Brian E. Vodicka v. Michael B. Tobolowsky, of the Estate of Ira E. Tobolowsky

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 6, 2019
Docket05-17-00727-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Brian E. Vodicka v. Michael B. Tobolowsky, of the Estate of Ira E. Tobolowsky (Brian E. Vodicka v. Michael B. Tobolowsky, of the Estate of Ira E. Tobolowsky) 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.

Bluebook
Brian E. Vodicka v. Michael B. Tobolowsky, of the Estate of Ira E. Tobolowsky, (Tex. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

Affirmed as Modified; Opinion Filed May 6, 2019.

In The Court of Appeals Fifth District of Texas at Dallas No. 05-17-00727-CV

BRIAN E. VODICKA, Appellant V. MICHAEL B. TOBOLOWSKY, EXECUTOR OF THE ESTATE OF IRA E. TOBOLOWSKY, Appellee

On Appeal from the 14th Judicial District Court Dallas County, Texas Trial Court Cause No. DC-15-08135

MEMORANDUM OPINION Before Justices Myers, Whitehill, and Carlyle Opinion by Justice Carlyle

Brian E. Vodicka appeals the trial court’s $5,500,000.00 damage award against him in this

defamation case. In six issues, Vodicka contends the evidence is legally insufficient to support the

judgment and the trial court erred by dismissing his counterclaims, failing to hear his Texas

Citizens Participation Act dismissal motion within the required time period, denying his recusal

request, and awarding excessive exemplary damages. We modify the judgment to reduce the

amount of exemplary damages from $5,000,000.00 to $500,000.00 and otherwise affirm. I. Background

Ira E. Tobolowsky1 filed this suit in July 2015 against Vodicka and Steven B. Aubrey

(“Defendants”). The live petition alleged (1) beginning in 2013, Aubrey’s mother, Betsy Aubrey,

retained Tobolowsky as her attorney in lawsuits Defendants filed against her regarding inherited

assets she controlled, and (2) due to “lack of success” in those lawsuits, Defendants “intentionally,

maliciously, and willfully made and published to third parties” false, defamatory per se statements

about Tobolowsky that attacked his “reputation, honesty, integrity, and practice of law” in order

to “punish, harass, and embarrass” him so he would cease to represent Betsy Aubrey.

Defendants filed a joint general denial answer and asserted several counterclaims. Also,

Defendants filed (1) a November 24, 2015 motion to dismiss pursuant to section 27.003 of the

TCPA, contending this suit “is merely a response to Defendants’ right to free speech or right to

petition”; (2) October 2016 affidavits asserting indigency and inability to pay court costs; and

(3) an April 28, 2017 motion to recuse trial court judge Donald Cosby based on personal bias,

prejudice, and questionable impartiality.

Tobolowsky filed an April 15, 2016 motion to require Defendants to provide security for

costs pursuant to Texas Rule of Civil Procedure 143. The trial court granted that motion in an April

18, 2017 order that directed Defendants to provide such security within fifteen days or risk

dismissal of their counterclaims with prejudice. Also, the trial judge signed a May 1, 2017 order

declining to recuse himself and requesting that a judge be assigned to hear the recusal motion.

At the May 8, 2017 bench trial, Defendants did not appear or explain their absence.

Tobolowsky introduced thirty-one exhibits2 into evidence and presented witness testimony

1 Following Tobolowsky’s death in May 2016, Michael B. Tobolowsky, executor of the estate of Ira E. Tobolowsky, succeeded him as plaintiff. We refer to appellee as “Tobolowsky.” 2 Tobolowsky’s exhibits included (1) a February 9, 2015 email from Vodicka to Tobolowsky, Betsy Aubrey, and another of Betsy’s sons who was also a Tobolowsky client, Richard Buck Aubrey, describing Tobolowsky’s purported “violation of Texas Penal Code 36.04” and stating “[i]mproperly influencing Judge Johnson is a criminal act and this very serious crime will be vigorously pursued”; (2) a March 20, 2015 email from

–2– regarding how those exhibits demonstrated defamation.3 The trial court’s May 11, 2017 final

judgment (1) dismissed Defendants’ counterclaims with prejudice based on their failure to provide

security for costs and (2) stated Tobolowsky “shall recover from Defendants, jointly and severally,

actual damages for injury to Ira Tobolowsky’s reputation and his mental anguish as found by the

Court in the amount of $500,000.00, and . . . exemplary damages from Defendants, jointly and

severally, as found by the Court, in the amount of $5,000,000.00,” plus additional costs and fees.

Several weeks later, an assigned judge heard and denied Defendants’ motion to recuse

Judge Cosby. Vodicka then filed a “Motion to Vacate Final Judgment,” contending the

$5,000,000.00 exemplary damage award was “outrageous” and “without basis.”

II. Sufficiency of the evidence

Where, as here, the trial is to the bench and the trial court does not make findings of fact

and conclusions of law, we imply all facts necessary to support the judgment that are supported by

the evidence. See BMC Software Belgium, N.V. v. Marchand, 83 S.W.3d 789, 795 (Tex. 2002). If

Vodicka to Tobolowsky and Justice Mary Murphy, Presiding Judge of the First Administrative Judicial Region of Texas, describing Tobolowsky’s purported “violations of Texas Penal Code Sec. 36.04 Improper Influence and upon information and belief, Texas Penal Code Sec. 36.02 Bribery” and stating “[w]e all understand the benefits to your firm through the creation of chaos”; (3) an April 21, 2015 email from Vodicka to Tobolowsky, his law partner, and Richard Buck Aubrey describing “the dozens of fraudulent misrepresentations [Tobolowsky] and his client have made together to the IRS, Wells Fargo Bank, and the courts” and stating Tobolowsky is over-charging Betsy and “may need to spend time making future plans for his business and his family if he is sent to prison for any variety of possible criminal convictions”; (4) an April 28, 2015 email from Vodicka to Tobolowsky, Betsy Aubrey, and Richard Buck Aubrey describing Tobolowsky’s purported “scheme directed at the Aubrey Family LLC” and stating “[y]our clients may be ignorant to the fact you are taking advantage of them but we are not”; and (5) several 2012 emails from Steven B. Aubrey to his mother and other family members in which he accused Betsy and Richard Buck Aubrey of stealing family assets and threatened to “unleash Jihad” on Betsy and “make the rest of your life miserable, as you deserve” if she did not make “dramatic changes” in his favor regarding managing those assets. 3 Ira Tobolowsky’s son Michael Tobolowsky testified (1) reputation “was everything” to Ira Tobolowsky; (2) Defendants’ intent was “to destroy [Tobolowsky’s] reputation so that he wouldn’t be able to have a practice anymore”; (3) Defendants published “blatant lies” about Tobolowsky in blogs, emails, and pleadings; (4) those statements harmed Tobolowsky’s reputation and caused him to lose clients and income; (5) Tobolowsky earned up to $2,000.00 for “a couple hours” of work; (6) a 2015 blog Defendants published describing Tobolowsky as a “Mortgage Fraudster” “resulted in at least a loss of $500,000 or more due to legal fees that [Tobolowsky] otherwise would have been able to earn”; (7) the stress caused by Defendants’ statements exacerbated Tobolowsky’s arthritic condition to the point where he needed assistance with basic tasks such as putting on his socks; (8) Michael saw his father “turn away cases because of having to deal with what I’ll call [Defendants’] nonsense”; and (9) although Defendants claim to be indigent, his own investigation into their finances shows they are lying. Additionally, Michael testified,

Q. And do you know from your investigation of all these materials whether Aubrey and Vodicka interacted when they prepared pleadings and/or correspondence? A. Interacted may be an understatement. Frequently one would draft it, the other would sign. Q. And—and would they show those documents to one another before they filed them? A. Sometimes. Q.

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Brian E. Vodicka v. Michael B. Tobolowsky, of the Estate of Ira E. Tobolowsky, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brian-e-vodicka-v-michael-b-tobolowsky-of-the-estate-of-ira-e-texapp-2019.