Thomas Swonke and Christopher Goodrich v. First Colony Community Service Association, Inc.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 15, 2010
Docket14-09-00019-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Thomas Swonke and Christopher Goodrich v. First Colony Community Service Association, Inc. (Thomas Swonke and Christopher Goodrich v. First Colony Community Service Association, 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
Thomas Swonke and Christopher Goodrich v. First Colony Community Service Association, Inc., (Tex. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

Reversed and Remanded and Memorandum Opinion filed June 15, 2010.

In The

Fourteenth Court of Appeals

___________________

NO. 14-09-00019-CV

Thomas Swonke and Christopher Goodrich, Appellants

V.

First Colony Community Services Association, Inc., Appellee

On Appeal from the 400th District Court

Fort Bend County, Texas

Trial Court Cause No. 07-CV-160602

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Thomas Swonke and Christopher Goodrich, collectively “appellants,” appeal from the grant of a plea to the jurisdiction, and in the alternative, motion for summary judgment, in their lawsuit against First Colony Community Services Association, Inc. (“the Association”).  The Association is a homeowners’ association of which appellants are members.  In their lawsuit, appellants asserted improprieties in the Association’s board of directors election in December 2007 and requested declaratory and injunctive relief.  In its combined motion and plea, the Association asserted that appellants lacked standing to maintain their claims and that those claims were without merit as a matter of law.  We reverse the trial court’s judgment and remand for further proceedings in accordance with this opinion.

I.  Background[1]

            The Association is a nonprofit corporation homeowners’ association for the First Colony subdivision in Sugar Land, Texas.  The subdivision’s developer, Sugar Land Properties, Inc., is listed as the sole “Class B” member in the Association’s bylaws, and the “Class A” membership consists of residential and business property owners within the subdivision.  As “Declarant” under the bylaws, Sugar Land Properties retained considerable control over operation of the Association until such time as its status as Class B member was revoked under conditions set forth in the bylaws.  Among the rights invested in the Declarant by the bylaws was the right to unilaterally amend the bylaws, “so long as no substantive rights of any existing [subdivision] Owner [were] adversely affected.”

The bylaws further provided for an annual election to fill seats on the board of directors.  Specifically, each year the existing board of directors was required to appoint a “Nominating Committee” to consider applications from persons seeking positions as directors.  The committee would then nominate applicants to appear on the election ballot at the annual meeting of members.  Other nominations could also be made “from the floor” at the meeting.

On August 23, 2007, the board of directors appointed appellant Goodrich to serve on the nominating committee.  Incumbent director Rod Craig was appointed as committee chair, five additional Association members were also appointed to the committee, and two alternates were named as well.  Also on August 23, a “Proposed Timeline” was prepared which included a date of October 15, 2007 for interviewing candidates, but no time of day or place was specified for the proposed meeting.  Appellant Swonke applied to be a candidate for the board in the December 6, 2007 election.  No meeting of the nominating committee took place on October 15.  In the evening of October 18, 2007, chairman Craig sent an email to committee members stating that the committee would meet at 7:45 on October 20.  This was the only meeting of the nominating committee appointed in August 2007.  In his affidavit, appellant Goodrich acknowledged having received Craig’s email notification, but he stated that he did not attend the meeting.  In all, only Craig and three of the six other committee members attended the meeting.  Neither alternate attended the meeting.  The committee did not select Swonke as a nominee.

Appellants Swonke and Goodrich then filed the present lawsuit against the Association, alleging principally that (1) the wrong nominating committee met to consider director applications for the December 2007 election; and (2) the committee meeting was improperly convened, in part because notice was not proper.  Specifically as to the proper nominating committee for consideration of candidates for the December 2007 meeting, appellants point out that under the bylaws, the nominating committee must be appointed “not less than thirty (30) days prior to each annual meeting of the Members to serve from the close of such annual meeting until the close of the next annual meeting, and such appointment shall be announced at each such annual meeting.”  Appellants asserted that under this provision, the proper nominating committee would have been one nominated prior to the December 2006 annual meeting, to serve from the close of that meeting until the close of the 2007 meeting.  Thus, according to appellants, the committee appointed in August 2007 had no authority to consider nominations for the 2007 meeting.

Regarding the allegedly improper meeting notice, appellants asserted that (1) the only notice was via email; (2) only three of six members, other than chairman Craig, attended the meeting; and (3) no written waiver of notice was submitted by the nonattending members.  Appellants further asserted that prior to the filing of the lawsuit, the board of directors was informed of the problems with the nominating committee by both Goodrich and a member of the board, Myatt Hancock, but nothing was done to cure the improprieties.

Appellants filed their Original Petition prior to the December 2007 election.  The pleading incorporated an application for a temporary restraining order, temporary injunction, and permanent injunction as well as a request for a declaratory judgment, essentially in an attempt to prevent the Association from moving forward with the election.  After a hearing on the request for a temporary injunction, the trial court denied the application.  The December 2007 election then went forward, and Swonke was neither nominated from the floor nor elected to the board of directors.  Appellants thereafter filed a motion for summary judgment in which they made the above accusations and requested a declaration that (1) the December 2007 election was void; (2) the three directors elected at that meeting were therefore not legally elected to the board; (3) “[a]ny actions taken or votes casts by” those three individuals were void; and (4) the presence of those individuals at board meetings should not be counted for purposes of determining whether a quorum existed at those meetings.  Appellants further requested court costs and attorney’s fees.

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Thomas Swonke and Christopher Goodrich v. First Colony Community Service Association, Inc., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thomas-swonke-and-christopher-goodrich-v-first-col-texapp-2010.