in Re Servicios Legales De Mesoamerica S. De R. L.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 6, 2014
Docket13-12-00466-CV
StatusPublished

This text of in Re Servicios Legales De Mesoamerica S. De R. L. (in Re Servicios Legales De Mesoamerica S. De R. L.) 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 Servicios Legales De Mesoamerica S. De R. L., (Tex. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

NUMBER 13-12-00466-CV

COURT OF APPEALS

THIRTEENTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS

CORPUS CHRISTI - EDINBURG

IN RE SERVICIOS LEGALES DE MESOAMERICA S. DE R.L.

On appeal from the County Court at Law No. 4 of Nueces County, Texas.

MEMORANDUM OPINION Before Justices Rodriguez, Benavides, and Perkes Memorandum Opinion by Justice Benavides Through a petition for writ of mandamus and writ of prohibition, relator, Servicios

Legales de Mesoamerica S. de R.L. (“Servicios”), seeks: (1) a writ of mandamus

directing the trial court1 to abate a Nueces County suit pending the disposition of a suit

in Hidalgo County; (2) a writ of mandamus ordering the trial court to vacate any and all

1 The respondent in this cause is the Honorable J. Manuel Bañales, sitting by assignment. orders that actively interfere with the Hidalgo County suit and the exercise of that court’s

jurisdiction; and (3) a writ of prohibition directing the trial court to take no further action in

the Nueces County suit. This Court requested and received a response to the petition

from the real party in interest, the Law Offices of Douglas A. Allison (“Allison”). We deny

the petition for writ of mandamus and writ of prohibition.

I. BACKGROUND

This case concerns two separate trial court cases: (1) a divorce proceeding filed

in Hidalgo County between non-lawyers, and (2) a declaratory judgment action filed in

Nueces County regarding the ownership of attorney’s fees between law firms and

attorneys. We address the history of these cases together.

A. THE HIDALGO COUNTY DIVORCE CASE

In February 2005, Maria de Jesus Garcia filed an original petition for divorce from

Wilfrido Rogelio Garcia in Hidalgo County (the “Hidalgo County suit”). Neither Maria nor

Wilfrido is an attorney. The original petition for divorce identified Wilfrido as

“Respondent” and Grupo Consejero Internacional and Servicios Legales as “Co-

Respondents.”2 Maria identified both co-respondents as alter egos of Wilfrido. Maria

alleged that Wilfrido fraudulently transferred assets to the co-respondents to defraud her

of community property or her separate property rights in those assets.

On May 14, 2008, the trial court entered an order requiring the deposit of “any

2 The petition for writ of mandamus asserts that Servicios Legales is the same entity as the Servicios in this case.

2 income or fees received or owed to the parties, Maria De Jesus Garcia and Wilfrido

Rogelio Garcia and Servicios Legales De Mesoamerica,” from specific entities, including

“the Law Office of Baker, Brown and Dixon, or the Law Office of Douglas A. Allison, or

the Law Office of Watts Law Firm, or the Law Office of Sico, White and Braugh, LLP, or

the Law Office of Podhurst Orseck, or the Law Office of Speiser and Krause, or the Law

Office of Fibich, Hampton and Leebron, LLP or the Law Office of Weitz and Luxenburg,

or the Law Offices of Haggard, Parks, Haggard and Lewis, or any other entity owing

funds,” to be placed in the registry of the court.

On March 5, 2009, Law Funder, a legal finance company, intervened in the lawsuit.

Law Funder asserted that it had purchased Wilfrido’s rights, if any, to receive funds

relating to certain lawsuits. Thereafter, Baker, Brown & Dixon, P.C. (“BBD”) and John

Baker filed an answer and counterclaim to Law Funder’s intervention. On September

10, 2009, Wilfrido, Servicios, and Law Funder filed a “joint” motion for appointment of a

receiver. According to the motion, some law firms had complied with the May 14, 2008

order requiring them to deposit the disputed funds into the registry of the court, but some

had not. Therefore, the movants sought the appointment of a receiver “for the purpose

of ascertaining the status of the cases” to which the May 14, 2008 order applied and “to

collect the monies due and owing.”

On October 1, 2009, the trial court appointed receivers Michael Flanagan, Eloy

Sepulveda, and Sean Callagy for “the purpose of securing an accounting and to seek

recovery of all claims, income and fees received or owed” to Wilfrido, Servicios, BBD, and

Law Funder. The order provided that the receivers would retain Raymond Thomas of

3 Kittleman, Thomas & Gonzalez, LLP to represent the receivers for the purposes stated in

the order.

On October 22, 2009, the receivers filed a petition in intervention against Allison

and other law firms. The petition in intervention sought an accounting “on all matters

referred” to the defendants, and to the extent an accounting showed money was owed by

defendants on “matters referred to them by [Servicios] and/or its assignee, [BBD],” the

petition sought an order compelling them to deposit the monies into the registry of the

court “until such time as the Court adjudicates ownership of said funds.”

B. THE NUECES COUNTY DECLARATORY ACTION

On January 25, 2010, Allison filed an original petition for declaratory judgment in

Nueces County against Law Funder, BBD, Baker, and Pablo Ruiz Limon (the “Nueces

County suit”).3 According to the petition, Allison had received the attorney’s fees due

after concluding four separate lawsuits, but the defendants had claimed an interest in the

attorney’s fees from those four cases.

C. HIDALGO COUNTY DIVORCE CASE REMOVED TO FEDERAL COURT

On January 26, 2010, the Hidalgo County suit was removed to federal court

because the Internal Revenue Service had joined the case through a third party petition

filed by two of the intervention defendants. The parties engaged in extensive litigation

in federal court. The record before this Court contains some, but not all, of the pleadings

and transcripts from the federal court proceeding. On May 14, 2010, the federal court

3 Limon was not served and is not a party to this original proceeding.

4 issued a preliminary injunction preventing Allison from proceeding with the Nueces

County suit until further order. Without further delineating the federal court proceedings

in any detail, Wilfrido, Baker, BBD, Servicios, and Law Funder settled all claims between

each other and dismissed those claims with prejudice.

On March 29, 2012, after a series of hearings, the federal court remanded the case

to Hidalgo County. The twenty-six page order of remand is entitled “Order Granting in

Part Allison’s Motion for Summary Judgment or Alternatively, Motion to Dismiss, Mooting

Mrs. Garcia’s Motion for Accounting, Mooting Receivers, SLM, Baker, and BBD’s Motions

to Quash and for Protective Order, Mooting Request for Status Conference, and Granting

Receivers’ Motion to Remand For Consideration of All Other Pending Motions.” The

order provides that the federal court was required to remand the case insofar as it could

not issue a divorce decree or order a division of the Garcias’ marital estate, thus, the case

had to be remanded for those purposes. As indicated by its title, the order of remand

addressed numerous substantive matters pending in that court.

First, the federal court briefly addressed Allison’s motion for summary judgment

or, alternatively, for the dismissal of the claims filed against him by the receivers.

According to the order, the only claims pending against Allison were those asserted by

the receivers in their petition in intervention, that is, the receivers’ demand for accounting

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