Lead Opinion
OPINION ON REHEARING
This is an agreed interlocutory appeal
Background
Stergiou and the GMF Companies have been embroiled in litigation over the ownership of certain shares of the GMF Companies’ stock for more than a decade. This case has been tried, appealed, reversed and remanded, and tried again. See Stergiou v. Gen. Metal Fabricating Corp.,
While the jury deliberated during the second trial, Stergiou announced to the trial court that the parties had reached an “agreement which has been written down and signed by counsel.” Not content to rely solely on the written settlement аgreement, however, Stergiou’s counsel asked to put the settlement terms on the record, thereby invoking the protection of Rule 11 of the Rules of Civil Procedure for agreements “made in open court and entered of record.” Tex.R. Civ. P. 11. The trial court agreed but first instructed the parties — who were sitting in the courtroom when the settlement agreement was announced — to “listen intently while these terms are dictated into the record because I will swear you in and I will confirm that you are seeking my approval of this proposal.” After Stergiou’s counsel read the Rule 11 agreement on the record, the trial court inquired of counsel for each party whether the terms reflected “the totality” of their agreement. Both counsel replied that it did. The trial court then reminded each party that they were under oath and asked whether they had consulted with counsel regarding the terms and “implication” of the “proposed settlement,” understood it, approved it, and “requested] the court to enter and approve” it. To each question, the parties answered affirmatively. Neither party indicated that the agreement was contingent upon the execution of other documents nor requested that the trial court delay acceptance of thе agreement or verdict until other documents could be drafted and executed. The trial court announced that, “based upon
The specific details of the Rule 11 agreement were contingent upon the jury’s answers. If the jury found in favor of the GMF Companies, Stergiou would assign all of the stock at issue to Curry and the parties would execute a mutual release of all claims. If the jury found in Stergiou’s favor, however, the GMF Companies would pay Stergiou $300,000 for the return of the stock. Payment would be in the form of a promissory note, with a $20,000 down payment being due “on or before May 3, 2006” and, on the first day of each month, “[cjommencing on June 1, 2006,” an “installment of $4,000.00 of principal and interest [would be] due and payable until the Note ha[d] been paid in full.”
The note would be “secured by a first lien Deed of Trust and Security Agreement covering all furniture, fixtures, equipment, receivables (from the ordinary course of business), inventory, and real property owned by the GMF Companies known [as] (the White Buildings and the empty lot) (excluding the four lots the ‘Blue Building’ resides upon and the ‘Blue Building’) of General Metal Fabrication, Inc. and GMF Leasing, Inc.” The parties аgreed “to execute all documents necessary to effectuate [their] agreement including all financing statements and deed(s) of trust” and to file a joint notice of non-suit with prejudice within ten days of the trial court’s acceptance of the jury’s verdict.
The jury returned a verdict for Stergiou. Although drafts of the additional documents contemplated by the Rule 11 agreement (i.e., the promissory note, the deeds of trust, the security agreements, and the financing statements) were circulated between them, the GMF Companies and Stergiou did not agree on the specific terms to be included in those documents. The agreed deadline for dismissing the case pursuant to the settlement was twice extended to allow the parties additional time to agree on the additional documents, but the additional documents were never consummated. The GMF Companies eventually tendered to Stergiou an executed motion to dismiss the lawsuit, one cashier’s check in the amount of $20,000 for the down payment required by their settlement, and a second cashier’s check for the remaining $280,000 owed. Stergiou rejected the tender and moved for entry of judgment on the jury’s verdict.
After the trial court entered judgment on the verdict, the parties continued to dispute the terms and effect of the Rule 11 agreement. They sought to resolve their dispute by competing summary judgment motions. The first set of summary judgment motions concerned the enforceability of the Rule 11 agreement. The GMF Companies contended the Rule 11 agreement was an enforceable contract; Ster-giou contended it was not. The second set of summary judgment motions addressed the issue of prepayment. The GMF Companies asked the trial court to find that Curry could pay the entire amount owed under the Rule 11 agreement at once; Stergiou asked the trial court to require Curry to make monthly installment payments. After the trial court determined that the Rule 11 agreement was enforceable but did not permit prepayment of the full amount owed, the parties agreed to this interlocutory appeal to resolve the controlling questions of law.
Both the trial court’s order permitting this interlocutory appeal and the parties’ joint notice of appeal raise two issues: (1) whether the Rule 11 agreement is an enforceable agreement and (2) whether Curry has the right to prepay his debt under the Rule 11 agreement.
Our review of a summary judgment is de novo. See Tex. Mun. Power Agency v. Pub. Util. Comm’n of Tex.,
Enforceability of the Rule 11 Agreement
In his sole issue on appeal, Stergiou challenges the trial court’s determination that the Rule 11 agreement was enforceable. He asserts three reasons why the trial court erred: (1) he and the GMF Companies never achieved anything more than an “agreement to agree,” (2) the trial court could not order compliance with the agreement because its terms are too indefinite, and (3) the agreement does not satisfy the statute of frauds.
1. The Rule 11 agreement is not a mere agreement to agree
The Rule 11 agreement required the parties to execute additional documents: a promissory note, deed of trust, security agreement, and any necessary financing statements. Stergiou argues in his first sub-issue that, because the Rule 11 agreement does not supply any information as to the specific terms of those documents (e.g., information with respect to any right or obligation to inspect, insure, maintain, or repair the collateral, the notice and cure periods in the event of default, and any right of or prohibition against prepayment), it fails for lack of essential terms and is nothing more than an unenforceable “agreement to agree” as a matter of law. In the alternative, Ster-giou asserts that there is a fact issue as to whether the execution of the additional documents was a condition precedent to the formation of a binding Rule 11 agreement.
The GMF Companies respond that the Rule 11 agreement is enforceable because, at its core, the agreement is a settlement containing all terms necessary to resolve the gravamen of the parties’ dispute, and the parties unequivocally indicated their intent to be bound by it when they affirmatively testified that they agreed to its terms and asked the trial court to approve it, twice extended the deadline for dismissing the case, and attempted to negotiate the terms of the additional documents. According to the GMF Companies, that the Rule 11 agreement contemplates the execution of additional, more formal docu
a. The parties agreed as to all essential terms
Contract law governs settlement agreements mаde in open court pursuant to Rule 11. See Padilla v. LaFrance,
A binding settlement may exist when parties agree upon some terms, understanding them to be an agreement, and leave other terms to be made later. Oak-rock Exploration Co. v. Killam,
Like most settlement agreements, the Rule 11 agreement here included essential terms for the payment of money in exchange for the performance of some act: Stergiou would return his shares of the GMF Companies’ stock, the GMF Companies would pay $300,000, and together the parties would dismiss the lawsuit with prejudice. See Padilla,
In Martin, two brothers had a dispute over the management of their closely-held corporation.
In DKH Homes, LP v. Kilgo, No. 03-10-00656-CV,
This case is more analogous to Montanaro v. Montanaro,
The court of appeals in Sadeghi reversed a summary judgment that a settlement agreement announced on the record was unenforceable.
The agreement announced on the record to the court was presented as a complete agreement and final resolution of the litigation. There was no indication of any negotiation to occur in the future. There was no mention of any terms, material or otherwise, upon which agreement had yet to be reached. Although the parties contemplated a formal writing, this was not characterized as a condition requisite to the formation of the contract. The material terms of the agreement were сarefully detailed
Id. at 776-77. Likewise here, we conclude that the particular terms of the additional documents were not essential and therefore did not destroy the Rule 11 agreement’s effectiveness, and we hold that the Rule 11 agreement is not an unenforceable “agreement to agree.”
b. The execution of the additional documents is not a condition precedent to the formation of a binding settlement agreement
Stergiou further asserts that there is a fact issue as to whether the execution of the additional documents was a condition precedent to the formation of a binding Rule 11 agreement. As we have already noted, a binding settlement may be shown even if the parties contemplate that a more formal document memorializing their agreement will be executed at a later date. See Fort Worth Indep. Sch. Dist., 22 S.W.Sd at 846; Foreca, S.A. v. GRD Dev. Co.,
Contrary to his statement to the trial court that the parties had reached an “agreement,” Stergiou now contends that a fact issue exists on whether he intended to agree or merely agreed to agree. While intent is normally an issue of fact, “in some cases, a court may determine the intentions of the parties as a matter of law.” MCRB I, Ltd. v. Sw. Rail Indus., Inc., No. 141000922CV,
The parties did not indicate an intent not to be bound before the trial court or in the Rule 11 agreement itself. The transcript of the trial court proceedings clearly reflects that the parties were entering into a settlement agreement. At no time did eithеr party state on the record that the Rule 11 agreement was merely a preliminary agreement. That is, neither party nor their counsel informed the trial court of any terms, material or otherwise, upon which agreement had yet to be reached. Although the Rule 11 agreement read into the record contemplated execution of additional documents, this was not characterized as a condition requisite to the formation of a binding settlement agreement; indeed, the Rule 11 agreement does not include any language indicating that the parties had engaged only in preliminary negotiations or that their agreement was contingent on agreement as to the terms of the additional documents. Cf. Foreca,
Moreover, the summary judgment record is not limited to the absence of evidence of an intention not to be bound — the parties affirmatively represented to the trial court that they were bound by the Rule 11 agreement and requested that the trial court approve its terms. Cf. Ronin,
The timing and circumstances of this particular settlement agreement also evidence an intention to be bound immediately. The specific terms of the settlement were contingent on the jury’s verdict. If the Rule 11 agreement was only preliminary and not intended to be final until the details of the additional documents were agreed upon, the party that prevailed before the jury might prefer the “win” over the compromised settlement, have little incentive to agree to the details of the additional documents, and choose to escape the settlement simply by refusing to execute the additional documents. Thus, in effect, Stergiou’s interpretation reads a “get out of jail free” card into the Rule 11 agreement. If we were to hold as Stergiou suggests, trial courts would have difficulty approving settlements entered on the eve of trial or, as here, during the jury’s deliberations because the parties generally will require additional time to prepare the formal documents memorializing their agreement. On the other hand, it is relatively easy to make it clear to the trial court that the agreement is contingent on further agreement on other documentation. Yet there is no evidence that Stergiou viewed the agreement as to the terms of the security agreement — other than the identification of the collateral, which was set out in the agreement — as a condition precedent to the formation of a binding settlement.
We thus conclude that agreement upon the terms of the additional docu
2. The Rule 11 agreement does not fail for indefiniteness
Stergiou next argues that absent the parties’ agreement on the terms of the additional documents, the Rule 11 agreement cannot be enforced as written because its terms are not sufficiently definite. He complains that it is impossible to enforce the Rule 11 agreement because the parties cannot agree on the additional documents’ terms and a reviewing court cannot supply terms not agreed upon by forcing еither Stergiou or the GMF Companies to accept the other’s version of the additional documents. This challenge to the definiteness of the Rule 11 agreement is closely related to the issue just decided— namely, the issue of whether the terms of the additional documents are essential and whether the failure to execute those documents renders the Rule 11 agreement unenforceable.
“[A] contract is legally binding only if its terms are sufficiently definite to enable a court to understand the parties’ obligations.” Fort Worth Indep. Sch. Dist.,
Moreover, the fact that the parties have left certain terms open for negotiation in an agreement that they intend to be binding does not make the agreement indefinite; “courts endeavor, if possible, to attach a sufficiently definite meaning to” an agreement intended to be binding, “even though one or more terms are missing or are left to be agreed upon.... Where the parties have intended to conclude a bargain, uncertainty as to incidental or collateral matters is seldom fatal to the existence of the contract.” Restatement (SeCOnd) of CONTRACTS § 33 cmt. a; see Kelly,
In support of his contention that the Rule 11 agreement fails for indefiniteness, Stergiou argues this case is analogous to Nash v. Conatser,
Here, the Rule 11 agreement set out the amounts to be paid for the return of the GMF Companies’ stock and the dismissal of the lawsuit, how those amounts were to be paid and when, and the interest rate. These terms provide a basis for determining the existence of a breach and for giving an appropriate remedy, meaning they are sufficiently definite to enable a court to ascertain the parties’ respective legal obligations. We thereforе hold that the terms of the Rule 11 agreement are not so indefinite so as to preclude its enforcement, and we overrule Stergiou’s second sub-issue.
3. The statute of frauds does not bar enforcement of the Rule 11 agreement
Part of the dispute on appeal concerns the description of the security for Curry’s promise to pay Stergiou $300,000 for the return of his stock. The Rule 11 agreement provides that the promissory note “will be secured by a first lien Deed of Trust and Security Agreement covering all furniture, fixtures, equipment, receivables (from the ordinary course of business), inventory, and real property owned by the GMF Companies known [as] (the White Buildings and the empty lot) (excluding the four lots the ‘Blue Building’ resides upon and the ‘Blue Building) of General Metal Fabrication, Inc. and GMF Leasing, Inc.”
Stergiou argues that we should reverse the trial court’s summary judgment and render judgment that the Rule 11 agreement is not enforceable because it does not sufficiently describe the real property offered as security. This argument rests on the premise that the Rule 11 agreement is
The statute of frauds does not require that a complete description of the land to be conveyed appear in a single document. See Padilla,
The GMF Companies’ summary judgment evidence included Curry’s affidavit testimony that they owned three tracts of land, which were commonly referred to as the “Blue Building,” the “White Buildings,” and the “empty lot.” Stergiou’s attorney drafted the Rule 11 agreement using those same terms. Although the Rule 11 agreement describes the property to be secured by the deed of trust only as the “White Buildings” and “empty lot,” but not “the four lots the ‘Blue Building resides upon and the ‘Blue Building,’ ” the various deeds of trust and the security agreements circulated as drafts between the parties contain sufficient legal descriptions of those properties. The “White Buildings” are described as:
Lots Five (5), Six (6), Fifteen (15) and Sixteen (16), in Block Fifty-Four (54), of KING’S COURT, an addition in Harris County, Texas, according to the map of the plat thereof recorded in Volume 7, Page 65 of the Map Records of Harris County, Texas.
The “empty lot” is described as:
Lots 7, 8, 9 and 10, in Block 54 of KING’S COURT, an addition in Harris County, Texas, according to the map or plat thereof recorded in Volume 7, Page 65 of the Map of Records of Harris County, Texas.
These same legal descriptions appear in the drafts prepared by Stergiou and in the drafts prepared by the GMF Companies. Thus, there was no dispute between the parties regarding the identification of the real estate.
For this reason, we hold that the statute of frauds does not bar enforcement of the Rule 11 agreement, and we overrule Ster-giou’s third sub-issue.
Interpretation of the Rule 11 Agreement
Having determined that the Rule 11 agreement is enforceable, we now considеr whether, as argued by the GMF Companies in their appeal, the agreement authorized Curry to pay the entire amount owed under the agreement at one time. In four issues, the GMF Companies contend (1) the Rule 11 agreement included a right of
1. The Rule 11 agreement does not confer a right to prepay future monthly installments
The Rule 11 agreement provided that the GMF Companies would pay Ster-giou $300,000, in the form of a promissory note and on the following terms:
• Interest shall accrue on the Note commencing on the date there of 6.5% per annum
• $20,000 of principal will be paid on or before May 3, 2006;
• Commencing on June 1, 2006, and continuing monthly on the same day of each month thereafter and installment of $4,000.00 of principal and interest shall be due and payable until the Note has been paid in full. Each installment shall be applied first to the accrued interest and the balance, if any, shall be applied to the reduction of the principal balance.
There is no dispute that, pursuant to these provisions, the GMF Companies tendered the full $300,000 owed to Stergiou before the down-payment deadline.
In their first issue, the GMF Companies argue that the trial court erred in determining that they had no right to prepay the full $300,000 because the agreement included language requiring payment of $20,000 of principal “on or before” May 3, 2006. They assert that “when an instrument permits a payment ‘on or before’ a certain date, the maker — while required to make the minimum payment due by that date — also has the right to prepay any other amount, so long as he does so by the due date. And, the right to prepay is not simply a right to pay early, but a right to avoid paying unearned interest.” Stergiou responds that the “on or before” language applied only to the $20,000 down payment and did not confer any general right to prepay the future payments owed. According to Stergiou, the interpretation urged by the GMF Companies would vitiate his right to receive interest and a long-term payout under the settlement.
When a contract is not ambiguous, we construe it according to the plain meaning of its express wording and enforce it as written. Chapman v. Abbot,
“Our primary concern when interpreting a contract is to ascertain and give effect to the intent of the parties as it is expressed in the contract.” Seagull Energy E & P, Inc. v. Eland Energy, Inc.,
As is often true in cases involving contract disputes, neither side asserts that the Rule 11 agreement’s payment provisions are ambiguous. But the existence of ambiguity is a legal question for the court. Heritage Res., Inc. v. Nations-Bank,
The words “on or before” have a particular meaning in Texas case law. More than one hundred years ago the Texas Supreme Court wrote: “The words ‘on or before’ are of such common use in promissory notes as to be well understood to mean, ‘immediately at or at any time in advance of,’ ‘a period named.’ ” Lovenberg v. Henry,
To apply these authorities here, we would have to presume that, by including the “on or before” language in the down payment provision, the parties intended it to apply to all of the payment provisions even though that language is not included in the provision for the future payments that are at issue. The structure of the rule 11 agreement counsels against making such a presumption. The down-payment provision and the future-payment provision are separately stated in separate bullet-pointed paragraphs using complete punctuation. The agreement uses different language to establish the time at which the down payment and monthly installments were due and payable. Moreover, under settled Texas law, “unless the loan agreement provides otherwise, a borrower does not have the right to prepay the loan.” Groseclose v. Rum,
The language “on or before” in the Rule 11 agreement applies only to the down payment. The monthly payments, on the other hand, are governed by the language, “Commencing on June 1, 2006, and continuing monthly on the same day of each month thereafter an[ ] installment ... shall be due and payable.” (emphasis added). When the contract specifies that an amount is payable on a certain date, but not on or before that date, the amount is not payable at any other time. Ware,
The GMF Companies argue that giving too much weight to the structure of the rule 11 agreement ignores their undisputed intent to provide a mechanism by which they could avoid paying Stergiou interest on the balance owed. Curry explained in his affidavit that “[he] did not believe [he] would have access to $300,000, which would be required in the event the jury’s verdict went against GMF. [He] therefore sought to include a provision in the [rule 11 agreement] that would allow GMF to pay the $300,000 settlement amount if the jury’s verdict required GMF to pay that amount.” But this is evidence that Curry was concerned the GMF Companies could pay the $300,000 owed at all, not that his concern was for the avoidance of interest.
We also reject the GMF Companies’ contention that the Rule 11 agreement required a down payment of “at least” $20,000. GMF Companies rely on Black’s Law Dictionary to support their contention that a “down-payment” usually refers to the minimum amount due. See Black’s Law Dictionary 1244 (9th ed.) (2009). Such usage stems from the creditor’s limitation on the amount of credit available to a borrower and does not affect our interpretation of the unambiguous requirement here for “$20,000 of principal.” Nor do we find it persuasive that the agreement does not state the amount of principal due at the start of the monthly payment period or specify an amоrtization schedule or number of monthly payments. GMF Companies do not identify any authority for the principle that the absence of such elements indicates the existence of a prepayment right. To read the agreement as calling for an initial payment of “at least $20,000 of principal” would imply the words “at least” before each payment amount in any
Finally, we reject the contention that the term “until paid” implies that the parties contemplated prepayment of any amounts. As used in the Rule 11 agreement, the term “until paid” simply establishes that monthly payments would continue until the debt was satisfied, without a balloon payment or any breaks in the series of payments. The cases upon which GMF Companies rely are not controlling and are distinguishable. For example, in Miller v. Potier,
Likewise, in In re Hunter,
GMF Companies also rely on Coco v. Soniat,
GMF Companies also rely on a line of cases from other states construing the language “if not sooner paid” as conferring a right of prepayment. See Latimer v. Grundy Cnty. Nat’l Bank,
A plain, literal reading of the words used in the rule 11 agreement compels a conclusion that the agreement did not confer any right of prepayment with respect to the GMF Companies’ future payment obligations. Consequently, the trial court did not err in granting summary judgment against the GMF Companies on this issue, and we overrule their first issue.
2. The GMF Companies’ arguments regarding substantial performance, waiver, and mitigation are outside the scope of this interlocutory appeal
In their remaining issues, the GMF Companies argue that they substantially performed under the Rule 11 agreement, that Stergiou waived his right to collect interest on the settlement amount by refusing the GMF Companies’ tender of full payment under the Rule 11 agreement, and that Stergiou failed to mitigate his damages. The trial court, however, authorized this interlocutory appeal only from the “two orders ... on the parties’ cross motions for summary judgment on the issues of whether (1) their Rule 11 settlement agreement is enforceable, granted in favor of [the GMF Companiеs], and (2) [the GMF Companies] had the right to prepay the amount due under the Rule 11 settlement agreement, granted in favor of [Stergiou].” See Act of May 27, 2005, 79th Leg., R.S., ch. 1051, § 1, 2005 Tex. Gen. Laws 3512, 3513, amended by Act of May 25, 2011, 82nd Leg., R.S., ch. 203, § 3.01, 2011 Tex. Gen. Laws 759, 761 (current version at Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code Ann. § 51.014(d) (West Supp.2013)).
Given that the trial court’s orders and the parties’ joint notice of appeal frame the issues to be decided in the same narrow manner, we conclude that the GMF Companies’ arguments regarding their substantial performance of the Rule 11 agreement, Stergiou’s waiver of the right to receive interest, and Stergiou’s alleged failure to mitigate damages are outside the scope of this appeal. We therefore overrule the GMF Companies’ second, third, and fourth issues.
Conclusion
Having concluded that the trial court did not err in determining that the Rule 11
Justice SHARP, dissenting with opinion.
Notes
. The GMF Companies have moved for en banc reconsideration of our September 17, 2013 opinion. The panel grants rehearing, withdraws its September 17, 2013, opinion and judgment, and issues this opinion and judgment in their place. We dismiss the motion for en banc reconsideration as moot.
. See Act of May 27, 2005, 79th Leg., R.S., ch. 1051, § 1, 2005 Tex. Gen. Laws 3512, 3513 (amended 2011, 2013) (current version at Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem.Code § 51.014(d) (West Supp.2011)).
. Although Stergiou frames his appeal as raising a single issue challenging the trial court’s enforceability ruling, we consider each of the reasons he asserts for error as a separate sub-issue in the order set out above.
. Some courts refer to material and essential terms interchangeably. See, e.g., Potcinske v. McDonald Prop. Invs., Ltd.,
. This Court derived its definition of “essential terms” from the following statement by the United States Court of Aрpeals for the Fifth Circuit in Neeley v. Bankers Trust Co. of Tex.,
[W]hether a promise or other term forms an essential part of an agreement depends primarily upon the intent of the parties. Thus, an "essential” promise denotes one that the parties reasonably regarded, at the time of contracting, as a vitally important ingredient in their bargain. Failure to fulfill such a promise, in other words, would*745 seriously frustrate the expectations of one or more of the parties as to what would constitute sufficient performance of the contract as a whole.
Id. at 628; see also Goetting,353 S.W.3d at 300 (stating that term is essential "if, when contracting, the parties would reasonably regard it as a vitally important element of the bargain”); Domingo v. Mitchell,257 S.W.3d 34 , 40-41 (Tex.App.-Amarillo 2008, pet. denied).
. Courts have noted, however, occasions in which an agreement may be upheld by supplying missing terms, such as implying a reasonable price. See Bendalin v. Delgado,
. We do not agree that all of the "standard” terms noted by Stergiou’s real estate expert were missing from the Rule 11 agreement. For instance, Stergiou complаins that the Rule 11 agreement does not identify the specific personal and real property that is collateral, but the agreement does. It specifically identified the security as being "all furniture, fixtures, equipment, receivables (from the ordinary course of business), inventory, and real property owned by the GMF Companies known [as] (the White Buildings and the empty lot) (excluding the four lots the 'Blue Building' resides upon and the ‘Blue Building').”
. Like the Montanaro and Sadeghi courts did and like we do here, other courts have enforced settlement agreements that contemplate additional documentation or leave open certain terms for future negotiation. See, e.g., Herring v. Heron Lakes Estates Owners Ass’n, Inc., No. 140900772CV,
. In this troublesome area, the Texas Supreme Court has quoted with approval from Corbin on Contracts — specifically, Section 29, Partial Agreements — "Contracts to Make a Contract.” Scott v. Ingle Bros. Pac., Inc.,
People do business in a very informal fashion .... A transaction is complete when the parties meant it to be complete. It is a mere matter of interpretation of their expressions to each other, a question of fact.
[[Image here]]
Even though certain matters are expressly left to be agreed upon in the future, they may not be regarded by the parties as essential to their present agreement. * * * Two persons may fully agree upon the terms of a contract, knowing that there are other matters on which they have not agreed and on which they expect further negotiation. Such an expectation does not prevent the agreement already made from being an enforceable contract. This may be true even though they expressly provide in their agreement that the new matters, when agreed upon, shall be incorporated into ... [anjother formal document along with the contract already made.
Id. (quoting 1 Corbin on Contracts 87-91, 93-95 (1963)); see also Frank B. Hall & Co., Inc. v. Buck,
. Quite the opposite, the existence of the standard fоrm security agreements referenced by Stergiou’s expert supports a conclusion that the parties intended to be bound immediately. See Restatement (Second) of Contracts § 27(1981).
. We note a distinction in Texas law between conditions precedent to the formation of a contract and conditions precedent to an obligation to perform an existing agreement. See Hohenberg Bros. Co. v. George E. Gibbons & Co.,
. The former version of sеction 51.014(d) applies to cases filed in the trial court before September 1, 2011. Act of May 25, 2011, 82nd Leg., R.S., ch. 203, § 6.01, 2011 Tex. Gen. Laws 759, 761.
Dissenting Opinion
DISSENTING OPINION ON REHEARING
Although I agree with the Court that the parties’ Rule 11 agreement is enforceable, I disagree with the Court’s interpretation of the agreement’s payment provisions in its May 29, 2014 opinion. I would hold — as the Court did in its last opinion— that the Rule 11 agreement includes a right of prepayment and therefore authorized Curry to pay the entire amount owed on or before the down-payment deadline. In its third opinion issued on September 17, 2013, the Court correctly held that:
the contractual terms surrounding prepayment are unambiguous. The [R]ule 11 agreement is worded in such a way that it can be given a certain or definite legal meaning or interpretation. We therefore construe the contractual terms as a matter of law and hold that the GMF Companies had the option to prepay the amount on or before the May 3 down-payment deadline.
Because the Court has changed course and now holds otherwise, I do not join that part of the Court’s opinion and I respectfully dissent from the Court’s judgment.
The GMF Companies correctly assert that the words “on or before” have a particular, commonly accepted meaning: they permit the obligor to pay аny amount of principle not due “ ‘immediately at or at any time in advance of,’ ‘a period named.’ “ Lovenberg v. Henry,
I would not place such great weight on the “structure” of the Rule 11 agreement. The right of prepayment is not important because it allows for the payment of principal before it is due. The right of prepayment is important because it allows for the avoidance of unearned interest. By holding that the Rule 11 agreement only authorizes Curry to prepay $20,000 in principal as a down-payment, the Court renders the “on or before” language meaningless because no interest was earned on that amount. Instead, the Rule 11 agreement provides for the accrual of interest after the down-payment deadline. I agree with the GMF Companies that “the only way to give meaning to ‘on or before’ in the ‘down-payment’ paragraph — and to harmonize that term-of-art with the more restrictive ‘on’ in the next paragraph — is to interpret the [Rule 11 agreement] as authorizing [the GMF Companies] to prepay so much of the settlement amount as [they] desired (including the full amount), so long as that occurred on or before” the down-payment deadline.
I also agree with the GMF Companies that the plain language of the Rule 11 agreement (i.e., monthly installments are only due “until the Note has been paid in full”) clearly contemplates the accrual of interest on the unpaid principal balance, but only as long as there is a balance. As the GMF Companies correctly point out, other courts have consistently construed
In light of the plain language of the Rule 11 agreement and given that there is no dispute that Curry tendered the full $300,000 owed under the agreement to Stergiou, I would reverse the trial court’s summary judgment that the Rule 11 agreement did not convey any right of prepayment and render judgment for the GMF Companies on this issue.
Justice SHARP, dissenting.
