in Re: Susan Gail Perrilloux

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 1, 2020
Docket05-19-01584-CV
StatusPublished

This text of in Re: Susan Gail Perrilloux (in Re: Susan Gail Perrilloux) 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: Susan Gail Perrilloux, (Tex. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

Conditionally Granted in part and Denied in part; Opinion Filed May 1, 2020

In The Court of Appeals Fifth District of Texas at Dallas No. 05-19-01584-CV

IN RE SUSAN GAIL PERRILLOUX, Relator

Original Proceeding from the 134th Judicial District Court Dallas County, Texas Trial Court Cause No. DC-17-08491

MEMORANDUM OPINION Before Justices Schenck, Reichek, and Evans Opinion by Justice Schenck In this mandamus proceeding, relator, Susan Gail Perrilloux, seeks relief from

the trial court’s December 12, 2019 contempt order (the “Order”) in a Rule 202

proceeding. After reviewing the parties’ briefs and the mandamus record, we have

determined relator is entitled to relief from a portion of the Order. We therefore

conditionally grant the writ in part and deny it in part.

BACKGROUND

The real parties in interest claim they are the beneficiaries of a trust created

by Hamp Williams (“Hamp Williams Trust”). They gave a power of attorney to relator’s husband, Ray Hudnall, Sr., now deceased, who was a relative of Hamp

Williams, to hire an attorney to track down information relating to the trust.

Relator helped Hudnall, Sr. search for information about the purported trust.

According to relator, she and her husband spent many years and over $300,000 in

time and money to obtain and store documents concerning her late husband’s

ancestor and their search did not yield any evidence of a Hamp Williams Trust or

any other inheritance that might belong to the real parties in interest.

The real parties in interest filed a Rule 202 petition to take pre-suit depositions

from various individuals, including relator. They sought to investigate a potential

suit to remove possible trustees of a Hamp Williams Trust and to recover their

inheritances.

Relator, a Florida resident, filed a special appearance, which the district court

denied. Relator filed a notice of interlocutory appeal from the denial of her special

appearance, but later moved to dismiss same. The district court then issued its Rule

202 order, which ordered, in part, that relator’s deposition would be taken within 10

miles of her residence. It also limited the scope of the deposition and subpoena

duces tecum to “issues relating to the Hamp Williams Trust, including but not

limited to the creation of such Trust, as well as any actions relating to the creation

of, existence of, or conduct concerning the Hamp Williams Trust.”

–2– The real parties in interest served a notice of deposition and subpoena duces

tecum on relator, compelling her to appear for deposition on January 18, 2019, in

California, where relator maintains a second home. Among other things, the

subpoena duces tecum requested production of all documents in relator’s possession

or control “pertaining to, relating to or in which the name of Hamp Williams is used

or mentioned and/or in which any property of Hamp Williams Trust or Hamp

Williams Estate is mentioned in any manner or form” and provided that the request

includes documents which “identify or discuss or otherwise relate to any property

held by or on behalf of the Hamp Williams Trust or Hamp Williams Estate by Hamp

Williams Expropriation Corp. before or after winding up.” 1

Relator filed a motion for protection, objecting to the deposition’s location

and the scope of the subpoena duces tecum. She protested the deposition’s location

in California, insisting that she is a Florida resident. As to the subpoena duces tecum,

she objected to the request for documents that solely mention “Hamp Williams” or

“Hamp Williams Estate,” arguing that it exceeded the scope of the Rule 202 order.

At the hearing on relator’s motion, the court noted that relator has a home in

California and concluded, because relator represented that she stores her documents

there, that is where the deposition would take place. The court also concluded that

1 It is asserted that Hamp Williams Expropriation Corp. is a corporation relator and her husband created to investigate and discover assets that may have belonged to Hamp Williams and the existence of a trust.

–3– the subpoena is “limited to issues relating to the Hamp Williams Trust, including but

not limited to the creation of such trust, as well as any actions relating to the creation

of, existence of, or conduct concerning the trust.” The court further noted that the

subpoena duces tecum comports with the Rule 202 order because it is limited to

documents in which both Hamp Williams and the Hamp Williams Trust are named,

or in which Hamp Williams and the Hamp Williams Estate are named, instead of

documents that solely reference Hamp Williams. The court denied relator’s motion

for protection. 2

On January 18, 2019, relator was deposed. She testified that while she had

pursued a theory that a Hamp Williams Trust existed, she had uncovered no evidence

of such a trust. Relator produced some documents at the deposition. The parties

dispute whether the documents were responsive to the subpoena. Other documents

were identified during the deposition, and the parties discussed releasing potential

claims and entering into a confidentiality agreement in exchange for the production

of the documents.3

The parties were unable to agree on the form and content of a confidentiality

and release agreement. Five months after the deposition, the real parties in interest

2 Relator filed a petition for writ of mandamus challenging the trial court’s ruling on her motion for protection. This Court denied that request for mandamus relief due to the lack of a sufficient record. 3 Those documents were (1) a judgment in the case of R.E. Trabue v. Hamp Williams, which concerned land that may have been part of the Hamp Williams Trust, and (2) a power of attorney related to a 1926 judgment that supposedly returned the land to Hamp Williams.

–4– filed a motion for contempt under Rule 215.2 of the Texas Rules of Civil Procedure,

arguing that relator should be compelled to produce documents responsive to the

subpoena duces tecum, be found in contempt for not producing the documents

earlier, and be sanctioned by awarding the real parties in interest attorney’s fees and

costs. The real parties in interest asserted that relator admitted to having documents

in her possession, agreed to produce them after signing a confidentiality agreement,

refused to sign the confidentiality agreement, and failed to produce the documents.

In response, relator maintained that the requested documents did not fall within the

scope of the subpoena because they did not mention Hamp Williams Trust or Hamp

Williams Estate and, thus, she was not obligated to produce them.

A contempt hearing was held on July 1, 2019, and an evidentiary hearing on

the issue of monetary sanctions was held on July 11, 2019. On December 12, 2019,

the trial court issued the Order. In that Order, the court directed relator to collect

and turn over all documents responsive to the subpoena duces tecum within 15 days.

The court also sanctioned relator in the amount of $18,566.34, which included the

real parties in interest’s expenses, costs, and attorney’s fees incurred in connection

with relator’s deposition and the preparation of the contempt motion. The court

further ordered that if relator failed to comply with any portion of the Order, a

warrant would issue for her arrest, whereupon she would be incarcerated until such

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