Court Opinion

ID: 4655236
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2021-01-28 08:14:39.499773+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:00:08.737991
License: Public Domain

In The
                              Court of Appeals
                     Seventh District of Texas at Amarillo
                             ________________________

                                  No. 07-19-00254-CV
                              ________________________

                           RAEANNE MARTIN, APPELLANT

                                            V.

           NANCY HIGGINSON, DEBBIE CHEADLE, EDWARD CHEADLE,
            ARTHUR CHEADLE, WAYNE CARSON, FINNEY CHEADLE,
              CHERYL SHOOP, AND KEITH SAWAYA, APPELLEES

                          On Appeal from the 72nd District Court
                                   Lubbock County, Texas
             Trial Court No. 2013-506,513; Honorable Ruben G. Reyes, Presiding

                                     January 27, 2021

                            MEMORANDUM OPINION

                    Before QUINN, C.J., and PIRTLE and PARKER, JJ.

      This is the second appeal in a long-standing dispute concerning the right to

conveyance of certain shares of a corporation. The first appeal was interlocutory and

concerned the trial court’s granting of a motion to vacate an arbitration award in favor of

Appellees, Nancy Higginson, Debbie Cheadle, Edward Cheadle, Arthur Cheadle, Wayne
Carson, Finney Cheadle, Cheryl Shoop, and Keith Sawaya (hereafter the Higginson

parties), filed by Appellant, Raeanne Martin. In that proceeding, Martin had argued to the

trial court that because the parties had reached a settlement agreement (a Rule 11

Agreement), the arbitrators exceeded their authority by entering an arbitration award

counter to that agreement. This court agreed and affirmed the trial court’s order vacating

the arbitration award. See Higginson v. Martin, No. 07-15-00343-CV, 2017 Tex. App.

LEXIS 1268, at *18 (Tex. App.—Amarillo Feb. 14, 2017, pet. denied) (mem. op.).

       After this court issued its opinion, in 2018, both parties sought entry of a final

judgment based on the Rule 11 Agreement. After several hearings, the trial court entered

a Final Judgment that incorporated verbatim the language from the Rule 11 Agreement.

Martin then moved to modify the Final Judgment. Relying on Lehmann v. Har-Con Corp.,

39 S.W.3d 191 (Tex. 2001), Martin questioned whether the Final Judgment was indeed

final. She alleged it included contradictory paragraphs and left open potential claims

against her in the future. The trial court denied her motion to modify and she has pursued

this appeal.

       The question now before this court is whether the trial court’s Final Judgment is

indeed final. Martin contends it is not. The Higginson parties argue to the contrary. By

her original brief and reply brief, Martin contends: (1) the trial court erred when it denied

her motion to modify the final judgment for purposes of finality and for clarity regarding

specific performance on the transfer of shares; (2) the appeal should be abated and the

cause remanded to the trial court for modification; and (3) alternatively, the trial court

erred in its interpretation of the Rule 11 Agreement so as to leave open the possibility of

claims being brought against her in the future. We agree with the Higginson parties that

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the Final Judgment is a final judgment for purposes of our review and we affirm that

judgment.

       BACKGROUND

       Although the historical facts are detailed in our prior opinion, we nevertheless

provide a summary. See Higginson, 2017 Tex. App. LEXIS 1268, at *1-14. All parties to

the underlying dispute are shareholders of Russell E. Womack, Inc. (REW), by way of

inheritance from the original founder. Relevant to this dispute, three groups own 100

percent of the shares of the corporation: (1) the Higginson parties, (2) Martin, and (3)

Michael V. Byrne, Richard Byrne, Jr., Barbara Holladay, West Womack, and Carolyn

Cain, beneficiary of the Carolyn Cain Irrevocable Trust (hereafter the Byrne parties).1

None of these three groups own nor control a majority of the shares.

       Pursuant to a Voting Trust Agreement executed on December 31, 2007, and a

Shareholders’ Agreement executed on January 1, 2008, the parties sought to consolidate

the voting power of their respective shares and to restrict the transfer of those shares.

There are two paragraphs in the Shareholders’ Agreement relevant to this appeal.

Paragraph 3.3 provides for a right of first refusal as follows:

       3.3   Voluntary Transfer Restrictions. Any proposed Voluntary Transfer of any
       Shares by a Shareholder is subject to the following provisions:

       (a) Before the Voluntary Transfer, the Shareholder must send an Offer
       Notice to the Other Shareholders who are parties to this Agreement
       describing the Voluntary transfer (the “Offer”). If any term of the proposed
       Voluntary Transfer changes after the delivery of an Offer Notice, the
       Shareholder must promptly notify the Other Shareholders who are parties

       1  The Higginson parties are all related on one side of Russell E. Womack’s family and the Byrne
parties are all related on the other side of Russell E. Womack’s family.

                                                  3
       to this Agreement of the changes, and the subsequent notice will constitute
       a new Offer Notice for purposes of this Section 3.3.(a).

       (b) For a period of sixty days after the date of the delivery of the Offer Notice
       to the Other Shareholders who are parties to this Agreement, the Other
       Shareholders have the right to accept or reject the Offer in writing. . . .

       (c) If the Other Shareholders do not accept the Offer to purchase all the
       Shares that are the subject of the Offer by the expiration of the time periods
       described in Section 3.3(b) or if before the time periods expire the Other
       Shareholders reject the Offer in writing, the Shareholder is entitled to sell
       the remaining Shares strictly in accordance with the terms contained in the
       Offer Notice.

       Paragraph 9.2, which provides for a specific contractual remedy in the event of a

putative voluntary transfer of shares in violation of the Shareholders’ Agreement, provides

as follows:

       9.2    Breach and Equitable Remedy. Any purported Transfer in breach of
       any provision of this Agreement is void, will not operate to Transfer any
       interest or title in the purported transferee, and will constitute an offer by the
       breaching Shareholder to sell his Shares to the Corporation at the purchase
       price per Share determined pursuant to Section 7.1 above to be payable in
       accordance with Section 7.2(b). In connection with any attempted Transfer
       in breach of this Agreement, the Corporation may refuse to transfer any
       Shares or any stock certificate tendered to it for Transfer, in addition to and
       without prejudice to any other rights or remedies available to the
       Corporation. Each party to this Agreement acknowledges that each other
       party will suffer immediate and irreparable harm if a party hereto breaches,
       attempts to breach, or threatens to breach this Agreement and that
       monetary damages will be inadequate to compensate the nonbreaching
       parties for any actual, attempted, or threatened breach. Accordingly, each
       party hereto agrees that each of the other parties will, in addition to any
       other remedies available to them at law or in equity, be entitled to specific
       performance or temporary, preliminary, and permanent injunctive relief to
       enforce the terms and conditions of this Agreement without the necessity of
       proving inadequacy of legal remedies or irreparable harm, or posting bond,
       any requirements to equitable and injunctive relief being hereby specifically
       waived.

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       When Martin attempted to sell her shares to the Byrne parties, 2 a lawsuit ensued.

In 2013, Martin and the Higginson parties both filed competing petitions for declaratory

relief. Martin sought a declaration to validate her attempted sale of her shares to the

Byrne parties, while the Higginson parties filed a counter-petition for declaratory relief,

seeking a declaration that (1) the Shareholders’ Agreement was a valid contract that

restricted Martin’s right to sell her shares and (2) the right of first refusal was triggered.

They also sought specific performance of Martin’s purported obligation to “transfer all of

Martin’s shares in Russell E. Womack, Inc. to them” as well as recovery of attorney’s fees.

       In 2014, the trial court ordered the parties to arbitration. The result was an

Arbitration Award that settled the dispute among the parties, which the trial court

interpreted as a Rule 11 Agreement. The award accomplished seven things: (1) it

confirmed that the Shareholders’ Agreement dated January 1, 2008, was “valid and

enforceable,” (2) it provided that Martin breached that Agreement by “failing to sell and

transfer her shares in [REW] to [the Higginson parties],” (3) it confirmed that Martin’s

purported transfer of shares to Michael V. Byrne and Richard Byrne, Jr. was void, (4) it

provided that the Higginson parties were entitled to “specific performance of the sale and

transfer of [Martin’s] shares in [REW],” (5) it provided that the Higginson parties were not

entitled to “a monetary damage remedy against [Martin] for breach of the Shareholders’

Agreement,” (6) it confirmed that “[t]hese findings do not preclude all or any of the other

remedies that may be available to [the Higginson parties] either under the Shareholders’

Agreement, or otherwise available at law or in equity,” and (7) it awarded the Higginson

       2   The Byrne parties, who did not participate in arbitration, have been non-suited.

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parties the sum of $400,000 for “arbitration fees, costs and reasonable and necessary

attorneys’ fees attributable to [their] claim against [Martin].”

       Although the Arbitration Award was treated as a Rule 11 settlement agreement by

the trial court, the arbitration panel was unwilling to approve the award and arbitration

continued. After three days of testimony, the panel issued an award in favor of the

Higginson parties. They asked the trial court to confirm the arbitration award. Martin

responded with a motion to vacate or modify the award because the parties had entered

into a settlement agreement leaving the arbitrators without authority to issue an award.

The motion was granted and resulted in the interlocutory appeal previously referenced

herein.

       After this court affirmed the trial court’s order vacating the arbitration award, the

parties moved for entry of judgment based on the Rule 11 settlement agreement. The

trial court’s judgment provides in relevant part as follows:

       Pursuant to the Rule 11 agreement between [Martin] and [the Higginson
       parties], which was discussed and affirmed in Higginson v. Martin, No. 07-
       15-00343-CV, 2017 Tex. App. LEXIS 1268 (Tex. App.—Amarillo Feb. 14,
       2017, pet. denied), the Court finds and declares that the “Shareholder’s
       Agreement Between Certain Shareholders of Russell E. Womack, Inc.”
       dated January 1, 2008 (“Shareholder Agreement”) is valid and enforceable
       and that Raeanne Martin breached the “Shareholder Agreement” by failing
       to sell and transfer her shares in Russell E. Womack, Inc. to [the Higginson
       parties].

       Pursuant to the Rule 11 agreement between [Martin] and [the Higginson
       parties], which was discussed and affirmed in Higginson v. Martin, No. 07-
       15-00343-CV, 2017 Tex. App. LEXIS 1268 (Tex. App.—Amarillo Feb. 14,
       2017, pet. denied), the Court further orders and declares that, under the
       provisions of the “Shareholder Agreement,” the transfer of shares by
       Raeanne Martin to Michael Byrne and Richard Byrne [Jr.] is void, [the
       Higginson parties] are entitled to specific performance of the sale and
       transfer of Raeanne Martin’s shares in Russell E. Womack, Inc., and, as a

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       result, [the Higginson parties] do not have a monetary damage remedy
       against Raeanne Martin for breach of the “Shareholder Agreement.”

       These findings do not preclude all or any of the other remedies that may be
       available to [the Higginson parties] either under the Shareholder
       Agreement, or otherwise available at law or in equity.

       Pursuant to the Rule 11 agreement between [Martin] and [the Higginson
       parties], which was discussed and affirmed in Higginson v. Martin, No. 07-
       15-00343-CV, 2017 Tex. App. LEXIS 1268 (Tex. App.—Amarillo Feb. 14,
       2017, pet. denied), the Court further finds and renders judgment that an
       award of costs of arbitration and attorney’s fees in favor of [the Higginson
       parties], as the prevailing parties, on the issue of whether Raeanne Martin
       breached the Shareholder Agreement is justified, and hereby awards [the
       Higginson parties] the sum total of $400,000.00 determined for arbitration
       fees, costs, and reasonable and necessary attorney fees.

                                            ***

       This judgment finally disposes of all parties and claims in this cause of
       action and is appealable.

(Emphasis added).

       ANALYSIS

       By her first issue, Martin contends the trial court erred in denying her motion to

modify the Final Judgment. At the core of Martin’s first issue is whether the judgment

actually disposes of all claims and parties and forecloses any potential future suits against

her. She alleges the judgment required specific “decretal language” to clarify that all

issues and claims between the parties had been finally disposed of and also required

clarification of the details of specific performance in transferring her shares of stock.

       Martin proposes that the Final Judgment be modified to add the following six

words, “[e]xcept as to Counter-Defendant Raeanne Martin,” at the beginning of the

paragraph reciting “[t]hese findings do not preclude all or any of the other remedies that

may be available to [the Higginson parties] . . . .” She does not dispute the award of

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$400,000 to the Higginson parties for arbitration fees, costs, and reasonable and

necessary attorney’s fees.

       After briefing was completed in this appeal, the Texas Supreme Court issued its

opinion in Palma v. Young, clarifying Lehmann on the finality of a judgment when there

has not been a conventional trial on the merits. See Palma v. Young, 601 S.W.3d 799,

801 (Tex. 2020). As a result, the parties did not have the benefit of that decision.

       In Palma, a summary judgment case which is a case without a conventional trial

on the merits, the trial court signed a final judgment against only one of two defendants.

The judgment recited “[a]ll relief not granted herein is denied. This is a final judgment.”

Palma, 601 S.W.3d at 800. On direct appeal, the cause was remanded to the trial court

to clarify the judgment’s finality. The trial court issued an order confirming that it had

intended to render a final judgment.      Id.       Despite the trial court’s confirmation, the

appellate court concluded the judgment was still not final and dismissed the appeal for

want of jurisdiction because the record failed to show how the suit was disposed of as to

one of the defendants in the suit. Id. at 801.

       The Supreme Court disagreed with the appellate court’s application of Lehmann

and clarified that an evaluation of the record to determine whether a judgment is final only

applies when there is some doubt as to whether the judgment is indeed final. Otherwise,

“a clear and unequivocal statement of finality must be ‘given effect’ even if review of the

record would undermine finality.” Palma, 601 S.W.3d at 801 (citing Lehmann, 39 S.W.3d

at 206).

                                                8
       In the underlying dispute, the trial court was asked to rule on competing petitions

for declaratory relief based upon an agreed settlement—again a matter of law proceeding,

based on undisputed facts, without a conventional trial on the merits. Thus, the logic of

the Lehmann rule, as clarified by Palma, applies in this situation. The Final Judgment

unequivocally recites that it “finally disposes of all parties and claims in this cause of action

and is appealable.” The intent of the trial court is clear and there is no equivocation or

doubt in the language used sufficient to invoke the Lehmann rule which would require us

to look to the record to determine whether the judgment is indeed final. See Palma, 601

S.W.3d at 801, 802. Irrespective of the trial court’s inclusion in the Final Judgment that

its findings did not “preclude all or any of the other remedies that may be available,” the

judgment was “final and appealable because there was no question the trial court

intended it to be so.” Id. at 802 (citing Lehmann, 39 S.W.3d at 206).

       Therefore, based on its unambiguous language, we find that the trial court’s Final

Judgment is a final appealable judgment. As such, Martin’s first issue is overruled. Our

disposition of issue one renders consideration of issues two and three unnecessary on

whether to abate the appeal and remand the cause for modification of the judgment or for

a determination of whether the trial court erred in its interpretation of the Rule 11

Agreement.

       We note that during the hearings concerning Martin’s motion to enter a final

judgment and to modify the Final Judgment, her counsel argued that Martin could

potentially face future litigation by other shareholders. The trial court acknowledged the

possibility but agreed with counsel that the defenses of res judicata or collateral estoppel

could be raised to defend against future litigation.

                                               9
      Martin is also concerned with the Higginson parties’ request for specific

performance regarding the sale of her shares of stock to them. However, because the

trial court found the Shareholders’ Agreement is valid and enforceable and that Martin

had originally breached that agreement by the attempted sale of her shares to the Byrne

parties, the sale of her shares is governed by the provisions of Paragraph 9.2 of that

Agreement.

      CONCLUSION

      The trial court’s judgment is affirmed.

                                                     Patrick A. Pirtle
                                                         Justice

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