Taco Bell Corp. v. Cracken

939 F. Supp. 528, 1996 WL 562067
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Texas
DecidedSeptember 12, 1996
Docket3:93-cv-01613
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 939 F. Supp. 528 (Taco Bell Corp. v. Cracken) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Taco Bell Corp. v. Cracken, 939 F. Supp. 528, 1996 WL 562067 (N.D. Tex. 1996).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER

FITZWATER, District Judge.

This is an action to recover against two attorneys, and one attorney’s professional corporation, on theories of fraud, abuse of process, conspiracy, and negligent misrepresentation for allegedly-collusive conduct that enabled the plaintiffs in a state-court wrongful death suit to maintain venue in a favorable forum. The court concludes that plaintiffs claims are barred as a matter of law, because each one arises out of conduct undertaken as part of the defendant-attorneys’ duties in representing parties to a lawsuit to which plaintiff was also a party. Accordingly, defendants’ motions for summary judgment are granted, and the actions against them are dismissed.

I

Plaintiff Taco Bell Corp. (“Taco Bell”) sues defendants John R.W. Cracken, Esq. (“Cracken”), Cracken’s professional corporation, John Robert William Cracken, P.C. (“Cracken, P.C.”), Douglas H. Parks, Esq. (“Parks”), and Jerome Green (“Green”), in connection with their conduct in a Texas state-court wrongful death lawsuit, Deborah R.V. Fraga, et al. v. American Sec. Prods. Co. & Jerome Green, No. 14,967 (229th Judicial District, Duval County, Tex.) (the “Fraga Suit”). According to Taco Bell’s amended complaint, “Taco Bell seeks to recover actual and punitive damages for the injuries it suffered as a result of defendants’ wrongful manipulation of the judicial system for their own improper gain ... by collusively placing and maintaining venue of a wrongful death lawsuit against Taco Bell in Duval County, Texas.” Am. Compl. at ¶ 1.

The Fraga Suit was a negligence action to recover for the wrongful deaths of four persons whom Green and another individual murdered during the course of an armed robbery at a Taco Bell restaurant located in Irving, Texas, a city located within Dallas County, Texas. The plaintiffs in the Fraga Suit (the “Fraga Plaintiffs”) were survivors of the murder victims. Named as defendants were American Security Products Company (“American Security”), the design *530 er and manufacturer of the restaurant wall safe, and Green. The Fraga Plaintiffs did not sue Taco Bell initially.

The Fraga Plaintiffs retained Cracken to represent them. Prior to filing suit, Cracken requested that Parks, who had been Green’s court-appointed criminal defense counsel, represent Green in the contemplated wrongful death action. Cracken agreed to compensate Parks at the rate of $150 per hour for representing Green, and sent Parks the sum of $1,500 as a retainer.

Cracken thereafter filed the Fraga Suit in Duval County, Texas, which is located several hundred miles from the murder scene. Duval County was perceived to be a “plaintiff’s venue” during the relevant time period. The. county’s jurors reputedly were disposed toward deciding personal injury or wrongful death claims in favor of plaintiffs, and the county was well-known for its large damages awards. Attorneys and others in the legal community viewed cases pending in Duval County as having a higher settlement value based on a higher probability of a large recovery at trial. Duval County was considered a far more favorable forum for plaintiffs than was Dallas County.

At the time the suit was filed, Green was incarcerated at a Texas state penal institution located in Anderson County, Texas, 1 also located several hundred miles from Duval County. Prior to his imprisonment, Green had lived in Dallas County, but had never even been to Duval County. The petition in the Fraga Suit, however, alleged on information and belief that Green was a resident of Duval County.

In response to the Fraga Plaintiffs’ petition, Green filed a general denial without objecting to venue, thus waiving his right to seek a transfer of venue. On Green’s behalf, Parks also filed at the same time responses to the Fraga Plaintiffs’ requests for admissions, in which Green admitted that he had chosen Duval County as his residence.

American Security — whose counsel Crack-en was not paying — was not so compliant. It filed a motion to transfer venue of the case to Dallas County. The Fraga Plaintiffs opposed the motion on the basis of Green’s admission of his Duval County residence. Taco Bell, which had not yet been joined as a defendant, reviewed American Security’s motion and advised it that the motion was defective, because it failed to challenge venue facts regarding defendant Green. In addition, Taco Bell requested that American Security not set the venue hearing until after the statute of limitations had run, so that if Taco Bell were joined in the suit, it could participate in the venue challenge.

Prior to the originally-scheduled venue hearing, the Fraga Plaintiffs and American Security entered into a “high-low” settlement agreement, which limited American Security’s potential liability to the sum of $250,000. The agreement provided that American Security could continue to pursue its motion to transfer venue, but that it would consent to the Fraga Plaintiffs’ discovery schedule and trial setting. Because the $250,000 payment was contingent upon the Fraga Plaintiffs’ obtaining a judgment, American Security remained a party to the litigation.

The state district judge denied the motion to transfer. Within minutes of the ruling, Cracken filed an amended petition that named Taco Bell as a defendant.

Taco Bell moved to vacate the state court’s denial of the venue motion, and moved to transfer venue. Under Texas law, once venue had been established, no subsequently-added defendant could challenge the determination. At the hearing, counsel for Green and for American Security stated that neither had stipulated with the Fraga Plaintiffs that venue would be fixed in Duval County. Cracken also advised the judge that he had not entered into any stipulation with anyone to establish venue there. The state court judge denied Taco Bell’s motion.

Taco Bell thereafter removed the case to the United States District Court for the Southern District of Texas, alleging that Green (who was not a diverse citizen from *531 the Fraga Plaintiffs) had been fraudulently joined, and that his citizenship should be disregarded. Taco Bell also filed the instant suit against Cracken, Parks, and Green. American Security refused to join in the removal, contending that to do so would violate certain of the terms of the settlement agreement. Following mediation, Taco Bell settled the Fraga Suit for the sum of $8.25 million.

Taco Bell now seeks damages against defendants Cracken, Parks, and Green on the basis of claims for fraud, abuse of process, and conspiracy, and sues defendant Cracken, P.C. for negligent misrepresentation. It contends it has incurred damages in the form of attorney’s fees and other costs “to investigate and expose the defendants’ conduct and in an attempt to reverse the effects of their misrepresentations, conspiracy, venue fraud and abuse of the legal process.” P.Resp. at 13. Defendants Cracken, Cracken, P.C., and Parks move for summary judgment. 2 Taco Bell has responded to Parks’ motion in tandem with the motion filed by defendants Cracken and Cracken, P.C. See P.Resp. at 2 n. 2.

II

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
939 F. Supp. 528, 1996 WL 562067, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/taco-bell-corp-v-cracken-txnd-1996.