First World Problems

July 31, 2014

The company operating the Golf Club at Castle Hills agreed to grant lifetime memberships to a number of golfers, who filed suit in order to vindicate those contracts after the course was foreclosed on and sold to defendant CAPX Realty. Although the plaintiffs continued to golf for free for the next four years, that was not enough to raise a genuine issue of material fact on the golfers’ theory that CAPX had ratified their contracts. Ratification is a theory by which a principal can affirm a contract entered into by an agent.  But CAPX was not a party to the contract, and nobody was acting as CAPX’s agent in entering into the contract. Therefore, CAPX could not ratify the lifetime memberships, and summary judgment was appropriately granted.

Averett v. CAPX Realty LLC, No. 05-13-00885-CV