Baylor College of Medicine v. Roy A. Camberg, Adminstrator of the Estate of Ana Julia Ortiz, and Texas Department of Family and Protective Services as Next Friend of Ana Delia Meija Ortiz, Enid Valentina Meija Ortiz, and Rigoberto Mejia Ortiz, Minors

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 29, 2008
Docket14-06-00500-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Baylor College of Medicine v. Roy A. Camberg, Adminstrator of the Estate of Ana Julia Ortiz, and Texas Department of Family and Protective Services as Next Friend of Ana Delia Meija Ortiz, Enid Valentina Meija Ortiz, and Rigoberto Mejia Ortiz, Minors (Baylor College of Medicine v. Roy A. Camberg, Adminstrator of the Estate of Ana Julia Ortiz, and Texas Department of Family and Protective Services as Next Friend of Ana Delia Meija Ortiz, Enid Valentina Meija Ortiz, and Rigoberto Mejia Ortiz, Minors) 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.

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Baylor College of Medicine v. Roy A. Camberg, Adminstrator of the Estate of Ana Julia Ortiz, and Texas Department of Family and Protective Services as Next Friend of Ana Delia Meija Ortiz, Enid Valentina Meija Ortiz, and Rigoberto Mejia Ortiz, Minors, (Tex. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

Affirmed and Opinion filed January 29, 2008

Affirmed and Opinion filed January 29, 2008.

In The

Fourteenth Court of Appeals

_______________

NO. 14-06-00500-CV

BAYLOR COLLEGE OF MEDICINE, Appellant

V.

ROY A. CAMBERG, ADMINISTRATOR OF THE ESTATE OF

ANA JULIA ORTIZ, DECEASED, and TEXAS DEPARTMENT

OF FAMILY & PROTECTIVE SERVICES as Next Friend of

ANA DELIA MEJIA ORTIZ, ENID VALENTINA MEJIA ORTIZ,

and RIGOBERTO MEJIA ORTIZ, Minors, Appellees

On Appeal from Probate Court No. 1

 Harris County, Texas

Trial Court Cause No. 332744-402

O P I N I O N


This appeal from the trial court=s entry of judgment in a wrongful death case comes to us in an usual procedural posture.  Appellant asks us to construe a Rule 11 settlement agreement entered into by the parties during jury deliberations.  Appellees, on the other hand, contend that after the parties disputed the terms of the Rule 11 agreement, the trial court disregarded the agreement and entered judgment on the jury=s verdict.  The record supports the conclusion that the trial court entered judgment on the jury=s verdict rather than the Rule 11 agreement.  We therefore affirm the trial court=s judgment without the necessity of construing the Rule 11 agreement.

I.  Factual and Procedural Background

Roy A. Camberg, Administrator of the Estate of Ana Julia Ortiz, Deceased, and Texas Department of Family & Protective Services as next friend of Ana Delia Mejia Ortiz, Enid Valentina Mejia Ortiz, and Rigoberto Mejia Ortiz, minors (collectively, Aappellees@) sued Baylor College of Medicine (ABaylor@) for the wrongful death of the minor children=s mother, Ana Julia Ortiz.  At trial, while  the jury was deliberating, Baylor and appellees entered into a Rule 11 Ahigh-low agreement.@[1]  The record reflects that this agreement was initially proposed by Baylor as follows:

[If there is a damage award, a]nd it=s less than $500,000, the Defendants agree to [pay] the named Plaintiffs $500,000.

If the damages awarded by the Jury are between $500,000 and $1.1 million, the Defendant will pay the verdict award by the jury.

If the verdict is in excess of $1.1 million, the Defendants will pay to the named Plaintiffs $1.1 million.

But appellees rejected this offer because they did not want the minimum amount conditioned on a finding of liability.  Baylor then modified the agreement, which was memorialized in the record as follows:

Court: Okay, high/low, low is $500,000, high is $1.1 million, period.

Baylor:           And if it=s in-between, we pay the in-between.

Appellees:      And the court costs are $15,000, not to exceed, and the ad litem fees are $10,000, not to exceed.

Court: Okay.


Baylor:           Now, can the Court make a docket entry on that?

Court: Well, is that your agreement?

Baylor:           Yes, sir.

Court:             Is that your agreement?

Appellees:      Yes, Your Honor.

Court: You have the agreement.

The jury returned its verdict on March 8, 2006.  As relevant to this appeal, the jury found $898,000 in damages.  On March 14, appellees filed a motion for entry of judgment that included a proposed judgment, which comported with the jury=s verdict but made no reference to the Rule 11 agreement.  The motion itself provided:

Plaintiffs hereby move the court to enter judgment in this matter, as set forth in the attached proposed judgment.  The judgment is supported by the jury=s verdict, and is for an amount within the parties= agreement to settle this case under the high-low agreement announced to the court on March 6, 2006.

In addition to $898,000 in damages, appellees= proposed judgment included prejudgment interest on the jury=s damage award.[2]  Appellees set this motion for hearing on March 23, 2006. 

The next day, Baylor responded by filing a motion to enforce the Rule 11 agreement and for entry of final judgment.  Baylor attached its own proposed judgment, which explicitly referenced the Rule 11 agreement and omitted any interest on the damages found by the jury.  This motion was also set for hearing on March 23.  At the  beginning of the hearing, the trial court noted, AI have had an opportunity to go through everything.  What I=m going to do is enter [appellees=] judgment, only I=m changing [the amount of certified court costs] . . . .@  The trial court signed the final judgment at the hearing, and  Baylor timely filed this appeal.


II.  Issue Presented

In a single issue, Baylor asserts that, by including prejudgment interest in its judgment, the trial court supplied terms or essential details not included in the parties= Rule 11 settlement agreement and thus violated its Aministerial duty@ to record only that which was agreed to by the parties.  Appellees respond that the trial court=s judgment was not based on the Rule 11 agreement, but instead was rendered on the jury=

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Baylor College of Medicine v. Roy A. Camberg, Adminstrator of the Estate of Ana Julia Ortiz, and Texas Department of Family and Protective Services as Next Friend of Ana Delia Meija Ortiz, Enid Valentina Meija Ortiz, and Rigoberto Mejia Ortiz, Minors, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baylor-college-of-medicine-v-roy-a-camberg-adminstrator-of-the-estate-of-texapp-2008.