Unit 82 Joint Venture, Five Star Holding Company, Inc., Five Star Holding Management, L.L.C. and 1320/1390 Don Haskins, LTD v. Mediacopy Texas, Inc., a Delaware Corporation, and Infodisc Global Holding, Inc., a Delaware Corporation and International Commercial Bank of China

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 28, 2010
Docket08-08-00159-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Unit 82 Joint Venture, Five Star Holding Company, Inc., Five Star Holding Management, L.L.C. and 1320/1390 Don Haskins, LTD v. Mediacopy Texas, Inc., a Delaware Corporation, and Infodisc Global Holding, Inc., a Delaware Corporation and International Commercial Bank of China (Unit 82 Joint Venture, Five Star Holding Company, Inc., Five Star Holding Management, L.L.C. and 1320/1390 Don Haskins, LTD v. Mediacopy Texas, Inc., a Delaware Corporation, and Infodisc Global Holding, Inc., a Delaware Corporation and International Commercial Bank of China) 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.

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Unit 82 Joint Venture, Five Star Holding Company, Inc., Five Star Holding Management, L.L.C. and 1320/1390 Don Haskins, LTD v. Mediacopy Texas, Inc., a Delaware Corporation, and Infodisc Global Holding, Inc., a Delaware Corporation and International Commercial Bank of China, (Tex. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS

EIGHTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS

EL PASO, TEXAS



UNIT 82 JOINT VENTURE,

FIVE STAR HOLDING COMPANY, INC., FIVE STAR HOLDING MANAGEMENT, L.L.C., and

1320/1390 DON HASKINS, LTD.,


                                    Appellants,


v.


MEDIACOPY TEXAS, INC.,

A DELAWARE CORPORATION and

INFODISC GLOBAL HOLDING, INC.,

A DELAWARE CORPORATION,


                                    Appellees.

§






No. 08-08-00159-CV


Appeal from

 327th District Court


of El Paso County, Texas


(TC # 2005-1987)

O P I N I O N


            The parties disagree about the very nature of this case. Appellants describe it as a receivership case involving a property owner’s claims for loss of property, damages to its property, and recovery in quantum meruit of the rental value of its commercial warehouse, noting that the jury found $3,500,000 in damages caused by the receiver. Appellees counter that, “long story short, this is really just a disgruntled landlord who doesn’t like being relegated to the status of a mere claimant. He wants to be able to . . . get money that he wouldn’t be otherwise entitled to because he is afraid he is not going to get it from his tenant who is in bankruptcy.” Aye, there’s the rub.

FACTUAL SUMMARY

            We begin by identifying the parties. Five Star Holding Company, Inc. owns a 200,000 square foot warehouse (the Premises) located at 1390 Don Haskins in El Paso. A separate entity-- 1320/1390 Don Haskins Ltd.--owns the lease for the Premises. Jerry Ayoub is the president of Five Star, the manager of Five Star Holding Management, L.L.C., and an authorized representative of 1320/1390 Don Haskins Ltd. For clarity, we will refer to Appellants collectively as Landlord. In 1997, Landlord leased the Premises to Mediacopy, Inc., a California corporation, spending nearly $3.8 million to finish out the warehouse to the tenant’s specifications. Under the terms of the lease, the tenant was required to replace any broken or removed equipment, fixtures, or appurtenances to the building with equipment, fixtures and appurtenances of substantially the same quality. The tenant was also required to repair all damages arising from replacement. The original lease was modified in May 1998, July 2000, and October 2000. At no time did Mediacopy, Inc. sublease the Premises.

            Mediacopy, Inc. and Mediacopy Texas, Inc. (MTI) are subsidiaries of Infodisc Global Holdings, Inc., which in turn is a wholly owned subsidiary of Infodisc Technology Co., Ltd. MTI and Infodisc Global are Delaware corporations. These companies manufactured and replicated DVD and videotaped recordings of movies, television programming, specialty films, and other types of entertainment and informational programming. The record is unclear precisely when MTI began utilizing the Premises, but the company did lease nearby property from Landlord.


Bank Loans and Bankruptcy

            On August 28, 2003, MTI and Infodisc Global entered into a security agreement and credit agreement with International Commercial Bank of China (ICBC). Two weeks later, on September 12, MTI and Infodisc Global executed six promissory notes totaling $16,560,000. These loans were secured by a lien on all machinery, equipment, and fixtures located at various locations of operation, including the Premises in El Paso. On September 12, 2004, MTI and Infodisc Global defaulted on the loans. Mediacopy, Inc. filed a Chapter 11 bankruptcy petition in the United States Bankruptcy Court for the Central District of California on October 22, 2004. Attached to the petition was a tenant estoppel certificate evidencing that Infodisc Global is a corporation “d/b/a Mediacopy, a California corporation.” Landlord was duly listed as a creditor. Oddly, the bankruptcy was dismissed on December 5, 2005, for “failure to appear at 341 meeting for the second time.”

The California Receivership Order

            On November 30, 2004--during the pendency of the bankruptcy proceedings--ICBC sued MTI and Infodisc Global in California state court and sought a receivership for the purpose of liquidating the collateral. It also sued “Does 1 through 100” whose true names and capacities--whether individual, corporate, or associate--were unknown but were believed to be responsible either contractually or tortiously. Landlord was not notified of this proceeding. On January 13, 2005, the California state court appointed Robb Evans as Receiver. Reciting an agreement between ICBC, MTI, and Infodisc Global to liquidate all of the assets, the California receivership order required the Receiver to seize and sell the assets of MTI and Infodisc Global at its business locations in California, Nevada, Texas, and Canada. Landlord’s Premises at 1390 Don Haskins were specifically mentioned. On March 29,2005, the California court approved Maynards Industries, Ltd. (Auctioneer) as the Receiver's agent to liquidate the assets. Although the Receiver claimed under oath to have prepared an inventory of MTI’s assets, an agent from Maynards testified that he--not Robb Evans--directed two former employees of MTI to update an inventory previously prepared by MTI.

The Texas Receivership Order

            To sell the receivership assets, ICBC sought and obtained an ancillary receivership in the 327th Judicial District Court of El Paso County, Texas on March 24, 2005. Landlord received no notice, although the assets were located on his property. Judge Linda Chew appointed Robb Evans as the Ancillary Receiver. Auctioneer and the Receiver then arranged for a private sale and public auction in accordance with the California and Texas receivership orders. The auction was scheduled for June 14-15.

Petition in Intervention

            On June 1, 2005, Landlord filed an original petition in intervention and sought a temporary restraining order to prevent the private sale and public auction. At the hearing, counsel for Landlord advised the court that although Mediacopy was the lessee, Landlord had recently learned that all of the personalty within the warehouse allegedly belonged to MTI:

[Mr. Haugland]: Mediacopy, Inc. Was [sic] converted to a Chapter 7 bankruptcy on Tuesday of this week. We have asked them to abandon these leasehold premises and we are anticipating that that will happen any day now.

Mediacopy, Inc. Has [sic] no assets, no business operations, no nothing. But they have been utilizing that bankruptcy to prevent my client the landlord from exercising his landlord rights in Texas relative to this property where all of the apparent physical assets of the operation have been housed for the last several months. . . . [M]y clients have been sitting back there trying to negotiate with the bank the receiver [sic] about what can be removed from the premises, who is going to be responsible for the damages to the property, what stays, what goes. And the problem we’ve had, Your Honor, is my client is not being allowed access to the property.

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Unit 82 Joint Venture, Five Star Holding Company, Inc., Five Star Holding Management, L.L.C. and 1320/1390 Don Haskins, LTD v. Mediacopy Texas, Inc., a Delaware Corporation, and Infodisc Global Holding, Inc., a Delaware Corporation and International Commercial Bank of China, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/unit-82-joint-venture-five-star-holding-company-inc-five-star-holding-texapp-2010.