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Lensabl v. RBH SBE One

Tex. Bus. Ct.November 5, 2025No. 25-BC08B-0013
DismissedRBH SBE One
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Case Details

Status — whether other courts must follow this ruling
Published
Procedural Posture — the stage the case had reached
summary judgment

Related Laws

No specific laws identified for this ruling.

Claim Types

Breach of Contract

Excerpt

Granting in part and denying in par Defendants' motion to dismiss under Rule 91a because the pleadings fail to state a legally cognizable claim for breach of contract or for veil piercing, and the fraud claim is adequately pleaded.. This opinion addresses Defendant's plea to the jurisdiction which challenged the Court's jurisdiction over Plaintiff's third-party claims filed against multiple subcontractors who performed work on a construction project. The Court denied Defendant's plea to the jurisdiction, concluding the third-party claims met the definition of an "action arising out of a qualified transaction" under Section 25A.004(d)(1). Further, the Court found the third-party claims were neither "conjectural, hypothetical or remote" and therefore ripe. Granting in part and denying in part Defendant's motion for partial summary judgment contending that Plaintiff's tortious interference with contract, defamation, and business disparagement claims are barred by the limitation-of-liability provision in the parties' 2022 agreement. Granting a third-party defendant's special appearance arguing no personal jurisdiction over him because he did not commit any tortious acts while in Texas. Because the respondents did not plead or prove that this defendant has sufficient Texas contacts giving rise to the claims against him to support personal jurisdiction over him for any pled cause of action, the court granted the non-resident's special appearances and dismissed the claims against him without prejudice. Pursuant to Texas Rule of Civil Procedure 166(g), the Court issues this decision holding that (1) fact issues preclude the Court from determining whether the liquidated-damages clause in the parties' contract is an unenforceable penalty and (2) under the circumstances of this case, the defendant's cost-basis theory is not the correct measure of the plaintiff's actual damages. In this force-majeure dispute arising out of Winter Storm Uri, parties to a contract for the sale of

What This Ruling Means

**Lensabl v. RBH SBE One: Contract Dispute Partially Dismissed** This case involved a business dispute between Lensabl and RBH SBE One over a construction project. Lensabl sued RBH SBE One and several subcontractors, claiming breach of contract, fraud, and trying to hold the company's owners personally responsible for the alleged wrongdoing (called "veil piercing"). The court partially granted and partially denied the defendants' request to dismiss the case. The judge ruled that Lensabl failed to properly state valid claims for breach of contract and veil piercing, so those parts of the lawsuit were thrown out. However, the fraud claim was allowed to proceed because it was adequately supported. The court also rejected the defendants' challenge to the court's authority to hear claims against the subcontractors involved in the construction work. **What this means for workers:** While this case involved businesses rather than individual employees, it shows how courts carefully examine whether contract claims are properly supported with specific facts. For workers considering contract-related lawsuits against employers, this demonstrates the importance of having detailed evidence and clearly stating how the contract was broken. Simply claiming a breach occurred isn't enough—you need to prove it with specifics.

This summary was generated to explain the ruling in plain English and is not legal advice.

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