Olga Gomez Acosta, Raymundo Gomez, Olga Gomez, Rosa Maria Gomez Romero, Gregorio Orozco, Fidel Manuel Orozco and Luzelena Melendez/Victor H. Falvey v. Victor H. Falvey/Olga Gomez Acosta, Raymundo Gomez, Olga Gomez, Rosa Maria Gomez Romero, Gregorio Orozco, Fidel Manuel Orozco and Luzelena Melendez

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 21, 2019
Docket08-16-00295-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Olga Gomez Acosta, Raymundo Gomez, Olga Gomez, Rosa Maria Gomez Romero, Gregorio Orozco, Fidel Manuel Orozco and Luzelena Melendez/Victor H. Falvey v. Victor H. Falvey/Olga Gomez Acosta, Raymundo Gomez, Olga Gomez, Rosa Maria Gomez Romero, Gregorio Orozco, Fidel Manuel Orozco and Luzelena Melendez (Olga Gomez Acosta, Raymundo Gomez, Olga Gomez, Rosa Maria Gomez Romero, Gregorio Orozco, Fidel Manuel Orozco and Luzelena Melendez/Victor H. Falvey v. Victor H. Falvey/Olga Gomez Acosta, Raymundo Gomez, Olga Gomez, Rosa Maria Gomez Romero, Gregorio Orozco, Fidel Manuel Orozco and Luzelena Melendez) 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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Olga Gomez Acosta, Raymundo Gomez, Olga Gomez, Rosa Maria Gomez Romero, Gregorio Orozco, Fidel Manuel Orozco and Luzelena Melendez/Victor H. Falvey v. Victor H. Falvey/Olga Gomez Acosta, Raymundo Gomez, Olga Gomez, Rosa Maria Gomez Romero, Gregorio Orozco, Fidel Manuel Orozco and Luzelena Melendez, (Tex. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS EIGHTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS EL PASO, TEXAS

OLGA GOMEZ ACOSTA, § RAYMUNDO GOMEZ, OLGA No. 08-16-00295-CV GOMEZ CHAVEZ, ROSA MARIA § GOMEZ ROMERO, Appeal from the GREGORIO OROZCO, FIDEL § MANUEL OROZCO and LUZELENA Probate Court No. 1 MELENDEZ, § of El Paso County, Texas Appellants/Cross-Appellees, § (TC# 84-P01364) v. §

VICTOR H. FALVEY, §

Appellee/Cross-Appellant. §

OPINION

This is an appeal from a judgment granting Appellee Victor H. Falvey’s motion for

summary judgment and ordering that Appellants Olga Gomez Acosta, Raymundo Gomez, Olga

Gomez Chavez, Rosa Maria Gomez Romero, Gregorio Orozco, Fidel Manuel Orozco, and

Luzelena Melendez (collectively, “Acosta”1) take nothing on their claims against him. Those

claims arise out of Falvey’s legal representation of Remedios Gomez concerning the estate of her

1 The record shows that Olga Gomez Acosta is the driving force behind this litigation and that the other Appellants have relied on her to act on their behalf in this matter as far back as 1986 . husband, Ramon Gomez, in 1984. Appellants are children or grandchildren of Remedios or

Ramon, or both. They assert that they were wrongfully deprived of their interest in Ramon’s

community estate and separate real property as a result of Falvey preparing and filing a false small

estate affidavit stating that Remedios was Ramon’s sole heir.

Falvey filed a cross-appeal, asserting that the trial court erroneously, and perhaps

unintentionally, denied his counterclaim for sanctions by ordering that all relief not expressly

granted is denied. We affirm the take-nothing judgment on the ground of limitations and hold that

Falvey’s request for sanctions was abandoned.

BACKGROUND

Ramon Gomez died intestate in 1984. Victor Falvey, an attorney, prepared and filed a

small estate affidavit, which was signed and sworn to by Ramon’s widow, Remedios Gomez. That

affidavit stated that Remedios was the sole distributee, heir, devisee, or assign of Ramon’s estate,

and was entitled to 100% of that estate. The affidavit was filed on March 22, 1984, and an order

approving it was signed the same day.

On March 25, 2015, over thirty-one years after the small estate affidavit was filed and

approved, Acosta sued Falvey. Acosta alleged that Falvey breached fiduciary duties owed to

Remedios and to the children of Remedios and Ramon because he knew that Ramon had children

and thus, he either knew that the small estate affidavit was false, or he was grossly negligent in

preparing it. As a further breach, Acosta alleged that Remedios received two real properties

through Ramon’s estate, which she then conveyed to Falvey’s parents, one in 1985 and one in

1986. Acosta asserted that Falvey fraudulently concealed “the breach of the fiduciary relationship

that Mr. Falvey established with Remedios and the heirs of Ramon and Remedios.” In anticipation

of a limitations defense, Acosta alleged that limitations was suspended because one plaintiff,

2 Raymundo Gomez, was in the armed forces from 1984 to 1997, and because of Falvey’s fraudulent

concealment. In a supplemental pleading, Acosta also asserted the discovery rule.

In response, Falvey filed an answer asserting that the suit was barred by limitations. He

also filed a “Counterclaim and/or Motion for Sanctions” pursuant to chapter ten of the Texas Civil

Practice and Remedies Code. In a supplemental answer, Falvey asserted an attorney-immunity

defense.

In her second amended petition, Acosta alleged that Falvey had a fiduciary relationship

only with Remedios, omitting her previous allegation that he also had a fiduciary relationship with

Remedios’s and Ramon’s descendants. She alleged instead that Remedios defrauded the children

and breached her fiduciary duty to them, and that Falvey aided and abetted Remedios in that fraud

and breach. She further alleged that Falvey aided and abetted Remedios in converting Ramon’s

real property which was conveyed to Falvey’s parents.

Falvey filed a motion for summary judgment asserting a variety of no-evidence and

traditional grounds. We need only address the assertion that Acosta’s suit is barred by limitations.

It is undisputed that the small estate affidavit here at issue was filed and approved in March 1984,

the affidavit was a matter of public record, and Acosta did not file suit until March 2015. As

summary judgment evidence, Falvey filed excerpts from the depositions of each of the individual

Appellants. These excerpts demonstrate that each of them relied on Olga Gomez Acosta to pursue

this matter, and that none of them (other than Acosta, herself) made any inquiry concerning

Ramon’s estate until Raymundo Gomez sent Falvey an email in 2014.

Acosta testified that, in 1986, she went to the courthouse to search the public record

because she had some questions in her mind concerning her father’s affairs and thought he might

have left a will. In her search, she discovered the small estate affidavit filed by Falvey. Also, in

3 1986, she told her brother, Raymundo, that something was not right and showed him the affidavit.

In 1989, Acosta started talking to various attorneys about the matter but was unable to obtain their

assistance, for unstated reasons. In 1994, Acosta filed an application for guardianship for

Remedios and mentioned her concerns about the small estate affidavit to Rene Ordonez, the

attorney representing her in the guardianship. Ordonez advised her to worry first about the

guardianship matter and “we’ll take care of the rest later on.”

Gregorio Orozco Mota testified that Acosta told him in the 1990’s that something was

wrong with Ramon’s estate. Raymundo Gomez similarly testified that Acosta had occasionally

mentioned that something was wrong with the estate since 1986 or 1987, and that she said she had

talked to several attorneys about it. He had asked Acosta about the matter two or three times a

year since 1997 and believed since that time that there was something wrong that should be

investigated. In 2014, Raymundo sent Falvey an email asking about the affidavit and why the

children were not notified.

In response to Falvey’s summary judgment motion, Acosta raised both the discovery rule

and fraudulent concealment to overcome the limitations defense. In support, she filed her own

affidavit acknowledging that she first had concerns about her father’s estate in 1986 and discovered

the small estate affidavit in that year.2 She stated that she asked Falvey about her father’s affairs

and whether he had a will, but Falvey responded, “your mother came by herself and that is all I

will tell you.” Acosta stated that she made repeated inquiries to Falvey over the years and received

the same response.

2 Documents, including Acosta’s affidavit, appear in the clerk’s record before, and apparently separately from, the summary judgment response. Falvey objected to the trial court considering those documents because they were not submitted as summary judgment evidence and did not comply with Rule 166a(d) of the Texas Rules of Civil Procedure. The record does not, however, contain any ruling on those objections and it appears that the trial court considered Acosta’s documents as summary judgment evidence. We will do the same. See TEX.R.APP.P. 33.1 (requiring a ruling on objection to preserve error).

4 Acosta also stated, “During the years following I contacted numerous lawyers to seek legal

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Olga Gomez Acosta, Raymundo Gomez, Olga Gomez, Rosa Maria Gomez Romero, Gregorio Orozco, Fidel Manuel Orozco and Luzelena Melendez/Victor H. Falvey v. Victor H. Falvey/Olga Gomez Acosta, Raymundo Gomez, Olga Gomez, Rosa Maria Gomez Romero, Gregorio Orozco, Fidel Manuel Orozco and Luzelena Melendez, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/olga-gomez-acosta-raymundo-gomez-olga-gomez-rosa-maria-gomez-romero-texapp-2019.