George Neil Lewis v. Jack D. Nolan

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 5, 2006
Docket01-04-00865-CV
StatusPublished

This text of George Neil Lewis v. Jack D. Nolan (George Neil Lewis v. Jack D. Nolan) 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
George Neil Lewis v. Jack D. Nolan, (Tex. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

Opinion issued October 5, 2006



In The

Court of Appeals

For The

First District of Texas





NO. 01-04-00865-CV

____________


GEORGE NEIL LEWIS, Appellant


V.


 JACK D. NOLAN, Appellee





On Appeal from 270th District Court

Harris County, Texas

Trial Court Cause No. 2001-29811





MEMORANDUM OPINION

          Appellant, George Neil Lewis, appeals from a take-nothing summary judgment rendered against him in his malpractice suit against appellee, Jack D. Nolan, his former attorney. We first affirm the judgment to the extent that it was rendered on Lewis’s negligent-misrepresentation claim because he abandoned that claim below and thus assigned no error to it on appeal. We then determine (1) whether Lewis needed expert testimony to prove the causation element of his negligence claim; (2) whether we must affirm the judgment rendered on Lewis’s breach-of-contract claim for his failure to challenge every basis asserted against that claim in the summary-judgment motion; and (3) whether Lewis’s having asserted an unpleaded Deceptive Trade Practices–Consumer Protection Act (“DTPA”) claim in response to Nolan’s summary-judgment motion raised a fact issue on that claim and, if not, whether Lewis has properly assigned error to the rendition of judgment on the only DTPA claim that he pleaded. We affirm.

Background

          Federated Financial Services, Inc. (“FFS”) was the holder of two notes. One note, dated April 7, 1987 and in the principal amount of $17,255, was signed by Lewis and a man who was his business partner at that time, Bill White (“the April 1987 note”). The borrowers on the April 1987 note were listed as “G. Niel [sic] Lewis & Bill White Baja Trax, Inc.” The second note, dated November 21, 1987 and in the principal amount of $9,431.99, was signed by White alone (“the November 1989 note”). The borrower on the April 1987 note was listed as “Bill White dba BAJA TRAX, INC.”

          FFS sued Lewis and White based on the two notes (“the collection suit”). Nolan represented Lewis in the collection suit. In his deposition testimony in that lawsuit, Lewis admitted his liability on the April 1987 note. In affidavits filed in the later malpractice suit from which appeal is now taken, however, Lewis averred that

[t]he [April 1987] note that I was testifying to in the deposition [in the collection suit] was paid off after my then-partner [White] borrowed money at which time he signed on to pay the [November 1989] note. I was not obligated to pay the [November 1989] note, and the [April 1987] note (which the deposition testimony refers to) was paid off in full.


          FFS moved for traditional summary judgment against Lewis in the collection suit based on the November 1989 note. It is undisputed that Nolan did not answer the motion or appear at the summary-judgment hearing, that the motion was granted, and that judgment was rendered against Lewis in May 1995 for $13,229.26. The parties disputed below the reasons for Nolan’s failure to respond or to appear: Lewis filed affidavits averring that Nolan had told him that the suit against him was non-meritorious and that Nolan later denied having received the summary-judgment motion, even though he had. In contrast, Nolan filed an affidavit averring that he had advised Lewis that the lawsuit was meritorious, that Nolan received FFS’s summary-judgment motion, that he tried unsuccessfully and repeatedly to contact Lewis about the motion, and that Nolan was never notified of the summary-judgment hearing.

          On June 13, 2001, Lewis sued Nolan for legal malpractice (negligence), negligent misrepresentation, violations of the DTPA, and breach of contract. The factual bases that Lewis alleged for all causes of action were as follows:

While representing [Lewis], [Nolan] failed to respond to a motion for summary judgment or to an amended motion for summary judgment filed by the plaintiff in that case. Prior to the motions for summary judgment being filed and served on [Nolan], [Lewis’s] deposition had been taken by the plaintiff in the [collection suit]. After the deposition [Nolan] told [Lewis] that he did not have to worry about the case and that it would be dismissed. However, on May 31, 1995, a final summary judgment was entered against [Lewis] in the amount of $13,229.26 plus court costs, prejudgment interest and post judgment interest. In late May 2001, [Lewis] discovered that judgment had been entered against him . . . . Eventually, [Lewis] negotiated a payoff of the judgment for the amount of $15,000.00. But for [Nolan’s] failure to respond to the motion for summary judgment, [Lewis] would not have lost the case.


Lewis sought fee forfeiture, actual damages, mental-anguish damages, and treble damages under the DTPA, as well as attorney’s fees, pre- and post-judgment interest, and costs.

          Nolan answered with a general denial and raised the affirmative defense of limitations. Nolan then moved for traditional summary judgment on the sole basis of limitations. The trial court granted the motion, rendering a take-nothing judgment against Lewis. Lewis appealed to the Fourteenth Court of Appeals, which reversed the judgment and remanded the cause. See Lewis v. Nolan, 105 S.W.3d 185, 190 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] 2003, pet. denied). On remand, Nolan filed six summary-judgment motions:

1.a traditional summary-judgment motion against Lewis’s DTPA claim;

2.a no-evidence summary-judgment motion against Lewis’s breach-of-contract claim;

3.a “first amended” traditional summary-judgment motion against all claims on the ground of limitations;

4.a traditional summary-judgment motion against Lewis’s legal-malpractice claim;

5.a no-evidence summary-judgment motion against Lewis’s legal-malpractice claim; and

6.a no-evidence summary-judgment motion against Lewis’s negligent-misrepresentation claim.


          Simultaneously with the filing of his summary-judgment motion against Lewis’s legal-malpractice claim, Nolan moved the trial court to “consolidate” Lewis’s causes of action under the heading of legal malpractice because the attempt to style the legal-malpractice claim as anything else (e.g.

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George Neil Lewis v. Jack D. Nolan, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/george-neil-lewis-v-jack-d-nolan-texapp-2006.