Court Opinion

ID: 4071023
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-09-30 01:42:50.493203+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T13:27:54.226034
License: Public Domain

Affirmed and Opinion filed October 29, 2015.

                                      In The

                     Fourteenth Court of Appeals

                               NO. 14-14-00679-CV

U. S. BANK NATIONAL ASSOCIATION, SUCCESSOR-IN-INTEREST TO
  WELLS FARGO BANK, N.A., SUCCESSOR BY MERGER TO WELLS
       FARGO BANK MINNESOTA, N.A., AS TRUSTEE FOR THE
      REGISTERED HOLDERS OF MERRILL LYNCH MORTGAGE
  INVESTORS, INC. MORTGAGE PASS-THROUGH CERTIFICATES,
                   SERIES 1998-C2, Appellant
                                         V.

                         DANNY M. SHEENA, Appellee

                    On Appeal from the 215th District Court
                             Harris County, Texas
                      Trial Court Cause No. 2011-77806A

                                 OPINION
      A bank filed suit against an attorney who had not represented the bank,
asserting that the attorney’s actions in disbursing settlement funds at the direction
of a client constituted tortious interference with contract, conversion, fraudulent
transfer, negligence, and conspiracy. In this appeal, we conclude the trial court did
not err in dismissing these claims on summary judgment under the doctrine of
attorney immunity. We therefore affirm.
                   FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

      Appellant/plaintiff U.S. Bank National Association, Successor-in-Interest to
Wells Fargo Bank, N.A., Successor by Merger to Wells Fargo Bank Minnesota,
N.A., as Trustee for the Registered Holders of Merrill Lynch Mortgage Investors,
Inc. Mortgage Pass-Through Certificates, Series 1998-C2 (“U.S. Bank”) was the
successor-in-interest to the lender in a real-estate transaction with Optimum Arbor
Oaks, L.L.C. As part of the transaction, Optimum Arbor Oaks executed a note,
secured by a deed of trust, on the Arbor Oaks Apartments. The deed of trust
contained terms that authorized U.S. Bank to litigate insurance disputes and to
exercise some control over any insurance funds Optimum Arbor Oaks received for
the Arbor Oaks Apartments. During Hurricane Ike, the Arbor Oaks Apartments
sustained damage and Optimum Arbor Oaks retained appellee/defendant Danny M.
Sheena, an attorney, to help obtain insurance funds to cover the damage. Sheena
eventually obtained over $900,000 in insurance proceeds on behalf of Optimum
Arbor Oaks.

      A few weeks before Sheena received any of the insurance proceeds, U.S.
Bank notified Optimum Arbor Oaks that Optimum Arbor Oaks was in default on
the mortgage. The letter contained references to loan documents. U.S. Bank sent a
copy of this letter to Sheena. Later, U.S. Bank sent a second letter, notifying
Optimum Arbor Oaks that it intended to foreclose. After receiving the second
letter, Sheena deposited the insurance proceeds into his trust account and disbursed
the proceeds pursuant to Optimum Arbor Oaks’ directions. Sheena disbursed
$101,565.88 of the proceeds to himself as his attorney’s fee.

      U.S. Bank foreclosed on the Arbor Oaks Apartments, but the foreclosure did

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not satisfy the outstanding amounts due under the note. U.S. Bank later filed suit
against Optimum Arbor Oaks and Sheena. U.S. Bank alleged Optimum Arbor
Oaks misappropriated the insurance funds and asserted a variety of claims against
Optimum Arbor Oaks. U.S. Bank alleged Sheena had notice of these documents
and therefore Sheena had notice of U.S. Bank’s interest in the insurance proceeds.
U.S. Bank asserted that in spite of knowledge U.S. Bank had an interest in the
insurance proceeds, Sheena negotiated the proceeds through Sheena’s trust account
to himself and others. U.S. Bank alleged Sheena committed tortious interference
with contract, conversion, and conspiracy.

      Sheena filed a summary-judgment motion in which he asserted many
summary-judgment grounds, including that he was not liable to U.S. Bank for
actions he took while representing Optimum Arbor Oaks because an attorney is
immune from claims brought by third parties who suffer damages from actions the
attorney takes representing a client. U.S. Bank amended its petition to add claims
for fraudulent transfer and negligence. Sheena filed another summary-judgment
motion related to those claims. In Sheena’s second summary-judgment motion,
Sheena reiterated that an attorney cannot be liable to a third party for actions taken
while representing a client.     The trial court granted both summary-judgment
motions, later severing U.S. Bank’s claims against Sheena to create a final
judgment.

      On appeal, U.S. Bank challenges the trial court’s rulings. U.S. Bank asserts
that the trial court erred in granting Sheena’s summary-judgment motions.

                                     ANALYSIS

      Sheena asserted as a summary-judgment ground that he is immune from
liability to U.S. Bank for any damages U.S. Bank suffered from Sheena’s
representation of Optimum Arbor Oaks. U.S. Bank asserts Sheena is not immune
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from liability because his actions were fraudulent and therefore constitute an
exception to the doctrine of attorney immunity.1

       In a traditional motion for summary judgment, if the movant’s motion and
summary-judgment evidence facially establish its right to judgment as a matter of
law, the burden shifts to the nonmovant to raise a genuine, material fact issue
sufficient to defeat summary judgment. M.D. Anderson Hosp. & Tumor Inst. v.
Willrich, 28 S.W.3d 22, 23 (Tex. 2000). In our de novo review of a trial court’s
summary judgment, we consider all the evidence in the light most favorable to the
nonmovant, crediting evidence favorable to the nonmovant if reasonable jurors
could, and disregarding contrary evidence unless reasonable jurors could not.
Mack Trucks, Inc. v. Tamez, 206 S.W.3d 572, 582 (Tex. 2006). The evidence
raises a genuine issue of fact if reasonable and fair-minded jurors could differ in
their conclusions in light of all of the summary-judgment evidence. Goodyear Tire
& Rubber Co. v. Mayes, 236 S.W.3d 754, 755 (Tex. 2007). When, as in this case,
the order granting summary judgment does not specify the grounds upon which the
trial court relied, we must affirm the summary judgment if any of the independent
summary-judgment grounds is meritorious. FM Props. Operating Co. v. City of
Austin, 22 S.W.3d 868, 872 (Tex. 2000). When a defendant moves for summary
judgment on the basis of an affirmative defense, such as attorney immunity, it has
the burden to conclusively prove the affirmative defense as a matter of law.
KPMG Peat Marwick v. Harrison Cnty. Hous. Fin. Corp., 988 S.W.2d 746, 748
(Tex. 1999).
       In 1882, the Supreme Court of Texas addressed the alleged fraud of a
defendant, noting evidence that when this defendant committed the alleged fraud
he was acting as attorney for other participants in the alleged fraud, though not in
       1
          U.S. Bank does not challenge the trial court’s grant of summary judgment with respect
to its negligence claim.

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the context of litigation. See Poole v. Houston & T.C. Ry. Co., 58 Tex. 134, 137
(Tex. 1882). The high court rejected the notion that the defendant’s status as an
attorney representing a client would give the attorney immunity from liability to
the party allegedly damaged by the fraud:

      Having assumed the apparent ownership of the goods, for the purpose
      and with the intention of consummating the fraud upon [the plaintiff],
      [the attorney] will not be heard to deny his liability to [the plaintiff]
      for the loss sustained by reason of his wrongful acts, under the
      privileges of an attorney at law, for such acts are entirely foreign to
      the duties of an attorney; neither will he be permitted, under such
      circumstances, to shield himself from liability on the ground that he
      was the agent of [his clients], for no one is justified on that ground in
      knowingly committing wil[l]ful and premeditated frauds for another.

Poole, 58 Tex. at 137–38 (emphasis added).          Texas’s intermediate courts of
appeals later developed various approaches to delineating the scope of an
attorney’s immunity from liability to a claimant for allegedly actionable conduct in
which the attorney engaged while representing a client in a matter in which the
claimant was an opposing party. For example, the Fourteenth Court of Appeals
concluded that though attorneys owe no negligence duty to opposing parties,
attorneys still are subject to liability to nonclients, including opposing parties,
based on the attorneys’ fraudulent or malicious conduct, even if the attorneys’
conduct was in the course of representing their client. Lackshin v. Spofford, No.
14-03-00977-CV, 2004 WL 1965636, at *3 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.]
Sept. 7, 2004, pet. denied) (mem. op.). See also JJJJ Walker, LLC v. Yollick, 447
S.W.3d 453, 468 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] 2014, pet. denied) (stating that
“it is well established that an attorney can be held liable for his own fraudulent
conduct even though it was performed on a client’s behalf”); James v. Easton, 368
S.W.3d 799, 803 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] 2012, pet. denied) (stating that,

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if an attorney engages in fraudulent or malicious conduct in the course of
representing his client, an opposing party may assert intentional tort claims against
the attorney based upon this conduct). This court decided that, if an attorney
engages in fraudulent or malicious conduct in the course of representing the
attorney’s client, an opposing party may assert intentional tort claims against the
attorney based upon this conduct. Lackshin, 2004 WL 1965636, at *3. This court
concluded that, once a defendant filed a summary-judgment motion asserting
attorney immunity, and proving as a matter of law that the allegedly actionable
conduct was undertaken in the legal representation of a third-party client, the
claimant was required to either raise a fact issue as to whether that conduct was
undertaken in the representation of a third-party client or plead sufficient facts to
show that the plaintiff asserts one or more claims that fall within an exception to
attorney immunity. Id. Other courts of appeals took a broader view of attorney
immunity. See Alpert v. Crain, Caton & James, P.C., 178 S.W.3d 398, 405–08
(Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 2005, pet. denied).

         The Supreme Court of Texas recently addressed the legal standard
applicable to attorney immunity from the claims of an opposing party in the
litigation context. See Cantey Hanger, LLP v. Byrd, 467 S.W.3d 477, 481–85
(Tex. 2015). The Cantey Hanger court stated that attorneys are not protected from
liability to non-clients for their actions when the actions do not qualify as “‘the
kind of conduct in which an attorney engages when discharging his duties to his
client.’” Cantey Hanger, LLP, 467 S.W.3d at 482 (quoting Dixon Financial Servs.
v. Greenberg, Peden, Siegmyer & Oshman, P.C., No. 01-06-00696-CV, 2008 WL
746548, at *9 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] Mar. 20, 2008, pet. denied) (mem.
op.)).    The high court gave as an example of such conduct an attorney’s
participation in a fraudulent business scheme with the attorney’s client and stated

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that the Poole court had found such acts to be “‘entirely foreign to the duties of an
attorney.’” Id. (quoting Poole, 58 Tex. at 138). The Cantey Hanger court also
suggested that other examples of such conduct include the fact pattern in Essex
Crane Rental Corp. v. Carter and a situation in which an attorney commits
physical assault during trial. See id. (citing Essex Crane Rental Corp. v. Carter,
371 S.W.3d 366, 382 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 2012, pet. denied), and
giving an example from Bradt v. West, 892 S.W.2d 56, 72 (Tex. App.—Houston
[1st Dist.] 1994, writ denied)).

      The high court disapproved of cases in which a court concluded that
attorneys still are subject to liability to opposing parties based on fraud committed
by the attorneys in the course of representing their clients. See id. at 483–84. The
Cantey Hanger court generally approved of a line of cases exemplified by the
Alpert case. See id. at 483–84. The high court indicated that (1) an attorney’s
knowing commission of a fraudulent act “outside the scope of his legal
representation of the client” is actionable; and (2) an attorney’s participation in
“independently fraudulent activities” is considered “foreign to the duties of an
attorney” and is not shielded from liability. See id. at 483–85. The Cantey Hanger
court stated that fraud is not an exception to attorney immunity but that the
immunity defense does not extend to fraudulent conduct that is outside the scope of
an attorney’s legal representation of the attorney’s client, just as it does not extend
to other wrongful conduct outside the scope of representation. See id. at 483–84.
The high court concluded that an attorney who pleads the affirmative defense of
attorney immunity has the burden to prove that the attorney’s alleged wrongful
conduct, even if it is alleged to be fraudulent, is part of the discharge of the
attorney’s duties to the client. See id. at 484.
      The Cantey Hanger court disagreed with the court of appeals’s conclusion

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that intentional misrepresentations made by an attorney for the purpose of
conferring a benefit on the attorney’s client are outside the scope of the attorney’s
duties to the client. See id. at 485. The high court indicated that an attorney’s
conduct may be fraudulent but still fall within the scope of the attorney’s
representation of the client. See id. The Cantey Hanger court held that the law
firm was entitled to summary judgment on its defense of attorney immunity
because the law firm conclusively established that its allegedly fraudulent conduct
was within the scope of its representation of a client in divorce proceedings and
was not foreign to the duties of an attorney. See id.
      In part of the Cantey Hanger opinion, the court appears to say that a
defendant asserting attorney immunity in a litigation context need only
conclusively prove that the allegedly actionable conduct, even if it is alleged to be
fraudulent, was part of the discharge of the attorney’s duties to the client in the
litigation context. See id. at 483–84. Given the high court’s conclusion that an
attorney’s fraudulent misrepresentations still may fall within the scope of the
attorney’s representation of the client, if this were the only requirement for
attorney immunity, then an attorney would enjoy complete immunity from civil
liability for all conduct committed during the representation of a client in litigation,
even if the conduct is fraudulent (hereinafter “Complete Immunity Rule”). See id.
at 483–85.
      Another part of the Cantey Hanger opinion appears to say that a defendant
asserting attorney immunity in a litigation context must prove conclusively that (1)
the allegedly actionable conduct, even if it is alleged to be fraudulent, was part of
the discharge of the attorney’s duties to the client in the litigation context; and (2)
the allegedly actionable conduct was not “foreign to the duties of an attorney”
(hereinafter “Partial Immunity Rule”). See id. at 485. Under this rule, an attorney
would be immune from civil liability for fraudulent conduct committed by the
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attorney while representing a client in litigation if the fraudulent conduct was not
“foreign to the duties of an attorney” but, the attorney would not be immune from
civil liability for fraudulent conduct that was “foreign to the duties of an attorney.”
See id. To apply the Partial Immunity Rule, courts would need to distinguish
between conduct “foreign to the duties of an attorney” and conduct not foreign to
these duties. Yet, in the Cantey Hanger opinion, the supreme court does not
articulate a legal standard for making this determination. See id. at 482–85. Two
possible standards that could be used are (1) whether the conduct falls within the
three examples of conduct “foreign to the duties of an attorney” apparently
provided by the Cantey Hanger court or (2) whether the alleged conduct is
fraudulent conduct based on an “independent duty” to the claimant together with
justifiable reliance on the attorney’s alleged representation or act, which is a
standard applied by the Alpert court. See id. at 482; Alpert, 178 S.W.3d at 408.
         U.S. Bank alleges Sheena’s actions in disbursing settlement funds obtained
from an insurance company constitute a fraudulent transfer, conversion, tortious
interference with contract, and conspiracy. The alleged conduct is that Sheena
placed settlement funds into his trust account and then disbursed the funds at his
client’s direction, but without considering a third party’s alleged interest in the
funds.     Sheena disbursed settlement funds to himself, as part of his earned
attorney’s fee, and Sheena disbursed the remainder of the settlement funds in
accordance with the dictates of his client. Under the Cantey Hanger case, the
summary-judgment evidence conclusively proves that Sheena’s allegedly
actionable conduct was part of Sheena’s discharge of his duties to his client in the
litigation context. See Cantey Hanger, LLP, 467 S.W.3d at 484–86. Thus, if the
Complete Immunity Rule applies, then the summary-judgment evidence
conclusively proves that Sheena is entitled to judgment as a matter of law as to all
of U.S. Bank’s claims based on the attorney-immunity defense. See id.
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      Under the Partial Immunity Rule, this court also would have to determine
whether the allegedly actionable conduct was “foreign to the duties of an attorney.”
See id. at 485. The three examples of such conduct provided by the Cantey
Hanger court appear to be: (1) participation in a fraudulent business scheme with a
client outside the litigation context, (2) the fact pattern in Essex Crane Rental
Corp. v. Carter—allegedly drafting and filing fraudulent legal documents in a non-
litigation context, for the purpose of conspiring to hide the client’s assets from
judgment creditors in violation of the Uniform Fraudulent Transfer Act and (3) a
physical assault committed by the attorney during trial. See id. at 482; Essex
Crane Rental Corp. v. Carter, 371 S.W.3d 366, 382 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st
Dist.] 2012, pet. denied). Under the Cantey Hanger case, the summary-judgment
evidence conclusively proved that Sheena’s allegedly actionable conduct does not
fall within any of these three categories. See Cantey Hanger, LLP, 467 S.W.3d at
482–85.    When the Alpert court spoke of an independent duty owed by the
claimant to the attorney, it does not appear that the Alpert court intended to include
in this category a duty by the attorney not to engage in fraudulent
misrepresentation or a fraudulent transfer in the litigation context. See Alpert, 178
S.W.3d at 405–08. Therefore, to the extent the Cantey Hanger court meant to
incorporate the Alpert legal standard for conduct “foreign to the duties of an
attorney,” the summary-judgment evidence conclusively proved that Sheena’s
allegedly actionable conduct is not “foreign to the duties of an attorney” under this
standard. See id. at 482–486; Alpert, 178 S.W.3d at 408. Thus, we conclude that, if
the Partial Immunity Rule applies, Sheena conclusively proves that (1) all of the
allegedly actionable conduct was part of the discharge of Sheena’s duties to his
client in the litigation context; and (2) none of the allegedly actionable conduct was
“foreign to the duties of an attorney.” See Cantey Hanger, LLP, 467 S.W.3d at
482–86.
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      Under Cantey Hanger, whether the Complete Immunity Rule applies or the
Partial Immunity Rule applies, the summary-judgment evidence conclusively
proves that Sheena is entitled to judgment as a matter of law as to all of U.S.
Bank’s claims based on the attorney-immunity defense. See id. Accordingly, we
overrule U.S. Bank’s appellate issues and affirm the trial court’s judgment.

                                       /s/    Kem Thompson Frost
                                              Chief Justice

Panel consists of Chief Justice Frost and Justices Jamison and Busby.

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