Yew Yuen Chow and Jeffery Chow v. Jose M. Rodriguez San Pedro

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 27, 2019
Docket14-18-00429-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Yew Yuen Chow and Jeffery Chow v. Jose M. Rodriguez San Pedro (Yew Yuen Chow and Jeffery Chow v. Jose M. Rodriguez San Pedro) 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
Yew Yuen Chow and Jeffery Chow v. Jose M. Rodriguez San Pedro, (Tex. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

Affirmed in part, Reversed in part, Rendered in part, and Memorandum Opinion filed August 27, 2019.

In the

Fourteenth Court of Appeals

NO. 14-18-00429-CV

YEW YUEN CHOWAND JEFFERY CHOW, Appellants v.

JOSE M. RODRIGUEZ SAN PEDRO, Appellee

On Appeal from the 152nd District Court Harris County, Texas Trial Court Cause No. 2016-76781

MEMORANDUM OPINION

This is an interlocutory appeal from orders denying special appearances made by nonresident individual defendants Yew Yuen Chow and Jeffery Chow in a suit brought by appellee Jose M. Rodriguez San Pedro. See Tex. R. Civ. P. 120a; Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code Ann. § 51.014(a)(7) (Supp.). San Pedro’s suit primarily concerns an alleged earn-out payment arrangement and related discussions. Specifically, he brings claims against Y.Y. Chow and J. Chow for fraud, breach of fiduciary duty, negligent misrepresentation, and promissory estoppel.

San Pedro alleged that the trial court has general and specific jurisdiction over Y.Y. Chow and specific jurisdiction over J. Chow. Y.Y. Chow contends Texas is not his domicile. Y.Y. Chow and J. Chow contend they are Singapore residents who only acted in Texas in their corporate capacities for defendant Keppel AmFELS L.L.C. (AmFELS) or its predecessor.1

We conclude that Y.Y. Chow’s Texas contacts are insufficient to confer general jurisdiction over him. We conclude that the allegations regarding San Pedro’s promissory-estoppel claims are insufficient to confer specific jurisdiction over Y.Y. Chow and J. Chow. We conclude that Y.Y. Chow’s Texas contacts are insufficient to confer specific jurisdiction over him with regard to San Pedro’s fraud claim. However, we conclude that Y.Y. Chow’s and J. Chow’s Texas contacts are sufficient to confer specific jurisdiction over both of them with regard to San Pedro’s breach-of-fiduciary-duty and negligent-misrepresentation claims and that J. Chow’s Texas contacts are sufficient to confer specific jurisdiction over him with regard to San Pedro’s fraud claim. We also conclude that exercising such jurisdiction over Y.Y. Chow and J. Chow comports with fair play and substantial justice.

We reverse in part the trial court’s order concerning Y.Y. Chow and render judgment granting Y.Y. Chow’s special appearance with regard to and dismissing San Pedro’s claims against Y.Y. Chow for promissory estoppel and fraud. We reverse in part the trial court’s order concerning J. Chow and render judgment granting J. Chow’s special appearance with regard to and dismissing San Pedro’s claim against J. Chow for promissory estoppel. We otherwise affirm the trial court’s orders as challenged.

1 AmFELS did not file a special appearance and is not a party to this appeal.

2 I. BACKGROUND

Because the parties involved in this appeal have a lengthy business-related history, we endeavor to limit our background discussion. San Pedro, a Florida resident, has experience in power-plant development, financing, and construction in the Caribbean Basin and Latin America. San Pedro founded the Nicaraguan entity Corporacion Electrica Nicaragüense, S.A. (CENSA). In 1995, Empresa Nicaragüense de Electricidad (ENEL), the Nicaraguan state-owned electric generation, transmission, and distribution company, entered into a Power Purchase Agreement (PPA) with CENSA.

AmFELS, a Texas entity with a principal place of business in Brownsville, Texas, and an office in Houston, was engaged in the construction and repair of mobile drilling rigs and platforms. In the mid-1990s, AmFELS sought to enter the Latin American power-generation business. In 1995, Y.Y. Chow, then president of AmFELS, reached out to San Pedro. They met in Houston and discussed the possibility of requesting an extension to the recently-expired PPA for a possible co- venture with AmFELS. After ENEL granted CENSA a short extension, however, the PPA terminated.

Also, in 1995, J. Chow, then providing legal services for AmFELS, approached San Pedro regarding spearheading AmFELS’s fledgling Power Development Division and preparing AmFELS’s bid package for a new PPA with ENEL. San Pedro then met with AmFELS executives, including Y.Y. Chow and J. Chow, in Brownsville. San Pedro began working with AmFELS.

In March 1996, ENEL entered into a new PPA with AmFELS. In 1996, San Pedro met with Y.Y. Chow and J. Chow in Brownsville to discuss the sale of CENSA to AmFELS and San Pedro’s request for an earn-out agreement. San Pedro sold CENSA to AmFELS for $75,000. 3 On January 22, 1997, AmFELS and San Pedro entered into a letter agreement in Brownsville whereby AmFELS agreed to pay San Padro $80,000 per year, paid quarterly, “as long as the [1996 PPA] is in full force and effect and ENEL has not defaulted thereunder.” Y.Y. Chow and J. Chow were both present. Y.Y. Chow signed this earn-out agreement as president of AmFELS; J. Chow prepared and initialed the AmFELS earn-out agreement.

On January 24, 1997, the 1996 PPA held by AmFELS was assigned to CENSA “completely free of any charge or load” for $20,000. The assignment was accomplished through a notarized instrument executed in Houston.

On January 25, 1997, the newly elected CENSA board of directors, including Y.Y. Chow and J. Chow, appointed San Pedro as general manager of CENSA.

AmFELS did not pay San Pedro any payments under the AmFELS earn-out agreement. In March 1998, J. Chow called San Pedro from Texas regarding his signing an earn-out agreement with CENSA. J. Chow sent San Pedro a fax from Texas containing specific language J. Chow wanted to be included in the CENSA earn-out agreement. After San Pedro read the language and translated it to Spanish, San Pedro called J. Chow in Texas to discuss a clause prohibiting an assignment or sale of the earn-out payments. J. Chow explained that the language would protect San Pedro’s wife and son “in case something happened” to him. San Pedro further asked J. Chow “if everything was taken care of and if [the CENSA earn-out agreement] was in proper form.” J. Chow assured San Pedro “it was,” and based on this statement, San Pedro signed the CENSA earn-out agreement on March 18, 1998.

The CENSA earn-out agreement stated that, in the 1997 assignment, CENSA had “acquired” from AmFELS “the obligation to pay annually” San Pedro $80,000 in quarterly installments, as long as the 1996 PPA was “in force.” CENSA began making payments to San Pedro under the CENSA earn-out agreement. 4 In 2004, Otto Escorcia, CENSA’s general manager, and José Francisco Mojica, CENSA’s financial manager, requested an addendum to the CENSA earn-out agreement to reflect that San Pedro’s payments were “net” for tax purposes. The addendum was executed in December 2004. AmFELS sold CENSA to a Panamanian company in 2009.

In 2009, CENSA attempted to renegotiate the CENSA earn-out agreement and 2004 addendum with San Pedro to substantially lower his payments by 80 percent. San Pedro did not agree to any reduction. In late 2013, CENSA stopped paying San Pedro’s earn-out payments.

In 2014, CENSA sued San Pedro in Nicaragua over the “veracity” of the CENSA earn-out agreement and 2004 addendum. In 2016, the Nicaraguan court ruled in CENSA’s favor because the payment obligation “was never assigned” from AmFELS and was a “nullity.” San Pedro was ordered to return payments he received from 1998 to 2013 totaling $969,292.00.

San Pedro brought claims against AmFELS, Y.Y. Chow, and J. Chow in Harris County district court. Specifically, San Pedro brought claims against all the defendants for fraud, breach of fiduciary duty, promissory estoppel, and negligent misrepresentation.2

Y.Y. Chow and J. Chow each filed a verified special appearance with attached declaration.

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Yew Yuen Chow and Jeffery Chow v. Jose M. Rodriguez San Pedro, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/yew-yuen-chow-and-jeffery-chow-v-jose-m-rodriguez-san-pedro-texapp-2019.