In Re Sims

88 S.W.3d 297, 2002 Tex. App. LEXIS 5056, 2002 WL 1559109
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 17, 2002
Docket04-02-00357-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by39 cases

This text of 88 S.W.3d 297 (In Re Sims) 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 Sims, 88 S.W.3d 297, 2002 Tex. App. LEXIS 5056, 2002 WL 1559109 (Tex. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

Opinion by:

ALMA L. LÓPEZ, Justice.

Relator, Sherre Taylor Sims, filed this original proceeding seeking relief from the trial court’s order granting real party in interest’s plea in abatement. Specifically, Sims contends that the trial court abused its discretion in abating the lawsuit she filed in Bexar County in favor of a later filed declaratory judgment action in Medina County, Texas. We conditionally grant the writ of mandamus.

Background

The final divorce decree of Sherre Cam-mack (now Sherre Taylor Sims) and Huette “Sonny” Cammack was entered on July 23, 1998 in the 37th Judicial District Court of Bexar County. That decree recognized an “Agreement Incident to Divorce” (the “Agreement”) between Sims and Cammack. The divorce decree specifically approved the Agreement and incorporated it by reference. The decree also provided that it expressly reserved the right “to make orders necessary to clarify and enforce th[e] Decree.” The purpose of the Agreement was to settle the rights of Sims and Cammack as to all marital property, assets, debts and obligations as between themselves, their heirs and assigns.

The Agreement specifically provides for the payment of contractual alimony by Cammack to Sims. Under section 6, Cam-mack must pay Sims $5,000.00 per month as alimony until the earlier of: (1) twenty-five years from the date of the initial monthly alimony payment; or (2) Sims’s exercise of her option to terminate payment of the monthly alimony amount in lieu of a cash payment. The Agreement defines the conditions which trigger Sims’s option for a cash payment. Paragraph 7.01 of the Agreement provides that upon the occurrence of an “equity transfer” Sims could opt for a cash payment of $1,500,000.00, less contractual alimony paid to that point. The Agreement defines an “equity transfer” as:

any transaction in which Huette “Sonny” Cammack or his estate or heirs, sell, assign, transfer, convey or suffer or permit the transfer or assignment of any percentage of the equity securities of Alamo Water Refiners, Inc. or its successors (through merger, consolidation or otherwise) that will result in more than 50% of the equity ownership of Alamo Water Refiners, Inc. or its successors being owned by persons other than (1) Huette “Sonny” Cammack; (ii) his estate; (iii) his heirs; (iv) an intervi-vos or testamentary trust of Huette “Sonny” Cammack or his heirs are the principal beneficiaries; (v) a limited partnership, limited liability company, corporation or other such entity as to which Huette “Sonny” Cammack or his heirs are the principal partners, members, shareholders, or beneficiaries, as the case may be or (vi) a combination thereof.

Pursuant to Paragraph 7.02 of the Agreement, Sims would be provided with a 30 day notice of any proposed closing of a transaction that would amount to an equity transfer. Upon receiving such notice, Sims would then have 30 days to exercise her option for a cash payment. If she failed to exercise the option within that time frame, the option would lapse.

By her first amended petition, Sims alleged that on or about August 9, 2000, Cammack sold or transferred Alamo Water Refiners, Inc. to the Marmon Group and/or Matt-son Inc. (the “Marmon Group”). Sims alleged Cammack failed to notify her of this transaction as required under the Agreement. Rather, she discov *301 ered the transaction on her own in November 2000. Sims subsequently gave Cam-mack written notification of her election to exercise her option to receive the $1.5 million cash payment. Cammack refused the request. Sims subsequently filed suit on May 18, 2001, in the 37th District Court, Bexar County, Texas, for breach of contract and to enforce the divorce decree. This was the same court that entered the 1998 divorce decree. Cammack filed a general denial answer denying Sims’s allegations and claims.

Cammack’s answer would turn out to be his last word on the matter. On September 30, 2001, Cammack died. An application to probate his last will and testament was filed in the County Court at Law of Medina County on October 11, 2001. An order admitting Cammack’s will to probate was entered by the County Court at Law on October 22, 2001. Pursuant to the will, Frost National Bank (“Frost Bank”) was appointed the independent executor of Cammack’s estate. Sims filed a suggestion of death and a request for issuance of a writ of scire facias pursuant to Texas Rule of Civil Procedure 154 in Bexar County. On December 13, 2001, the trial court in Bexar County entered an order substituting Frost Bank for Cammack as defendant in Sims’s lawsuit and issued the writ of scire facias.

On January 4, 2002, Frost Bank filed an original petition in the County Court at Law of Medina County against Sims seeking a declaratory judgment regarding its duty to pay the $1.5 million under the Agreement and its continued obligation to make monthly alimony payments. In its petition, Frost Bank specifically contended that the Alamo Works Marmon Group transaction did not constitute an equity transfer which triggered Sims’s option. Frost Bank also began depositing the $5,000.00 monthly payments into the court’s registry alleging the Agreement was unclear on whether Sims should be paid pending her lawsuit. Sims responded by filing a plea to the jurisdiction, plea in abatement, original answer and counterclaims on March 4, 2002 in Medina County. 1 Sims’s answer and counter-claims for breach of contract were made subject to her special pleas. In those pleas, she contended that the Bexar County District Court had exclusive and/or dominate jurisdiction over the dispute.

On January 4, 2002, the same day Frost Bank filed its petition in Medina County, Frost Bank also filed a plea in abatement, plea to the jurisdiction and original answer in Bexar County asserting that Sims was wrongfully attempting to litigate an issue that was appertaining and incident to the Estate of Huette Cammack in the County Court at Law in Medina County, Texas. Frost Bank sought abatement of the Bexar County suit alleging that the County Court at Law of Medina County had exclusive and/or dominant jurisdiction. On January 14, 2002, Sims filed a first amended petition in the Bexar County District Court naming Frost Bank respondent in place of Cammack and adding a declaratory judgment action to her claims. On Sims’s motion, a hearing on Frost Bank’s plea was held on February 21, 2002, in the 37th Judicial District Court, Bexar County, Texas. After hearing arguments, respondent orally granted Frost Bank’s plea. A written order was subsequently entered on April 3, 2002, abating Sims’s lawsuit pending a final resolution of the declaratory judgment action in Medina County. Notwithstanding the special pleas Sims filed with the court in Medina County, the record reflects that she served requests for disclosures and requests for production on *302 Frost Bank in the declaratory judgment action on April 18, 2002. She subsequently filed this mandamus in the Bexar County lawsuit on May 16, 2002.

STANDARD OF REVIEW

In this mandamus proceeding, Sims must show that the trial court’s granting of Frost Bank’s plea in abatement was an abuse of discretion for which there is no adequate remedy by by appeal. See Walker v. Packer, 827 S.W.2d 833, 842 (Tex.1992); Dallas Fire Ins.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
88 S.W.3d 297, 2002 Tex. App. LEXIS 5056, 2002 WL 1559109, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-sims-texapp-2002.