Startex First Equipment, Ltd. v. Aelina Enterprises Inc.

208 S.W.3d 596, 2006 Tex. App. LEXIS 3055, 2006 WL 952390
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 14, 2006
Docket03-05-00455-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 208 S.W.3d 596 (Startex First Equipment, Ltd. v. Aelina Enterprises Inc.) 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
Startex First Equipment, Ltd. v. Aelina Enterprises Inc., 208 S.W.3d 596, 2006 Tex. App. LEXIS 3055, 2006 WL 952390 (Tex. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

OPINION

JAN P. PATTERSON, Justice.

This appeal arises out of a dispute regarding the ownership of a .384-acre tract of commercial real property in Bastrop County. Appellant Startex First Equipment, Ltd., appeals the trial court’s summary judgment in favor of appellee Aelina Enterprises, Inc., granting Aelina title to the property. In two issues, Startex contends that the trial court erred in granting Aelina’s motion for summary judgment and denying Startex’s motion for partial summary judgment. Because Startex’s right of first refusal survived previous sales of the property and was superior to Aelina’s purchase option, we reverse the district court and render judgment in favor of Startex.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

This case involves a dispute over a right of first refusal. In 1970, the Wilhelms, the owners of the .384-acre tract, entered into a Lease and Operating Agreement (“Lease Agreement”) with Pioneer Oil Company to operate a gasoline pumping station on the property. Section 14C of the Lease Agreement granted to Pioneer a right of first refusal. It provides in relevant part:

If, during the term of this lease, or any renewal thereof, lessor receives a bona-fide offer to purchase the premises which offer lessor wishes to accept, lessor shall be obligated first to notify lessee in writing of such offer, and lessee shall then have seven days from the receipt of such written notice in which to exercise lessee’s first right of purchase or refuse to purchase the premises at said offered price, and only after the expiration of said seven-day period can lessor proceed to accept the offer and sell the premises to such original bona-fide offeror, and then such sale shall be subject to the terms of this lease or any renewal thereof.

(Emphasis added.)

During the term of the Lease Agreement, the property was sold by the Wil-helms’ successors, the Joneses, to the Eglesons in 1979; and by the Eglesons to Kathy Favoccia in 1987. In 1996, Kathy Favoccia, then owner of the property, en *598 tered into a Retail Store Lease/Purchase Contract with Aelina, allowing it to run the convenience store on the property. The Retail Store Lease/Purchase Contract granted Aelina an option to purchase the property.

In 2002, Startex purchased Pioneer’s interest in the Lease Agreement and received an express written assignment from Pioneer. Section 14D of the Lease Agreement gave Pioneer the right to “assign its operation on the premises.”

In May 2003, Favoccia and Aelina entered into an earnest money contract for the purchase of the property in the amount of $240,000. Favoccia notified Startex of the contract, “pursuant to paragraph 14C of the [Lease and Operating] agreement.” In a letter sent to Favoccia in June 2003, Startex “formally and affirmatively exerciser] its right of purchase of the property under Paragraph 14C of the Lease Agreement, on the same terms” as the offer from Aelina. On July 29, 2003, Startex purchased the property from Favoccia and received a general warranty deed. On July 31, 2003, Aelina notified Startex that it was attempting to purchase the property from Startex by exercising the purchase option it acquired from Favoccia in its Retail Store Lease/Purchase Contract. Startex disputed Aelina’s right to buy the property and has declined to sell the property.

Aelina filed suit in Travis County district court seeking specific performance of the land purchase contract and, alternatively, damages for breach of contract. The court granted Aelina summary judgment, specifying in the order the basis for its ruling. The court found,

• Pioneer’s right of first refusal in the Lease Agreement expired before it assigned its interest to Startex. Therefore, Startex did not acquire a right of first refusal;
• Aelina received a valid purchase option in its Retail Store Lease/Purchase Contract with Kathy Favoccia not subject to any right of first refusal;
• Startex took title to the property subject to the obligations of Kathy Favoc-cia under the valid Aelina purchase option;
• Startex is compelled to perform those obligations by conveying legal title to Aelina upon the terms and conditions of Aelina’s properly exercised option.

The trial court denied Startex’s motion for summary judgment, which sought unencumbered title to the property and a declaration that Startex had no obligation to sell the property to Aelina. This appeal followed.

ANALYSIS

The Controversy

Startex argues that the right of first refusal survived two previous sales of the property, from the Wilhelms’ successors, the Joneses, to the Eglesons, and from the Eglesons to Kathy Favoccia. To support its argument, Startex points to the language in 14C that reads, “only after the expiration of said seven-day period can lessor proceed to accept the offer and sell the premises to such original bona fide offeror, and then such sale shall be subject to the terms of this lease or any renewal thereof.” (Emphasis added.) Startex argues that because the property was sold “subject to the terms” of the Lease Agreement, and one of the terms of the Lease Agreement was the right of first refusal, the right of first refusal survived the previous sales. This interpretation is confirmed, Startex submits, by Favoecia’s notification and eventual sale of the property to Startex, “pursuant to paragraph 14C of the [Lease and Operating] agreement.” Startex further contends that rights of *599 first refusal are assignable, and that the instant right of first refusal was properly-assigned by Pioneer to Startex and was available to Startex when Aelina and Fa-voccia entered into their earnest money contract. Startex claims that its surviving right of first refusal predates, and is superior to, Aelina’s purchase option. Startex further asks the court to strike down, as inequitable, Aelina’s subsequent attempt to “thwart” Startex’s prior right of first refusal, which Startex claims Aelina did by contracting with Favoccia for less than the price of the option, triggering Startex’s right of first refusal, and then attempting to exercise its purchase option to purchase the property from Startex.

Aelina contends that Startex did not acquire a right of first refusal from Pioneer because Pioneer’s right expired when it elected not to exercise its right to purchase the property after receiving notice of two different offers to sell. 1 Aelina further contends that in 1987, the Egle-sons sold the property to Kathy and Larry Favoccia, their daughter and son-in-law, which would implicate a section of the lease specifically concerning property sales to a lessor’s children. 2 Aelina argues that, because only its right exists, Startex’s deed is void, its superiority argument fails, and its equities argument is irrelevant. Aelina also contends that the Lease Agreement did not expressly provide that Pioneer’s right of first refusal was assignable. 3

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208 S.W.3d 596, 2006 Tex. App. LEXIS 3055, 2006 WL 952390, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/startex-first-equipment-ltd-v-aelina-enterprises-inc-texapp-2006.