John E. Boatman v. Bradley M. Griffin, Inc. D/B/A Home Theater Design Group

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 21, 2011
Docket02-10-00417-CV
StatusPublished

This text of John E. Boatman v. Bradley M. Griffin, Inc. D/B/A Home Theater Design Group (John E. Boatman v. Bradley M. Griffin, Inc. D/B/A Home Theater Design Group) 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 E. Boatman v. Bradley M. Griffin, Inc. D/B/A Home Theater Design Group, (Tex. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS SECOND DISTRICT OF TEXAS FORT WORTH

NO. 02-10-00417-CV

JOHN E. BOATMAN APPELLANT

V.

BRADLEY M. GRIFFIN, INC. D/B/A APPELLEE HOME THEATER DESIGN GROUP

----------

FROM THE 362ND DISTRICT COURT OF DENTON COUNTY

MEMORANDUM OPINION1 ----------

Appellant John E. Boatman appeals the trial court‘s postanswer default

judgment in favor of appellee Bradley M. Griffin, Inc. d/b/a Home Theater Design

Group. Appellant contends that the trial court abused its discretion by refusing to

grant a new trial because he met each of the elements for setting aside a default

judgment under Craddock v. Sunshine Bus Lines, Inc., 134 Tex. 388, 393, 133

1 See Tex. R. App. P. 47.4. S.W.2d 124, 126 (1939). We disagree, and we therefore affirm the trial court‘s

judgment.

Background Facts

In April 2009, appellee sued appellant for ―amounts due and owing

pursuant to a contract.‖ Appellee alleged in his sworn petition that appellant had

contracted for the purchase and installation of various items of home electronic

equipment but that appellant had refused to pay an invoice related to the goods

and services.2 Appellee brought claims for breach of contract, suit on a sworn

account, and quantum meruit, and appellee requested damages for the amount

owed ($12,691.35), interest, attorney‘s fees, and costs.

After appellant did not initially answer appellee‘s suit, appellee sought a

no-answer default judgment. But on June 4, 2009, appellant filed an answer.

The answer contained a general denial, asserted that appellee ―never completed

the home theater system, which . . . [did] not work,‖ and alleged that appellant

had been ―forced to seek cover to enable even partial use of the system

promised by [appellee].‖ Appellant therefore requested an offset of the amount

that he paid other contractors, and he asserted a breach of contract

counterclaim. Appellant‘s answer was not sworn. Because of appellant‘s answer

2 The petition was verified by Sheri Griffin, the president of Home Theater Design Group. Sheri affirmed that appellee had ―provided the goods and services to [appellant] under the explicit agreement and business dealings between the parties that [appellant] would timely pay to [appellee] the value of the goods and services.‖ Appellee attached copies of the original invoice (which itemized the goods and services) and the most recent invoice to the petition.

2 and in conjunction with the parties‘ agreement, the trial court set aside the no-

answer default judgment that it had signed on June 5 and set the case for a jury

trial on September 14, 2009.

The case did not proceed to trial in September. Instead, in November

2009, appellee‘s attorney sent a letter to appellant‘s attorney stating that the trial

had been reset for February 8, 2010, with a docket call occurring on January 29,

2010. According to an affidavit filed by appellee‘s counsel, during the docket call,

because of appellant‘s various medical problems, the parties jointly requested a

special trial setting in August 2010, and appellant‘s counsel told the trial court

that appellant would not request any other continuances.3 In February 2010,

appellee‘s attorney wrote a letter to appellant‘s counsel stating,

Per our agreement reached as of last week and as announced to the Court . . . in light of [appellant‘s] medical issues, this letter confirms that the jury trial in this case now is Specially Set at 9:00 a.m. on Monday August 16, 2010, and Docket Call is at 10:30 a.m. on August 6, 2010 . . . .

Please let me know if you have any questions or problems. Thank you.

About two weeks before trial, appellant wrote a letter that was received by

the trial court on August 3, 2010. The letter stated in part,

I am writing to inform the court that I am unable to locate my attorney that is representing me in this case. I have called their office and their phone number has been [disconnected], in addition, I have

3 Appellant‘s original trial counsel called appellee‘s counsel on January 25, 2010 to state that appellant needed spinal surgery that would interfere with his ability to participate in the February 8 trial.

3 stopped by their offices and they are no longer there, I have called information to see if they have a new address . . . and they are not listed with any new address. I hired a private detective to find them, which he has been unable to do so. I am in the process of trying to hire a new attorney but am unable to [due] to some corrective spinal surgeries I have had in July. I have included the documents to prove I have [had] surgery since the last ones that caused this motion/case to be postponed.

The surgery I had in late July . . . is the 6th spinal surgery I have had since January 2010. I understand this case was postponed due to a surgery I had before, however this surgery was not planned for and had to happen before paralysis and permanent spinal damage occurred. . . . This isn‘t a minor surgery and does require a lot of recovery time. I . . . am not allowed to drive, sit or stand for any period of time and also am [on] heavy medications to prevent pain and also infection. Due to the fact that I am unable to be in court myself, I am unable to locate the attorney I paid for to represent me, and that I am not in the health to interview and hire new legal counsel, I am requesting an immediate postponement of the scheduled court date . . . . I am requesting a postponement of this case until a December or January hearing date. This will allow me to recover and bring a new attorney up to speed on the case since my attorney can‘t be found. Thank you for your consideration in this case and please approve this request for the listed causes. I look forward to hearing from the court.[4]

Appellant and his counsel did not attend the August 6, 2010 docket call.

Appellee‘s attorney and the trial court were each unsuccessful in attempting to

contact appellant‘s counsel, so appellee‘s attorney sent a letter personally to

appellant to remind him of the August 16 trial setting. According to appellant,

however, he has never lived at the address where appellee‘s counsel sent the

letter; his relatives live there and only sometimes forward his mail sent there.

4 The trial court‘s judgment states that to the extent this letter was intended to be a motion for continuance, the motion was denied.

4 Neither appellant nor his attorney appeared on August 16, but appellee

appeared with counsel. After hearing brief testimony from Sheri about Home

Theater Design Group‘s business relationship with appellant, the trial court

signed a postanswer default judgment. The judgment dismissed appellant‘s

counterclaim and awarded appellee $12,691.35 for the ―sworn just and true

amount due and owing,‖ more than $5,000 in prejudgment interest, $20,000 for

attorney‘s fees (plus additional amounts if appellant appealed the judgment), and

postjudgment interest.

On August 23, appellant called appellee‘s counsel but did not talk to her or

leave a message. After retaining new counsel, he then timely filed a motion for

new trial that asked the trial court to set aside the default judgment under

Craddock. His motion and affidavit alleged that he had completed six major

spinal surgeries in the preceding thirty months. Appellant alleged that in July

2010 (a month before the scheduled trial date), he learned that he would need

another procedure that would leave him ―bedridden for a couple of weeks and on

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John E. Boatman v. Bradley M. Griffin, Inc. D/B/A Home Theater Design Group, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/john-e-boatman-v-bradley-m-griffin-inc-dba-home-th-texapp-2011.