Hardy v. McCorkle

765 S.W.2d 910, 1989 Tex. App. LEXIS 391, 1989 WL 17218
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 24, 1989
Docket01-89-00020-CV, 01-89-00024-CV and 01-89-00025-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 765 S.W.2d 910 (Hardy v. McCorkle) 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
Hardy v. McCorkle, 765 S.W.2d 910, 1989 Tex. App. LEXIS 391, 1989 WL 17218 (Tex. Ct. App. 1989).

Opinion

WARREN, Justice.

This action encompasses three requests for relief.

In the first cause, District Clerk Ray Hardy seeks a writ of prohibition to prohibit District Judge Lamar McCorkle from reassigning a suit for attorney’s fees pending in Judge Allen Daggett’s family court to a civil district court.

In the second case, Judge Huey O’Toole, plaintiff in the suit to collect attorney’s fees, and defendant in a legal malpractice suit, asks for a mandamus against Judge Sharolyn Wood, directing her to rescind her order requiring the district clerk to deliver all papers in the malpractice suit against O’Toole to Judge Wood’s court. In the third cause, O’Toole seeks relief by writ of prohibition or mandamus from Judge McCorkle’s inchoate order to transfer.

These actions involve the Harris County local rules as they pertain to the assignment and reassignment of cases, and the authority of the judges under the rules.

Harris County has four separate trial divisions: criminal, civil, family, and probate. The district clerk accepts all filings, except probate, and initially assigns each case to the appropriate division. But each division maintains its own docket and promulgates its own rules, which vary in some degree from the other divisions’ rules. Each of these courts, except the probate courts, has general jurisdiction over all district court matters. Local rules limit the assignment of cases to these courts.

These actions arise because of different interpretations given these rules.

O’Toole represented Susan Elizabeth Jenness in her suit for divorce, which was granted December 7, 1987, in Judge Dag-gett’s family court. On February 2, 1988, O’Toole sued Jenness for unpaid attorney’s fees allegedly incurred in the divorce proceeding. This suit was assigned to Judge Daggett’s court, allegedly at the insistence of O’Toole or his representative.

On March 11, Jenness sued O’Toole for alleged malpractice arising from O’Toole’s representation in the divorce case. This case was randomly assigned by the district clerk to Judge Wood’s civil district court.

On October 10, 1988, pursuant to O’Toole’s motion, Judge Daggett consolidated the malpractice case filed in Judge Wood’s court with the suit for attorney’s fees filed in his court. We note that the malpractice case was a compulsory counterclaim to the suit for attorney’s fees. Bailey v. Travis, 622 S.W.2d 143 (Tex.App. —Eastland 1981, writ ref'd n.r.e.).

Jenness then filed a motion for leave to file a writ of mandamus with this Court, challenging the consolidation. We refused the writ, concluding that Jenness had not shown that Judge Daggett abused his discretion by assuming jurisdiction. Jenness v. Daggett, No. 01-88-01031-CV (Tex.App. —Houston [1st Dist.], November 23, 1988, orig. proceeding) (ordered not published) [1988 WL 125197].

Judge Daggett preferentially set the consolidated case for trial on December 14, and announced discovery guidelines.

After a December 9 hearing, on a motion for sanctions filed by O’Toole, Judge Dag-gett found that sanctions should be imposed. He ordered that: (1) Jenness’ counterclaim be dismissed, (2) default judgment be entered against Jenness on O’Toole’s claim, and (3) Jenness pay attorney’s fees to O’Toole’s lawyers. However, he set out several conditions, which, if kept by Jenness, would have the effect of removing the sanctions.

On the same day, O’Toole and Jenness settled the two causes of action and executed a written instrument embodying the terms of the mutual release. One of the terms of the release required the parties to file a mutual take-nothing judgment in cause no. 88-04999, the consolidated case pending in Judge Daggett’s court.

*912 On December 16, Judge Wood, on her own motion, signed an order deconsolidat-ing the two cases pending in Judge Dag-gett’s court and transferring the legal malpractice case back to her court. Her order further commanded the district clerk to secure all papers filed in the malpractice case and deliver them to her courtroom. Additionally, the order prohibited the parties, their agents, servants, and attorneys from presenting any motions, orders, or requests for relief to any other judge except her.

On December 19, Judge Daggett signed a judgment in the consolidated cause, which was entered in accordance with the previously executed release, and was approved and agreed to by the attorneys for O’Toole and Jenness.

On January 3, 1989, Jenness filed a motion for new trial in Judge Wood’s court, seeking to set aside Judge Daggett’s December 9 sanctions order, his December 19 judgment, and the release, and to order O’Toole to repay the money paid by Jenness to secure the settlement.

Simultaneous to the filing of the motion for new trial, Jenness filed a petition for a writ of mandamus and injunctive relief, with Judge McCorkle, who was the ancillary judge. Jenness’ application for mandamus and injunctive relief cited the history of the malpractice and attorney’s fees cases, and set forth the alleged wrongs she suffered because of the misassignment, consolidation, and the granting of sanctions. She prayed that Judge McCorkle order the district clerk to reassign the attorney’s fees case to the civil division, and that by injunction, order O’Toole to return the money Jenness paid him for the release.

Both of Jenness’ requests for relief were based on the theory that since Judge Wood signed an order transferring the malpractice case back to her court before Judge Daggett signed the judgment on the consolidated case, which included the malpractice case, Judge Daggett’s judgment was a nullity.

After a hearing, Judge McCorkle, sitting as the ancillary judge, orally granted the mandamus against the district clerk, but denied the temporary injunction. Judge McCorkle declined to sign a written order pending the outcome of this proceeding.

Jenness’ claim of misassignment of the attorney’s fees suit is based on. Rule 3.2.1 of the Harris County District Court Rules, which reads:

Prior Judgment. Any claim for relief based upon a prior judgment shall be assigned to the court of original judgment.

In answer to Jenness’ application for writ of mandamus seeking to correct the alleged misassignment of the suit for attorney’s fees to Judge Daggett’s court, we declined to hold that Judge Daggett abused his discretion in assuming jurisdiction of the case under the above rule. Jenness v. Daggett, No. 01-88-01031-CV, slip op. at p. 3. Despite our determination in that cause, Jenness continued to insist that the case had been misassigned, and that O’Toole was guilty of “forum shopping” by filing the case in Daggett’s family court. Jenness further contends that the interpretation of the rule by the district clerk and the judges is that the attorney’s fees suit should not have been returned to the court that issued the original judgment, unless the relief sought in the new suit was specifically granted in the original judgment.

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Bluebook (online)
765 S.W.2d 910, 1989 Tex. App. LEXIS 391, 1989 WL 17218, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hardy-v-mccorkle-texapp-1989.