Voss Road Exxon LLC and Demos Thanos v. Frank G. Vlahakos and Jackson Walker L.L.P.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 30, 2011
Docket01-10-00146-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Voss Road Exxon LLC and Demos Thanos v. Frank G. Vlahakos and Jackson Walker L.L.P. (Voss Road Exxon LLC and Demos Thanos v. Frank G. Vlahakos and Jackson Walker L.L.P.) 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
Voss Road Exxon LLC and Demos Thanos v. Frank G. Vlahakos and Jackson Walker L.L.P., (Tex. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

Opinion issued June 30, 2011.

In The

Court of Appeals

For The

First District of Texas

————————————

NO. 01-10-00146-CV

———————————

Voss Road Exxon LLC and Demos Thanos, Appellants

V.

Frank G. Vlahakos and Jackson Walker L.L.P., Appellees

On Appeal from the 190th District Court

Harris County, Texas

Trial Court Case No. 2008-45333

MEMORANDUM OPINION

          Voss Road Exxon LLC and Demos Thanos (collectively, “VRE”) sued Jackson Walker L.L.P. and one of its partners, Frank Vlahakos (collectively, “Jackson Walker”), asserting that Jackson Walker’s alleged legal malpractice and other wrongful conduct caused VRE to fail to consummate a purchase of the property on which it is located pursuant to a right of first refusal in its lease agreement. The trial court granted summary judgment in favor of Jackson Walker. We conclude that VRE’s right of first refusal, which expired before VRE contacted Jackson Walker, was not revived by waiver. Jackson Walker did not cause VRE’s alleged injury. Because Jackson Walker has disproved causation with respect to VRE’s loss of its right of first refusal, and because VRE does not assert on appeal that it had any separate injury distinct from its loss of the right of first refusal, we hold that the trial court did not err by granting summary judgment.

I.       Background

A.      Factual background

VRE owns and operates a gas station, which is located on property that VRE leases from Billie Jean Reed. The lease agreement contains a right of first refusal that entitled VRE to purchase the property by matching any third-party offer to purchase the property that Reed was willing to accept during the initial five-year term of the lease.[1] Under the right of first refusal, Reed was required to give VRE notice of any acceptable third-party offer within seven days of receiving it; VRE then had ten days to exercise its right of first refusal by sending Reed a “Notice of Exercise.” If VRE failed to exercise its right of first refusal, Reed could sell the property to the third-party subject to VRE’s right to lease the property for the remainder of the initial five-year term.

Two years into the initial term of the lease, Reed sent VRE notice of an offer to purchase the property. The letter notified VRE that it had until July 30, 2007ten days from the date the notice was “effective” under the lease, which was three days after it was mailedto exercise its right of first refusal. The notice identified Southwest Investment Company, LLC as the third party which had offered to purchase the property, and it contained the principal terms of the offer, including price, earnest money payment, and inspection period.

Thanos, VRE’s sole owner, was on vacation in Greece for four weeks in July 2007, and he did not have anyone monitoring his mail. He did not actually receive the notice until he returned home on August 2. Thanos then contacted Vlahakos and retained Jackson Walker to represent VRE in the matter. Vlahakos immediately emailed Reed’s counsel, Stephanie Harrison, notifying her that Thanos had been out of the country, stating that VRE wanted to exercise its right of first refusal, and asking her to accept the email as notification of exercise. Thanos also wrote Reed a letter explaining that he had been out of the country and “did not have enough time to reply back by the July 30, 2007 deadline,” requesting that she allow him another opportunity to exercise the right of first refusal. Thanos also left a voicemail for Harrison.

Harrison did not immediately respond to Vlahakos’s and Thanos’s attempts to contact her, and on August 8, Jackson Walker attorney Curt Langley sent her a letter informing her that Thanos was arranging financing and would like to speak with her about the transaction. That day, Langley spoke with Harrison. In an email to Thanos that afternoon, Langley stated that Harrison had made the following statements: (1) when they did not receive a response from VRE by the deadline, they proceeded under the impression that VRE did not wish to exercise its right of first refusal; (2) when she received VRE’s notification of exercise on August 2, she inquired of Reed whether she intended to honor the notification or contest it as untimely, but she had not yet received Reed’s response; and (3) she considered her notice of offer letter effective and timely under the lease’s notice provision. Thanos responded to Langley’s email stating that he “totally accept[ed] responsibility” but was disappointed that neither Reed nor her broker, each of whom had been at the gas station recently, had mentioned any possibility of sale. He also stated in the email that “[a] simple courtesy call or a fair warning would have been the ethical thing to do” and his wish was “that Ms. Reed be compassionate.”

The next communication Jackson Walker received from Reed was an email on August 16 from Christopher Leavitt, Reed’s grandson and an attorney, who requested that Jackson Walker “have your client submit his [purchase and sale agreement] to me.”[2] Langley informed Thanos of the communication and introduced him to Rob Harlow, a real estate transactions partner at Jackson Walker. After speaking with Thanos, Harlow started preparing a proposed purchase and sale agreement for VRE. In drafting the agreement, Harlow contacted Leavitt to request a purchase and sale agreement that had already been drafted, which he could use as a starting point for VRE’s agreement, to “keep costs down.” Leavitt told Harlow that he was “working on the changes for the [purchase and sale] agreement,” but he would provide it to Harlow soon. In a subsequent email Leavitt told Harlow: “I found the last one we were working with, and after I make a few changes I will forward it on.” The next day, Leavitt sent Harlow a draft purchase and sale agreement between Reed and a buyer to be determined. Leavitt stated that the draft “still might not be 100% perfect.”

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Voss Road Exxon LLC and Demos Thanos v. Frank G. Vlahakos and Jackson Walker L.L.P., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/voss-road-exxon-llc-and-demos-thanos-v-frank-g-vla-texapp-2011.