David T. Phillips v. Estate of Phillip O. Poulin

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 12, 2007
Docket03-05-00098-CV
StatusPublished

This text of David T. Phillips v. Estate of Phillip O. Poulin (David T. Phillips v. Estate of Phillip O. Poulin) 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
David T. Phillips v. Estate of Phillip O. Poulin, (Tex. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN




NO. 03-05-00098-CV

David T. Phillips, Appellant



v.



Estate of Phillip O. Poulin, Appellee



FROM PROBATE COURT NO. 1 OF TRAVIS COUNTY, NO. 73677-a,

HONORABLE GUY S. HERMAN, JUDGE PRESIDING

M E M O R A N D U M O P I N I O N



David T. Phillips appeals from a judgment awarding the estate of a business partner, Phillip O. Poulin, $21,025.82--representing $32,000 in attorney's fees, net of credits and offsets--on an accounting claim brought by the Estate. In four issues, Phillips argues that the probate court erred in awarding the accounting and attorney's fees because he had previously discharged any duty to provide an accounting to Poulin or his Estate, that the court erred in imposing the entire amount of the attorney's fee award against him, and that the evidence was insufficient to support the fee award. We affirm the probate court's judgment.

This is one of two appeals arising from a dispute between Phillips and the Estate. During his lifetime, Poulin invested in two real estate-related general partnerships with Phillips, Hill Country and South Cross, (1) and owned 50 percent shares with Phillips in a company, Y&O, Inc., that managed properties including those owned by the two partnerships. Phillips kept the books for these entities, though it is undisputed that both men had access to the business's books and bank accounts, and could issue checks. Poulin died in November 1998. Upon his death, it is undisputed that the Estate succeeded to Poulin's interests in the three businesses.

The probate court heard testimony that, while attempting to settle Poulin's affairs, Poulin's heirs discovered information causing them to suspect Phillips of improprieties. This included: (1) Phillips having possibly obtained a refund of payroll taxes that Poulin had paid while acting as general contractor in repairing fire damage at one of the partnership properties, causing the Estate to incur liability for both the taxes and penalties; (2) Phillips's potential diversion of corporate opportunities from Y&O by causing termination of management contracts with clients that subsequently executed contracts with a management company owned by Phillips but not Poulin; and (3) Phillips's withholding sums due to the Estate in the guise of obtaining repayment of a $51,000 "loan" he claimed Poulin had obtained from one of the businesses. Poulin's daughter, Susan, testified that the Estate encountered difficulties in obtaining information and documents from Phillips concerning these transactions.

The Estate eventually obtained counsel and sued Phillips, alleging "a genuine dispute and controversy between these parties as to the amounts due the Estate" and seeking an accounting of the businesses' accounts between the parties. Phillips counterclaimed, seeking amounts he claimed Poulin and the Estate owed the businesses. The Estate later amended its petition to allege claims for breach of fiduciary duty, and sought damages and a constructive trust on certain property. The probate court severed the Estate's accounting claim from the parties' breach-of-fiduciary-duty claims and Phillips's counterclaims. The accounting claim was tried to the probate court in August 2003, but the court did not render a final judgment in the cause until February 2005, following trial of the severed breach-of-fiduciary duty claims and counterclaims, at which time the court signed final judgments in both causes. Phillips, as well as the Estate, appealed the final judgment on the severed claims, and we are contemporaneously issuing our opinion and judgment in that proceeding. (2)

The final judgment in the accounting cause recited that, at the conclusion of trial, the probate court had ordered Phillips "to produce an accounting and awarded Plaintiff $32,000 as reasonable and necessary attorney's fees" and that, "[t]he accounting was timely made." At that time, the court had ordered that the attorney's fees, as well as the cost of the accounting, be borne by the partnerships (i.e., Phillips, the Estate, and any other partners would pay the fees according to their proportionate ownership shares). In the judgment, however, the court held that"[a]fter reconsidering the allocation of attorney's fees," it would impose the attorney's fee award against Phillips alone. The court credited $7,888 that Phillips had paid as his proportionate share of the attorney's fee award and offset the Estate's proportionate share of the accounting expenses, $3,086.18, leaving a net judgment against Phillips of $21,025.82. Findings of fact were neither requested nor filed.

In his first two issues, Phillips argues that the probate court erred in ordering an accounting because Phillips and the Estate both had full access to the businesses' books, because Phillips had discharged his duty to provide accountings pursuant to the businesses' governing agreements, and because he had previously produced the same information in discovery that the court later determined to be a sufficient accounting.

The parties stipulated that each of the agreements governing their three jointly-owned businesses contained a provision like the following:



A complete accounting of the Partnership affairs as of the close of business on the last day of each quarter shall be rendered to each PARTNER within 15 days after the close of said period. On each such accounting being made, the net profits of the Partnership shall be distributed to the PARTNERS as herein provided to the extent that cash is available for each distribution. (3)



The partnership agreements further provide that "[t]he prevailing party in any litigation between the parties hereto . . . shall be entitled to reasonable attorney's fees incurred by the prevailing party." See also Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code Ann. § 38.001(8) (West 1997).

At trial, Phillips presented undisputed evidence that during Poulin's lifetime, in compliance with the governing agreements, he had provided Poulin monthly operating statements (income and expense statements and a balance sheet) and complete tax returns. The evidence was also undisputed that Poulin at all times had full access to the businesses' books. Phillips also testified that while in California for Poulin's funeral, he had met with the Poulin heirs and given them financial information concerning the businesses, and Susan Noble, Poulin's daughter, acknowledged that the heirs received balance sheets, general ledgers, and operating statements during that meeting. Phillips testified that he had thereafter continued to provide the Estate tax information as he had previously done for Poulin, and that his heirs continued to have access to the books. But Phillips's counsel at the time conceded that the only "accountings" that the Estate had received going forward was a right of access to the businesses' books, (4) not the periodic accountings required by the governing agreements. Again, it was undisputed that the Estate had succeeded to Poulin's rights under the governing agreements, and also that both partnerships remained in existence through the time of trial, though their respective assets had been sold between Poulin's death and trial. (5)

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Bluebook (online)
David T. Phillips v. Estate of Phillip O. Poulin, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/david-t-phillips-v-estate-of-phillip-o-poulin-texapp-2007.