Trinity River Authority of Texas v. Badders

453 S.W.2d 304, 1970 Tex. App. LEXIS 2664
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 1, 1970
DocketNo. 351
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 453 S.W.2d 304 (Trinity River Authority of Texas v. Badders) 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
Trinity River Authority of Texas v. Badders, 453 S.W.2d 304, 1970 Tex. App. LEXIS 2664 (Tex. Ct. App. 1970).

Opinion

TUNKS, Chief Justice.

The appellant, Trinity River Authority of Texas, was created by act of the legislature as a “governmental agency of the State of Texas and a body politic and corporate.” Article 8280-188, Vernon’s Ann. Tex.St. It is a conservation and reclamation district. For several years it has been acquiring land in connection with the creation of Lake Livingston on the Trinity River. It has the power of eminent domain. The appellant will sometimes be called T.R.A. in this opinion.

In May, 1967, John Douglas Bell and his mother, Louise K. Bell, neither of whom are parties to this suit, owned a tract of land in Trinity County, Texas. On May 3, 1967, T.R.A. offered the Bells $64,771 for 286.7 acres of their land. The Bells did not accept the offer. After some negotiation between the Bells and T.R.A., during which no agreement was reached, the Bells hired an attorney, Mr. R. F. Evans, to represent them in the matter. This employment is evidenced by a written contract signed by the Bells and Mr. Evans dated August 25, 1967. The contract in part stated:

“* * * we, the said LOUISE K. BELL and JOHN DOUGLAS BELL, have employed R. F. Evans, attorney at law of Groveton, Texas, as our attorney to represent us and to prosecute, or defend, any and/or all of our certain claim, or claims, that we have, or may have against the said Trinity River Authority, or others and their successors or assigns.
“And we hereby fully authorize and empower our said attorney to bring suit, or suits, on our said claim, or claims, if necessary, and to prosecute, or defend, same to final judgment, or judgments, and to compromise and settle our .said claim, or claims,, with or without suit, in any way or manner that he may deem adviseable. However, it is understood and agreed that our said attorney will not finally settle, or compromise, our said claim, or claims, without first consulting us.
“For and in consideration of the services rendered us and to be rendered us by our said attorney, R. F. Evans, we hereby agree and obligate ourselves to give and allow him, as compensation herein, thirty (30%) per cent of any and/or all amounts received by us as damages recovered from the said Trinity River Authority, or its successors, and others, over and above, and in excess of, the amounts originally offered to us by said Authority, and others, as its firm offer heretofore made as compensation for damages inflicted by its actions, or omissions, upon our said lands, and we do hereby sell, transfer, assign and convey to our said attorney, R. F. Evans, a thirty (30%) per cent undivided interest in and to our said claim for damages, or claims for damages, as above set out and clarified, against all of the said Trinity River Authority, its successors and assigns, and others, whether the same is settled with or without suit, * *

A few months after he was so employed by the Bells, Mr. Evans died as the result of a hunting accident. Soon after Mr. Evans’ death his widow and his son introduced Mr. Bill Badders, an attorney of Nacogdoches, Texas, to the Bells and recommended that he be employed to continue the matter of the representation of the Bells in their claim against T.R.A. The Bells accepted this recommendation and did so employ Mr. Badders. This employment is evidenced. by a written memorandum on the back of the original contract between the Bells and Mr. Evans. It reads as follows :

“We Mrs. Louise K. Bell & Son John Douglas Bell do hereby employ Bill Badders of Nacodoches to represent us in any claim we have, could havé or might have against the Trinity River Authority, [307]*307on the same terms that we previously employed Mr. R. F. Evans & a copy of our agreement with Mr. Evans is actually on the back of this page & is incorporated herein for a specific description of our contract with Mr. Evans.

“/s/ Rush F. Evans, Jr. witness to signatures of Doug & Mrs. Bell

/s/ Mrs. Louise K. Bell” /s/ John Douglas Bell

The R. F. Evans, Jr. who witnessed the contract is the son of the attorney who formerly represented the Bells.

On January 26, 1968, Badders notified T.R.A. that he had been employed to represent the Bells and furnished it a copy of his contract of employment. Badders then entered into negotiations with T.R.A. in an effort to settle the claim. Following those negotiations T.R.A. made an offer to Badders of about $100,000 for the property in question. This offer was communicated to the Bells. It was neither accepted nor rejected.

On October 9, 1968, the Bells wrote a letter to Badders in which they stated that they had terminated his employment and asked to be billed for the services rendered as of that date. On October 18, 1968, Badders replied by a letter to the Bells in which he stated that he was still representing them under the terms of his written contract. He asked the Bells to let him know their response to the $100,000 offer that had been made and invited them to come to his office to discuss the matter. He also requested that they forward to him any process that they might receive in connection with the contemplated condemnation proceedings.

In December, 1968, T.R.A. filed a condemnation suit against the Bells seeking the acquisition of the property in question. The Bells did not forward to Badders the citation which they received in that case nor otherwise inform him of its having been filed. Rather, John Douglas Bell contacted an agent of T.R.A. and stated that he wished to settle the matter without litigation. Bell told the T.R.A. agent that Badders was no longer representing them in the matter of their claim. Negotiations between John Douglas Bell and the T.R.A. agents continued over a period of approximately three months. As a result of those negotiations . on March 10, 1969, John Douglas Bell, who had by then acquired his mother’s interest in the land in question, conveyed the property to T.R.A. by deed for a consideration of $101,611. At no time during the course of these negotiations did the T.R.A. agents notify Badders that they were negotiating directly with Bell, nor did they seek confirmation from Badders that he was no longer representing the Bells. During the course of these negotiations T.R.A.’s agents had actual knowledge of the contractual agreement between the Bells and Badders. It was not until after March 10, 1969, the date the land was conveyed, that Badders learned of the agreement reached by Bell and T.R.A.

Badders filed this suit against T.R.A. to recover from it that portion of the consideration paid for the Bell property which had been assigned to him in his contract with the Bells. Both parties filed motions for summary judgment. From the depositions of some of the T.R.A. agents and affidavits filed in support of the motions for summary judgment, the above facts were established. The trial court overruled the motion for summary judgment of T.R.A. and granted that of Badders. Judgment was rendered in favor of Badders for $11,052 together with interest to the date of trial. The amount of the judgment represented 30% of the sum by which the consideration paid to Bell for his property exceeded the original offer made to the Bells by T.R.A. T.R.A. has perfected its appeal from that judgment.

It is the position of T.R.A. on this appeal that the trial court’s judgment against it was error because it is protected by the doctrine of governmental immunity. Two [308]*308different aspects of the doctrine of the governmental immunity are asserted in appellant’s brief.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
453 S.W.2d 304, 1970 Tex. App. LEXIS 2664, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/trinity-river-authority-of-texas-v-badders-texapp-1970.