Manning v. Enbridge Pipelines (East Texas) L.P.

345 S.W.3d 718, 2011 Tex. App. LEXIS 5336, 2011 WL 2732226
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 14, 2011
Docket09-10-00205-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 345 S.W.3d 718 (Manning v. Enbridge Pipelines (East Texas) L.P.) 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
Manning v. Enbridge Pipelines (East Texas) L.P., 345 S.W.3d 718, 2011 Tex. App. LEXIS 5336, 2011 WL 2732226 (Tex. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

OPINION

DAVID GAULTNEY, Justice.

This appeal concerns a condemnation action in which the parties agreed on the amount of compensation, $32,005, for a pipeline easement, but tried other contested issues. The landowner, the pipeline company, and the pipeline company’s counsel appealed. We affirm the trial court’s judgment.

Enbridge Pipelines v. Manning

Five years ago, Enbridge Pipelines (East Texas), L.P. began an action to condemn a 50-foot-wide pipeline easement across property held by William K. Manning. Enbridge’s original petition named Manning without mentioning any representative capacity. The special commissioners awarded Manning $9,222.00. En-bridge deposited that sum and acquired a writ of possession that encompassed the entire Manning property of approximately 183 acres. Acting in his capacity as Executor of the Estates of Jack C. Manning and Edna C. Manning, Manning filed a plea to the jurisdiction. He alleged that he had been incorrectly named as a defendant in his individual capacity instead of in his capacity as the Independent Executor of the Manning estates. Manning objected to the special commissioners’ award and challenged Enbridge’s authority to take private property. Manning filed a counterclaim alleging breach of contract, fraud, and negligence. He moved to dissolve En-bridge’s writ of possession.

Enbridge claimed that Manning was the proper party to the condemnation. According to Enbridge, Jack C. Manning acquired the property by deed and left his entire estate to his wife, Edna C. Manning, at his death. Enbridge alleged that Edna died leaving a nuncupative will, and that upon Edna’s death her real property im *721 mediately passed to William K. Manning under the laws of descent and distribution. Enbridge asked the trial court to deny Manning’s motion to dissolve the writ of possession, moved for summary judgment, and filed a notice of lis pendens. The trial court denied Manning’s plea to the jurisdiction.

Manning sought to depose Enbridge’s counsel of record, Thomas A. Buchanan. Buchanan sought a protective order. On order of the trial court, the trial court clerk issued an amended writ of possession. Manning continued to seek the depositions of Buchanan and other persons with Buchanan’s firm, Flowers Davis, P.L.L.C. Enbridge sought to disqualify Manning’s counsel on the ground that Manning’s counsel was a fact witness on issues other than attorney fees.

MANNING v. Buchanan

Manning, acting in his capacity as executor of the Manning estates, and John R. Cook, acting in his capacity as trustee of the Edna C. Manning Family Trust, sued Buchanan and Flowers Davis, for abuse of process and tortious interference with an oil and gas lease on the Manning property. Buchanan and Flowers Davis filed a motion for summary judgment based on an assertion of qualified immunity, and filed a motion for protective order. The trial court signed an agreed protective order permitting the deposition. Manning deposed Buchanan, and then filed an amended petition to add Enbridge as a defendant. Manning and Cook sought to non-suit the claims against Buchanan and Flowers Davis. The trial court signed an order of non-suit. Buchanan and Flowers Davis filed a motion for sanctions against Manning and Cook and their counsel of record. After a hearing, the trial court denied the motion for sanctions.

Consolidation and Trial

Enbridge v. Manning and Manning v. Buchanan were consolidated. Enbridge filed a plea to the jurisdiction and motion to dismiss on grounds that all of the claims filed by Manning solely in a representative capacity had occurred while Manning was record title owner in his individual capacity. Enbridge alleged that Manning, in his representative capacity, lacked standing to pursue a claim actually held in an individual capacity. The trial court denied the plea to the jurisdiction after a pre-trial hearing in which no testimony was received.

Manning filed a plea to the jurisdiction in which Manning alleged that Enbridge’s certificate of its right to do business in Texas had been forfeited from September 29, 2006, through October 25, 2006. Manning alleged that Enbridge lacked the capacity to receive the award and writ of possession, and that consequently En-bridge lacked the capacity to condemn Manning’s property. The trial court overruled Manning’s plea to the jurisdiction.

Trial before a jury began but was concluded by stipulations, not by jury verdict. A partial record of the trial testimony has been filed. See Tex.R.App. P. 34.6(c). The appellate record includes testimony from an expert regarding the laws of descent and distribution, testimony from a representative of a company that decided not to obtain an oil and gas lease on the Manning property after the company discovered the property was the subject of a condemnation suit, and testimony from two of Manning’s attorneys.

The trial court entered a judgment that established the pipeline easement and awarded compensation over the amount initially deposited by Enbridge. On the contested issues, the trial court directed a verdict in favor of Enbridge on Manning’s claims for abuse of process, breach of con *722 tract, tortious interference with contract, fraud, nuisance, and negligence. The trial court resolved the declaratory judgment action on Manning’s suit to quiet title, to remove a cloud on title, and attorney fees associated with those claims. The trial court rendered a declaratory judgment declaring and quieting title in Manning, individually, and awarding Manning’s counsel attorney fees in the amount of $10,000. The trial court found that the usual and customary rate for attorneys in Polk County is $200 per hour, that Manning’s lead counsel recorded 43.25 hours from the date of the filing of the petition through the date that the amended writ of possession issued, and that Manning’s lead counsel was entitled to an award of $10,000 as reasonable and necessary attorney fees.

The Appeals

In nine issues that have been presented collectively, Manning, acting in his capacity as executor of the Manning estates and in his capacity as co-trustee of the Edna C. Manning Family Trust, 1 asserts challenges to the judgment that are based upon En-bridge’s right to conduct business, defects in service on Manning, alleged abuses of process in the course of the condemnation proceedings, and the award of attorney fees to Manning’s counsel of record. In one issue, Enbridge, Buchanan, and Flowers Davis contend the trial court abused its discretion by denying their motion for sanctions and they ask this Court to reverse the sanctions order and render judgment on their motion for sanctions. They argue that Manning’s counsel brought groundless claims that were barred as a matter of law and that the record shows that counsel’s purpose was to gain an unfair advantage and to disrupt the attorney-client relationship between Enbridge and Buchanan.

Right to Transact Business

In issue one, Manning contends that the trial court improperly applied Section 153.309 of the Business Organization Code. He argues that a proper application of the statute requires a dismissal of the condemnation action.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
345 S.W.3d 718, 2011 Tex. App. LEXIS 5336, 2011 WL 2732226, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/manning-v-enbridge-pipelines-east-texas-lp-texapp-2011.