Smith v. CDI RENTAL EQUIPMENT, LTD.

310 S.W.3d 559, 2010 WL 1212479
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 3, 2010
Docket12-09-00113-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 310 S.W.3d 559 (Smith v. CDI RENTAL EQUIPMENT, LTD.) 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
Smith v. CDI RENTAL EQUIPMENT, LTD., 310 S.W.3d 559, 2010 WL 1212479 (Tex. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

OPINION

JAMES T. WORTHEN, Chief Justice.

This is an assumed name case. Rex Smith appeals from a judgment, rendered *562 after a trial before the court, favoring Ap-pellees CDI Rental Equipment, Ltd. d/b/a Future Rental Services and FEI Equipment, Ltd. d/b/a Future Equipment Company and d/b/a Equipment Support Services, in Appellees’ suit for damages. In thirteen issues, Smith alleges that Appel-lees cannot properly maintain suit against him because he did not have a contract with the business entities named as plaintiffs, there is no evidence of a valid contract or the elements of a sworn account, and the trial court erred in awarding attorney’s fees and in failing to find spoliation of evidence. We reverse and render.

Background

On March 22, 2005, Smith rented a doz-er, signing a rental agreement that has the name “Future Rental Services” printed at the top. Smith had problems with that dozer in mid-May and exchanged it for a different one. On June 22, the second dozer was driven into a “water hole,” got stuck in mud, and stopped working. The dozer had to be pulled out and taken to the repair shop where it was determined that there was water and sand in the transmission, the radiator was “plugged with mud,” and the torque converter was full of sand. The dozer was repaired and Smith received a repair bill in the amount of $16,012.82. Smith was also billed $1,420.40 for costs to inspect the dozer on his property and transport it back to the shop. These two invoices have the name “Equipment Support Services” printed at the top. One of them also has the name “Future Equipment” either typed or stamped at the top. The other one also has the name “Future Equipment Co.,” which appears to be printed by a fax machine.

Because Smith did not pay the invoices, he was sued in a Dallas County district court in January 2006 for breach of contract and a sworn account. The named plaintiff on the original petition was Equipment Support Services, Inc. d/b/a Future Equipment Company, Inc. The named defendants were Smith and The Travelers Lloyds Insurance Company. In their first amended petition, Appellees named as plaintiff Equipment Support Services, Inc. d/b/a Future Rental Services and d/b/a Future Equipment Company, Inc. In their second amended petition, Appellees named as plaintiffs CDI Rental Equipment, Ltd. d/b/a Future Rental Services and FEI Equipment, Ltd. d/b/a Future Equipment Company and also d/b/a Equipment Support Services. They further identified themselves as follows:

CDI RENTAL EQUIPMENT, LTD. d/b/a FUTURE RENTAL SERVICES is a Texas limited partnership with its principal place of business in Houston, Harris County, Texas. Its registered agent is Equipment Support Services, Inc. FEI EQUIPMENT, LTD. d/b/a FUTURE EQUIPMENT COMPANY and also d/b/a EQUIPMENT SUPPORT SERVICES is a Texas limited partnership with its principal place of business in Euless, Texas. Plaintiffs are sister entities and are hereafter collectively referred to as ‘ESS’.

In June 2006, Appellees nonsuited The Travelers Lloyds Insurance Company and the suit was transferred to Henderson County, where Smith resides.

Smith filed special exceptions complaining that he did not know which plaintiff, CDI Rental Equipment, Ltd. or FEI Equipment, Ltd., is doing business as Future Rental Services, the name on the rental agreement. He further argued that the plaintiffs should state why the entity that is not Future Rental Services is a plaintiff in this cause of action. He filed a sworn affidavit in support of his special exceptions denying, among many other specific items, the execution of a written *563 contract identifying CDI Rental Equipment, Ltd. or FEI Equipment, Ltd. as parties to the agreement. He also denied that either of those two entities did business under the name of Future Rental Services.

In its order granting Smith’s special exceptions, the trial court explained that plaintiffs’ exhibits show that CDI Rental Equipment, Ltd. and its assumed name registration in the assumed name of Future Rental Services ceased to exist on August 6, 2003 when it merged into Equipment Support Services, Inc. The court noted that no plaintiff in the suit had shown that it is registered to do business under the name of Future Rental Services. The trial court gave the plaintiffs fifteen days “to identify which of the two Plaintiffs [sic] are doing business under the assumed name of ‘Future Rental Services’ and stating facts as to why the other party plaintiff, [sic] is a proper party to this suit.”

Shortly thereafter, Appellees filed their third amended petition, identifying themselves exactly as they had in their second amended petition. A month later, Appel-lees filed their fourth amended petition, identifying themselves exactly as they had in their third amended petition. However, in the factual background section of the petition they explained that Smith “executed a rental agreement with CDI Equipment, Ltd. [sic] d/b/a Future Rental Services” and the bulldozer he rented “was owned by FEI Equipment, Ltd. d/b/a Future Equipment Company.” They explained that from the “time of the contract to the present, CDI Equipment, Ltd. [sic] d/b/a Future Rental Services and FEI Equipment, Ltd. d/b/a Future Equipment Company were ultimately being operated by Equipment Support Services.”

Smith filed a motion to dismiss, arguing that the plaintiffs still had not identified which plaintiff was doing business under the assumed name of Future Rental Services or explained why the other plaintiff was a party to the suit as ordered by the trial court. The trial court denied Smith’s motion to dismiss.

On the day of trial, December 9, 2008, Smith moved to abate the lawsuit until the plaintiffs provided proof that a proper assumed name certificate had been filed for CDI Rental Equipment, Ltd. Counsel for the plaintiffs produced evidence that an assumed name certificate had been filed on November 27, 2007 showing that Equipment Support Services, Inc. is doing business as Future Rental Services. Smith again argued that the entity named on the assumed name certificate as doing business as Future Rental Services is not a plaintiff in this lawsuit and that no assumed name certificate shows that CDI Rental Equipment, Ltd. does business as Future Rental Services. Noting that it was hard to make sense of all the different names, the trial court denied the motion to abate and proceeded to try the case.

After a bench trial, the court found in favor of Appellees. Mirroring the live petition, the judgment names as plaintiffs CDI Rental Equipment, Ltd. d/b/a Future Rental Services and FEI Equipment, Ltd. d/b/a Future Equipment Company and also d/b/a Equipment Support Services, collectively ESS. The court ordered Smith to pay $17,433.22 in actual damages for breach of contract, $25,000.00 in attorney’s fees, and prejudgment and postjudgment interest.

CDI Rentai.: Equipment, Ltd.

In his first and twelfth issues, Smith contends the judgment against him cannot stand because he signed a rental agreement with Future Rental Services, not the named plaintiffs who sued him. He asserts that CDI Rental Equipment, Ltd., a named plaintiff, ceased to exist when it *564 merged with Equipment Support Services, Inc.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
310 S.W.3d 559, 2010 WL 1212479, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-cdi-rental-equipment-ltd-texapp-2010.