Sural Abdujelil and Sura Kimo v. Hiko Bafa

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedSeptember 14, 2021
Docket01-19-00746-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Sural Abdujelil and Sura Kimo v. Hiko Bafa (Sural Abdujelil and Sura Kimo v. Hiko Bafa) 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
Sural Abdujelil and Sura Kimo v. Hiko Bafa, (Tex. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

Opinion issued September 14, 2021

In The

Court of Appeals For The

First District of Texas ———————————— NO. 01-19-00746-CV ——————————— SURAL ABDUJELIL AND SURA KIMO, Appellants V. HIKO BAFA, Appellee

On Appeal from the 270th District Court Harris County, Texas Trial Court Case No. 2016-04660

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Appellants Sural Abdujelil and Sura Kimo appeal the trial court’s judgment

in favor of appellee Hiko Bafa on his fraud by nondisclosure claim. The trial court

awarded Bafa $89,504.07 in damages, which included attorney’s fees and costs,

$15,392.82 in prejudgment interest, and post-judgment interest. The appellants raise four issues on appeal. In the first issue, they argue that the trial court erred by trying

the case in their absence because they allegedly did not receive notice of the trial

setting. In the second and third issues, they challenge the sufficiency of the evidence

to support fraud by nondisclosure and the amount of damages awarded. In their

fourth issue, they challenge the award of attorney’s fees.

We reverse the trial court’s judgment and remand to the trial court for a new

trial.

Background

Hiko Bafa came to the United States from Ethiopia in 2006, and he worked as

a taxi driver. Several years later, he met Kimo and Abdujelil, who also came from

Ethiopia and were part of the same Ethiopian tribe to which Bafa belonged. Bafa

loaned Kimo money to buy a car so that he could work as a driver, and Kimo paid

him back the following year.

In November 2013, Bafa, Kimo, and Abdujelil formed SHS Transportation

LLC to provide “school transportation.” Bafa provided about $1,000 for start-up

costs, which was later paid back. According to Bafa’s trial testimony, they did not

have a written agreement about the business only a “mutual family understanding.”

He said:

Our agreement is [Kimo] is director of our business, [Abdujelil] is secretary of our business and represented our company and also he prepares the payroll for our employees. And then my part I am bringing

2 the employees, the drivers, to the business and they go into process through [Kimo and Abdujelil].

Bafa testified that they agreed to pay their employees by checks drawn on the

SHS Transportation bank account. Bafa said that they all had equal access to the

account, and each had a debit card. According to Bafa, they agreed that any one of

them could make a withdrawal with the debit card so long as he told the others why

he withdrew the money.

Bafa testified that the business was initially profitable, but at some point,

Kimo and Abdujelil began ignoring him, and he stopped working with them. Bafa

said that after that, although they all had access to the bank account, he was not

“involved in that bank account.” He testified: “By trusting, I gave them full

responsibility.”

Bafa said that he did not withdraw money from the bank account, but Kimo

and Abdujelil did. Bafa acknowledges that he received payments from SHS

Transportation initially, but he said that after the second year of business, he received

no money from SHS Transportation. Bafa estimated that he should have received

more than $12,000 the second year.

In June 2015, Kimo and Abdujelil sent Bafa a document entitled: “SHS

Transportation, LLC Consent in Lieu of Meeting of Members.” The consent

document stated that the company had “accumulated funds from operations” in the

amount of $12,800 in its bank account. In the document, the parties resolved that

3 Kimo should receive $3,000 as compensation for past “non-driving administrative

work,” and that Abdujelil should receive $3,000 as compensation for past “non-

driving transportation support services.” In addition, they would set $800 for

“anticipated costs and expenses for the balance of the fiscal year, including taxes,”

and distribute the remaining $6,000 equally to the three members. Kimo and

Abdujelil signed the consent document, but Bafa did not.

In January 2016, Bafa filed suit alleging that Kimo and Abdujelil wrongfully

depleted the SHS Transportation bank account and ceased operations. Bafa alleged

fraud by nondisclosure and other causes of action not relevant to this appeal. Bafa

alleged that Kimo and Abdujelil made a “material misrepresentation of [their]

relationship to the plaintiff with knowledge of its falsity.” Kimo and Abdujelil

answered with a general denial.

In March 2019, Kimo and Abdujelil filed an agreed motion for continuance,

requesting a 90-day continuance of their trial date, which was March 18, 2019. The

trial court granted the motion and reset the trial for “the two-week period beginning

06-17-2019.” The order resetting trial was sent to counsel of record for all parties.

The following week, counsel for Kimo and Abdujelil filed a motion to

withdraw arguing that his clients had failed to cooperate, to appear for mediation,

and to compensate counsel for legal services rendered. Counsel listed the appellants’

last known address as a location in Houston, Texas, where they had initially been

4 served with the lawsuit. Counsel sent them a letter regarding his withdrawal from

representation. Both the motion to withdraw and the letter to Kimo and Abdujelil

stated that trial was set for June 17, 2019. The trial court granted the motion to

withdraw in early April 2019. Kimo and Abdujelil did not engage new counsel.

The court held a bench trial on June 25, 2019. Kimo and Abdujelil, now pro

se, did not appear. Bafa’s counsel stated that the court coordinator had left two voice

messages informing them of the trial setting. The court trial coordinator stated on

the record that he had spoken that day by phone to Abdujelil, who informed the

coordinator that he had moved to another state, that he had not provided the court

with a new address, and he had received no notice from the court. The court trial

coordinator stated that Abdujelil acknowledged having received a voice message

about the trial setting.

Bafa testified through an interpreter. Bafa introduced SHS Transportation’s

bank statements but he did not testify about specific deposits, withdrawals, or

transfers. In response to his counsel’s leading questions, he testified that he believed

the company made $236,124.20 based on the bank records, and he asked, first, for

$78,708.06 in damages and, later, for $236,124.20 in damages.

On July 5, 2019, the trial court rendered judgment in favor of Bafa on his

fraud claim, awarding $89,503.07 in total actual damages, plus pre- and post-

5 judgment interest.1 Kimo and Abdujelil rehired their attorney and filed a motion for

new trial, which was denied. Kimo and Abdujelil appealed.

Analysis

I. The trial court did not abuse its discretion by denying Kimo and Abdujelil’s motion for new trial that argued they had no notice of trial.

In their first issue, the appellants argue that they had no notice of the trial

setting. They raised this argument in a motion for new trial, to which they attached

Kimo’s affidavit. Kimo averred that he had lived in Tukwila, Washington since April

1, 2017. He also averred that he “did not receive any notice of trial,” that he “was

unaware that trial was scheduled for June 25, 2019,” and that he “was not contacted

by anyone about the trial date.” Bafa responded to the motion for new trial with

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