in Re AJBJK, LLP

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 6, 2018
Docket01-18-00772-CV
StatusPublished

This text of in Re AJBJK, LLP (in Re AJBJK, LLP) 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
in Re AJBJK, LLP, (Tex. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

Opinion issued December 6, 2018

In The

Court of Appeals For The

First District of Texas ———————————— NO. 01-18-00772-CV ——————————— IN RE AJBJK, L.L.P., Relator

Original Proceeding on Petition for Writ of Mandamus

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Relator, AJBJK, LLP (“AJBJK”), has filed a petition for a writ of mandamus,

challenging the trial court’s order granting a motion to modify or reform a final

judgment in the underlying proceeding.1 In one issue, AJBJK contends that the trial

1 The underlying case is AJBJK, L.L.P., a Texas Limited Partnership v. Saefaldin Rahmati and Abdul Saeed Assadi Rahmati, No. 11-DCV-194122, in the 240th District Court of Fort Bend County, Texas, the Honorable Chad Bridges presiding. court’s order is void on the ground that it was signed after the trial court’s period of

plenary power had expired.

We conditionally grant the petition.

Background

The underlying trial court proceeding involved the interpretation of reciprocal

easements affecting adjacent properties owned by AJBJK and real parties in interest,

Saefaldin Rahmati and Abdul Saeed Assadi Rahmati (collectively, “the Rahmatis”).

AJBJK sought a declaration about the rights of the Rahmatis and their tenant to drive

over and park on AJBJK’s property and AJBK’s rights to construct fences and

control access to its property. It also sought a permanent injunction to allow it to

reconstruct a fence on its property and to enjoin the Rahmatis and their tenant from

entering upon, using, and parking on AJBJK’s property. AJBJK sought damages of

$20,000 for the Rahmatis’ trespass and use of AJBJK’s property, $20,000 for their

“unauthorized entry upon” the property and “the destruction of [AJBJK’s] chain link

fence,” and attorney’s fees under the Uniform Declaratory Judgments Act (the

“DJA”).2

After a bench trial, the trial court signed a judgment that awarded, in part:

1. Declaratory Judgment declaring that [the Rahmatis] have and possess no reciprocal easement rights regarding ingress, egress or parking over, across, or upon [AJBJK’s] real property . . . ;

2 See TEX. CIV. PRAC. & REM. CODE ANN. § 37.009 (Vernon 2015).

2 2. Declaratory Judgment declaring that [AJBJK] is allowed to erect fences and/or barriers upon [its] real property to control access to and from [its] real property . . . ; 3. [AJBJK] is given a permanent injunction which hereby immediately orders, prohibits, and enjoins [the Rahmatis], their successors and assigns, [the Rahmatis’] tenant, their respective guests, vendors, customers, and employees from the use of, entrance upon, parking upon, or traverse over the real property . . . ; [and] 4. [AJBJK] is given judgment for and shall recover from [the Rahmatis] (a) $28,550.00 for attorneys fees, (b) $2,400.00 for attorney’s related costs, (c) $4,000.00 for expert fees and (d) $1,400.00 for damages to [AJBJK’s] fence; and all cash judgments bear interest at the rate of FIVE PERCENT (5.00%) per anum on the amount to be calculated from thirty days (30) after the entry of judgment until paid.

The Rahmatis appealed the trial court’s judgment to this Court.3 In their

appeal, the Rahmatis challenged the trial court’s declaratory judgment, the

permanent injunction, and the award of damages in the amount of $1,400.00 for

damages to AJBJK’s fence.4 We concluded that the evidence established that the

Rahmatis “[had] an easement that includ[ed] ingress and egress over, and parking

upon, AJBJK’s real property.”5 And we held that the trial court erred in granting

AJBJK declaratory and injunctive relief but did not err in awarding damages to

3 See Rahmati v. AJBJK, L.L.P., No. 01-15-01036-CV, 2017 WL 4820336 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] Oct. 26, 2017, pet. denied) (mem. op.). 4 Id. at *1. The Rahmatis did not challenge the trial court’s award of attorney’s fees, attorney’s related costs, or expert fees. See id. 5 Id. at *8. 3 AJBJK.6 Accordingly, we “revers[ed] the portions of the trial court’s judgment

granting AJBJK declaratory and injunctive relief and render[ed] judgment that the

Rahmatis . . . have an easement over the Common Areas of the Shopping Center,”

and we “affirm[ed] the remainder of the judgment.”7 We did not remand the case to

the trial court.

AJBJK filed a petition for review in the Supreme Court of Texas, which

denied the petition. The Clerk of this Court then issued this Court’s mandate. After

the mandate issued, AJBJK sought to enforce its judgment for attorney’s fees,

attorney’s related costs, and expert fees in the trial court. The Fort Bend County

District Clerk issued an abstract of judgment reflecting awards to AJBJK in the

amounts of $28,550.00 for attorney’s fees, $2,400.00 for attorney’s related costs,

$4,000.00 for expert fees, and $1400.00 for damages to AJBJK’s fence, plus post-

judgment interest at the rate of five percent per annum. And, at AJBJK’s request,

the district clerk issue a writ of execution.

The Rahmatis then filed in the trial court a motion to modify or reform the

judgment and a request to stay the writ of execution. They asserted that the trial

court’s previous awards of attorney’s fees, attorney’s related costs, and expert fees

to AJBJK were “now wholly without legal basis, undeserved, and would result in an

6 Id. at *8–9. 7 Id. at *9. 4 inequitable and absurd windfall to the losing [AJBJK] and its attorneys to the

detriment of the prevailing [Rahmatis].” And they also argued that no “equitable or

just basis for [the trial court’s] award of attorney’s fees to [AJBJK]” remained

because our Court had reversed “the entirety of the declaratory relief” originally

granted by the trial court. According to the Rahmatis, “because the attorney’s fees

award [was] predicated on [AJBJK’s] declaratory relief at trial, when [our Court]

overruled the declaratory relief in its entirety, [we] implicitly overturned the

declaratory relief-predicated attorney’s fees award without the necessity of explicitly

stating as such in [our] Mandate.” (Emphasis added.) They asked the trial court to

“modify or reform its Judgment in a manner consistent with the decision of [this

Court] and the principles of equity and justice and vacate the portion of its judgment

with respect to attorneys fees in its entirety.” And they requested “a new accounting

and determination of costs and expert fees to be awarded, if any, in light of [their]

ultimate victory on the issues of declaratory and injunctive relief.”

AJBJK responded with a plea to the trial court’s jurisdiction, asserting that the

portions of the trial court’s judgment that this Court affirmed “included the award of

attorney’s fees and expenses and damages for the repair of the fence.” And it argued

that any order that the trial court issued would be void because its period of plenary

power had expired. AJBJK further asserted that our reversal of the declaratory

judgment portion of the trial court’s judgment did not require reversal of the award

5 of attorney’s fees to AJBJK. And it asked that the trial court deny the Rahmatis’

motion and “the judgment be executed.”

The trial court granted the Rahmatis’ motion, concluding that its previous

judgment should be modified or reformed “in keeping with” this Court’s mandate.

Thus, the trial court ordered:

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