Gladys Bishop v. Karen Smith

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 31, 2009
Docket09-08-00185-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Gladys Bishop v. Karen Smith (Gladys Bishop v. Karen Smith) 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
Gladys Bishop v. Karen Smith, (Tex. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

In The



Court of Appeals



Ninth District of Texas at Beaumont



____________________

NO. 09-08-00185-CV



GLADYS BISHOP, Appellant



V.



KAREN SMITH, Appellee



On Appeal from the 9th District Court

Montgomery County, Texas

Trial Cause No. 06-07-06587 CV



MEMORANDUM OPINION

Gladys Bishop appeals the trial court's order that taxed her with the majority of Karen Smith's receiver's fees: Smith served as the court-appointed receiver in the divorce proceeding between Bishop's daughter, Connie Blake, and Jeff Blake. We affirm the trial court's order.



Background

A partial recitation of the tactics employed by the parties in this case is necessary to explain our resolution of the issues on appeal. In July 2006, Jeff filed a petition for divorce against Connie; Connie filed her counter-petition in response. In August 2006, in a separate cause number, Bishop sued Jeff, Connie, and their family limited partnership, J and C Blake Family Limited Partnership, L.P. In Bishop's suit, she claimed that Jeff, Connie, and the partnership owed her $760,000.00 or more. Shortly after she filed suit, Bishop moved to consolidate her case with Jeff and Connie's divorce proceeding. On August 28, 2006, the trial court consolidated the two cases. On September 6, 2006, the trial court appointed Smith, a licensed attorney, as receiver. The order gave Smith the following powers:

1. to manage and oversee the sale of the Yap Note, (1) including but not limited to the collection of the monthly note payment in the amount of $6,100.00 and payment of the monthly note payable to AMI during the interim and/or pendency of the sale of the note and escrow of the proceeds of any sale;



2. to manage and oversee the completion of any and all repairs to the residence located at 55 Wilmington . . . and the potential sale, including but not limited to contacting a realtor to list the home for sale; [and]

3. to manage and oversee the collection and distribution of rental proceeds from all rental properties owned by Jeff Blake and/or Connie Renee Blake, including but not limited to receipt and accounting of all monies received from the rental properties and all monies paid for payment of principal, interest, taxes, insurance and repairs made to the properties.



The order further stated that Smith had the power and discretion to "maintain custody and control of any monies related to the above described properties which she deems necessary in order to effectuate the sale(s) and/or collection of monies." The record does not reflect that any party objected to the trial court's appointment of Smith as receiver.

Before trial, the parties filed numerous motions for temporary orders, enforcement, injunctions, and sanctions against each other. At various times, Smith also filed monthly motions in which she requested that the court approve her receiver's fees. Smith attached invoices to her various motions to reflect her work as a receiver, the time it had taken to do the work, the persons who did individual parts of the work, and each person's hourly rate for the time that had been required to accomplish the work. Smith's motions for the approval of her fees reflect that all of the parties were served with Smith's motions. The trial court approved four of Smith's motions, but the trial court's orders approving payment are each contingent upon the prospective sales of various marital assets.

After a trial, the parties negotiated a settlement. On April 18, 2007, the trial court signed the Final Decree of Divorce. All of the parties, including Bishop, are included as parties in the Final Decree. With the exception of the Yap Note, the decree distributed the Blakes' marital assets between all of the parties, including Bishop. The decree also provided that Smith, "solely and without interference from any other persons, parties, and/or their agents or representatives" was to oversee the sale of the Yap Note. The decree further provided that upon the Yap Note's sale, its proceeds were to first be applied to the outstanding balance on the AMI Note. Thereafter, the decree created priorities for additional payments from the remaining proceeds. Smith's receiver's fees are included among these items. Thus, with respect to how Smith's receiver's fees were to be paid, the decree continued to reflect the expectation that the proceeds from the Yap Note's sale would satisfy that liability connected to the Blakes' marital estate. After all other priorities had been satisfied, Connie was to receive any of the net remaining proceeds from the sale of the Yap Note. The Final Decree does not expressly contemplate the possibility that the Yap Note would not be sold.

After the trial court entered the Final Decree, the J and C Blake Family Limited Partnership, L.P., Jeff, and Connie failed to pay the AMI Note's final balloon payment. The possibility of foreclosure on the collateral securing the AMI Note adversely impacted the value of the Yap Note. In an effort to salvage the value of the Yap Note, the trial court conducted several emergency hearings, the first of which was held on May 23, 2007. Over the course of these hearings, the trial court discovered that the AMI Note had been acquired by a corporation owned by Bishop and created for the purpose of buying the AMI Note.

On May 30, 2007, Bishop filed motions to remove the receiver and to recuse the trial court judge. On that same day, Smith asked the trial court to approve a purchaser's proposal to buy the Yap Note for an offer substantially lower than the parties had anticipated in settling their lawsuit. In her motion requesting the court's approval of the proposed sale, Smith alleged that Bishop and Connie interfered with her efforts to sell the note. Smith asked the court to enjoin AMI, a nonparty, and Bishop's corporation, also a nonparty, from foreclosing on the collateral secured by the AMI Note. Bishop filed objections to Smith's request to approve the sale of the Yap Note.

On June 15, 2007, the presiding administrative judge reassigned the case to another trial judge. Subsequently, Bishop amended her motion to remove Smith as receiver. Bishop's motion disclosed that Bishop had purchased the interests of all of the parties to the Final Decree. Among other things, Bishop's motion asserts that Smith never qualified to act as receiver, misrepresented the value of the Yap Note, and breached her fiduciary duties in managing the marital estate. Bishop also asserted that Smith exercised powers beyond those the court granted to her and argued that Smith was not entitled to any fees. Bishop filed a separate motion in which she requested that the trial court hold Smith in contempt.

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