OPINION
Aftеr a conflict developed among the board members of a private, nonprofit community healthcare clinic, Brazoria County, on behalf of the State of Texas, brought a quo warranto proceeding, in which it sought a temporary restraining order and a temporary injunction against the chief executive and certain board members of the nonprofit, and the appointment of a receiver to run the clinic. The trial court granted the temporary restraining order and, in a subsequent hearing, ordered a temporary injunction against the board members from taking further action on behalf of the nonprofit. In addition, the court appointed a receiver to oversee all of its assets and business affairs, relying on Article 1396-7.05(A) of the Revised Civil Statutes. See Tex.Rev.Civ. Stat. Ann. art. 1396-7.05(A) (Vernon 2003). The board members appeal the temporary injunction and the order appointing a receiver, contending that the trial court (1) erred *28 in detеrmining that Brazoria County was authorized to bring this quo warranto action against a nonprofit, (2) abused its discretion in ordering a temporary injunction and appointing a receiver, and (3) abused its discretion in admitting documents that were not properly authenticated. We conclude that Brazoria County has failed to show irreparable harm, or any grounds upon which it may impose a receiver to run the nonprofit. We therefore reverse the trial court’s orders.
Background
The Alvin Cоmmunity Health Endeavor (“ACHE”), a nonprofit corporation founded in 1970, provides primary and supplemental healthcare services to community residents who are medically indigent or have limited healthcare provider options. Since its inception, ACHE has operated through various sources of funding, including private donations and donations from charitable organizations. In September 2005, ACHE began to receive federal funding as a Federally Qualified Health Center (“FQHC”) to cope with additional medical care needs in Brazoria County in the wake of hurricanes Katrina and Rita. Brazoria County owns the property upon which ACHE’s facility is located and leases the land to ACHE pursuant to an agreement that ACHE provide free and low-cost healthcare benefits to Brazoria County residents. The lease agreement recognizes that ACHE had attained FQHC status.
In May 2007, the Health Resources and Services Administration (“HRSA”) of the United States Department of Health and Human Services, the federal agency overseeing FQHC funding, conducted an on-site diagnostic review of ACHE after it received complaints about ACHE’s then-current chief executive officer, Nancy Benefield. Benefield had served as the chief executive officer since 1994. Based on its review, HRSA concluded that ACHE had failed to comply with various requirements for federal funding, and expressed “significant concerns regarding ACHE’s clinical, fiscal and administrative operations as well as its governance.” HRSA expressed its findings in a July 19 letter to Nancy McNulty, an ACHE board member. In the letter, HRSA recommended follow-up actions, and stated that if ACHE did not correct the deficiencies HRSA found, as well as comply with various requirements, it would deny ACHE’s grant application, resulting in the loss of its federal funding. The letter requested a “Board-approved Corrective Action Plan, with time-framed objectives responsive to the concerns noted,” by September 1.
Following the letter, in a series of events that spanned three days in late July, some members of ACHE’s board of directors met and voted to terminate Benefield as CEO of ACHE. Then, board member Jerry Smith and others changed the locks at ACHE’s clinic facility, issued a criminal trespass citation against Benefield, can-celled ACHE’s insurance contracts, pulled the internet cabling out of the walls of ACHE’s office, cancelled ACHE’s housekeeping contraсt, and terminated employees of ACHE, all without any formal approval of the board of directors. Finally, certain other members of the board met again in an emergency meeting and voted to restore Benefield as CEO of ACHE.
In response to HRSA’s warnings, ACHE hired a healthcare management company, which proposed a Clinic Management and Medical Staffing Agreement to ACHE to resolve the issues that concerned HRSA. Before the September deadlinе, Benefield sent a corrective action plan to HRSA, describing ACHE’s accomplishments and continuing efforts to comply with the federal funding requirements. *29 The healthcare management company also sent a letter to ACHE’s board of directors that outlined the progress made and planned future actions that would resolve the problems that HRSA identified in its summary of findings.
Fearful that ACHE stood to lose its federal funding, Brazoria County sued. In October 2007, the trial court granted Bra-zoria County leave to file “an information in the nature of a quo warranto.” The county also applied for a temporary restraining order, a temporary injunction, and the appointment of a receiver over ACHE. In the quo warranto action against Benefield and eight other directors, the county alleges illegal corporate conduct, human resource code violations, and breach of ACHE’s lease.
The trial court granted the county’s request for a temporary restraining order. Thereafter, the trial court heard the applications for the temporary injunction and appointment of a receiver. The parties presented testimony from ex-board member Gary Goff, board members Nancy McNulty and Nancy Benefield, and Lynda Bible, who manages similar healthcare facilities in neighboring counties. At Brazo-ria County’s request, the trial court also admitted several pieces of correspondence from HRSA. At the conclusion of the hearing, the trial court enjoined ACHE’s directors from taking any action whatsoever on behalf of ACHE, except as directed by the receiver, and barred access to all funds, accounts, and real, personal, or mixed property. In addition, it appointed Bible as a receiver for ACHE, and authorized her to conduct all of ACHE’s affairs. Benefield and the other board members bring an interlocutory appeal, seeking reversal of the temporary injunction and the appointment of the receiver. See Tex. Civ. PRAC. & Rem.Code Ann. § 51.014(a)(1), (4) (Vernon 2008). Recently, the trial court extended the receivership until November 30, 2008. We granted the board members’ motion to consider that order as part of this appeal. See Tex.R.App. P. 29.6 (“While an appeal from an interlocutory order is pending, on a party’s motion or on the appellate court’s own initiative, the appellate court may review ... a further appealable interlocutory order concerning the same subject matter.”).
Appellate Jurisdiction
As an initial matter, Brazoria County contests our jurisdiction over the board members’ appeal of Brazoria County’s authority to bring a quo warranto proceeding, contending that we lack jurisdiction to consider this argument in an interlocutory appeal. The board members argue that quo warranto proceedings are extraordinary in nature, and are not available tо challenge the legality or propriety of board member conduct.
See Newsom v. State,
Appellate courts have jurisdiction to consider immediate appeals of interlocutory orders only if a statute expressly provides appellate jurisdiction.
Stary v. DeBord,
Temporary Injunction
The board members contend that the trial court abused its discretion in ordering a temporary injunction because Brazoria County did not plead and prove the elements required for a temporary injunction.
The purpose of a temporary injunction is to preserve the status quo pending trial, but it is an extraordinary remedy and does not issue as a matter of right.
Butnaru v. Ford Motor Co.,
To obtain a temporary injunction, an applicant must prove (1) a cause of aсtion against a defendant, (2) a probable right to the relief sought, and (3) a probable, imminent, and irreparable injury in the interim.
Butnaru,
Brazoria County asserts that ACHE is an important part of its obligation to provide healthcare assistance to its low-income residents. It leases county-owned land to ACHE to carry out that purpose. In support of the trial court’s order, Bra-zoria County relies on evidence that ACHE might not qualify for the federal grant it had been receiving since 2005. ACHE, on the other hand, presented evidenсe that it was taking steps to comply with federal regulations. While the county’s evidence suggests the possibility that this nonprofit corporation might lose its federal funding, it did not suggest that the loss of federal funding would jeopardize ACHE or its ability to serve low-income residents of Brazoria County. To the contrary, the testimony at the hearing was that ACHE operates through various sources of funding, and it operated without federal funding for thirty-five years before it first received federal funds. Brazoriа County implies that ACHE has an obligation to it to seek and receive federal funding, but no evidence suggests that ACHE, a private, nonprofit corporation, either requires or depends on federal funding to be able to provide healthcare services to Brazoria County residents. Nor has Brazoria County offered any evidence
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of such an obligation to it, either in the lease agreements or otherwise. Consequently, Brazoria County fails to show that it would suffer an imminent, irrеparable injury, even if ACHE were to lose its federal funding. At most, Brazoria County has established a fear of the possibility of a future injury, and such a contingency “is not sufficient to support issuance of a temporary injunction.”
See Reach Group, L.L.C. v. Angelina Group,
Appointment of Receiver
The board members further contend that the trial court abused its discretion in appointing a receiver over all of the assets and business affairs of ACHE because the county did not plead and prove the elements required for the appointment of a receiver.
Whether authorized by statute or by equity, we should affirm the interlocutory appointment of a receiver unless the trial court clearly abused its discretion.
Mueller v. Beamalloy, Inc.,
The Texas Nonprofit Corporation Act governs the appointment оf a receiver to rehabilitate a nonprofit corporation, and it states in relevant part:
(A) A receiver may be appointed for the assets and business of a corporation by the district court for the county *32 in which the registered office of the corporation is located, whenever circumstances exist deemed by the court to require the appointment of a receiver to conserve the assets and affairs of the corporation and to avoid damage to parties at interest, but only if all other requirements of law are complied with and if all other remedies available either at law or in equity, including the appointment of a receiver for specific assets of the corporation, are determined by the court to be inadequate, and only in the following instances:
(1) In an action by a member when it is established:
(a) That the corporation is insolvent or in imminent danger of insolvency; or
(b) That the directors are dеadlocked in the management of the corporate affairs and the members are unable to break the deadlock, and that irreparable injury to the corporation is being suffered or is threatened by reason thereof; or
(c) That the acts of the directors or those in control of the corporation are illegal, oppressive, or fraudulent; or
(d) That the corporate assets are being misapplied or wasted.
Tex.Rev.Civ. Stat. ANN. art. 1396-7.05(A). A сourt may appoint a receiver over an entire corporation only if all other remedies are deemed inadequate.
See Aubin v. Territorial Mortgage Co. of Am., Inc.,
Nothing in the record indicates that Brazoria County met this burden or that the trial court considered remedies less drastic than a receivership. For example, if Brazoria County has a contractual interest in ensuring that ACHE maintains its FQHC status, as it contends, it has not shown that other remedies, such as money damages, cannot adequately prоtect that contractual interest. Because remedies at law were not even considered, they could not have been deemed “inadequate” as required by the Texas Nonprofit Corporation Act.
Furthermore, no evidence suggests that ACHE is insolvent or in imminent danger of insolvency to justify the appointment of a receiver to take control of the entire corporation and all of its assets; the county has merely shown that ACHE might lose one of its sourсes of funding. Brazo-ria County maintains that the public interest, as reflected in the Texas Health and Safety Code, requires the county to provide healthcare services to its low income residents, and that to meet this obligation, it leased county-owned land to ACHE on which ACHE operates a clinic that provides such services. See Tex. Health & Safety Code Ann. § 61.028(a) (Vernon 2001) (listing healthcare services county must provide for its indigent residents). In 2005, the county extended its lease with ACHE and noted that ACHE had become a FQHC, but nothing in the lease requires ACHE to maintain its status as a FQHC. The county also asserts that its own obli *33 gation to provide healthcare to its indigent residents gives the county a legal and contractual interest in ensuring that ACHE maintain its FQHC status. The county’s effort to transfer its own statutory obligation onto a private corporation, however, fails to meet the statutory test for a receivership — namely that without one, a danger of insolvency or injury to the county or its residents exists. Brazoria County’s obligation to provide healthcare services to its residents does not require it to provide federally-funded healthcare services, nor is ACHE — a private corporation — required to maintain FQHC status to avoid a complete government takeover of its operations. Brazoria County fails to show how the county or its residents would be irreparably injured were ACHE to lose FQHC status, or that the loss of federal funding would place ACHE in danger of insolvency, or even that the loss of federal funding is a foregone conclusion. Accordingly, the county did not justify the appointment of a receiver on this ground.
Nor has Brazoria County demonstrated that the acts of the directors or those in control of the corporation are illegal, oppressive, or fraudulent. The county has shown only that, while one of ACHE’s board members was on a brief sick leave, the board of directors had eight rather than the required nine members. This showing does not support Brazoria County’s contention that the board was therefore illegally constituted in general. Brazoria County relies heavily on
Greater Fort Worth & Tarrant County Community Action Agency v. Mims
to justify the appointment of the receiver, but
Mims
is distinguishable.
See
Furthermore,
Mims
authorized such a limited receivership to reconstitute a dysfunctional board only when the board was “so impaired that it was no longer organized or functioning as it was established or constituted,” and only when the court determines that a board is “illegally constituted.”
See Swain v. Wiley College,
Because the appointment of a receiver over the assets and business affairs of a corporation is a “radical remedy,” it should never be applied “unless some serious injury to the complainant will result, or is threatened.”
See Tex. Consol. Oils v. Hartwell,
Admission of Evidence
Last, the board members contend that the trial cоurt abused its discretion in admitting certain exhibits reflecting corre
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spondence from HRSA to ACHE, because the documents are not properly authenticated, constitute hearsay, and are irrelevant. The admission and exclusion of evidence is committed to the trial court’s sound discretion, but a trial court abuses that discretion when it acts without regard for any guiding rules or principles.
City of Brownsville v. Alvarado,
Texas Rule of Evidence 803(8) excludes records from public offices and agencies from the hearsay rule. Tex.R. Evid. 803(8). However, such records must be properly authenticated to be admissible. Tex.R. Evid. 901(a). Generally, the requirement of authentication or identification as a condition precedent to admissibility is satisfied by evidence sufficient to support a finding that the matter in question is what the proponent claims, and specifically, public records or reports may be authenticated by evidence that the purported public record or report is from the public office where items of this nature are kept. Tex.R. Evid. 901(a); 901(b)(7). While Brazoria County contends that Rule 803(8) creates a presumption of admissibility, with the burden being placed on the party opposing the admission of the report to show its untrustworthiness, that presumption does not exempt the offered document from satisfying other requirements of the rules.
See 1001 McKinney, Ltd. v. Credit Suisse First Boston Mortgage Capital,
Conclusion
We conclude that we do not have jurisdiction to consider the status of the pending quo warranto proceeding in this interlocutory appeal, but because Brazoria County does not show the necessary irreparable harm to support a temporary injunction or the appointment of a receiver, we reverse the trial court’s orders granting a temporary injunction and a receivership, and remand the cause to the trial court for further proceedings. We dismiss all pending motions as moot.
