Carl T. Wibbenmeyer v. TechTerra Communications, Inc. Christian Behier And Adella Almazan-Seabolt ( 2008 )


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  •       TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN
    NO. 03-07-00038-CV
    Carl T. Wibbenmeyer,
    Appellant
    v.
    TechTerra Communications, Inc.; Christian Behier;
    and Adella Almazan-Seabolt,
    Appellees
    FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF WILLIAMSON COUNTY, 368TH JUDICIAL DISTRICT
    NO. 06-881-C368, HONORABLE BURT CARNES, JUDGE PRESIDING
    MEMORANDUM OPINION
    Carl T. Wibbenmeyer appeals from the trial court’s denial of his request for
    a temporary injunction. Wibbenmeyer, Christian Behier, and Adella Almazan-Seabolt are the
    founders and chief shareholders of TechTerra Communications, Inc. Wibbenmeyer sued Behier,
    Almazan-Seabolt, and TechTerra, seeking access to company records and alleging breach of contract
    and tortious interference with business relations. Wibbenmeyer also asked the trial court to restrain
    Behier and Almazan-Seabolt from taking action at a shareholder’s meeting to amend TechTerra
    Communications, Inc.’s bylaws and reduce the number of the company’s directors. Finding that
    TechTerra’s bylaws can be amended, the trial court concluded that Wibbenmeyer was not likely to
    prevail on his claims for breach of contract and tortious interference. We affirm the denial of the
    request for temporary injunction.
    Wibbenmeyer, Behier, and Almazan-Seabolt are the principal shareholders and
    directors of TechTerra. Their respective ownership shares are: Behier, 43.87%; Almazan-Seabolt,
    15.49%; and Wibbenmeyer, 30.28%. The remaining 10.36% of the shares are divided among eight
    other shareholders.
    Wibbenmeyer, an attorney, drafted the TechTerra bylaws and a shareholder
    agreement. The bylaws provide in part as follows:
    2.02 Time of Annual Meeting. Absent notice to the contrary, the annual meetings of
    the shareholders will be held each year at 9:00 a.m. on the first Monday of May. . . .
    2.03 Notice of Meeting. Notice of the meeting . . . shall be given in writing to each
    shareholder entitled to vote at the meeting at least 10 but not more than 60 days
    before the date of the meeting . . . .
    2.04 Special Meetings. The President may call special meetings of the members for
    any purpose or purposes whatsoever at any time, notice of which must be given in the
    manner specified in paragraph 2.03.
    ....
    3.02 Number and Qualification of Directors. The authorized number of Directors
    of this corporation is three. The number of Directors may be increased or decreased
    from time to time by amendment to these Bylaws, but no decrease may have the
    effect of shortening the term of any incumbent Director. Any directorship to be filled
    by reason of an increase in the number of Directors will be filled either by election
    at an annual meeting or at a special meeting of shareholders called for that purpose.
    3.03 Election and Term of Office. The Directors will be elected annually by the
    shareholders entitled to vote, and will hold office until their respective successors are
    elected, or until their death, resignation, or removal.
    ....
    3.05 Removal of Directors. Any individual Director may be removed from office
    only with good cause through judicial declaration.
    2
    ....
    8.01 Amendment by Shareholders. These Bylaws may be amended only by the vote
    of shareholders owning more than sixty-percent (60%) of the issued and outstanding
    shares of the corporation.
    The Shareholders Agreement provides in relevant part as follows:
    For so long as the Board of Directors consists of three or more members, the parties
    to this Agreement agree to vote all of their shares for the election of directors as
    follows: one nominee of Christian Behier, one nominee of Adella Almazan, and one
    nominee of Carl T. Wibbenmeyer.
    Behier, Almazan-Seabolt, Wibbenmeyer, and the spouses of Wibbenmeyer and Behier are listed as
    signatories to the shareholder agreement.
    At some point, relations between Wibbenmeyer and the other principal shareholders
    apparently deteriorated. On October 27, 2006, Wibbenmeyer filed a Plaintiff’s Mandamus to Open
    Books and Records of a Corporation Under Article 2.44 Texas Business Corporation Act. By
    motion dated October 30, 2006, Behier asked the TechTerra board of directors to have Wibbenmeyer
    “removed from the board of TechTerra due to the serious nature of the conflict of interest” with
    another company for which Wibbenmeyer worked. Wibbenmeyer was not removed as a director.
    On December 9, 2006, Behier called a special meeting of the shareholders “to amend
    the Corporation’s Bylaws to reduce the number of directors, revise the effect of a reduction in the
    number of directors and to change the provisions for removing directors.” On December 15, 2006,
    Wibbenmeyer filed an Application for Temporary Restraining Order, Temporary Injunction and
    Permanent Injunction, and added claims for breach of contract and tortious interference with
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    business relations. His request for injunctive relief had several grounds. He asserted that his
    removal from the board would “partially remove jurisdiction on the Plaintiff’s pending Mandamus
    action and negatively affect his existing rights to seek documents and information from the
    Corporation based upon his status as a Director. Damages for all of these losses are irreparable in
    that it is difficult or impossible to quantify.” He asked the court to enjoin appellees from:
    (1) holding or attending a Shareholders’ meeting for the purpose of amending
    TechTerra Communications, Inc.’s Bylaws to reduce the number of directors, to
    revise the effect of a reduction in the number of directors or to change the provision
    for removing directors.
    (2) making or voting for any motion that would have the [e]ffect of carrying out the
    purpose of amending TechTerra Communication, Inc.’s Bylaws to reduce the number
    of directors, to revise the effect of a reduction in the number of directors or to change
    the provision for removing directors.
    (3) amending or attempting to amend the Bylaws of TechTerra Communications,
    Inc. to reduce the number of directors, or to revise the effect of directors or to change
    the provision for removing directors.
    The trial court entered a temporary restraining order using Wibbenmeyer’s proposed order but
    excising the language just quoted. In its place, the court inserted language enjoining appellees from
    “removing any directors currently appointed to the Board of Directors of TechTerra
    Communications, Inc.”
    The shareholders other than Wibbenmeyer met on December 19, 2006. Because of
    scheduled travel plans, Wibbenmeyer did not attend. According to Behier, the other shareholders
    amended the bylaws by reducing the number of directors to a minimum of two, setting an election
    4
    date and terms for directors, deleting the requirement of a judicial declaration of good cause to
    remove a director, and permitting shareholders or directors to vote to remove a director.
    The trial court held a hearing on Wibbenmeyer’s requests for temporary injunction
    and writ of mandamus, and then denied both. Wibbenmeyer appealed from the denial of the
    temporary injunction. This Court issued an order temporarily enjoining appellees “from taking any
    action removing Carl T. Wibbenmeyer from the Board of TechTerra Communications, Inc.” pending
    consideration of his appeal.
    The denial of a temporary injunction is subject to reversal only for a clear abuse
    of discretion. Walling v. Metcalfe, 
    863 S.W.2d 56
    , 58 (Tex. 1993). A trial court abuses its discretion
    when it acts arbitrarily, unreasonably, and without reference to guiding rules or principles,
    or misapplies the law to the established facts of the case. See Walker v. Packer, 
    827 S.W.2d 833
    , 840 (Tex. 1992) (orig. proceeding); State v. Southwestern Bell Tel. Co., 
    526 S.W.2d 526
    , 528
    (Tex. 1975). We may neither substitute our judgment for that of the trial court nor resolve the merits
    of the underlying case. See Davis v. Huey, 
    571 S.W.2d 859
    , 862 (Tex. 1978); Universal Health
    Servs., Inc. v. Thompson, 
    24 S.W.3d 570
    , 576 (Tex. App.—Austin 2000, no pet.). Rather, we review
    the evidence in the light most favorable to the trial court’s order, indulging every reasonable
    inference in its favor. See Universal 
    Health, 24 S.W.3d at 576
    .
    The purpose of a temporary injunction is to preserve the status quo pending a trial on
    the merits. 
    Walling, 863 S.W.2d at 57
    . For a temporary injunction to issue, the movant must show:
    (1) a viable cause of action; (2) a probable right to recovery; and (3) a probable, imminent, and
    irreparable injury in the interim. 
    Id. 5 We
    will focus on the second prong of the test because the trial court made an express
    finding that Wibbenmeyer is unlikely to prevail on his claims for damages for tortious interference
    with contract and breach of contract. Wibbenmeyer complains that Behier and Almazan-Seabolt’s
    actions show their intent to breach their obligation under the shareholders’ agreement to vote for
    Wibbenmeyer’s nominee for director.1 He contends that the reduction of the number of directors to
    two renders compliance with the three named principal shareholders’ obligation to vote for one
    another’s nominees impossible. Thus, Wibbenmeyer argues, he has shown a probable right to
    recover on his claim that Behier and Almazan-Seabolt will violate the shareholder agreement.
    Wibbenmeyer challenges the trial court’s finding that Wibbenmeyer was not likely
    to prevail on his claim of tortious interference with contract. Wibbenmeyer claims that Behier and
    Almazan-Seabolt tortiously interfered with the shareholder agreement. A successful claim of
    tortious interference, however, must be based on the acts of an interfering third party—in other
    words, a party to a contract cannot tortiously interfere with its own contract. See Four Bros. Boat
    Works, Inc. v. Tesoro Petroleum Cos., Inc., 
    217 S.W.3d 653
    , 668 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.]
    2006, pet. denied); Central Sav. & Loan Ass’n v. Stemmons Nw. Bank, N.A., 
    848 S.W.2d 232
    , 241
    (Tex. App.—Dallas 1992, no pet.). Because Behier and Almazan-Seabolt are both parties to the
    shareholder agreement, the trial court did not abuse its discretion by finding that Wibbenmeyer is
    unlikely to show that they tortiously interfered with the shareholder agreement.
    1
    The trial court expressly found that Wibbenmeyer brought his claim “in anticipation of a
    breach by the individual defendants of the shareholder agreement covenant to vote their shares for
    plaintiff when voting for directors.” Appellees assert that Wibbenmeyer did not allege the essential
    elements of an anticipatory breach claim. The trial court did not address appellees’ argument in its
    findings of fact and conclusions of law.
    6
    Wibbenmeyer also challenges the court’s finding that he is unlikely to prevail on his
    breach of contract claim. He argues that the individual appellees are taking actions that will cause
    them to breach the shareholder agreement. He contends that the agreement creates a covenant to
    vote for at least three directors—one of whom he nominates—not an obligation contingent on the
    existence of the condition precedent that the board of directors have three members.
    Wibbenmeyer argues that this case is indistinguishable from a case in which a
    shareholder voting agreement was interpreted to prohibit a shareholder from changing the number
    of directors. See R.H. Sanders Corp. v. Haves, 
    541 S.W.2d 262
    , 264 (Tex. Civ. App.—Dallas 1976,
    no writ). In that case, Sanders was the sole owner of a corporation with a three-member board of
    directors. When two investors bought 35% of the shares of the company, they and Sanders entered
    a contract that provided as follows, “Each of the three stockholders shall be a Director of the
    corporation and each vote shall be equal. A majority of the three-man board of Directors shall
    control.” 
    Id. When Sanders
    tried to exercise his majority shares to expand the board to five
    directors—thereby allowing him to gain majority control of the board—the minority shareholders
    obtained an injunction blocking the expansion. 
    Id. at 263-64.
    The court of appeals affirmed,
    concluding that the entire contract showed that the parties intended the voting agreement to
    guarantee that the minority shareholders would have majority control of the board. 
    Id. at 264.
    “This
    control is only possible if Sanders is bound to vote his shares for the election of plaintiffs to the
    Board and is bound not to vote them in a manner that would deprive plaintiffs of a majority.” 
    Id. Wibbenmeyer contends
    that the agreement here is similarly intended to give each principal
    shareholder a place on the board.
    7
    The record in this case is distinguishable from that in Sanders. The agreement in
    Sanders emphasizes the size of the board, stating that each of the three stockholders will be a
    director and have an equal vote on the “three-man board.” That emphasis, combined with the
    evidence regarding the minority shareholders’ intent to control the board in exchange for their
    investment and loan, persuaded the Sanders court to conclude that the parties intended the board to
    remain at three members. 
    Id. The shareholder
    agreement in Sanders did not expressly prohibit the
    expansion of the board of directors, but neither is there any conditional language as in the agreement
    in this case. Here, the shareholders’ agreement to vote for one another’s nominees is prefaced with
    the phrase “[f]or so long as the Board of Directors consists of three or more members,” indicating
    an awareness that the number could be reduced.
    Wibbenmeyer contends that he is likely to prevail because this facially conditional
    shareholder agreement is actually a covenant for the three principal shareholders to vote for one
    another’s director nominees. He argues that the agreement is not subject to a condition precedent.
    Conditions precedent can be acts or events that occur after the making of the contract that must occur
    before the parties have a right to immediate performance or before the parties breach a contractual
    duty.2 Hohenberg Bros. Co. v. George E. Gibbons & Co., 
    537 S.W.2d 1
    , 3 (Tex. 1976). A court,
    in determining the meaning and intent of a contract, must look at the entire instrument and must
    2
    Wibbenmeyer argues that, because the board of directors included three members when the
    shareholder agreement was formed, the three-director board was an existing condition rather than
    a condition precedent needing to be satisfied. That is an accurate observation, but it is not
    dispositive. Under the bylaws, the opportunity to nominate and vote for directors occurs annually.
    Thus, whether the obligation to vote for the three primary shareholders’ nominees for director recurs
    depends on the conditions existing at the time of the election.
    8
    construe and consider all of its provisions together. 
    Id. Because of
    their potential harshness,
    conditions are not favored. 
    Id. Where the
    intent of the parties is in doubt or a condition imposes an
    absurd or impossible result, the court should interpret the contract as imposing a covenant rather than
    a condition. 
    Id. “When interpreting
    a contract, we examine the entire agreement in an effort
    to harmonize and give effect to all provisions of the contract so that none will be meaningless.”
    MCI Telecomm. Corp. v. Texas Utils. Elec. Co., 
    995 S.W.2d 647
    , 652 (Tex. 1999).
    Although facially conditional language can create a covenant in the right context,
    we conclude that it does not do so here. Wibbenmeyer relies on a case that interpreted what
    appears to be a conditional promise to transfer property when taxes are paid by the recipient as
    instead a promise by the recipient to pay taxes when the property is transferred. Marsh v. Marsh,
    
    949 S.W.2d 734
    , 744 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] 1997, no pet.). The agreement in Marsh
    provided as follows:
    It is the intent of the parties that the transfer from Marsh to Jacobs shall qualify for
    the unlimited marital deduction gift as provided for by the provisions of the U.S.
    Internal Revenue Code concerning gifts to spouses and any provisions to the contrary
    in this Agreement or the Trust shall not take effect if such provisions would cause
    any gift taxes to be paid on the transfer of this gift, unless such taxes are paid by
    Jacobs from the property transferred.
    
    Id. at 743.
    Marsh argued that his obligation to give the gift was excused because Jacobs did not pay
    the gift taxes. 
    Id. Noting that
    the obligation to pay gift taxes does not arise until after a gift is made,
    the court rejected Marsh’s argument as illogical. 
    Id. at 744.
    Because construing the tax-paying as
    a condition precedent to the gift-giving obligation would have led to an absurd result, the court
    construed the contract as creating a covenant requiring Jacobs to pay taxes when Marsh made the
    9
    gift. See 
    id. In this
    case, however, construing the prefatory clause in the shareholder agreement as
    a condition does not lead to an absurd result. It is logical that an obligation to vote for three
    nominees for a board of directors persists only while the board of directors includes three members.
    It is also logical that an obligation that exists “for so long as” a condition exists is excused when the
    condition does not exist. Interpreting the agreement as a covenant to maintain three directors would
    render the “for so long as” language meaningless, thus violating a fundamental principal of contract
    interpretation. MCI 
    Telecomm., 995 S.W.2d at 652
    (contracts should be interpreted so that no
    provision is meaningless).
    Wibbenmeyer also argues that, although appellees have the power under the
    bylaws to reduce the number of directors, the shareholder agreement stripped them of the right
    to do so, relying on Rich v. McMullan, 
    506 S.W.2d 745
    , 747 (Tex. Civ. App.—San Antonio 1974,
    writ ref’d n.r.e.). In Rich, a landowner repudiated a contract to sell land based on the buyer’s failure
    to obtain financing. 
    Id. The court
    found the repudiation invalid, however, because the landowner
    had caused the buyer’s failure to obtain financing by refusing to allow the prospective lender’s
    appraiser access to the land. 
    Id. The landowner
    had the general power to exclude people from his
    land, but he lost the right to do so without contractual penalty when he agreed to sell his land.
    Wibbenmeyer contends that the appellees are not excused from compliance with the shareholder
    agreement based on the low number of directors because appellees are responsible for the number
    of shareholders falling below three.
    We are not persuaded that the trial court abused its discretion by concluding otherwise
    in this case. Wibbenmeyer has not shown himself likely to prove that the parties intended to require
    10
    a minimum of three directors on the board when they did not do so, either in the bylaws or in the
    shareholder agreement. The bylaws expressly and undisputedly permit an amendment that reduces
    the number of directors to two. Section 3.02 states, “The number of Directors may be increased or
    decreased from time to time by amendment to these Bylaws . . . .” The shareholder agreement does
    not expressly address, much less limit, the right to reduce the number of directors. Although the
    agreement obligates the three named principal shareholders to vote for the director nominees of the
    three named principal shareholders, it prefaces that obligation by stating that the agreement applies
    “[f]or so long as the Board of Directors consists of three or more members.” The shareholder
    agreement and bylaws reasonably can be read to require the three named principal shareholders to
    vote for the nominees of the three named principal shareholders except when the bylaws have been
    amended properly to reduce the number of directors to fewer than three. Thus, the trial court did not
    abuse its discretion by concluding that Wibbenmeyer has not shown himself likely to prevail on a
    claim that appellees breached the shareholder agreement by exercising their power to amend the
    bylaws or would breach it after doing so.
    This opinion is not to be interpreted as a comment on the merits of the underlying
    cause of action beyond that required by the standard of review. We are reviewing only the trial
    court’s decision not to issue a temporary injunction. That decision was based on the record
    presented and turned in part on whether Wibbenmeyer had shown that he would probably recover
    on the merits. Our review of that decision is limited to whether the trial court abused its discretion
    based on this record.
    11
    We find no abuse of discretion in the trial court’s denial of the motion for temporary
    injunction on the record presented. We vacate our Order dated January 25, 2007, temporarily
    enjoining appellees from taking any action removing Carl T. Wibbenmeyer from the Board of
    TechTerra Communications, Inc., and affirm the order of the district court.
    G. Alan Waldrop, Justice
    Before Justices Patterson, Pemberton and Waldrop
    Affirmed
    Filed: April 11, 2008
    12