in Re Avi B. Markowitz

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 7, 2010
Docket10-10-00116-CV
StatusPublished

This text of in Re Avi B. Markowitz (in Re Avi B. Markowitz) 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 Avi B. Markowitz, (Tex. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

IN THE

TENTH COURT OF APPEALS

 

No. 10-10-00116-CV

In re Avi B. Markowitz


Original Proceeding

DISSENTING Opinion


            This mandamus proceeding is targeting what appears to be, at best, an order compelling discovery in aid of collection of a judgment that is not final.  That order, in my view, seeks post-judgment discovery from a person who was never sued, but against whom, or possibly a third party, a judgment may have been rendered. 

            What lies at the heart of the matter is that inadequate attention was paid to the details when the suit was filed and as the suit progressed.  The underlying trial court proceeding was processed with an extraordinary lack of regard for the rules and the details necessary to successfully sue for collection of a note and guaranty, secure a valid judgment, and then be able to collect on that judgment.  Many rules and details were simply ignored or swept past.  I like rules.  I find comfort in their consistent application.  I find protection in the requirement that they must be followed.  But I am scared by what was brushed past to allow collection efforts to proceed against Avi B. Markowitz, MD when he was not properly sued.  The Bank makes a simplistic response to the petition that basically Markowitz knew the suit was against him, that he received the citation and the petition, and because he took the risk of not appearing in the suit and defending against it there is no reason why he should not personally be held liable for the judgment.  The Bank’s primary legal response is that this was a simple misnomer, not a misidentification of parties.  The Bank could be right but the record does not show it to be so.  And I note, with some degree of satisfaction, that the Bank was meticulous in its preparation of the loan, security, and guaranty documents, obtaining the signatures of a separate legal entity that it now contends may not even exist, Avi B. Markowitz, MD, PA.  In this proceeding, the Bank takes the incredible position that “PA” may stand for physicians assistant rather than professional association.  And any suggestion that the suit was clearly only a suit against the guarantor must ignore the record. 

            Some description of the inconsistencies and errors is necessary, but I will not burden this opinion with all the inconsistencies and lack of attention to detail.  I will only mention some of the many flaws in the underlying proceeding including, the most important, that Avi B. Markowitz, MD was never sued.

  1. The original petition speaks throughout, including the style, in terms of only one defendant.
  1. The defendant identified is Avi B. Markowitz, MD, PA.  In this dissenting opinion, this entity will be identified as PA.
  1. The style and text of the original petition indicates that PA is doing business as Central Texas Cancer Care.
  1. The original petition is captioned “Original Petition for Suit on Note.”  It does not indicate it is a suit on a guaranty agreement.
  1. The original petition first identifies PA as an individual.  But obviously, a professional association is not an individual.
  1. The original petition states that PA may be served at “his home.”  But professional associations do not have genders.  Nor do we normally think of professional associations as having a home but rather a primary place of doing business.
  1. The original petition also states that service may be made on “said Defendant” again indicating a singular defendant.
  1. The original petition then states that a copy of the note was signed by PA, and is attached and incorporated.  The note is attached and it was signed by the president of PA.
  1. Next the original petition states that the defendant, again singular, is in default, and that the sum currently due on the note is an amount that is almost a quarter-of-a-million dollars. 

            Up to here, other than some references to a professional association, PA, as if it is a human person, as opposed to a fictitious person, there is nothing fatal to the Bank’s claim against PA.  But that is about to change.

  1. The original petition then states that without waiving the foregoing, “Defendant Avi B. Markowitz, MD, PA, personally guaranteed the above-referenced note.”  The reference to defendant is again singular and it unquestionably again identifies PA but says PA “Personally guaranteed” the note.  The Bank probably intended to sue Dr. Markowitz in his individual capacity as guarantor of the note but identified, and thus sued, only PA.  The doctor individually, Dr., was never identified as the defendant in the petition.  One could argue, though I think it is a long stretch, that because the guaranty agreement was incorporated by reference, Dr. was also sued.  At the very least, however, there are glaring problems already present, and that is only through paragraph 6 of the petition.
  1. The documents in the appendix, after the note, security agreement, asset based financing agreement, and guaranty that appear behind the tab with the original petition, and which appear to be proper copies, are the papers regarding service.  The citation is issued to “Defendant Avi B. Markowitz, M.D. D/B/A Central Texas Cancer Center.”  Now remember that only PA has been referenced with a D/B/A, so it is somewhat confusing to have Dr. referred to with a D/B/A and the D/B/A is not Central Texas Cancer Care, as appeared in the style, text, and attachments of the original petition but by the name Central Texas Cancer Center.  So it is unknown if this is a different D/B/A, or whether they intended to reference PA or Dr.  This possible new identity will be referred to as “Center.”
  1. In the affidavit attached to the citation showing the proof of service by the professional process server, the style of the suit still identifies only PA as the only defendant, but identifies Center as the recipient of the papers.

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in Re Avi B. Markowitz, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-avi-b-markowitz-texapp-2010.