Verley Lee Sembritsky, Jr. v. Michel Castrinos Sembritzky

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 8, 2009
Docket01-07-00251-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Verley Lee Sembritsky, Jr. v. Michel Castrinos Sembritzky (Verley Lee Sembritsky, Jr. v. Michel Castrinos Sembritzky) 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
Verley Lee Sembritsky, Jr. v. Michel Castrinos Sembritzky, (Tex. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

Opinion issued January 8, 2009





In The

Court of Appeals

For The

First District of Texas

____________



NO. 01-07-00251-CV



VERLEY LEE SEMBRITZKY JR.,

Appellant



V.



MICHEL LESLIE CASTRINOS SHANKS

a/k/a MICHEL CASTRINOS SEMBRITZKY,

Appellee



On Appeal from the 312th District Court

Harris County, Texas

Trial Court Cause No. 2006-06775



MEMORANDUM OPINION



In this restricted appeal, appellant, Verley Lee Sembritzky Jr., appeals a default judgment rendered against him in a suit alleging a breach of a contractual alimony agreement, brought by appellee, Michel Leslie Castrinos Shanks. (1) We determine (1) whether a misnomer in the citation requires reversal of the judgment and (2) whether the evidence is legally sufficient to support the damages award. We modify the judgment and affirm it in part, reverse the judgment in part, and remand the cause with instructions.

Background

Sembritzky and Shanks were once married. They divorced in 2001 and, as part of the agreed divorce decree entered into an agreement for contractual alimony. Under this agreement, Sembritzky was to pay Shanks the greater of 25% of his gross monthly income each month or $5,000, for a total of 60 months, beginning January 1, 2002 and ending after the payment due December 1, 2006, or until such time that Shanks had received a total of $5,000,000, whichever occurred first. (2)

On January 31, 2006, Shanks filed a petition for breach of alimony contract, alleging that Sembritzky failed to pay numerous installments of the contractual alimony agreement from February 2003 through January 1, 2006, (3) and asserting that Sembritzky owed at least $180,000 in payments. Shanks also alleged that Sembritzky's "flagran[t] disregard" of the contractual alimony degree constituted an anticipatory repudiation of all future payments, and Shanks averred that she was therefore entitled to the "present value of all maximum future payments due and owing," after the subtraction of an amount already received by way of garnishment. Shanks prayed for an award of $4,952,815.77 ($5,000,000 minus $45,184.23 previously received in garnishment action), attorney's fees, pre- and post-judgment interest, and costs of court. The action was styled "In the Matter of the Marriage of Michel Castrinos Sembritzky and Rocky Sembritzky." (4)

Citation was issued and served on "Rocky Sembritzky." No answer was filed

and no appearance made.

A default judgment hearing took place on September 21, 2006. The only evidence offered was the testimony of Shanks, who agreed that, under the terms of the alimony agreement, Sembritzky was obligated to pay her 25% of his monthly gross income per month, or $5,000 per month, whichever was greater, from January 1, 2002 through December 2006, with total payments not to exceed $5,000,000. She testified that Sembritzky had made only one voluntary payment of $5,000, in April 2002, and that a judgment had already been rendered against him for outstanding alimony payments from January 2002 through January 2003. She agreed that she was requesting the court to render a judgment "for all amounts due and owing from February 1 of 2003 through December 1 of 2006," and that it was her belief that Sembritzky's failure to make any payments since April 2002 constituted a breach of the entire obligation. She agreed that she was requesting that the trial court accelerate all the remaining amounts due from October 1, 2006 through December 1, 2006. The following exchange between Shanks and her counsel then took place:

COUNSEL: Has Rocky Sembritzky provided you with any information establishing that 25 percent of his gross monthly income from January 1, 2002 to the present would be less than $5 million?



SHANKS: No.



COUNSEL: Do you have any reason to believe that that amount would be less than $5 million?



SHANKS: No, I don't.



COUNSEL: Are you requesting that this Court enter a judgment in the amount of $4,935,000 in this matter?



SHANKS: Yes, I am.



COUNSEL: Is the amount $4,935,000 based upon $5 million minus the previous $60,000 judgment, minus the one $5,000 payment in April 2002?



SHANKS: Yes.

Counsel subsequently requested that the trial court enter a default judgment "against V.L. Rocky Sembritzky in the amount of $4,935,000." The trial court asked if that was the amount that would be due under the terms of the agreement in counsel's opinion, and counsel agreed that it was. Counsel then tendered her own testimony in support of her request for attorney's fees in the amount of $5,000.

The trial court awarded damages in the amount of $4,935,000 and attorney's fees in the amount of $5,000. The written judgment, signed on the same day as the hearing, stated that V.L. Rocky Sembritzky, although duly served with citation, had not appeared and wholly made default, and ordered that Shanks recover from "V.L. Rocky Sembritzky, a/k/a Verley Lee Sembritzky, a/k/a Rocky Sembritzky, a/k/a V.L. Sembritzky" the sum of $4,935,000, with interest at the rate of 7.75% from February 1, 2003 until final payment, plus attorney's fees of $5,000 and all costs of court with interest at the rate of 7.75%. The judgment also allowed Shanks such writs and processes necessary to enforce and collect the judgment.

On March 16, 2007, Sembritzky filed a notice of restricted appeal, stating that he was a party to the judgment, he did not participate in the hearing that resulted in the default judgment being appealed, and he did not timely file a post-judgment motion, request for findings of facts and conclusions of law, or a notice of appeal. Sembritzky also stated that the notice of restricted appeal was being filed by "Verley Lee Sembritsky, Jr." and that he had been incorrectly named "Rocky Sembritsky" in the underlying petition and default judgment.

Restricted Appeal

A restricted appeal is a direct attack on a default judgment. Whitaker v. Rose, 218 S.W.3d 216, 219 (Tex. App.--Houston [14th Dist.] 2007, no pet.); see also Norman Commc'ns v. Tex. Eastman Co., 955 S.W.2d 269, 270 (Tex. 1997) (same, under prior nomenclature of "writ of error").

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Verley Lee Sembritsky, Jr. v. Michel Castrinos Sembritzky, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/verley-lee-sembritsky-jr-v-michel-castrinos-sembritzky-texapp-2009.