San Pedro Impulsora De Inmuebles Especiales, S.A., De C v. v. Raquel Villarreal, Individually and as Guardian of the Person and Estate of Raquel Cantu De Villarreal, Marcelo Villarreal, and Carlos Villarreal

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 18, 2010
Docket13-09-00226-CV
StatusPublished

This text of San Pedro Impulsora De Inmuebles Especiales, S.A., De C v. v. Raquel Villarreal, Individually and as Guardian of the Person and Estate of Raquel Cantu De Villarreal, Marcelo Villarreal, and Carlos Villarreal (San Pedro Impulsora De Inmuebles Especiales, S.A., De C v. v. Raquel Villarreal, Individually and as Guardian of the Person and Estate of Raquel Cantu De Villarreal, Marcelo Villarreal, and Carlos Villarreal) 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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San Pedro Impulsora De Inmuebles Especiales, S.A., De C v. v. Raquel Villarreal, Individually and as Guardian of the Person and Estate of Raquel Cantu De Villarreal, Marcelo Villarreal, and Carlos Villarreal, (Tex. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion



NUMBER 13-09-00226-CV



COURT OF APPEALS



THIRTEENTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS



CORPUS CHRISTI
- EDINBURG



SAN PEDRO IMPULSORA DE INMUEBLES

ESPECIALES, S.A. DE C.V., Appellant,



v.



RAQUEL VILLARREAL, INDIVIDUALLY AND AS

GUARDIAN OF THE PERSON AND ESTATE

OF RAQUEL CANTU DE VILLARREAL, MARCELO

VILLARREAL, AND CARLOS VILLARREAL, Appellees.

On appeal from the 404th District Court

of Cameron County, Texas.



OPINION



Before Justices Yañez, Rodriguez, and Garza

Opinion by Justice Rodriguez



San Pedro Impulsora de Inmuebles Especiales, S.A. de C.V. ("San Pedro Impulsora") appeals the trial court's denial of its special appearance. San Pedro Impulsora raises two issues, through which it argues that: (1) the trial court considered inadmissible evidence in determining that it had jurisdiction over San Pedro Impulsora; and (2) San Pedro Impulsora has no minimum contacts with Texas and is not subject to jurisdiction here. We affirm.

I. Background

The underlying dispute arises from a series of acrimonious legal proceedings among the seven adult children of Raquel Cantu de Villarreal ("Doña Raquel"). (1) Doña Raquel, a wealthy, elderly widow, became incapacitated and her children began fighting over her custody, guardianship, and sizeable estate in a series of Machiavellian legal skirmishes that make the Hatfield-McCoy feud seem like a kindergarten brawl.

In this lawsuit, Raquel Villarreal, individually and as guardian of the person and estate of Doña Raquel, and two of her siblings, Marcelo Villarreal and Carlos Villarreal, brought suit against Lone Star National Bancshares-Texas, Inc. ("Lone Star"), San Pedro Impulsora, Ignacio Villarreal, Fernando Villarreal, Consuelo Villarreal, and Martha Villarreal, alleging generally that Ignacio, Fernando, Consuelo, and Martha ("the Villarreal defendants"), and San Pedro Impulsora improperly converted funds belonging to Doña Raquel and placed $2.7 million dollars of her funds in San Pedro Impulsora's bank account with Lone Star in Brownsville, Texas. The plaintiffs sought a temporary restraining order and temporary injunction to prevent Lone Star from releasing the funds to San Pedro Impulsora or the Villarreal defendants. The plaintiffs alleged different causes of action against specific groups of defendants; causes of action pleaded against San Pedro Impulsora include conversion, fraudulent transfer, and conspiracy. (2)

The plaintiffs' petition in this lawsuit includes an in-depth factual history of the dispute and chronicles previous legal proceedings between the children in trial court cause number 2007-CGC-041-B in County Court at Law Number Two of Cameron County, Texas. In that cause, the parties litigated matters pertaining to guardianships for the person and estate of Doña Raquel and ownership of her assets. Ultimately, all of the children participated in an "Irrevocable Family Settlement Agreement, Assignment, and Release and Rule 11 Agreement," which purported to settle all claims between them regarding their mother's person and property. The agreement was approved and incorporated into a judgment rendered in that court. Following disputes over implementation of the agreement, the trial court referred the matter to arbitration and ultimately entered judgment approving the arbitration award.

In the instant proceeding, the plaintiffs' first amended petition alleges that jurisdiction over San Pedro Impulsora is proper because San Pedro purposefully availed itself of conducting activities in Texas and committed a tort in Texas:

This court has personal jurisdiction over Defendants in that 1) Defendants purposefully availed [themselves] of conducting activities in Texas; and 2) the causes of action asserted herein arise from or are related to those contacts or activities. Jurisdiction over Defendants comports with traditional notions of fair play and substantial justice. Specifically, Defendants . . . availed themselves of conducting activities in Texas in order to perpetuate and complete a fraud upon [Doña Raquel], a resident Ward of a Cameron County Probate Court. Furthermore, Defendants availed themselves of Texas by fraudulently transferring assets to Texas with the actual intent to hinder, delay, or defraud [Doña Raquel], and without receiving a reasonable equivalent value in exchange for the transfer to Texas. Tex. Bus. & Com. Code Section 24.001 et seq. Defendants brought [Doña Raquel] to Texas and opened an account in Defendant Lone Star National Bank, depositing her money in said Bank, in order to complete the fraud upon her. Finally, Defendant [San Pedro Impulsora] was created for the sole purpose of buying and selling land in Texas for the benefit of [Doña Raquel]. Defendant [San Pedro Impulsora] did buy and sell land in Texas for the benefit of [Doña Raquel].



. . . .



On September 19, 2006, Defendants induced their mother to sign an impresa[ (3)] falsely stating she owed 70 million pesos to a corporation, [San Pedro Impulsora]. [San Pedro Impulsora] is a Mexican corporation that was created at the direction of [Doña Raquel] to hold title to a home that she had in Brownsville, Texas. Other than the house, it had no assets, engaged in no business, had no employees or place of business and simply operated as a shell to hold title to the house in the United States. Doña Raquel is the owner of the corporation, holding 99 percent of the shares, with Defendant Ignacio Villarreal holding 1 percent. Defendant Ignacio Villarreal was the sole "administrator"[ (4)] of this company and controlled it.



Defendants then initiated a subterfugio (i.e., sham), lawsuit against their mother in Mexico. They got their mother to confess to a 70 million peso judgment against Doña Raquel in favor of [San Pedro Impulsora]. The purpose of this sham lawsuit was to seize control over all their mother's property and money. The money which [they] sought to obtain through this sham lawsuit included 34 million pesos and $2.7 million, in two separate accounts. Applying the conversion rate at the time of the sham lawsuit, the total of the two accounts was roughly 70 million pesos. The only funds, however, obtained through the sham lawsuit were the 34 million pesos.



Defendant Ignacio Villarreal has repeatedly testified that this 34 million pesos is his mother's money.



At approximately the same time, Defendants obtained the signature of their mother to withdraw the $2.7 million from her . . . account in a Mexican bank and eventually transferred the $2.7 million from Mexico to an account at Defendant Lone Star National Bank in the Rio Grande Valley in the name of [San Pedro Impulsora]. At the time that Defendants obtained [Doña Raquel's] signature, she did not have the mental capacity to execute any documents.

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San Pedro Impulsora De Inmuebles Especiales, S.A., De C v. v. Raquel Villarreal, Individually and as Guardian of the Person and Estate of Raquel Cantu De Villarreal, Marcelo Villarreal, and Carlos Villarreal, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/san-pedro-impulsora-de-inmuebles-especiales-sa-de-c-v-v-raquel-texapp-2010.