Randall C. Boyd v. Koons, Fuller, Vanden Eykel & Robertson, P.C.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 5, 2005
Docket10-03-00337-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Randall C. Boyd v. Koons, Fuller, Vanden Eykel & Robertson, P.C. (Randall C. Boyd v. Koons, Fuller, Vanden Eykel & Robertson, P.C.) 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
Randall C. Boyd v. Koons, Fuller, Vanden Eykel & Robertson, P.C., (Tex. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

IN THE

TENTH COURT OF APPEALS


No. 10-03-00337-CV

Randall C. Boyd,

                                                                      Appellant

 v.

Koons, Fuller,

Vanden Eykel & Robertson, P.C.,

                                                                      Appellee


From the 116th District Court

Dallas County, Texas

Trial Court # 02-09480-F

MEMORANDUM  Opinion


This is a legal malpractice action in a divorce and child custody case.  The trial judge granted a traditional motion for summary judgment in favor of Koons, Fuller, Vanden, Eykel & Robertson, P.C. (“Fuller”).  Randall C. Boyd, Fuller’s client, appeals in one issue: Is there an issue of fact as to whether Fuller’s negligence was a substantial cause of Boyd’s divorce not having been finalized before Boyd received certain stock and options?  We will overrule Boyd’s issue and affirm the summary judgment.

BACKGROUND

A Mediated Settlement Agreement (“MSA”) was entered in May 1997.  Boyd’s wife Ginger and their daughter Ashley (through her attorney) contested the MSA in August 1997 because: (1) it did not comply with the Family Code (requirement to name the county of residence or the conservator with exclusive right to establish primary residence); (2) Boyd did not disclose a bonus that was already due in the amount of $230,000; and (3) the MSA was not in Ashley’s best interest.  Boyd filed a motion to enforce the MSA.  A hearing was held on the motion to enforce in September 1998.  In April 1999, the motion to enforce was denied because the MSA did not consider “the bonus money which might have affected the allocation decisions made by the Petitioner and is unenforceable with respect to the visitation and access issues.”  However, in July 1998, Boyd had received a stock and options bonus worth $8,000,000.  A divorce decree was entered in the fall of 1999, which considered the $8,000,000 bonus received in July 1998 as part of the community estate and divided the bonus with Ginger.

Boyd sued Fuller for legal malpractice claiming Fuller: (1) failed to investigate the extent of the community estate; (2) advised Boyd that he did not have to disclose the $230,000 bonus already due; and (3) drafted an MSA that was not compliant with the Family Code.  He argues that these negligent actions delayed the final decree and allowed the July 1998 bonus worth $8,000,000 to become community property.

Fuller filed a traditional motion for summary judgment challenging the causation element of legal malpractice.  The motion was granted.


ARGUMENTS

Boyd argues that Fuller’s negligence caused the delay in the finalization of the divorce.  He argues that without these negligent acts, there would have been no grounds to challenge the MSA.  He asserts that his expert raised a fact issue as to causation with testimony that there would have been “no basis on which to move to set aside the MSA,” and “[w]ithout a basis for moving to set aside the [MSA], an attorney would be highly unlikely to file such a motion and even less likely to continue to pursue it as late as July of 1998.”

Fuller argues that the delay was attributable to: (1) the court’s delay in having a hearing on the motion to enforce; (2) Boyd and Ginger could never have agreed on enforceable visitation and access provisions; and (3) Boyd’s expert testimony was purely speculative and does not raise a fact issue on causation.  The lawyers for Ginger and Ashley testified that they would have challenged the MSA regardless of Fuller’s negligence because Ashley “violently” opposed the visitation and access provisions.  Ashley’s attorney further stated that he would have challenged the agreement on whatever reasonable and ethical grounds he could have come up with, including a family law court’s ability to set aside agreements that are not in the child’s best interest.  He testified that, if this approach failed, he would have sought a modification.  Ginger’s attorney testified that: “I would have pursued this claim on behalf of Mrs. Boyd so long as I had a client and some judge told me not to – had not told me to go home, that I didn’t have anything to do; in other words, get out of my courtroom.  Whether she would’ve come in with a decree based on this MSA, or just the MSA, I would’ve attacked it.”  Fuller’s expert testified that the “primary factor in the harm that Mr. Boyd suffered was the judge’s failure to hold a hearing on the motion for enforcement.”

SUMMARY JUDGMENT

Standard of Review

We review the decision to grant or deny a summary-judgment motion de novo.  See Rucker v. Bank One Texas, N.A., 36 S.W.3d 649, 653 (Tex. App.—Waco 2000, pet. denied).  The standards for reviewing a traditional motion for summary judgment are well established.  Nixon v. Mr. Property Mgmt. Co., 690 S.W.2d 546, 548 (Tex. 1985).  The movant has the burden of showing that no genuine issue of material fact exists and that he is entitled to the summary judgment as a matter of law.  American Tobacco Co. v. Grinnell, 951 S.W.2d 420, 425 (Tex. 1997); Ash v. Hack Branch Distributing Co., 54 S.W.3d 401, 413 (Tex. App.—Waco 2001, pet. denied).  The reviewing court must accept all evidence favorable to the non-movant as true.  Nixon

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Bluebook (online)
Randall C. Boyd v. Koons, Fuller, Vanden Eykel & Robertson, P.C., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/randall-c-boyd-v-koons-fuller-vanden-eykel-robertson-pc-texapp-2005.