the Law Offices of John S. Young, P.C. v. Michael Deadman, Temporary Administrator of the Estate of John Edward Sullivan

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 5, 2017
Docket03-17-00148-CV
StatusPublished

This text of the Law Offices of John S. Young, P.C. v. Michael Deadman, Temporary Administrator of the Estate of John Edward Sullivan (the Law Offices of John S. Young, P.C. v. Michael Deadman, Temporary Administrator of the Estate of John Edward Sullivan) 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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the Law Offices of John S. Young, P.C. v. Michael Deadman, Temporary Administrator of the Estate of John Edward Sullivan, (Tex. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN

ON MOTION FOR REHEARING

NO. 03-17-00148-CV

The Law Offices of John S. Young, P.C., Appellant

v.

Michael Deadman, Temporary Administrator of The Estate of John Edward Sullivan, Deceased, Appellee

FROM THE COUNTY COURT AT LAW OF TOM GREEN COUNTY, NO. 14P252-L-A, HONORABLE MARTIN (BROCK) JONES, JUDGE PRESIDING

MEMORANDUM OPINION

We withdraw our opinion and judgment issued on September 13, 2017, and substitute

the following opinion and judgment in their place. We deny appellant’s motion for rehearing.

The Law Offices of John S. Young, P.C.1 appeals from the trial court’s final summary

judgment dismissing its claims against Michael Deadman, temporary administrator of the estate of

John Edward Sullivan. In four issues, the Law Office contends that the trial court erred in granting

summary judgment in Deadman’s favor. We will affirm the trial court’s summary judgment.

1 We will refer to the individual John S. Young as “Young” and to his law firm as “the Law Office.” BACKGROUND

In April 2014, the State of Texas brought a civil forfeiture proceeding against John

Sullivan. In connection with a criminal proceeding against Sullivan, the State seized a bank account

of Sullivan’s worth several million dollars. Sullivan hired the Law Office to represent him in the

proceeding, and the two signed an “Attorney Contingent Fee Contract.” This agreement provided

that the Law Office would receive a fee of 27.5% “of all sums recovered.” The contract also stated,

“Attorneys agree not to settle or compromise the case without the Client’s approval of the terms

and form of the settlement . . . .” Finally, the paragraph stating that “Client gives Attorneys a Power

of Attorney to execute (sign) all documents connected to this representation” was crossed out

and initialed.

On June 3 or 4, 2014, Sullivan died.2 On June 5, Young filed an application for

probate of will as muniment of title in the trial court. Young presented a document purporting to

be a holographic will signed by Sullivan on June 2. This document named Young as the sole

beneficiary of Sullivan’s estate. On June 16, the court signed an “Order Admitting Holographic

Will to Probate as Muniment of Title.” This order found “that there is no necessity for administration

of [Sullivan’s] estate” and decreed “that ALL right, title, and interest in ANY property or interest,

whether listed herein or not, belonging to the Estate of [Sullivan], Deceased . . . shall be and is

hereby vested in [Young], only, as the sole beneficiary in and under the herein described Will

admitted to probate.” After obtaining this order, Young had the funds from Sullivan’s account

transferred to another account in Young’s name.

2 There is some disagreement in the record regarding the exact date of Sullivan’s death.

2 On July 2, 2014, a district court in the civil forfeiture proceeding signed an “Agreed

Final Judgment of Forfeiture,” resolving the forfeiture proceeding against the account that had

previously belonged to Sullivan and was now under Young’s name. In this judgment, the court

found that Young “is now the possessor/owner of the property subject of this forfeiture proceeding.”

The court further found that $500,000 of the account was contraband and subject to forfeiture to the

State and that the remainder of the account was not contraband and was not subject to forfeiture.

The court therefore ordered that $500,000 be turned over to the State and that “the remaining balance”

of the account “shall be released, without encumbrance, to its possessor/owner.” The judgment

was signed by the district court, the assistant district attorney, and Christianson Hartman, who

represented “the interests of [Young], Defendant,” and was referred to as “Attorney for Defendant.”3

Later, a relative of Sullivan challenged the holographic will, and Deadman was

appointed Temporary Administrator of Sullivan’s estate. The Law Office sought to recover an

attorney’s fee from Deadman and Sullivan’s estate pursuant to the contingent-fee agreement it made

with Sullivan, but Deadman denied the claim. The Law Office then sued Deadman and Sullivan’s

estate, seeking $919,197.67, or 27.5% of the amount the Law Office claimed to have recovered in

the forfeiture proceeding.

Deadman filed a motion for summary judgment, which contained three parts. In the

first part, Deadman argued that the trial court should grant summary judgment against the Law

3 The summary-judgment record contains an affidavit in which Hartman avers that he “was engaged to serve as associate counsel for [the Law Office] in connection with the performance of the Contingent Fee Contract.” Hartman further avers that he “personally appeared” in the forfeiture proceeding and that his appearance “was also in the role as associated counsel for the Law Office.”

3 Office’s claims against Sullivan’s estate because an estate is not a legal entity and cannot be sued.4

In the second part, Deadman moved for no-evidence summary judgment as to the Law Office’s

claims against Deadman as temporary administrator of Sullivan’s estate. Deadman argued that

“there is no evidence that [Sullivan], ‘the Client’ in the contingent fee contract, approved of the

terms and form of the settlement in [the forfeiture proceeding], as required by paragraph 4 of the

[contingent-fee] contract.” In the third part, Deadman moved for traditional summary judgment as

to the Law Office’s claims against him. Deadman argued that the evidence showed: (1) that Sullivan

never approved the settlement in the forfeiture proceeding, (2) that Sullivan’s death terminated

the attorney-client relationship between the Law Office and Sullivan, (3) that the Law Office

subsequently had no authority to represent Sullivan’s estate in the forfeiture proceeding, (4) that the

Law Office waived any right to recover attorney’s fees by failing to take “the appropriate action to

ensure that [Sullivan’s] estate was properly represented in the final disposition of the forfeiture

proceeding” and by transferring all the assets of the account at issue in the forfeiture proceeding to

Young’s personal account prior to the rendition of the final agreed judgment in the forfeiture

proceeding, and (5) that there was no recovery in the forfeiture proceeding within the meaning of the

fee agreement because $500,000 of the account was forfeited to the State and the remainder was

released without encumbrance to Young—none went to Sullivan’s estate.

The trial court granted Deadman’s motion for summary judgment without indicating

the grounds for its decision, and this appeal followed.

4 The Law Office has not disputed this point, and Sullivan’s estate is not a party to this appeal.

4 STANDARD OF REVIEW

We review a trial court’s ruling on a motion for summary judgment de novo. See

Exxon Mobil Corp. v. Rincones, 520 S.W.3d 572, 579 (Tex. 2017) (citing Valence Operating Co.

v. Dorsett, 164 S.W.3d 656, 661 (Tex. 2005)). Traditional summary judgment is proper only if the

movant establishes that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that it is entitled to

judgment as a matter of law. Tex. R. Civ. P. 166a(c). No-evidence summary judgment is proper

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