William Klug v. J.P. Wickert and Ted Bovay, D/B/A Applause Entertainment

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 16, 2015
Docket05-14-00080-CV
StatusPublished

This text of William Klug v. J.P. Wickert and Ted Bovay, D/B/A Applause Entertainment (William Klug v. J.P. Wickert and Ted Bovay, D/B/A Applause Entertainment) 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
William Klug v. J.P. Wickert and Ted Bovay, D/B/A Applause Entertainment, (Tex. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

AFFIRM; and Opinion Filed July 16, 2015.

Court of Appeals S In The

Fifth District of Texas at Dallas No. 05-14-00080-CV

WILLIAM KLUG, Appellant V. J.P. WICKERT AND KARL BOVAY, D/B/A APPLAUSE ENTERTAINMENT, Appellees

On Appeal from the 298th Judicial District Court Dallas County, Texas Trial Court Cause No. DC-11-08158-M

MEMORANDUM OPINION Before Justices Evans, Brown, and Whitehill 1 Opinion by Justice Brown Appellant William Klug appeals the trial court’s order dismissing his lawsuit against

appellees J.P. Wickert and Karl Bovay, d/b/a Applause Entertainment, for want of personal

jurisdiction. Klug contends the trial court erred in granting appellees’ special appearance and

subsequently dismissing his lawsuit because appellees did not negate all grounds asserted by

Klug for the court’s exercise of personal jurisdiction. For reasons that follow, we affirm the trial

court’s dismissal order.

BACKGROUND

In 2011, Klug, a Dallas County resident, sued appellees, who are Manchester, Vermont

residents, in Dallas County District Court. Neither appellee maintains a regular place of business 1 Justice Bill Whitehill succeeded Justice Kerry FitzGerald, a member of the original panel, following Justice FitzGerald’s retirement. Justice Whitehill has reviewed the briefs and the record before the Court. in Texas or has an agent here for service of process. Klug’s pleadings assert that both appellees

were engaged in and doing business in Texas. Specifically, Klug alleged appellees contracted

with a Texas resident and the contract was to be performed, in whole or in part, in Texas. Klug

also asserted both appellees committed a tort in Texas and committed acts outside of Texas that

had foreseeable consequences in Texas. Klug’s pleadings further alleged the suit arises out of

appellees’ business in Texas and that both Wickert’s and Bovay’s contacts with Texas are

continuous and systematic.

According to Klug’s pleadings, appellees are in the business of selling items related to

live theater, including stage theater window cards or posters. Appellees maintain an interactive,

commercial website from which people all over the United States and around the world may

order items. They also maintain a telephone number for out-of-state residents to use to place

orders. In reliance upon representations by appellees directed to him in Texas, Klug delivered to

appellees in Vermont a large quantity of stage theatre window cards to sell on their website.

The parties had a contract that required appellees to safeguard the cards and pay Klug a

percentage of sales. Klug alleged appellees breached the contract by failing to pay him for the

sold theater cards, failing to return all of the unsold cards to him in Texas, and failing to

safeguard the cards. Klug asserted a claim for fraud, alleging appellees directed into Texas false

misrepresentations of material facts which induced him to deliver his cards to them. Based on

these same facts, Klug also asserted claims for negligence, conversion, conspiracy, and bailment.

Appellees filed a joint special appearance to object to the court’s jurisdiction. They

asserted neither of them had sufficient minimum contacts with Texas to confer jurisdiction on the

trial court and neither had ever purposefully availed themselves of Texas. Appellees maintained

they had not done business in Texas and not committed a tort in Texas. Although Wickert

entered into an oral contract with Klug, performance was to occur in Vermont, not Texas. Klug

–2– solicited Wickert in Vermont and shipped his collection to Vermont. Bovay was not a party to

the contract. Appellees supported their special appearance with affidavits.

In his affidavit, Wickert stated he was a Vermont resident. He operates a business called

Applause Entertainment, and it is a sole proprietorship owned and operated solely by him.

Wickert buys and sells promotional and collectible material related to the theater, particularly

Broadway productions. On September 13, 2007, Klug contacted Wickert by email and asked if

Wickert would be willing to sell Klug’s posters. Prior to that email, Wickert had no business

dealings with Klug for at least five years. A copy of Klug’s email is attached to the affidavit.

The email stated:

Due to health issues I am letting go of my poster collection to pay medical bills. I have sent the list to Roger at Triton Gallery and he is looking it over, but his consignment agreement is 50%. I will give you two first pick if you’d be willing to deal on 55%.

According to Wickert, he agreed to take about 100 specific items on consignment. Wickert

maintains Klug ignored the limited nature of his request and instead shipped about 2200 items to

his home in Vermont. When Wickert contacted Klug about the large shipment, Klug claimed he

would make arrangements to have the items returned to Texas, but never did. Over a year later,

Klug contacted police in Manchester, Vermont, to accuse Wickert of stealing his collection.

When Wickert learned of the accusations, he shipped all of Klug’s items back to him in Texas.

Wickert stated he had never done business in Texas or committed a tort in Texas. In a

separate affidavit, Wickert stated that he did not know of any Texas resident to whom he had

sold merchandise in the past five years.

Wickert stated in his affidavit that Bovay is his roommate and does not work for him or

for Applause and was not involved in Wickert’s contract with Klug. Bovay’s affidavit contained

similar information. Bovay stated he is a Vermont resident. Wickert is his roommate, and

Bovay does not work for Wickert or for Applause. He had never spoken with Klug, other than –3– “brief exchanges of pleasantries” when he answered a phone call from Klug to Wickert. Bovay

was not involved in the alleged contract between Wickert and Klug and performed no work

related to the alleged contract. Bovay has never done business in Texas. He has never

committed a tort in Texas.

In April 2012, the trial court held a hearing on appellees’ special appearance at which the

court heard testimony from Klug and the argument of counsel. Klug testified that he has lived in

Texas since 1973. He entered into a business relationship with appellees for the purpose of

having them buy his posters and sell them on their business interactive website. He testified that

he dealt with both appellees. He testified he discussed business matters with Bovay, specifically,

the selling of his inventory on the website. Klug stated that Wickert appeared to be the

salesperson and Bovay appeared to be the person who took care of the finances. Klug testified

that in August 2007, Wickert initiated discussions about purchasing Klug’s theater cards. It

came about when Klug and Wickert were having a conversation about being Stephen Sondheim

fans. Klug told Wickert about a rare poster he had. Wickert had never heard of it or seen it

before. Klug sent him a picture of it, and Wickert asked if he could buy it. Klug refused.

Wickert then offered to sell the poster instead of buying it himself. When Klug still refused,

Wickert offered to sell 200 posters. Wickert told Klug which posters he wanted. The 200

posters were the most valuable ones Klug owned. Because Klug would have been left with cards

that were not very valuable, he told Wickert that if he was going to send him any of his posters,

he was going to send all of them. They entered into an agreement under which appellees would

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William Klug v. J.P. Wickert and Ted Bovay, D/B/A Applause Entertainment, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/william-klug-v-jp-wickert-and-ted-bovay-dba-applau-texapp-2015.