Antioch St. Johns Cemetery Company D/B/A American Memorial Park, Grand Prairie, Texas Gerald Weatherall And Beverly Randall-Weatherall v. Texas Department of Banking Commissioner ( 2016 )


Menu:
  •       TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN
    NO. 03-15-00341-CV
    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
    FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF TRAVIS COUNTY, 261ST JUDICIAL DISTRICT
    NO. D-1-GN-14-000367, HONORABLE SCOTT H. JENKINS, JUDGE PRESIDING
    MEMORANDUM OPINION
    Antioch St. Johns Cemetery d/b/a American Memorial Park, Grand Prairie, Texas
    (“Antioch”); Gerald Weatherall; and Beverly Randall-Weatherall filed suit in Travis County district
    court seeking judicial review of an order signed by the Commissioner of the Texas Department of
    Banking assessing administrative penalties in the amount of $56,000 for violations of certain
    provisions of the Texas Health and Safety Code and Texas Finance Commission rules governing the
    operation of perpetual care cemeteries. See Tex. Health & Safety Code §§ 711.001-.062 (general
    provisions relating to cemeteries), 712.001-.068 (perpetual care cemeteries); 7 Tex. Admin. Code
    § 26.2 (2016) (Texas Dep’t of Banking, What Records am I Required to Maintain?). The trial court
    affirmed the Commissioner’s order. We will affirm.
    BACKGROUND
    In 2009, Gerald Weatherall and Beverly Randall-Weatherall purchased and began
    operating Antioch St. Johns Cemetery d/b/a American Memorial Park, Grand Prairie, a “perpetual
    care cemetery.”1 The Texas Department of Banking, a state agency operating under the oversight
    of the Finance Commission of Texas, has enforcement authority over perpetual care cemeteries. See
    Tex. Health & Safety Code §§ 712.0441 (after notice and opportunity, the commissioner may impose
    administrative penalties for violations of chapter 712), .001 (“commissioner” in chapter 712 means
    the Banking Commissioner of Texas). The Banking Commissioner, after notice and opportunity for
    hearing, has the authority to impose an administrative penalty on a person who violates chapters
    711 or 712 of the Health and Safety Code, a final order of the Commissioner, or a rule of the
    Texas Finance Commission. See 
    id. §§ 711.053,
    711.055, 711.056, 712.0441, 712.0442. The
    administrative penalty assessed may not exceed $1,000 for each day the violation occurs. 
    Id. §§ 711.055,
    712.0441.
    In September 2011, the Department conducted an onsite examination of Antioch’s
    operations through June 2011 and identified the following alleged violations:
    C       failure to accurately identify the plots in which remains were interred in
    Antioch’s interment records;
    C       failure to record the final disposition of cemetery plot purchase agreements
    on Antioch’s historical contract register;
    1
    A “perpetual care cemetery” is defined as “a cemetery for the benefit of which a perpetual
    care trust fund is established” for maintenance of the cemetery. See Tex. Health & Safety Code
    § 711.001(24). “Perpetual care” means the “maintenance, repair, and care of all places in the
    cemetery.” 
    Id. § 711.001(23).
    2
    C       failure to maintain separate property files in the names of purchasers of
    cemetery plots;
    C       failure to maintain a financial statement that substantiated Antioch’s use of
    perpetual care trust fund income;
    C       failure to accurately calculate the amount of perpetual care funds to
    be deposited;
    C       failure to accurately deposit required perpetual care funds no later than the
    20th day after the end of the month in which the original cemetery plot
    purchase agreement was paid in full;
    C       failure to disclose on the cemetery plot purchase agreements the correct
    amount of perpetual care funds to be deposited in the perpetual care
    trust fund;
    C       failure to maintain monthly recapitulations of all interment rights issued;
    C       selling cemetery property prior to filing accurate plat maps with the county
    clerk’s office; and
    C       failure to issue conveyance documents as required on paid-in-full cemetery
    property and to file those conveyance documents in Antioch’s office.
    See 
    id. §§ 711.003(4),
    711.034, 711.038; 712.028(a), 712.029. After a follow-up “limited scope”
    audit, the Department identified an additional alleged violation of failing to maintain Antioch’s
    minimum capital requirement. See 
    id. § 712.0037.
    The Department notified Antioch of its findings
    in a Report of Examination provided in April 2012. According to the Department, Antioch did not
    correct the violations by the 31st day after it received the Report of Examination.
    In March 2012, Antioch’s certificate of authority to operate a perpetual care cemetery
    was due for renewal. See 
    id. § 712.0032
    (corporation must hold certificate of authority issued under
    chapter 712 to operate perpetual care cemetery). As a condition of renewal, a certificate holder must
    3
    meet all the requirements that apply to a new applicant. See 
    id. § 712.0037(a)
    (renewal of certificate
    of authority). Some of the conditions that apply to a new applicant are that it have the “business
    ability, experience, character, financial condition, and general fitness” to warrant the public’s
    confidence. See 
    id. § 712.0034(b)(1).
    The issuance of the certificate of authority must also be in the
    public interest. 
    Id. § 712.0034(b)(3).
    Antioch’s internally prepared financial statement as of
    December 31, 2011 revealed that it had a negative $21,700 equity position. For that reason, the
    Department determined that Antioch did not have the financial condition to warrant renewal of its
    certificate of authority.
    Because of Antioch’s financial condition and what it considered to be outstanding
    violations, the Department did not renew Antioch’s certificate of authority. Despite the non-renewal,
    however, Weatherall continued to operate Antioch without a certificate of authority. In May 2012,
    the Commissioner issued an emergency order requiring Weatherall and Randall-Weatherall to,
    among other things, cease and desist from all cemetery operations except for burials of persons who
    owned cemetery plots as of the date of the order. See 
    id. § 712.0441(e)
    (commissioner may issue
    order to cease and desist if violation has not been corrected within 30 days after receipt of written
    notice from commissioner of violation).         Antioch was also ordered to provide recorded
    documentation to the Department of any allowed burial it performed within two days of such burial.
    According to the Department, Antioch violated the cease and desist order by performing a burial in
    June 2012 and failing to send the required documentation to the Department.
    In June 2013, the Department held a hearing to determine whether to assess
    administrative penalties against Antioch, Weatherall, in his individual capacity and as Antioch’s
    4
    President, and Randall-Weatherall, as Antioch’s Vice-President.           After the hearing, the
    Administrative Law Judge (ALJ) prepared a Proposal for Decision that included his findings that the
    condition of the cemetery property had deteriorated after Weatherall began operating Antioch,
    specifically that the maintenance of the property was very poor, there was inadequate signage at the
    entrance, sections within the cemetery were not adequately marked, and graves had collapsed,
    creating deep sink holes. The ALJ also found numerous deficiencies in Antioch’s records of the
    locations of burials and the identity of persons interred in cemetery plots and that the evidence
    supported the numerous violations identified by the Department in its Record of Examination,
    including that Weatherall violated the Commissioner’s cease and desist order.
    The ALJ found that although Weatherall had 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 violations during the time he was responsible for Antioch’s
    operations established a pattern of wilful disregard for the requirements of the law applicable to
    perpetual care cemeteries. The ALJ found:
    The continued 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, of combinations of an inability to
    accomplish and inattention to the accomplishment 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 demand from the 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.
    5
    The ALJ concluded that the evidence presented supported the assessment of an administrative
    penalty in the amount of $70,000 against Weatherall, as the person responsible for Antioch’s
    operations, for the violations.2 Based on the evidence, including the facts that the Department had
    already acted on the violations by not renewing the certificate of authority, that the cemetery
    company was no longer in business, and that Weatherall and Randall-Weatherall no longer owned
    the cemetery property or conducted cemetery operations, the ALJ recommended an administrative
    penalty not to exceed $56,000.
    The Commissioner adopted the ALJ’s findings of fact and conclusions of law in their
    entirety and concluded that an administrative penalty in the amount of $56,000 was justified and
    appropriate under the relevant factors. The Commissioner assessed a $56,000 administrative penalty
    2
    The Commissioner adopted the ALJ’s finding that:
    Gerald Weatherall, Sr., 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.
    The Commissioner also adopted the ALJ’s conclusion 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.
    Weatherall does not challenge that finding or conclusion.
    6
    against Antioch and Weatherall, in his individual capacity and in his capacity as Antioch’s
    former President.3     Antioch, Weatherall, and Randall-Weatherall timely filed a motion for
    rehearing asserting:
    To the extent that the Movants disagree with the penalties assessed against the
    individual movants in their individual capacities, and that such penalties do not
    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.
    The Commissioner overruled the motion for rehearing and this appeal followed. In one issue,
    Antioch, Weatherall, and Randall-Weatherall assert that “the [ALJ]’s findings of fact and
    conclusions of law and penalties assessed against the Appellants for violations of the Texas Health
    and Safety code” were not “warranted with the facts submitted to the ALJ during a contested case
    hearing.”
    DISCUSSION
    Section 2001.174 of the Texas Government Code provides the standard for judicial
    review of the Commissioner’s order. See Tex. Gov’t Code § 2001.174. Under this standard we may
    not, with respect to questions committed to its discretion, substitute our judgment on the weight of
    the evidence for that of the agency. 
    Id. We must,
    however, reverse an order if it prejudices
    substantial rights because its findings, inferences, conclusions, or decisions (1) violate a
    3
    The Commissioner agreed that although Randall-Weatherall was Antioch’s Vice-President,
    she did not have an active role in or have responsibility for the cemetery operations or the cemetery
    company and therefore he did not assess, or order her to pay, any administrative penalties.
    7
    constitutional or statutory provision; (2) exceed statutory authority; (3) were made through unlawful
    procedure; (4) were affected by other error of law; (5) are not reasonably supported by substantial
    evidence considering the reliable and probative evidence in the record as a whole; or (6) are arbitrary
    or capricious or characterized by an abuse of discretion or a clearly unwarranted exercise of
    discretion. 
    Id. An agency
    order is presumed to be valid and is supported by substantial evidence if
    the evidence in its entirety is sufficient to allow reasonable minds to have reached the conclusion the
    agency must have reached to justify the disputed action. Texas State Bd. of Dental Exam’rs
    v. Sizemore, 
    759 S.W.2d 114
    , 116 (Tex. 1988). The party challenging the order has the burden of
    demonstrating a lack of substantial evidence. CenterPoint Energy Entex v. Railroad Comm’n of
    Tex., 
    213 S.W.3d 364
    , 369 (Tex. App.—Austin 2006, no pet.) (citing City of El Paso v. Public Util.
    Comm’n, 
    883 S.W.2d 179
    , 185 (Tex. 1994)).
    On appeal, Antioch, Weatherall, and Randall-Weatherall do not challenge any of the
    Commissioner’s findings that there were numerous and persistent violations of various provisions
    of the Texas Health and Safety Code.4 Nor do they challenge the finding that Weatherall violated
    the cease and desist order. Rather, they maintain that, because the Commissioner found that
    Weatherall had addressed the Department’s concerns regarding the violations of the Health and
    Safety Code and repaid the perpetual cemetery trust fund, it could not also find that Weatherall
    showed a “pattern of wilful disregard for the requirements of the law that applies to perpetual care
    4
    Moreover, having failed to challenge any specific findings of fact in the motion for
    rehearing, any such complaints have been waived. See BFI Waste Sys. of N. Am. v. Martinez Envt’l
    Group, 
    93 S.W.3d 570
    , 578 (Tex. App.—Austin 2002, pet. denied) (to preserve error motion for
    rehearing must set forth particular finding of fact, conclusion of law, ruling, or other agency action
    which complaining party asserts was error and legal basis upon which claim of error rests).
    8
    cemeteries.” Thus, according to Weatherall, the Commissioner’s findings are not supported by the
    evidence and the assessment of an administrative penalty was arbitrary and capricious.
    As previously set forth, findings that the evidence at the hearing established numerous
    and persistent violations of laws and regulations governing perpetual care cemeteries have not been
    challenged on appeal. The Commissioner found:
    Although Mr. Weatherall has 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 violations 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.
    Thus, the Commissioner did not, as Weatherall suggests, find that Weatherall “addressed the
    agency’s concerns.” Rather, it expressly found that although he attempted to address violations
    brought to his attention, he did not correct all the violations and continued to repeat those violations
    throughout the time he was responsible for Antioch’s operations. Moreover, Texas Health and
    Safety Code section 712.0442 provides that corrected violations may be included in determining
    whether a pattern of wilful disregard exists. See Tex. Health & Safety Code § 712.0442(b). Thus,
    the fact that Weatherall corrected some of the violations identified by the Department would not
    preclude the Commissioner’s finding that his conduct established a pattern of wilful disregard for
    the statutory requirements applicable to perpetual care cemeteries. The Commissioner’s Final Order
    reveals that he did in fact consider mitigating factors and assessed a $56,000 penalty instead of the
    $70,000 penalty that the ALJ found was supported by the evidence under the provisions of Health
    and Safety Code sections 711.055, 711.056, 712.0441, and 712.0442. These factors included that
    9
    (1) the Department had already acted on the violations by not renewing the certificate of authority,
    (2) Antioch was no longer in business, and (3) Weatherall and Randall-Weatherall no longer owned
    the cemetery property or conducted cemetery operations. The penalty was supported by the evidence
    and its assessment was not arbitrary or capricious.
    Antioch, Weatherall, and Randall-Weatherall also argue that the Commissioner
    committed an error of law by assessing penalties against Weatherall and Randall-Weatherall
    individually for Antioch’s liability. As an initial matter, the Commissioner did not assess penalties
    against Randall-Weatherall at all. For his part, Weatherall claims that, as Antioch’s President, he
    is shielded from individual liability for administrative penalties assessed against Antioch, a
    corporation, unless the evidence establishes that the corporation has been used to perpetuate a fraud.
    See Tex. Bus. Orgs. Code § 21.223(a) (owner of corporation not liable for certain obligations of
    corporation), (b) (owner of corporation may be liable for corporation’s contractual obligations or any
    matter relating to or arising from those obligations if it is demonstrated that owner caused
    corporation to be used for purpose of perpetrating and did perpetrate actual fraud on obligee
    primarily for direct personal benefit of owner). But the Department did not seek to impose liability
    on Weatherall on the theory that he could be held individually liable for Antioch’s corporate conduct.
    Instead, the Department sought administrative penalties against Weatherall individually based on his
    own personal conduct. The Commissioner found that Weatherall himself violated various provisions
    of the Texas Health and Safety Code and that he violated the Commissioner’s cease and desist order.
    The Commissioner assessed penalties against him for that conduct. Weatherall has not challenged
    10
    the Commissioner’s findings in that regard, nor does he argue in this appeal that the Commissioner
    did not have the authority to assess penalties against him based on his own violations of the statute.
    CONCLUSION
    Having concluded that the Commissioner’s assessment of civil penalties against
    Antioch and against Weatherall individually was supported by substantial evidence, was not arbitrary
    or capricious, and was not in contravention of the protection from liability afforded by the Business
    Organizations Code, we overrule the sole appellate issue and affirm the trial court’s judgment.
    _____________________________________________
    Scott K. Field, Justice
    Before Chief Justice Rose, Justices Pemberton and Field
    Affirmed
    Filed: June 30, 2016
    11
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 03-15-00341-CV

Filed Date: 6/30/2016

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 7/6/2016