Susan Gail Messina v. Louis Anthony Messina

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 24, 2008
Docket01-07-00277-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Susan Gail Messina v. Louis Anthony Messina (Susan Gail Messina v. Louis Anthony Messina) 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
Susan Gail Messina v. Louis Anthony Messina, (Tex. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

Opinion Issued July 24, 2008

Opinion Issued July 24, 2008



In The

Court of Appeals

For The

First District of Texas


NO. 01-07-00277-CV


SUSAN GAIL MESSINA, Appellant

V.

LOUIS ANTHONY MESSINA, Appellee


On Appeal from the 308th District Court

Harris County, Texas

Trial Court Cause No. 2005-73098



MEMORANDUM OPINION

          Appellant, Susan Messina, sued her ex-husband, Louis Messina, to recover assets that he allegedly failed to disclose during their 1999 divorce proceeding.  The trial court granted Louis’s motion to dismiss the suit with prejudice and ordered Susan to pay Louis’s attorney’s fees.  On appeal, Susan contends that the trial court abused its discretion in: (1) dismissing the suit with prejudice after granting Susan’s motion for nonsuit; (2) imposing sanctions against her; (3) imposing sanctions and attorney’s fees without stating supporting reasons; and (4) denying Susan’s motion for new trial.  Susan’s final contention is that limitations should be tolled during this appeal.  We conclude that (1) Susan failed to preserve her contention that the trial court failed to articulate reasons for its sanctions order and (2) the trial court did not abuse its discretion in dismissing the case with prejudice and awarding attorney’s fees.  We therefore affirm.

Background

          Susan and Louis Messina divorced in July 1999.  Prior to entry of the final divorce agreement (“AID”), the Messinas executed a Mediated Settlement Agreement (“MSA”), which they filed on May 24, 1999.  The MSA contained schedules of the partitioned assets and liabilities, and recited that it “shall be effective immediately as a contract, shall supersede any temporary orders or other agreements of the parties with respect to the subject matter thereof, and shall serve as a partition of all property set forth herein to the person to whom such property is awarded.”

          Susan sued Louis in November 2005, alleging that unpartitioned property existed at the time of the divorce, in which she has a community property interest.  Specifically, she claims an interest in: (1) a ranch in New Ulm, which Louis sold in 2005 for over $1 million; (2) proceeds from a sale of Pace Entertainment, Inc. (“Pace”) stock to SFX Entertainment, allegedly worth $40 million; and (3) “other community assets.”  Susan attached a copy of the final divorce decree, the mediated settlement agreement, and Louis’s inventory and appraisement to her petition.  When Louis did not appear, Susan obtained an interlocutory default judgment against him in May 2006, which awarded Susan a “writ of inquiry,” and damages to be assessed when the cause was called.

          Louis became aware of the suit in September 2006 when Susan attempted to depose Allen Becker, one of Louis’s business associates.  Shortly after learning about the suit, Louis moved to set aside the interlocutory default judgment, to dismiss, and for sanctions.   Louis’s motion was entitled “LOUIS MESSINA’S SECOND SUPPLEMENT TO ‘APPEARANCE AND MOTION TO DISMISS AND FOR ECONOMIC SANCTIONS UNDER RULE 13 OF TEXAS RULES OF CIVIL PROCEDURE AND GENERAL SANCTIONS AND LOUIS MESSINA’S SUPPLEMENT TO MOTION TO SET ASIDE INTERLOCUTORY DEFAULT JUDGMENT AND FOR NEW TRIAL.’”  In support of the motion, Louis provided an affidavit, a copy of a closing payment confirmation which evidences the sale of Pace stock to SFX Entertainment, the earnest money contract for the New Ulm ranch, copies of checks written as payment for an option fee and earnest money drawn on accounts from Chase Bank partitioned to Louis in the MSA, the deed for 75+ acres of land, and a warranty deed for 44+ acres purchased on February 18, 2003.

In October 2006, the trial court heard Louis’s motion for new trial and his motion to dismiss and for sanctions.  After hearing argument that Susan’s lawsuit was based on nothing other than “intuition,” the trial court granted Louis’s motion to set aside the default judgment, but allowed Susan additional time for discovery before ruling on the motion to dismiss and for sanctions.  The trial court warned Susan that “if intuition is it, sanctions will be granted because it’s taking up the Court’s time.”  The parties agreed to set the trial for January 9, 2007.

          On January 3, 2007, Susan moved for a continuance on the grounds that both Susan’s co-counsel and her counsel’s wife had been hospitalized, and she needed additional time for discovery.  Susan had not yet provided Louis with his requested discovery, nor had she deposed either Allen Becker or Louis.  Her answers to Louis’s request for production was “will produce.”  Rather than produce this evidence, Susan served Chase Bank with a request for a deposition, seeking Louis’s bank records for the previous twenty years.  The trial court quashed the deposition, stating that asking for records from the date of divorce through 2006 was harassment.  The trial court also denied the motion for continuance.

          When the parties arrived for trial on January 9, Susan moved to nonsuit her claims without prejudice.  The trial court advised Susan that even if it granted the motion, Louis’s motion to dismiss and for sanctions remained pending.  Susan acknowledged Louis’s right to go forward, and the trial court granted Susan’s nonsuit.  After a hearing on the motion to dismiss and for sanctions, the trial court stated that it did not find the lawsuit to be frivolous, because Susan “had a right to bring it,” but granted the motion to dismiss with prejudice and awarded Louis $42,195 in attorney’s fees.  The trial court’s order does not state the basis for the sanctions award.

          Susan moved for a new trial, which the trial court denied.  At the hearing on that motion, the trial court stated that it had found no evidence of undisclosed property.

Dismissal with Prejudice

          Susan contends that the trial court abused its discretion in: (1) granting Louis’s motion to dismiss with prejudice after granting her nonsuit and (2) imposing any sanctions against her, including the dismissal of her suit.

Sanctions Following Nonsuit

          Susan contends that the trial court could not dismiss her case with prejudice after granting her motion for nonsuit.  We disagree.  “[A] plaintiff’s right to take a nonsuit is

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Susan Gail Messina v. Louis Anthony Messina, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/susan-gail-messina-v-louis-anthony-messina-texapp-2008.