John Deaton and Deaton Law Firm, LLC v. Law Offices of Steven M. Johnson, PC

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 21, 2024
Docket11-23-00126-CV
StatusPublished

This text of John Deaton and Deaton Law Firm, LLC v. Law Offices of Steven M. Johnson, PC (John Deaton and Deaton Law Firm, LLC v. Law Offices of Steven M. Johnson, PC) 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
John Deaton and Deaton Law Firm, LLC v. Law Offices of Steven M. Johnson, PC, (Tex. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

Opinion filed August 21, 2024

In The

Eleventh Court of Appeals __________

No. 11-23-00126-CV __________

JOHN DEATON AND DEATON LAW FIRM, LLC, Appellants V. LAW OFFICES OF STEVEN M. JOHNSON, P.C., Appellee

On Appeal from the 48th District Court Tarrant County, Texas Trial Court Cause No. 048-283747-16

OPINION At times, minor disagreements and contrasting views evolve into lingering and contentious litigation. In the eyes of many, disputes of this nature are never- ending and fade into an abyss. This case—as other courts have also noted—is no exception. The matter before us concerns the latest chapter in the parties’ ongoing feud, which has spanned decades, over the distribution of attorney’s fees. The parties have battled over this issue in numerous state and federal courts in Texas—at all levels of the judiciary—and in other venues beyond our state’s borders; however, none of these courts, or the arbitration tribunals to whom these courts have deferred, have determined the merits of the parties’ core dispute. We do so today. Here,1 Appellants, John Deaton and Deaton Law Firm, challenge the trial court’s grant of the motion to compel arbitration filed by Appellee, the Law Offices of Steven M. Johnson, P.C., and its order confirming the arbitrator’s final award. In three issues, Appellants contend that (1) the trial court erred when it compelled arbitration because no signed arbitration agreement existed between the parties, (2) vacatur of the arbitrator’s award is warranted because arbitration without an agreement to arbitrate is an abuse of authority, which is an express ground for vacatur under both the Federal Arbitration Act (FAA) and the Texas General Arbitration Act (TGAA), and (3) a mandatory forum selection clause and an already- pending lawsuit in another jurisdiction prohibited the parties from arbitrating in this case. For the reasons expressed below, we affirm.

1 Appellants originally appealed to the Second Court of Appeals. This appeal was subsequently transferred to our court by order of the Texas Supreme Court after the seven justices of the Second Court of Appeals recused. See TEX. GOV’T CODE ANN. § 73.001(a) (West Supp. 2023); Miles v. Ford Motor Co., 914 S.W.2d 135, 137 (Tex. 1995); see also TEX. R. APP. P. 16.2 (grounds for recusal of an appellate court justice or judge); TEX. R. CIV. P. 18b(b) (grounds for recusal). As the transferee court, we must decide the issues raised in this appeal in accordance with the precedent of the Second Court of Appeals if its precedent conflicts with ours. See TEX. R. APP. P. 41.3. 2 I. Factual and Procedural Background This appeal is the next edition2 to an already tortured procedural chronicle “that exceeds all bounds of reasonable behavior.” 3 At the bottom of this litigious bog lies an unpleasant truth. Working together in mass tort litigation that involved hernia repair Kugel Mesh, from approximately 2008 to 2015, the parties agreed to share attorney’s fees that were generated from that litigation. Eventually, their relationship soured and, rather than resolving their disagreements in a civil manner, for years they have opted to engage in costly, prolonged, and largely ineffective litigation across the full gamut of available dispute resolution mediums—including filings in multiple state and federal trial and appellate courts, as well as engaging in, at times over objection, mediation and arbitration. Because the context of the parties’ unraveled relationship is important to our analysis, we review the background of their disputes and resulting battles in grave detail. 4

2 See In re: All Individual Kugel Mesh Cases, No. PC-2008-9999, 2022 WL 19705089, at *1–9 (R.I. Super. Ct. Nov. 10, 2022) (providing an exhaustive review of the relevant background and history of the parties’ disputes); Deaton v. Johnson, C.A. No. 22-187WES, 2023 WL 3158933, at *1 n.1 (D. R.I. Apr. 26, 2023) (recounting the abundant decisions, opinions, and orders pertaining to the parties’ disputes). Additionally, the United States District Court for the Northern District of Texas, Fort Worth Division, recently dismissed the claims that Appellants asserted against Appellee and others for breach of contract, fraud and fraud in the inducement, tortious interference, and conspiracy, because these claims had already been litigated and adjudicated or could have been litigated or adjudicated in the arbitration proceeding underlying this appeal. See Deaton v. Johnson, No. 4:23-CV-00415-O, 2024 WL 920082 (N.D. Tex. Mar. 4, 2024) (slip op.). 3 The Honorable Mark Whittington, the arbitrator in the underlying proceeding, who is also a former state district court judge and a former justice of the Fifth Court of Appeals sitting in Dallas, keenly described this feud as an “extraordinary dispute” in which “[b]oth sides have engaged in unprofessional conduct and their actions have benefitted neither themselves nor their clients.” We agree. Here, we focus primarily on Appellants’ conduct because it is their conduct that determines 4

whether they “embraced” the ARAs under the doctrine of direct benefits estoppel. This focus does not imply that either party’s behavior was more or less unreasonable as their disputes percolated over time. 3 A. The Parties’ Original Agreements The genesis of the parties’ relationship began in 2008, when Appellee began filing lawsuits in Rhode Island and elsewhere on behalf of numerous clients5 alleging that the clients’ injuries and conditions were caused by defective Kugel Mesh implants that were manufactured by C.R. Bard, Inc., and its subsidiary Davol, Inc. (following the parties’ style in their briefs, we will refer to the manufacturer- defendants collectively as Bard/Davol). Appellee, a Texas law firm, executed an Attorney Representation Agreement (ARA) with each client, including Moreno. The ARAs specify that they (1) were executed in Tarrant County, (2) are to be construed pursuant to Texas law, (3) are performable in Texas, (4) permit Appellee to retain associate counsel to represent the clients, and (5) require the clients and Appellee to arbitrate “any dispute arising from the interpretation, performance, or breach” of the agreement in Fort Worth. In connection with some of the ARAs, and through a general fee-sharing agreement, Appellee engaged Appellants to act as local counsel for Appellee by filing Kugel Mesh lawsuits in a Rhode Island superior court. Initially, the parties to this appeal agreed that Appellants would receive five percent of all attorney’s fees that were ultimately recovered in the lawsuits that they filed as local counsel for Appellee. This fee-sharing agreement, which is expressed in an e-mail from Appellee to Appellants, is reproduced below:

5 One such client is Margaret Moreno, the original plaintiff in the underlying lawsuit that generated this appeal. Moreno originally filed a legal malpractice action against both Appellee and Appellants and moved to compel arbitration. Appellee answered and filed cross-claims against Appellants. Moreno later nonsuited her claims. 4 As further stated below, the parties later agreed to increase Appellants’ attorney’s fee recovery to ten percent:

Appellants filed 176 Kugel Mesh lawsuits in a Rhode Island superior court as local counsel for Appellee. Appellee prepared each individual client’s original complaint and sent them to Appellants, who filed the complaints in the superior court. The parties also agreed that Appellants would file and argue any motions regarding the reduction of certain fees related to the mass tort litigation and that Appellee would consider paying a bonus to Appellants based on the results of these additional efforts. B.

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John Deaton and Deaton Law Firm, LLC v. Law Offices of Steven M. Johnson, PC, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/john-deaton-and-deaton-law-firm-llc-v-law-offices-of-steven-m-johnson-texapp-2024.