Court Opinion

ID: 4075682
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-09-30 06:16:25.903153+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:32:41.164801
License: Public Domain

ACCEPTED
                                                                                     03-15-00341-CV
                                                                                             7955647
                                                                          THIRD COURT OF APPEALS
                                                                                     AUSTIN, TEXAS
                                                                               11/23/2015 3:42:52 PM
                                                                                   JEFFREY D. KYLE
                                                                                              CLERK
                             03-15-00341-CV

           In the Court of Appeals for the Third District of Texas FILED IN
                                                            3rd COURT OF APPEALS
                              Austin, Texas                      AUSTIN, TEXAS
               ____________________________________         11/23/2015 3:42:52 PM
                                                               JEFFREY D. KYLE
                                                                    Clerk
            ANTIOCH ST. JOHNS CEMETERY COMPANY
    D/B/A AMERICAN MEMORIAL PARK, GRAND PRAIRIE, TEXAS;
   GERALD WEATHERALL; AND BEVERLY RANDALL-WEATHERALL
                                                             Appellants
                                       V.

         TEXAS DEPARTMENT OF BANKING COMMISSIONER,
                                                 Appellee
               ____________________________________

 On Appeal from the 261st Judicial District Court of Travis County, Texas,
                    Cause No. D-1-GN-14-000367
____________________________________________________________

                      BRIEF OF APPELLEE
          TEXAS DEPARTMENT OF BANKING COMMISSIONER
____________________________________________________________

KEN PAXTON                                  ANN HARTLEY
Attorney General of Texas                   Attorney in Charge
                                            State Bar No. 09157700
CHARLES E. ROY
First Assistant Attorney General            Office of the Attorney General
                                            Financial Litigation and
JAMES E. DAVIS                                 Charitable Trusts Division
Deputy Attorney General                     PO Box 12548
for Civil Litigation                        Austin, Texas 78711-2548
                                            Tel: (512) 936-1313
LESLI G. GINN                               Fax: (512) 477-2348
Division Chief, Financial Litigation        ann.hartley@texasattorneygeneral.gov
and Charitable Trusts Division              COUNSEL FOR APPELLEE

                  NO ORAL ARGUMENT REQUESTED
                                      TABLE OF CONTENTS

Record and Party References ..................................................................... v

Statement of the Case .............................................................................. vii

Issues Presented for Review .................................................................... viii

Statement of Facts ...................................................................................... 1

  Weatheralls buy the St. Johns cemetery In 2009...................................... 1
  Violations, Cease and Desist Order, Administrative Hearing .................... 1
  Motion For Rehearing............................................................................... 3
  Lawsuit ..................................................................................................... 4

Summary of the Argument .......................................................................... 4

Standard of Review .................................................................................... 5

       Issue 1 Appellants did not preserve for judicial review any
               argument not raised in the Motion For Rehearing. ............... 6

       Issue 2 The Commissioner’s Final Order was supported
               by substantial evidence. ..................................................... 10

       Issue 3 The assessment of an administrative penalty
               against Gerald Weatherall was authorized by
               law and supported by substantial evidence. ....................... 17

                     A. The Commissioner is authorized to
                        assess penalties against an individual. ........................ 17
                     B. St. Johns operated without a corporate charter. .......... 22

Prayer ....................................................................................................... 23

Certificate of Compliance .......................................................................... 25

Certificate of Service ................................................................................. 25
Appendix................................................................................................... 26
                                                       ii
                               TABLE OF AUTHORITIES

Cases
BFI Waste Sys. v. Martinez Envtl. Group
  93 S.W.3d 570 (Tex.App.-Austin 2002, pet. denied)................................ 7

Castleberry v. Branscum
 721 S.W.2d 270 (Tex. 1986) ................................................................. 21

Entergy Gulf States, Inc. v. Public Util. Comm'n of Tex.
  173 S.W.3d 199 (Tex.App.–Austin 2005, pet. denied) ......................... 4, 7

Firemen's & Policemen's Civil Serv. Comm'n v. Brinkmeyer
  662 S.W.2d 953 (Tex. 1984) ................................................................. 12

Granek v. Texas State Bd. of Med. Exam'rs
  172 S.W.3d 761 (Tex.App.–Austin 2005, no pet.).................................... 6

Hill v. Bd. of Trustees
  40 S.W.3d 676 (Tex. App.–Austin 2001, no pet.)..................................... 7

Imperial American Resources Fund, Inc. v. Railroad Commission
  557 S.W.2d 280 (Tex. 1977) ................................................................. 10

Montgomery Indep. Sch. Dist. v. Davis
 34 S.W.3d 559 (Tex. 2000) ..................................................................... 6

Pierce v. Texas Racing Comm'n
  212 S.W.3d 745 (Tex.App.–Austin 2006, pet. denied) ............................. 6

Scally v. Texas State Bd. of Med. Examiners
  351 S.W.3d 434 (Tex. App.–Austin 2011, pet. denied) .......................... 12

State v. Malone Svc. Co.
  853 S.W.2d 82 (Tex. App.–Houston [14th Dist.] 1993, writ denied) . 18, 19

Tex. Alcoholic Beverage Commission v. Quintana
  225 S.W.3d 200 (Tex.App.–El Paso 2005, pet. denied)................... 7, 8, 9

                                                iii
Tex. Health Facilities Comm'n v. Charter Med. Dallas, Inc.
  665 S.W.2d 446 (Tex. 1984) ....................................................... 4, 10, 14

Statutes
TEX. BUS. CORP. ACT art. 2.21 ................................................................... 10

TEX. BUS. CORP. ACT art. 11.02(B) ............................................................. 10

TEX. GOV’T CODE § 311.005....................................................................... 18

TEX. GOV’T CODE § 2001.071..................................................................... vii

TEX. GOV’T CODE § 2001.074(2)(A)-(F) ........................................................ 5

TEX. GOV'T CODE § 2001.174................................................................... 5, 6

TEX. GOV'T CODE § 2001.174(2)(E)............................................................ 12

TEX. HEALTH & SAFETY CODE § 711.021 ..................................................... 20

TEX. HEALTH & SAFETY CODE § 711.0442 ....................................... 16, 18, 20

TEX. HEALTH & SAFETY CODE § 711.055 ........................................... 5, 18, 20

TEX. HEALTH & SAFETY CODE § 711.056 ................................... 16, 17, 18, 20

TEX. HEALTH & SAFETY CODE § 712.003 ....................................................... 2

TEX. HEALTH & SAFETY CODE § 712.0441 ................................... 5, 17, 18, 20

                                                 iv
                  RECORD AND PARTY REFERENCES

     Gerald Weatherall is an appellant, as is Beverly Randall-Weatherall.

The term “Mr. Weatherall” refers to Gerald, because Gerald was found to

be the person responsible for violations of law (3 RR 441/425, # 21), Beverly

was found to have not exercised responsibility for cemetery operations

(3 RR 431/415/17, # 16), the administrative penalty at issue was assessed

against Gerald but not Beverly (3 RR 446/429), and the judgment now

appealed affirmed the administrative order assessing a penalty against

Gerald but not Beverly (CR 14).

     “St. Johns” refers to the cemetery in Grand Prairie, Dallas County,

Texas, known as Antioch St. Johns Cemetery Company d/b/a American

Memorial Park.

     “DOB” refers to the Texas Department of Banking.

     “Apt. Br.” refers to Appellant’s Brief.

     The Reporter’s Record comprises three volumes. References to the

first two volumes of the Reporter’s Record will show the volume number

before “RR” and the page number afterward. “2 RR 4" refers to page 4 of

Volume 2 of the Reporter’s Record.

                                      v
      The third volume contains the administrative record that was admitted

as Joint Exhibit 1 in the trial court (2 RR 4). Because this record was compiled

for this Court in Adobe format, there are several page-numbering systems

for most documents: the Adobe page, the “Banking Dept”-stamped page,

and the internal, document-specific page.

      Page numbers will be listed, separated by a slash, in this order:

            (1) Adobe page,

            (2) Banking Dept-stamped page,

            (3) internal, document-specific page where appropriate.

For example, (3 RR 36/23/6) refers to the third volume of the Reporter’s

Record, Adobe page 36 (easiest to find on a computer) / Banking Dept page

23 stamped on top of the page for filing with the trial court, and / page 6 of

the document it is part of (the hearing transcript). Where there are only two

page numbers, there is no internal page numbering, or the document has

only a few pages.

      The Clerk’s Record is referred to as “CR.” There is only one volume,

so “CR 14" refers to page 14 of the Clerk’s Record.

                                       vi
                       STATEMENT OF THE CASE
     The Texas Department of Banking regulates perpetual care

cemeteries. Appellants were operating the Antioch St. Johns Cemetery

Company d/b/a American Memorial Park, a perpetual care cemetery.

Department of Banking staff initiated an enforcement action against

Appellants and after a hearing, on November 25, 2013, the Department of

Banking Commissioner issued a Final Order against Appellants (3 RR

446/429) adopting the Proposal for Decision Following Exceptions, including

specifically the Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law. The Final Order

assesses an administrative penalty of $56,000 against Antioch St. Johns

Cemetery Company d/b/a American Memorial Park (“St. Johns”) and Gerald

Weatherall, Sr. (“Mr. Weatherall”), in his individual capacity and in his

capacity as former President of St. Johns.

     After Appellants’ Motion for Rehearing was denied, Appellants sought

judicial review as authorized by Texas Government Code Section 2001.071

(CR 3, 10).

     After a hearing, on April 30, 2015, the Travis County District Court

affirmed the Final Order (CR 14), and Appellants filed notice of appeal

(CR 15).

                                    vii
                   ISSUES PRESENTED FOR REVIEW
     1.     Appellants did not preserve for judicial review any arguments not

raised in the Motion for Rehearing.

     2.     The Commissioner’s Final Order was supported by substantial

evidence.

     3.     The assessment of an administrative penalty against Gerald

Weatherall was authorized by law and supported by substantial evidence.

                                      viii
                         STATEMENT OF FACTS
Weatheralls Buy the St. Johns Cemetery in 2009

     In 2009, the Weatheralls purchased St. Johns, a cemetery operation

and business. (3 RR 418/402/4). Starting in 2009, DOB staff performed three

audits or examinations of cemetery operations and prepared a Report of

Examination for each audit, setting out the violations observed and

assessing the adequacy of Mr. Weatherall’s attempts at compliance. (3 RR

420/404/6).

Violations, Cease and Desist Order, Administrative Hearing

     Due to persistent violations and Mr. Weatherall’s failure to correct

them, Certificate of Authority No. 74 to operate the cemetery was not

renewed when it expired March 1, 2012. (3 RR 424/408/10). Mr. Weatherall

continued operating, without a certificate of authority, so an Emergency

Order to Cease and Desist was issued May 16, 2012. (3 RR 424/408/10).

Mr. Weatherall violated this Order (3 RR 441/425/27, #19) by burying the

body of a person on June 14, 2012 and failing to send documentation to DOB

as required by the Order.

     As a result of Mr. Weatherall’s continued poor performance, DOB staff

initiated the administrative proceeding (3 RR 420/404/6) that resulted in the

Commissioner’s Final Order (CR 14) adopting the Proposal for Decision

                                     1
Following   Exceptions      (“PFD”)   (3   RR   415/399/1)    and    assessing

administrative penalties.

      The Commissioner found, among other things, that the condition of the

cemetery deteriorated after Mr. Weatherall took over; parts of the cemetery

were not properly marked; graves had collapsed, creating deep sinkholes

(3 RR 423-433/416-417/18-19, #21); the internment register reflected two

burials in the same space on eight occasions; on four occasions the burial

card showed a person was buried in a plot while the internment register

showed the burial of another person in that plot (3 RR 433/417/19, #24); on

four occasions the burial cards and the internment register showed different

burial plots for the same person; and on four occasions, the burial cards and

the internment register show different persons were buried in the same plot

(3 RR 434/418/20, #24); the cemetery company sold plots on many

occasions without having filed with the county clerk an accurate map or plat

showing the location of the cemetery plots; and the cemetery company

continued operating after March 1, 2012, when Certificate of Authority No.

74 (required for lawful operation of a perpetual care cemetery, TEX. HEALTH

& SAFETY CODE §§ 712.003, .0032) expired (3 RR 435/419/21, ##34, 36).

      The Commissioner also found that, although Mr. Weatherall attempted

to address some violations brought to his attention, the failure to correct them

                                       2
and his continual repetition of some violations established a pattern of willful

disregard   for   the   law   applicable   to   perpetual   care   cemeteries.

(3 RR 436/420/22, #38).

      After listing the numerous violations of applicable law (3 RR 437-

441/421-425/23-27) by Mr. Weatherall, the administrative law judge (“ALJ”)

found that the evidence supported an administrative penalty in an amount up

to $70,000.00 (3 RR 441/425/27, #23). However, because DOB had not

renewed the Certificate of Authority for the cemetery, Mr. Weatherall’s

cemetery company was no longer in business, and Mr. Weatherall neither

owned the cemetery property nor conducted cemetery operations any

longer, the ALJ recommended an administrative penalty up to only

$56,000.00 (3 RR 442/426/28).

Motion for Rehearing

      Appellants timely filed a Motion for Rehearing (3 RR 449/431), a two-

page document that does not cite or refer to any finding of fact or conclusion

of law. DOB replied (3 RR 452/433), noting that, “The substance of the

Motion is contained in one sentence and wholly fails to apprise the Texas

Banking Commissioner (Commissioner) of the legal basis upon which

Respondents request a rehearing.” The Motion for Rehearing was denied

(3 RR 457/437).

                                       3
Lawsuit

      Appellants timely filed suit in Travis County seeking judicial review of

DOB’s decision (CR 3), hearing was had on April 30, 2015, and judgment

was rendered April 30, 2015 affirming the Commissioner’s Order. (CR 14).

                       SUMMARY OF THE ARGUMENT
      Appellants preserved no argument for judicial review because the

Motion for Rehearing, while timely, contains no argument and mentions not

a single finding of fact or conclusion of law in the PFD. An appellant must

raise his issues in his motion for rehearing to preserve them for review. See

Entergy Gulf States, Inc. v. Public Util. Comm'n of Tex., 173 S.W.3d 199,

210 (Tex.App.–Austin 2005, pet. denied).

      Since    Appellants     preserved       no   argument   to   challenge   the

Commissioner’s Final Order, the trial court was entitled to presume that the

order was supported by substantial evidence, while the burden was on

Appellants to prove otherwise. See Tex. Health Facilities Comm'n v. Charter

Med. Dallas, Inc., 665 S.W.2d 446, 453 (Tex. 1984).

      Even without this presumption, Appellants have not pointed to a speck

of evidence to support any challenge to the Commissioner’s Final Order —

in the trial court or in Appellants’ Brief.

                                          4
       The Commissioner was authorized by             Health and Safety Code

Sections 712.0441 and 711.055, and by the evidence, to assess an

administrative penalty of $56,000.00 against Mr. Weatherall in his individual

capacity.

                           STANDARD OF REVIEW
       This Court’s review of the Commissioner’s Final Order is governed by

the “substantial evidence” standard in the Texas Administrative Procedure

Act (“APA”). TEX. GOV’T CODE § 2001.074.

       This standard requires that the Court reverse or remand a case for

further proceedings “if substantial rights of the appellant have been

prejudiced because the administrative findings, conclusions, or decisions”

are:

       (A)   in violation of a constitutional or statutory provision,

       (B)   in excess of the agency's statutory authority,

       (C)   made through unlawful procedure,

       (D)   affected by other error of law,

       (E)   not reasonably supported by substantial evidence considering
             the reliable and probative evidence in the record as a whole, or

       (F)   arbitrary or capricious or characterized by abuse of discretion or
             clearly unwarranted exercise of discretion.

TEX. GOV’T CODE § 2001.074(2)(A)-(F).
                                         5
      With respect to subparagraph (E), the test is not whether the Court

believes the Commissioner reached the correct conclusion, but whether his

factual findings are reasonable “in light of the evidence from which they were

purportedly inferred.” Granek v. Texas State Bd. of Med. Exam'rs, 172
S.W.3d 761, 778 (Tex.App.–Austin 2005, no pet.). The Court may not

substitute its judgment for that of the Commissioner on the weight of the

evidence on matters committed to agency discretion. See TEX. GOV'T CODE

§ 2001.174; Pierce v. Texas Racing Comm'n, 212 S.W.3d 745, 751

(Tex.App.–Austin 2006, pet. denied).

      On appeal from the district court’s judgment, the focus is on the

Commissioner’s decision. See Montgomery Indep. Sch. Dist. v. Davis,

34 S.W.3d 559, 562 (Tex. 2000).

                                  ISSUE 1
            Appellants did not preserve for judicial review any
            arguments not raised in the Motion for Rehearing.

      Appellants preserved no argument for judicial review because the

Motion for Rehearing, while timely, contained no argument and mentioned

not a single finding of fact or conclusion of law in the PFD. The PFD contains

39 Findings of Fact and 23 Conclusions of Law (3 RR 429-441/413-425).

The Motion for Rehearing did not mention a single one. The single

substantive sentence-paragraph states in its entirety:
                                       6
      To the extent that the Movants disagree with the penalties
      assessed against the individual movants in their individual
      capacities, and that such penalties do no[t] comport with the
      finding of facts by the Administrative Law Judge and the rules
      regarding governance of cemeteries for the state of Texas,
      Movants request a rehearing in this cause.

(3 RR 449/431).

      An appellant must raise his issues in his motion for rehearing to

preserve them for review. See Entergy Gulf States, Inc. v. Public Util.

Comm'n of Tex., 173 S.W.3d 199, 210 (Tex.App.–Austin 2005, pet. denied)

("The motion for rehearing must be sufficiently definite to allow the agency

to cure the error or defend the order. . . . To preserve the issue for review,

the party must state in the motion for rehearing the particular issue the party

asserts was error and the legal basis upon which the claim rests.")1

      The motion for rehearing must specify: (1) the particular finding of fact,

conclusion of law, ruling or other action by the agency that was purportedly

in error, and (2) the legal basis for claiming the error. Tex. Alcoholic

Beverage Commission v. Quintana, 225 S.W.3d 200, 203 (Tex.App.–El Paso

2005, pet. denied). Both elements must be present, and neither element may

      1     This is a different question from whether a motion for rehearing confers
jurisdiction on the district court. See BFI Waste Sys. v. Martinez Envtl. Group, 93 S.W.3d
570, 578 (Tex.App.–Austin 2002, pet. denied) ("The timely filing of a motion for rehearing
is jurisdictional, but the sufficiency of the motion's content goes solely to the issue of
preservation of error.") (citing Hill v. Bd. of Trustees, 40 S.W.3d 676, 679 (Tex. App.–
Austin 2001, no pet.)

                                            7
be stated solely in generalities. Id. (“It is insufficient to state that the order is

not supported by substantial evidence.")

      Appellants’ Motion for Rehearing does not preserve the errors about

which Appellants now complain. At best, the particular agency action

complained of in this sentence is the administrative penalty assessed against

Mr. Weatherall in his individual capacity. Therefore, the Motion for Rehearing

fails to preserve error as to any finding of fact, conclusion of law, or agency

action other than the administrative penalty against Mr. Weatherall

individually. Moreover, the Motion for Rehearing specifies no legal basis for

complaining about the penalty against Mr. Weatherall. To say merely that

"such penalties do no[t] comport with the findings of facts," is no different

from saying that the penalties are not supported by substantial evidence,

which is insufficient to preserve error. See Quintana, 225 S.W.3d at 203.

      In Quintana, the plaintiff in her motion for rehearing "respectfully

request[ed] that the cancellation be reconsidered because the evidence

presented at trial does not support the cancellation and constitutes a harsh

penalty." Id. at 204. The court found this statement to be insufficient to

preserve error, noting that while Quintana "specified the ruling she asserted

was error, namely, the cancellation of her license and permit, she did not

challenge any of the specific factual findings forming the basis of the

                                         8
Commission's decision to cancel her permit and license." Id. Here, the PFD

contains 39 findings of fact, 24 of which, taken together, find that violations

occurred and that Mr. Weatherall is responsible for them in his individual

capacity. (3 RR 430-436/414-420/16-20; 441/425 #21.) As in Quintana, the

Appellants' single sentence fails to challenge any factual findings forming the

basis of the administrative penalty assessed against Mr. Weatherall.

      The Quintana court also explained that to the extent Quintana

"intended to appeal the Commission's legal conclusion that Section

11.61(b)(13) does not require proof that the employee was on duty or acting

within the course and scope of employment, she was required to state this

legal basis for the appeal in her motion for rehearing." Id. Here, Appellants

state in their brief (Apt. Br. 7) that "Mr. and Mrs. Weatherall are shielded by

the existence of St. Johns as a corporate entity unless it is found that the

corporation has been used to perpetuate [sic] a fraud." But, under the court's

analysis in Quintana, Appellants were required to state this legal ground for

appeal in their Motion for Rehearing. They failed to do so. Because

                                      9
Appellants have preserved no issue for judicial review, the Court should

uphold the trial court’s affirmance of the Commissioner’s Final Order. 2

                                       ISSUE 2
              The Commissioner’s Final Order was supported by
              substantial evidence.

      Since     Appellants     preserved        no   argument     to   challenge      the

Commissioner’s Final Order, the trial court was entitled to presume that the

order was supported by substantial evidence. See Tex. Health Facilities

Comm'n v. Charter Medical Dallas, Inc., 665 S.W.2d 446, 453 (Tex. 1984)

(“Charter Medical”):

      The findings, inferences, conclusions, and decisions of an
      administrative agency are presumed to be supported by
      substantial evidence, and the burden is on the contestant to
      prove otherwise. Imperial American Resources Fund, Inc. v.
      Railroad Commission, 557 S.W.2d 280, 286 (Tex. 1977).

      Even without this presumption, Appellants have not pointed to any

evidence to support any challenge to the Commissioner’s Final Order. The

entire Appellant’s Brief contains a total of two record cites (to 3 RR

436/420/22, Findings of Fact ##38 and 39). Appellants assert that the co-

      2   Appellants cite Article 2.21 of the Texas Business Corporation Act (“BCA”)
(Apt. Br. 6). On January 1, 2010, the BCA expired and was replaced by the Texas
Business Organizations Code. See TEX. BUS. CORP. ACT art. 11.02(B) (“This Act expires
January 1, 2010.”). The Business Organizations Code limits an individual’s liability for a
corporation’s obligations, but the administrative penalty in this case was assessed not
only against the corporation but against Mr. Weatherall in his individual capacity.

                                           10
existence of these two findings of fact “within the same opinion” shows that

“the ALJ opinion is arbitrary and capricious.” (Apt. Br. 5). To the contrary,

these findings simply show that the ALJ recognized Mr. Weatherall’s efforts

to address some of the continual violations and still concluded that the

frequent repetition of the some of the violations showed a willful disregard

for the requirements of the law applicable to perpetual care cemeteries.

     The presumption that the order was supported by substantial evidence

is intact in light of the absence of any record cite to any evidence to the

contrary.

     The Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law in the PFD are well

summarized by the ALJ:

     The evidence presented at the hearing proved a pattern of wilful
     disregard concerning the violations. It appears that the main
     reason[] for the continuing violations [was] ignorance of the law
     at first, but later was incompetence and an indifference
     concerning management of the cemetery and the cemetery
     company. Nevertheless, the evidence proves the factors that
     support making a finding of wilful disregard. A determination of
     the issue of wilful disregard would not have a practical impact in
     this case, however, because the staff has recommended a less
     monetary penalty than what would be the maximum.

(3 RR 428/412/14).

     Even if the Court concludes that Appellants have preserved any error

to challenge the Final Order, the Commissioner’s conclusions of law and

                                     11
administrative penalties are supported by substantial evidence. The APA

authorizes a reviewing court to test an agency's findings, inferences,

conclusions, and decisions to determine whether they are reasonably

supported by substantial evidence considering the reliable and probative

evidence in the record as a whole. See TEX. GOV'T CODE § 2001.174(2)(E).

Whether the agency's order satisfies the substantial-evidence standard is a

question of law. Scally v. Texas State Bd. of Med. Examiners, 351 S.W.3d
434, 441 (Tex. App.–Austin 2011, pet. denied), citing Firemen's &

Policemen's Civil Serv. Comm'n v. Brinkmeyer, 662 S.W.2d 953, 956

(Tex. 1984). A court is to presume that the order is supported by substantial

evidence and a plaintiff or appellant bears the burden of proving otherwise.

See Scally, id. at 441. "The burden is a heavy one – even a showing that the

evidence preponderates against the agency will not be enough to overcome

it, if there is some reasonable basis in the record for the action taken by the

agency." Id. Appellants do not meet this high burden.

      Appellants essentially asked the trial court, and now this Court, to re-

weigh the evidence submitted to the ALJ and to substitute its judgment for

that of the ALJ. Appellants assert that the ALJ's findings of fact are

"completely contradictory" (Apt. Br. 4) because although the ALJ found that

Mr. Weatherall corrected some of the noted violations – including repaying

                                      12
the perpetual care cemetery trust fund – the ALJ also concluded that the

violations were so numerous that Mr. Weatherall showed a "willful disregard

for the law that applies to perpetual care cemeteries." (Apt. Br. 5; 3 RR

436/420/22, #38.) There is no inherent contradiction in the conclusion that

although Appellants corrected some violations, there were so many

violations overall, and so many persistent failures to address fundamental

problems, that the Appellants' actions amount to willful disregard. As

explained by the ALJ:

      The violations concerning failure to disclose on the
      sale/purchase agreements the accurate amount to be deposited
      in the Perpetual Care Trust Fund appear to be low on the
      seriousness scale. Failure to make timely deposits in the
      Perpetual Care Trust Fund involve a higher seriousness, but the
      shortages ultimately were made up. The violations of failure to
      accurately plat and file for record an accurate plat and of failures
      to keep accurate burial records are particularly serious, because
      they are necessary for anyone to locate the graves of those who
      were buried. It appears that these violations were a factor in
      some of the complaints. The violation of the Commissioner's
      Order is a very serious violation. The history of so [many]
      violations during a short period of time and of a violation of the
      Cease and Desist order weighs heavily in favor of a higher
      penalty. Mr. Weatherall's actions to correct many of the violations
      and that resulted in the continuing occurrence of violations
      demonstrates both good faith and a lack of good faith.

(3 RR 427-428/412-13/14-15.)

      After weighing the evidence, the ALJ found that Mr. Weatherall's

actions establish a pattern of willful disregard for the requirements of the law
                                      13
and recommended "that the Commissioner impose an administrative penalty

that is no higher than the low end of the range advocated by the staff." (3

RR 428/413/15; 436/420/2).

     The reviewing standard is whether "there is some reasonable basis in

the record" for the ALJ's conclusion. Charter Medical, 665 S.W.2d at 453.

Here, the PFD specifically cites (3 RR 404-409) the administrative record

(3 RR 47/34/16; 173-178/160-165/1-6; 179-192/166-179/7-20; 194-213/181-

200/22-14; 241-244/228-231/69-72; 245/230/73; 56/43/25; 254/241/82; 193-

213/180-200/21-41; 85/72/54) that includes evidence of numerous

violations, including consumer complaints (3 RR 244/231; 269-70/256-57;

277-78/264-65; 291-94/278-81; 311/298).

     One woman whose grandfather is buried at St. Johns wrote:

"Disgraceful, disrespectful and disgusting don't come close to describing the

appearance of this final resting place for many people. . . ." The same

woman noted that she took her 87 year old grandmother out to visit the grave

of her husband, and “she was in tears at what she saw and the thought that

one day she will have to be laid to rest there.” (3 RR 244/231).

     Another woman could not find her son’s grave two and half months

after his funeral despite repeated visits to the cemetery and requests to Mr.

Weatherall for information. (3 RR 277-278/264-265; 291-295/278-281).

                                     14
      Another woman went to put flowers on her mother’s grave and

discovered someone else’s headstone on the spot she had purchased. After

searching the entire cemetery she could not find her mother’s grave, though

she did meet other people looking for graves. When she called the St. Johns

phone number for help, it was disconnected. (3 RR 269-270/256-257).

      The record also includes evidence of failures to correct violations

identified in the various Reports of Examination. For example, the June 30,

2011, Report of Examination (3 RR 193/180) notes that Mr. Weatherall was

given 30 days from the date of the June 30, 2010, Report of Examination to

implement corrective actions for the cited violations and provide a written

response to the DOB by September 6, 2010. (3 RR 203/190/7). He failed to

respond by September 6, provided limited responses only after further

inquiries from the DOB, and still failed to correct the platting violation as of

the June 30, 2011, Report of Examination. (3 RR 203/190/7). Similarly, the

February 7, 2012, Limited Report of Examination notes that the "overall

condition of the certificate holder has not improved since the last full-scope

examination and remains critically poor," and “the pattern of refusing to

comply    with   Departmental     requests    demonstrates      management's

unwillingness to achieve compliance.” (3 RR 219/206/1.)         It further notes

that Mr. Weatherall "failed to demonstrate corrective action on eleven of the

                                      15
nineteen violations cited" in the June 30, 2011 Report of Examination.

(3 RR 219/206/1).

     These violations and the failure to correct them establish a reasonable

basis in the record for the ALJ's conclusion that Mr. Weatherall's conduct

was willful. Moreover, Appellants do not actually contest these violations in

their brief — they merely suggest that Mr. Weatherall's attempts to address

certain violations should have been given greater weight by the ALJ, and that

because the PFD contains conclusions Appellants deem “contradictory,” it is

“arbitrary and capricious.” (Apt. Br. 5). Accordingly, even if Appellants had

preserved error, the conclusions about which they complain are supported

by substantial evidence.

     Furthermore, as noted by the ALJ, the determination of willful disregard

has no practical impact on the amount of the administrative penalty

assessed. (See PFD, 3 RR 428/412/14.) A finding of willful disregard for the

requirements of the law allows the fact finder to recommend that the

Commissioner impose the maximum administrative penalty permitted, or to

cancel or not renew the corporation's certificate of authority. TEX. HEALTH &

SAFETY CODE §§ 711.056(a) and 712.0442. Here, the DOB staff

recommended an administrative penalty in the range of $56,000 to $70,000

for fourteen violations. (3 RR 123/110/92; 427-428/411-412/13-14.) This

                                     16
range is below the maximum penalty authorized by Chapters 711 and 712.

Under sections 711.056 and 712.0441, the Commissioner may assess an

administrative penalty of up to $1,000 per day of violation if the responsible

person (1) does not correct the violation within 30 days of notification or

(2) engages in a pattern of violation. TEX. HEALTH & SAFETY CODE §§ 711.056

and 712.0442. Here, the ALJ concluded (3 RR 427/411/13) that

            Mr. Weatherall is responsible for multiple violations that are
            set forth in the Conclusions of Law, which count in the
            hundreds and which involve multiple days for most
            violations. The violations include both those that were not
            corrected within 30 days of notice and those that establish
            a pattern of violation.

      Even if preserved, Appellants’ challenge to the Commissioner’s Final

Order would fail in the face of overwhelming substantial evidence.

                                   ISSUE 3
            The assessment of an administrative penalty against
            Gerald Weatherall was authorized by law and
            supported by substantial evidence.

                  A.    The Commissioner is authorized to assess
                        penalties against an individual.

      Even if they had been preserved, Appellants’ arguments regarding the

“corporate shield” (Apt. Br. 7) are misplaced.

      Here, the ALJ concluded that an "administrative penalty in the amount

of up to $70,000 is supported by the evidence under the provisions of Health
                                      17
and Safety Code Sections 711.055, 711.056, 712.0441, and 712.0442."

(3 RR 441/425/27, #23).      The ALJ recommended a lower amount, an

administrative penalty of up to $56,000. (3 RR 442/426/28).

     The Final Order (3 RR 446-447/429-430) assesses an administrative

penalty in the amount of $56,000 against the corporation and Mr. Weatherall

individually, but not against Beverly Randall-Weatherall: The penalty is

assessed “against respondents Antioch St. Johns Cemetery Company d/b/a

American Memorial Park, and Gerald Weatherall, Sr. in his individual

capacity and in his capacity of former President of Antioch St. Johns

Cemetery Company d/b/a Memorial Park."

     Texas Health and Safety Code Sections 711.055 and 712.0441 each

allow the Commissioner to impose an administrative penalty on a “person.”

TEX. HEALTH & SAFETY CODE §§ 711.055(b), 712.0441(a). Texas Government

Code Section 311.005 (Code Construction Act) defines “person” to include

a “corporation … and any other legal entity,” which includes natural persons.

See State v. Malone Svc. Co., 853 S.W.2d 82, 84 (Tex. App.–Houston [14th

Dist.] 1993, writ denied). In Malone Service, the defendants argued that

there could be no individual liability for the company’s president and plant

manager for violations of the Texas Water Code because those individuals

are not permit holders, but merely act as agents for the permit holders.

                                     18
Id. at 84-85. The court rejected this argument, noting that “liability is based

on the agent’s own actions, not his status as agent” in part because “an

environmental tort is more analogous to a situation in which a corporate

officer who participates in or directs the commission of a tort may be held

personally liable.” Id. at 85. Here, Mr. Weatherall’s liability is based on his

own actions, not his status as an agent of St. Johns.

      The Commissioner was justified by the record, as well as authorized

by law, to assess an administrative penalty against Gerald Weatherall in his

individual capacity. Conclusion of Law #21 (3 RR 441/425/27) says that:

              Gerald Weatherall, Sr., is the person who is responsible,
              individually and in his capacity as former president of
              Antioch St. James Cemetery d/b/a American Memorial
              Park, for the violations of law that are set forth in these
              Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law.

      Conclusion of Law #22 (3 RR 441/42527) says that:

              The Commissioner of Banking in his discretion has the
              authority under Health and Safety Code Sections 712.0441
              and 711.055 to assess an administrative penalty against
              Antioch St James Cemetery d/b/a American Memorial Park
              and Gerald Weatherall, Sr., in his individual capacity and
              in his capacity as former president of the cemetery
              company, in the amount of $1,000 for each day of violation.

      Sections 712.0441(a) and 711.055(b) are identical with respect to the

parts in each that authorize the Commissioner to impose an administrative

penalty on:
                                       19
            a person who:

                  (1)    violates this chapter or a final order of the
                         commissioner . . . ; or

                  (2)    engages in a pattern of violations, as
                         determined by the commissioner.

TEX. HEALTH & SAFETY CODE §§ 711.055(b) and 712.0441(a) [Emphasis

added].

      While Texas Health and Safety Code Section 711.021 provides that a

cemetery may be operated by a person that is a corporation organized for

cemetery purposes, this does not limit the definition of “person” in other parts

of Chapter 711. Within subchapter D, which includes the enforcement

provisions of Chapter 711, the term “corporation” is not used interchangeably

with the term “person.” For example, Section 711.051 states that “[a]

cemetery corporation that violates this chapter or Chapter 712 forfeits the

corporation’s charter . . . .” In contrast, Section 711.0521 provides that “[a]

person who is an individual, firm, association, corporation, or municipality . . .

commits an offense if the person interferes with a person’s reasonable right

to ingress and egress under Section 711.041.”

      Chapter 712 also does not define “person,” but its context makes clear

that “person” is not limited to a corporation. Section 712.0443 allows the

commissioner to “issue an order to cease and desist to a person . . . .” If the
                                       20
legislature had intended to limit the Commissioner’s enforcement authority

to extend only to corporations—and not individuals—it would have said so.

        The case3 and statutory provisions4 cited by Appellants regarding

shareholder liability for corporate obligations (Apt. Br. 7) have no bearing on

the Commissioner’s authority to enforce the provisions of Chapters 711 and

712. Whether a shareholder is personally liable for the contractual

obligations of a corporation is a different question from whether the

Commissioner can assess an administrative penalty against an individual

operating a cemetery who, after notice and opportunity for a hearing, is found

to have violated the provisions of Chapters 711 and 712. The Commissioner

found that Mr. Weatherall was president of the cemetery company and

exercised an active role as the person and officer who was responsible for

the     operations     of   the   cemetery     and     the   cemetery     company.

(3 RR 431/415/17, #15). Even if Appellants had preserved the “corporate

shield” argument by mentioning it in their Motion for Rehearing—which they

did not—the Commissioner had statutory authority, as well as ample

evidence regarding the poor operation of the St. Johns cemetery by Mr.

3   Castleberry v. Branscum, 721 S.W.2d 270 (Tex. 1986).
4   Sections 21.223, 21.2224, and 21.225 of the Texas Business Organizations Code.

                                          21
Weatherall, to assess the administrative penalty against Mr. Weatherall in

his individual capacity.

                    B.     St. Johns operated without a corporate
                           charter.

      Under Appellants’ theory, an individual operating a perpetual care

cemetery could evade the Commissioner’s enforcement powers simply by

failing to operate as a corporation. St. Johns temporarily forfeited its

corporate charter in 2011 and later terminated its corporate charter with the

Secretary of State in May 2012. Even so, the cemetery continued to operate

under Mr. Weatherall’s personal direction until at least June 14, 2012. 5

(3 RR 141/128/110; 311-313/298-300.)               Actions taken after St. Johns

terminated its corporate charter would not be protected by any “corporate

shield” because no corporation existed.

      The record shows that St. Johns operated without a corporate charter

between January 28, 2011 and November 7, 2011. (See 3 RR 197/184/1;

205/192/9; 219/206/1). During this period, the DOB issued its Report of

Examination as of June 30, 2011, which detailed nineteen violations. (3 RR

197-207/184-94/1-11). Also during this period, the DOB received complaints

5  St. Johns, the corporation, went into Chapter 7 bankruptcy. During the bankruptcy
proceedings, it became clear that the corporation itself had no assets – did not own the
cemetery – because the cemetery land was jointly owned by Weatherall LLC and Ms.
Randall-Weatherall. (3 RR 145-146/132-133).

                                          22
about the cemetery, including the following plea from the granddaughter of

a man buried at St. Johns, dated June 15, 2011:

            Our plea is that someone will take action and make “the
            owners” of this cemetery take some sort of responsibility
            for their actions in the appearance/condition of this area.
            You can’t just smooth out the dirt piles and freshen things
            up. This is way bigger than that. What about the grave
            marker that is thrown up against the tree, hidden in all the
            tall grass, or randomly sitting in the middle of the cemetery?
            Where do those go? Who do they belong to? You can’t just
            stick it back and say, “Oh I think that one goes here?” The
            proper action MUST be taken!

(3 RR 244/231). Appellants’ theory that Mr. Weatherall may not be held

individually liable for these violations is contrary to Chapters 711 and 712 of

the Health and Safety Code. Furthermore, they have waived the right to

assert the argument.

                                   PRAYER
      Appellee the Texas Department of Banking Commissioner asks this

Court to affirm the judgment of the trial court.

                                       23
Respectfully submitted,

KEN PAXTON
Attorney General of Texas

CHARLES E. ROY
First Assistant Attorney General

JAMES E. DAVIS
Deputy Attorney General for Civil Litigation

LESLI G. GINN
Division Chief
Financial Litigation and Charitable Trusts Division

/s/ Ann Hartley
ANN HARTLEY
Assistant Attorney General
State Bar No. 09157700
Financial Litigation and Charitable Trusts Division
P.O. Box 12548
Austin, Texas 78711-2548
Telephone: (512) 936-1313
Telecopier: (512) 477-2348
ann.hartley@texasattorneygeneral.gov

          24
                     CERTIFICATE OF COMPLIANCE

      In compliance with Texas Rule of Appellate Procedure 9.4(i)(2), this

brief contains 4,972 words, excluding the portions of the brief exempted by

Rule 9.4(i)(1).

                           /s/ Ann Hartley
                           ANN HARTLEY
                           Assistant Attorney General

                       CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE

      I certify that on the 23rd day of November, 2015 a true copy of this

Appellee’s Brief was sent by email to Appellants’ counsel, Mr. Kevin S. Wiley,

Jr., at kevinwiley@lkswjr.com.

                           /s/ Ann Hartley
                           ANN HARTLEY
                           Assistant Attorney General

                                     25
                                            APPENDIX

Texas Department of Banking (DOB) Commissioner’s
PROPOSAL FOR DECISION FOLLOWING EXCEPTIONS ......................................... 1

DOB Commissioner’s FINAL ORDER No. 2013-028 ...................................... 2

Motion for Re-Hearing ................................................................................ 3

Final Order – Travis County District Court .................................................. 4

                                                  26
             Appendix 1
Proposal for Decision Following Exceptions
                                                                                         BANKING DEPT
                                                                                                  399

                                       Docket No. BE-13-11-326

    IN THE MATTER OF ANTIOCH                        §     BEFORE THE BANKING
    ST. JAMES CEMETERY COMPANY                      §
    d/b/a AMERICAN MEMORIAL PARK,                   §
    GRAND PRAIRIE, TEXAS, (Certificate              §
    of Authority No. 74, expired);                  §
                                                    §
    GERALD WEATHERALL, ST. AS ITS                   §     COMMISSIONER OF TEXAS
    PRESIDENT AND IN HIS INDIVIDUAL                 §
    CAPACITY; AND,                                  §
                                                    §
    BEVERLYRANDALL-WEATBERALL                       §
    AS ITS VICE-PRESIDENT                           §     AUSTIN, TRAVIS COUNTY, TEXAS

                                     PROPOSAL FOR DECISION
                                     FOLLOWING EXCEPTIONS

            This Proposal for Decision Following Exceptions is issued following consideration of

    the record consisting of testimony, documentary evidence, and argument of.the parties, which

     were received at a contested case hearing on June 10, 2013, and Exceptions to the Proposal

    ·for Decision that were filed on October 7, 2013.

                                     STATEMENT OF THE CASE

            This is an enforcement action involving a perpetual care cemetery, which staff of the

     Department of Banking initiated against the respondents: Antioch St. James Cemetery

     Company d/b/a American Memorial Park, Grand Prairie, Texas; Gerald Weatherall, Sr., ~ its

     J>resident and individually; and, Beverly Randall-Weatherall as its Vice-President Staff

     alleges that the respondents violated provisions of the Texas Health .and Safety Code,

     Chapters 711 and 712, and Texas Finance Commission Rules, 7 Tex. Admin. Code Chapter

     26; and, of Commissioner Order 2012-011, signed on May 16, 2012. Staff seeks

     administrative penalties against the company, Mr. Weatherall in his capacity as president and

r
                                                                                                 BANKING D:EPT   ~

     400

"·
~          his individual capacity, and against Ms. Randall-Weatherall in her capacity as vice-president

           of the company. Antioch St. James Cemetery C~mpany d/b/a American Memorial Park will

           be referred to as the "Cemetery Company." References to the transcript of the contested case

           hearing will be "[IR (page number)]."

           CHARGES OF VIOLATIONS

                   The department staff charged the respondents with up to fifteen types of violations

           involving ten separate Health .and Safety Code provisions and five Finance Commission

           Rules, with failure to comply with and violations of an Emergency Order To Cease and Desist

           that is dated May 16, 2012, and with operating a perpetual care cemetery without a certificate

           of authority. Department staff argu~ that the respondents' actions established a pattern of

           wilful disregard for the requirements of law concerning operation of the Cemetery Company,

           within the meaning of Health Code §§711.056 and 712.0442, and that the Commissioner

           should impose administrative penalties and costs of this proceeding against all the

           respondents, jointly.and severally. The specific violations with corresponding provisions of

           the Health and Safety Code, the Finance Commission Rules, and the Cease and Desist Order,

           are set forth in the Notice of Hearing that was signed on May 2, 2013.

                                                        DISCUSSION

           APPEARANCES

                   Depart:J;nent staff, represented by Deborah H. Loomis, Assistant General Counsel,

           presented evidence of violations with testimony from Mark E. LaPlante and Russell Reese and

           with documents, including Reports of Examination from 2010, 2011, and 1012; spreadsheets

           showing information from operatiop.s of the cemetery; records concerning four complaints

r
           DOB Docket 13-11-326
           Antioch St James Cemetery Company. et al.
           Proposal for Decision Following Exceptions                                                  Page2
                                                                                        BANKING DEPT
                                                                                                      401

from 2011 and 2012; and, other correspondence. Ultimately, the staff recommended the

imposition of administrative penalties within a range between $56,000 and $70,000 for

fourteen violations. [TR 91-92].

        Mr. Gerald D. Weatherall, Sr., appeared for the Cemetery Company, as fonner

president of the company, and for himself individually. Mr. Weatherall also owns and

operates the Eternal Rest Funeral H.ome that is located in Plano, Texas. [TR 108; DOB

Exhibit 1, p. 47]. Ms. Weatherall appeared as former vice-president of the Cemetery

Company. Mr. Weatherall presented evidence in the form of testimony and documeµts. He

declined to offer an original plat of the cemetery, which included what appeared to be a newer

depiction of Section J that was taped over the .original version on that plat. In general, Mr.

Weatherall testified about his efforts to address the violations after receiving notifications

from the Department. He testified that they hired a man to run the cemetery and con~t

.workers and that the ~iiJy time.he got involved was at the inspections. [TR 100, 101). ·Mr.

Weatherall testified :that Ms. Randall-Weatherall did.not participate in   any of the operations of
the Cemetery Company and shoUid not be held responsible for ~Y of the violations. Mr.

Weatherall felt that he tried to do everything that the Department asked them to do. He

testified that onee he fotind out they were not equipped to handle a cemetery, they put it into
                                             '    -··   .

Chapter 7 bankrllptcy, terminated the company's eo,.Porate charter, and lost title to the

cemetery property through foreclosure.

        The Administrative Law Judge concludes that Mr. Weatherall is responsibJe for

violations of the law and recommends assessment of an administrative penalty against him; as

president of the cemetery company and individually, and against the cemetery company, as set

forth in the recommendation that follows.

DOB Docket 13-11-326
Antioch St James Cemetery Company. et al.
Proposal for Decision Following Exceptions                                                   Page3
                                                                                              BANK I NG D'EPT   ~

 402

       APPLICABLE LAW

               Pertinent law for the regulation of perpetual care cemeteries is found in the Heal~ and

       Safety Code, Chapters 711 and 712, and Finance Commission Rules: Title 7, Part 2, Chapter

       26 of the Texas Administrative Code. The appiicable provisions are set out in detail in the

       Notice of Hearing, appear in the Emergency Cease and Desist Order, and will be set forth in

       the Conclusions of Law concerning each asserted violation.

       DISCUSSION OF THE EVIDENCE

               The Ce~etery. the Cemeterv Company and the Weatheralls' Ownership

               This matter involyes a cemetery that at least a part of which, named Antioch Cemetery,

       was dedicated in 1896. [Weatherall Exhibit 3]. The property is located between Avenue D

       and Hardy Road in Grand Prairie, Dallas County, Texas. The record shows that the cemetery

       property was -not owned by the Cemetery Company.

               The Cemetery Company was organized as a corporation beginning in 1952. [TR 111].
                                           I             .

       Mr. Weatherall was president and a director of the corporation and Ms. Randall-Weatherall

       was vice-president and a director of the corporation. The Secretary of State forfeited the

       corporate charter in early 2011 for failure to pay franchise taxes and reinstated the charter by

       November, 2011, after payment was made. At some time in 2012, the respondents tenninated

       or dissolved the corporation through the Secretary of S~te, after the bankruptcy filing and

       forfeiture ofthe cemetery property. [TR 110].

               On June 3, 2009, Mr. Gerald Weatherall, Sr., and Ms. Beverly Ann Randall-

       _Weatherall purchased the cemetery property and the cemeteiy company from Mr. Robert

       Wright and Mr. Ray Windham. [TR 11 ]. The records for the purchase and cfiange of

r·     DOB Docket 13-11-326
       Antioch St. James Cemetery Company, et al.
       Proposal for Decision FolJowing Exceptions                                                   Page4
                                                                                             BANKING DEPT
                                                                                                         403

    ownership of the cemetery company and Certificate of Authority No. 74, including the

    documentation that the respondents filed with the Department, showed 50% ownership by

    Weatherall Family FWleral Service, LLC, and 50% ownership by Beverly-Randall Weatherall.

    At the time of the 2011 examination, Mr. Weatherall reported that he owned 50% of the

    cemetery property and company, but documentation of that was not provided. [TR 32]. The

    infonnation required to complete a change of ownership was submitted to the Department,

    which recorded the change of ownership and of Certificate of Authority No. 74 on or about

    December 21, 2009. [Id.]. At some time after the February 7, 2012, Report of Examination,

    the Cemetery Company filed for bankruptcy under Chapter 7 and the bankruptcy proceedings

    ended with the Cemetery Company being converted b ack to the respondents, because there

    were no assets to. sell. Also after February 7, 2012, the respondents transferred title to the

    property on which the cemetery is located by deed in lieu of foreclosure to Avery Weatherall,

    Gerald Weatherall, Sr. 's son. Avery Weatherall lent the money for the Weatheralls' purchase

    of the property in 20()9.

            Overview of the Asserted Violations

            The focus of this proceeding was directed to the general condition of the cemetery

    grounds, the record.-keeping; and the maintenance o.f the Perpetual Care Trust Fund ("PC1F")

    by the cemetery company, and the operations within two areas of the northeast portion of the

    cemetery. [See generally, DOB Exhibits 2 and 3]. The two areas we!e identified as "Section

    r   and ~'New Section J" and in this proposal for decision will be referred to in combination as

    "Section J." [Weatherall Exhibit 3 and DOB Exhibit 4]. The records, although too poorly

    kept to enable an exact count, show that few burials took place in Section J before 2009, when

r   DOB Docket 13-11-326
    Antioch St. James Cemetery Company, et aJ.
    Proposal for Decision Following Exceptions                                                   Page5
                                                                                               BANK I NG o·EPT
    404

          the respondents took over operation. The r~cords show a total of approximately 24 burials in

          that section between 1984 and 2008, with no burials recorded during I0 of those 25 years.

          [DOB Exhibit 3]. Approximately 132 burials were done from 2009 through 2012, with 106

          of those done in 2010 and 2011. [Id.]. Mr Weatherall testified that 80-83% of the graves were

          sold directly to his funeral home [TR 129] and that many of the graves were donated for

          hardship cases.

                  Reports of Examination from the Staff and Responses from the Cemetery Company

                  From the outset of the respondents, ownership, Department staff reviewed the

          respondents' operations of the cemetery. Staffperfonned three audits or examinations of the

          operations of the Cemetery Company and· prepared a Report of Examination ("ROE,') for

          each of the audits/ex8minations. As a result of the examinations and the inadequacy of the

          respondents' attempts of compliance, the Commissioner of Banking issued a Cease and Desist

          Order in 2012, and the staff initiated this enforcement proceeding.

                  First Audit: Period Ended June 30. 2010

                  The first audit of the Cemetery Company's operations covered the period to June 30,

          2010. [DOB Exhibit 1, pp. 7-20J In general, the ROE noted that cemetery operations were

          adequate, the property and grounds were adequately maintained, and no complaints were on

          file. The ROE documented.what was stated to have been 11 violations of law [TR 16),

          involving at least 67 instances of violation. [DQB Exhibit 1, pp. 7-20]. The ROE from this

          audit was sent to the respondents by letter dated August 2, 2010, and directed correction by no

          later than September 6, 2010. [DOB Exhibit 1, pp. 8-9]. The evidence does not present an

          accurate picture of the respondent's response to this ROE. (TR 21].

r         DOB Docket 13-11-326
          Antioch St James Cemetezy Company, et al.
          Proposal for Decision Following Exceptions                                                Page6
                                                                                            BANKING DEPT
                                                                                                        405

"·
~            Second Audit: June 20. 2010 to June 30 2011

             The results of the second audit, which covered the period ofJune 20, 2010 to June 30,

     2011, are contained in the ROE that was sent to the respondents by letter dated October 19,

     2011. [DOB Exhibit 1, pp. 22-41]. This ROE noted that the overall condition of the operation

     of the Cemetery Company had deteriorated. The corporate charter had been forfeited as of

     January 28, 2011, for failure to pay franchise taxes. The grounds were in poor condition and

     a complaint was on file. In the· complaint, a family was concerned about the condition of the

     grandfather's grave. [TR 22; DOB Exhibit 1, pp. 69-72]. Mr. LePlante inspected the cemet~ry

     on August 11, 2011, in response to the complaint and concluded, in general, that the

     complaint w~ well founded. [DOB Exhibit 1, p. 73]. Mr. LePlante noted that poor condition

     of the grounds, mostly in Section J, which included sunken-in graves, what appeared to have

     been part of a casket protruding from the ground, graves laid out in different directions, poor

     marking of graves without headstones, very old headstones having been broken, with some

     appearing to have b~en pushed off of graves and partially covered by dirt in the excess dirt
                                                                    ..
     pile in the far northeast co~er of the cemetery. [TR 25]. Lot pins that locate sections of the

     cemetery were lying on the ·ground in various places. Mr. .Weatherall responded to the

     complaint and parts ofMc. LePlante's report of his August 11 site visit by letter dated

     September 6, 2011. Mr. Weatherall's response included his understanding that the headstones

     found in the dirt pile were in a shed that was there when they purchased the property, which

     was tom down to make room for more burial plots. [DOB E]Chibit 1, p. 82].

             The 2011 ROE listed 19 violations oflaw, including 8 repeat violations (from the

     audit in 2010), which involved more than 350 instances of violations. (DOB Exhibit I, pp. 21-

"'
\
     DOB Docket 13-11-326
     Antioch St. James Cemetmy Company. et al.
     Proposal for Decision Following Exceptions                                                 Page7
                                                                                                  BANK I NG D'EPT
    406

          41; DOB Exhibit 2]. There was a shortage of $2,770.19 in the PCTF, which the respondents

          made up before the end ofNovember, 2011. [TR 32; DOB Exhibit 1, p. 58]. The re-plat of

          Section J was deficient in several respects. [TR 34-44; DOB Exhibit 4 (Re-Plat of Section J,

          filed for record on 09/01/11); DOB Exhibit 5 (Plat of"Old Cemetery Section," showing

          county record numbers)]. DOB Exhibit 5 is understood to have been the plat of Section J as it

          was set out at the time when ownership of the cemetery changed from Mr. Wright to the

          respondents. [TR 43]. Conveyance documents had not been issued for 6 of the 50·instances

          that the 2010 ROE documented had not been issued as of June 30, 2010.        ffR 54]. The ROE
          includes a report of each category of violation with a description of supporting evidence.

                  The June 30, 20 I I, ROE was sent to Mr. Weatherall by letter dated October 19, 2011,

          with instructiit 1, p. 60]." Mr. Weatherall-testified that corrective action had been taken. [TR 58-60).

          The respondents s~nt a copy, of the Minutes of November 11, 2011, board meeting at which

          discussions of the vi.olations and·corrective actions were recorded. [DOB Exhibit 1, pp. 58-

          60]. The minutes summarized· a discussion that Mr. Weatherall was not aware that a deposit

          to the PCTF was due for donated graves, that he misunderstood the amount for deposit could

          include $1.75 per square foot as an-alternative to 15% of the total sales price~ and that 85% of

          the graves were donated. The minutes noted a plan for·making and monitoring deposits and

          for auditing.all books and deposits monthly. The minutes stated ~at all shortages have been

          corrected, correction for the contract for sale has been corrected, the intennent/disintennent

          register has been corrected, all deeds have been corrected and issued to buyers, documentation

          of proof of ownership of the cemetecy was provided, ownership ofthe "Museum'' (an unused

r         DOB Docket 13-11-326
          Antioch St James Cemetery Company, et al.
          Proposal for Decision Following Exceptions                                                   Pages
                                                                                        BANKING DEPT
                                                                                                      407

mausoleum, see, DOB Exhibit l, p. 64) was provided, correction regarding corporate status

was provided, and that response to the consumer complaint was timely done. Also noted is an

intention by the board to ask for an extension of time to re-plat the property. The minutes

made references to tabs of supporting documents for most items, but the tabs were not

included in the exhibit. Per a December 20, 2011, letter, the staff concluded that most of the

stated corrections were not adequate, listed the deficiencies, and referenced an upcoming

limited scope examination. [DOB Exhibit 1, pp. 61-66]. Per a January 24, 2011, letter, the

staff noted receipt of the required documentation regarding the platting issue and proof of

deposit to the ~CTF. [DOB Exhibit 1, p. 67]. Department staff instructed Mr. Weatherall to

provide by January 14, 2012, documentation of all actions taken to address the uncorrected

violations stated in the December 20 letter. [TR 61-66). Mr. Weatherall sent notice on

January 24, 2012, which stated they had stopped selling graves in and closed Section J.

        Limited Scope Examination: Period Ending February 7. 2012

        As a result o( the findings of a unifonn risk rating of 5 in the previous examination, a

limited scope examination was conducted sooner than according to the usual schedule. [TR

56]. The .limited scope examination was conducted to determine the extent that management

corrected the 19 categories ofyiolations that were documented in the June 30, 2011, ROE and

to review: operations between Jl:lly 1, 2011, and the date· of the exam. Mr. LePlante was on-

site in November, 2011, determined the extent that the respondents ~rrected violations from

the 06/30/11 ROE, reviewed all post-June 30, 2011, purchase and conveyance documents, and

compared burial cards and interment recor4ds for all of the recorded burials in Section J. The

ROE from the limited scope examination documents the findings of the Department staff. [1R

DOB Docket 13-11-326
Antioch St James Cemetery Company. et al.
Proposal for Decision Following Exceptions                                                    Page9
                                                                           ... ··
                                                                                              BANK I NG D'EPT
408

      42-57]. Mr. LePlante detennined that, as of the November 23, 2011 deadline, corrective

      action had not been taken for 11ofthe19 categories of violations from the 06/30/11 ROE.

      [DOB Exhibit I, p. 47]. The 02/07/12 ROE also documents 16 categories of new violations,

      including 11 repeat violations, which involved many instances of violation. [DOB Exhibit 1,

      pp. 42·57; See also, TR 57]. In general, the overall condition of the cemetery had not

      improved and was described to be critically poor. [DOB Exhibit 1, p. 47]. The conditioµ in

      Section J was slightly improved. [Id., at p. 49]. More specifically, the ROE includes a report

      of each category of violation with a description of supporting evidence. From an exit meeting

      by telephone on February 16, 2012, the ROE notes that Mr. Weatherall agreed with the

      findings and planned to implement corrective ac~ons. [DOB Exhibit I, p. 56). The staff

      concluded that it wil_l refer the matter to the legal division for action. [DOB Exhibit 1, p. 56].

              Certificate of Authority No. 74

              The Cemetery Company operated under authority of Certificate of Authority No. 74

      from the time of ch~ge of ownership in 2009. The department did not renew the certificate

      as of the March 1, 2012 renewal date. [DOB Exhibit 1, p.    3r ·Mr. Weatherall testified that
      they did not receive notice that the application for renewal of the certificate had been denied.

      [TR 108; WeatherallExhibit 1].

              Cease and Desist Order

              On May 16, 2012, the Commissioner signed Order No. 2012-011, an Emergency

      Order To Cease And Desist From Operating A Perpetual 9are Cemetery Without A Valid

      Certificate Of Authority And From Violating Texas Health And Safety Code, effective the

      date of signing. The order included Findings of Fact and Conclusions that. the respondents

      DOB Docket 13-11-326
      Antioch St. James Cemetery Company, et al.
      Proposal for Decision Following Exceptions                                                  Page 10
                                                                                        BANKING DEPT
                                                                                                      409

violated many provisions of the Health and Safety Code and Finance Commission Rules.

[DOB Exhibit 1, pp. 1-6]. The Commissioner ordered the respondents to cease and desist (1)

from the sale of any cemetery spaces or interment rights in the cemetery until the department

confinned that all violations were corrected, and (2) from all cemetery operations except for

burials for persons who own plots as of the date of the order, and for maintenance of the

property. [Id.]. The commissioner also ordered the respondents to ensure that each burial

allowed under the order occurs in a plot that is exclusively reserved for the use of the current

owner and that all required documentation is properly completed and maintained and sent to

the department within tWo business days of burial. [Id].

        BANKING COMMISSIONER'S ENFORCEMENT AUTHORITY

Health and Safety Code Sec. 711.055
(b)     After notice and opportunity for hearing, the commissioner may impose an
administrative penalty on a person who:
        {l) violates this chapter or a final order of the commissioner or rule of the Finance
        Commission of Texas and does not correct the violation ·before the 3 lst day after the
        date the person receives written notice of the violation from the Tex~ Department of
        Banking; or, ·                                                '
        (2) engages in a pattern of violations, as detennined by. the commissioner.
(c)     The amount of the penalty for each violation.may not exceed $1,000 for each day the
violation occurs.
(d)     In detennining the amount of the pena1ty, the commissioner shall consider the
seriousness of the violation, the person's history of violations, and the person's good faith in
attempting to comply with this chapter. The commissioner may collect the penalty in the same
manner that a money judgment is enforced in district c~urt.

Health and Safety Code Sec. 711.056
(a) If after a hearing conducted as provided by Chapter 200 I, Government Code, the trier of
fact finds that a violation of this chapter or a rule of the Finance Commission of Texas
establishes a pattern of wilful· disregard for the requirements of this chapter of rules of the
finance commission, the trier of fact shall recommend to the commissioner that the maximum
administrative penalty permitted under Section 711.055 be imposed on the person committing
the violation or that the commi~ioner cancel or not renew the person's permit under Chapter
154, Finance Code, if the person holds such a pennit.

DOB Docket 13-11-326
Antioch St James Cemetery Company, et al.
Proposal for Decision Foil owing Exceptions                                                 Page 11
                                                                                         BANK I NG D'EPT

 (b) For the purposes of this section,' violations corrected as provided by Section 711.055 may
 be included in determining whether a pattern of wilful disregard for the requirements of this
 chapter or rules of the finance commission exists.

         A pennit under Chapter 154 of the Finance Code is not involved in this case.

 Health and Safety Code 712.0441
 (a)    After notice and opportunity for hearing, the commission may impose an
 administrative penalty on a person who:
         (1) violates this chapter or a final order of the commissioner or rule of the Finance
 Commission of Texas and does ~ot correct the violation before the 31st day after the date the
 person receives written notice of the violation from the banking department;
         or,
         (2) engages in a pattern of violations, as determined by the commissioner.
 (b)     The amount of penalty for each violation may not exceed $1,000 for each day the
 violation occurs.
 (c)     In detennining the amount of the penalty, the commissioner shall consider the
 seriousness of the violation, the person's history of violations, and the person's good faith in
 attempting to comply with this chapter.

  Health and Safezy Code Sec. 712.0442
. (a) If, after a hearing conducted as provi<;led by Chapter 2001, Government Code, the trier of
  fact finds that a violation of this chapter or a rule of the Finance Commission of Texas
  establishes a pattern of wilful disregard for the requirements of this chapter rules of the
  finance commission, the trier of fact may recommend to the commissioner that the maximum
  administrative penalty pennitted under Section 712.0441 be imposed on the person
  committing the violation or that the commissioner cancel or not renew the corporation's
  certificate of authority under this chapter if the person holds su~b a c~rtificate.
  (b)     For the purposes of this section, violations corrected as provided by Section 712.0441
  may be included in determining whether a pattern of wilful disregard for the requirements of
                         of
  this chapter or rules the finance commission exists.

 ANALYSIS BY THE ADMINISTRATIVE LAW JUDGE

         The evidence proves the occurrence of violations of the laws ·regulating the operation

 of a perpetual care cemetery as charg~d by the staff for each violatio1:1, with one ex_ception.

 The administrative law judge concludes that the charge of'{iolation of Health and Safety Code

 §712.0037, which sets forth the conditions for annual rene~al of a certificate of authority,
                                                                                .~·

 does not meet the criteria for imposition of an administrative penalty after a decision not to

 DOB Docket ·13-11-326
 Antioch St. James Cemetery Company, et al.
 Proposal for Decision Following Exceptions                                                  Page 12
                                                                                                  BANKING DEPT
                                                                                                              411

~
~
     renew the certificate of authority. Under Section 712.0037(a), the commissioner reviews the

     holder's application for renewal and determines whether the holder meets the qualifications

     and requirements for holding a certificate. The charged violation involves one of those

      requirements. The commissioner may decide not to renew the certificate of authority, which

      is what happened in this case. The decision not to renew was the consequence for the

      respondents' failing to meet the requirements of Section 712.0037(a). The administrative law

     judge concludes that failure to meet the requirements of Section 712.0037(a) is not a violation

      that is subject to assessment of an administrative penalty after the decision not to renew the

      respondents' certificate of authority. Operation of a perpetual care cemetery without a

      certificate of authority is a violation, of course, and that violation is included in the

    · Conclusions of Law. The remaining issues involve the assessment and amount of an

      administrative penalty.

              The Commissioner Has Discretion To Determine the Amount of Penalty

              Assessment of an administrative penalty is discretionary. Under Health and Safety

      Code §§711.056 and 712.0441, the Commissioner may assess an administrative penalty of up

      to $1,000 per day of violation if the responsible person (1) does not correct the violation

      within 30 days of notification or (2) engages in a pattern of violation. In this case, Mr.

      Weatherall is responsible for multiple violations that are set forth in the Conclusions of Law,

      which count in the hundreds and which involve multiple days for most violations. The

      violations include both those that were not corrected within-30 days of notice and those that

      establish a pattern of violation. Accordingly, the Commissioner is authorized by Chapters 711

      and 712 to assess administrative penalties in an amount greatly exceeding the staffs

      DOB Docket 13-11-326
      Antioch St James Cemetery Company, et al.
      Proposal for Decision Following Exceptions                                                    Page 13
                                                                                            BANK I NG o·EPT

recommended range of $56,000 to $70,000 for fourteen violations.

        If the trier of fact finds that violations establish a pattern of wilful disregard for the

requirements oflaw, then the trier of fact may under §712.0442(a) and shall under

§711.056(a) recommend that the Commissioner impose the maximum administrative penalty

pennitted or, under Section 712.0442, cancel or not renew the corporation's certificate of

authority under this chapter if the person holds such a certificate. The evidence presented at

the hearing proved a pattern of wilful disregard concerning the violations. It appears that the

main reasons for the continuing violations were ignorance of the law at first, but later w~

incompetence and an indifference concerning management of the cemetery and the cemetery

company. Nevertheless, the evidence proves the factors that support making a finding of

wilful disregard. A detennination of the issue of wilful disregard would not have a practical

impact in this case, however, because the staff has recommended a lesser monetary penalty

than what would be the maximum.
        The seriousness of the violation, the person's history of violations, and the person's

good faith in attempting to comply with the requirements of law are the factors prescribed by

§§711.055 and 712.0442 to consider for deciding how much administrative penalty to a5sess.

In this case, the many types of violations cover a range of seriousness. The violations

concerning failure to disclose on the sale/purchase agreements the accurate amount to be

deposited in the Perpetual Care Trust Fund appear to be low on the seriousness scale. Failure

to make timely deposits in the Perpetual Care Trust Fund iI~volve a higher seriousness, but the

shortages ultimately were made up. The violations of failure to accurately plat and file for

record an accurate plat and of failures to keep accurate b.urial records are particularly serious,

DOB Docket 13·11·326
Antioch St James Cemetery Company, et al.
Proposal for Decision FoJlowing Exceptions                                                      Page 14
                                                                                            BANKING DEPT
                                                                                                          413

"
~
    because they are necessary for anyone to locate the graves of those who were buried. It

    appears that these violations were a factor in some of the complaints. The violation of the

    Commissioner,s Order is a very serious violation. The history of so may violations during a

    short period of time and of a violation of the Cease and Desist order weighs heavily in favor

    of a higher penalty. Mr. Weatherall's actions to correct many of the violations and that

    resulted in the continuing occurrence of violations demonstrates both good faith and a lack of

    good faith. In addition, it appears that the non-renewal of the certificate of authority and the

    facts that the respondents have lost ownership of the cemetery property, have tenninated the

    eorporation, and are out of the cemetery business, :would weigh substantially against a higher

    amount of penalty.      ··

         : Ultimately, the evidence supports an administrative penalty in the range that the staff

    advocated. The evidence shows a very large number of days of violation, with some of the

    violations being very serious. The evidence also could support a lesser penalty than the

    minimum of the range that the staff seeks, because of the factors discussed above and because

    the respondents· appear to·have acted more in incompetence than in bad faith. Based on the

    above analysis, the administrative law judge recommends that the Commissioner impose an

    administrative penalty that is no higher than the low end of the range advocated by the staff.

                                                 FINDINGS OF FACT

            Based on the evidence of record and applicable law, the Adm.inistrative Law Judge

    makes the following findings of fact and conclusions of law.

            I.       Notice of hearing was timely given to all respondents.

            2.       Mr. Gerald Weatherall, Sr., appeared at the hearing individually and as former

    DOB Docket 13-1 1-326
    Antioch St. James Cemetery Company, et al.
    Proposal for Decision Following Exceptions                                                  Page 15
                                                                                                BANKING DEPT
4i4

                      President of Antioch St. Johns Cemetery d/b/a American Memorial Park.

              3.      Ms. Beverly Randall-Weatherall appeared at the he~ng as former Vice-

                      President of Antioch St. Johns Cemetery d/b/a American Memorial Park.

              4.       Antioch St Johns Cemetery d/b/a American Memorial Park was a perpetual

                       care cemetery that is located on 3.2 acres of land in Grand Prairie, Texas.

              5.       Antioch St Johns Cemetery d/b/a American Memorial Park was operated as a

                       corporation beginning iii 1958, and is referred to herein as the "cemetery

                       company.''

              6.       Gerald Weatherall, Sr., and Beverly Randall-Weatherall purchased and began

                       operating the cemetery property and the cemetery company in June, 2009.

              7.       The Secretary of State forfeited the cemetery company's corporate charter as of

                       January, 201 r, for failure to pay franchise taxes and reinstated the charter as of

                       November 7, 2011.

              8.       Antioch St Johns Cemetery d/b/a American Memorial Park operated as a

                       perpetual care cemetery under Certificate of Authority No. 74.

              9.       When the Department decided not to renew Certificate of Authority No. 74, it

                       expired as of the March 1, 2012, renewal date.

              10.      The Commissioner ofBankiQg signed Order No. 2012-011, an Emergen~y

                       Order to Ceas~ and Desist against the cemetery comp~y, Mr. Weatherall, and

                       Ms. Randall-Weatherall, on May 16, 2012 ..

              11.      The respondents did not request a hearing concerning Order No. 2012-011 or

                       othen\rise chaUenge it.

      DOB Docket 13-11-326
      Antioch St James Cemetery Company. et al.
      Proposal for Decision Following Exceptions                                                     Page 16
                                                                                                 BANKING DEPT
                                                                                                              415

              ·12.    The cemetery company filed for Chapter 7 bankruptcy after May 16, 2012, but

                      the estate was converted back to the owners because there were no assets to sell

                       in bankruptcy.

              13.      Mr. Weatherall and Ms. Randall-Weatherall conveyed the cemetery property by

                       deed in lieu of foreclosure to Avery Weatherall after May 16, 2012.

              14.      The respondents·terminated the cemetery company's corporate charter with the

                       Secretary of State after May 16, 2012.

              15.      Gerald Weatherall, Sr., was president ofthe cemetery company and exercised

                       an active role as the person and officer who was responsible for the operations

                       of the cemetery and the cemetery company.

              16.      Beverly Randall-Weatherall was vice-president of the cemetery company but

('"                    did not exercise an active role in or responsibility for the operations of the

                       cemetery or the cemetery company.

              17.      The Findings of Fact that are set forth in Order No. 2012-011 support

                       conclusions that the cemetery company and Gerald Weathenlll, Sr., individually

                       and as president of the cemetery company, violated provisions of the Health

                       and Safety Code Chapters 711and712 and of the Finance Commission Rules

                       that are set forth therein and did not correct the violations within 30 days after

                       receiving notice of them.

              18.      Staff of the Department's Special Audits Division conducted an examination of

                       the cemetery property and cemetery company as of the close of business on

                       June 30, 2010. The Report of Examination identified violations of applicable

      DOB Docket 13-11-326
      Antioch St James Cemetery Company, et al.
      Proposal for Decision Following Exceptions                                                    Page 17
                                                                                                    BANKING DEPT .
      416

                            law and instructed the respondents to correct the violations no later than

                            September 6, 2010. Staff sent the Report of Examination to the respondents on

                            August 2, 2010.

                    19.     Staff of the Department's Special Audits Division conducted an examination of

                            the. cemetery property and cemetery company as of the close of business on

                            June 30, 2011. The Report of Examination identified violations of applicable

                             law and instructed the respondents to correct the violations no later than

                            November 23, 2011. Staff sent the Report of Examination to the respondents

                             on October 19, 2011. The responsible persons did n<;>t timely correct all of the

                             violations.

                    20.      Staff of the Department's Special Audits Division conducted a limited scope

(''                          exaajnation of the cemetery property and cemetery company as of the close of

                             business on February 7, 2012, in order to determin('. the extent to which the

                             respo~dents    had corrected preyiously noted violations. The Report of Limited

                             Scope Examination identified the extent to which previously noted violations

                             had been corrected and noted additional violations of applicable law and

                             instructed the respondents to notify the department of their actions correcting ·

                             the violatjons .no later ~an July 4, 2012. ·Staff sent the Report of Limited Scope

                             Examination to the respondents on April 30, 2012. The responsible persons did

                             not timely correct all of the violations.

                    21.      The condition of the cemetery property deteriorated after the respondents began

                             operation of the cemetery and cemetery company. In general, the maintenance

            DOB Docket 13-1 J-326
            Antioch St James Cemetery Company, et al.
            Proposal for Decision Following Exceptions                                                    Page 18
                                                                                          BANKING DEPT
                                                                                                       417

                of the cemetery was very poor, including the following: an entrance did not

                have an adequate sign; sections within the cemetery were not adequately

                 marked; grav~s had collapsed, creating deep sink holes, while there were

                 mounds. of dirt in other areas; and, graves had been dug in both directions in

                 some cases.

        22.      The respondents corrected some of the individual violations that were set forth

                 in the reports of examination, but did not correct all the violations in each type

                 of violation within the stated deadlines.

        23.      Burial cards and the interment register show at least 77 instances of violation of

                 record keeping requirements concerning sales of cemetery plots and burials,

                 which were not corrected within 30 days·after notice of the facts of violation

                 was given to the respt>ndents.

        24.      The cemetery. company records were in such poor shape that it is difficult and

                 probably impossible to detennine from the records whose remains were buried

                ·in which location. Examples of the deficiencies in the records are shown on

                 Deparbnent of Banking Exhibit No. 3 and include:

                 a       21 burials shown on the burial cards were not recorded on the inteJIDent
                 register;

                 b.     the intennent register reflects tw~ burials in the same space on 8
                 occasions;

                 c.      the interment register reflects a burial in a plot on 6 occasions when the
                 burial card for the plot does not show a burial;

                 d.      on 4 occasions, the burial card shows the burial of a person in a plot and
                 the intennent register shows the burial of another person in that plot;

DOB Docket 13~11-326
Antioch St. James Cemetery Company, et al.
Proposal for Decision Following Exceptions                                                   Page 19
                                                                                                    BANKING DEPT ·
     418

                           e.      on 4 occasions, the burial cards and the interment register show
                           different burial plots for the same person; and,

                           f.      on 4 occasions, the burial cards and the intennent register show
                           different persons were buried in the same burial plot.

                   25.      The cemetery company on many occasions did not accurately identify on the

                            interment records of the cemetery the plot in which the remains of an individual

                           .are interred.

                   26.     The cemetery company did not record the final disposition of purchase

                            agreements on the historical ~ontract register on many occasions and did not

                            correct the deficiencies within 30 days after notice of the facts of violation was

                            given to the respondents.

                   27.      The cemetery co~pany did not maintain a?curate separate property files in the

('                          names of the purchasers of burial plots on many occasions and did not correct

                            the deficiencies within 30 days after notice of the facts of violation was given to

                            the re.spondents.

                   28.      The cemetery company repeatedly did not maintain a current financial

                            statement that substantiated the use of income from the Perpetual Care Trust

                            Fund

                   29.      The cemetery ~ompany consistently did not accurately calculate the amount of

                            money to be deposited in the Perpetual Care Trust F~d.

                   30.      The cemetery company did not for almost ev.ery month of its operation deposit

                            within 20 days after the end of the month in which purchase agreements were

                            paid in full any amount of money in the Perpetual Care Trust Fund. The

           DOB Docket 13-11-326
           Antioch St James Cemetery Company> et al.
           Proposal for Decision Following Exceptions                                                   Page20
                                                                                                        BANKING DEPT
                                                                                                                      419

                              cemetery company did deposit the required amounts after department staff

                              notified the respondents of the deficiencies.

                      31.     The cemetery company did not disclose on agreements to purchase a cemetery

                              plot the correct amount of money to be deposited in the Perpetual Care trust

                              Fund on many occasjons and did not correct the deficiencies within 30 days

                               after notice of the facts· of violation was given to the respondents.

                      32.      The cemetery company did not maintain accurate monthly recapitulations of the

                               interment rights or conveyance of burial plot rights on many occasions and did

                               not correct the deficiencies within 30 days after notice of the facts of violation

                               was given to the respondents.

                      33.      The cemetery company did not prepare and file with the county clerk an

"
~·        .                    accurate map or plat of Section J that showed the cemetery plots and their

                               orientation to the remainder of the cemetery property, including the boundaries

                               of th~ cemetery property.

                      34.      The cemetery company sold cemetery plots on many occasions without having

                               filed an adequate accurate map or plat of Section J with the county clerk and

                               has not filed such a plat

                      35.      The cemetery company did not issue to the appropriate person and file in its

                               office the conveyance document after cemetery plots were paid in full on many

                               occasions and often did not correct those deficiencies within 30 days after

                               notice of the facts of violation was given to the respondents.

                      36.      The cemetery company operated and conducted cemetery operations after

,,,.._,                        March 1> 2012.
\
              DOB Docket JJ. J 1-326
              Antioch St. James Cemetery Company, et al.
              Proposal for Decision Following Exceptions                                                    Page 21
                                                                                                           BANKING DEPT .
         420

lf1"""

'                      37.     The cemetery company did not send notice of the June 14, 2012, burial of Lena

                               Sneed-Holleman to the department within two days as required by Order No.

                               2012-011.

                       38.     Although Mr. Weatherall attempted to address violations that were brought to

                                his attention, the failure to correct all of the violations and the continual

                                frequent repetition of the several types of violation throughout the time ·he was

                                responsible for the operations of the cemetery company establishes a pattern of

                                wilful disregard for the requirements of the law that applies to perpetual care

                                cemeteries.

                       39.      The continual occurrences of violations and Mr. Weatherall's actions

                                concerning the operations of the. cemetery and the.cemetery company were

                                initially more the result of ignorance of the legal requirements and later, o~

                                combinations of an inability to accomplish and inattention to the

                                acco~plishment of the legal    requirements. Mr. Weatherall eventually made up

                                the shortages in the Perpetual Care Trust Fund after the department staff

                                notified him and demanded compliance. He attempted to address the

                                complaints. Some of the record-keeping deficiencies were corrected after

                                notice and dem~d from th~ staff. He ultimately gave up the cemetery and

                                cemetery company as a result of financial insolvency.. He has continued to pay

                                for some maintenance of the cemetery property.

               DOB Docket 13-l 1-326
               Antioch St James Cemetery Company, et al.
               Proposal for Decision Following Exceptions                                                       Page22
                                                                                         BANKING DEPT
                                                                                                      421

                                      CONCLUSIONS OF LAW

        I.      Proper notice of hearing was timely given to Antioch St. James Cemetery

                Company d/b/a/ American Memorial Park ("cemeteiy company.,'), Gerald

                Weatherall Sr., individually and as president of the cemetery company, and

                Bever~y Randall-Weatherall    as vice-president of the cemetery company.

        2.      The Commissioner of Banking has jurisdiction to enforce the provisions of the

                Texas Health and Safety Code and Texas Finance Commission Rules
                                       .                                         .
                 concerning the operations of perpetual care cemeteries, specifically with respect

                 to Antioch St James C~metery Company d/b/a American Memorial Park, the

                 actions of Gerald Weatherall, Sr., individually and as president ofthe·cemetery

                 company, and the actions of Beverly Randall-Weatherall as vice-president of

                 the cemetery company, and to the violations which are charged in this docket.

        3:       During the period from 2009 to March 1, 2012, ~hen it was owned and

                 operated by the respondents, Antioch St. James Cemetery d/b/a American

                 Memorial Park was a perpetual care cemetery under Health and Safety Code

                 §711.001(24) that was operated under Certificate of Authority No. 74.

        4.       Order No. 2012-011, the May 16, 2012, Emergency Cease and Desist Order

                 concerning the respondents in this case, is a final order and its Findings of Fact

                 are taken as true.

        5.       The responsible persons violated Health andSafety Code §711.003(4) on

                 multiple occasions by failing to accurately identify on the intennent records of

                 the cemetery the plot in which the remains ofa specific individual was interred

DOB Docket 13-1 I-326
Antioch St. James Cemetery Company, et at.
ProposaJ for Decision Following Exceptions                                                   Page23
                                                                                                   BANKING DEPT ·
422

                      and failing to correct the violations within 30 days after receiving notice of the

                      violations from the Department.

              6.       The responsible persons violated Finance Commission Rule 7 Texas

                       Administrative Code §26(2)(b)(4) on multiple occasions by failing to record the

                       final disposition of purchase agreements on the historical contract register and

                       failing to correct the violations within 30 days after receiving notice of the

                       violations from the Department.

              7.       The responsible persons violated Finance Commission Rule 7 Texas

                       Administrative Code §26(2)(b)(3) on multiple occasions by failing to maintain

                       separate property files in the names of the purchasers and failing to correct the

                       violations within 30 days after receiving n<:>tice of the violations from the

                       Department.

              8.       The responsible persons violated Finance Commission Rule 7 Texas

                       Adm~nistrative Code         §26.2(b)(l)(A) on several occasions by failing to maintain

                       a financial statement that substantiates the cemet~ry's use     of trust fund income
                       and failing to correct the violations within 30 days after receiving notice of the .

                       violations from the Department

              9.       Th~ responsible    persons_ violated Health·_and Safety Code §712.028(a) on

                       multiple occasions by failing to accurately calculate the amount of perpetual

                       care funds to be deposited and failing to coqect the violations within 30 days

                       after receiving notice of the violations from the Department.

      DOB Docket 13-1 J-326
      Antioch St James Cemetery Company. et al.
      Proposal for Decision Following Exceptions                                                       Page 24
                                                                                          BANKING DEPT
                                                                                                      423

        10.     The responsible persons violated Health and Safety Code §712.029(c) on

                multiple occasions by failing to timely deposit the correct amount of funds into

                the perpetual care trust fund.

        11.     The responsible persons violated Health and Safety Code §712.029(a) on

                 multiple occasions by failing to disclose on the purchase agreements the correct

                 amount of perpetual care funds to be deposited· in the perpetual care trust fund

                 and failing to correct the violations within 30 days after receiving notice of the

                 violations from the Department.

        12.      The responsible persons violated Finance Commission Rule 7 Texas

                 Administrative Code §26.2(b)(5) on multiple occasions by failing to maintain

                 accurate monthly recapitulations of all interment rights issued and failing to

                 correct the violations within 30 days after receiving notice of the violations

                 from the Department

        13.      The responsible persons violated Health and Safety Code §71 l.034(a)(l) by

                 failing to accurately survey and map or plat Section J of the cemetery property

                 showing the plots contained within the perimeter boundary and showing a

                 specific unique number for each plot and failing to correct the violations within

                 30 days after receiving notice of the violations from the Department.
                                         .                               .

        14.      The responsible persons violated Health and Safety Code §71 l.034(b) by

                 failing to file an accurate map or plat of Section.I with the county clerk in

                 which the cemetery is located and failing to correct the violations within 30

                 days after receiving notice of the violations from the Department

DOB Docket 13-11-326
Antioch St. James Cemetery Company, et al.
Proposal for Decision Following Exceptions                                                   Page25
                                                                                                      BANKING DEPT .
     424

"
~                  15.     The responsible persons violated Health and Safety Code §711.038(a)(l) by

                           selling, conveying, or both selling and conveying the exclusive right of

                           sepulture in a plot in Section J before an accurate map or plat and a certificate

                            or declaration of dedication was filed with the county clerk as provided by

                            Section 711.034 and failing to correct the violations within 30 days after

                            receiving notice of the violations from the Department.

                   16.      The responsible persons violated Finance Commission Rule §26.5 by failing on

                            multiple occasions, with respect to Section J, to issue a conveyance document

                            for a cemetery plot, as defined by Health and Safety Code §711.001(25), no

                            later than 20 days after the end of the month in which the contract is paid in full

                            and failing to correct the violations within 30 days after receiving notice of the

r                           violations from the Department

                   17.      The responsible persons violated Health and Safety Code §711.038(c) by

                            failing on multiple occasions,. with respect to Section J, to file in the cemetery

                            organizations' office the conveyance of the exclusive right of sepulture in

                            Section J and failing to correct the violations within 30 days after receiving

                            notice of the violations from the Department

                   18.      The responsible persons violated Health and Safety Code §712.0032 by

                            operating a perpetual care cemetery after Marc~ 1, 2012, without_holding a

                            certificate of authority to operate a perpetual
                                                                         . care cemetery under
                                                                                            .
                                                                                               Health and

                            Safety Code Chapter 712.

                                                                                          .-

"
'Z         DOB Docket 13-11-326
           Antioch St James Cemetery Company, et al.
           Proposal for Decision Following Exceptions                                                    Page 26
                                                                                                 BANKING DEPT
                                                                                                              425

                19.     The responsible persons violated Commissioner Order No. 2012-011 by

                        burying the body of a person on June 14, 2012, and failing to timely send the

                        required documentation to the Department.

                20.      With respect to the asserted violation of Health and Safety Code §712.0037(a),

                         the responsible person's actions concerning failure to maintain required

                         minimum capital did not amount to a violation oflaw that is subject to

                         imposition of an administrative penalty after the department decided not to

                         renew the certificate of authority.

                21.      Gerald Weatherall, Sr., is the person who is responsible, individua11y and in his

                         capacity as fonner president of Antioch St. James Cemetery d/b/a American

                         Memorial Park, for the violations of law that are set forth in these Findings of

r                        Fact and Conclusions of Law.

                22.      The Commissioner of Banldng in his discretion has the authority under Health

                         and Safety Code Sections 712.0441 and 711.055 to assess an administrative

                         penalty against Antioch St James Cemetery d/b/a American ·Memorial Park

                         and Gerald Weatherall, Sr., in his individual capacity and in his capacity as

                         former president of the cemetery company, in the amount of$~,OOO for each

                         day of violation.

                23.      An_administrative penalty in the amount of up to $70,_000.00 is supported by

                         the evidence under the provisions of Health and Safety Code Sections 711.055,

                         711.056, 712.0441, and 712.0442.

r
'   '
        DOB Docket 13-11-326
        Antioch St. James Cemetery Company, et al.
        Proposal for Decision Following Exceptions                                                  Page 27
426
                                                                                            BANKING DEPT ·

                                               RECOMMENDATION

               Based on the evidence and applicable law, including the facts that the Department has

      acted by not renewing Certificate of Authority No. 74, the cemetery company is nd longer in

      business, and the respondents no longer own the cemetery property or conduct cemetery

      operations, the administrative law judge recommends an administrative penalty up to

      $56,000.00.

      Signed this 12th day of November, 2013.

           MP h. 002JL--
      Donald N. Walker
      Administrative Law Judge

      DOB Docket 13-11-326
      Antioch St James Cemetery Company, et al.
      Proposal for Decision Following Exceptions                                              Page 28
                                                                                     BANKING DEPT
                                                                                                427

                                  Docket No~ BE-13-11-326

IN THE MATTER OF ANTIOCH                        §    BEFORE THE BANKING
ST. JAMES CEMETERY COMPANY                      §
d/b/a AMERICAN MEMORIAL PARK,                   §
GRAND PRAIRIE, TEXAS, (Certificate              §
 of Authority No. 74, expired);                 §
                                                §
GERALD WEATHERALL, SR., AS ITS                  §    COMMISSIONER OF TEXAS
PRESIDENT AND IN HIS INDIVIDUAL                 §
CAPACITY; AND,                                  §
                                                §
BEVERLY RANDALL-WEATHERALL                      §
AS ITS VICE-PRESIDENT                           §    AUSTIN, TRAVIS COUN':fY, TEXAS

                                       FINAL ORDER

       On this _ _ _ _ day of _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _, 2013, ca.me on to be
considered Docket No. BE-13-11-326. After reviewing the administrative record and the
Proposal for Decision Following Exceptions issued by the Administrative Law Judge on
November 12, 2013, I have determined that the Findings ofFact and Conclusions of Law are
supported by the evidence of record and applicable law.

        I, therefore, ADOPT the Proposal for Decision Following Exceptions, including
                                                              are
specifically the Findings of Fact and Conclusions ·of Law that° set forth in the Proposal for
Decision Following Exceptions and incorporate in this Order the Findings of Fact and
Conclusions of Law therein as if set out in full in this Order.

      Based on the record and the Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law, I conclude that
an administrative penalty in the.amount of$                     is justified and
appropriate under the factors required by law.

       It is, therefore, ORDERED that an administrative penalty in the amount of
$                         be and is hereby ASSESSED against respondents Antioch St. James
Cemetery Company d/b/a American Memorial Park, and Gerald Weatherall, Sr., in his
individual capacity and in his capacity offonner President of Antioch St James Cemetery
Company d/b/a American Memorial Park.
                                                                                              BANKING DEPT·
428

             Respondents Antioch St. James Cemetery Company d/b/a American Memorial Park,
      and Gerald Weatherall, Sr., in his individual capacity and in his capacity of fonner President
      of Antioch St James Cemetery Company d/b/a American Memorial Park, jointly and
      sever~ly, are ORDERED to pay an administrative penalty of .....$ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ to the
      Texas Department of Banking.

               All relief that was requested but not granted or othetwise disposed of herein is denied.

      SIGNED and ENTERED this _ _ _ _ day of - - - - - - - - 2013.

      Charles G. Cooper
      Banking Conunissioner

      DOB Docket 13-11-326
      Antioch St. James Cemetery Company. et al
      Final Order                                                                                 Page2
    Appendix 2
Final Order No. 2013-028
                                  Order No. 2013- -0~9,
                                  Docket No. BE-13-11-326

 IN THE MATTER OF ANTIOCH       §                      BEFORE THE BANKING
 ST. JOHNS CEMETERY COMPANY     §
 d/b/a AMERICAN MEMORIAL PARK,  §
 GRAND PRAIRIE, TEXAS, (Certificate
                                §
  of Authority No. 74, expired);§
                                §
GERALD WEATHERALL, SR., AS ITS §                       COMMISSIONER OF TEXAS
PRESIDENT AND IN HIS INDIVIDUAL §
CAPACITY; AND,                  §
                                §
BEYERLY RANDALL-WEATHERALL §
AS ITS VICE-PRESIDENT           §                    AUSTIN, TRAVIS COUNTY, TEXAS

                                       FINAL ORDER

                  . rh
       On this J.:> day of November, 2013 came on to be considered Docket No.
BE-13-11-326. After reviewing the administrative record and the Proposal for Decision
Following Exceptions issued by the Administrative Law Judge on November 12, 2013, I have
determined that the Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law are supported by the evidence of
record and applicable law.

       I, therefore, ADOPT the Proposal for Decision Following Exceptions, including
specifically the Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law that are set forth in the Proposal for
Decision Following Exceptions and incorporate in this Order the Findings of Fact and
Conclusions of Law therein as if set out in full in this Order.

        Based on the record and the Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law, I conclude that
an administrative penalty in the amount of $56,000 is justified and appropriate under the
factors required by law.

       It is, therefore, ORDERED that an administrative penalty in the amount of$56,000 be
and is hereby ASSESSED against respondents Antioch St. Johns Cemetery Company d/b/a
American Memorial Park, and Gerald Weatherall, Sr., in his individual capacity and in his
capacity of former President of Antioch St. Johns Cemetery Company d/b/a American
Memorial Park.
      Respondents Antioch St. Johns Cemetery Company d/b/a American Memorial Park,
and Gerald Weatherall, Sr., in his individual capacity and in his capacity of former President of
Antioch St. Johns Cemetery Company d/b/a American Memorial Park, jointly and severally,
are ORDERED to pay an administrative penalty of$56,000 to the Texas Department of
Banking.

         All relief that was requested but not granted or otherwise disposed of herein is denied.

SIGNED and ENTERED this               ~S- tt:iay ofNovember, 2013.

 ~de(~
Charles G. Cooper
Banking Commissioner

                                                                                          Page2
DOB Docket 13-11-326
Antioch St. Johns Cemetery Company, et al
Final Order
   Appendix 3
Motion for Re-Hearing
                                                                                        BANKING DEPT
                                                                                                      431

                                  DOCKET NO. BE 13-11-326

IN THE MATTER OF ANTIOCH                         §   BEFORE THE BANKING
ST. JOHNS CEMETARY COMPANY                       §
d/b/a AMERICAN MEMORIAL PARK,                    §
GRAND PRAIRIE, TEXAS, (Certificate               §
of Authority No. 74, expired);                   §
                                                 §   COMMISSIONER OF TEXAS
GERALD WEATHERALL, AS ITS                        §
PRESIDENT AND IN HIS INDIVIDUAL                  §
CAPACITY; AND;                                   §
                                                 §
BEVERAL Y RANDALL-WEATHERALL §
AS ITS VICE-PRESIDENT          §                     AUSTIN, TRAVIS COUNTY, TEXAS

                                 MOTION FOR RE-HEARING

        NOW COMES, Antioch St. Johns Cemetery Company d/b/a American Memorial Park,

Grand Prairie, Texas, Gerald Weatherall, and Beveraly Randall-Weatherall (the "Movants"), to

file this, their Motion for Rehearing on the Final Order of the administrative law judge for the

above referenced and numbered cause.

        To the extent that the Movants disagree with the penalties assessed against the individual

. movants in their individual capacities, and that such penalties do no comport with the finding of

facts by the Administrative Law Judge and the rules regarding governance of cemeteries for the

state of Texas, Movants request a rehearing in this cause.

        Accordingly, this Motion for Rehearing is being submitted pursuant to Texas

Government Code§§ 2001.145 and 2001.146.

MOTION FOR REHEARING                                                                       PAGE-I
                                                                                      BANKING DEPT
                                                                                                    432

                                     Respectfully Submitted by:
                                     THE LAW OFFICES OF KEVIN S. WILEY, JR.

                                                    /s/ Kevin S. Wiley, Jr.
                                                    Kevin S. Wiley, Jr.
                                                    Texas State Bar No. 24029902
                                                    325 N. St. Paul Street, Suite 4400
                                                    Dallas, Texas 75201
                                                    Tel.: 469-619-5721
                                                    Fax.: 469-619-5725
                                                    ATTORNEY FOR
                                                    Gerald Weatherall and Beverly Weatherall

                                 CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE

        I hereby certify that a copy of the foregoing Motion for Rehearing has been served on the
Banking Commission by and through their counsel ofrecord below on this 27th day of December
via electronic mail

Deborah H. Loomis
Assistant General Counsel
dloomis@dob.texas.gov
2601 N. Lamar Blvd.
Austin, Texas 78705

MOTION FOR REHEARING                                                                     PAGE-2
                                                                         BANKING DEPT
                                                    TEXAS DEPARTMENT OF BANKING 437
                                                                  2601 North Lamar Blvd., Austin, Texas 78705
                                                                               512-475-1300 /877-276-5554
                                                                                           www.dob.texas.gov
      Charles G. Cooper
       Commissioner

January 7, 2014

Kevin S. Wiley, Jr.                                     Transmitted via:
The Law Offices of Kevin S. Wiley, Jr.                  Certified Mail, return receipt requested,
325 N. St. Paul Street, Suite 4400                      No. 7192 3020 001020001729.
Dallas, Texas 75201                                     and email to kevinwiley@LKSWJR.com

Deborah H. Loomis                                       Transmitted via:
Texas Department of Banking                             Hand Delivery
2601 North Lamar Boulevard, Suite 300
Austin, Texas 78705

Re:        In The Matter of Antioch St. Johns Cemetery Company dba American Memorial Park,
           Grand Prairie, Texas; Gerald Weatherall, as its President and in his individual capacity;
           and Beverly Randall-Weatherall, as its Vice-President; Docket No. BE-13-11-326;
           Commissioner's Order 2013-028

Dear Mr. Wiley and Ms. Loomis:

I have reviewed the Motion for Re-Hearing in the above referenced matter filed by Antioch St.
Johns Cemetery Company dba American Memorial Park, Granc:l Prairie, Texas, Gerald
Weatherall, and Beverly Randall-Weatherall dated December 27, 2013, and the Reply of Texas
Department of Banking to Motion for Rehearing Filed by Respondents.

The ·Motion for Re-Bearing is denied.

Charles G. Cooper
Banking Commissioner

cc:        A. Kaylene Ray, General Counsel
             Appendix 4
Final Order – Travis County District Court
                                                                           Filed in The District Court
                                                                            of Travis County Texas

                                                                         At
                                                                                APR Q 2;15
                                                                                         Ji J_
                                                                                                      ~
                                CAUSE NO. D-1-GN-14-000367                                            M
                                                                          Velva L. Price, District Jerk .
 ANTIOCH ST JOHN CEMETERY                        §               IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF
 COMPANY D/B/A AMERICAN                          §
 MEMIORIAL PARK, GRAND PRAIRIE,                  §
 TEXAS, GERALD WEATHERALL and                    §
 BEVERLY RANDALL-WEATJ-IERALL,                   §
   Plaintiffs,                                   §
                                                 §
                                                 §
 V.                                              §                  TRAVIS COUNTY. TEX/\S
                                                 §
 THE TEXAS DEPARTMENT Of                         §
 BANKING COMMISSIONER,                           §
   Defendant                                     §
                                                 §                  261st .JUDICIAL DISTRICT

       On April 30, 20 I 5, the Court heard the administrative appeal of Plaintiffs Antioch St. John
Cemetery Company d/b/a American Memorial Park, Grand Prairie, Texas, Gerald Weatherall, and
Beverly Randall-Weatherall. After considering the parties' briefs, arguments of collnsel, and the
applicable law, the Court finds that the Texas Banking Commissioner's Order No. 20 I3-028,
entered on November 25, 2013, should be affirmed.
       lt is therefore ORDERED that Commissioner's Order No. 2013-028, entered on November
25, 2013, is AFFIRMED.

SIGNEDon     ~/L             3L2                      '2015.