Court Opinion

ID: 9948454
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2024-03-07 08:15:42.722975+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:29:42.220181
License: Public Domain

COURT OF APPEALS
                                EIGHTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS
                                     EL PASO, TEXAS

 KEYVAN PARSA, M.D.                                 §               No. 08-23-00134-CV

                                Appellant,          §                  Appeal from the

 v.                                                 §            41st Judicial District Court

 ALBERT FLORES,                                     §             of El Paso County, Texas

                                Appellee.           §               (TC# 2020DCV2997)

                                  MEMORANDUM OPINION

       Following a bench trial, the trial court signed a judgment in favor of appellee, Albert Flores,

that ordered defendants, Keyvan Parsa and Montoya Park Place, Inc., to pay Flores actual damages,

punitive damages, and attorney’s fees. Only Parsa appeals, raising three issues challenging the

factual sufficiency of the evidence that Parsa (1) breached a contract with Flores, (2) defrauded

Flores, and (3) was unjustly enriched. We affirm.

                                         BACKGROUND
       This case arises out of the sale of real estate, and more particularly, a dispute over the

division of the sale proceeds between the parties who developed the property. Flores sued Parsa

and Montoya Park Place for, among other claims, a declaratory judgment of unjust enrichment,

fraud in a real estate transaction, equitable subordination, fraud in a stock transaction, unjust
enrichment in a stock transaction, breach of contract, fraudulent transfer, and common law fraud.

The case was tried to the trial court. Because we conclude the evidence is factually sufficient to

support the trial court’s conclusion that Flores committed common and statutory fraud, this opinion

addresses only the facts relevant to that claim. 1

        A. Flores’s trial testimony

        Flores and his cousin inherited a parcel of land in El Paso’s upper valley and later sold it

to Johannsen Development Group, Inc. (JDG). The cousin took cash from the sale but Flores

accepted JDG’s $437,000 promissory note which was payable in a lump sum in six months. When

JDG defaulted on that note, Flores allowed JDG to refinance. The refinancing lender, Right Immix

Capital, Inc. (RIC), lent JDG $700,000. The loan was secured by the land. Flores agreed to

subordinate his lien on the land to RIC’s lien. After a time, JDG again defaulted on Flores’s note,

and Flores began foreclosure proceedings.

        Parsa was a shareholder in JDG. During the foreclosure proceedings, Parsa approached

Flores with a proposal that they form a corporation and market the land together. As a part of that

arrangement, Flores foreclosed on his lien, bidding $450,980 for the land. In February 2020, Flores

and Parsa formed Montoya Park Place for the purpose of developing the land and Flores conveyed

his title to the land to Montoya Park Place. Flores never signed the RIC note, but he began making

payments on the note because Parsa was having cash-flow problems. Flores made six to eight

payments totaling approximately $18,000, and assumed he would be reimbursed that advance from

the proceeds of the sale of the land.

1
  Additional background facts may be gleaned from our opinion in Parsa v. WestStar, LLC; No. 08-23-00135-CV,
2024 WL 688258 (Tex. App.—El Paso, February 20, 2024, no pet. h.) (mem. op.). We repeat some of the facts from
that opinion and provide additional background related to this appeal.

                                                      2
       Several months later, Montoya Park Place secured a buyer—IDEA Public Schools—who

agreed to buy the property for $1,950,000. The transaction closed on July 1, 2020, when Flores

signed the closing documents at WestStar Title (Parsa had signed the day before). WestStar

released a net amount of $1,829,295.40 to Montoya Park Place. Flores noticed that $722,000 of

that amount should have been paid to RIC to pay-off its note and release the first lien, but the sum

was mistakenly included in the sale proceeds to Montoya Park Place. The sale proceeds were wire

transferred to a bank over which only Parsa had control.

       On July 2nd, Flores went to Parsa’s office and stated that they had been overpaid by the

amount that should have been paid to RIC. Parsa responded that he had already lost too much

money in the deal and that the title company was liable for the overpayment. Because Flores was

uncomfortable with Parsa’s response, he decided he wanted “out of [Montoya Park Place] because

[he] didn’t want to be included in that.” Flores then told Parsa he wanted his “share of the sale

proceeds only,” which he calculated to be $571,173.09. That sum was comprised of one-half of

the sale proceeds not including the $722,000 windfall, and an additional $18,000 that Flores had

advanced as payments on the RIC note.

       Parsa then asked him how much he needed right away. Flores quickly calculated that he

needed $280,000 of that amount “right away and then [Parsa] can pay” him “the rest afterwards.”

Flores testified that he discussed with Parsa what the balance of the money owed to Flores was

due and they came to an agreement on that. Parsa promised to get Flores the $280,000 “[i]n a little

while” saying “[g]ive me some time.”

       Flores went back to Parsa’s office on July 6 and received a cashier’s check for $280,000.

Flores asked when he would get that rest of his share and was again told “in a little while”—“Give

me some time.” Flores went back to see Parsa on July 10 looking for the balance of his share. In

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that conversation, Flores again told Parsa that keeping the $722,000 windfall was a bad idea

because he had learned that the title insurance protected the buyer, and not the seller. At that

meeting, Parsa presented Flores a stock purchase agreement whereby Flores would sell his shares

in Montoya Park Place to Parsa for $50. Flores said he thought the agreement was unnecessary

because no stock had ever been issued, but he agreed to sign the agreement because he wanted the

balance of the money owed to him. The agreement is dated July 1, 2020, but Flores testified that

he actually signed it on July 10. According to Flores, at this meeting and before signing the stock

purchase agreement, he asked Parsa when he would be paid the rest of his money, and was again

told, “Give me a little time.” Flores said that throughout the summer of 2020 he continued to press

Parsa for his share of the sale proceeds and was continually told “In a little while.” “Just give me

some time.”

       By the middle of July, Flores started to receive demands for payment of the note and

demands by WestStar and Fidelity to return the $722,000. In September 2020, Flores filed suit

against Parsa to appoint a receiver for Montoya Park Place that could pay Flores his share of the

sale proceeds and return the $722,000 overpayment. Parsa’s response to the suit asserted that the

stock purchase agreement ended any future payment obligations to Flores. Based on the assertion

of this defense, Flores later asserted statutory and common law fraud claims that we discuss below.

       B. Parsa’s trial testimony

       Parsa conceded that he and Flores initially agreed to develop the land and split any profit

fifty-fifty. Parsa admitted that he told the company that serviced the RIC note that he and Flores

would continue to make payments on the note after Flores foreclosed on the property. He also

conceded that Montoya Park Place was overpaid by $722,949.22 at closing. However, he did not

recall refusing to pay RIC the $722,949.22. Parsa claimed that to the best of his knowledge, Flores

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closed on the land sale and then, pursuant to the stock purchase agreement, signed over his interest

in Montoya Park Place on July 1, 2020. Parsa said he and Flores verbally agreed to the stock

purchase agreement before the July 1st closing date but did not disclose it to the title company

because they thought the title company would delay the closing.

         Parsa denied that Flores asked for anything more than the $280,000 that he was paid and

the $50 consideration for his shares. He denied all the conversations where it was claimed Parsa

put Flores off by asking for “a little time.” According to Parsa, although the net proceeds from the

sale of the land was $1,829,295.40, Flores only wanted the return of his original $280,000

investment. When asked if $1,829,295.40 was “an awful lot of money for Mr. Flores only to want

280,000,” Parsa replied that Flores “made the decision prior than that. It’s too late now.”

         Parsa claimed that he did not receive any money from the sale of the land, but he admitted

Montoya Park Place loaned $1,461,586.89 (the balance of the sale proceeds) to Westmount Group,

Inc. Parsa prepared the promissory note himself and signed it as President of Westmount.

Westmount then used the money to purchase money market certificates in the name of Westmount.

         C. The trial court’s judgment

         In addition to the testimony from Flores and Parsa, the trial court admitted many exhibits,

took evidence on attorney’s fees, and took notice of its multiple prior hearings in the case. It signed

a judgment that awarded Flores $240,000 in actual damages, 2 $100,000 in punitive damages, and

$100,000 in attorney’s fees. 3

2
  Flores had requested more. He calculated his actual damages as $291,173.09 as follows: net sales proceeds in the
amount of $1,829,295.40 less the $722,949.22 owed to RIC, which equaled $1,106,346.18 to be divided by half
equaling $553,173.09, plus the $18,000 he paid on the RIC note, less the $280,000 he received.
3
  Parsa does not challenge the award of punitive damages or attorney’s fees, other than to attack the underlying basis
for claims they are predicated on.

                                                          5
       On request, the trial court entered findings of fact and conclusions of law. The pertinent

findings include:

       4.   All Closing documents were prepared, and Defendant Parsa attended a closing
            on June 30, 2020.

       5.   Defendant Parsa received a check for the full purchase price because the title
            company overlooked the Right Immix Note. The overpayment was
            approximately $ 720,000.00.

       6.   Parsa had full knowledge of the Right Immix lien which he personally had
            guaranteed and knew the overpayment was occurring.

       7.   Flores was out of town on June 30, 2020, and went to the title company the
            following day, July 1, 2020, to add his signature to the closing documents.

       8.   After learning of the overpayment, Flores urged Parsa to pay the excess back
            to the title company so that the Right Immix Capital lien could be paid off.

       9.   Parsa refused to do so.

       10. After repeated unsuccessful efforts to convince Parsa to repay the excess
           payment, Flores’s lawyer Bud Kirk sent Parsa a letter on July 24, 2020 (Exhibit
           O) imploring him to do so and advising him of the doctrine of unjust
           enrichment.

       11. Parsa still refused to refund the excess payment.

       12. It is unclear where the proceeds of the sale were kept. There is some evidence
           that Parsa opened an account at Western Heritage Bank. He also told Flores
           the money had been moved to Mexico. At some point, they were apparently
           deposited in an account owned or controlled by Westmount Group Inc. (an
           entity apparently controlled by Parsa which filed for Bankruptcy), and they
           were also deposited in Wells Fargo CD’s.

       13. The Court Ordered the funds to be deposited into the registry of the Court, but
           that never occurred.

       14. Flores wished to terminate all business relations with Parsa, have the [RIC]
           loan paid, and receive his net proceeds from the sale of Tract 3.

       15. Parsa told Flores he would pay him soon and asked how much he needed “right
           now.” An agreement was reached to pay Flores an initial payment of
           $280,000.00, with the understanding that the remainder was to be paid “soon.”

                                                6
       16. To effectuate the termination of the business relationship between Parsa and
           Flores, Parsa prepared a “STOCK PURCHASE AGREEMENT.” (Exhibit
           M)., which purports to sell all of Flores’s stock to Parsa for $50.00. This
           document states that the sale will close on July 1, 2020, even though it was
           obviously prepared well after that date.

                                         Conclusions of Law

       1.    Parsa made multiple false statements [to] Flores, which Parsa knew at the time
             were false. Flores relied to his detriment on those statements. Fraud was
             committed.

The trial court also made findings on breach of contract and unjust enrichment which we need not

decide in light of the fraud claims discussed below. See TEX. R. APP. P. 47.1 (“The court of appeals

must hand down a written opinion that is as brief as practicable but that addresses every issue

raised and necessary to final disposition of the appeal.”).

                                   FLORES’S FRAUD CLAIMS

       Among the theories he prevailed on at trial, Flores alleged Parsa committed fraud. He

pleaded both a common law fraud claim, and a statutory fraud claim under TEX. BUS. & COM.

CODE ANN. 27.01. Some specific allegations overlap between the two:

       (1) Parsa obtained Flores’s signature on the “Stock Purchase Agreement” through false

            representations of existing material facts, including that Parsa intended to pay the

            balance of his interest by saying “In a little while. Give me a little time”;

       (2) Parsa promised he would handle the bank account for Montoya Park Place impartially

            and according to their mutual wishes, Flores relied upon this representation to his

            detriment because Parsa managed the account to the exclusion of Flores and

            appropriated all but $280,000 of the legitimate sale proceeds to himself; and

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        (3) Parsa misrepresented that he would pay Flores his share of the sale proceeds “in a little

            while,” which Flores relied upon to his detriment because he “desperately needed the

            $280,000.”

        A. Applicable law

        A fraud cause of action requires: (1) a material misrepresentation that (2) was false, (3)

was either known to be false when made or was asserted without knowledge of its truth, (4) was

intended to be acted upon, (5) was relied upon, and (6) which caused injury. See Formosa Plastics

Corp. USA v. Presidio Eng’rs and Contractors, Inc., 960 S.W.2d 41, 47 (Tex. 1998). Section 27.01

of the Texas Business and Commercial Code provides a statutory cause of action for fraud in real

estate transactions. See TEX. BUS. & COM. CODE ANN. § 27.01. The elements of the statutory claim

require a showing that (1) a person makes a false representation of a past or existing material fact

in a real estate transaction to another person for the purpose of inducing the making of a contract;

and (2) the false representation is relied on by the person entering into the contract. Id. at

§ 27.01(a)(1)(A), (B). Under § 27.01, the person who made the false representation is liable to the

person defrauded for “actual damages” as well as “reasonable and necessary attorney’s fees, expert

witness fees, costs for copies of depositions, and costs of court.” Id. at § 27.01(b), (e). If the false

representation is made with actual awareness of its falsity, exemplary damages may also be

recovered. Id. at § 27.01(c).

        “Proving that a party had no intention of performing at the time a contract was made is not

easy, as intent to defraud is not usually susceptible to direct proof.” Tony Gullo Motors I, L.P. v.

Chapa, 212 S.W.3d 299, 305 (Tex. 2006). Accordingly, the fact-finder is permitted to draw

reasonable inferences from the direct and circumstantial evidence. Zaragoza v. Jessen, 511 S.W.3d

816, 823–24 (Tex. App.—El Paso 2016, no pet.). Mere breach of a contract is no evidence the

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party did not intend to abide by it. Chapa, 212 S.W.3d at 305. Nor does denial of the alleged

promise prove fraudulent inducement. Id. But breach of an agreement combined with “slight

circumstantial evidence” of fraud is enough to support a verdict for fraudulent inducement. Id.;

see also Aquaplex, Inc. v. Rancho La Valencia, Inc., 297 S.W.3d 768, 774–75 (Tex. 2009) (While

breach of the contract alone is not evidence that a party did not intend to perform, “breach

combined with ‘slight circumstantial evidence’ of fraud” is some evidence of fraudulent intent,

enough to support a verdict.). And a “party’s intent is determined at the time the party made the

representation, [but] it may be inferred from the party’s subsequent acts after the representation is

made.” Spoljaric v. Percival Tours, Inc., 708 S.W.2d 432, 434 (Tex. 1986).

       B. Standard of review

       This case comes to us from a bench trial where the trial judge entered findings of fact and

conclusions of law. “A trial court’s findings of fact issued after a bench trial have the same weight,

and are judged by the same appellate standards, as a jury verdict.” Texas Outfitters Ltd. v.

Nicholson, 572 S.W.3d 647, 653 (Tex. 2019). “Generally, a trial court’s findings of fact are not

binding on a court of appeals where[, as here,] a complete reporter’s record is part of the record on

appeal.” Pearl Res. LLC v. Charger Servs., LLC, 622 S.W.3d 106, 115 (Tex. App.—El Paso 2020,

pet. denied). “However, if the trial court’s findings of fact are not challenged by a point of error

on appeal, the appellate court is bound by them.” Id. When challenged, they may be reviewed for

legal and factual sufficiency by the same standards as evidence supporting a jury’s answer. Id.

       When, as here, the party complaining of factual insufficiency did not have the burden of

proof at trial, we conduct our review by considering all the evidence in the record both for and

against the finding. See Cain v. Bain, 709 S.W.2d 175, 176 (Tex. 1986) (per curiam); Getosa, Inc.

v. City of El Paso, 642 S.W.3d 941, 949 (Tex. App.—El Paso 2022, pet. denied). We can find the

                                                  9
evidence factually insufficient only if we conclude the finding is so contrary to the overwhelming

weight of the evidence as to be clearly wrong and unjust. Cain, 709 S.W.2d at 176. If we find the

evidence is factually sufficient, we are not required to detail all the evidence supporting the finding.

Maritime Overseas Corp. v. Ellis, 971 S.W.2d 402, 407 (Tex. 1998). However, if we find the

evidence to be factually insufficient, we must detail all the evidence relevant to the issue and

clearly state why the finding is so against the great weight and preponderance of the evidence that

it is manifestly unjust. Id. We may not pass upon the witnesses’ credibility or substitute our

judgment for that of the fact-finder, even if the evidence would clearly support a different result.

Id.

       C. Analysis

       On appeal, Parsa focuses his argument primarily on the stock purchase agreement

contending no evidence established that he made a materially false misrepresentation that he knew

was false at the time and that used to induce Flores to sign the agreement. As for the allegations

that he misrepresented he would pay Flores his share of the sale proceeds “in a little while,” Parsa

asserts (1) there is no evidence he could not pay Flores the “full agreed share of the legitimate sale

proceeds” and (2) even if he told Flores the payment would be made “in a little while,” there is no

evidence Flores relied on that statement or that he was harmed by any reliance.

        On appeal, Parsa does not specifically challenge any finding of fact made by the trial court,

including that: (1) Flores wanted to “receive his net proceeds from the sale of Tract 3,” (2) Parsa

told Flores he would pay him soon and asked how much he needed “right now,” and (3) “[a]n

agreement was reached to pay Flores an initial payment of $280,000.00, with the understanding

that the remainder was to be paid ‘soon.’”

                                                  10
        The evidence of fraud largely came through the testimony of Flores and Parsa, and the

many exhibits admitted below. Focusing on the actionable misrepresentations, Flores testified that

Parsa agreed to pay his share of the sale proceeds, but kept putting him off (Parsa could pay him

“the rest afterwards,” “[i]n a little while” and “[g]ive me some time”). Parsa disagreed that Flores’s

half share was $571,173.09, but the trial court heard and saw the witness testimony and is the

proper judge of their credibility. The trial court as the fact-finder could have believed Flores, if

nothing else, based on the economic implausibility that he would only want $280,050 from a

transaction that he had a 50% interest in and that netted just over a million dollars. Flores had most

recently bought the property at foreclosure for $450,950. The record also contains correspondence

from Flores’ lawyer to Parsa on July 24 that contemplates the split of proceeds between Parsa and

Flores was yet to take place—contrary to Parsa’s claim that it had already been accomplished on

July 1st.

        Many of these same considerations bear on falsity of the statement, and present intent to

deceive. The trial court’s fact-findings include that Parsa was aware of the overpayment by

WestStar Title, informed that it should be returned, but refused to do so. He told Flores that he did

not intend to return the money because he claimed to have lost too much money on the property.

Flores’s lawyer wrote Parsa on July 24, explaining why Montoya Park Place had no right to the

money, and pointedly told Parsa, “You don’t have clean hands. You are wrongfully withholding

money that belongs, and should have gone, to others.” If Parsa was willing to abscond with those

funds, it is no great reach to conclude that in the same transaction and in the same time frame, he

intended to shortchange Flores. At the very least, this constitutes the kind of a “slight

circumstantial evidence” of fraud coupled with breach of an agreement that would support a

finding of fraudulent inducement. See Chapa, 212 S.W.3d at 305

                                                 11
        There were multiple flash points in the witness testimony. Parsa and Flores disagreed about

details of meetings—when they were held, what was said, and payoff of the RIC loan. Parsa’s

testimony also clashed with a witness who serviced the RIC note who testified that he mailed a

demand for payment of the note to Montoya Park Place to Parsa’s home address. But Parsa denied

knowledge of the demand. The trial court also had before it some evidence that the sale proceeds

were shuttled around to different institutions, and sua sponte questioned Parsa’s credibility over a

claim that he had made about those funds. 4 And the trial court made a fact-finding that the stock

purchase agreement was not executed on July 1, but at some point later. Yet one of Parsa’s claims

was that he was free to take control of the sale proceeds on July 2 because the stock purchase

agreement on July 1 took Flores out of the picture. And if Flores’s view of the meetings and

statements are believed, then Parsa was making representations about paying Flores his balance

even at the meeting when the stock purchase was presented to Flores, and later, after it was signed.

        Bearing in mind that this Court is not a fact-finder, does not pass upon the credibility of

the witnesses, or substitute our judgment for that of the fact-finder, we conclude the evidence is

factually sufficient to support the implied findings that Parsa made a material misrepresentation to

Flores that he would pay Flores his share of the sale proceeds; Parsa knew the misrepresentation

was false when made or was asserted without knowledge of its truth; Parsa intended Flores to act

upon the misrepresentation by entering into the stock purchase agreement; Flores relied on the

4
   THE COURT: Well, yes. I mean, I -- my recollection is that at the time of that hearing, there were -- there was
literature from Wells Fargo indicating that if you got out a CD with $10 million, you could get something close to 1
percent.
MR. PEREZ: Uh-huh.
THE COURT: And your client was telling me he was getting 8 to 10 percent, so I had some concerns about his candor
to the Court.

                                                        12
misrepresentation by initially only accepting $280,000; and Flores was harmed by the

misrepresentation because he never received the amount owed to him.

                                            CONCLUSION
       For the reasons stated above, we affirm the trial court’s judgment.

                                              JEFF ALLEY, Chief Justice

February 29, 2024

Before Alley, C.J., Palafox and Soto, JJ.

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