Cornwell v. Scothorn addressed the interplay between the opposing sides’ fraud and promissory estoppel claim. It distinguished El Paso Healthcare System v. Piping Rock Corp., 939 S.W.2d 695 (Tex. App.—El Paso 1997, writ denied), as “address[ing] whether an unclean hands defense barred recovery on a promissory estoppel claim. Piping Rock does not stand for the proposition that Stewart’s fraud in this case negated the Scothorns’ promissory estoppel claims. Ro the extent the jury found Stewart committed fraud and damaged McKinney $9427.86 in out-of-pocket damages and $8000 in damages for loss of credit reputation, we cannot conclude this finding precluded the jury from also finding that the Scothorns were entitled to damages of $201,318.04 on their promissory estoppel claim against Cornwell and McKinney.” No. 05-18-00799-CV (Sept. 17, 2020) (mem. op.).

The Court of Appeals has granted mandamus to prevent three depositions sought by a homebuyer seeking to avoid an arbitration agreement. The trial court granted the builder’s motion to compel arbitration, but had not yet ruled whether the buyer’s claims against two individual employees of the builder were also arbitrable. While their motion was pending, the trial court granted a motion to compel the depositions of the employees and the company to explore whether they had engaged in any fraudulent or criminal conduct. The Court of Appeals held that order was an abuse of discretion. Under In re Kaplan Higher Education Corp., 235 S.W.3d 206 (Tex. 2007), agents who are nonsignatories to their principal’s arbitration agreement may still invoke equity to compel arbitration unless the claimant can demonstrate the agents had unclean hands in the formation of the arbitration provision. In this instance, the buyer alleged only that the individuals had unclean hands in the performance of the contract, not the formation of the arbitration clause. Accordingly, the issue of their unclean hands was an issue for the merits of the case that had to be determined in arbitration, making discovery of those facts inappropriate for a judicial proceeding. The Court therefore directed the trial court to stay the case so that all of the parties could proceed to arbitration. The Court also wrote separately to summarily deny the buyer’s mandamus petition challenging the arbitration order for her claims against the company.

In re Susan Newell Custom Home Builders, Inc., No. 05-13-01474-CV

Way back in 1989, a latex products manufacturer named Ansell Healthcare Products registered a federal trademark for the phrase “Condom Sense,” which it used in advertising its Lifestyle condoms. A few years later, Ansell sought federal registration of Condom Sense as a service mark for a proposed chain of retail stores. But Ansell’s own retail stores never materialized, and it ended up licensing the mark to Condom Sense, Inc. (“CSI”), which had already opened up its own Condom Sense store in Dallas.

In 1997, CSI sold its original store on Greenville Avenue, including the right to use the Condom Sense name. That sale led to a series of competing claims over use of the name at multiple locations, including some inconclusive preliminary litigation. In 2005, Ansell — which had never used the mark itself, and which had been unaware of all the drama over its use in Texas — assigned CSI all of its interest in the federal service mark.  CSI then registered the mark in Texas, along with three related service marks that also used the Condom Sense name. CSI ended up suing the operators of the other Condom Sense stores, alleging trademark infringement under the federal Lanham Act, the Texas Trademark Act, and Texas common law. After a bench trial, the trial court ruled in favor of the competitors and cancelled registrations of both the federal and state service marks.  CSI and its owners appealed.

According to the court of appeals, CSI’s competitors were not entitled to cancellation of the state service mark even though the trial court found that CSI registered the mark fraudulently, i.e., while knowing that competitors were also using the Condom Sense mark.  Under section 16.28 of the Business & Commerce Code, the party asking the court to cancel the registration must be someone who was “injured” by the false or fraudulent procurement of the service mark registration, but the other Condom Sense owners had failed to submit any evidence that they were injured by it.  But the court of appeals sustained the trial court’s cancellation of the federal service mark, giving credit to testimony that Ansell’s licensing agreement with CSI had not been renewed past its original expiration date in 1999, and that the mark had therefore lapsed because Ansell had abandoned it. Finally, the court of appeals affirmed the trial court’s ruling in favor of the competitors’ laches and unclean hands defenses, holding that the evidence supported the lower court’s rulings that five years had been too long for CSI to sit on its rights before bringing suit, and that it had acted improperly in selling any rights to the Condom Sense name (in the 1997 sale of the original store) at a time when it was merely a licensee of Ansell’s mark.

Condom Sense, Inc. v. Alshalabi, No. 05-10-01024-CV