Holly West Marc G. Rosenthal And Rosenthal & Watson v. Sandra Joseph

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 26, 2001
Docket03-00-00691-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Holly West Marc G. Rosenthal And Rosenthal & Watson v. Sandra Joseph (Holly West Marc G. Rosenthal And Rosenthal & Watson v. Sandra Joseph) 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
Holly West Marc G. Rosenthal And Rosenthal & Watson v. Sandra Joseph, (Tex. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN




NO. 03-00-00691-CV

Holly West; Marc G. Rosenthal; and Rosenthal & Watson, Appellants


v.



Sandra Joseph, Appellee



FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF TRAVIS COUNTY, 201ST JUDICIAL DISTRICT

NO. 98-06495, HONORABLE MARY PEARL WILLIAMS, JUDGE PRESIDING

Appellants Holly West, Marc G. Rosenthal, and the law firm of Rosenthal & Watson appeal from a trial court order imposing sanctions against Marc G. Rosenthal and Rosenthal & Watson. We will affirm the order.

BACKGROUND



In June 1998, Holly West filed suit against appellee Sandra Joseph in Travis County district court to recover for injuries resulting from an automobile accident between the two. The case was set for trial on April 24, 2000.

Approximately one month before trial, West's attorney, Marc Rosenthal, deposed and questioned Joseph about her responses to a request for admissions concerning the use of her cellular phone before, during, and immediately after the automobile collision. During the deposition, a disagreement arose over whether Joseph could see the document from which Rosenthal was questioning her about her responses. Rosenthal refused to allow Joseph to see the document and instead insisted on reading it to her "verbatim." Joseph's attorney, Matthew Beatty, indicated his intent to get his copy of the document from his files; Rosenthal, however, refused to consent to a break and indicated that he would end the deposition if Beatty left the room. Beatty eventually removed Joseph from the deposition.

Rosenthal subsequently served Joseph with a second notice to continue her deposition on April 10, and filed a motion to compel and for sanctions relating to the first deposition; Joseph filed a motion to quash the deposition notice. The district court denied Rosenthal's motion for sanctions and partially granted Joseph's motion to quash. The court allowed the deposition to go forward with the limitation that Rosenthal could examine Joseph for no longer than thirty minutes and only on the topic of her use of her cellular phone at or near the time of the accident. Thirty minutes before the scheduled deposition on April 10, Rosenthal faxed a letter to Beatty stating that he "would not resume the deposition" of Joseph that day. Rosenthal did not call to notify defense counsel, and the letter did not reach defense counsel until after the time the deposition was set to begin.

On March 31, in the period between the two deposition dates, Rosenthal filed a loss of consortium claim against Joseph, arising out of the same automobile collision, in a Travis County county court at law on behalf of West's husband, Daniel West. Joseph filed a motion to consolidate Mr. West's case with Ms. West's district court case. The county court at law held a hearing on Joseph's motion to consolidate. Rosenthal opposed consolidation, serving Joseph's counsel with Mr. West's first amended original petition reducing the requested damages to $499.99, just one cent below the minimal jurisdictional limits of the district court. However, because this amount was also below the county court at law's jurisdictional minimum of $500, the court dismissed Mr. West's suit for lack of subject matter jurisdiction and sanctioned Rosenthal, finding that "the actions of [Rosenthal] herein are the sort that cry out for sanctions," that Rosenthal's actions had "caused an unnecessary multiplicity of lawsuits from an apparently simple, routine car wreck case," and that his actions "in unreasonably attempting to impede the transfer of and consolidation of claims [had] caused a waste of the resources of the courts and of Defendant's time and money."

Following the county court's dismissal order, Rosenthal filed a new but identical lawsuit on behalf of Mr. West, again in the county court at law. In response, Joseph filed, in the county court at law, a motion to transfer Mr. West's suit to district court, and, in district court, a motion for continuance, asking the district court to continue the April 24 trial setting to allow time to consolidate the county court at law and district court proceedings. The district court denied Joseph's motion, and the April 24 setting remained in place. The county court at law, however, granted the motion to transfer Mr. West's case to district court; the district court consented to the transfer but indicated that it would not agree to the consolidation of Mr. West's and Ms. West's cases because Ms. West's case was set for trial the following Monday. Unable to obtain consolidation, Joseph withdrew her motion to transfer Mr. West's suit to district court.

Rosenthal allegedly contacted Beatty by telephone the day before trial, which was Easter Sunday, stated that he had been "unreasonable" in his attempts to avoid consolidation, and agreed to try both cases on the merits the next day. However, with less than twenty-four hours before trial, Beatty was unable to reach his client to obtain consent to the consolidation and trial of both cases on April 24.

The morning of April 24, the district court held a pretrial hearing. At the end of the hearing, the district judge instructed the parties to return to the courtroom by 1:45 p.m. for jury selection. That afternoon, Joseph was served with two new lawsuits Rosenthal had filed in Travis County district court within the previous hour. Rosenthal then served Joseph's counsel with a nonsuit without prejudice of the district court and county court at law cases.

Joseph subsequently filed a motion for sanctions for "frivolous and unethical conduct of Plaintiff's attorney," requesting that the court impose sanctions under either sections 10.001 through 10.006 of the Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code, see Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code Ann. §§ 10.001-.006 (West Supp. 2001), or under the court's inherent power to sanction. The matter was set for hearing on May 22; Rosenthal responded by filing a motion to quash the hearing on the basis that it had "been illegally scheduled by one of Defendant's attorneys of record (Matthew Beatty)." The district court denied Rosenthal's motion to quash and proceeded to hear evidence relating to Joseph's motion for sanctions.

The district court found that "Marc G. Rosenthal and the firm of Rosenthal & Watson have engaged in conduct which justifies the imposition of sanctions pursuant to [the] Court's inherent power to discipline attorneys for improper and bad faith conduct." The court ordered Rosenthal and Rosenthal & Watson to pay Joseph sanctions in the amount of $14,751.08, payable to Herman & Howry, L.L.P., Beatty's law firm, "for the payment of the fees and expenses incurred in defense of the incident and allegations alleged by Plaintiff." West, Rosenthal, and Rosenthal & Watson (collectively "appellants") appeal the trial court's order of sanctions.



DISCUSSION

The decision to impose a sanction is left to the discretion of the trial court and will be set aside only upon a showing of a clear abuse of discretion. Koslow's v. Mackie, 796 S.W.2d 700, 704 (Tex. 1990). A trial court abuses its discretion when it acts in an unreasonable and arbitrary manner, or without reference to any guiding rules or principles.

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