the El Paso Education Initiative, Inc., D/B/A Burnham Wood Charter School v. Amex Properties, LLC

564 S.W.3d 228
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 31, 2018
Docket08-17-00049-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 564 S.W.3d 228 (the El Paso Education Initiative, Inc., D/B/A Burnham Wood Charter School v. Amex Properties, LLC) 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
the El Paso Education Initiative, Inc., D/B/A Burnham Wood Charter School v. Amex Properties, LLC, 564 S.W.3d 228 (Tex. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS EIGHTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS EL PASO, TEXAS

THE EL PASO EDUCATION INITIATIVE, INC. d/b/a BURNHAM § No. 08-17-00049-CV WOOD CHARTER SCHOOL, § Appeal from the Appellant, § County Court at Law No. 6 v. § of El Paso County, Texas AMEX PROPERTIES, LLC, § (TC# 2008-2370) Appellee. § OPINION

Appellant, the El Paso Education Initiative, Inc. (EPEI) appeals the trial court’s denial of

its plea to the jurisdiction in which EPEI asserts that it is immune from the breach of contract suit

filed by Appellee, Amex Properties, LLC (Amex). First, EPEI asserts it is immune from suit as

the underlying contract that is a basis of the suit was not “properly executed” pursuant to the waiver

of immunity. Second, even if immunity is waived, EPEI asserts that the statutory waiver of

immunity precludes an award of consequential damages and attorney’s fees. We affirm in part

and reverse in part.

BACKGROUND

Factual Background

The breach of contract claim underlying this appeal stems from a lease agreement between EPEI and Amex. EPEI, doing business as Burnham Wood Charter School District, operates open-

enrollment charter schools chartered by the Texas Education Agency. Vista Del Futuro Charter

School is one of the charter schools operated by the school district. In early 2008, Iris Burnham,

EPEI’s president and superintendent of schools, informed EPEI’s board of directors that EPEI was

searching for sites for the location of Vista Del Futuro Charter School.

After locating a suitable site in east El Paso, Burnham began negotiating with Silvia

Martinez Aguirre, part owner of Amex, to lease the property and construct a building for the

operation of the school.1 Working with EPEI’s board of directors, Burnham reviewed a proposal

for entering a lease with Amex and presented the board with the projected multi-year rent schedule

and budget for the charter school. The minutes from this meeting state that “Burnham asked the

Board’s permission to continue to negotiate a lease with Ms. Martinez,” which the board granted.

To construct the building EPEI desired, Amex had contracted with AbM Construction Co., who

had begun the construction process.

Burnham and Martinez signed a document titled “Lease Agreement” after a series of

negotiations, which included their respective attorneys, Jerry Wallace for EPEI and Victor Firth

for Amex.2 On either of two dates, Friday, April 25, or the following Monday, April 28, Martinez

verbally informed the charter school’s general administrator, Rebeca Perez, and its realtor, Juan

Uribe, that she had signed the written Lease Agreement. An email dated April 25 sent from

Attorney Jerry Wallace to Administrator Perez states:

The lease agreement needs to be signed by both ms. Burnham on behalf of the charter and ms. Martinez on behalf for [sic] the property

1 The property’s location is: 1441 N. Zaragoza Rd., El Paso, Texas, 79936. 2 For a more detailed recitation of the background surrounding the formation of the “Lease Agreement,” see El Paso Educ. Initiative, Inc. v. Amex Properties, LLC, 385 S.W.3d 701, 703–04 (Tex. App.—El Paso 2012, pet. denied).

2 owner.

Our suggesting [sic] is that you contact. ms. Martinez, inform her that the document has been signed by ms. burnham, and ask her to come by and execute the document. You can also inform her that we have transmitted the document to victor firth for his review.

I’m sure that ms. Martinez will want an original executed and notarized lease instrument, so you should either have ms. burnham and ms. Martinez execute two leases, or simply make a copy of the lease after ms. Martinez has signed it and her signature has been notarized. Either method will work just fine.

Thanks,

jerry

The Lease Agreement contained a recital stating that the document was “[e]xecuted as of

17 April 2008” and included Martinez’s signature as manager of the landlord of the lease (Amex),

and Burnham’s signature as president of the tenant of the lease (EPEI). It also contained an Entire

Agreement provision which specified that “[s]ubmission of this Lease for examination does not

constitute an option for the Leased Premises and becomes effective as a Lease only upon execution

and delivery thereof by Landlord to Tenant.” In addition, the Authority of Signatories provision

of the lease stated: “Each person executing this Lease [Agreement] individually and personally

represents and warrants that he/she is duly authorized to execute and deliver the same on behalf of

the entity for which he/she is signing (whether a corporation general or limited partnership or

otherwise) and that this Lease [Agreement] is binding upon the entity in accordance with its terms.”

Contained within the Lease Agreement were also two notarized certificates of

acknowledgement. The first, a certificate acknowledging that Martinez’s signature, was signed on

April 25 by a notary public stating that Martinez, as “Manager of Amex,” appeared and

acknowledged that Martinez had executed the Lease Agreement “for the purposes and

considerations therein expressed and on behalf of” Amex. The second, a certificate acknowledging 3 that Burnham’s signature, was signed on April 24 by a notary public stating that Burnham, as

“President” of EPEI, had appeared and acknowledged that she had executed the Lease Agreement

“for the purposes and considerations therein expressed and on behalf of The El Paso Education

Initiative, Inc.”

Unaware that Burnham and Martinez had signed the Lease Agreement, Firth continued to

negotiate the terms and conditions of the agreement with Wallace until Sunday, April 27. On May

13, Wallace sent Amex notice that the charter school was unequivocally rejecting the Lease

Agreement and that it no longer desired to lease any property from Amex.

Procedural Background

Amex sued EPEI, claiming that EPEI anticipatorily breached the lease and sought actual

damages, consequential damages, and attorney’s fees. EPEI filed its first plea to the jurisdiction,

which the trial court denied as to the breach of contract claim and associated claims for

consequential damages and attorney’s fees. This Court affirmed the trial court’s denial of the plea

to the jurisdiction in a previous opinion. El Paso Educ. Initiative, Inc. v. Amex Properties, LLC,

385 S.W.3d 701 (Tex. App.—El Paso 2012, pet. denied) (EPEI I). The Texas Supreme Court

denied EPEI’s petition for review of that decision on March 29, 2013, and the case resumed in the

trial court. EPEI filed a second plea to the jurisdiction, and after Amex amended its petition, filed

its third plea to the jurisdiction. The trial court dismissed the tort claims Amex added in its

subsequent petitions but again denied the plea to the jurisdiction that challenged the breach of

contract suit, claims for consequential damages, and attorney’s fees. This second interlocutory

appeal followed.

DISCUSSION

In this interlocutory appeal, EPEI raises three issues contending that the trial court erred in 4 denying EPEI’s plea to the jurisdiction. First, it argues that the trial court erred in denying its plea

to the jurisdiction because the purported contract was not “properly executed” on behalf of EPEI.

Second, it argues that the trial court erred in denying its plea to the jurisdiction as it related to

EPEI’s claim for consequential damages flowing from the breach of contract claim. Third, it

argues that the trial court erred in denying its plea to the jurisdiction as it related to EPEI’s claim

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564 S.W.3d 228, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-el-paso-education-initiative-inc-dba-burnham-wood-charter-school-texapp-2018.