RWI Construction, Inc., RWI Acquisition, LLC, Lone Star Opportunities Fund V, LP and RWI Construction Holdings, LLC v. Comerica Bank

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 12, 2019
Docket05-18-00265-CV
StatusPublished

This text of RWI Construction, Inc., RWI Acquisition, LLC, Lone Star Opportunities Fund V, LP and RWI Construction Holdings, LLC v. Comerica Bank (RWI Construction, Inc., RWI Acquisition, LLC, Lone Star Opportunities Fund V, LP and RWI Construction Holdings, LLC v. Comerica Bank) 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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RWI Construction, Inc., RWI Acquisition, LLC, Lone Star Opportunities Fund V, LP and RWI Construction Holdings, LLC v. Comerica Bank, (Tex. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

AFFIRM in Part, REVERSE in Part, and REMAND, Opinion Filed April 12, 2019.

In The Court of Appeals Fifth District of Texas at Dallas No. 05-18-00265-CV

RWI CONSTRUCTION, INC., RWI ACQUISITION, LLC, LONE STAR OPPORTUNITIES FUND V. LP, and RWI CONSTRUCTION HOLDINGS, LLC, Appellants V. COMERICA BANK, Appellee

On Appeal from the 134th Judicial District Court Dallas County, Texas Trial Court Cause No. DC-18-01217

OPINION Before Justices Brown, Schenck, and Pedersen, III Opinion by Justice Schenck In this interlocutory appeal, we must determine whether the trial court erred in granting

appellee Comerica Bank’s request for a temporary injunction. In a single issue, appellants Lone

Star Opportunities Fund V. LP (“Lone Star”), RWI Construction, Inc. (“RWI Construction”), RWI

Acquisition, LLC (“RWI Acquisition”), and RWI Construction Holdings, LLC (“RWI Holdings”)

claim the trial court abused its discretion in entering the injunction because Comerica Bank did

not establish that it would suffer an irreparable injury for which the remedy at law would be

inadequate. We reverse in part and affirm in part the trial court’s temporary injunction order. We

remand the case to the trial court for entry of a temporary injunction in accordance with this

opinion. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

Lone Star is a private equity fund that acquires, holds, and sells other companies like RWI

Acquisition. RWI Acquisition in turn owns RWI Construction. The assets of Lone Star are limited

primarily to its investment in the companies in its portfolio and to the subordinated debt the

portfolio companies owe to Lone Star. Comerica Bank is a limited partner in Lone Star1 and has,

over the years, extended loans to some of Lone Star’s portfolio companies. Lone Star itself has a

revolving credit loan with Texas Capital Bank. Comerica Bank is a participant in that loan.

At issue in this case are a loan Comerica Bank made to RWI Construction and RWI

Acquisition in excess of $8 million and the respective guaranties of RWI Holdings2 and Lone Star.3

RWI Construction’s and RWI Acquisition’s accounts receivable, inventory, equipment, fixtures,

and other personal property serve as collateral for the loan. It is undisputed that RWI Construction

and RWI Acquisition failed to pay their indebtedness to Comerica Bank at maturity and, in May

2017, Comerica Bank demanded payment from appellants on the notes and the guaranties. No

payment was made.

On January 30, 2018, Comerica Bank filed suit against appellants for breach of their

agreements and sought injunctive relief enjoining appellants from dissipating certain funds

deposited into an account at Texas Capital Bank in response to a capital call issued by Lone Star.

Comerica Bank anticipated that Texas Capital Bank would distribute the proceeds of the capital

call in excess of the amounts required to fully satisfy its revolving loan (“Excess Proceeds”) to

Lone Star and asserted that, unless enjoined, Lone Star would dissipate, hide, secrete, or otherwise

1 In this case, Comerica Bank does not assert any claims in its capacity as a partner in Lone Star. All of its claims relate to its role as a lender. 2 Appellants concede that the RWI entities are insolvent and are unable to meet their obligations as they come due. 3 Lone Star’s guaranty is a limited guaranty. Comerica Bank’s representative calculated the amount due on the guaranty to be $4,400,000.04 in principal, plus continuing costs.

–2– make the Excess Proceeds unavailable to Comerica Bank. The trial court entered a temporary

restraining order enjoining appellants from hiding, secreting, or dissipating the Excess Proceeds.

On February 13, 2018, the trial court conducted a hearing to determine whether to grant

Comerica Bank a temporary injunction. During that hearing, the trial court took judicial notice of

the testimony and exhibits from an earlier hearing on appellants’ motion to reconsider the

temporary restraining order and the parties called various witnesses to testify.

The record from the temporary injunction hearing includes the testimony of a

representative of a valuation firm Comerica Bank hired to value RWI Construction’s fleet of

trucks, a Vice President in Comerica Bank’s special asset group, and the managing partner of Lone

Star. The record also includes numerous documents admitted into evidence during the hearing on

appellants’ motion to dissolve the temporary restraining order and the hearing on the application

for temporary injunction.

The evidence presented by Comerica Bank indicated the following:

 The RWI entities have ceased operating and are insolvent.

 The outstanding balance on the loan at issue is approximately $9.4 million.

 RWI Construction’s equipment, which is collateral securing the loan, has a forced liquidation value of approximately $2 million.

 The deficiency following the sale of RWI Construction’s equipment is estimated to be at least $6 million and potentially more than $7 million.

 In October 2017, RWI Construction received a payment of $800,000 in settlement of an account receivable owed by Oxy USA WTP LP (“Oxy”). That receivable and its proceeds are collateral for Comerica Bank’s loan. Comerica Bank demanded that RWI Construction turn over that payment. RWI Construction did not turn over that payment to Comerica Bank but instead transferred it to Lone Star. Lone Star, like RWI Construction, has refused to turn over those funds to Comerica Bank.

 Lone Star purchased a receivable from RWI Construction in the amount of $1,445,094.32. That receivable secures RWI Construction and RWI Acquisition’s debt to Comerica Bank. If collected, those funds would belong to Comerica Bank, and are not an asset available to Lone Star to pay on its guaranty, unless and until the unpaid balance of the loan is reduced to $4,400,000.04 or less. –3–  As of September 30, 2017, Lone Star had a cash balance of $311.77 and notes receivable and interest receivable of $188 million, $186 million of which is from portfolio companies that are not operating or are operating with significant third-party debt.

 In September 2017, Lone Star issued a capital call in the amount of $32 million. Comerica Bank paid its pro rata share, but Lone Star Opportunities Fund V, LP (“Lone Star OF”), the general partner of Lone Star, failed to pay its share.

 Texas Capital Bank received $28.8 million of the capital call to pay the balance owed on Lone Star’s revolving loan, and Lone Star used the remaining proceeds to fund the operations of its portfolio companies that cannot return the funds to Lone Star.

 In early 2018, Lone Star made its final capital call in the amount of $40 million to be paid directly to an account at Texas Capital Bank and to be applied by Texas Capital Bank to Lone Star’s indebtedness under the revolving loan totaling approximately $36 million. Again, Comerica Bank paid its pro rata share of the capital call, and Lone Star OF failed to contribute its share.

 If the Excess Proceeds from the final capital call are paid to Lone Star, Comerica Bank believes that it will dissipate those funds just as it had done with the initial capital call, and Lone Star does not have the ability to make further capital calls to generate funds to secure its outstanding debts.

Lone Star’s representative testified that Lone Star could pay the guaranty with the cash it

has from the Excess Proceeds and from dividends or cash distributions from five of its portfolio

companies. Lone Star’s representative further testified that Lone Star’s updated financials show

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RWI Construction, Inc., RWI Acquisition, LLC, Lone Star Opportunities Fund V, LP and RWI Construction Holdings, LLC v. Comerica Bank, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rwi-construction-inc-rwi-acquisition-llc-lone-star-opportunities-fund-texapp-2019.