Jaci Johnson and Jeffrey Johnson v. Leonard Pounds

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 14, 2008
Docket11-07-00073-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Jaci Johnson and Jeffrey Johnson v. Leonard Pounds (Jaci Johnson and Jeffrey Johnson v. Leonard Pounds) 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
Jaci Johnson and Jeffrey Johnson v. Leonard Pounds, (Tex. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

Opinion filed August 14, 2008

Opinion filed August 14, 2008

                                                                        In The

    Eleventh Court of Appeals

                                                                   __________

                                                          No. 11-07-00073-CV

                  JACI JOHNSON AND JEFFREY JOHNSON, Appellants

                                                             V.

                                      LEONARD POUNDS, Appellee

                                        On Appeal from the County Court at Law

                                                        Midland County, Texas

                                                Trial Court Cause No. CC 13,610

                                             M E M O R A N M U M  O P I N I O N


Jaci Johnson and Jeffrey Johnson brought this suit in Midland against Leonard Pounds, a resident of New Mexico, alleging that funds due them from their mother=s estate were misappropriated or converted by Pounds.  Pounds had married their mother shortly before her death and was the executor of her will. The will was probated in New Mexico.  Pounds filed a special appearance, contesting personal jurisdiction.  The trial court granted the special appearance motion, finding that Pounds and the testatrix were residents of New Mexico, that Pounds had not had the minimum contacts necessary to confer personal jurisdiction in Texas, and that the operative facts concerning the estate and Pounds only involved New Mexico and its law.  We affirm.

Background Facts

Pounds has been a resident of New Mexico since 1991.  In 1992, Pounds and Sheila Denise Johnson, the mother of appellants, began their relationship in New Mexico.  In 1993, Sheila was diagnosed as having breast cancer.  She and Pounds contemplated marriage but postponed the marriage due to her health problems.  They were finally married in New Mexico on July 13, 1996.  Sheila died nine days later on July 22, 1996, while in a Midland hospital.

In her will, Sheila named Pounds as the personal representative, and Pounds filed an application for probate of the will in New Mexico in August 1996.  Under the terms of the will, Sheila=s residuary estate was to be divided in three equal shares: one-third to Leonard Pounds, one-third to Jeffrey Johnson, and one-third to Jaci Johnson.  Jeffrey and Jaci were minors at the time, and the will provided that their shares would be placed in a trust with Pounds as the trustee.

Prior to their marriage, Sheila had opened a money market account at Sunwest Bank of Hobbs, New Mexico.  Pounds was a cosigner on the account, and the account had a Apayable-on-death@ provision for the funds in the account to be payable directly to Pounds upon the death of Sheila.  Pounds stated that the funds in the account were from a medical malpractice settlement received by Sheila and that, at the time of her death, there was $72,000 in the account.  The account is the primary focus of appellants= lawsuit.  Although the account had the payable-on-death box checked, appellants maintain that the reason Sheila created trusts in her will was that the funds in the account would be divided into the three equal shares with their shares being placed in a testamentary trust.  Appellants would then receive distributions from the trust when each reached twenty-one and twenty-five years of age.


After Sheila=s death, Pounds subsequently lived for a period of time with a woman named Linda Gassaway.  In 2001, Pounds then married another woman.  In 2005, Pounds discovered that Gassaway had used an expired debit card that drew on his separate bank account at Sunwest Bank of Hobbs.  The unauthorized purchases by Gassaway utilizing the debit card caused Pound=s account to become overdrawn, and Sunwest Bank automatically withdrew funds from the payable-on-death account to cover the overdrafts.  Pounds estimated that Gassaway stole between $26,000 and $30,000.  Pounds stated that he initiated a criminal prosecution of Gassaway, but the charges were dismissed.

Jeffrey and Jaci complain that Pounds did not tell them about the theft of the money by Gassaway and that Pounds misled them.  Their evidence consisted of an affidavit by their father Eric Johnson, affidavits by Jeffrey and Jaci, and references to statements by Pounds in his deposition and in his affidavit.  According to Eric=s affidavit, he had telephone conversations from 1997 to 2006 with Pounds during which Pounds represented to him that Jeffrey and Jaci would receive distributions from the estate that would amount to about $22,000 each.  Eric stated that he heard about the theft by Gassaway for the first time in 2006.  The affidavits by Jeffrey and Jaci are similar.  They state that, while Acommunicating@ with Pounds, they were told by Pounds that they would receive their share of the money that their mother Aleft as a result of the settlement proceeds from her malpractice claim@ and that Pounds would send part of the money when they reached twenty-one and the balance when they reached twenty-five years of age.  The three affidavits do not state that Pounds was in Texas when he made the representations, only that the affiants were Ain the State of Texas.@  The evidence suggests that Pounds was in New Mexico during the telephone conversations involving his alleged representations.  For example, Pounds testified at one point that Eric instigated a telephone call to him in New Mexico to discuss issues concerning Sheila=s estate.

Jeffrey and Jaci stated that they did receive $14,000 as a partial distribution from the estate in the spring of 2006, although Pounds testified that he made these payments from his own account. For our analysis of the question of jurisdiction, we will assume that Pounds represented that the distributions were made from the estate. 

In three points of error, appellants argue that there were sufficient minimum contacts for personal jurisdiction over Pounds in Texas, that the trial court abused its discretion because Pounds did not carry his burden of proof at the special appearance hearing, and that the court=s findings of fact were insufficient to support its order granting the special appearance motion of Pounds.

Standard of Review


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Jaci Johnson and Jeffrey Johnson v. Leonard Pounds, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jaci-johnson-and-jeffrey-johnson-v-leonard-pounds-texapp-2008.