Wood Care Centers, Inc. v. Evangel Temple Assembly of God of Wichita Falls

307 S.W.3d 816, 2010 WL 598625
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 1, 2010
Docket2-08-300-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 307 S.W.3d 816 (Wood Care Centers, Inc. v. Evangel Temple Assembly of God of Wichita Falls) 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
Wood Care Centers, Inc. v. Evangel Temple Assembly of God of Wichita Falls, 307 S.W.3d 816, 2010 WL 598625 (Tex. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

*818 OPINION

ANNE GARDNER, Justice.

I. Introduction

This breach of contract case concerns a facility that Appellant Wood Care Centers, Inc. (“Wood Care”) leased to Appellee Evangel Temple Assembly of God of Wichita Falls, Texas (“Evangel Temple”) in fall 2005 for the immediate purpose of housing Hurricane Katrina evacuees. Evangel Temple terminated the parties’ lease agreement (the “Agreement”) after the last hurricane evacuees left the facility. Wood Care later sued Evangel Temple and argued Evangel Temple was obligated to find other uses for the facility before terminating the Agreement. The trial court entered a take-nothing judgment against Wood Care after a bench trial.

In two issues, Wood Care argues the trial court improperly considered parol evidence in its interpretation of the Agreement and the evidence is legally and factually insufficient to support the trial court’s conclusion that Evangel Temple did not breach the Agreement. We affirm.

II. Factual and procedural background

Mike Wood testified for Wood Care at trial. He said Wood Care originally owned and operated as many as eleven nursing homes. Wood Care previously sold its other nursing home facilities but was unable to sell the facility at issue because it was closed and no longer licensed to operate as a nursing home.

After Hurricane Katrina made landfall on August 29, 2005, Evangel Temple contacted Wood Care to lease the facility to assist Katrina evacuees. Wood testified that after the parties reached an initial agreement, Evangel Temple retained an attorney to finalize the Agreement. Wood testified Evangel Temple’s attorney drafted the document, but Evangel Temple’s business administrator said Wood provided the initial draft to Evangel Temple.

The parties exchanged several drafts of the proposed agreement and signed the final version of the twenty-year lease on September 6, 2005. Evangel Temple’s monthly lease payment was $10,997, although Wood Care made a charitable contribution to Evangel Temple during the initial term in the form of a reduced monthly lease payment. The Agreement contained a “ten-percent termination clause” that stated:

Tenant, however, shall have the option of terminating this lease at any time by giving Landlord written notice of its election to do so and payment to Landlord of a sum of money equal to 10% of the balance of the rental payments then owed under the terms of this lease.

The Agreement also contained a “tax-exemption termination clause” that stated:

Both parties agree to cooperate with each other to achieve any available property tax exemption. In the event a property tax exemption for the leased premises is denied or suspended, Tenant shall have the option to terminate this lease. If, notwithstanding, the denial of such property tax exemption, Tenant elects to continue the lease, then Tenant shall be responsible for the payment of all property taxes and assessments and shall timely pay such taxes or assessments.

The original draft of the Agreement did not include the tax-exemption termination clause. Wood testified that although he did not specifically remember, he thought Evangel Temple added the tax-exemption termination clause because a church is traditionally tax-exempt. Wood also testified he understood Evangel Temple would initially use the facility to house Hurricane Katrina evacuees.

*819 After signing the Agreement, Evangel Temple sought a tax exemption for the facility, stating in the application that the primary use was “to house victims of natural disasters.” The appraisal district granted the exemption and informed Evangel Temple in writing that if the use ever changed, the church must notify the appraisal district.

For the first nine months, Evangel Temple paid reduced rental payments to Wood Care while receiving financial assistance from FEMA, but the last evacuees left the facility in approximately May 2006. In late June 2006, several Evangel Temple representatives met with Wood and gave Wood Care notice that Evangel Temple would soon move out of the facility. Evan-gel Temple sent a termination letter to Wood Care on June 30, 2006, and Wood Care sent a response the same day making demand for payment of ten percent of the remaining lease payments under the ten-percent termination clause.

Evangel Temple vacated the facility in approximately July 2006. According to Wood, Wood Care was unable to sell or lease the facility after Evangel Temple vacated, and he testified Wood Care’s damages totaled $256,279.90 in lost rent, ad valorem taxes, insurance premiums, and maintenance costs. Wood testified he believes Evangel Temple breached the Agreement because it had a duty to implement other tax-exempt uses at the facility and could have easily done so.

Kile Bateman testified that he is the lead pastor of Evangel Temple and that Chad Sykes was the business administrator, outreach pastor, and director of “Called To Compassion.” Bateman testified that Evangel Temple had a few tax-exempt properties and that, typically, tax exemptions are available if property. is used for non-profit purposes. Evangel Temple’s tax-exempt properties included undeveloped property next to the church and a facility that housed Masters Commission students, drug and alcohol counseling, a college and career ministry, and flood victims.

Bateman testified that the Agreement did not limit Evangel Temple’s use of the facility and that the parties contemplated future tax-exempt uses for the facility when negotiating the Agreement. 1 However, Bateman testified that he understood Evangel Temple’s right to terminate the Agreement was dependent on Evangel Temple having a program in place that could operate in a self-sustaining manner at the facility. Bateman believed that if the facility lost its tax exemption, Evangel Temple had a choice to terminate the Agreement without liability or continue with the Agreement in the hope that something arose in the future.

Bateman agreed it would have been possible to use the facility for the Masters Commission ministry, “very limited” worship services, or bible study groups. He also said Evangel Temple “could have” submitted a new application for tax-exempt status citing “religious purposes” as the primary use of the facility and conducted some type of activity on the property that would have allowed the property to remain tax-exempt. Although Bateman agreed that “[ajnything is possible,” he testified that “not everything is reasonable.”

Bateman testified that if there were another possible use for the facility, Evangel Temple would have maintained the tax-exempt status, but that there were no *820 other reasonable uses for the facility. He explained that Evangel Temple considered using the property for a children’s home, a women’s shelter, and a Sudanese refugee center. After the lawsuit was filed, Evan-gel Temple considered using the facility to house at-risk teenagers or as a Life Challenge ministiy. Ultimately, Bateman believed Evangel Temple did not have any reasonable uses available for the facility.

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307 S.W.3d 816, 2010 WL 598625, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wood-care-centers-inc-v-evangel-temple-assembly-of-god-of-wichita-falls-texapp-2010.