in Re Arnold & Itkin, L.L.P., Beck Redden, L.L.P., Albritton Law Firm, Kurt Arnold, Cory Itkin, Jason Itkin, Russell Post, Fields Alexander, Jas Brar and Eric Albritton

501 S.W.3d 214, 2016 Tex. App. LEXIS 8559
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 9, 2016
DocketNO. 01-15-00989-CV, NO. 01-15-00990-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 501 S.W.3d 214 (in Re Arnold & Itkin, L.L.P., Beck Redden, L.L.P., Albritton Law Firm, Kurt Arnold, Cory Itkin, Jason Itkin, Russell Post, Fields Alexander, Jas Brar and Eric Albritton) 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 Arnold & Itkin, L.L.P., Beck Redden, L.L.P., Albritton Law Firm, Kurt Arnold, Cory Itkin, Jason Itkin, Russell Post, Fields Alexander, Jas Brar and Eric Albritton, 501 S.W.3d 214, 2016 Tex. App. LEXIS 8559 (Tex. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

OPINION

Jane Bland, Justice

In this appeal, we determine whether a claim for legal taalpractice is ripe for adjudication. In the underlying state court action, the clients have sued their former lawyers for the lawyers’ alleged negligence in handling their federal court personal injury cáses. The federal court dismissed the clients’ personal injury cases, ruling that Mexico was the proper forum for those suits. But the federal court conditioned its dismissal on a return jurisdiction clause, should the Mexican courts refuse to exercise jurisdiction over the personal injury claims when properly presented. By a petition for a writ of mandamus and a request for a permissive interlocutory appeal, the defendant lawyers challenge the trial court’s denial of their plea to the jurisdiction, in which they contended that the clients have not presented a legal injury ripe for adjudication. We hold that the clients’ legal malpractice claims are not *218 ripe for adjudication. We therefore grant mandamus relief. We dismiss the request for a permissive interlocutory appeal as moot.

BACKGROUND

In the federal court personal injury case, the clients, who are citizens of Mexico, sued several American companies and individuals for injuries and deaths that occurred in an accident on a drilling rig in Mexican waters. The clients alleged various causes of action, including products liability and wrongful death, based on Texas state law, general federal and international maritime law, the Jones Act, and Mexican law.

A. Proceedings in Federal Court and in the Mexican Courts

In the federal personal injury, suit, the clients were represented by lawyers with the firm Arnold & Itkin, L.L.P. and the Albritton Law Firm, who are relators in this mandamus proceeding. The personal injury defendants in the federal suit moved to dismiss the federal action on the basis of forum non conveniens. They argued that Mexico is the proper forum for the clients’ personal injury claims because the clients are Mexican citizens who resided in Mexico and the accident occurred offshore of Mexico. Lawyers with relator Beck Redden L.L.P. .were retained to assist the clients in federal court in opposing the motion to dismiss. In September 2010, the federal district court consolidated the personal injury lawsuits for the purpose of briefing and deciding the forum non con-veniens issue and other issues common to each case.

The federal court ■ then dismissed the clients’ state law claims with prejudice, ruling that any state law claims were preempted by the Jones Act. The federal court also dismissed the clients’ federal maritime claims, but without prejudice, because “[pjlaintiffs failed to allege that there was no available remedy in Mexico, as required to pursue a federal maritime claim under the Jones Act.” 1

The clients then amended their complaint and abandoned their federal maritime claims, but they continued to allege state law claims and claims under Mexican law. The federal court again dismissed the state law claims because they were preempted by the Jones Act.

In April 2011, the federal court then conditionally granted the personal injury defendants’ motion to dismiss for forum non conveniens. 2 As a condition to granting the dismissal, the court required the personal injury defendants to stipulate *219 that they would “appear and submit themselves to the jurisdiction of a Mexican federal or state court,- waiving any jurisdictional defenses they might normally possess” and would “waive any statute of limitations defense that they did not possess as of the date each-of the seven cases was originally filed.” The personal injury defendants complied by filing a stipulation in federal court in which they 'stipulated that they would agree to. submit to jurisdiction in Mexico, waive any statute of limitations and laches defenses, agree to discovery in Mexico, and make all witnesses and documents available in Mexico. Accordingly, the federal court entered a final order conditionally dismissing the case. The court’s dismissal order included a return jurisdiction clause, providing that:

Should the courts of Mexico refuse to accept jurisdiction of this case for reasons other than Plaintiffs’ refusal to pursue an action or to comply with the procedural requirements of Mexican courts, this Court may reassert jurisdiction upon timely notification of the same.

The clients did not appeal this May 4, 2011 order.

Between February and May of 2013, the lawyers refiled in Mexico eleven of the more than eighty original cases. The Mexican courts rejected jurisdiction of the cases on the basis that the filings failed to comply with Mexican procedural requirements. In October 2013, the Lawyers filed a motion to reinstate the case in the federal court, arguing that Mexico had rejected jurisdiction over the cases. 3 In May 2014, the federal court denied this motion, observing that “[bjecause counsel made no attempt to litigate those cases in Mexico in compliance with the court’s Memorandum and Order, there is no basis upon which to reopen them here.” With regard to the eleven cases that were refiled in Mexico, the federal district court found that the clients “did not prosecute the cases in good faith.” Specifically, the district court found that the clients failed to (1) inform the Mexican courts of the personal injury defendants’ stipulations consenting to jurisdiction; (2) inform the Mexican courts of the federal court’s orders granting dismissal based on forum non conveniens-, and (3) translate copies of the stipulations and court orders for the Mexican court. Accordingly, the court denied the clients’ motion to reinstate their underlying lawsuits, and provided that the clients could “not seek reinstatement in [the federal district court] unless and until they have pursued their claims in Mexico with diligence and good faith, including seeking final appellate review of any. Mexican dismissal order.”

Several months after the federal court’s denial of the motion to reinstate the clients’ cases, Arnold & Itkin withdrew from representing the clients. In its letter withdrawing from representation, it noted that the federal court’s denial of the clients’ motion to reinstate “provided a possibility that the cases could be brought in the United States,” but expressed a belief that “the chances of the Court accepting jurisdiction for these cases' even after following all steps is remote.”

B. The Stdte Court Malpractice Action

The clients did not re-file their claims in Mexico. Instead, alleging that any further action in Mexico would be futile, the clients filed this malpractice action in the Harris County District Court against the lawyers who represented them in the federal suit. *220 In this suit, they seek the recovery of their personal injury damages from the lawyers based on the recovery they alleged they would have obtained had they successfully remained in federal court in the United States.

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501 S.W.3d 214, 2016 Tex. App. LEXIS 8559, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-arnold-itkin-llp-beck-redden-llp-albritton-law-firm-kurt-texapp-2016.