Wang v. Wen-Ning Lee

256 S.W.3d 862, 2008 Tex. App. LEXIS 4216, 2008 WL 2369119
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 12, 2008
Docket09-07-370 CV
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 256 S.W.3d 862 (Wang v. Wen-Ning Lee) 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
Wang v. Wen-Ning Lee, 256 S.W.3d 862, 2008 Tex. App. LEXIS 4216, 2008 WL 2369119 (Tex. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

OPINION

CHARLES KREGER, Justice.

Wen-Ning Lee, Pao-Yu Lin, and Eric C. Lee recovered judgment for $205,000 against Alex Wang and Serena Wang for fraud committed in the course of the sale of a business. The Wangs challenge the legal and factual sufficiency of the evidence in five issues. We reverse the judgment, render judgment in part, and remand the case in part.

Shortly after emigrating from Taiwan, Wen-Ning Lee and Pao-Yu Lin moved to Texas to learn the ice cream store business from Serena, who operated six Baskin-Robbins franchise stores in Texas and three in California. In 1998, the Lees paid the Wangs $60,000 for a one-half interest in a Baskin-Robbins store located in Spring. Wen-Ning worked at the Conroe Baskin-Robbins and Pao-Yu worked at the Spring Baskin-Robbins. In 1999, the Lees paid the Wangs $40,000 for a one-half interest in the Conroe Baskin-Robbins store. 1 Serena provided the documents they signed. Although they had purchased a one-half interest in the stores, the Lees’ sole compensation was equal to or less than the $6.00 hourly wage paid to the other workers. When the Lees asked for a raise, Serena told them they would need to purchase the other one-half interest in the two stores. In May 2000, the Lees purchased one-half of the shares of a newly-formed corporation, Ice Cream King, Inc., from the Wangs for an additional $100,000.

According to Serena, the Lees purchased “100 percent, both two stores, the *864 fixtures, equipment, good will and the business.” Pao-Yu testified that at that time she believed she already owned one-half of the franchise. The business operation being run at each of the locations was a Baskin-Robbins ice cream store and the Lees believed Ice Cream King was the Baskin-Robbins business operating out of the Spring and Conroe locations. Serena testified that they formed the corporation because the Lees wanted to obtain a Bas-kin-Robbins Franchise. 2 Serena never told them they were not working as a Baskin-Robbins and could not represent themselves “as a Baskin-Robbins person.” Asked what Pao-Yu understood her relationship with Baskin-Robbins to be after June 2000, Pao-Yu testified that she believed she and Wen-Ning owned “100 percent of these two stores.” Serena agreed that “[t]he Lee’s family bought both stores, Conroe store and Spring store. 100 percent own stores, yes.” The Lees paid the rent directly to the landlord but Serena did not transfer the leases to the Lees as she had agreed to do. The Lees operated the two stores and each month filed the sales tax returns and paid sales tax on the store’s receipts. The Lees used a password Serena gave them to buy their supplies from Baskin-Robbins.

Serena Wang held the franchises for the two stores in her name as an individual and her franchise agreement with Baskin-Robbins prohibited her from transferring the franchise to a third party. 3 The Wangs did not disclose to the Lees that Serena’s contracts with Baskin-Robbins did not permit her to sell her right to operate a Baskin-Robbins franchise to a third party. 4 Serena continued to hold the franchises while the Lees’ son Eric completed his college education. Serena was supposed to transfer the franchises into Eric’s name when Eric was ready. Meanwhile, Serena told the Lees that a “secret shopper” for Baskin-Robbins had caught Pao-Yu pocketing proceeds from a sale and placed the store on “probation.” 5 *865 Serena told the Lees that if they asked Baskin-Robbins to show them the document that supposedly showed they had been cheating, Baskin-Robbins would close the store down. Serena told the Lees that they would have to pay her one-half of the Spring store’s profits as a management fee while the store was on “probation.” The Lees continued to operate the Conroe and Spring stores, but paid Serena one-half of the profit from the Spring store. Over a three-year period, the Lees paid Serena an additional $79,000.

In 2002, the Wangs told the Lees that they were not supposed to show Baskin-Robbins any of their previous transactions. Eric graduated from college in 2004 and arranged with Baskin-Robbins to enter into a trainee program. Serena transferred some cash to Eric and they fabricated some documents to make it appear that Eric had just purchased the Conroe store, although his parents had actually paid for both of the stores several years earlier. Serena told Eric that the Spring store could not be transferred to Eric because it was on the “probation list of Bas-kin-Robbins.” In order to enter the trainee program, Eric had to produce a written assignment of the lease to the Conroe store and Serena’s approval. Although the Lees had paid the Wangs in full for the stores, Serena still held the leases. The assignment was presented to Serena, who refused to sign the document. Serena demanded one-half ownership of the Spring store, but the Lees refused. The landlord would not execute the assignment unless Serena signed it. Unable to produce an assignment of the lease, Eric could not enter the Baskin-Robbins franchisees’ training program. The Lees had always ordered their supplies through Serena, who still held the franchises. Serena cut off the Lees’ supplies and contacted Bas-kin-Robbins to terminate their orders and revoke her permission to supply the Lees with Baskin-Robbins’ products, and the stores closed. Asked why she refused to assign the leases when the assignment was the only impediment to the Lees’ acquisition of the franchises, Serena replied that she did not cooperate because she had been served with the Lees’ lawsuit.

Serena testified that in the 1998 Spring store transaction the Lees bought “50 percent of the store equipment, fixture, good will, the business for the whole business.” By 2000, the Lees had purchased “100 percent, both two stores, the fixtures, equipment, good will and the business.” But, Serena testified, she did not sell the franchise because she could not. Serena testified that the Lees were aware that they must obtain permission from Baskin-Robbins in order for her to transfer the franchise in early 2000, as follows:

The very beginning even the company formed and the CPA do the document for Ice Cream King Company, they mentioned about do you know you did not buy franchisee, you buy the stores only. They say, yeah, yeah, I know, because Serena said she will help cooperate with us to apply the franchise.

Pao-Yu’s account of their discussion varied from Serena’s. According to Pao-Yu, Wen-Ning’s sister noticed the franchises were not mentioned, and Pao-Yu asked Serena about it. Serena said “there’s no problem. Any of the members of your family, as long as this person is eligible or capable of obtaining the franchise, and she would just go ahead and transfer either one or both of the stores franchisee to us[.]”

The appellants’ first two issues challenge the legal sufficiency of the evidence supporting the judgment entered against *866 Alex Wang and the legal sufficiency of the evidence supporting the findings of fact as they relate to Alex Wang. The appellees concede error. We sustain issues one and two.

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256 S.W.3d 862, 2008 Tex. App. LEXIS 4216, 2008 WL 2369119, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wang-v-wen-ning-lee-texapp-2008.