Vikor Scientific, LLC v. Kachina Air, Inc., GAI AIR, LLC F/K/A GSAIC, LLC, AWMR, LLC, AAW Investments, LLC, and Xian Hua "Aaron" Wang

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 4, 2025
Docket09-24-00103-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Vikor Scientific, LLC v. Kachina Air, Inc., GAI AIR, LLC F/K/A GSAIC, LLC, AWMR, LLC, AAW Investments, LLC, and Xian Hua "Aaron" Wang (Vikor Scientific, LLC v. Kachina Air, Inc., GAI AIR, LLC F/K/A GSAIC, LLC, AWMR, LLC, AAW Investments, LLC, and Xian Hua "Aaron" Wang) 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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Vikor Scientific, LLC v. Kachina Air, Inc., GAI AIR, LLC F/K/A GSAIC, LLC, AWMR, LLC, AAW Investments, LLC, and Xian Hua "Aaron" Wang, (Tex. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

In The

Court of Appeals

Ninth District of Texas at Beaumont

__________________

NO. 09-24-00103-CV __________________

VIKOR SCIENTIFIC, LLC, Appellant

V.

KACHINA AIR, INC., GAI AIR, LLC F/K/A GSAIC, LLC, AWMR, LLC, AAW INVESTMENTS, LLC AND XIAN HUA “AARON” WANG, Appellees

__________________________________________________________________

On Appeal from the 284th District Court Montgomery County, Texas Trial Cause No. 22-06-07372-CV __________________________________________________________________

MEMORANDUM OPINION

This is an interlocutory appeal from the denial of Appellant Vikor Scientific,

LLC’s special appearance challenging the trial court’s jurisdiction. Vikor is a South

Carolina limited liability company that performs laboratory diagnostic services for

health care providers and clinicians throughout the country, with its principal place

of business in Charleston, South Carolina. After Creek Crossing Management, LLC

(“Creek Crossing”), individually and derivatively on behalf of Radius Flex

1 Logistics, LLC, (“Radius Flex”) filed a lawsuit against Appellants Kachina Air, Inc.,

GAI Air, LLC f/k/a GSAIC, LLC, AWMR, LLC, AAW Investments, LLC, and Xian

Hua “Aaron” Wang (collectively, the “Kachina Parties”), the Kachina Parties filed a

third-party action bringing Vikor into the case based on allegations of civil

conspiracy, money had and received, quantum meruit, and unjust enrichment.

Challenging jurisdiction, Vikor filed a special appearance which the trial court

denied. Because we conclude that the trial court lacks personal jurisdiction over

Vikor, both generally and specifically as to all of the Kachina Parties’ claims, we

reverse the trial court’s order denying Vikor’s special appearance.

Background

On January 9, 2019, Creek Crossing and Vikor entered into a management

services agreement whereby Creek Crossing, as a transportation, freight, and

logistics broker, offered freight management and logistics management and

reporting to Vikor. Vikor agreed to pay Creek Crossing for all shipments facilitated

by Creek Crossing through the agreement. According to the pleadings, Creek

Crossing’s sole member, Gregory Lewis, subsequently decided that his company

could better serve the industry by providing delivery services itself instead of

brokering and outsourcing delivery to third parties, so he began investigating in late

2020 a Part 135 Certificate which would authorize operation as an on-demand air

charter carrier for hire for compensation or profit. A Part 135 Certificate is issued to

2 a “certificate holder,” who must meet certain requirements. Lewis was introduced to

Wang by an acquaintance and understood that Wang had expertise in aircraft

operations and several other companies with access to airplanes, airplane hangars

and related facilities, and pilots and related technicians necessary for flying. Creek

Crossing’s petition alleges that in or around May 2021, the acquaintance and Wang

had identified a Part 135 Certificate, and that Wang set up a new company, GAI Air,

for an option to acquire Kachina Air, contingent upon the FAA’s issuing Kachina Air

its then-pending Part 135 Certificate.

On June 2, 2021, Creek Crossing and Kachina Air executed a Joint Venture

Agreement (the “JVA”) creating a newly formed company, Radius Flex Logistics,

LLC. According to the terms of the JVA, prior to a liquidity event, Radius Flex was

to acquire the Part 135 Certificate purchased and managed by Kachina Air, and

Creek Crossing was to assign contracts and revenue to Radius Flex “when

planes\routes are operational as agreed.” According to Creek Crossing’s petition,

Radius Flex tested the operational viability of delivery routes with the planes under

or contemplated to be under the Part 135 Certificate. Creek Crossing obtained

permission from its customers, including Vikor, for Radius Flex to make deliveries

on its behalf. Neither Radius Flex nor Creek Crossing charged the customers

anything for these validation exercises. Creek Crossing alleges that after facilitating

the acquisition of Kachina Air and the Part 135 Certificate in October 2021, Wang,

3 individually and through his companies, began to implement a scheme to avoid

financial obligations to Radius Flex and coerce a buyout by Creek Crossing on unfair

terms.

Creek Crossing sued the Kachina Parties, and the Kachina Parties

counterclaimed. The trial court ordered an accounting firm to perform an

independent accounting of Radius Flex. The accounting report states that “Based on

total [Creek Crossing] Sales, Vikor accounts for $7,078,77.12, [sic] 70.4% of [Creek

Crossing’s] recorded Revenues/Sales.” The report also states that

Vikor has not been invoiced to date (December 20, 2022) for any packages received by Radius Flex and has not made any payments to Radius Flex for any packages received. Greg Lewis has stated numerous times that the packages that Radius Flex transported were at “No Charge” while developing Radius Flex logistics services until [Vikor is] notified otherwise.

The Kachina Parties amended their pleadings to add Vikor as a third-party

defendant against whom the Kachina Parties assert claims for civil conspiracy,

money had and received, quantum meruit, and unjust enrichment.1 Regarding

jurisdiction, the Kachina Parties’ pleading asserts,

All counter-defendants and third-party defendants have either appeared in this lawsuit, reside in Texas, do business in Texas, and/ or have sufficient minimum contacts (both specific and general) with the State of Texas such that the exercise of jurisdiction over them would not offend the traditional notions of fair play and substantial justice.

We note that civil conspiracy is not an independent tort but a theory of 1

vicarious liability. See Agar Corp., Inc. v. Electro Circuits Int’l, LLC, 580 S.W.3d 136, 141 (Tex. 2019). 4 In response, Vikor filed a special appearance, asking the court to dismiss Vikor

for lack of personal jurisdiction. The special appearance asserts that the Kachina

Parties’ jurisdictional allegations are conclusory and that the Declaration of Dan

Nodes attached to Vikor’s special appearance negates any factual basis for personal

jurisdiction over Vikor. Vikor’s special appearance argues that Vikor is “at home” in

South Carolina, that it does not engage in “continuous and systematic” contacts in

Texas, and that its mere relationship with Creek Crossing “is insufficient to confer

specific jurisdiction over Vikor in Texas[,]” because “the operative facts of this

lawsuit involve a failed business venture undertaken jointly by the other parties to

this litigation not Vikor[.]”Vikor supported its special appearance with the

declaration of Dan Nodes, who states,

I am the Chief Operating Officer of Third-Party Defendant Vikor Scientific, LLC (“Vikor”). Vikor is not a Texas entity. It is South Carolina limited liability company with its principal place of business in Charleston, South Carolina.

[…]

While Vikor performs testing services for health care providers and clinicians located throughout the country, Vikor’s headquarters and principal place of business is in Charleston, South Carolina. Vikor does not maintain any offices in the State of Texas.

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Vikor Scientific, LLC v. Kachina Air, Inc., GAI AIR, LLC F/K/A GSAIC, LLC, AWMR, LLC, AAW Investments, LLC, and Xian Hua "Aaron" Wang, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vikor-scientific-llc-v-kachina-air-inc-gai-air-llc-fka-gsaic-llc-texapp-2025.