Thomas Sims and Raymond Campbell v. Patricia Hill Fitzpatrick and Richard Guion

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 13, 2014
Docket01-13-00176-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Thomas Sims and Raymond Campbell v. Patricia Hill Fitzpatrick and Richard Guion (Thomas Sims and Raymond Campbell v. Patricia Hill Fitzpatrick and Richard Guion) 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
Thomas Sims and Raymond Campbell v. Patricia Hill Fitzpatrick and Richard Guion, (Tex. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

Opinion issued March 13, 2014

In The

Court of Appeals For The

First District of Texas

NO. 01-13-00176-CV

THOMAS SIMS AND RAYMOND CAMPBELL, Appellants V. PATRICIA HILL FITZPATRICK AND RICHARD GUION, Appellees

On Appeal from the 125th District Court Harris County, Texas Trial Court Cause No. 2006-14287

MEMORANDUM OPINION This is the second appeal in this lawsuit brought against appellants Thomas

Sims and Raymond Campbell by appellees Patricia Hill Fitzpatrick and Richard

Guion. In the first appeal, we remanded for a new trial on damages. Sims v. Fitzpatrick, 288 S.W.3d 93, 96–97 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 2009, no pet.).

After the case was remanded, the parties entered into a Rule 11 settlement

agreement. Guion amended his pleading to allege that Sims and Campbell

breached the Rule 11 agreement and then moved for summary judgment on that

basis. The trial court granted summary judgment enforcing the Rule 11 agreement,

and Sims and Campbell challenge the summary judgment. We affirm.

Background

First Appeal

In March 2006, Fitzpatrick and Guion sued Sims and Campbell, as well as

several entities owned by Sims and Campbell, 1 asserting that the defendants had

committed fraud by perpetrating a Ponzi scheme. In September 2007, two months

before trial, Fitzpatrick and Guion moved for death-penalty sanctions. Id. at 97.

Guion and Fitzpatrick alleged that Sims and Campbell had refused to comply with

numerous court orders compelling discovery and that the trial court had previously

imposed monetary sanctions and prohibited them from conducting their own

discovery as a sanction for discovery abuse. Id. The trial court granted Guion’s

and Fitzpatrick’s motions for death-penalty sanctions, striking the defendants’

1 The corporate defendants were TMS Financial Services, Inc., Supernova Financial Services Corporation, and Supernova Investments, Inc. 2 pleading and entering judgment as to liability in favor of Fitzpatrick and Guion.

Id.

On September 25, 2007, more than 30 days before the trial date, Sims and

Campbell filed a jury demand. Id. On the same day, the trial court set a hearing on

damages for October 3, 2007. Id. Sims and Campbell filed a verified motion for

continuance, seeking to continue the October 3, 2007 damages hearing to

November 5, 2007, the date the case had been previously set for trial. Id. at 97–98.

Sims and Campbell noted that they had made a written demand for a jury trial, and

asserted that they needed a continuance so that their new counsel could prepare for

trial. Id. at 98.

On October 3, 2007, the trial court denied Sims and Campbell’s motion for

continuance, ruled that their jury demand was untimely, and conducted a bench

trial on damages. Id. The trial court entered judgment awarding $425,000 to

Guion and $888,000 to Fitzpatrick, plus interest. Id. All defendants were jointly

and severally liable, except for TMS Financial Services, Inc., which had been

dismissed before entry of judgment because it filed for bankruptcy. Id. at 100.

On appeal, we affirmed the imposition of death-penalty sanctions as to

liability, but reversed on the issue of damages, holding that appellants’ jury

3 demand was timely and that the issue of damages should have been tried to a jury.

Id. at 104, 107. We remanded for a new trial on damages. Id. at 107.

Proceedings on Remand and Second Appeal

On remand, the trial court set the case for trial during the two-week period

beginning June 6, 2011. On June 9, 2011, attorney Susan Norman moved to

substitute for the defendants’ counsel and for a 90-day continuance so that she

could familiarize herself with the case. The trial court continued the case to

August 8, 2011, but the record contains no order granting the motion to substitute

counsel.

A week after Norman appeared, the parties entered into a written Rule 11

settlement agreement. Sims and Campbell agreed to pay Guion $332,769.37 and

to pay Fitzpatrick $644,000, each in 24 monthly installments. The agreement

provided that if Sims and Campbell made the payments, the parties would dismiss

the case, but if not, Guion and Fitzpatrick would be entitled to judgment for

damages in the amount of $443,692.49 and $998,878, respectively. The Rule 11

agreement was signed by Norman, Sims, Campbell, and the attorneys for Guion

and Fitzpatrick, and it was filed with the trial court.

Sims and Campbell made no payments under the Rule 11 agreement.

Instead, they moved pro se to rescind the agreed judgment on the grounds that it

4 was “executed under duress, with insufficient time for said Defendants to obtain

adequate legal information to agree to said document.”

Shortly after Sims and Campbell moved to rescind the Rule 11 agreement,

Norman moved to withdraw on the grounds that she was “unable to communicate

effectively with Defendants in a manner that promotes continuation of the

attorney-client relationship.” The record contains no order on this motion.

Guion and Fitzpatrick moved to enter the agreed judgment. Two days

before the hearing on entry of judgment, Sims filed for bankruptcy, triggering the

automatic bankruptcy stay. After Sims was discharged from bankruptcy, Guion

informed the trial court that the stay had been lifted and that the bankruptcy court

found that Sims’s debts to Guion and Fitzpatrick were non-dischargeable.

On November 26, 2012, Guion filed an amended petition, alleging that Sims

and Campbell had breached the Rule 11 agreement and requesting enforcement of

the Rule 11 agreement and entry of the agreed judgment. Guion also filed a

traditional motion for summary judgment on the breach of contract claim and a no-

evidence summary-judgment motion on the appellants’ defense that they executed

the Rule 11 agreement under duress. The motions were set for submission on

December 17, 2012.

5 Five days before the submission date, on December 12, 2012, Sims and

Campbell filed their summary-judgment response in which they argued that there

were “significant genuine issues of material fact,” and summary judgment was not

appropriate. The only evidence attached to the response was the parties’ 2004

agreements that formed the basis for the lawsuit. The trial court granted Guion’s

motion to strike the response as untimely, granted the summary-judgment motions,

and entered a final judgment awarding Guion and Fitzpatrick the amounts set forth

in their agreed judgment—$443,692.49 and $998,878, respectively.

Discussion

Sims and Campbell contend the summary judgment was improper for four

reasons. First, they contend that the trial court should not have enforced the Rule

11 agreement because Norman was not their attorney of record at the time they

signed it. Second, they contend that the trial court failed to consider their claim

that they executed the Rule 11 agreement under duress. Third, they contend that

the issues of damages and duress should have been determined by a jury. Finally,

they argue that the trial court was required to dismiss the case because of an order

entered in the TMS Financial Services bankruptcy proceeding.

A. Standard of Review

We review a trial court’s summary judgment de novo. Travelers Ins. Co. v.

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