Samuel Crego v. Guillermo Lash & John Hoysick

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 27, 2014
Docket13-12-00100-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Samuel Crego v. Guillermo Lash & John Hoysick (Samuel Crego v. Guillermo Lash & John Hoysick) 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
Samuel Crego v. Guillermo Lash & John Hoysick, (Tex. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

NUMBER 13-12-00100-CV

COURT OF APPEALS

THIRTEENTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS

CORPUS CHRISTI – EDINBURG

SAMUEL CREGO, Appellant,

v.

GUILLERMO LASH & JOHN HOYSICK, Appellees.

On appeal from the 404th District Court of Cameron County, Texas.

MEMORANDUM OPINION ON REHEARING Before Justices Rodriguez, Garza and Perkes Memorandum Opinion by Justice Garza We issued our original memorandum opinion in this case on December 19, 2013.

Appellant Samuel Crego filed a motion for rehearing. See TEX. R. APP. P. 49.1. Appellees

Guillermo Lash and John Hoysick filed a response to the motion. We deny the motion for

rehearing, withdraw our previous memorandum opinion and judgment, and substitute the following memorandum opinion and judgment in their place.

This case involves loans between acquaintances to finance a failed real estate

venture. A jury found that Crego breached two separate loan agreements: one, a

promissory note with Lash, and two, an unwritten agreement with Hoysick. After the jury

awarded damages and attorneys’ fees, the trial court rendered judgment against Crego

in favor of Lash for $52,584.25 and in favor of Hoysick for $50,000.00. The trial court

also awarded appellees $33,745.00 in attorneys’ fees plus costs, post-judgment interest,

and conditional appellate attorneys’ fees. By four issues, Crego argues that: (1) the trial

court erred by conditioning his right to appeal on the posting of a bond in the amount of

the judgment; (2) Lash and Hoysick’s claims were barred by limitations; (3) alternatively,

the trial court erred in refusing to submit the limitations issue to the jury; and (4) if either

damage award is reversed, the attorneys’ fees award should be reversed and remanded.

We affirm.

I. BACKGROUND

Crego, Lash, Hoysick, Ralph Burks, and Carlos Sarmiento met through their

employment with Trico in Brownsville, Texas. In March 2004, Crego and Burks formed a

management company, Crego and Burks Management Group, LLC (“the management

company”), for the purpose of developing and managing real estate ventures.1

On July 1, 2004, Lash loaned Crego and Burks $80,000. The loan was evidenced

by a promissory note, which provided for repayment in monthly installments over six

months, with the final payment due January 1, 2005. The note was secured by real

property located in Harlingen, Texas. Under the note, for the first six months, interest

1 Crego testified that “Crego and Burks Management Group, LLC” was later renamed Westgate

Village Homes, LLC.

2 was 3.3% per month on the first $50,000 and 1.6% on the remaining $30,000. The total

principal and interest due on January 1, 2005 was $93,000.

It is undisputed that the loan was not repaid in January 2005. An invoice dated

July 18, 2006 was admitted at trial. The invoice, from Lash to the management company,

states that it is for the “[i]nvestment [l]oan on 7/1/05.”2 It further states, “Principal amount:

$80,000.00 @ 14% per annum simple interest” and “Balloon Date 6/31/06.” The “Amount”

column shows $80,000.00 plus $11,200.00 in interest, for a total of $91,200.00. Crego

testified that the $91,200.00 amount “was an agreed upon amount” between himself,

Burks, and Lash. Crego testified that Lash was paid the $91,200.00 on October 31, 2006.

Crego admitted that the amount repaid to Lash was less than the amount due under the

terms of the note, but stated that Lash agreed to the amount in a “spirit of cooperation.”

In August 2004, Hoysick and Sarmiento each provided the management company

with $50,000 to facilitate the purchase and resale or development of an eight-acre

property in Weslaco, Texas known as “Westgate Loop.”3 The terms of these transactions

were not reduced to writing. It is undisputed that the $100,000 was used as “collateral”

for a $575,000 bank loan to the management company for the purchase and development

of Westgate Loop. According to Crego, the unwritten agreement was that Burks, Hoysick,

and Sarmiento would each receive 22.5% of the profits from the resale or development

project, with Crego receiving 32.5% of the profits. Crego testified that eight months later,

around April 2005, the bank loaned the management company $425,000 to purchase the

Westgate Loop property. Six or eight months after that, Sarmiento decided to withdraw

2 Crego admitted that July 1, 2005 was a year later than the actual date of the loan, July 1, 2004.

3 Crego denies that these funds were loans; rather, he contends they were “investments” in the

development project. Crego testified that there was no date certain when Hoysick would receive a return on his $50,000. 3 from the venture. Crego testified that he returned Sarmiento’s $50,000. The three

remaining parties agreed to split the profits with each receiving thirty percent, and Crego

receiving an additional ten percent.

Sarmiento testified that he loaned the management company $50,000. According

to Sarmiento, the parties agreed that these funds, along with the $50,000 loaned by

Hoysick, would remain untouched at the bank, the land would be resold at a substantial

profit, and each would receive twenty-five percent of the profit from the resale. The

agreed-upon interest on the loan was a percentage of profits upon resale. Later, after

Crego began working for the management company full time, the percentage of profit

changed to twenty percent each for Sarmiento, Lash, and Burks, and forty percent for

Crego. Crego told Sarmiento that he expected to “flip” the property quickly because

another buyer had already made an offer. After the management company turned down

several offers and decided to develop the property, Sarmiento decided to withdraw from

the venture and asked for the return of his $50,000. Over the course of two years,

Sarmiento was repaid the $50,000, but was not repaid any interest. Sarmiento testified

that when the plans changed from resale to development of the property, he felt that he

was being invited to invest and decided not to do so.

Hoysick testified that he loaned the management company $50,000 in August

2004. The agreement was that when the property was resold, he would receive his

$50,000 plus a percentage of the profits from the resale. Initially, the percentage of profit

was twenty-five percent; later, the percentage changed to twenty-two-and-a-half percent,

and still later, to twenty percent. Hoysick stated that he suggested to Crego that he also

wanted to withdraw, but Crego said he did not have the funds to repay him. Crego told

Hoysick that if he withdrew, he would not retain any interest in the project. Hoysick said 4 that Crego offered to pay him fourteen percent interest on repayment of the $50,000 if

Hoysick withdrew. Hoysick was not ever repaid any amount. In January 2007, Crego

told Hoysick that the bank had released the funds held in security. Hoysick gave Crego

a transfer account number, but Crego refused to provide any repayment. Crego told

Hoysick that the funds were used for other management company projects. Hoysick

stated that he did not invest in Westgate Loop and did not know that his money was at

risk.

On cross-examination, Hoysick was asked about a July 9, 2006 email that he sent

to Crego in which he asked “to discuss the status of the apartment project” and “to review

something in writing to document my relationship/investment with Crego and Burks.”

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Samuel Crego v. Guillermo Lash & John Hoysick, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/samuel-crego-v-guillermo-lash-john-hoysick-texapp-2014.