Ali Yazdchi v. Unauthorized Practice of Law Committee
This text of Ali Yazdchi v. Unauthorized Practice of Law Committee (Ali Yazdchi v. Unauthorized Practice of Law Committee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Opinion issued July 1, 2010
In The
Court of Appeals
For The
First District of Texas
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NO. 01-09-00065-CV
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Ali YaZDchi, Appellant
V.
Unauthorized Practice of Law Committee, Appellee
On Appeal from the 165th District Court
Harris County, Texas
Trial Court Case No. 2006-66712
MEMORANDUM OPINION
Appellant, Ali Yazdchi, appeals a summary judgment rendered in favor of appellee, the Unauthorized Practice of Law Committee of the Supreme Court of Texas (“Committee”). The summary judgment rendered in favor of the Committee permanently enjoins Yazdchi from engaging in the unauthorized practice of law. In four issues, Yazdchi contends the trial court erred because (1) affidavits supporting the Committee’s summary judgment motion contained “conclusory and hearsay statements,” (2) it did not allow him to testify at the temporary injunction hearing, (3) he denied all requests for admissions, and (4) he stated in an affidavit that he never practiced law without a license. We conclude we lack jurisdiction to address his second issue regarding the temporary injunction. We further conclude that Yazdchi waived error regarding his other issues.
We affirm.
Background
To protect the public, the Supreme Court of Texas appoints nine members to the Committee for the purposes of investigating and prosecuting persons who practice law without authorization.[1] The Committee pursued an administrative action against Yazdchi, giving him the opportunity to attend a hearing before the Committee’s Houston Subcommittee. Although the Subcommittee notified Yazdchi of an administrative hearing to address allegations of his unauthorized practice of law, Yazdchi failed to appear. Because Yazdchi failed to appear at the administrative hearing, it instituted a lawsuit against Yazdchi to enjoin him from engaging in the unauthorized practice of law.
The Committee brought suit against Yazdchi in 2006. It petitioned for a declaratory judgment against Yazdchi, and requested the court to temporarily and permanently enjoin him from the unauthorized practice of law. The trial court held a temporary injunction hearing in November 2007. At the hearing, the Committee produced evidence that Yazdchi did not have a license to practice law in Texas. Other evidence produced by the Committee shows that Yazdchi set up a business under his alias, Al Giovanni, called “Giovanni and Associates.” It further shows that under his Giovanni alias, Yazdchi attempted to represent multiple people in insurance claims. Yazdchi later sought payment from insurance companies under the auspice that he represented clients with claims against the insurance companies. One letter in evidence shows Yazdchi asked Farmers Insurance Group to send him over $29,000 on behalf of Mariana Gonzales, a “client” of his. Yazdchi’s attorney, Michael O’Conner, later sent a letter to Farmers Insurance Group instructing Farmers “not to pay Ms. Gonzales any insurance proceeds” because “Mr. Giovanni has expended services and monies in connection with [Gonzales’s] insurance claim.” An affidavit from Michele Quattlebaum states that Yazdchi admitted to her that he “was not a licensed Texas attorney but an ‘international attorney’ and has more ‘power’ than the State Bar of Texas.” She continued and stated that her insured, Marianna Gonzales, “thought he was an attorney as he provided h[er] a letter of ‘representation’ and a ‘Letter of Protection’ of the medical bills, after ‘attorney fees are taken out.’” She then stated, “[h]e admitted to [her] he does not have nor need a Texas license to represent clients in Texas because he is far better than a Texas attorney,” and that “[h]e threatened [her] if [she] raised an issue about it when [she] requested proof [that] he was an attorney.”
The trial court granted the temporary injunction based upon the evidence and testimony produced at the hearing and set a trial date for the permanent injunction. The Committee later moved for summary judgment and supported its motion with evidence and testimony from the temporary injunction hearing. In October 2008, based upon the evidence provided by the Committee, the trial court granted the Committee’s motion for summary judgment and permanently enjoined Yazdchi from the unauthorized practice of law. This appeal followed.
Temporary Injunction
In his second issue, Yazdchi contends the trial court erred because it denied him the opportunity to “defend or testif[y] in his defense.” To support his assertion, Yazdchi points to a portion of the record containing the temporary injunction hearing. The record states,
[Yazdchi]: Your Honor, I would like to testify. I would like to testify in this proceeding.
The Court: No, sorry. I granted [the Committee’s] relief without your testimony so there’s nothing for you to testify about.
[Yazdchi]: Okay.
Yazdchi’s complaint regards the temporary injunction. The trial court has already entered a permanent injunction against Yazdchi. A final judgment renders an appeal relating to a temporary injunction moot. See Lincoln Property Co. v. Kondos, 110 S.W.3d 712, 716 (Tex. App.—Dallas 2003, no pet.) (citing Richards v. Mena
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