Elliott v. Hollingshead Ex Rel. Hollingshead

327 S.W.3d 824, 2010 Tex. App. LEXIS 8755, 2010 WL 4323070
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 28, 2010
Docket11-08-00256-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 327 S.W.3d 824 (Elliott v. Hollingshead Ex Rel. Hollingshead) 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
Elliott v. Hollingshead Ex Rel. Hollingshead, 327 S.W.3d 824, 2010 Tex. App. LEXIS 8755, 2010 WL 4323070 (Tex. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

OPINION

TERRY McCALL, Justice.

This is a wrongful death and survival action arising from an automobile accident. Appellants, Richard Elliott and West Texas Centers for MHMR (MHMR), appeal from the trial court’s judgment allocating settlement proceeds. We reverse the trial court’s judgment and remand this cause to the trial court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.

Background

On April 12, 2006, Stacey Hollingshead was driving her minivan in the westbound lanes of Interstate 20 while in the course and scope of her employment with MHMR. At the same time, Jose Rosales was driving an eighteen-wheeler in the eastbound lanes of Interstate 20. Rosales lost control of his truck, crossed the median of the highway, and entered the westbound lanes of the highway. At one point, Rosales’s truck blocked the westbound lanes. Stacey’s minivan struck Rosales’s trailer and became lodged underneath it. Stacey was pronounced dead at the scene.

Stacey was survived by her minor children, Kelcey, Klayton, and Kanyon Holl-ingshead. Stacey had formerly been married to Gregory Hollingshead. Stacey and Gregory divorced prior to the accident. Stacey’s employer, MHMR, is a self-insured governmental entity for workers’ compensation purposes, and it is a member of the Texas Council Risk Management Fund, which is a risk management pool of political subdivisions. Following Stacey’s death, the risk management fund began paying weekly workers’ compensation death benefits to Stacey’s children in the amount of $471.60 ($157.20 per child).

As a result of Stacey’s death, appellee Gregory Hollingshead, individually and as next friend and guardian of the person of Kelcey Hollingshead, Klayton Hollings-head, and Kanyon Hollingshead, minors, filed a wrongful death suit against Rosales and two other defendants, Intermodal Cartage Co., Inc. and Flexi Van Leasing, *829 Inc. 1 Elliott is an attorney, and he represented Hollingshead and the minor children in the wrongful death suit. In the wrongful death petition, Hollingshead alleged that, at the time of the accident, Rosales was acting in the course and scope of his employment with Intermodal and Flexi Van Leasing and in the furtherance of their business. Stacey’s parents, Roy Long and Ernestine Long, intervened in the suit and asserted wrongful death claims against the defendants. 2 The law firm of Forbes & Forbes represented the Longs in connection with their intervention. Later, the law firm of Hall & Hall, L.L.P., joined the Forbes firm in the representation of the Longs. MHMR also intervened in the suit, seeking reimbursement for the workers’ compensation benefits that had been paid to Stacey’s minor children. Michael J. Donovan of the law firm of Burns, Anderson, Jury, & Brenner, L.L.P., represented MHMR in connection with its intervention.

In an amended plea in intervention, the Longs added Mark George and Translead Hyundai as defendants. The Longs alleged that Intermodal and George were “alter-egos of each other” and, as such, were “jointly and severally liable for the damages alleged herein and liable for each other’s liability.” The Longs alleged that Hyundai had designed, engineered, manufactured, and marketed the trailer that was involved in the accident and that the trailer was defective. The Longs also added a survival action against the defendants. Hollingshead filed a plea in intervention in which he asserted claims against George and Hyundai, and MHMR amended its plea in intervention to assert claims against George and Hyundai.

Defendants Rosales, Intermodal, and George moved for summary judgment against Hollingshead, the Longs, and MHMR. MHMR did not respond to the motions for summary judgment, and its counsel did not appear at the hearing on the motions. The trial court entered orders granting summary judgment in favor of Rosales, Intermodal, and George against MHMR. The trial court denied summary judgment to Rosales, Intermo-dal, and George on Hollingshead’s claims and the Longs’ claims.

The Longs’ counsel asserted that the summary judgments entered in favor of Rosales, Intermodal, and George against MHMR disposed of MHMR’s claim for reimbursement of workers’ compensation benefits that had been paid to the minor plaintiffs. MHMR filed a motion for order nunc pro tunc seeking clarification of the trial court’s orders granting summary judgment to Rosales and Intermodal against it. The trial court granted MHMR’s motion, rescinded its previous summary judgment order regarding Rosales and Intermodal’s motion for summary judgment, and entered a new corrected order. In the new order, the trial court granted partial summary judgment to Rosales and Intermodal “as to Interve-nor [MHMR] on the issues of gross negligence and standing as a statutory beneficiary under the Texas Survival Statute and Texas Wrongful Death Statute.” This order made clear that the trial court had not granted summary judgment to Rosales and Intermodal on MHMR’s claim for reimbursement of workers’ compensation benefits that had been paid to Stacey’s children.

*830 Upon motion by the Longs, the trial court realigned them as plaintiffs. The trial court also appointed Burt L. Burnett as attorney ad litem for Stacey’s children. Ultimately, Hollingshead and the Longs agreed to settle the claims against all defendants for a total of $4,016,461.99. This total amount consisted of the following payments from the defendants: (1) $3,996,461.99 from Rosales, Intermodal, George, or their insurers; (2) $15,000 from Flexi Van or its insurer; and (8) $5,000 from Hyundai or its insurer.

On June 24, 2008, the trial court held a settlement hearing. We have reviewed the testimony from the hearing in its entirety. The evidence showed that $2,100,000 of the settlement proceeds had been used to fund annuities for the benefit of the minor plaintiffs.

At the hearing, MHMR sought reimbursement for benefits and funeral expenses it had paid totaling $59,377.40. The attorney ad litem and the Longs’ counsel raised questions about Elliott’s representation of the minor plaintiffs. After hearing the evidence and argument from counsel, the trial court approved the settlement. The trial court also approved the claims of the Forbes firm and the Hall firm for attorney’s fees and costs. The trial court then stated:

As to Mr. Elliott, I have some concerns as to the timing of some of the things that happened. I’m going to approve certainly the attorneys’ fees with — I guess a total amount of attorneys’ fees and expenses of $616,766.50, with $200,000 of that to be interpled into the Court pending potential appeals that may take place.

The trial court also concluded that Elliott’s actions had caused the attorney ad litem to incur additional attorney’s fees. Therefore, the trial court found that $15,000 of Elliott’s attorney’s fees should be paid toward the attorney ad litem’s total approved fee of $40,000.

On July 21, 2008, the trial court entered a judgment approving the settlement.

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Bluebook (online)
327 S.W.3d 824, 2010 Tex. App. LEXIS 8755, 2010 WL 4323070, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/elliott-v-hollingshead-ex-rel-hollingshead-texapp-2010.