Terry and Phyllis Price, Michaela Watson, and Robert L. Mays, Jr. v. Philip Schroeder, Bill Smith, Jerry Beene, Leroy Harrington, Reagan Hill, Jerry Mitchell, Gary Moore, Tony Silva, Martin Ramsay, Johnnie Terrazas, Ray Wainner, John Watson, David Beene, A. v. Welsh, and First Baptist Church of Bulverde

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 20, 2010
Docket03-07-00364-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Terry and Phyllis Price, Michaela Watson, and Robert L. Mays, Jr. v. Philip Schroeder, Bill Smith, Jerry Beene, Leroy Harrington, Reagan Hill, Jerry Mitchell, Gary Moore, Tony Silva, Martin Ramsay, Johnnie Terrazas, Ray Wainner, John Watson, David Beene, A. v. Welsh, and First Baptist Church of Bulverde (Terry and Phyllis Price, Michaela Watson, and Robert L. Mays, Jr. v. Philip Schroeder, Bill Smith, Jerry Beene, Leroy Harrington, Reagan Hill, Jerry Mitchell, Gary Moore, Tony Silva, Martin Ramsay, Johnnie Terrazas, Ray Wainner, John Watson, David Beene, A. v. Welsh, and First Baptist Church of Bulverde) 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
Terry and Phyllis Price, Michaela Watson, and Robert L. Mays, Jr. v. Philip Schroeder, Bill Smith, Jerry Beene, Leroy Harrington, Reagan Hill, Jerry Mitchell, Gary Moore, Tony Silva, Martin Ramsay, Johnnie Terrazas, Ray Wainner, John Watson, David Beene, A. v. Welsh, and First Baptist Church of Bulverde, (Tex. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN




NO. 03-07-00364-CV

Terry and Phyllis Price, Michaela Watson, and Robert L. Mays, Jr., Appellants



v.



Philip Schroeder, Bill Smith, Jerry Beene, Leroy Harrington, Reagan Hill, Jerry Mitchell, Gary Moore, Tony Silva, Martin Ramsay, Johnnie Terrazas, Ray Wainner, John Watson, David Beene, A. V. Welsh, and First Baptist Church of Bulverde, Appellees



FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF COMAL COUNTY, 22ND JUDICIAL DISTRICT

NO. C2005-1386A, HONORABLE JACK H. ROBISON, JUDGE PRESIDING

M E M O R A N D U M O P I N I O N



Terry and Phyllis Price sued their former church, the First Baptist Church of Bulverde ("the Church"), for access to the Church's books and records. See Tex. Rev. Civ. Stat. Ann. art. 1396-2.23 (West 2003) (members of nonprofit corporation have right to inspect corporation's books and records). The Prices alleged that while the Church allowed them limited access to its books and records, it did not allow them sufficient access to conduct a full audit. The Church filed a special appearance and plea to the jurisdiction, arguing that the Prices lacked standing and the Price's suit implicated ecclesiastical matters beyond the trial court's jurisdiction. The Prices subsequently added Michaela Watson, a personal friend and active member of the Church, as a co-plaintiff. The trial court granted the Church's plea to the jurisdiction regarding the Prices' claims but allowed Watson's claims to proceed. The Prices then filed a new suit against individual deacons of the Church, seeking damages under various tort theories. The Church intervened in the suit against the deacons because it had agreed to indemnify them. The two suits were consolidated, and the Church and the deacons eventually moved for summary judgment on all claims against them. The trial court granted the summary judgment motions and also granted defendants' motions for sanctions against the Prices and their attorney. The Prices, their attorney, and Watson appeal the summary judgments and sanctions awards. We will affirm in part and vacate in part.



FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

The Prices were members of the Church for several years. They eventually disagreed with various ecclesiastical and secular Church policies, including how the Church handled its finances. In September 2004, the Prices requested access to the Church's financial books and records, which the Prices were entitled to review because the Church was a registered non-profit corporation. See id. (members of corporation have right, on written demand and for proper purpose, to examine and copy corporation's books and records). The Prices made a second request to examine the Church's books and records on March 31, 2005, this time through a letter drafted by their attorney, Robert L. Mays, Jr. ("Mays").

On April 3, 2005, in accordance with its bylaws and Constitution, the Church terminated the Prices' membership. The Church maintains that this action was not the result of the Prices' financial inquiries, but rather of the Prices' longstanding and increasingly vehement disagreements with the Church's ecclesiastical doctrines. The Church alleges it had made many efforts over the years to address the Prices' concerns, including arranging for special meetings with an independent mediator, but ultimately these efforts failed. The Church's members voted to remove the Prices as members on April 3, 2005. The Church allowed the Prices and Mays to examine the Church's books and records on April 5, 2005, two days after the Prices' membership was terminated. On April 12, 2005, Mays sent a letter to the Church's attorney, Amy Benavides, stating that the April 5 examination convinced him that a "complete audit of the church records is necessary." Mays requested that the Church turn over financial records for the period from 2002 through 2005 so that Mays could submit them to an accountant for a complete audit. On April 14, 2005, Mays allegedly told Benavides that the Prices' main concern was how the Church had disposed of a donation the Prices made to the Church's building fund in 1997. (1) Accordingly, on April 28, 2005, Benavides sent Mays a letter stating that the Prices' audit request was "not only beyond what is required by [Tex. Rev. Civ. Stat. art. 1396-2.23], but would fail to shed light on Mrs. Price's stated concern." Benavides's letter stated that the Church would be willing to attempt to locate records related to the Prices' 1997 building-fund donation, but otherwise the Church believed that it had discharged its legal duties.

The Prices did not take the Church up on its offer to locate additional records related to the Prices' 1997 building-fund donation. Rather, on April 26, 2005, the Prices filed suit against the Church. Their petition alleged that while they had been allowed to view the Church's records on April 5, they had not been allowed to copy them. Their petition initially requested that the court order the Church to produce its 2003, 2004, and 2005 records for copying, but it later requested simply that the Court "order an audit" of those records. The petition variously stated that the purpose of the audit was "to verify that [the Church's] expenditures are for Church-related purposes," "to determine whether or not the acts of the pastor and the Board of Deacons are illegal, oppressive, or fraudulent," and "to determine whether or not corporate assets have been misapplied or wasted."

The Prices served their petition on Cheryl Hallonquist, the Church's former treasurer and registered agent for service of process. Hallonquist had stopped attending the Church after moving from Bulverde to San Antonio some years earlier. The Prices were personal friends of Hallonquist and served her at a San Antonio address rather than the Bulverde address that was listed in the Secretary of State's records due to an oversight by the Church. The Church maintains that Hallonquist did not inform anyone at the Church about the lawsuit and that it did not learn about the lawsuit until after a visiting trial court judge entered a default order on May 25, 2005 granting the relief requested by the Prices' petition. The default order required the Church to produce financial records for 2002 through 2005 as well as other information, including "the audio tape recording on April 3, 2005 in which Terry Price and Phyllis Price were purportedly excommunicated from the Church." The Prices served the order on the Church's deacons at their homes.

On June 6, 2005, the Church filed a special appearance that argued the Church was not subject to the court's jurisdiction because it had never been properly served with the petition. On the same day, the Church also filed a motion to vacate the May 25, 2005 audit order and a plea to the jurisdiction that argued (1) the information sought by the Prices was ecclesiastical and therefore outside the court's jurisdiction and (2) the Prices lacked standing because their church membership was terminated before they filed suit.

On July 5, 2005, the Prices filed an amended petition that added Watson, a friend of the Prices and member of the Church, as a co-plaintiff.

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Terry and Phyllis Price, Michaela Watson, and Robert L. Mays, Jr. v. Philip Schroeder, Bill Smith, Jerry Beene, Leroy Harrington, Reagan Hill, Jerry Mitchell, Gary Moore, Tony Silva, Martin Ramsay, Johnnie Terrazas, Ray Wainner, John Watson, David Beene, A. v. Welsh, and First Baptist Church of Bulverde, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/terry-and-phyllis-price-michaela-watson-and-robert-l-mays-jr-v-philip-texapp-2010.