Elene B. Glassman v. Meryl B. Goodfriend

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 2, 2011
Docket14-09-00522-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Elene B. Glassman v. Meryl B. Goodfriend (Elene B. Glassman v. Meryl B. Goodfriend) 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
Elene B. Glassman v. Meryl B. Goodfriend, (Tex. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

Motion for Rehearing Denied; Motion for Rehearing En Banc Denied As Moot; Memorandum Opinion of February 24, 2011 Withdrawn; Affirmed and En Banc Opinion filed June 2, 2011.

In The

Fourteenth Court of Appeals

NO. 14-09-00522-CV

ELENE B. GLASSMAN, Appellant

V.

MERYL B. GOODFRIEND, Appellee

On Appeal from Probate Court No. 1

Harris County, Texas

Trial Court Cause No. 350,750-403

EN BANC OPINION

            Appellant Elene B. Glassman’s motion for panel rehearing is denied, and her motion for rehearing en banc is denied as moot.  On its own motion, this court grants en banc rehearing to secure uniformity in the court’s precedent regarding the legal standard for imposing sanctions under Texas Rule of Appellate Procedure 45. 

Glassman appeals from a final order in garnishment obtained by appellee, Meryl B. Goodfriend, to satisfy an underlying judgment.  Glassman, an attorney, appears pro se in this appeal.  Goodfriend contends this appeal is frivolous and requests sanctions.  We affirm the final order in garnishment and assess $2,500 in sanctions against Glassman.

Background

Glassman and Goodfriend are sisters.  Their parents established an inter vivos trust with Glassman appointed as trustee.  Under its provisions, the trust was to be discharged and the assets distributed equally to Glassman and Goodfriend upon the last surviving parent’s death.  In 2004 (after the last parent died), Goodfriend filed a petition to compel an accounting, which she later amended to also compel distribution of trust assets, alleging Glassman had failed to comply with Goodfriend’s requests for performance of these duties.  Goodfriend also applied for injunctive relief to preserve the status quo of trust property, alleging she believed Glassman might wrongfully disburse assets or remove them beyond the court’s jurisdiction.

On January 31, 2005, the trial court signed an order requiring an accounting by a date certain.[1]  The court also ordered the parties to mediate following the accounting.  Goodfriend subsequently filed a motion for contempt, contending Glassman had not complied with the order for the accounting.  The parties then mediated and signed an agreement on various matters.  On May 4, 2005, the trial court reduced to interlocutory judgment several items of this agreement, including Goodfriend’s willingness to pass an upcoming hearing set on her previous motion for contempt in exchange for Glassman’s providing the accounting by another date certain.

Goodfriend later again moved for contempt, alleging Glassman failed to provide the accounting as specified in the May 4, 2005 judgment.  The trial court signed an order requiring Glassman to provide the accounting within seven days or serve three days in jail.  When Glassman failed to comply with that order, Goodfriend filed a motion to enforce.  On July 20, 2005, after a hearing, the trial court found Glassman in contempt of the May 4, 2005 judgment and ordered her confined for three days.[2]

Subsequently, Goodfriend amended her request for injunctive relief, alleging Glassman had mismanaged the trust and still refused to provide the accounting.  Glassman then filed a motion to recuse both the trial judge and associate judge, suggesting they had committed various procedural irregularities, engaged in ex parte communications, and lacked impartiality.  Another judge assigned to decide the recusal matter denied the motion, found it was filed to delay a hearing originally scheduled on Goodfriend’s application for injunctive relief, and sanctioned Glassman $2,000.

The trial court then resumed proceedings in October 2005 on the application for injunctive relief.  On October 24, 2005, after having issued a temporary restraining order, the trial court signed a temporary injunction and order removing Glassman as trustee, terminating the trust, and appointing a successor trustee to wind up the trust.  The court also enjoined Glassman from exercising control over any trust assets and ordered her to relinquish the assets and records to the successor trustee.  Thereafter, the successor trustee performed her duties, partial distributions of assets were made to Goodfriend, and the trust was ultimately closed in August 2007 after a final accounting.

In the meantime, on the same day that the trial court issued the temporary injunction, Goodfriend filed a second amended petition alleging claims against Glassman for breach of fiduciary duty based on her various actions and omissions as trustee and breach of contract for her failure to comply with several provisions in the parties’ mediation agreement.  Goodfriend requested an accounting, distribution of trust assets, damages, attorneys’ fees, removal of Glassman as trustee, and a ruling that Glassman must forfeit all trustee fees, profits, and improper benefits she obtained by breach of the fiduciary relationship.

While these claims were pending, the trial court again sanctioned Glassman $9,624.09, finding she had engaged in “a pattern of discovery abuse and misconduct,” including disregarding prior court orders compelling discovery, failing to provide the accounting as previously ordered, disobeying the temporary injunction by refusing to produce trust records, filing the groundless motion to recuse, and failing to pay the sanctions assessed for filing the motion to recuse.  As requested by Goodfriend, the trial court converted both sanctions orders to an enforceable money judgment for $11,624.09.  This judgment was satisfied via a garnishment proceeding instituted by Goodfriend for funds held by Glassman at Raymond James & Associates, Inc.

On June 9, 2006, a bench trial was conducted on the remaining claims asserted in Goodfriend’s second amended petition.  Although notified of the setting, Glassman did not attend.  Goodfriend presented evidence supporting her claims.  On June 27, 2006, the trial court signed a final judgment (1) finding that Glassman “knowingly and willfully breached her fiduciary duty as Trustee . . .

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Elene B. Glassman v. Meryl B. Goodfriend, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/elene-b-glassman-v-meryl-b-goodfriend-texapp-2011.