No Change (Yet?) For Texas LLCs and Statutory Liability for Attorney’s
Fees
Texas has a curious statute
which provides that in any breach of contract action against a person or a
corporation, the prevailing party may recover their attorney’s fees. This rule
is set forth in Section 38.001 of the Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code.
Specifically, with respect to claims arising in certain categories, “[a] person
may recover reasonable attorney’s fees from an individual or corporation, in
addition to the amount of a valid claim and cost.” In Hoffmen v L & M Arts, Civ. Act No. 3:10-CV-0953-D, 2015 WL
1000838 (N.D. Texas March 6, 2015), the court was called upon to assess who is
potentially liable under this provision.
While Section 38.001 allows
recovery to a “person”, which is itself a defined term (see Tex. Gov’t Code
Ann. § 311.005(2)), that term is not utilized as defining who was potentially
subject to liability. Rather, that is restricted to “an individual or
corporation.”, and neither of those terms is defined. As this suit involved a
claim against an LLC, the court was faced with the conundrum that:
Thus while it is apparent from the
text of § 38.001 that the universe of those who may recover attorney’s fees is
broader than those from whom such fees may be recovered, the court must decide
whether an LLC falls within the scope of “an individual.” 2015 WL 1000838, *5.
The court easily disposed of
the suggestion that an LLC constitutes an “individual,” finding rather that the
term is restricted to natural persons. The court likewise dismissed the
suggestion that “corporation” encompasses LLCs, noting that they are organized
under different statutes and that corporation as a defined term under the Business
Association Act does not include LLCs.
There has been submitted to the Texas legislature a proposal
to expand § 38.001 to include claims against LLCs and other organizational
forms in addition to corporations. See 2015
HB 230. To date, however, that legislation has not passed.
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