MacDonald Devin, PC and Patrick F. Madden v. John Rice

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 27, 2015
Docket05-14-00938-CV
StatusPublished

This text of MacDonald Devin, PC and Patrick F. Madden v. John Rice (MacDonald Devin, PC and Patrick F. Madden v. John Rice) 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
MacDonald Devin, PC and Patrick F. Madden v. John Rice, (Tex. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

Affirmed and Opinion Filed October 27, 2015

S In The Court of Appeals Fifth District of Texas at Dallas No. 05-14-00938-CV

MACDONALD DEVIN, PC AND PATRICK F. MADDEN, Appellants V. JON RICE, WILLIAM BLAKE HYDE, AND THE HYDE LAW FIRM, PLLC, Appellees

On Appeal from the County Court at Law No. 3 Dallas County, Texas Trial Court Cause No. CC-11-05714-C

MEMORANDUM OPINION Before Justices Francis, Lang, and Evans Opinion by Justice Francis MacDonald Devin, PC and Patrick F. Madden appeal the trial court’s order awarding W.

Blake Hyde and The Hyde Firm $4500 in attorney’s fees and $75 in costs on a motion to compel.

In three issues, appellants assert the trial court abused its discretion by (1) disregarding the

parties’ Rule 11 discovery agreement, (2) assessing “sanctions” when they did not commit any

“offensive conduct” and in an amount that is excessive, and (3) basing the award of attorney’s

fees on legally insufficient evidence. After reviewing the record, we conclude appellants’ issues

are without merit and affirm.

The underlying case involved a pedestrian-auto accident. While crossing an intersection,

Jon Rice was struck by an automobile driven by Brett Alan Slagle and owned by Slagle’s

employer, Cleveland Steel Container Corporation (CSC). Rice alleged Slagle was intoxicated at the time. Rice sued Slagle, CSC, SouthPak Container Corporation, and the bar where Slagle had

reportedly been drinking prior to the accident, alleging several causes of action and seeking

damages for his injuries.1 Appellants represented CSC and SouthPak in the litigation; Hyde

represented Rice.

As relevant here, Rice served CSC, SouthPak, and Slagle with production requests and

interrogatories. He also requested dates for the depositions of SouthPak and CSC

representatives. In response, CSC asserted a trade secret objection to fourteen of the twenty-one

production requests (including, for example, documents reflecting Slagle’s job duties,

supervisors, and policies about automobile use) and five of the fifteen interrogatories and failed

to verify its responses to interrogatories. With respect to deposition dates, both CSC and

SouthPak refused to produce corporate representative witnesses “until your client has been

deposed” and had responded to written discovery.

Thereafter, Rice filed a motion to compel discovery responses from CSC and Slagle and

an amended motion to compel depositions of CSC and SouthPak. Both motions were set for

hearing on June 14, 2013. On that date, the judge called the motions to compel but sent the

parties outside the courtroom to try to work out an agreement. After two hours of negotiations,

the parties returned to the courtroom to dictate their “statements” on the record. (The trial judge

was not present.) Rice’s attorney, Hyde, stated he would “attempt to send a Rule 11 agreement

that mirrors what we state here on the record to counsel to further attempt to solidify

understandings.”

As set out by Hyde and confirmed by Madden, CSC agreed to supplement its responses

to Interrogatories Nos. 2, 3, and 4 within two weeks “to the extent there is any further responsive

1 Rice originally sued in county court in Dallas County in August 2011 and named only Slagle as a defendant. The case was removed to federal court after the driver moved back to his home state of Ohio. Twenty months later after the criminal case was resolved, Rice refiled the lawsuit in county court, naming the additional defendants. The trial court consolidated the newer case with the older, and proceeded under the older cause number.

–2– information to those specific questions” and to withdraw its trade secret objections to other

production requests and interrogatories. In return, Rice agreed that specifically identified

responses would “remain confidential in their production” to Rice and his attorney and attorney’s

staff. Further, if anyone else needed to review the information, Rice would provide the person’s

name to CSC before tendering the responsive information, and CSC would have fourteen days to

object, which would necessitate a hearing before the trial court. Both Hyde and Madden then set

out the particular interrogatories and production requests that were to remain confidential. With

regard to depositions, CSC and SouthPak agreed their representatives would be deposed within

thirty days and would provide deposition dates within that time frame. This was conditioned on

the remaining defendants filing an answer within seven days of the deposition dates.

During the hearing, the parties referred to both a “confidentiality order” and a

“confidentiality agreement.” At one point, Hyde stressed the “confidentiality agreement was

entered in lieu of a protective order agreement” because he believed none of the information was

privileged as asserted and, as a compromise, agreed to keep the information confidential for his

use in the case.

Four days after the hearing, Hyde forwarded a “Confidentiality Agreement” for execution

by CSC and Slagle’s attorneys. At the same time, Hyde sent deposition notices to CSC and

SouthPak as to the scope of subjects requested. CSC attorney Madden responded with an

“Agreed Confidentiality Order” that required the judge’s signature, governed all discovery,

allowed any party to designate documents as confidential by placing the words “ATTORNEYS

EYES ONLY – SUBJECT TO PROTECTIVE ORDER” on them, and required that those

documents be filed under seal and marked accordingly. He also sought to limit the scope of the

depositions. When it became apparent that the parties could not agree on either the

Confidentiality Agreement or the Confidentiality Order or the scope of the depositions, Hyde

–3– reset both motions to compel for hearing, filed supporting evidence, gave notice of the hearing,

and sought reimbursement for fees and expenses incurred in connection with the motions to

compel. The supporting evidence included Hyde’s affidavit on attorney’s fees.

On the day before the hearing, CSC responded to the motions and asserted the parties

agreed to a Confidentiality Order as opposed to a Confidentiality Agreement. It requested a

protective order or confidentiality order in the event the trial court did not enforce the June 14

agreement, and attached the affidavit of Dennis Puening, CSC’s vice president of finance and

administration and CFO, as support. With regard to corporate representative depositions, CSC

and SouthPak asserted Rice had sent notices with topics far exceeding those agreed to on June

14. (The response also included a motion to enforce the agreement, but this motion was not set

for a hearing.)

The hearing was held on June 28 and lasted several hours. The first portion of the

hearing dealt with whether CSC was to produce documents under a confidentiality agreement or

confidentiality order. Hyde argued the documents were to be produced under a confidentiality

agreement while Madden argued the parties agreed to a confidentiality order. The trial judge

read the transcript of the hearing and, after discussion with counsel, ultimately determined the

parties did not have an agreement given that the parties did not have “an understanding of what it

was.” The trial judge urged the parties to “[s]ort it out” and reach agreements on the requests,

but after returning from a break, the parties indicated they had not “communicated.” After

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