in the Estate of Gus W. Riefler, Jr.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 3, 2020
Docket02-19-00189-CV
StatusPublished

This text of in the Estate of Gus W. Riefler, Jr. (in the Estate of Gus W. Riefler, Jr.) 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 the Estate of Gus W. Riefler, Jr., (Tex. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

In the Court of Appeals Second Appellate District of Texas at Fort Worth ___________________________ No. 02-19-00189-CV ___________________________

IN THE ESTATE OF GUS W. RIEFLER JR., DECEASED

On Appeal from the County Court at Law Cooke County, Texas Trial Court No. PR-17203-1

Before Birdwell, Bassel, and Wallach, JJ. Memorandum Opinion by Justice Birdwell MEMORANDUM OPINION

Under the American Rule, a party generally may not recover attorney’s fees

unless authorized by statute or contract. In re Nat’l Lloyds Ins., 532 S.W.3d 794, 809

(Tex. 2017) (orig. proceeding). In its findings of fact and conclusions of law, the trial

court cited two bases for awarding attorney’s fees to appellee Danny Joe Jonas Jr.:

breach of contract and interpleader.

On appeal, appellant Ronald Brian Ayers (Brian or Brian Ayers) contests both of

these grounds. As to the contract theory, he asserts that any recovery is barred because

Danny Joe failed to plead and prove his satisfaction of a condition precedent to

attorney’s fees under the contract: participating in mediation. As to the interpleader

theory, Brian contends that Danny Joe was not an innocent, disinterested stakeholder

in the funds he sought to interplead, which disqualifies him from collecting attorney’s

fees under an interpleader theory.

On both accounts, we agree. We therefore reverse the award of attorney’s fees

and render judgment that Danny Joe take nothing.

I. BACKGROUND

This is an appeal from an action for attorney’s fees in the County Court at Law

of Cooke County. But this case is an outgrowth of an earlier set of disputes concerning

the estate of Gus W. Riefler Jr. To set out the pertinent facts for this action, we must

briefly cover the earlier probate proceedings in Cooke County, as well as some satellite

litigation in the courts of Comanche County.

2 A. The Cooke County Probate Proceedings

Riefler died intestate in 2014. The central issue in the probate proceedings was

whether Riefler’s estate should go to (1) Riefler’s stepdaughter and her heirs or

(2) Riefler’s siblings and their heirs.

Riefler’s stepdaughter Claudia D. Jonas began the proceedings by filing for an

independent administration in the County Court at Law of Cooke County. She claimed

to be Riefler’s sole rightful heir. When Claudia died, her cause was taken up by her

children, and foremost among them was Danny Joe, who became the administrator of

her estate.

The family of Riefler’s sister Mary Theresa Ayers opposed the Jonases’ claim to

Riefler’s estate. Her husband Ronald Alan Ayers (Ronald Ayers), who was acting as her

guardian, filed his own application to determine heirship in which he argued that Mary

Theresa Ayers was entitled to half the Riefler estate. Also contesting the Jonases’ claims

was James Timothy Nelson, the son of another of Riefler’s sisters.

In 2016, the parties attended a mediation, which resulted in a settlement

agreement. Under the settlement, Danny Joe would be appointed administrator of

Riefler’s estate, and Mary Theresa Ayers and Nelson would jointly receive a payment of

$440,000 from the estate. It was further agreed that Claudia Jonas was Riefler’s sole

rightful heir and, therefore, that the Jonases alone were entitled to inherit the remainder

of Riefler’s estate.

3 Danny Joe filed an application to approve the settlement. But Ronald Ayers

soon changed course and objected to the settlement, arguing that it was invalid. The

Jonases amended their petition to add a claim that Ronald had breached the settlement

agreement by challenging it, and they sought attorney’s fees for the breach.

After a trial, the Cooke County court entered a final judgment in July 2016,

followed by a series of amended judgments to consolidate the cause numbers under

which the case had been proceeding.1 The last of these final judgments decreed that

the settlement agreement “is hereby accepted and given full effect” and that “each side

will be responsible for their own expenses incurred herein.” The court thus did not

award the Jonases attorney’s fees.

Ronald appealed the Cooke County judgments, and in late 2017, the Amarillo

Court of Appeals affirmed, decreeing that the settlement agreement was valid and

enforceable. Estate of Riefler, 540 S.W.3d 626, 628–29 (Tex. App.—Amarillo 2017, no

pet.).

B. The Guardianship Proceeding in Comanche County

Meanwhile, in late 2016, Ronald Ayers was also attacking the settlement

agreement on another front: the courts of Comanche County, which at that time had

jurisdiction over the Ayers guardianship. Having obtained the transfer of his wife’s

guardianship proceeding from the Probate Court of Dallas County to the County Court

Those cause numbers were PR-17203, PR-17203-1, and PR-17203-2. 1

4 of Comanche County, Ronald filed an application to avoid the settlement in the latter

court on October 4, 2016. On October 5, 2016, the County Court of Comanche

County, on its own motion and pursuant to Section 32.003(a)(2) of the Texas Estates

Code, transferred the guardianship proceeding to the 220th District Court for Bosque,

Comanche, and Hamilton Counties. On December 5, 2016, the judge of the district

court signed the “Order Disapproving Settlement” that had been submitted with

Ronald’s application in the county court.

Danny Joe subsequently filed a timely plea in intervention and motion for new

trial, which the district court granted on February 18, 2017. In February 2017, a new

trial was purportedly granted. 2 The district court thereafter took no further action with

respect to the settlement and Ronald’s efforts to avoid it.

While the appeal was pending, Mary Theresa Ayers died, and her son, Brian

Ayers, filed a probate proceeding in the County Court of Comanche County, separate

and distinct from the guardianship proceeding in the district court, on September 22,

2017. On November 15, 2017, the county court entered an order granting letters of

2 By signing the “Order Disapproving Settlement” submitted with Ronald’s application, which included the style and cause number of the county court, the judge of the district court caused some degree of confusion in the record because nothing about the order indicated that its rendition occurred after the transfer of the guardianship proceeding to the district court other than the distinctive signature of the judge, the date of his signature, and a facsimile transmission line from the “Comanche Dist. Court” dated December 29, 2016. Because the parties treat this order as an order of the district court, so do we.

5 administration to Brian as the administrator of his mother’s estate. The district court

subsequently closed the guardianship proceeding in February 2018.

C. This Proceeding on Attorney’s Fees in Cooke County

Following the Amarillo Court of Appeals’ affirmance of the Cooke County

judgments, Danny Joe launched the latest stage of the proceedings in June 2018, when

he filed a new petition in the County Court at Law of Cooke County in the same cause

number as the prior probate proceedings. In his petition, Danny Joe pleaded three

causes of action, all apparently with the aim of obtaining attorney’s fees for services

rendered in the prior appeal before the Amarillo Court of Appeals, the satellite litigation

in Comanche County, and the latest proceedings in Cooke County.

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