Perot Jr. v. Cuban

August 22, 2014

In an opinion that never mentions the name “Ross Perot Jr.” (a.k.a. Hillwood Investment Properties III), the Court of Appeals has affirmed summary judgment in favor of Mark Cuban (a.k.a. Radical Mavericks Management LLC) in a case alleging that Cuban spent too darned much money on payroll for the Mavs. Or, more technically speaking, that the Mavs were spending more money than they were taking in, rendering the team insolvent and requiring the appointment of a receiver. Sports fans and legal observers may recall this case as the one in which Cuban filed a particularly amusing pleading shortly after the Mavs won the 2011 NBA title. In any event, the Court of Appeals affirmed the trial court’s ruling that Hillwood had no evidence of insolvency, holding that its expert had failed to consider “third-party contributions to the Mavericks” (a.k.a. Cuban’s personal footing of the bills). The Court also affirmed the trial court’s decision to seal certain business records under Rule 76a, holding that the lower court had not abused its discretion in determining that the financial and collective bargaining documents were sufficiently sensitive to justify their sealing.

Hillwood Investment Props. III, Ltd. v. Radical Mavericks Mgmt., LLC, No. 05-11-01470-CV