Jeffrey R. Vaughan v. Raul Medina and Law Offices of Raul Medina, P.C. ( 2024 )


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  •                           NUMBER 13-23-00402-CV
    COURT OF APPEALS
    THIRTEENTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS
    CORPUS CHRISTI – EDINBURG
    JEFFREY R. VAUGHAN,                                                          Appellant,
    v.
    RAUL MEDINA AND LAW OFFICES
    OF RAUL MEDINA, P.C.,                                                        Appellees.
    ON APPEAL FROM THE 430TH DISTRICT COURT
    OF HIDALGO COUNTY, TEXAS
    MEMORANDUM OPINION
    Before Chief Justice Contreras and Justices Longoria and Peña
    Memorandum Opinion by Chief Justice Contreras
    In this long-running dispute between two attorneys, appellant Jeffrey R. Vaughan
    challenges the trial court’s judgment which, in part, awarded him $5,950 in attorney’s fees
    to be paid by appellees Raul Medina and Law Offices of Raul Medina, P.C. (collectively
    Medina). By four issues, Vaughan argues: (1) the trial court erred by submitting issues to
    the jury “that did not ask the jury to award [Medina] recoverable attorney fees”; (2) the
    trial court erred by “limiting [Medina’s] jury issues on attorney’s fees solely to fraudulent
    misrepresentation and negligent misrepresentation”; (3) the trial court erred by excluding
    Vaughan’s attorney’s billing records; and (4) the award of $5,950 in fees was against the
    great weight and preponderance of the evidence. We affirm in part and reverse and
    remand in part.
    I.      BACKGROUND
    Prior to 2012, Vaughan and Medina were friends and worked together on personal
    injury cases. In April of 2012, Medina agreed to loan Vaughan $300,000 so that Vaughan
    could pay a federal tax debt. 1 In connection with the loan, Vaughan drafted a “Promissory
    Note and Assignment” which stated in part that Vaughan “promises to pay [Medina]
    $357,000.00 on or before December 31, 2012.” The note further stated that, “[t]o secure
    the loan of $300,000.00 from [Medina], [Vaughan] is assigning his personal interest in the
    following assets as [sic] up to the amount that will be due and owed to [Medina] . . . .” The
    assigned “assets” were several pending personal injury cases in which both Vaughan and
    Medina were involved. 2 The note was signed by Vaughan but not by Medina.
    Vaughan satisfied his tax debt with the loaned funds. However, the cases which
    were listed as collateral in the note did not produce the expected amount of settlement
    proceeds. As a result, Vaughan did not repay the loan before December 31, 2012, and
    1 Medina acted with his associate Pierre Newkirk. Newkirk was initially named as a defendant in
    Vaughan’s lawsuit but was later non-suited and is not a party to this appeal.
    2 Specifically, the note listed “Avandia Settlement of 148 cases” (referring to a global settlement of
    class-action litigation involving a pharmaceutical) as well as three additional cases then pending in Hidalgo
    and Cameron Counties.
    2
    he only made $35,000 in payments over the next two years. From then on, the former
    friends became perennial combatants in litigation. 3
    First, Vaughan filed suit in the 190th District Court of Harris County in 2015,
    alleging that: (1) Medina negligently failed to preserve the value of the cases listed as
    collateral assets in the note; (2) Medina refused to pay for 300 hours of legal work that
    Vaughan had performed for Medina, which Vaughan argued should be offset against the
    amount he owed under the note; and (3) the interest rate on the note—which Vaughan
    alone drafted and signed—was usurious. Meanwhile, Medina sued Vaughan in Hidalgo
    County to collect on the note. He raised claims for breach of the note, breach of fiduciary
    duty, negligent misrepresentation, and fraudulent inducement. Medina’s live petition also
    named Vaughan’s law firm, Villalobos & Vaughan, PLLC (V&V), as a defendant.
    Vaughan’s claims were eventually transferred to Hidalgo County and the cases were
    consolidated.
    Prior to trial in 2018, the parties stipulated that Vaughan breached the note, and
    Medina withdrew his negligent misrepresentation and fraudulent inducement claims. After
    trial, a jury found, among other things: (1) Medina did not negligently fail to “preserve the
    collateral” specified in the note; (2) Vaughan did not perform compensable legal work for
    Medina for which he was uncompensated; (3) a reasonable fee for the necessary services
    of Vaughan’s attorney “[f]or representation in the trial court” was $163,875; and (4) a
    reasonable fee for the necessary services of Medina and his trial counsel Mario
    Rodriguez “for the failure to pay the promissory note” was $162,315. The trial court signed
    3 In its final judgment, the trial court noted that “the parties dislike each other and frequently cannot
    agree on the most elementary and non-controversial issues in a lawsuit.”
    3
    a judgment finding that Vaughan breached the note and that the total amount due
    thereunder was $441,573.53 as of April 1, 2018. The judgment also awarded Medina
    attorney’s fees in accordance with the jury’s verdict, plus interest and conditional
    appellate attorney’s fees. It did not award Vaughan attorney’s fees.
    Vaughan appealed. See Vaughan v. Medina, No. 13-18-00266-CV, 
    2020 WL 1951441
     (Tex. App.—Corpus Christi–Edinburg Apr. 23, 2020, pet. denied) (mem. op.). 4
    We held in part that (1) Medina had the individual capacity to collect on the note, (2) the
    evidence was factually sufficient to support the jury’s finding that Medina did not
    negligently fail to preserve the collateral, (3) Vaughan failed to adequately brief his issue
    contending that the note was usurious, and (4) the trial court did not err by failing to award
    attorney’s fees to Vaughan for his usury claim. 
    Id.
     at *3–10. However, we also held that
    (1) Vaughan conclusively established his claim for quantum meruit based on
    uncompensated legal work, and (2) the evidence was factually insufficient to support the
    award of attorney’s fees to Medina because Medina did not segregate recoverable from
    non-recoverable fees. 
    Id.
     at *4–6, *8–10. In light of our conclusions, we reversed the
    judgment in part and remanded to the trial court: (1) “to determine the value of Vaughan’s
    labor in his quantum meruit claim”; (2) to determine Vaughan’s “attorney’s fees for that
    claim, if any”; and (3) for “segregation of Medina and [his trial counsel’s] attorneys’ fees
    4 In a separate case arising out of the underlying suit, we partially granted a petition for writ of
    mandamus filed by Vaughan concerning discovery in a post-judgment proceeding under Texas Rule of
    Appellate Procedure 24. See In re Vaughan, No. 13-18-00541-CV, 
    2019 WL 962381
    , at *7 (Tex. App.—
    Corpus Christi–Edinburg Feb. 27, 2019, orig. proceeding [mand. denied]) (mem. op.) (concluding in part
    that the trial court abused its discretion by ordering the production of income tax returns and 1099 forms).
    4
    for those causes of action for which fees may not be recovered and for those causes of
    action that were abandoned.” Id. at *11. 5
    At trial on remand, Medina testified that, out of 388.3 total hours he spent on the
    case since 2015, only four were spent prosecuting the negligent misrepresentation and
    fraudulent inducement claims. Vaughan’s attorney George Bishop stated that his fees for
    representing Vaughan in this matter since 2015 totaled $185,000—and of that amount,
    $130,000 was for work that was inextricably intertwined with Vaughn’s quantum meruit
    claim. See Kinsel v. Lindsey, 
    526 S.W.3d 411
    , 427 (Tex. 2017) (noting that a party must
    segregate recoverable from non-recoverable fees except “when the fees are based on
    claims arising out of the same transaction that are so intertwined and inseparable as to
    make segregation impossible”). Vaughan offered Bishop’s billing records as evidence,
    but the trial court excluded them. Ultimately, the jury found: (1) the reasonable value of
    compensable legal work provided by Vaughan to Medina is $19,200; (2) the reasonable
    fee for Bishop as to Vaughan’s quantum meruit claim is $5,950 for trial court work, but $0
    for any appeal; and (3) Medina and his trial counsel spent a total of four hours on his
    “abandoned claims of fraudulent inducement and negligent misrepresentation.”
    On June 13, 2023, the trial court signed a final judgment providing: (1) as of
    October 24, 2019, Vaughan owed $483,095.01 including interest under the 2018
    judgment; (2) Vaughan paid $300,000 on October 24, 2019, leaving a balance of
    $183,095.01; (3) Medina is entitled to $161,115 in attorney’s fees “for the trial of this
    cause,” not including the four hours spent on the fraudulent inducement and negligent
    5 We take judicial notice of the record filed in the earlier appeal. See TEX. R. EVID. 201; Gerdes v.
    Kennamer, 
    155 S.W.3d 541
    , 546 (Tex. App.—Corpus Christi–Edinburg 2004, no pet.) (noting that an
    appellate court may take judicial notice of its own files involving the same subject matter between the same
    parties).
    5
    misrepresentation claims; (4) Vaughan is entitled to $19,200 from Medina on his quantum
    meruit claim; and (5) Vaughan is entitled to attorney’s fees of $5,950 “for the trial of this
    case.” The judgment also awarded conditional appellate attorney’s fees to both Medina
    and Vaughan. 6 This appeal followed.
    II.     DISCUSSION
    A.      Award of Fees to Medina
    By his first issue, Vaughan argues the trial court erred by “submitting issues to the
    jury that did not ask the jury to award [Medina] attorney’s fees.” More precisely, he claims
    that Medina waived his right to recover attorney’s fees under Texas Rule of Civil
    Procedure 279 because he failed to request a question in the jury charge regarding the
    total amount of fees he incurred since the inception of the case. See TEX. R. CIV. P. 279
    (“Upon appeal all independent grounds of recovery or of defense not conclusively
    established under the evidence and no element of which is submitted or requested are
    waived.”). Instead, Questions No. 3 and 4 of the charge asked only how many hours were
    attributable to Medina’s fraudulent inducement and negligent misrepresentation claims,
    and the judgment awarded fees to Medina based in part on those findings.
    As noted, Medina’s live petition at the time of the 2018 trial included claims for
    breach of contract, fraudulent inducement, and negligent misrepresentation, but Medina
    6 Specifically, the judgment awarded Medina $7,500 “for a successful appeal” to this Court, $5,000
    “in the event of a successful appeal or petition for review to the Texas Supreme Court,” and $15,000 “for
    successful briefing and successful argument before the Texas Supreme Court.” As to Vaughan, the
    judgment awarded $15,000 “for a successful appeal” to this Court, $10,000 “in the event of a successful
    appeal for representation at the [p]etition for [r]eview stage in the Texas Supreme Court,” $15,000 “for
    representation and successful appeal at the merits briefing stage in the Texas Supreme Court,” and
    $10,000 “in the event of a successful appeal for representation through oral arguments and the completion
    of the proceedings in the Texas Supreme Court.” Medina did not file a notice of appeal and does not
    challenge the trial court’s award of conditional appellate fees to Vaughan despite the absence of a
    corresponding jury finding.
    6
    abandoned the latter two claims prior to the 2018 judgment. Vaughan challenged the
    award of fees to Medina in his 2018 appeal, and we held in part that “Medina cannot
    recover attorney’s fees on his claims for fraudulent inducement and negligent
    misrepresentation,” even though “evidence supporting th[os]e claims was included at
    trial.” Vaughan, 
    2020 WL 1951441
    , at *9 (citing Chevron Phillips Chem. Co. v. Kingwood
    Crossroads, L.P., 
    346 S.W.3d 37
    , 69 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] 2011, pet. denied)
    (holding that attorney’s fees are not recoverable for prosecuting a fraud or negligent
    misrepresentation claim)). Although we found legally sufficient evidence to support the
    fee award to Medina, we could not discern from the record “how much time Medina spent
    on his abandoned tort claims”; therefore, we “remanded to the trial court to determine
    segregation.” 
    Id.
     at *9–11.
    Vaughan cites Tony Gullo Motors I, L.P. v. Chapa, 
    212 S.W.3d 299
    , 314 (Tex.
    2006), in which the Texas Supreme Court held that, when “at least some of the attorney’s
    fees are attributable only to claims for which fees are not recoverable, segregation of fees
    ought to be required and the jury ought to decide the rest.” (emphasis supplied by
    Vaughan). He essentially argues that Medina cannot recover fees now because the 2023
    jury was never asked to make a determination as to the total amount of fees he incurred,
    from which the unrecoverable fees could be subtracted. 7
    7 In response, Medina argues in part that we “did not reverse the award of attorney’s fees and
    costs” to him in our 2020 opinion, and therefore, had the trial court required him to obtain a jury finding on
    the total amount of fees incurred, that would have exceeded the scope of our mandate on remand. See
    Cessna Aircraft Co. v. Aircraft Network, LLC, 
    345 S.W.3d 139
    , 144 (Tex. App.—Dallas 2011, no pet.)
    (“When an appellate court remands a case with specific instructions, the trial court is limited to complying
    with the instructions and cannot re-litigate issues controverted at the former trial.”). However, we did reverse
    the award of attorney’s fees to him on grounds of factual sufficiency. See Vaughan v. Medina, No. 13-18-
    00266-CV, 
    2020 WL 1951441
    , at *10–11 (Tex. App.—Corpus Christi–Edinburg Apr. 23, 2020, pet. denied)
    (mem. op.) (stating that we “reverse and remand in part” for the trial court to “determine segregation”); Dal-
    Chrome Co. v. Brenntag Sw., Inc., 
    183 S.W.3d 133
    , 145 (Tex. App.—Dallas 2006, no pet.) (“[Appellant’s]
    7
    We disagree that Medina waived his right to recover attorney’s fees by failing to
    request a jury question on the total amount of fees he incurred. Texas Rule of Civil
    Procedure 279 states:
    When a ground of recovery or defense consists of more than one element,
    if one or more of such elements necessary to sustain such ground of
    recovery or defense, and necessarily referable thereto, are submitted to and
    found by the jury, and one or more of such elements are omitted from the
    charge, without request or objection, and there is factually sufficient
    evidence to support a finding thereon, the trial court, at the request of either
    party, may after notice and hearing and at any time before the judgment is
    rendered, make and file written findings on such omitted element or
    elements in support of the judgment. If no such written findings are made,
    such omitted element or elements shall be deemed found by the court in
    such manner as to support the judgment.
    TEX. R. CIV. P. 279 (emphasis added). Here, although Medina did not seek a jury question
    asking for the total amount of hours spent or attorney’s fees incurred, the jury charge did
    ask how many hours were attributable to the abandoned causes of action, and as we held
    in 2020, segregation of fees is a necessary “element” of Medina’s attorney’s fees claim. 8
    See id.; Vaughan, 
    2020 WL 1951441
    , at *9; see also Tony Gullo Motors I, 212 S.W.3d at
    314 (“Unsegregated attorney’s fees for the entire case are some evidence of what the
    argument that [appellee] failed to segregate its attorneys’ fees raises an issue as to the factual sufficiency
    of the evidence to support the jury’s finding of the reasonable amount of [appellee’s] attorneys’ fees for
    presenting its counterclaim.”).
    8 Alternatively, even if the segregation of non-recoverable fees is not considered an “element” of
    Medina’s attorney’s fees claim, the judgment was proper because Medina conclusively established his
    entitlement to the fee award. See TEX. R. CIV. P. 279 (“Upon appeal all independent grounds of recovery or
    of defense not conclusively established under the evidence and no element of which is submitted or
    requested are waived.”) (emphasis added); McMillin v. State Farm Lloyds, 
    180 S.W.3d 183
    , 210 (Tex.
    App.—Austin 2005, pet. denied) (holding that, “where trial counsel’s testimony concerning attorney’s fees
    is clear, positive and direct, and uncontroverted, it is taken as true as a matter of law” and “in such instances,
    appellate courts will reverse a denial or minimization of attorney’s fees and render judgment for attorney's
    fees in the amount proved”) (citing Ragsdale v. Progressive Voters League, 
    801 S.W.2d 880
    , 882 (Tex.
    1990)).
    8
    segregated amount should be.”). And Vaughan does not contest the sufficiency of the
    evidence to support the fee award to Medina. See TEX. R. CIV. P. 279. 9
    Because “one or more” of the elements of Medina’s attorney’s fees claim was
    submitted to and found by the jury—and because, between the 2018 and 2023 trials,
    there was factually sufficient evidence to support the award of fees to Medina—we deem
    the total amount of hours to have been “found by the trial court in such manner as to
    support the judgment.” See 
    id.
     Vaughan’s first issue is overruled.
    B.       Segregation of Medina’s Fees
    By his second issue, Vaughan argues the trial court erred by “limiting [Medina]’s
    jury issues on attorney’s fees solely to fraudulent misrepresentation and negligent
    misrepresentation.” See TEX. R. CIV. P. 278 (providing that, after a jury trial, the trial court
    must      submit      a    written      charge      including       all    “questions,       instructions       and
    definitions . . . which are raised by the written pleadings and the evidence”). We review
    the trial court’s decision for abuse of discretion. Shupe v. Lingafelter, 
    192 S.W.3d 577
    ,
    579 (Tex. 2006); see Samlowski v. Wooten, 
    332 S.W.3d 404
    , 410 (Tex. 2011) (noting
    that a trial court abuses its discretion when it acts in an arbitrary or unreasonable manner
    or without reference to guiding rules or principles).
    9 In 2020, we found that the evidence was legally sufficient to support the award of fees to Medina.
    Id. at *11. We note that the same judge presided over the 2018 and 2023 trials. We presume the trial court
    took judicial notice of the evidence adduced in 2018 and calculated the final fee award in 2023 based in
    part on it. See Bob Smith Bail Bonds, Sur. v. State, 
    963 S.W.2d 555
    , 556 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth 1998, no
    pet.) (“A trial court may take judicial notice of its own file at any stage of proceedings and is presumed to
    have done so with or without a request from a party.”); Vahlsing, Inc. v. Mo. Pac. R.R. Co., 
    563 S.W.2d 669
    , 674 (Tex. App.—Corpus Christi 1978, no writ) (“A trial judge judicially knows what has previously taken
    place in the case on trial . . . . This appellate court can presume that the trial court, in support of its judgment,
    took judicial notice of the matters mentioned above . . . even though the trial court was not asked to do so
    and did not formally announce that it had done so.”); see also Gardner v. Martin, 
    345 S.W.2d 274
    , 276
    (Tex. 1961) (“[A] trial court may take judicial notice of its own records in a cause involving the same subject
    matter between the same, or practically the same, parties.”).
    9
    Questions No. 3 and 4 of the charge asked how many hours of Medina’s and
    Rodriguez’s work were attributable to Medina’s “abandoned fraudulent inducement and
    negligent misrepresentation claims.” Vaughan objected to these questions at trial, but the
    trial court overruled the objection. He asserts on appeal that these questions constituted
    an “insufficient attempt at segregation” because the evidence showed that Medina
    “performed substantial work” on other “causes of action[] and claims that would not
    support an award of attorney’s fees.” 10 In particular, Vaughan contends that the total
    number of hours Medina testified to included: (1) 41.5 hours for prosecuting the claims
    against V&V; (2) 82 hours for attempting to disqualify Bishop as V&V’s counsel; and
    (3) 7.75 hours relating to third-party claims against a separate law firm. He further
    contends that Medina’s total included hours attributable to Medina’s breach of fiduciary
    duty claim, which was abandoned, and to defending against Vaughan’s quantum meruit
    claim. He argues that fees relating to these hours were not recoverable, and the jury
    should have been asked to segregate them from the total amount testified to by Medina.
    Vaughan made essentially the same argument in the 2020 appeal, and we
    addressed it then. By his ninth issue, Vaughan argued
    that Medina failed to segregate his attorneys’ fees between those fees
    incurred defending against Vaughan’s affirmative claims and claims for
    offsets and Medina’s efforts to enforce the Note, Medina’s (unsuccessful)
    efforts to disqualify Vaughan’s trial counsel, and fees incurred while Medina
    represented Newkirk.
    Vaughan, 
    2020 WL 1951441
    , at *8. We observed that, though a party seeking fees must
    “segregate work relating to recoverable and non-recoverable claims,” there is an
    10 Vaughan separately complains in his brief that Questions No. 3 and 4 “only inquired about the
    hours, not the reasonable and necessary value of two of the abandoned causes of action which [Medina]
    had pursued.” He does not support this complaint with argument or citations to authority; accordingly, we
    do not address it. See TEX. R. APP. P. 38.1(i).
    10
    “exception to the segregation rule . . . when the fees are based on claims arising out of
    the same transaction that are so intertwined and inseparable as to make segregation
    impossible.” 
    Id.
     at *9 (citing Kinsel, 526 S.W.3d at 427). We noted that “it is only when
    discrete legal services advance both a recoverable and unrecoverable claim that they are
    so intertwined that they need not be segregated.” Id. (citing Tony Gullo Motors I, 212
    S.W.3d at 313–14). “For example, to prevail on a contract claim a party must overcome
    any and all affirmative defenses (such as limitations, res judicata, or prior material
    breach), and the opposing party who raises them should not be allowed to suggest to the
    jury that overcoming those defenses was unnecessary.” Id. (citing Tony Gullo Motors I,
    212 S.W.3d at 314).
    We then analyzed whether, and to what extent, segregation of Medina’s fees was
    necessary:
    Medina, on behalf of his law firm, and his trial counsel each testified
    regarding the hours they spent, their experience, that their time was
    reasonable and necessary to prepare and defend the contract case, that
    they had been licensed more than twenty-five years, and that a reasonable
    hourly rate for their services was $300 per hour. They each submitted an
    itemized log of daily activities on the case showing the time each of them
    spent. Vaughan objected during Medina’s testimony that he had not
    segregated his time between defending against Vaughan’s claims and
    pursuing his own breach of contract case. Vaughan made the same
    objection during trial counsel’s testimony.
    At the time of trial, Vaughan was the plaintiff who asserted affirmative claims
    against Medina for: negligent destruction of collateral, usury, quantum
    meruit, and breach of oral contract for off-setting attorney’s fees. Each of
    the claims against Medina was designed to offset any monies Vaughan
    owed Medina under the Note. Medina, as the defendant and counter-
    plaintiff, asserted defenses to Vaughan’s claims and affirmative claims for
    breach of contract. Medina was entitled to recover attorneys’ fees for time
    spent defending against Vaughan’s affirmative claims to collect on the Note
    which did not have to be segregated. See Varner v. Cardenas, 
    218 S.W.3d 68
    , 69 (Tex. 2007) (holding that fees incurred in successfully defending
    against counterclaim in order to collect full amount of note need not be
    segregated); [Tony Gullo Motors I], 212 S.W.3d at 313; Anglo-Dutch
    11
    Petroleum Int[’l], Inc. v. Case Funding Network, LP, 
    441 S.W.3d 612
    , 634
    (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 2014, pet. denied) (holding that “to prove
    their entitlement to recover for Anglo-Dutch’s breach of the investment
    agreements, the release investors had to overcome Anglo–Dutch’s
    counterclaims. Attorneys’ fees incurred to defeat a counterclaim that must
    be overcome to recover fully on a contract need not be segregated.”).
    Vaughan also challenged the time Medina spent defending Newkirk from
    most of the same defensive claims he brought against Medina. According
    to Medina and Newkirk, Newkirk assigned his interest in the Note to Medina.
    It was in Medina’s best interest to ensure that nothing occurred to jeopardize
    Medina/Newkirk’s interest. However, the time logs Medina submitted as
    exhibits to the jury do not mention representation of Newkirk but any actions
    Medina took on his own behalf benefitted them both and did “double-duty.”
    See [Tony Gullo Motors I], 212 S.W.3d at 313.
    However, Medina cannot recover attorney’s fees on his claims for fraudulent
    inducement and negligent misrepresentation. . . . Medina abandoned his
    tort claims and did not submit them to the jury although evidence supporting
    the claims was included at trial.
    Vaughan, 
    2020 WL 1951441
    , at *9.
    As illustrated above, we implicitly held in 2020 that the only claims for which fees
    were not recoverable by Medina were the fraudulent inducement and negligent
    misrepresentation claims. See 
    id.
     That conclusion represents the law of the case, which
    we may not revisit. See Hudson v. Wakefield, 
    711 S.W.2d 628
    , 630 (Tex. 1986) (“By
    narrowing the issues in successive stages of the litigation, the law of the case doctrine is
    intended to achieve uniformity of decision as well as judicial economy and efficiency.”).
    For the same reason, the trial court would have exceeded the scope of our mandate had
    it included a jury charge question regarding any other claims for which fees were allegedly
    not recoverable. See Cessna Aircraft Co. v. Aircraft Network, LLC, 
    345 S.W.3d 139
    , 144
    (Tex. App.—Dallas 2011, no pet.) (“When an appellate court remands a case with specific
    instructions, the trial court is limited to complying with the instructions and cannot re-
    litigate issues controverted at the former trial.”). Vaughan’s second issue is overruled.
    12
    C.      Exclusion of Billing Records
    By his third issue, Vaughan argues the trial court erred by “sustaining an objection
    to [his] attempt to introduce his contemporaneous billing records to support an award of
    attorney’s fees” when “no objection was made by [Medina].” We review a trial court’s
    evidentiary rulings on appeal for abuse of discretion. Brookshire Bros., Ltd. v. Aldridge,
    
    438 S.W.3d 9
    , 27 (Tex. 2014).
    At trial, Bishop testified in narrative form about his relationship with Vaughan and
    the work he performed for him throughout the case. He stated that he prepared a bill
    showing the total number of hours he spent representing Vaughan in this case since
    October of 2015. When Bishop attempted to introduce Bishop’s written billing records into
    evidence, the trial court asked whether there were any objections, and Medina replied:
    “Yes, Judge. There are two sets of hours, multiple sections and nothing is segmented out
    to quantum meruit.” Bishop replied to the objection as follows:
    My response, Your Honor, is the time for the hours spent in the Loa case[ 11]
    is in [sic] inextricably intertwine[d] with this, but I have told Mr. Vaughan and
    he has agreed that my fees would be reduced by 30 percent to take into
    account time [sic] it wasn’t just on that, but I have spent time on this. It would
    amount to, I know it’s very difficult to say, but $189,000.00. However, I have
    agreed to discount my fee about 30 percent to get down to 130,000, but that
    amount is not on here. The hours are, so the jury if they decide to do so,
    can calculate what a—what they believe to be a reasonable fee [for] my
    time in this case.
    Medina then took Bishop on voir dire, and Bishop reiterated that he was “willing to say,
    take 30 percent off from my time, which by a normal rate would be, because of the fact
    some of this dealt with matters in which the state Supreme Court said you couldn’t recover
    11 “The Loa case was a wrongful death case in which Medina represented the family of a young
    man who died after receiving injuries while playing soccer.” Vaughan v. Medina, No. 13-18-00266-CV, 
    2020 WL 1951441
    , at *4 n.2 (Tex. App.—Corpus Christi–Edinburg Apr. 23, 2020, pet. denied) (mem. op.).
    13
    attorney[’]s fees.” Medina then asked “can you highlight or tell me which ones are
    exclusively to quantum meruit, because that’s the issue before this Court?” Bishop
    replied: “Well, it’s just eight years of work. It will take me a little while to do that, but if you
    want to have me do that from in front of the jury, I’ll look at it.” The trial court sustained
    the objection to the billing records.
    Later, during cross-examination, Medina asked Bishop: “Can you tell me how
    much time you spent exclusively on quantum meruit?” Bishop replied:
    The word “exclusively,” I cannot. But I can tell you at least 70 percent of the
    time before we started this trial and this trial is totally about quantum meruit
    and payment due to Mr. Vaughan for the 64 hours you say he spent, and
    so, it’s everything I’ve done getting ready for this trial, and this trial is about
    that.
    Bishop agreed that his billing records did not specify which hours or fees were “specific
    to quantum meruit.” When asked to “highlight the portions that at least involve quantum
    meruit,” Bishop stated, “[e]verything in the 190th District Court.”
    On appeal, Vaughan claims that the trial court erred by excluding Bishop’s billing
    records because no objection was made by Medina to their introduction into evidence.
    However, the record reflects that Medina initially objected to their introduction on grounds
    that “nothing is segmented out to quantum meruit.” Essentially, he suggested that the
    billing records were irrelevant and inadmissible because they did not address the only
    issue then before the court—i.e., how much of Bishop’s work was attributable to
    Vaughan’s quantum meruit claim. See TEX. R. EVID. 401 (“Evidence is relevant if: (a) it
    has any tendency to make a fact more or less probable than it would be without the
    evidence; and (b) the fact is of consequence in determining the action.”), 402 (“Irrelevant
    evidence is not admissible.”); see also TEX. R. APP. P. 33.1(a)(1)(A) (stating that, to
    preserve a complaint for appellate review, a party must “state[] the grounds for the ruling
    14
    that the complaining party sought from the trial court with sufficient specificity to make the
    trial court aware of the complaint, unless the specific grounds were apparent from the
    context”).
    Regardless of whether Medina properly objected to the admission of the records,
    the trial court abused its discretion by excluding them. The itemized billing records
    reflected Bishop’s work since the beginning of the case, and it included details as to each
    entry. Medina emphasizes that the records included hours attributable to Vaughan’s
    “failed causes of action, including usury, negligent destruction of collateral, oral contract
    and offset.” Medina therefore argues that, had the trial court admitted the records, it would
    have exceeded the scope of remand because the only issue was “how much time was
    spent by [Vaughan] in prosecuting his quantum meruit claim.” See Cessna, 
    345 S.W.3d at 144
    . 12 However, this argument ignores the longstanding caselaw establishing that
    segregation of fees is not necessary “when the fees are based on claims arising out of
    the same transaction that are so intertwined and inseparable as to make segregation
    impossible.” Kinsel, 526 S.W.3d at 427. Though Bishop conceded that his billing records
    did not reflect that any hours were attributable “exclusively” to the quantum meruit claim
    or “specific to” that claim, he consistently averred that seventy percent of the work he
    performed was “inextricably intertwined” with that claim. In any event, the records were
    indisputably relevant to the issue before the jury. See Tony Gullo Motors I, 212 S.W.3d
    at 314 (“Unsegregated attorney’s fees for the entire case are some evidence of what the
    segregated amount should be.”).”
    12 On appeal, Medina does not offer any other potential reason for why the trial court would have
    excluded the records.
    15
    Vaughan argues that
    [i]f the trial court would have allowed [him] to introduce the
    contemporaneous billing records, [Bishop] would have been able to read
    relevant portions of the billing records to the jury and explain the basis for
    his attorney fee calculations. Further, the jury could have considered these
    bills when they were making their decision about awarding [Vaughan]’s
    attorney fees during deliberation.
    We agree. The jury was instructed as to the “inextricably intertwined” rule and may well
    have reached a different verdict had it been able to review the detailed written records,
    from which it could have determined whether the “discrete legal services” specified
    therein “advance[d] both a recoverable and unrecoverable claim.” See Kinsel, 526 S.W.3d
    at 427. We note that, though the jury’s award of fees to Vaughan represented around
    thirty percent of the amount Vaughan recovered on his quantum meruit claim, it
    represented less than five percent of what Bishop testified was reasonable for prosecuting
    that claim and claims “inextricably intertwined” with it. Given these circumstances, we find
    that the trial court’s error in excluding the billing records “(1) probably caused the rendition
    of an improper judgment; or (2) probably prevented [Vaughan] from properly presenting
    the case” to this Court. TEX. R. APP. P. 44.1(a); see Rohrmoos Venture v. UTSW DVA
    Healthcare, LLP, 
    578 S.W.3d 469
    , 502 (Tex. 2019) (noting that “billing records are
    strongly encouraged to prove the reasonableness and necessity of requested fees when
    those elements are contested); see also El Apple I, Ltd. v. Olivas, 
    370 S.W.3d 757
    , 763
    (Tex. 2012) (“An attorney could, of course, testify to these details, but in all but the
    simplest cases, the attorney would probably have to refer to some type of record or
    16
    documentation to provide this information.”). Accordingly, the error was reversible. We
    sustain Vaughan’s third issue. 13
    III.     CONCLUSION
    We reverse that part of the trial court’s judgment awarding Vaughan $5,950 in
    attorney’s fees for the prosecution of his quantum meruit claim in the trial court, and we
    remand for reconsideration of that issue consistent with this memorandum opinion. The
    remainder of the trial court’s judgment is affirmed.
    DORI CONTRERAS
    Chief Justice
    Delivered and filed on the
    26th day of September, 2024.
    13 In light of our conclusion, we do not address Vaughan’s fourth issue, as it would afford him no
    greater relief even if sustained. See TEX. R. APP. P. 47.1.
    17
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 13-23-00402-CV

Filed Date: 9/26/2024

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 9/28/2024