Wellness Wireless, Inc v. Nicholas Vita and Rosemary Mazanet

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 12, 2013
Docket01-12-00500-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Wellness Wireless, Inc v. Nicholas Vita and Rosemary Mazanet (Wellness Wireless, Inc v. Nicholas Vita and Rosemary Mazanet) 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
Wellness Wireless, Inc v. Nicholas Vita and Rosemary Mazanet, (Tex. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

Opinion issued March 12, 2013

In The Court of Appeals For The First District of Texas ———————————— NO. 01-12-00500-CV ——————————— WELLNESS WIRELESS, INC, Appellant V. NICHOLAS VITA AND ROSEMARY MAZANET, Appellees

On Appeal from the 127th District Court Harris County, Texas Trial Court Case No. 2011-54116

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Wellness Wireless, Inc. filed this interlocutory appeal from the trial court’s

order granting the special appearances of nonresident defendants Nicholas Vita and

Rosemary Mazanet. Wellness contends that the trial court erred in certain fact findings and conclusions of law and that the trial court had personal jurisdiction

over Vita and Mazanet. We affirm the trial court’s order sustaining Vita’s and

Mazanet’s special appearances and dismissing Wellness’s claims against them.

Background

Kimon Angelides founded Wellness as a Delaware corporation and

registered it in Texas as a foreign for-profit corporation. Angelides initially served

as the company’s chief executive officer and director. Wellness’s sole place of

business was in a Houston office that Angelides had leased for the company.

Wellness provided mobile health services to those with chronic diseases such as

diabetes. The company was a “spin-off” subsidiary partially owned by Diabetes

America, Inc., another Delaware corporation founded by Angelides that had patient

health centers in Texas and Arizona. The two companies shared some common

board members.

Vita, a resident of New York, and Mazanet, a resident of Connecticut, were

principals in various affiliated entities collectively known as Argenis. Argenis

owned stock in and made loans to Diabetes America. Argenis also owned shares in

Wellness. At various times, Vita was a director of both Diabetes America and

Wellness. Mazanet was periodically a director and officer of Diabetes America, but

was never a director or officer of Wellness.

2 In or about April 2008, Diabetes America decided to settle civil claims

against Healthpia, Inc. and Stephen Kim that were then pending in federal district

court. Angelides, acting as Wellness’s director, offered to assume Diabetes

America’s litigation expenses in that case in return for an assignment of all rights

to any recovery from the lawsuit. Wellness and Diabetes America executed an

assignment agreement to that effect in May.

On the same day that the assignment agreement was executed, Diabetes

America entered into a settlement agreement with InfoPia America LLC, a Florida

company affiliated with Healthpia, to resolve the civil claims. Under that

agreement, InfoPia agreed to pay Diabetes America a total of $800,000 according

to a payment schedule.

In October 2008, Angelides resigned as director and CEO of Wellness, at

which point Wellness ceased operations. Vita formally resigned as a director the

following month. Wellness’s status as a registered foreign for-profit corporation in

Texas was forfeited in May 2009, and its status as a Delaware corporation was

forfeited the following October.

Pursuant to the settlement agreement with Diabetes America, Infopia made

an initial payment of $300,000 which was in turn paid to Diabetes America’s law

firm. Infopia failed to make any further payments as required under the settlement

3 agreement. Diabetes America obtained a default judgment against Healthpia and

Stephen Kim in December 2008.

In early 2010, a telephonic meeting took place among three Diabetes

America board directors: Vita, Mazanet, and Bonita Groesser. The purpose of the

meeting was to discuss and approve a new settlement agreement with Infopia.

Mazanet and Vita participated in the meeting from outside Texas. The record does

not reflect from where Groesser, a Texas resident, participated in the meeting. In

February 2010, Vita signed in New York on behalf of Diabetes America a

“Settlement Agreement and Mutual Release” with Infopia whereby the parties

released claims against one another for payment by Infopia of $300,000. The 2010

Settlement Agreement and Mutual Release does not refer to any assignment right

held by Wellness.

After having resigned from his positions at Diabetes America and Wellness

in 2008, Angelides pursued other business activities. Starting in 2011, Angelides

obtained consents from various Wellness shareholders (except Argenis) to be

appointed as acting director to collect outstanding debts and wind up the company.

At the time, Wellness’s corporate status remained forfeited. Angelides engaged

counsel for Wellness to demand from Infopia the payments due under the 2008

settlement agreement. Infopia refused on the ground that the debt was satisfied and

4 referred to the 2010 Settlement Agreement and Mutual Release that it had executed

with Diabetes America.

Wellness sued Vita and Mazanet (as well as Groesser) for “converting” the

recovery that had been assigned to it. It asserted claims for fraud, gross negligence,

misappropriation of confidential information, usurpation of corporate opportunity,

breach of fiduciary duty, and civil conspiracy. Wellness further claimed that Vita’s

and Mazanet’s actions benefitted not only Argenis, but also Vita and Mazanet

individually because they were Argenis’s principals. As stated by Wellness in its

proposed findings of fact and conclusions of law, all of Wellness’s claims “relate

to” the approval and signing of the 2010 Settlement Agreement and Mutual

Release. After Wellness filed suit, the Texas Secretary of State issued Wellness a

certificate of conversion certifying its status as a Texas corporation, and Wellness

was later reinstated as a Delaware corporation.

Vita and Mazanet filed a special appearance with supporting affidavits to

challenge the district court’s exercise of personal jurisdiction over them,

contending that they were residents of New York and Connecticut, respectively.

The district court conducted a hearing on the special appearance on Friday,

February 10, 2012. None of the parties called any witnesses at the hearing. During

the hearing, the trial court suggested that Wellness’s counsel “tighten up” the

5 petition and gave Wellness “two weeks from today to fix” the pleading. It also

requested additional briefing on issues relating to the special appearances.

On Monday, February 12, the trial court coordinator informed the parties by

email that the judge “will not require the briefing he asked for” because he “is

going to grant the Special Appearance.” Later that day, Wellness filed a new

pleading (the “Fifth Supplemental Petition”) and a supplemental brief discussing

“new reasons, not raised previously, on why” the special appearances should be

denied. The next day, it also filed “supplemental comments” along with

Angelides’s supporting affidavit. Wellness did not request leave to file the

supplemental petition, brief, “comments,” or evidence.

Over two months later, the court signed an order holding that it lacked

personal jurisdiction over Vita and Mazanet. The same order reflected the court’s

findings of facts and conclusions of law on the special appearance ruling. Wellness

requested amended findings and conclusions, effectively asking the court to

reverse its decision. The district court denied the motion. Wellness timely filed this

interlocutory appeal.

Personal Jurisdiction

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