Irreparable Injury and Asset Freezes – part 2 of 2

April 15, 2019

The flip side to the “controlling rule [that] forecloses resort to injunctive relief simply to sequester a source of funds to satisfy a future judgment” is that an “asset freeze” temporary injunction can issue on a proper showing. Here: “Comerica Bank presented evidence that in October 2017, after RWI Construction and RWI
Acquisition defaulted on their loan, RWI Construction collected $800,000 in settlement of a receivable owed by Oxy. Those funds were collateral for the loan at issue in this case. Rather than pay those funds over to Comerica Bank as required upon their receipt, RWI Construction transferred them to Lone Star. Accordingly, the evidence presented by Comerica Bank traced collateral for the loan to Lone Star, and those funds are both logically and justifiably connected to Comerica Bank’s breach of contract claim and the relief it seeks in this case.”

In the same vein, the Court noted that while a showing of insolvency can establish irreparable injury in such a context, it is not always necessary: “To a district court exercising discretion over an injunction decision, unwillingness to pay is just as significant, and perhaps more so, as an inability to pay.” RWI Construction Co v. Comerica Bank, No. 05-18-00265-CV (April 12, 2019).