pfleider D/B/A Joey Pfleider Logging, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ron-l-fraze-and-eastern-development-no-1-inc-v-joe-texapp-2005.