Texas First Rentals, LLC v. Montage Development Co., LLC and Derick Murway

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 16, 2023
Docket04-22-00429-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Texas First Rentals, LLC v. Montage Development Co., LLC and Derick Murway (Texas First Rentals, LLC v. Montage Development Co., LLC and Derick Murway) 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
Texas First Rentals, LLC v. Montage Development Co., LLC and Derick Murway, (Tex. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

Fourth Court of Appeals San Antonio, Texas MEMORANDUM OPINION

No. 04-22-00429-CV

TEXAS FIRST RENTALS, LLC, Appellant

v.

MONTAGE DEVELOPMENT CO., LLC and Derick Murway, Appellees

From the 285th Judicial District Court, Bexar County, Texas Trial Court No. 2022-CI-08101 Honorable Tina Torres, Judge Presiding

Opinion by: Rebeca C. Martinez, Chief Justice

Sitting: Rebeca C. Martinez, Chief Justice Beth Watkins, Justice Sandee Bryan Marion, Chief Justice (Retired) 1

Delivered and Filed: August 16, 2023

DISMISSED IN PART; AFFIRMED IN PART; REVERSED IN PART; REMANDED

Texas First Rentals, LLC (“TFR”) appeals from an order denying its motion to compel

arbitration and from an order denying its motion for reconsideration. We hold the trial court erred

by denying TFR’s motion to compel arbitration as to its claims against Montage Development Co.,

LLC (“Montage”) related to a single rental contract. Accordingly, we reverse the trial court’s

order and remand with instructions to compel arbitration and stay proceedings as to those claims.

1 Retired Fourth Court of Appeals Chief Justice Sandee Bryan Marion sitting by assignment. See TEX. GOV’T CODE ANN. § 74.003. 04-22-00429-CV

We otherwise affirm the trial court’s order denying TFR’s motion to compel arbitration.

Additionally, we dismiss the portion of TFR’s appeal challenging the trial court’s order denying

its motion for reconsideration because we lack jurisdiction over that part of the appeal.

BACKGROUND

On November 6, 2019, Montage submitted an “Application for Credit” with TFR, a

company which rents construction equipment. The Application lists Derick Murway as Montage’s

“owner or president,” and Murway signed the Application as Montage’s “principal” and

“managing member.” According to an Application term, Murway, by signing, recognized that his

credit history could be used as a factor in TFR’s credit evaluation.

The Application for Credit states that Montage,

acknowledges and agrees to the following:

1. . . . (a) all purchases/rentals made by [Montage] from [TFR] are subject to the Terms and Conditions contained herein; (b) [Montage] has received, read, understands and accepts all of the terms and conditions of TFR’s Rental Contract; ....

2. . . . Rentals by TFR to [Montage] made subsequent to the acceptance of this application by TFR shall be governed by the Rental Contract pertaining to such rental and by this Agreement. In the event that any provisions of the Rental Contract shall conflict with any provision of this Agreement, the Rental Contract shall control.

The Application does not define “Rental Contract,” and no contract is attached.

In 2022, TFR sued Montage and Murway, alleging they failed to pay for equipment rented

in 2021. TFR asserted a breach of contract claim against Montage and filed its claim as a suit on

a sworn account. See TEX. R. CIV. P. 185. TFR also asserted a claim against both Montage and

Murway for violations of the Texas Trust Fund Act. See TEX. PROP. CODE ANN. §§ 162.001–.033.

In its breach of contract claim, TFR alleged that the amount due at the time of filing was

$48,789.63. In its Texas Trust Fund Act claim, TFR alleged that Murway, in his management

-2- 04-22-00429-CV

capacity, received and controlled funds received by Montage for the use of TFR’s equipment and

that Murway failed to remit the funds to TFR. TFR attached to its petition an affidavit by Corey

Woods, its Financial Services Manager, verifying the amount it alleged was owed.

Montage and Murway filed a motion to transfer venue and an original answer, and TFR

filed a motion to compel arbitration and to stay proceedings. Attached to TFR’s motion is an

affidavit by Woods in support. The affidavit authenticates a copy of the Application for Credit

and “true and correct cop[ies] of the Rental Agreements,” which are attached as Exhibits A-1 to

A-5. Woods avers: “The Rental Agreements contain an arbitration provision, which provides, in

part, that the parties shall submit to binding arbitration any ‘any [sic] dispute arising out of or

relating to this transaction.’”

Attachments A-1 to A-5 of Woods’s affidavit include some or all of the following

documents: a “Rental Out,” a “Pickup Ticket,” a “4 Week Bill,” and a “Rental Invoice.” Each

exhibit, A-1 to A-5, relates to one of five specific contracts for equipment rentals:

• Contract 1161827—Attachment A-1 includes a Rental Invoice (1 page),

another Rental Invoice (1 page), a Rental Out (2 pages), another Rental Out

(1 page), a 4 Week Bill (1 page); and another 4 Week Bill (1 page).

• Contract 1161701—Attachment A-2 includes a Rental Invoice (1 page), and

a Pickup Ticket (2 pages).

• Contract 1162465—Attachment A-3 includes a Rental Invoice (1 page), a

Rental Out (1 page), another Rental Out (2 pages), a 4 Week Bill (1 page),

and a Pickup Ticket (2 pages).

• Contract 1164701—Exhibit A-4 includes a Rental Invoice (1 page), another

Rental Invoice (1 page), another Rental Invoice (1 page), another Rental

-3- 04-22-00429-CV

Invoice (2 pages); a Rental Out (2 pages), another Rental Out (2 pages), a 4

Week Bill (1 page); another 4 Week Bill (1 page), another 4 Week Bill (1

page), a Pickup Ticket (2 pages), and another Pickup Ticket (2 pages).

• Contract 1170368—Exhibit A-5 includes a Rental Invoice (1 page), and a

Pickup Ticket (2 pages).

The Rental Outs, Pickup Tickets, 4 Week Bills, and Rental Invoices include specific

contract numbers, customer information, and rental information on their first pages. Based on how

these forms have been filled out, it appears that the Rental Out form is used when TFR releases

equipment to a customer, and the Pickup Ticket form is used when equipment is returned to TFR.

The 4 Week Bill form and the Rental Invoice form reflect, respectively, installment billing and

billing after equipment has been returned. 2 At the bottom of each of the four forms is the statement:

“Conditions of Rental, Read Front & Reverse Side.” In the bullet points above, if a form is shown

as comprising two pages, then it includes a second page containing “Additional Terms and

Conditions.” This second page is identical across the four forms whenever it is included.

However, as reflected in the paragraph above, when a form is shown as comprising a single page,

it does not have a reverse side. Most of the forms are unsigned. Additionally, as reflected above,

Exhibits A-2 and A-5 do not include a Rental Out form. Moreover, some of the Rental Out forms

state a printing date that is after the date the equipment is listed as being delivered to Montage.

Only one of the Rental Out forms — a Rental Out form in Exhibit A-4 — is both signed and printed

on the date listed as the date the equipment was delivered.

2 TFR’s counsel confirmed this understanding of the forms at the hearing on the motion for reconsideration:

Now, rental invoices are invoices. Those are not rental contracts. The rental out documents . . . those have terms and conditions. They say a contract date, they say a contract number, they say additional terms of that contract. Those are the contracts we are talking about.

-4- 04-22-00429-CV

When included, the second/reverse page comprising Additional Terms and Conditions

includes the following language:

ARBITRATION: Parties agree to submit to binding arbitration for any dispute arising out of or relating to this transaction.

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Texas First Rentals, LLC v. Montage Development Co., LLC and Derick Murway, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/texas-first-rentals-llc-v-montage-development-co-llc-and-derick-murway-texapp-2023.