Victor S. Elgohary and Peter Pratt v. Herrera Partners, L.P., Herrera Partners, G. A. Herrera & Co, LLC, Gilbert A. Herrera

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 5, 2014
Docket01-13-00193-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Victor S. Elgohary and Peter Pratt v. Herrera Partners, L.P., Herrera Partners, G. A. Herrera & Co, LLC, Gilbert A. Herrera (Victor S. Elgohary and Peter Pratt v. Herrera Partners, L.P., Herrera Partners, G. A. Herrera & Co, LLC, Gilbert A. Herrera) 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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Victor S. Elgohary and Peter Pratt v. Herrera Partners, L.P., Herrera Partners, G. A. Herrera & Co, LLC, Gilbert A. Herrera, (Tex. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

Opinion issued June 5, 2014.

In The

Court of Appeals For The

First District of Texas ———————————— NO. 01-13-00193-CV ——————————— VICTOR S. ELGOHARY AND PETER PRATT, Appellants V. HERRERA PARTNERS, L.P., HERRERA PARTNERS, G.A. HERRERA & CO., L.L.C. AND GILBERT A. HERRERA, Appellees

On Appeal from the 133rd District Court Harris County, Texas Trial Court Case No. 2010-40476

MEMORANDUM OPINION

In this appeal from the denial of a post-judgment turnover order, we consider

whether (1) the trial court’s order is final and appealable, and (2) the trial court erred in denying appellant’s request that certain property be turned over to a

receiver appointed to collect a judgment on his behalf. We affirm.

BACKGROUND

The Underlying Suit

In 2006, Elgohary and Herrera Partners, LP [“the LP”] entered into an

employment agreement containing an arbitration provision. The LP was a Texas

limited partnership; Gilbert Herrera was the limited partner and G.A. Herrera &

Co., LLC was the general partner. In May 2007, the LP terminated Elgohary’s

employment. In that same month, Elgohary filed a wage claim with the Texas

Workforce Commission, claiming that the LP had refused to pay salary and

expenses it owed him. G.A. Herrera & Co., LLC, the LP’s general partner,

responded to the wage claim, and, in 2009, Elgohary initiated arbitration

proceedings. In June 2010, the arbitrator issued an award and decision in favor of

Elgohary and against the LP and Gilbert Herrera, individually. G.A. Herrera &

Co., LLC was not named in the arbitration award.

In June 2010, Elgohary filed suit in the trial court below seeking to confirm

the arbitration award against the LP and its limited and general partners, Gilbert

Herrera and G.A. Herrera & Co., LLP. The trial court confirmed the award against

the LP, but denied the motion to confirm as to Gilbert Herrera and G.A. Herrera &

Co., LLP, and vacated the arbitration award against Herrera.

2 Elgohary appealed to this Court, arguing that the trial court erred in vacating

the arbitration award as to Gilbert Herrera because the arbitrator, not the trial court,

had the authority to determine whether Gilbert Herrera was bound by the

arbitration agreement even though he was not a signatory to that agreement. See

Elgohary v. Herrera, 405 S.W.3d 785, 789 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 2013,

no pet.). This Court disagreed, holding that the trial court, not the arbitrator, was

responsible for determining whether a non-signatory to the arbitration agreement

could be bound by its terms. Id. at 793. Nevertheless, this Court reversed and

remanded the trial court’s judgment so that it could conduct an independent review

to determine whether Gilbert Herrera, as a non-signatory, could be compelled to

arbitrate under any applicable legal theory. Id. at 794.

The LP was not a party to this Court’s earlier appeal, and the appeal did not

affect the trial court’s judgment confirming the arbitration award against the LP

and rendering judgment against the LP in the amount of $29,432.05. In June 2011,

while the appeal was pending, Elgohary sought and obtained a turnover order to

pursue collection of the judgment against the LP. The trial court appointed Peter

Pratt as receiver to pursue collection of the debt owed to Elgohary by the LP.

The Amegy Bank Account

In May 2012, Pratt sent Amegy Bank a letter entitled “Court Levy” invoking

his power under the turnover order and requesting the bank to place a hold on all

3 accounts of “Herrera Partners, L.P. FEIN XX-XXXXXXX.” Amegy responded that it

“maintains no funds in the name of Herrera LP. However, Amegy does hold funds

of [Herrera] Partners [a Texas General Partnership].”

The history of the Amegy account is as follows: The LP opened the account

on June 6, 2007. The account agreement listed the employer tax identification

number of the LP. Twelve days later, Herrera Partners formed its general

partnership. That same day the LP transferred $100,000.00 from Sterling Bank to

the Amegy Account. Twenty days after the account was opened, Herrera Partners

applied for and received its federal employer tax identification number [“FEIN”]

from the Internal Revenue Service. On June 28, 2007, the LP filed its Certificate

of termination of a Domestic Entity with the Texas Secretary of State. There was

evidence that the form of the business was changed from an LP to a general

partnership to avoid the implementation of a new margin tax on limited

partnerships, and that, to avoid the tax implications, the transaction had to be

completed by July 1, 2007.

As such, the Amegy account had been temporarily set up in the name of the

LP, with its FEIN, but after the general partnership was created and the LP

dissolved, the account could only be accessed using Herrera Partners’ FEIN.

There was evidence that the $100,718.39 that the LP had deposited in the account

was used to pay the LP’s existing liabilities at the time, including salaries, costs,

4 and expenses. Thereafter, all deposits into the account were for services provided

by Herrera Partners, not the LP. A commercial lender with Amegy Bank testified

that Herrera Partners was the owner of the account since early August 2007, but

that a new signature card was not executed by Herrera Partners until July 2010.

Elgohary’s Request for Disbursement of the Funds

In May 2012, Pratt, the receiver, sent a “Court Levy” requesting that Amegy

put a hold on all accounts belonging to the LP. Amegy responded by filing an

interpleader stating that the LP had no accounts, but Herrera Partners did. Herrera

Partners intervened in the interpleader, contending that the money in the account

belonged to it, not to the LP. Elgohary and Pratt then filed a motion requesting the

court to release the interpleaded funds to them in satisfaction of the LP’s judgment.

After a hearing on the same, the court denied their request and ordered the funds

released to Herrera Partners. This appeal followed.

IS THE ORDER APPEALABLE?

Herrera Partners contends that, even though the trial court’s judgment

against the LP was final when it was not timely appealed along with the rest of the

case, it nonetheless became interlocutory again when this Court reversed and

remanded the judgment against Gilbert Herrera, which was the subject of the

earlier appeal.

5 This issue is moot. This Court resolved the issue when it denied Herrera

Partner’s motion to dismiss, stating, “This Court’s judgment of March 5, 2013

reversed the trial court’s judgment only as to parties to appeal number 01-

11000550-CV. Herrera Partners was not a party to that appeal, thus any trial court

judgment against it is unaffected by our March 5, 2013 judgment.” Indeed, under

the circumstances presented here, this Court could not reverse a judgment as to a

non-appealing party. See Fletcher v. Blair, 874 S.W.2d 83, 84 n.1 (Tex. App.—

Austin 1994, writ denied) (citing Saigh v. Monteith, 215 S.W.2d 610, 613 (Tex.

1948)). Therefore, the judgment against the LP was final when it was not timely

appealed. Herrera Partners has cited no authority to support its assertion that this

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Victor S. Elgohary and Peter Pratt v. Herrera Partners, L.P., Herrera Partners, G. A. Herrera & Co, LLC, Gilbert A. Herrera, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/victor-s-elgohary-and-peter-pratt-v-herrera-partne-texapp-2014.