Ernest Adimora-Nweke v. Bethrand I. Ohakweh, Dependent Administrator

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 9, 2024
Docket14-23-00146-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Ernest Adimora-Nweke v. Bethrand I. Ohakweh, Dependent Administrator (Ernest Adimora-Nweke v. Bethrand I. Ohakweh, Dependent Administrator) 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
Ernest Adimora-Nweke v. Bethrand I. Ohakweh, Dependent Administrator, (Tex. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

Affirmed and Memorandum Opinion filed May 9, 2024.

In The

Fourteenth Court of Appeals

NO. 14-23-00146-CV

ERNEST ADIMORA-NWEKE, Appellant

V. BETHRAND I. OHAKWEH, DEPENDENT ADMINISTRATOR, Appellee

On Appeal from the Probate Court No 1 Harris County, Texas Trial Court Cause No. 444,609

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Appellant, attorney for dependent administrator (and other family members) in probate administration, asks that we reverse the probate court’s January 5, 2023 order approving the account for final settlement and its February 2, 2023 “Drop Order” removing the case from the probate court docket. We affirm.

I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

In 2015, appellant, Ernest Adimora-Nweke, executed a contingent fee contract with Aphaeus Ohakweh to represent Ohakweh principally for claims against his health care providers. When Ohakweh passed away in September, Ohakweh’s surviving family members signed contingency fee agreements for Adimora-Nweke to continue to pursue those claims on behalf of Ohakweh’s estate and to represent them in their independent claims against the health care providers. The family also agreed for Adimora-Nweke to handle the probate of Ohakweh’s estate. The agreement provided for work on probate matters to be at an hourly rate but “payable on receipt of proceeds for claims brought on behalf of the Estate of Decedent”, specifically:

The probate-services provision, though hourly, is dependent on the successful receipt of proceeds of claims brought on behalf of the Estate of Decedent.

Appellant assisted the family in instituting the probate proceeding and the appointment of Ohakweh’s eldest son, Bethrand I. Ohakweh, as administrator. Specifically, on November 30, 2015, appellant filed on behalf of Bethrand Ohakweh (“Bethrand”), his “Application for Independent Administrator & Application for Judicial Declaration of Heirship.” Appellant signed the pleading 2 as “Attorney for Applicant.” On January 26, 2017, and again on July 27, 2017, the trial court ratified appellant’s contingency fee agreement.

The record provides indicia of appellant’s pursuit of multiple claims on behalf of the estate and his family members, but no indicia of successful recovery. Relevant to his work for the estate and family, appellant filed two federal court actions which were consolidated in the Southern District of Texas, and resulted in prejudicial dismissals of claims against Baylor, Harris Health and Halpern. Shortly after the Fifth Circuit affirmed the dismissals in those cases, appellant filed—and the federal district court dismissed—the same or similar claims under a new cause number. Appellant ran into problems representing the family in the federal court: His pro hac vice applications were denied and he was forbidden to represent the family in the matter unless certain conditions were satisfied, including the retention of another attorney who was board certified in civil trials. Unable to retain sustained assistance in these litigations, the matters were left to the clients to handle pro se.

Seeking an end-around to the federal court’s bar to his representation, with his clients’ blessing, appellant sought in probate court to have himself named administrator of the estate, hoping to appear in federal court pro se. Though appellant was named temporary administrator of the Estate in July 2017, this role was short-lived due to appellant’s inability to post bond. Ohakweh’s eldest son, Bethrand, was re-appointed as administrator of the estate by the end of the same month. Appellant filed an instrument titled “Notice of Withdrawal” which stated “Applicant, Ernest C. Adimora-Nweke Jr hereby withdraws any recusal [sic] of consideration for permanent administrator for the Estate of Aphaeus Ohakweh.” Despite several hearings in the following years where the subject of appellant’s re- appointment as administrator was raised again for the purpose of revitalizing the

3 federal claims,1 no such re-appointment was made, with the bond-posting requirement as the primary impediment.2

On February 14, 2022, appellant filed a 441-page pleading titled “Original Bill of Review (Independent Action in Equity) Complaint” which unapologetically reasserts the claims previously litigated and dismissed in federal court. The pleading names appellant as a “Plaintiff and Relator” and is signed “pro se” for “the Estate of Dr. Aphaeus Ohakweh et al, and on behalf of United State [sic] of America, And on behalf of State of Texas,” suggesting appellant, ipse dixit, to be the administrator of the estate.

The trial court sent notices to the named administrator of the estate, “Bethrand I. Ohakweh,” rather than his attorney, appellant. Despite appellant’s role on the case, a number of exchanges occur between Bethrand and the court, including the following:

• On July 14, 2022, the probate court issued a notice with personal

1 At a 2022 hearing, the following explanation was given: MR. ADIMORA-NWEKE: . . .In order for me to carry this [federal] case through to the very end I need to be administrator under Rule 17, then I would be basically taken in as a real party in interest in my name. THE COURT: Why can’t you get admitted? That’s not a hard process. MR. ADIMORA-NWEKE: I have followed that process many times. During this case with the extrinsic fraud that was going on, you have got to imagine this, I got sanctioned, okay, because -- THE COURT: I mean, what you are asking me to do it sounds to me is to become the dependent administrator so that you can file pro se basically. MR. ADIMORA-NWEKE: Exactly. THE COURT: To go around the rule of being admitted. MR. ADIMORA-NWEKE: Yeah, because right now I have not been admitted. 2 Appellant remained the administrator’s counsel of record and appeared at various hearings in subsequent years. The court acknowledged his role as counsel for the administrator at a January 30, 2020 hearing.

4 citation to Bethrand, the named personal administrator at his home address to show cause for failure to file a “Final Account along with Close & Discharge”.

• The record contains an ink-file-stamped September 20, 2022 letter, signed by Bethrand individually requesting that the estate be “closed and my duty as administrator be discharged.” The letter is accompanied with a Final Account reporting a zero balance in all categories. The Final Account is left blank in some areas and is not signed by Bethrand.

• The record then contains a September 22, 2022 “Notice of Show Cause Hearing” letter directed and addressed to Bethrand, resetting the hearing to October 21, 2022.

• This is followed by a nearly identical letter dated October 24, 2022 directed again only to Bethrand, resetting the hearing to January 20, 2023. The October 24 notice includes a letter addressed to Bethrand from the probate judge stating that the deficiency in the original Final Account lacked a sworn affidavit from the administrator.

• On November 9, 2022, Bethrand hand filed (ink-file-stamped) an Amended Final Account again reporting a zero balance in all categories of the administration. The Amended Final Account remained left blank in some areas but is not signed under oath by Bethrand.

The record does not indicate that appellant, as Bethrand’s attorney, was provided notice of these filings. Nevertheless, before the approval of the final accounting, appellant discovered the correspondences and on October 21, 2022

5 filed an objection to the accounting and objection to the closure of the estate. Appellant’s October 21 Objection notifies the court of the clerk’s failure to serve him as lead counsel of record. (“Petitioner, as counsel on record for administrator and family of Decedent (i.e., heirs) was not served any of the 2022 notices regarding the estate administration.”).

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Davis v. Kaufman County
195 S.W.3d 847 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 2006)
Maxwell's Unknown Heirs v. Bolding
36 S.W.2d 267 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1931)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Ernest Adimora-Nweke v. Bethrand I. Ohakweh, Dependent Administrator, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ernest-adimora-nweke-v-bethrand-i-ohakweh-dependent-administrator-texapp-2024.