Marcus Brent Patterson, Individually, as Independent Administrator of the Estate of Diane Patterson, and as Next Friend of Daniel Patterson and Danae Patterson, and Danae Patterson and Daniel Patterson (Now 18 Years of Age) v. Brewer Leasing, Inc.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 1, 2015
Docket01-14-00013-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Marcus Brent Patterson, Individually, as Independent Administrator of the Estate of Diane Patterson, and as Next Friend of Daniel Patterson and Danae Patterson, and Danae Patterson and Daniel Patterson (Now 18 Years of Age) v. Brewer Leasing, Inc. (Marcus Brent Patterson, Individually, as Independent Administrator of the Estate of Diane Patterson, and as Next Friend of Daniel Patterson and Danae Patterson, and Danae Patterson and Daniel Patterson (Now 18 Years of Age) v. Brewer Leasing, Inc.) 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.

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Marcus Brent Patterson, Individually, as Independent Administrator of the Estate of Diane Patterson, and as Next Friend of Daniel Patterson and Danae Patterson, and Danae Patterson and Daniel Patterson (Now 18 Years of Age) v. Brewer Leasing, Inc., (Tex. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

Opinion issued June 30, 2015

In The

Court of Appeals For The

First District of Texas ———————————— NO. 01-14-00013-CV ——————————— MARCUS BRENT PATTERSON, INDIVIDUALLY, AS INDEPENDENT ADMINISTRATOR OF THE ESTATE OF DIANE PATTERSON, AND AS NEXT FRIEND OF DANIEL PATTERSON AND DANAE PATTERSON, AND DANAE PATTERSON AND DANIEL PATTERSON (NOW 18 YEARS OF AGE), Appellants V. BREWER LEASING, INC., Appellee

On Appeal from the 334th District Court Harris County, Texas Trial Court Case No. 2011-64488

OPINION

This is a bill of review proceeding. We reverse and remand the trial court’s

judgment on appellants’ fraud claim. We affirm the remainder of the judgment. BACKGROUND

Diane Patterson was killed on June 15, 2006 when her stationary vehicle was

struck by an 18-wheeler truck driven by Charles Hitchens. Traffic had been

stopped on Interstate Highway 10 by police officers escorting an oversized load

onto the freeway. Witnesses testified, and the physical evidence confirmed, that

Hitchens did not slow down from his 55-mile-per-hour speed before plowing into

Diane’s stopped car, and hitting several other vehicles.

THE 2006 LITIGATION

In Cause No. 2006-76647, the Patterson family sued Hitchens, Brewer

Leasing, Inc., Texas Stretch, Inc., Ray Bellew & Sons, Inc., and Williams Brothers

Construction Co., Inc. for wrongful death. It alleged that Texas Stretch was the

company that hired Hitchens and that related-company Brewer Leasing owned or

leased the tractor-trailer combination that Hitchens was driving. Texas Stretch had

its TxDOT number, corporate logo, US DOT number, and ICC numbers on both

sides of the tractor. A sign on both sides of the cab of the tractor also contained

Brewer Leasing’s TxDOT number and corporate logo, and it stated “Leased to

Brewer Leasing, Inc.”

The Patterson family further alleged that defendants Ray Bellew & Sons and

Williams were negligent in their oversight and moving of the large bridge beams

onto the freeway that caused the freeway traffic to stop at the location of the

2 accident. According to the Patterson family, that location was not a safe entrance

ramp to bring such equipment on the freeway, and there should have been

additional motorcycle police escorts used.

On March 6, 2009, Brewer Leasing, Texas Stretch, and Hitchens filed a pre-

trial Joint Motion of Defendants to Exclude Evidence that Hitchens tested positive

for cocaine after the accident. They represented in that motion that the amount of

cocaine in Hitchens’s system had not been quantified and that there was no other

evidence indicating that he was impaired. Because evidence of a drug or alcohol

consumption is generally not admissible in an automobile-accident case unless

there is also evidence of impairment that causes the accident, defendants argued

that the positive drug test evidence should be excluded as highly prejudicial. On

March 27, 2009, the trial court granted the motion to exclude this evidence.

Williams Brothers and Ray Bellew & Sons each reached settlements with

the Patterson family and were released. Two days before the April 6, 2009 trial

setting, the Patterson family also reached a settlement with Texas Stretch requiring

money be paid to the Patterson family by or on behalf of Texas Stretch, Sagamore

Insurance Company (Texas Stretch’s insurer), and Mr. A.B. Brewer (100% owner

of Texas Stretch and Brewer Leasing). The terms of that agreement included:

A. Texas Stretch would pay the Patterson family $470,000 as follows: (1) $400,000 by Sagamore Insurance, (2) $25,000 by Texas Stretch, and (3) $45,000 over time by Texas Stretch, personally guaranteed by Mr. Brewer; 3 B. Texas Stretch was released;

C. Brewer Leasing would hire Mr. Herzog (the Patterson family’s attorney) to pursue Stowers and other claims against Home State (Brewer Leasing’s insurer); and

D. Brewer Leasing would later assign its claims against Home State to the Patterson family.

Claims against Brewer Leasing were not released as part of this settlement.

Also as part of the settlement terms, Mr. Brewer was released from personal

liability for future payments (his personal guarantee of some of Texas Stretch’s

obligation excepted) and, thus, Brewer Leasing received a Covenant to Not

Execute (even though Brewer Leasing was not a party to the settlement or a

released party).

By agreement of the parties, the jury was then dismissed and the trial court

heard the evidence against Brewer Leasing and Hitchens. A post-answer default

judgment was taken against Brewer Leasing, and Hitchens presented evidence.

The trial court’s findings of fact and conclusions of law included the findings that

(1) Hitchens’s negligence was the sole cause of the accident, (2) Hitchens was

employed by Texas Stretch, and (3) “both Brewer Leasing and Texas Stretch were,

at the time of the events in question, the statutory employer of Charles Hitchens

under the theory of logo liability.” On June 2, 2009, the trial court signed a final

judgment (“2009 Judgment”) memorializing the resolution of all the parties and

claims, applying various settlement credits, and then rendering judgment of

4 approximately $8,000,000 in actual damages in favor of the Patterson family and

against Brewer Leasing and Hitchens, jointly and severally.

After the 2009 Judgment was entered, Mr. Herzog sent a statutory demand

notice to Home State, on behalf of Brewer Leasing, based on his understanding

that, under the parties’ settlement agreement, he was being hired by Brewer

Leasing to represent it in a Stowers suit. A dispute then arose over Mr. Herzog’s

proposed fees, and Brewer Leasing ultimately refused to hire him. Later, the

Patterson family received an oral assignment of Brewer Leasing’s claims against

Home State, and Mr. Herzog’s filed suit against Home State on behalf of the

Patterson family as assignees of Brewer Leasing. In October 2010, the Patterson

family received a written assignment.

THE UNDERLYING BILL-OF-REVIEW PROCEEDINGS

In 2011, the Patterson family sued Brewer Leasing, alleging fraud in the

2006 litigation. Specifically, the Patterson family alleged that Brewer Leasing had

concealed evidence about the large amount of cocaine in Hitchens’s system at the

time of the accident. According to the Patterson family, this deception induced the

trial court in the 2006 litigation to exclude the evidence that Hitchens tested

positive for cocaine two hours after the accident, and induced the Patterson family

to accept settlement terms that they otherwise would not have accepted.

Their bill-of-review petition alleged:

5 8. Plaintiffs obtained a favorable judgment [in Cause No. 2006- 76647 against Brewer Leasing], but were prevented from making a meritorious claim for punitive damages and obtaining a full recovery of actual damages by the extrinsic fraud of Defendant. Defendant fraudulently concealed knowledge of the massive level of cocaine in Charles Hitchens’s system at the time the tragic auto collision occurred.

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Marcus Brent Patterson, Individually, as Independent Administrator of the Estate of Diane Patterson, and as Next Friend of Daniel Patterson and Danae Patterson, and Danae Patterson and Daniel Patterson (Now 18 Years of Age) v. Brewer Leasing, Inc., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marcus-brent-patterson-individually-as-independent-administrator-of-the-texapp-2015.