Cynthia Vanderweyst v. Adolph G. Boudreaux & Beverly B. Kaufman

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 2, 2003
Docket01-02-00928-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Cynthia Vanderweyst v. Adolph G. Boudreaux & Beverly B. Kaufman (Cynthia Vanderweyst v. Adolph G. Boudreaux & Beverly B. Kaufman) 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
Cynthia Vanderweyst v. Adolph G. Boudreaux & Beverly B. Kaufman, (Tex. Ct. App. 2003).

Opinion



Opinion issued October 2, 2003.






In The

Court of Appeals

For The

First District of Texas





NO. 01-02-00928-CV





CYNTHIA ANN VANDERWEYST, Appellant


V.


ADOLPH G. BOUDREAUX and BEVERLY B. KAUFMAN, Appellees





On Appeal from the 164th District Court

Harris County, Texas

Trial Court Cause No. 2002-02251





MEMORANDUM OPINION


          This is an interlocutory appeal arising from the trial court’s granting of Adolph G. Boudreaux and Beverly B. Kaufman’s plea to the jurisdiction asserting sovereign immunity from Cynthia Ann Vanderweyst’s suit. We reverse and remand the case to the trial court for further proceedings. Background

          This appeal is related to an earlier suit filed by Vanderweyst against Nationwide Housing Systems, Inc. in which Vanderweyst obtained a judgment against Nationwide for $91,280.47. Nationwide perfected its appeal and posted a supersedeas bond with the Harris County Clerk, Beverly Kaufman. The bond was approved by Deputy Harris County Clerk Adolph G. Boudreaux. Although Vanderweyst’s award was in the amount of $91,280.47, the bond was issued for $88,152.00. The surety on the supersedeas bond was American Homestar Corporation, who is allegedly Nationwide’s parent company. Shortly after posting the bond and filing an appeal, Nationwide filed for bankruptcy under Chapter 11. Nationwide’s appeal was abated by the Fourteenth Court of Appeals due to Nationwide’s bankruptcy.

          In January 2002, Vanderweyst filed suit against Boudreaux and Kaufman in their personal capacities. Vanderweyst’s petition claimed that the bond provided by Nationwide was not “good and sufficient,” as required by Texas Rule of Appellate Procedure 24.1.

[T]he bond approved by Mr. Boudreaux on behalf of and as agent of Ms. Kaufman was not good and sufficient as required under Rule 24.1. Mr. Boudreaux owed to Plaintiff a legal duty to exercise ordinary and due care in ascertaining the sufficiency of the sureties . . . . Mr. Boudreaux, acting on behalf of and as agent for Ms. Kaufman, negligently failed to exercise ordinary and due care in ascertaining the sufficiency of Nationwide Housing Systems, Inc.’s supersedeas bond. Mr. Boudreaux, acting on behalf of and as agent for Ms. Kaufman, negligently failed to make ordinary and due inquiry into the sufficiency of the sureties on Nationwide Housing Systems, Inc.’s supersedeas bond.

          . . .

As a direct and proximate result of the occurrence made the basis of this lawsuit, Plaintiff was prevented, by Mr. Boudreaux’s negligent approval of the supersedeas bond, from executing judgment on assets of Nationwide Housing Systems, Inc., which were otherwise subject to judgment execution and/or from executing judgment on the supersedeas bond. Plaintiff has thereby sustained economic damages in the amount of $109,856.11. This amount includes the judgment $91,208.47, plus post-judgment interest in the amount of $18,647.64 for the period from February 3, 2000 to January 20, 2001.


After Vanderweyst filed her petition, Boudreaux and Kaufman answered with a general denial and invoked the affirmative defenses of governmental or sovereign immunity, official immunity, and judicial immunity.

          Boudreaux and Kaufman also filed a motion for leave to file a third party petition. This motion does not appear in the appellate record, but other pleadings show that the motion was directed at Vanderweyst’s attorney, Ralph Shepard. Shepard represented Vanderweyst in the original suit against Nationwide and he continued to represent her in her suit against Boudreaux and Kaufman. In response to Boudreaux and Kaufman’s motion, Shepard retained his own counsel, Scott Rothenberg, who (1) filed a notice of appearance on behalf of Shepard and (2) requested an oral hearing on Boudreaux and Kaufman’s motion.

          The trial court granted Shepard’s request for an oral hearing on the motion to file a third party petition, and the hearing was set for June 3, 2002.

          After filing their motion for leave to file a third party petition, Boudreaux and Kaufman filed a plea to the jurisdiction. Boudreaux and Kaufman asserted that the trial court lacked subject matter jurisdiction over Vanderweyst’s claims because, as Nationwide’s appeal was still pending, judgment had not been rendered on the bond. Further, Boudreaux and Kaufman asserted that

[e]ven if Vanderweyst had a right to collect on the judgment today, and Nationwide could not satisfy the judgment, Vanderweyst has never attempted to collect on the supersedeas bond, nor does she allege. Vanderweyst’s complaint that the supersedeas bond is insufficient or inadequate is therefore premature because it is possible that she will not prevail on appeal, or if she does prevail, it is possible she may recover on the bond.


Accordingly, Boudreaux and Kaufman asserted that Vanderweyst’s claims were not yet ripe for adjudication. Boudreaux and Kaufman’s plea to the jurisdiction was set for ruling on May 27, 2002. Vanderweyst’s attorney was notified that Boudreaux and Kaufman’s plea was to be submitted “without the necessity of an Oral Hearing, unless demand for one is made.” Notice of the submission was also sent to Shepard’s attorney.

          On appeal, Vanderweyst alleges that the legal assistant for Scott Rothenberg, who was counsel for Shepard (Vanderweyst’s original attorney and still merely a potential third-party defendant) called the trial court’s clerk to request an oral hearing on Boudreaux and Kaufman’s plea to the jurisdiction and to schedule that hearing for the same day as the hearing on the motion for leave to file a third party petition. According to Rothenberg’s legal assistant, the trial court clerk’s office told her that there would be no problem in having an oral hearing on the plea to the jurisdiction on June 3, 2002. However, on May 28, the day after the plea had originally been set for written submission, the trial court granted Boudreaux and Kaufman’s plea to the jurisdiction and ordered that Vanderweyst take nothing in her suit against Boudreaux and Kaufman.

          

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Cynthia Vanderweyst v. Adolph G. Boudreaux & Beverly B. Kaufman, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cynthia-vanderweyst-v-adolph-g-boudreaux-beverly-b-texapp-2003.