Giselle Borbon (Formerly Rodriguez) and Her Attorney of Record Carlos A. Peniche v. Samuel Rodriguez

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 8, 2010
Docket01-09-00450-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Giselle Borbon (Formerly Rodriguez) and Her Attorney of Record Carlos A. Peniche v. Samuel Rodriguez (Giselle Borbon (Formerly Rodriguez) and Her Attorney of Record Carlos A. Peniche v. Samuel Rodriguez) 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
Giselle Borbon (Formerly Rodriguez) and Her Attorney of Record Carlos A. Peniche v. Samuel Rodriguez, (Tex. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

Opinion issued July 8, 2010

In The

Court of Appeals

For The

First District of Texas


NO. 01-09-00450-CV


GISELLE BORBON AND CARLOS A. PENICHE, Appellants

V.

SAMUEL RODRIGUEZ, Appellee


On Appeal from the 247th District Court

Harris County, Texas

Trial Court Cause No. 2006-69894


MEMORANDUM OPINION

          Appellants, Giselle Borbon and Carlos A. Peniche, challenge the trial court’s orders denying Borbon’s motion to clarify its Final Decree of Divorce and awarding appellee, Samuel Rodriguez, his attorney’s fees to defend against the motion.  In two issues, Borbon and Peniche, counsel for Borbon below, contend that the trial court erred in denying Borbon’s motion to clarify and in finding that the motion was “groundless and frivolous.”  

We affirm.

Background

          On June 9, 2008, the trial court entered its Final Decree of Divorce dissolving the marriage between Borbon and Rodriguez.  The decree provided

IT IS ORDERED that good cause exists to award David Eckman a judgment in the amount of $4,250.00 for attorney’s fees, expenses, and costs . . . .  The judgment . . . is awarded against Giselle [Borbon] and Giselle [Borbon] is ORDERED to pay the fees, expenses, and costs in the attorney’s own name by any means available for the enforcement of a judgment debt.  It is ordered that this judgment is a lien against the property awarded to Giselle [Borbon], and Giselle [Borbon] waives her homestead right as to said judgment.

The “property awarded to Giselle [Borbon]” included the parties’ homestead located in Katy, Texas.  The decree also provided

[Rodriguez] and [Borbon] each acknowledge that before signing this Final Decree of Divorce they have read this Final Decree of Divorce fully and completely, have had the opportunity to ask any questions regarding the same, and fully understand that the contents of this Final Decree of Divorce constitute a full and complete resolution of this case.  [Rodriguez and Borbon] acknowledge that they have voluntarily affixed their signatures to this Final Decree of Divorce, believing this agreement to be a just and right division of the marital debts and assets, and state that they have not signed by virtue of any coercion, any duress, or any agreement other than those specifically set forth in this Final Decree of Divorce.

Both Borbon and Rodriguez signed the decree and indicated that the decree was “approved and consented to as to both form and substance.”

On March 4, 2009, after she began receiving notices about a lien on her home, Borbon filed her motion to clarify the divorce decree, requesting that the trial court strike from its decree the provision giving David Eckman, Rodriguez’s attorney, a lien on her homestead to secure payment of his fees because it was an “unlawful provision” under the Texas Constitution and the Texas Property Code, which “limit the manner in which homestead rights can be waived or abridged” and which manner does not include a judgment for attorney’s fees in a decree of divorce as “among the few exceptions to homestead protection rights under Texas Law.”[1]  Borbon also filed in a different court a bill of review challenging the award of attorney’s fees to Eckman as without “good cause” and “excessive” and the waiver of homestead provision as unconstitutional. 

In response, Eckman sent to Borbon and Peniche a letter in which he offered “a full and final settlement of any and all claims by [Borbon] in any way connected to the . . . divorce case, including and not limited to [her] current litigation, [by agreeing] to modify the divorce decree by deleting the [objected to] language.”  Borbon and Peniche rejected this offer.

Subsequently, in his response to Borbon’s motion to clarify, Rodriguez asserted that the language Borbon sought to clarify was unambiguous, the trial court had no authority to enter an order to alter or modify the decree, and the contested provision was part of an agreed property division.  Rodriguez also requested his attorney’s fees to defend against the motion.

After denying Borbon’s motion to clarify, the trial court set a hearing on Rodriguez’s motion for attorney’s fees, in which he asserted that Borbon had “filed a groundless and frivolous pleading in that, under the guise of a motion to clarify, [she] sought to remove from the Final Decree of Divorce . . . a provision that had been agreed to by [Borbon] and her attorney.”  He also asserted that Borbon’s continued pursuit of the matter after she had rejected Eckman’s offer to “settle all of [her] claims by agreeing to remove the provision objected to,” was “not only groundless and frivolous but was clearly intended only to harass [Rodriguez].”  Borbon responded that she had relied on the advice of Peniche, who was advised by two attorneys with “substantial family practices” that a motion to clarify was “appropriate” and, thus, her motion was filed “in good faith and was not frivolous.”

The trial court granted Rodriguez’s motion and found that Borbon and Peniche “signed and filed a motion to clarify that was frivolous and groundless in violation of Texas Rule of Civil Procedure 13 and Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code sections 10.001 and 9.012” and “sought relief that was not legally available to Borbon.”  The trial court also found that Borbon “rejected a settlement offer by [Eckman] that would have avoided further action . . . manifesting a clear intent to harass [Rodriguez].” 

Motion to Clarify

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Giselle Borbon (Formerly Rodriguez) and Her Attorney of Record Carlos A. Peniche v. Samuel Rodriguez, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/giselle-borbon-formerly-rodriguez-and-her-attorney-of-record-carlos-a-texapp-2010.