In re Estate of Nunu

542 S.W.3d 67
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 2, 2017
DocketNO. 14-16-00394-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 542 S.W.3d 67 (In re Estate of Nunu) 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 Estate of Nunu, 542 S.W.3d 67 (Tex. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

Tracy Christopher, Justice

In this appeal, an estate's beneficiary seeks reversal of (a) the trial court's ruling that the beneficiary has no claim for forfeiture of opposing counsel's attorneys' fees, (b) the trial court's assumed denial of the beneficiary's challenge to the independent executor's entitlement to use estate funds to pay her attorneys' fees and expenses in this case, (c) the denial of the beneficiary's application to compel distribution of the estate, and (d) the denial of the beneficiary's motion to recuse the trial judge. We agree with the trial court that the beneficiary lacks standing to pursue a fee-forfeiture claim based on alleged deficiencies in opposing counsel's legal advice to the estate's independent executor. We also find no error in the denial of the motion to recuse. We do find error, however, in the trial court's failure to rule on the extent to which the independent executor's legal fees and expenses can be paid from the estate, and on its failure to order distribution of the estate as statutorily required. We accordingly affirm in part, reverse in part, and remand the cause to the trial court.

I. BACKGROUND

Paul Nunu and his sister Nancy Nunu Risk are each beneficiaries of one-third of the estate of their mother, Rose Farha Nunu ("the Estate").1 Nancy is the independent executor of the Estate, and she previously was represented in that capacity by Paul, who is an attorney. After Paul accused her of wrongdoing, Nancy instead employed attorneys W. Cameron McCulloch and Christopher C. Burt of the law firm of MacIntyre, McCulloch, Stanfield & Young, LLP ("MacIntyre McCulloch").

The probate case originally had been assigned to statutory county Probate Court No. 4 in Harris County. In that court, Paul allegedly accused Nancy's attorney McCulloch of misconduct and moved to recuse the Honorable Christine Butts on the ground that McCulloch's father previously was the presiding judge of Probate Court No. 4.2 After Judge Butts voluntarily recused herself, the case was transferred to statutory county Probate Court No. 1.

A. Paul's Motion to Recuse the Trial Judge

Paul then moved to recuse the Honorable Loyd Wright, presiding judge of Probate *72Court No. 1, alleging that Judge Wright is biased in favor of MacIntyre McCulloch. Judge Wright declined to recuse himself, and the judge assigned to hear the motion denied it.

B. Paul's Claims Against Nancy and His First Application to Compel Distribution

Paul alleged that Nancy, in her capacity as independent executor, breached her fiduciary duties to him and committed acts of negligence per se, gross negligence, gross mismanagement, gross misconduct, and actual fraud. He asked the court to enforce a forfeiture provision of his mother's will against Nancy, to remove her as independent executor, and to award him exemplary damages.3

Paul also alleged that the Estate's heirs had agreed to the division of the Estate's real property in February 2014, but that Nancy demanded a release as a condition to distribution of the property. Nevertheless, on March 7, 2014, Paul drafted and delivered to Nancy a "Partition Agreement" and partition deeds that did not contain a release. Nancy refused to sign them. In April 2014, she hired MacIntyre McCulloch, and her new counsel drafted a "Settlement Agreement" containing a release. Paul would not sign that proposed agreement. Based on these factual allegations, Paul pleaded for declaratory relief and for Nancy's removal as independent executor on the ground that her insistence on a release as a condition for the distribution of the Estate's assets violated Texas Estates Code section 405.002(b). Paul also alleged that McCulloch and Nancy conspired to obtain an illegal release.

On October 26, 2015, Paul filed an "Application to Compel Distribution," in which he asked the trial court (1) to compel the distribution of all of the Estate's assets "as such estate existed on March 6, 2014"; (2) to order Nancy to "fulfill her prior agreement to partition and exchange the real property" of the Estate; (3) to order Nancy, in her individual capacity, to "pay all costs of delay including proration of ad valorem taxes and written assignment of all insurance policies"; (4) to "compel distribution of one[-]third of [a] note receivable as of March 6, 2014 ($18,777) plus one[-]third of all interest payments from April 2012 to the present ($1,500), plus one[-]third of all attorneys['] fees, and all jewelry and all other income or assets of the estate." In her response, Nancy pointed out that Paul had not asked the trial court to compel the distribution of the Estate's assets pursuant to the terms of Rose Farha Nunu's will. She also stated that the Estate had outstanding debts for legal fees and the fees and expenses of her expert witness, and that the distribution of the Estate's assets before resolution of the claims against her as executrix would be premature. The trial court found that "[a] necessity for administration exists for the Estate," denied Paul's application, and set the case for trial.

On the third day of the jury trial, Paul announced in open court that he was nonsuiting with prejudice all claims to enforce the will's forfeiture provision or to remove Nancy as independent executrix, reserving only his claims to compel distribution and to contest, and to request forfeiture of, the fees charged by Nancy's attorneys.

C. Paul's Application for Attorney-Fee Forfeiture and Second Application to Compel Distribution of Assets

After Paul's nonsuit, he filed his "Application for Attorney Fee Forfeiture and Second Application to Compel Distribution *73of Assets." In that document, he argued that all fees claimed by or paid to Nancy's attorneys should be forfeit, or that Nancy should be required to pay the fees herself rather than paying them from Estate funds. He also again asked the trial court to compel distribution of the Estate as it existed on the second anniversary of his mother's death and to compel distribution of the Estate in accordance with the unexecuted partition agreement. In her response, Nancy did not mention any of Paul's requests for relief concerning attorneys' fees. As for his second application to compel distribution, Nancy again stated that there was a continued need for administration because the Estate still had outstanding debts in the form of the attorneys' fees owed to MacIntyre McCulloch and the fees and expenses due to her expert witness.

The trial court rendered a final judgment (1) recounting Paul's voluntary nonsuit of his claims against Nancy; (2) stating that the "Application for Attorney Fee Forfeiture" was heard; (3) finding that Paul "has no claims or causes of action for forfeiture against the attorneys representing [Nancy], as Independent Executrix of this Estate"; and (4) denying "the Application for Attorney Fee Forfeiture and any claims or causes of action relating thereto." The final judgment neither authorized Nancy to pay attorneys' fees from the Estate, nor ordered her to reimburse the Estate for attorneys' fees she already had paid with Estate funds. The trial court denied Paul's motion for rehearing or for a new trial, and Paul brought this appeal.

II. NANCY'S THRESHOLD ISSUES

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
542 S.W.3d 67, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-estate-of-nunu-texapp-2017.