Robert Alpert, Danro Corporation and Alba Corporation v. Crain, Caton & James, P.C., Darlene Payne-Smith and Sharon B. Gardner

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedSeptember 22, 2005
Docket01-04-00484-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Robert Alpert, Danro Corporation and Alba Corporation v. Crain, Caton & James, P.C., Darlene Payne-Smith and Sharon B. Gardner (Robert Alpert, Danro Corporation and Alba Corporation v. Crain, Caton & James, P.C., Darlene Payne-Smith and Sharon B. Gardner) 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
Robert Alpert, Danro Corporation and Alba Corporation v. Crain, Caton & James, P.C., Darlene Payne-Smith and Sharon B. Gardner, (Tex. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

Opinion issued September 22, 2005





In The

Court of Appeals

For The

First District of Texas





NOS. 01-04-00101-CV

          01-04-00484-CV





ROBERT ALPERT, DANRO CORPORATION, and ALBA CORPORATION, Appellants


V.


CRAIN, CATON & JAMES, P.C., DARLENE PAYNE SMITH and SHARON B. GARDNER, Appellees





On Appeal from the 55th District Court

Harris County, Texas

Trial Court Cause No. 2003-47342





O P I N I O N

          A law firm moved to dismiss this case because Texas law does not recognize a tort action brought against a lawyer by a party opposed to that lawyer’s client in litigation. The party responds that he properly pleaded a recognized exception to the general rule. The trial court dismissed the case on special exceptions, and awarded the law firm approximately $13,000 in attorney’s fees as a sanction. We agree with the trial court that the facts as pleaded do not weather an attack by special exceptions, and conclude that the trial court did not abuse its discretion in awarding sanctions. We therefore affirm. Facts

          Appellants, Robert Alpert, Danro Corporation, and Alba Corporation (collectively “Alpert”), sued appellees, Crain, Caton & James, P.C., Darlene Payne Smith, and Sharon B. Gardner (collectively “Crain Caton”), in connection with Crain Caton’s legal representation of Alpert’s former attorney, Mark R. Riley. Alpert alleges that Crain Caton conspired with Riley to defraud Alpert, and both aided and

 abetted in the breach of, and tortiously interfered with, Riley’s fiduciary duty to Alpert.

          Riley is Alpert’s former attorney, having assisted him from June 1994 through 1998 in the administration of his business and legal affairs. Among other duties, Riley acted as legal counsel to various businesses in which Alpert had an interest and to several trusts Alpert established for the benefit of his children. The relationship between Alpert and Riley soured in 1998, and Riley’s professional dealings with Alpert ended. Riley sued Alpert in probate court, and Alpert counterclaimed against Riley (“the trust litigation”). Riley hired the Crain Caton law firm to represent him in the trust litigation and, perhaps, during events immediately preceding it.

          Alpert thereafter brought this district court action against Crain Caton. In this case, Alpert alleges that Crain Caton conspired with Riley to defraud Alpert, and both aided and abetted, and tortiously interfered with, Riley’s fiduciary duty to Alpert by the following: (1) concealing Riley’s malpractices and breaches of fiduciary duty; (2) filing frivolous lawsuits against Alpert in probate court; and (3) disparaging Alpert’s reputation in the business community. Alpert does not allege that Crain Caton represented him. Rather, he acknowledges that Crain Caton represented Riley. Alpert did not name Riley as a defendant in this litigation against Crain Caton, but instead refers to Riley as a co-conspirator.

          In January 2004, the trial court granted Crain Caton’s special exceptions and dismissed the case, holding that Alpert “failed to set forth a claim or plead a cause of action against [Crain Caton] recognized under Texas law.” In April 2004, the trial court granted Crain Caton’s motion for sanctions, ordering Alpert to pay sanctions of $12,831.56 for Crain Caton’s attorney’s fees and expenses.

The Dismissal Order

          In response to Crain Caton’s special exceptions, Alpert amended his pleadings several times, and announced to the trial court that he stood on his fourth amended petition. Alpert’s petition—referring to Riley as “Riley” and to Crain Caton as “the Defendants”—alleges the following:

The acts and/or omissions of Riley, the fiduciary include, but are not limited to the following:

          a.       Appropriating proprietary, confidential information protected by the attorney-client privilege and the attorney work product privilege and utilizing that information to make scandalous representations to the Internal Revenue Service and perhaps to other governmental entities. This action amounted to self-dealing in that Riley was interested in collecting monies from the Internal Revenue Service for making complaints about his clients and also to pressure Alpert into paying money to him and the Defendants. The Defendants have stated that they only want money paid to them and to Riley in order for Riley to cease this inappropriate activity;

          b.       By turning Alpert over to the Internal Revenue Service and perhaps other governmental entities, Riley and the Defendants knew that Riley was breaching his fiduciary duty of “perfect fairness” on the part of an attorney to his clients;

          c.       With the assistance of the Defendants, Riley did not advise the Plaintiffs of the actions that he was taking with the proprietary and confidential information thereby aiding and abetting Riley to breach the duty of discretion, the duty of loyalty and the duty to make full disclosure of material facts to his clients;

          d.       By attempting to blackmail the Plaintiffs into paying money to them, the Defendants aided and abetted Riley in breaching his duty of loyalty to the Plaintiffs and his duty to place the interest of the Plaintiffs above his own. Riley and the Defendants used this as an advantage of their personal positions to gain a benefit for themselves at the expense of the Plaintiffs/beneficiaries;

          e.       The Defendants aided and abetted Riley in a conflict of interest wherein they allowed him to continue to sue the Plaintiffs and to make claims against the Plaintiffs utilizing confidential and proprietary information which Riley gained from the attorney-client privilege and from his attorney work product while representing the Plaintiff in order to extract attorney’s fees for the Defendants and so called “trustee fees” for Riley;

          f.       The Defendants aided and abetted Riley in breaching his fiduciary duty of making a full and accurate confession of all his fiduciary activities, transaction, profits and mistakes all of which is paramount to fraudulent concealment.

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Robert Alpert, Danro Corporation and Alba Corporation v. Crain, Caton & James, P.C., Darlene Payne-Smith and Sharon B. Gardner, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robert-alpert-danro-corporation-and-alba-corporation-v-crain-caton-texapp-2005.