Vietentours GMBH v. the Ticket Company, Inc., and the Ticket Company International, Inc.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 24, 2011
Docket01-09-00732-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Vietentours GMBH v. the Ticket Company, Inc., and the Ticket Company International, Inc. (Vietentours GMBH v. the Ticket Company, Inc., and the Ticket Company International, 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
Vietentours GMBH v. the Ticket Company, Inc., and the Ticket Company International, Inc., (Tex. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

Opinion issued March 24, 2011

In The

Court of Appeals

For The

First District of Texas

————————————

NO. 01-09-00732-CV

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Vietentours GmbH, Appellant

V.

The Ticket Company, Inc. and The Ticket Company International, Inc., Appellees

On Appeal from the 165th District Court

Harris County, Texas

Trial Court Case No. 2006-69465

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Vietentours GmbH, a German company, sued The Ticket Company Inc. and The Ticket Company International, Inc. (“TC International”) on sworn account and for breach of contract for services provided in connection with the World Cup held in Germany in June and July 2006.  Vietentours claimed it provided over €5.3 million worth of services, but was paid only €4.1million, leaving a balance of €1,217,451.55.  A jury found that both TC International and Ticket Company breached the contract with Vietentours, but their breach was excused.  The trial court entered a take nothing judgment on Vietentours’s claims against both companies. Vietentours raises four issues on appeal, focusing primarily on the legal and factual sufficiency of the jury’s finding of excuse.  Vietentours also challenges the sufficiency of the evidence supporting the jury’s finding of Vietentours’s breach, the submission of the damages question, and the finding that the two companies are not jointly and severally liable. 

We affirm.

Background

Vietentours provides hotel brokering and logistical services for major international sporting events such as the Olympics or World Cup.  Ticket Company and TC International were Houston-based ticketing companies that provided services for group and individual customers to attend sport and concert events.  Years before this dispute arose, the two owners of Ticket Company, Christopher Toy and Ali Fazeli, formed TC International with Andrew Worthington.[1]  TC International specialized in selling packages to events including hotels, airfare, tickets, and souvenirs, while Ticket Company is a ticket broker.  TC International is no longer in business.

In 2004, Vietentours and one of the two companies—the parties disagree which one—decided to collaborate on major international sporting events.  Vietentours contends that it did business with Ticket Company.  Defendants assert that only TC International contracted for Vietentours’s services and that they made the distinction clear.[2]  Ticket Company and TC International shared offices and had some overlapping employees, though they had separate bank accounts, tax returns, and phone and fax numbers.  Vietentours addressed its invoices to Ticket Company, but TC International made all the payments.  Worthington, who was Defendants’ primary liaison with Vietentours, had business cards and emails identifying himself as the “Director of International Sales and Marketing” for Ticket Company even though he was a co-owner only of TC International.  Regardless, the parties generally had a satisfactory business relationship and worked on several events together. 

In 2005, the managing director for Vietentours, Hans Overhage, and several Vietentours principals met with Toy, Fazeli, and Worthington in Germany to discuss providing a package for the 2006 World Cup.  The parties agreed that Defendants would purchase tickets for the games and arrange for air travel, and Vietentours would provide bookings for hotels, restaurants, and local transportation.  Early booking of the hotel rooms was important because 600-700,000 visitors needed rooms during the World Cup.  The arrangements were not exclusive—Vietentours assisted a total of 60,000 customers for all of its clients and Defendants also booked hotels outside of the agreement with Vietentours.  Defendants were to provide Vietentours with the number and dates of the hotel rooms needed for their customers as soon as possible after the brackets for cities and teams was announced in December 2005.

Vietentours sent Worthington a series of written contracts between Vietentours and Ticket Company but they were never signed.  The problem with the contracts was that there were so many groups of customers with changing preferences and requirements that it was “almost impossible to be producing contract after contract.”   The parties decided to “keep control” of the evolving list of needed hotels and their agreements through an excel spreadsheet. 

Vietentours ultimately provided hotel rooms and other services to approximately 3,000 to 6,000 of Defendants’ customers for the World Cup.  The World Cup began on June 9 and ended on July 9, 2006.  The hotel rooms were needed from June 6 until July 10.  The games were held in over a dozen cities in Germany.

On June 7, two days before the start of the World Cup, Overhage informed Worthington that €1.8 million was overdue for Vietentours’s services.  Vietentours had already paid for the hotel rooms and was facing a large loss and Defendants’ prior payments did not cover the amounts owed.  Worthington responded that he understood that half of the past-due amount had been paid or was going to be paid that day.  Vietentours did not provide Worthington with copies of any invoices for him to review so he could verify this amount, but instead showed him various receipts and other information that confirmed the approximate amount.

Vietentours and Worthington signed an agreement on June 7 that, as of that date, Ticket Company owed Vietentours “about” €1,800,000.  The June 7 agreement reflects that Worthington was acting on behalf of Ticket Company. Worthington agreed to provide proof of payment of €900,000 by 4:00 p.m.

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