list of parties and counsel
Transcription
list of parties and counsel
LIST OF PARTIES AND COUNSEL Appellant Appellate Counsel Edwin C. Olsen IV R. Deryl Edwards, Jr. 606 S. Pearl Ave. Joplin, MO 64801 (417) 624-1962 (o) (417) 624-1965 (f) Trial and Appellate Counsel Jeff Forest Smith 6750 Hillcrest Plaza Suite 214, LB-16 Dallas, Texas 972-387-3388 (o) 972-387-2299 (f) Trial Counsel Pro Se Edwin C. Olsen IV 11318 Cotillion Drive Dallas, Texas 469-441-8715 (o) 972-686-1464 (f) Appellee Appellate Counsel Commission for Lawyer Discipline Jeremy Kernodle Haynes & Boone, L.L.P. 2323 Victory Ave, Suite 700 Dallas, TX 75219 214-651-5159 (o) 214-200-0693 (f) Appellate Counsel Cynthia W. Hamilton Office Chief Disc. Counsel State Bar of Texas P.O. Box 12487 Austin, TX 78711-2487 512-427-1349 (o) 512-427-4167 (f) Trial Counsel Susan Morgan Farris Office Chief Disc. Counsel State Bar of Texas One Lincoln Centre 5400 LBJ Freeway, Suite 1280 Dallas, Texas 75240 972-383-2900 (o) 972-383-2935 (f) i TABLE OF CONTENTS List of Parties and Counsel . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . i Table of Contents . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .ii Index of Authorities . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . iv Statement of the Case . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . vi Statement Regarding Record References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .vii Issues Presented . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . viii Statement of Facts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1 Statement of the Argument . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4 Argument . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .5 1. EVIDENTIARY STANDARD FOR LAWYER DISCIPLINARY ACTIONS . . . . . . . 5 2. EVIDENTIARY STANDARD FOR SUMMARY JUDGEMENTS . . . . . . . . . . . .6 3. STANDARD OF APPELLATE REVIEW FOR SUMMARY JUDGEMENTS . . . . . . . 7 4. ARGUMENT AND AUTHORITIES. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .7 A. The Summary Judgment Evidence. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7 B: ISSUE ONE: The trial court erred in granting the Commission for Lawyer Discipline’s Motion for Partial Summary Judgment. . . . 8 C: ISSUE TWO: The trial court erred in granting summary judgment that Mr. Olsen violated Rule 3.08(a). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .8 D: ISSUE THREE: The trial court erred in granting summary judgment that Mr. Olsen violated Rule 8.04(a)(3) regarding Mary Ellen’s February 22, 2005 Will and accompanying notary jurat, and in granting summary judgment that the Mary Ellen’s actual February 22, 2005 Will consisted solely of two pages and was not accompanied by a third page bearing a notary’s jurat, signature and seal, and that the filing of the three-page will document constituted dishonesty and misrepresentation. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13 E: ISSUE FOUR: The trial court erred in granting summary judgment that Mr. Olsen violated Rule 8.04(a)(3) regarding the notary jurat’s language accompanying Mary Ellen’s February 22, 2005 Will, and in granting summary judgment that the filing the original of Mary Ellen’s February 22, 2005 Will with the accompanying jurat erroneously stating that Mary Ellen was before the notary constituted dishonesty and misrepresentation. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .17 F: ISSUE FIVE: The trial court erred in granting summary judgment that Mr. Olsen violated 8.04(a)(3), 3.03(a)(1), 3.03(b), and in granting summary judgment that Mr. Olsen’s statements to the court were dishonest, constituted a misrepresentation to the court, and that Mr. Olsen was not candid with the court and intended to mislead the court. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .25 G: ISSUE SIX: The trial court erred in granting summary judgment that Mr. Olsen violated 8.04(a)(3), 3.03(a)(1) & 3.03(b), and in granting summary judgment that Mr. Olsen’s Opposition to Giron’s Motion for Emergency Orders was dishonest, constituted a misrepresentation to the court, and that Mr. Olsen was not candid with the court and intended to mislead the court. . . . . . . .31 H: ISSUE SEVEN: The trial court erred in granting summary judgment that Mr. Olsen violated Rule 8.04(a)(1). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .34 I: Procedural History of the Disciplinary Case: . . . . . . . . . . .34 ii J: ISSUE EIGHT: The trial court erred in giving Mr. Olsen only three hour’s notice of the re-set December 5, 2008 summary judgment hearing date and time, and erred in not complying with the procedural requirements of T.R.C.P. 166a. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 37 K: ISSUE NINE: The trial court erred in denying Mr. Olsen’s written and oral request for the creation of a written record, and erred in not permitting the court reporter to perform her duty as mandated by the Texas Rules of Appellate Procedure. . . . . . . . . . . . .38 L: ISSUE TEN: The trial court erred in striking Mr. Olsen’s Response verification and affidavit, and in sustaining the Commission’s objections to Mr. McCay’s and Burgess’ affidavit portions pertaining to Mary Ellen’s will. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39 M: ISSUE ELEVEN: The trial court erred in denying Mr. Olsen’s motion to cure the alleged defects in the affidavits attached to his Response, his motion to supplement the record with additional affidavits and discovery, and his motion to continue the summary judgment hearing until the deposition of Judge Price was completed. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .43 N: ISSUE TWELVE: The trial court erred in granting summary judgment to the Commission, there by denying Mr. Olsen’s right to a trial by jury and his right to due process. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .44 O: ISSUE THIRTEEN: The trial court erred in not following the Texas Rules of Disciplinary Procedure’s requirement to consider all the factors set forth in § 3.10 in determining the appropriate sanction for attorney misconduct. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 45 P: ISSUE FOURTEEN: The trial court erred in deciding that the appropriate sanction for attorney misconduct was disbarment, disbarment was not a “just” punishment under the circumstances. . . . . . . . . . . 48 Q: ISSUE FIFTEEN: The trial court erred in refusing to conduct a hearing on Mr. Olsen’s timely filed Verified motion for new trial regarding the default disbarment judgment. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 49 R: ISSUE SIXTEEN: The trial court erred in awarding attorney’s fees to the Commission because no admissible evidence exists in the record supporting the reasonableness nor amount of the Commission’s alleged attorney fees. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 49 Prayer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .50 Certificate of Service . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 51 APPENDIX INDEX. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 52 iii INDEX OF AUTHORITIES CASE LAW: Bastine v. Comm'n for Lawyer Discipline, 252 S.W.3d 413,416-7 (Tex.App.–Houston [1stDist.] 1996, no writ): page 50 Birdwell v. Texins Credit Union, 843 S.W.2d 246, 249-50 (Tex. App. – Texarkana 1992, no writ): page 38 City of Houston v. Clear Creek Basin Authority, 589 S.W.2d 671, 675-79 (Tex. 1979): pages 6, 45 Cutler v. Ament, 726 S.W.2d 605, 609 (Tex. App. – Houston [14th Dist.], 1987, writ ref’d n.r.e.): pages 18, 19 Daves v. State Bar of Texas, 691 S.W.2d 784, 791 (Tex. App.--Amarillo 1985, writ ref'd n.r.e.), dism'd, 474 U.S. 1043 (1986), citing State v. Ingram, 511 S.W.2d 252, 253 (Tex. 1974): page 49 E.B. Smith Co. V. USF&G, 850 S.W.2d 621, 623 (Tex. App. – Corpus Christi 1993, writ den.): page 8 Fluty v. Simmons Co., 835 S.W.2d 664, 667 (Tex. App.—Dallas 1992, no writ): page 49 Gasaway v. Nesmith, 548 S.W.2d 457, 460 (Tex. Civ. App. – Houston [1st Dist.] 1977, writ ref’d n.r.e.): page 19 Gibbs v. General Motors Corp., 450 S.W.2d 827, 828 (Tex. 1970): page 6 Luker at 629, citing Nixon v. Mr. Property Management Co., 690 S.W.2d 546, 548 (Tex. 1985): page 6 Malooly Bros., Inc. v. Napier, 461 S.W.2d 119, 121 (Tex. 1970): page 8 May v. Crofts, 868 S.W.2d 397, 399 (Tex. App. – Texarkana 1993, no writ): page 9 Nixon v. Mr. Property Management Co., 690 S.W.2d 546, 548 (Tex. 1985) 6 Rhone-Poulenc, Inc. v. Steel, 997 S.W.2d 217, 223 (Tex.1999): page 6 Rodriguez v. Naylor Industries, Inc., 763 S.W.2d 411, 412-3 (Tex. 1989): page 6, 7 Smith v. Smith, 544 S.W.2d 121, 123 (Tex. 1976): page 39 State v. Ingram, 511 S.W.2d 252, 253 (Tex. 1974): page 49 State Bar v. Kilpatrick, 874 S.W.2d 656, 659(Tex. 1994): page 49 State v. O'Dowd, 158 Tex. 348, 312 S.W.2d 217, 221 (Tex. 1958): page 49 Tenneco Inc. v. Enterprise Products Co., 925 S.W.2nd 640, 647 (Tex. 1996): page 44 iv TREATISES: Johanson’s Texas Probate Code Annotated, 2001 ed.: pages 9, 18, 23, 24 Texas Center for Legal Ethics and Professionalism opinion: page 12 Tex. Bar R. art. X, § 16 (B), (C): page 6 TEXAS STATUTES: Texas Probate Code § 10: page 23 Texas Probate Code § 59: pages 15, 18 Texas Probate Code § 75: pages 22, 23 TEXAS RULES: T.R.C.P. 194.2(f)(3): page 47 T.R.D.P 3.03(a)(1): pages 25, 31 T.R.D.P. 3.03(b): pages 25, 31 T.R.D.P. 3.08: pages 5, 10, 11 T.R.D.P. 3.10: pages 45, 47, 48 T.R.D.P 8.04(a)(3): pages 13, 17, 25 v STATEMENT OF THE CASE Nature of the Case and Parties: Commission for Lawyer Discipline brought disciplinary action against attorney Edwin C. Olsen IV on behalf of non-client Frances Ann Giron. Trial Court: Judge Graham Quisenberry (415th Judicial District Court), sitting by assignment in the 162nd Judicial District Court of Dallas County, Texas. (CR 10) The court granted the Commission’s motion for partial summary judgment at a re-set hearing for which Mr. Olsen was given three hours notice. (CR 214) At a default sanctions hearing conducted on May 8, 2010, the Court entered a final judgment of disbarment. (CR 423) Mr. Olsen timely filed a verified motion for new trial which was denied without hearing (CR 466). (CR 428), Mr. Olsen timely appeal to the Court of Appeals for the 5th District of Texas, at Dallas. (CR 467) vi STATEMENT REGARDING RECORD REFERENCES The clerk's record in this case consists of three original volumes and is cited as (CR __) for page numbers 1 through 474. The reporter’s record of the default sanctions hearing of May 8, 2009 is one volume. vii ISSUES PRESENTED ISSUE ONE: The trial court erred in granting the Commission for Lawyer Discipline’s Motion for Partial Summary Judgment. ISSUE TWO: The trial court erred in granting summary judgment that Mr. Olsen violated Rule 3.08(a). ISSUE THREE: The trial court erred in granting summary judgment that Mr. Olsen violated Rule 8.04(a)(3) regarding Mary Ellen’s February 22, 2005 Will and accompanying notary jurat, and in granting summary judgment that the Mary Ellen’s actual February 22, 2005 Will consisted solely of two pages and was not accompanied by a third page bearing a notary’s jurat, signature and seal, and that the filing of the three-page will document constituted dishonesty and misrepresentation. ISSUE FOUR: The trial court erred in granting summary judgment that Mr. Olsen violated Rule 8.04(a)(3) regarding the notary jurat’s language accompanying Mary Ellen’s February 22, 2005 Will, and in granting summary judgment that the filing the original of Mary Ellen’s February 22, 2005 Will with the accompanying jurat erroneously stating that Mary Ellen was before the notary constituted dishonesty and misrepresentation. ISSUE FIVE: The trial court erred in granting summary judgment that Mr. Olsen violated 8.04(a)(3), 3.03(a)(1), 3.03(b), and in granting summary judgment that Mr. Olsen’s statements to the court were dishonest, constituted a misrepresentation to the court, and that Mr. Olsen was not candid with the court and intended to mislead the court. ISSUE SIX: The trial court erred in granting summary judgment that Mr. Olsen violated 8.04(a)(3), 3.03(a)(1) & 3.03(b), and in granting summary judgment that Mr. Olsen’s Opposition to Giron’s Motion for Emergency Orders was dishonest, constituted a misrepresentation to the court, and that Mr. Olsen was not candid with the court and intended to mislead the court. ISSUE SEVEN: The trial court erred in granting summary judgment that Mr. Olsen violated Rule 8.04(a)(1). ISSUE EIGHT: The trial court erred in giving Mr. Olsen only three hour’s notice of the re-set December 5, 2008 summary judgment hearing date and time, and erred in not complying with the procedural requirements of T.R.C.P. 166a. ISSUE NINE: The trial court erred in denying Mr. Olsen’s written and oral request for the creation of a written record, and erred in not viii permitting the court reporter to perform her duty as mandated by the Texas Rules of Appellate Procedure. ISSUE TEN: The trial court erred in striking Mr. Olsen’s Response verification and affidavit, and in sustaining the Commission’s objections to Mr. McCay’s and Burgess’ affidavit portions pertaining to Mary Ellen’s will. ISSUE ELEVEN: The trial court erred in denying Mr. Olsen’s motion to cure the alleged defects in the affidavits attached to his Response, his motion to supplement the record with additional affidavits and discovery, and his motion to continue the summary judgment hearing until the deposition of Judge Price was completed. ISSUE TWELVE: The trial court erred in granting summary judgment to the Commission, there by denying Mr. Olsen’s right to a trial by jury and his right to due process. ISSUE THIRTEEN: The trial court erred in not following the Texas Rules of Disciplinary Procedure’s requirement to consider all the factors set forth in § 3.10 in determining the appropriate sanction for attorney misconduct. ISSUE FOURTEEN: The trial court erred in deciding that the appropriate sanction for attorney misconduct was disbarment, disbarment was not a “just” punishment under the circumstances. ISSUE FIFTEEN: The trial court erred in refusing to conduct a hearing on Mr. Olsen’s timely filed Verified motion for new trial regarding the default disbarment judgment. ISSUE SIXTEEN: The trial court erred in awarding attorney’s fees to the Commission because no admissible evidence exists in the record supporting the reasonableness nor amount of the Commission’s alleged attorney fees. ix STATEMENT OF FACTS Attorney Edwin C. Olsen IV, Appellant, has never had a grievance filed against him by a client in his entire practice (Mr. Olsen was admitted to the Illinois Bar in 1993 and to the Texas Bar in 1994). (CR 441, CR 462) Mr. Olsen‘s representation alleged of Ellen‖). (CR 308) Mary misconduct Ellen is Logan an outgrowth Bendtsen in 2005 of his successful (hereinafter ―Mary Mary Ellen was the subject of an involuntary guardianship action brought by her only child, Frances Ann Giron (hereinafter ―Giron‖). See, In the Matter of the Guardianship of Mary Ellen Logan Bendtsen, An Alleged Incapacitated Person, No. 05-272-P2, Dallas County Probate Court No. 2; Application for Appointment of Temporary Guardian and Application for Appointment of Permanent Guardian. (CR 353) Mr. Olsen served as Mary Ellen‘s attorney in that matter (CR 309), along with attorney-ad-litem presiding Judge Robert Jon Arneson Price (CR denying 306; CR Giron‘s 309), which Application resulted for in temporary guardianship in its entirety. (CR 308) Judge Price conducted three hearings regarding Mary Ellen, on January 31, February 7, and February 11, 2005. (CR 309; CR 368; CR 362) Mr. Olsen provided Mary Ellen‘s primary defense at all three. (CR 309; CR 369; CR 363) As a result of these hearings, Judge Price entered three orders: (1) He denied Giron‘s Motion in Limine to strike Mr. Olsen as Mary Ellen‘s counsel. (CR 316) (2) He denied Giron‘s Application for appointment of and as temporary guardian. (CR 308) (3) He sua sponte ordered Giron to pay attorney-ad-litem Arneson‘s attorney‘s fees of $10,470.00 personally. (CR 307) At the final February 11, 2005 hearing, Mr. Olsen asked Mary Ellen the following question and she testified – under oath – as follows: Q. If this Court decides you need a temporary guardian, do you want your daughter, Frances Ann, to be your temporary guardian? A. No. She’s doing so many things terrible to me that I don’t want – I don’t want her to be connected to me. (transcript p. 81, lines 7-11; CR 364) Giron had previously removed the entirety of Mary Ellen‘s savings account 1 of $65,404.39 – on January 19, 2005 (CR 217), two days before Giron filed the involuntary guardianship action against Mary Ellen. (CR 353) Mary Ellen‘s sole monthly income was interest from her savings account and Social Security. (CR 358) January 19, 2005 was the same day that Giron had been thwarted in her effort to remove Mary Ellen to a nursing home from Baylor University Hospital. (CR 217) Giron‘s verified (CR 361) Application for Appointment of Temporary Guardian and Application for Appointment of Permanent Guardian concedes that Mr. Olsen‘s efforts on behalf of Mary Ellen had rendered Giron ―unable to admit her mother into a nursing home‖. (CR 354) Mary Ellen had been brought to Baylor on January 12, 2005, for a sprained ankle and gashed forehead (out collecting her mail, Mary Ellen slipped in the rain). (CR 29) Giron had directed the Baylor staff to have Mary Ellen sedated when Ms. Giron returned to take her away because ―she [Mary Ellen] would otherwise try to jump out of the car.‖ (CR 217) Mary Ellen was discharged from Baylor on January 21, 2005, having had her forehead physical gash stitched, therapy on and her on Baylor‘s sprained advice ankle, had which agreed took to place undergo at the rehabilitation center Ashley Court, in Dallas. (CR 350) The afternoon of January 31, 2005, Ashley Court discharged Mary Ellen, having informed her that Medicaid would no longer cover her stay because ―goals met‖. (CR 350) Mary Ellen went from Ashley Court to the first of the three court events in Giron‘s involuntary guardianship case. (CR 30; CR 246) Mary Ellen returned home after the January 31 st hearing. (CR 247) Mary Ellen‘s ―profoundest wish [was] to be in her home of over fifty-five years.‖ (CR 125) return Giron‘s Giron then filed her Motion for Emergency Orders, seeking to Mary Ellen Emergency to the Orders rehabilitation Motion was center first 2 heard Ashley on Court. (CR 246) February 7th, then continued to February 11, 2005. (CR 368, 362) At the February 11th hearing, Judge Price denied Giron‘s Application for appointment of any temporary guardian. (CR 308) Eleven days later (February 22, 2005), Mary Ellen suffered a stroke. (CR 30; CR 243) Her stroke was to the motor skills hemisphere of her brain, not to the cognitive functions hemisphere. (CR 219) Mary Ellen informed Mr. Olsen that she wished her Last Will and Testament prepared, and dictated the terms, her bequests, and her desired beneficiaries. (CR 218) Giron was to receive only the ―cradle rocking chair‖ in which Mary Ellen had rocked Giron as an infant. (CR 50) Mr. Olsen was informed that Mary Ellen had a 2% chance of making it through the night. (CR 241; CR 243) Mr. Olsen prepared Mary Ellen‘s will at a business near Baylor, not at his distant law office by Garland, Texas. (CR 242) Mr. Olsen arranged to have the will signing videotaped. (CR 243, 244) Mary Ellen did not have her Texas driver‘s license or any other form of identification. (CR 241; CR 244) Mary Ellen stated that Giron had previously taken her driver‘s license and other identification cards from her and cut them up. (CR 241; CR 244) Thus, only a notary who personally knew Mary Ellen could notarize legal documents for Mary Ellen. Marian Gibson, a long-standing (―some fifty years‖) elderly friend of Mary Ellen‘s was a notary. (CR 241; CR 244) Ms. Gibson had notarized legal documents for Mary Ellen at Ashley Court on the afternoon of January 22, 2009. (CR 241; CR 244). This event was also videotaped at Mr. Olsen‘s insistence. Marian Gibson however declined to go to Baylor the evening of February 22, 2005. (CR 245) Mr. Olsen was informed of this fact at the last minute (CR 241; CR 245) and consequently had to make rushed modifications to what had been the self-proving affidavit component of the will document. (CR 242) Mary Ellen died on March 2, 2005. (CR 243) Mary Ellen‘s designated executrix Dixie 3 Mr. Olsen agreed to represent Tidwell, and prepared the Application for Probate, filed March 2, 2005. (CR 47; CR 242; CR 244) Four hours later Giron filed her own application for probate of a 2002 Will (CR 127), in which Giron was Mary Ellen‘s sole beneficiary. (CR 131) The next day Giron filed a Will Contest. (CR 136) Giron – never a client – later filed this grievance against Mr. Olsen (CR 31) – his first. (CR 441) SUMMARY OF ARGUMENT: The trial court erred in granting the Commission for Lawyer Discipline‘s Motion for Partial Summary Judgment, because it did not apply the proper evidentiary standard when considering the summary judgment evidence before it. In each case, instead of requiring the Commission to demonstrate that there was no issue of material fact and interpreting all disputed material facts in favor of the non-movant, Mr. Olsen, the trial court accepted the Commission‘s version of the facts and rejected Mr. Olsen‘s. The trial court erred evidentiary standards. by not applying the proper summary judgment It it had done so, the trial court would have found that the five specific areas of alleged misconduct were intrinsically fact questions that must be resolved by a trier of fact. The trial court further erred by giving Mr. Olsen only three (3) hours notice of the re-setting of the hearing on the Commission‘s Motion for Partial Summary Judgment, not the seven (7) days required by T.R.C.P. 166a. The trial court failed to follow the procedures specified by Texas Rules of Civil Procedure for granting continuances, rescheduling hearings, and for ruling on verified motions for new trial. The trial court also erred in not granting Mr. Olsen‘s written motion for the presence of a court reporter. The trial court further erred in striking Mr. Olsen‘s Verified Summary Judgment Response and accompanying affidavits. giving Mr. Olsen leave to amend and cure The trial court erred in not the defects alleged by the Commission, nor time to complete the remainder of Judge Price‘s deposition 4 and to secure the additional discovery that was necessary. In imposing a sanction of disbarment at the default sanctions hearing, the trial court ignored the requirements of Texas Rule of Disciplinary Procedure § 3.10 ―Imposition of Sanctions‖, failing to consider admissible evidence on all twelve elements. At the default sanctions hearing, the court took admissible evidence only on one of the twelve elements (―I‖), which was in fact exculpatory to Mr. Olsen. The only other testimony considered by the Court was inadmissible evidence as it was not sworn testimony, and was opinion testimony offered by a non-designated expert. The trial court‘s decision to disbar Mr. Olsen at a default sanctions hearing after granting summary judgment on intrinsic material fact questions having stricken Mr. Olsen‘s affidavits was unjust, grossly disproportionate to the allegations of misconduct made by the Commission, and an abuse of discretion. The trial court‘s rulings violated Mr. Olsen‘s constitutional rights to due process and to trial by jury. Lastly, trial court erred in awarding the Commission attorney‘s fees because no evidence in the recorded supported the award. The Commission presented no sworn testimony as to the amount and reasonableness of those fees. No affidavit as to the amount and reasonableness of the Commission‘s attorney‘s fees appears in the record. ARGUMENT and AUTHORITIES: 1. EVIDENTIARY STANDARD FOR LAWYER DISCIPLINARY ACTIONS: Disciplinary actions are civil in nature and governed by the preponderance of the evidence standard of proof. Tex. Bar R. art. X, § 16 (B), (C); Tex. R. Disciplinary P. 3.08 (C). As the Petitioner, the Commission for Lawyer Discipline (heretofore ―the Commission‖) has the evidentiary burden, and must prove at trial by a preponderance of the evidence that all five of the specific allegations of misconduct by Mr. Olsen took place (the sixth charge is the catchall charge 5 of having violated any rule of disciplinary procedure). The Commission did not meet even this hurdle. court no preponderance of the allegations of misconduct. evidence on It presented to the trial any of the five specific Regarding some allegation of misconduct, the Commission presented no evidence whatsoever on the specific charge. 2. EVIDENTIARY STANDARD FOR SUMMARY JUDGEMENTS: However, the hurdle for the Commission was actually much higher, since this matter never went to trial and judgment resulted from a summary judgment ruling in favor of the Commission as movant. To properly prevail at summary judgment, the movant must establish that there was ―no genuine issues of material fact‖ and that it was ―entitled to judgment as a matter of law.‖ Rodriguez v. Naylor Industries, Inc., 763 S.W.2d 411, 412-3 (Tex. 1989): Summary judgment is proper only if the movant establishes that there are no genuine issues of material fact and that he is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. City of Houston v. Clear Creek Basin Authority, 589 S.W.2d 671, 675-79 (Tex. 1979); Gibbs v. General Motors Corp., 450 S.W.2d 827, 828 (Tex. 1970). The Commission failed to show that no genuine issue of material fact existed and that it was entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Nixon v. Mr. Property Management Co., 690 S.W.2d 546, 548 (Tex. 1985). The burden of proof is on the movant, and all doubts about the existence of a genuine issue of material fact are resolved against the movant. Rhone-Poulenc, Inc. v. Steel, 997 S.W.2d 217, 223 (Tex.1999). ―Under Rule 166a(c), summary judgment is proper only when the movant demonstrates that there is no genuine issue of material fact and that it is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.‖ Luker at 629, citing Nixon v. Mr. Property Management Co., 690 S.W.2d 546, 548 (Tex. 1985); T.R.C.P. 166a(c). Applying the traditional summary judgment standard, the Luker court held that ―When deciding whether there is a disputed material fact issue precluding summary judgment under Rule 166a(c), we treat evidence favorable 6 to the nonmovant as true and we resolve any doubts in its favor.‖ Luker, Id. 3. STANDARD OF APPELLATE REVIEW FOR SUMMARY JUDGEMENTS: For the purposes of this appeal, the evidence favorable to Mr. Olsen is taken a true and all doubts are resolved in his favor. ―On appeal from a summary judgment, the evidence favorable to the non-movant will be taken as true, and all doubts will be resolved in favor of the non-movant.‖ Rodriguez, 763 S.W.2d at 413. (citation omitted; emphasis added) ―The question on appeal from a summary judgment is not whether the summary judgment evidence raises a fact issue on the essential elements of the claim, but whether the evidence establishes as a matter of law that there is no genuine issue of material fact.‖ Rodriguez, 763 S.W.2d at 413 (emphasis added) 4. ARGUMENT AND AUTHORITIES: The Commission‘s Motion for Partial Summary Judgment [hereinafter ―MPSJ‖] alleged that Mr. misrepresentation‖ Olsen engaged in conduct ―involving (the Commission‘s MPSJ at pp. 4-6 of dishonesty or 18 [CR 31-33], mislead the Court [CR 39] and ―should have withdrawn [CR 43]), and in so doing committed five specific acts of misconduct (plus the Rule 8.04(a)(1) catchall violation of committing any violation). (CR 43) Each of these will be addressed individually as separate issues. A. The Summary Judgment Evidence: The Commission‘s summary judgment consisted of: (1) Mr. Olsen‘s admissions regarding basic facts (CR 53); (2) A certified copy of Mary Ellen‘s Last Will and Testament (CR 49); (3) The videotape commissioned by Mr. Olsen of Mary Ellen‘s signing of her Last Will and Testament (CR 69); (4) An affidavit of Judge Price (CR 113); (5) One of the three hearing transcripts-for January 31, 2005 (CR 71); (6) The Application for Probate authored by Mr. Olsen (CR 46); (7) Mary Ellen‘s Opposition to Giron‘s Motion for Emergency Order heard on February 7 and February 11, 2005 (CR 115); and (8) Giron‘s Application for Probate (CR 126), Will (CR 131), and Will Contest (CR 136). Mr. Olsen, who was pro se at the time of the summary judgment hearing on December 5, 2008 (CR 6), verified his Response to the Commission‘s MPSJ(CR 237), and included as additionally summary judgment evidence an appendix, as 7 well as incorporating by reference the Commission‘s evidence. The appendix included the following documents: EXHIBIT EXHIBIT EXHIBIT EXHIBIT EXHIBIT A: B: C: D: E: Nov. 28, 2008 Affidavit of Edwin C. Olsen IV (CR 238) Nov. 28, 2008 Affidavit of Justin Dale Burgess (CR 240) Nov. 28, 2008 Affidavit of Mark Patrick McCay (CR 243) Giron‘s February 2, 2005 Motion For Emergency Order (CR 246) Giron‘s Proposed Order for her February 2, 2005 Motion For Emergency Order (CR 251) November 6, 2008 Deposition of Judge Robert Price, with Exhibits 1-15 (CR 252) EXHIBIT F: Mr. Olsen timely filed and served his Response on The Commission seven (7) days before hearing on the motion (CR 216), pursuant to T.R.C.P. 5 and 166a(c), E.B. Smith Co. V. USF&G, 850 S.W.2d 621, 623 (Tex. App. – Corpus Christi 1993, writ den.). B: ISSUE ONE: The trial court erred in granting the Commission for Lawyer Discipline’s Motion for Partial Summary Judgment. Appellant includes this issue to granting of the ensure that he preserves all error concerning the Commission‘s Motion for Partial Summary Judgment. See Malooly Bros., Inc. v. Napier, 461 S.W.2d 119, 121 (Tex. 1970) (holding that a summary judgment can be attacked on appeal through a general assignment of error). This issue incorporates as if set forth in full herein the arguments and authorities set forth below at Issues Two through Twelve. C: ISSUE TWO: The trial court erred in granting summary judgment that Mr. Olsen violated Rule 3.08(a). The Commission alleges that ―Respondent [Mr. Olsen] Should Have Withdrawn‖ (CR 41) from representing Ms. Tidwell as Mary Ellen‘s nominated executrix in the will contest filed by Giron because ―he [Mr. Olsen] prepared [Mary Ellen] Bendtsen‘s will and because he was present when [Mary Ellen] Bendtsen signed the will.‖ (CR 42) The Commission asserts that T.R.D.P. 3.08 ―requires him [Mr. Olsen] to withdraw from representation if he may be a witness.‖ (CR 41; emphasis added) Under Texas law, a lawyer who prepared the will may defend it in a 8 resulting will contest. May v. Crofts, 868 S.W.2d 397, 399 (Tex. App. – Texarkana 1993, no writ). Texas law expressly crafts an exception to Rule 3.08 in the context of will contests. Merely because an attorney has prepared a will, he cannot be disqualified as counsel: ―Disciplinary Rule 3.08 did not bar attorney who prepared will contestant from announced serving as intention counsel to call for will attorney proponent as even hostile though witness.‖ Johanson’s Texas Probate Code Annotated, 2001 ed., p. 29, citing May v. Crofts, 868 S.W.2d 397 (Tex. App. – Texarkana 1993, no writ). In May v. Crofts, the Court of Appeals thoroughly parsed Ruled 3.08: Her [the Will Contestant‘s] argument seems to assert that because she intends to call Old [opposing counsel] as a witness, he is automatically disqualified from acting as attorney in the will contest. However, under Rule 3.08, an attorney is not automatically disqualified under such circumstances. See Robert K. Wise, The Lawyer-Witness Rule: A Comparison of a Lawyer's Ability to be Both a Witness and an Advocate Under the Texas Code of Professional Responsibility and the Texas Disciplinary Rules of Professional Conduct, 31 So. TEX. L. REV. 651, 672 (1990). This rule should rarely be the basis for disqualification. Id. at 663. Although the Rules of Professional Conduct may be relevant when determining an attorney's disqualification to serve in a case, the primary function of the rules is to define proper conduct for purposes of professional discipline. TEX. DISCIPLINARY R. PROF. CONDUCT preamble para. 10 (1989); see Ayres v. Canales, 790 S.W.2d 554, 556 n.2 (Tex. 1990). Nor has Irma May [the will contestant] established that Old's continued representation of the estate is prohibited by Rule 3.08. There is no evidence showing what Old would testify to or that he is a witness who is necessary to establish an essential fact on behalf of his client. At oral argument, Old indicated that he did not intend to call himself as a witness. Rather, Irma May's attorney is the one who claims he wants to call Old as a witness. Rule 3.08 should not be used as a tactical weapon to deprive the opposing party of the right to be represented by the lawyer of his or her choice, because reducing the rule to such use would subvert its purpose. Ayres, 790 S.W.2d at 556 n. 2; TEX. DISCIPLINARY R. PROF. CONDUCT. 3.08 cmt. 10 (1989). In Ayres, the court held that, in order to prevent such misuse of Rule 3.08, a trial court should require the party seeking disqualification to demonstrate actual prejudice to itself resulting from the opposing lawyer's service in the dual roles. Ayres, 790 S.W.2d at 558; TEX. DISC[.] R. PROF. CONDUCT 3.08 cmt. 10 (1989). May v. Crofts, 868 at 399 (footnote omitted; bolding added). In May v. Crofts, the will contestant had stated she intended to call Olds (opposing counsel) as a witness. In Giron‘s will contest of Mary Ellen‘s will, Giron never designated Mr. Olsen as a witness. 9 Moreover, Giron never moved to disqualify Mr. Olsen under Rule 3.08, much less ―demonstrate actual prejudice‖. The Commission does not assert that Mr. Olsen actually was a witness, only that he ―m[ight] be one‖. (CR 41) The Commission‘s alleged violation of Rule 3.08 derives from a hypothetical possibility, not an actual situation, as it asserts that T.R.D.P. 3.08 ―requires him [Mr. Olsen] to withdraw from representation if he may be a witness.‖ (CR 41; emphasis added) Aside from the fact that under May v. Crofts Mr. Olsen was not obliged to unilaterally withdraw as counsel, and aside from the fact that Mr. Olsen was never designated a witness by Giron, the Commission misconstrues T.R.D.P. 3.08. The Commission quotes the first part of T.R.D.P. 3.08 (CR 41): Rule 3.08(a) ―Lawyer as Witness‖ provides: ―A lawyer shall not accept or continue employment as an advocate before a tribunal in a contemplated or pending adjudicatory proceeding if the lawyer knows or believes that the lawyer is or may be a witness necessary to establish an essential fact on behalf of the lawyer‘s client.‖ The Commission presented no summary judgment evidence that Mr. Olsen was a material fact witness ―necessary to establish an essential fact on behalf of the lawyer’s client.‖ (Rule 3.08, emphases added). Indeed, the only summary judgment evidence offered by the Commission was Mr. Olsen‘s dual admissions that he represented Ms. Tidwell on behalf of Mary Ellen‘s estate and did not withdraw (CR 42; Olsen Admission #46 and Olsen Admission #47) The Commission asserts that Mr. Olsen had ―personal knowledge of facts related to each of Giron’s claims‖ (CR 42;emphasis added). This is entirely irrelevant under May v. Crofts and the notes explicating Rule 3.08. relevant person under Rule 3.08 is ―the lawyer’s client” not Giron. The Giron was not Mr. Olsen‘s client, Giron was the opposing party. The Commission claims that the areas of Mr. Olsen‘s personal knowledge pertaining to ―each of Giron‘s claims‖ were [1] the circumstances surrounding the execution of the Will, [2] Bendtsen‘s testamentary intent, [3] Bendtsen‘s testamentary capacity, [4] any undue influence asserted against Bendtsen, [5] 10 the inability of Bendtsen to resist the efforts others to force her to sign the Will. (CR 42) Ignoring for the moment that Rule 3.08‘s standard make is [sic] not by ―personal knowledge on the essential facts relating to a Will contest‖ (CR 43), but ―knowing‖ that he [the lawyer] is or may be a ―witness necessary to establish an essential fact on behalf of the lawyer’s client‖ [emphases added], the Commission presented no summary judgment evidence that Mr. Olsen had personal knowledge regarding Giron‘s claims. It cannot offered by violation be the of overemphasized that Commission its Rule 3.08 in are his the only MPSJ two summary regarding admissions judgment Mr. that evidence Olsen‘s he alleged represented Ms. Tidwell on behalf of Mary Ellen‘s estate and did not withdraw (CR 42; Olsen Admission #46 and Olsen Admission #47). Thus the Commission‘s assertion that because Mr. Olsen ―was in possession of all this personal knowledge on the essential facts relating to the Will contest, [and] he failed to withdraw from representing Tidwell‖ (CR 43), thus ―A violation of Rule 3.08(a) has been proven as a matter of law‖ (CR 43) is not substantiated by the summary judgment evidence. The Commission‘s claim also misapplies Rule 3.08 and ignores May v. Crofts. Whether Mr. Olsen had ―personal Giron‘s will contest is irrelevant. Ms. Tidwell contemplate as nominated withdraw if knowledge‖ the five elements of Rule 3.08 applies not to Giron, but to executrix. his of Under testimony is 3.08, Mr. ―necessary Olsen to must establish only an essential fact on behalf of the lawyer’s client.” (emphasis added) Further, Rule 3.08 offers an exception even to this scenario: where withdraw would offer ―substantial hardship on the client‖, the lawyer can both testify to the essential fact and represent his client. Rule 3.08(a)(5) states this exception: ―unless . . . disqualification of the lawyer would work substantial hardship on the client.‖ 11 Excepting the issue of attorney‘s fees, Mr. Olsen was not designated as a witness, as expressly permitted by Rule 3.08 (a)(3): ―the testimony relates to the nature and value of legal services rendered in the case‖. In its MPSJ, the Commission cites no case law. The only authority cited by the Commission regarding Rule 3.08 does not apply to the facts at bar. The attorney at issue in the Texas Center for Legal Ethics and Professionalism ethics opinion cited by the Commission had both prepared ―and notarized‖ the will. (Ethics Opinion at CR 141-2) Mr. Olsen did not notarize Mary Ellen‘s will, nor does the Commission allege that he did so. The Commission properly quotes the dual requirement specified by the Ethics Opinion of ―prepared the will and notarized it‖ (CR 43), then in the immediate next sentence omits the essential element of ―notarized‖: ― Just as [sic] in that fact situation [i.e. re the notarizing attorney], Respondent [Mr. Olsen] prepared the will and was the attorney for Tidwell . . . After considering this Ethics Opinion and the personal knowledge Respondent possessed, it is clear Respondent should have withdrawn from representing Tidwell. (CR 43) The Commission offers no evidence that Mr. Olsen notarized the will. In fact, Exhibit Two to the Commission‘s MPSJ is a certified copy of the Mary Ellen‘s will which shows the actual notary was named Marian Gibson. (CR 52) Notarization of a self-proving affidavit makes a will self-proved and obviates the need to produce witnesses in court, see Texas Probate Code § 59, so notarization is a crucial element. But Mr. Olsen did not notarize Mary Ellen‘s will (CR 52) – and could not have done so since he is not and never has been a notary – thus the Ethics Opinion cited by the Commission does not apply to Mr. Olsen‘s conduct. Finally, the Commission offers no summary judgment evidence that Mr. Olsen knew or believed that he “is or may be a witness necessary to establish an essential fact on behalf of the lawyer‘s client.‖ Rule 3.08(a) (emphasis added). affidavit that he In did fact, not Mr. know Olsen nor 12 testified believe in himself his to Response ―be a and witness necessary to establish an essential fact on behalf of the lawyer‘s client.‖ (CR 235) Indeed, after having been subjected to Giron‘s Motion in Limine to remove him as Mary Ellen‘s counsel on precisely ―material witness‖ grounds in the guardianship action -- which was denied -- Mr. Olsen made sure not to interject himself as a potential material witness, so he did not witness the will, nor did he notarize it. (CR 314; CR 316) Finally, on the issue of testamentary capacity, Mr. Olsen believed that Mary Ellen‘s doctors were the essential material witnesses. (CR 235) On the issue of undue influence, Mr. Olsen believed that Mary Ellen‘s long standing friends were the essential material witnesses. (CR 235) Since Mr. Olsen had not witnessed nor notarized the will, he was not an essential material witness as to whether it was executed according to the formalities required by Texas Probate Code § 59. On none of the grounds alleged in Giron‘s will contest or in the Commission‘s MPSJ did Mr. Olsen know himself to be or believe himself to be a ―witness necessary to establish an essential fact on behalf of the lawyer‘s client‖. (CR 235) D: ISSUE THREE: The trial court erred in granting summary judgment that Mr. Olsen violated Rule 8.04(a)(3) regarding Mary Ellen’s February 22, 2005 Will and accompanying notary jurat, and in granting summary judgment that the Mary Ellen’s actual February 22, 2005 Will consisted solely of two pages and was not accompanied by a third page bearing a notary’s jurat, signature and seal, and that the filing of the three-page will document constituted dishonesty and misrepresentation. The Commission alleges that the actual will that was signed consisted solely of two pages and was not accompanied by a third page bearing a notary‘s jurat, signature and seal. The Commission asserts that the presence of a third page with three lines of text and a signature block on it of a notary‘s attestation and stamp contradicts the language of the will ―consisting of this and one preceding page‖. (MPSJ at p. 7 of 18; CR 34) The Commission claims that ―Filing a three-page Will with the probate court when the actual Will that was signed consisted of two pages constitutes dishonesty and misrepresentation.‖ (MPSJ at p. 7 of 18; CR 34) 13 In short, the material fact at issue is whether the actual will document was only two (2) pages in length or whether it had a third, accompanying page for the notary‘s jurat, signature and seal. The Commission attached a copy of the three-page will document filed with the Dallas County Probate Court to its Partial Motion for Summary Judgment (CR 49-52). The first two pages are filled with text, with the first page identifying the beneficiaries and setting forth terms of the will and the second page setting forth additional terms of the will along with containing the signatures of Mary Ellen and her two witnesses and the witnesses‘ attestation clause (which is what is being sworn to before the notary). (CR 50, 51) The third page bears three lines of text (CR 52): SUBSCRIBED AND SWORN TO before me by the said MARY ELLEN LOGAN BENDTSEN, Testatrix, and ______________ and ________________ Witnesses, this 22nd day of February, 2005. The two witness name blanks in the above notary jurat bear the handprinted names ―Rose Cline‖ and ―Dixie L.M.Tidwell‖ [Ms. Tidwell hand-printed these names, on page two before Mary Ellen in the hospital (CR 51), then on page three before the notary Marian Gibson at her home]. (CR 52) Below these three lines in a signature block line underscribed by ―Notary Public, State of Texas‖ with the signature name ―Marian Gibson‖ above the signature line and her notary seal to the left. (CR 52) The exact same notary seal on page three also appears at the bottom of page two of the will. (CR 51; CR 52) This evidences the link between both pages of the will (CR 50 & CR 51), and the notary‘s jurat page (CR 52). The SOLE summary judgment evidence offered by the Commission that this third page does not properly accompany the will is (1) the fact that the text of the will refers to the will itself being ―this and one preceding page‖ (―this‖ being the second page bearing Mary Ellen‘s and the two present attesting witness‘ signatures). (CR 34) And (2), the negative evidence that the video recording arranged by Mr. Olsen of the will signing ―shows that 14 the Will [Mr. Olsen] presented to Bendtsen for execution consisted of a total of two pages.‖ (CR 35) The Commission does not address the presence on page two of the will (CR 52) of the same notary seal that is on page three of the will document. (CR 51) Both seals are the three-dimensional embossed notary seal physically embossing the paper (made visible by pencil), not the ink-stamp seal kind. Under Texas law, a will can be accompanied by a ―self-proving affidavit‖. § 59 Texas Probate Code, ―Requisites of a Will‖, provides: Such a will or testament may, at the time of its execution or at any subsequent date during the lifetime of the testator and the attesting witnesses, be made self-proved, and the testimony of the witnesses in the probate thereof may be made unnecessary, by the affidavits of the testator and the attesting witnesses, made before an officer authorized to administer oaths under the laws of this State. [emphasis added] As is set forth in more detail in the next issue section, Mr. Olsen originally drafted the will to include the ―self-proving affidavit‖ language set forth in § 59. At the last minute he was informed that Mary Ellen‘s notary would not travel to the hospital, but would only notarize at her home, thus rendering the self-proving affidavit pointless. (CR 245) He therefore changed the witness testament language on page two from the present tense ―do hereunto subscribe our names‖ to the past tense ―have hereunto subscribed our names‖ (CR 51), so as to objectively fix the date of the will‘s signing and attestation. Having the witness attestation clause on page two notarized by the notary on page three preserved an objective method of fixing attestations. Because the the date of the will‘s execution and of the witness The dual embossing of the notary‘s seal linked the pages. third page was solely a notary jurat for the notary‘s signature and seal, Mr. Olsen did not present this third page to Mary Ellen in the video he arranged to be made of Mary Ellen signing the will. As that the third page pertained to the absent notary, did not require Mary Ellen‘s signature, and did not contain any of the specific bequests, terms or heirs 15 of Mary Ellen‘s will, there was no reason for Mr. Olsen to remove it from his briefcase along with the other two pages shown in the video. At trial, jury determines whether the absence in the video of this threelined third page outweighs Mr. Olsen‘s evidence: from himself, from the testimony of Ms. Tidwell and Mr. Burgess (CR 242) (both present when the three page will was printed on Mr. Burgess‘ computer by Mr. Olsen), and from the testimony of Mr. McCay, Ms. Tidwell, Ms. Cline, Ms. Gibson and Mr. Olsen (CR 245) (present when the notary signature and stamp was later affixed to page three of the will document, and the notary stamp affixed to page two). Further, the jury would determine whether the fact that a three page will document was filed is contradicted by the will itself referring on its page two as being that page and ―one preceding page‖. (CR 51) In short, it is a question of fact for a jury to decide whether the Commission has proven with a preponderance of the evidence its assertion that the actual will that was signed consisted solely of two pages and was not accompanied by a third page bearing a notary‘s jurat, signature and seal (which seal also appears on the will‘s second page). (CR 50 & CR 51; CR 52) But before this Court of Appeals is not the outcome of a trial, but a summary judgment ruling. not outweigh accompanying the The Commission‘s summary judgment evidence does evidence affidavits. presented Joining Mr. in Mr. Olsen‘s Olsen‘s sworn MSJ Response statement that and he produced a three page will, presented the first two pages to Mary Ellen, and then probated the three page will document with Dallas County‘s Probate Court, is Mr. Burgess‘ summary judgment affidavit. (CR 240-242) Mr. Burgess‘ sworn testimony states: Because of this new information [that the notary refused to travel to the hospital], I observed Mr. Olsen hurriedly make changes on my computer to the will he was preparing, and with my help since he was unfamiliar with my computer, he printed out a three page document. The three page document he printed out on my computer on February 22, 2005 is the same as the three page document that is attached hereto as Exhibit 1. This is the same three page document 16 that I couriered to Dallas County Probate Court for filing on March 2, 2005. The first two pages of this three page document are the same two pages that Mr. Olsen explained and presented to Mary Ellen on February 22, 2005. The second page is the same page that Mary Ellen signed in my presence in the Baylor University Emergency Room on February 22, 2005. (CR 242) Mr. McCay‘s affidavit confirms Mr. Burgess‘ affidavit. (CR 243-245) Since the standard at issue is the evidentiary standard for summary judgment rulings, this material fact must be construed in favor of Mr. Olsen. Mr. Burgess‘ affidavit alone is enough to create a material fact dispute which must be construed in favor of Mr. Olsen, the non-movant. Significantly, there was no allegation by the Commission that the Last Will and Testament filed on March 2, 2005 does not fully reflect the testamentary dispositions declared by Mary Ellen on February 22, 2005 in the videotape recording of her stating what her last wishes were. A copy of this videotape was attached as Exhibit 4 to the Commission‘s Motion for Partial Summary Judgment. Mary Ellen‘s video-taped statements track exactly with the terms, beneficiaries, property dispositions and executor arrangements set forth in the Will filed on March 2, 2005. Given the summary judgment evidence before the trial court, the trial court erred in not construing that evidence in favor of Mr. Olsen, the nonmovant, erred in not finding that the two pages that were presented to Mary Ellen, to the second page of which she affixed her signature, are the two pages that are pages one and two of the three page Will document that was filed for probate on March 2, 2005, and erred in finding Mr. Olsen engaged in misconduct and violated the T.R.D.P. 8.04(a)(3). E: ISSUE FOUR: The trial court erred in granting summary judgment that Mr. Olsen violated Rule 8.04(a)(3) regarding the notary jurat’s language accompanying Mary Ellen’s February 22, 2005 Will, and in granting summary judgment that the filing the original of Mary Ellen’s February 22, 2005 Will with the accompanying jurat erroneously stating that Mary Ellen was before the notary constituted dishonesty and misrepresentation. The Commission alleged that ―Filing a Will with the probate court that included a jurat that states the Will was signed by Bendtsen in front of a 17 notary when that did not occur constitutes dishonesty and misrepresentation.‖ (The Commission‘s MPSJ at p. 7 of 18, CR 34) The Commission further alleged that: [1] By filing the Will with the Application for Probate (Exhibit 1), Respondent [Mr. Olsen] certified to the court that the Will was valid and was the one executed by Bendtsen. [2] The problem is that a third page, containing a false jurat, became attached to the Will between the time Bendtsen signed it and the time Respondent [Mr. Olsen] filed it with the court. [3] Thus, the Will Respondent filed for probate is not the two-page Will Bendtsen signed. (The Commission‘s MPSJ at p. 8 of 18, CR 35; bracketed numerals added) The Commission‘s conclusion does not follow from the premises stated at ―[1]‖ and ―[2]‖, and ignores that fact that a defectively drafted selfproving affidavit does not invalid the will it accompanies. Cutler v. Ament, 726 S.W.2d 605, 609 (Tex. App. – Houston [14th Dist.], 1987, writ ref‘d n.r.e.). See also Johanson’s Texas Probate Code Annotated, 2001 ed., p. 113, citing Cutler v. Ament: ―If the attesting witnesses signed the will and self-proving affidavit, but the affidavit is merely acknowledged and not sworn to by the witnesses, invalidity of the affidavit does not invalidate the will. Although the will is not self-proved, it is admissible to probate upon proof of its due execution.‖ (emphasis added) Under Texas Probate Law, a testator‘s signature need not be notarized for the will to be valid. Texas Probate Code § 59, ―Requisites of a Will‖. The Texas Probate Code only requires that the testator‘s signature be witnessed by two witnesses who sign the will in the presence of the testator. Id. Only a self-proving affidavit requires a notarization. Id. A self-proving affidavit is optional, it is not required for a will to valid. Id. Further, the self-proved affidavit can be done separately from the will: ―. . . at any subsequent date during the lifetime of the testator and the witnesses, [the will may] be made self-proved‖. Id. A defective self-proving affidavit does not invalid the will it accompanies. Cutler v. Ament, op. cit. As an evidentiary matter, Texas law holds that the validity of a self- 18 proved affidavit is a fact issue, and thus cannot be resolved through a summary judgment proceeding. Gasaway v. Nesmith, 548 S.W.2d 457, 460 (Tex. Civ. App. – Houston [1st Dist.] 1977, writ ref‘d n.r.e.). See also Johanson’s Texas Probate Code Annotated, 2001 ed., p. 113, citing Gasaway v. Nesmit: ―A self-proving affidavit constitutes prima facie evidence of the validity of the will‘s execution. Although the recitals in the affidavit are subject to contradiction by competent testimony, such testimony does not destroy the prima facie case established by the will‘s attestation clause, and only raises a fact issue for the trier of facts.‖ (emphasis added) Consequently, under Texas Probate law, the Commission is in error in suggesting that the defective jurat in any way made defective Mary Ellen‘s February 22, 2005 Will. The Commission is also in error is arguing that Mr. Olsen‘s filing of Mary Ellen‘s February 22, 2005 Will with the defective jurat contradicted his alleged certification ―to the court that the Will was valid‖ (Commission MPSJ at p. 8 of 18, CR 35). Texas Probate Law is clear that a defective self-proving affidavit does not invalidate the will it accompanies. Cutler v. Ament, op. cit. As a evidentiary matter, the Commission presents no evidence that the two pages that are pages one and two of the will document that was filed on March 2, 2005 are not the same two pages that appear in the videotape of the February 22, 2005 will signing. The Commission presents no evidence that the signature of Mary Ellen‘s located on page two the of the will document that was filed on March 2, 2005 is not the signature that she affixed to her will as documented by the videotape of the February 22, 2005 will signing. The Commission presents no evidence that the hand printed and signed names of the two attesting witnesses located on page two of the will document that was filed on March 2, 2005, were not affixed to the will on February 22, 2005, as both witnesses attested before the notary Marian Gibson (as is typed on page three of the will document). (CR 51; CR 52) 19 Therefore, the Commission‘s conclusion that ―Thus, the Will Respondent [Mr. Olsen] filed for probate is not the two-page Will Bendtsen signed.‖ does not follow logically and is not substantiated by the evidence provided by the Commission. (The Commission‘s MPSJ at p. 8 of 18; CR 35) What the summary judgment evidence does demonstrate is the following: Fact: Mary Ellen had a stroke on February 22, 2005. (CR 30; CR 243) Fact: Mr. Olsen was informed Mary Ellen was in the Baylor Emergency Room and went there to see how his client was doing. (CR 218) Fact: At the time, there was still pending Giron‘s Application for appointment of and as Mary Ellen‘s permanent guardian (Giron‘s Application to be temporary guardian had been denied 11 days earlier). (CR 353; CR 308) Fact: Mr. Olsen continued to represent Mary Ellen in Giron‘s involuntary guardianship action against Mary Ellen. (CR 218) Fact: Mary Ellen asked to see Mr. Olsen in Baylor‘s Emergency Room. (CR 218) Fact: Mr. Olsen visited with Mary Ellen in Baylor‘s Emergency Room. (CR 218) Fact: Mary Ellen asked Mr. Olsen to draft her Last Will and Testament and informed him as to her desired heirs, testamentary dispositions, desired executors, and the disposition of her body. (CR 218) Fact: Mr. Olsen was informed Mary Ellen had only a 2% chance of making it through the night. (CR 241; CR 243) Fact: Mary Ellen was at Baylor Hospital, Dallas, Texas. (CR 241; CR 243) Fact: Mr. Olsen‘s law office was on the outskirts of Garland, Texas. (CR 219; CR 309) Fact: Traveling to Mr. Olsen‘s law office to prepare Mary Ellen‘s will with his law books and will forms available and returning to Baylor would have taken much longer than doing Mary Ellen‘s will nearby at DecoDence L.L.C. (which at 3020 Canton Street is five blocks from the Baylor Emergency Room). (CR 219; CR 241) Fact: Mary Ellen had no identification to prove her identity.(CR 241;CR 244) Fact: Giron had destroyed Mary Ellen‘s driver‘s license and other identifications. (CR 241; CR 243) Fact: Because Mary Ellen had no identification, only a notary who knew her personally could notarize a self-proven affidavit attached to her will. (CR 241; CR 243) Fact: Marian Gibson was a notary who knew Mary Ellen personally and had already notarized legal documents for Mary Ellen on January 22, 2005 at Ashley Court. (CR 241; CR 243) Fact: Marian Gibson was contacted to be taken to Baylor‘s Emergency Room to notarize a self-proving affidavit for Mary Ellen‘s will. (CR 245) Fact: Marian Gibson refused to travel to Baylor Emergency Room but agreed to notarize legal documents at her home. (CR 245) Fact: Mr. Olsen was informed of this last minute refusal. (Cr 242; CR 245) Fact: Mr. Olsen had to re-draft the will document because there was now no notary available for the hospital signing. (CR 242) Fact: Mr. Olsen did re-draft the will document. (CR 242) Fact: Mary Ellen signed her will in Baylor Hospital (on page two of the three page will document). (Cr 242; CR 245) Fact: The two attesting witnesses both wrote their names to the will in front of Mary Ellen. (CR 226) Fact: The two attesting witnesses than went to Ms.Gibson‘s home and attested that they had witnessed Mary Ellen sign her will at Baylor. (CR 226) 20 Fact: The notary Marian Gibson then affixed her signature and notary seal to page three of the will document, and affixed her notary seal to page two of the will document. (CR 226) These are the facts set forth in the summary judgment record by Mr. Olsen, the non-movant. The trial court erred in not applying these facts to the Commission‘s allegations and in granting the Commission‘s MPSJ. The emergency situation set forth in the fact section above and the attached affidavits of Edwin C. Olsen IV (CR 238-239), Justin Dale Burgess (CR 240-242), and Mark Patrick McCay (CR 243-245), illustrate that circumstances were not ideal for the drafting of perfect legal documents. Under the emergency situation at issue, and the last minute refusal of the only notary that could notarize a ―self-proving affidavit‖ to a will for Mary Ellen, the document that was printed was flawed. (CR 242; CR 245) But it was the document that Mary Ellen had signed and the witnesses present knew that a three-page will document had been printed. (CR 226) The document printed at Deco-Dence L.L.C. on February 22, 2005, signed by Mary Ellen, and subscribed by her two witnesses, and then notarized at the notary‘s house, was the one filed ―as is‖ on March 2, 2005. The notary jurat language deriving from the (CR 226) ―self-proving affidavit‖ language of § 59 of the Texas Probate Code is the sole content of page three. The typed text referring to Mary Ellen on page three was inadvertently not deleted after the changes were made to the language of the witness‘s attestation clause on page two in the last minute rush to accommodate the notary‘s refusal to go to Baylor Hospital‘s Emergency room. It is a mischaracterization for the Commission to claim it is a ―false jurat‖ (CR 35), in the sense of being intentional done for dishonest reasons or reasons of misrepresentation. Once the will document was signed and notarized, the typed language was left unmarked since that was the document ―as is‖ that Mary Ellen signed and was witnessed and later notarized. Further, the Commission is incorrect in its assertion that ―The problem 21 is that a third page, containing a false jurat, became attached to the Will between the time Bendtsen [Mary Ellen] signed it and the time Mr. Olsen filed it with the court. Thus, the Will Mr. Olsen filed for probate is not the two-page Will Bendtsen signed.‖ (The Commission‘s MPSJ at p. 8 of 18) As the non-movant, the summary judgment evidence is that the third page was printed out on a computer printer at the same time as pages one and two, and all three pages were in Mr. Olsen‘s brief case when he returned to Baylor Hospital‘s Emergency Room. (CR 242) Mary Ellen was presented page one and two since those had the next germane language for recording Mary Ellen‘s wishes for her Last Will and Testament, Mary Ellen signed page two, the witnesses subscribed their names to page two, then pages one and two were returned to the brief case. The witnesses, Mr. Olsen, and Mr. McCay then went to the notary‘s home, pages 2 and 3 were presented to the notary, the witnesses affirmed their attestation on page 2, and they affixed their signatures to the notary‘s notary book. The notary signed her name to page 3 and affixed her seal to page 3 and page 2. Pages 2 and 3 were then returned to Mr. Olsen‘s brief case back with page 1. Eventually all three pages were photocopied, and then at this point were page 1, page 2 and page 3 stapled together. On March 2, 2005, all three pages were filed together since they constituted the original three page Will document as signed by Mary Ellen and her witnesses, and as notarized by the notary. (CR 242) NO LEGAL AUTHORITY THAT ONLY VALID WILLS MAY BE FILED FOR PROBATE Mr. Olsen was obliged to file the three page will document under Texas law. Texas Probate Code § 75: ―Upon receiving notice of the death of a testator, the person having custody of the testator‘s will shall deliver it to the clerk of the court which has jurisdiction of the estate.‖ The Commission claims that ―[1] By filing the Will with the Application for Probate (Exhibit 1), Respondent [Mr. Olsen] certified to the court that 22 the Will was valid. (CR 35; bracketed numerals added; emphasis added). The Commission provides no legal authority for its proposition that the filing of a will is a certification by an attorney that the will is ―valid‖. Texas Probate Code § 75 makes no such distinction. Texas Probate Code § 75 mandates a blanket obligation to deliver all wills to the probate court clerk. Any ―person‖ having ―custody ―deliver it to the clerk of the court‖. of the testator‘s will‖ Texas Probate Code § 75. ―shall‖ There is no exception made for not being obliged to deliver ―invalid‖ wills. The obligation is even more draconian when a person has in his custody a testator‘s last Will: ―On sworn written complaint that any person has the last will of any testator . . . the county judge shall cause said person . . . to appear before him and show cause why he should not deliver such will to the court for probate.‖ Texas Probate Code § 75. Indeed, a person having custody of a testator‘s last Will is potentially subject to imprisonment if he does not provide it the court for probate: ―. . . such judge may cause him to be arrested and imprisoned until he shall so deliver . . .‖ Texas Probate Code § 75. The Commission presents no legal authority for its proposition that the drafting attorney must determine the validity of a will and so certify. Such a situation is contrary to the purpose of the statutory establishment of specialized county probate courts, whose express duty is to determine the validity of wills filed with them. It is the duty of the probate court, through the judge and the trier of fact to access the validity of wills, by subjecting contested wills to the adversarial admissible evidence from lay and expert witnesses. process and to consider See Texas Probate Code § 10 ―Persons Entitled to Contest Proceedings‖ and Johanson’s Texas Probate Code Annotated, 2001 ed., discussion of § 10, p. 22-30. Wills can be challenged on a variety lack of testamentary capacity and undue influence. See Texas Probate Code § 10. A 23 of grounds, including facially valid will can be found to be invalid because the testator lacked testamentary capacity or was subject to undue influence. When a client asks her attorney to draft her will, it is his obligation to do so and let the Court decide whether or not the will is valid, not to don the mantle of judge and jury and unilaterally decide not to file a last will because of potential claims that it is ―invalid‖. To the contrary, Texas Probate Code § 75 obliges the attorney to file a last will. A last will is constructively presumed to be valid by the Probate Court and will be admitted to Probate if facially valid, unless it is successfully challenged by a will contestant. In a will contest, the will proponent has the burden to demonstrate that the will complies with statutory formalities and that the testator had testamentary capacity. See Johanson’s Texas Probate Code Ann. 2001 ed., p. 23. But the will contestant has the burden to prove undue influence. Id. p. 26: ―The burden of proving undue influence is on the contestant.‖ Lastly, the Commission ignores that the attestation clause wording of page two above the witness signature lines. On its face, it applies only to the two attesting witness, and it is this attestation that the two witnesses are swearing to before the notary on page three of the will document. Ellen‘s attestation clause is entirely separate, and is Mary located in the middle of page two, above her signature block. (CR 51) Specifically, the witness attestation clause reads: The foregoing instrument, consisting of this and the preceding page, was signed, published and declared by MARY ELLEN LOGAN BENDTSEN, Testatrix, to be her Last Will and Testament, in our presence and we, at her request and in the presence of each other, have hereunto subscribed our names as witnesses this 22nd day of February, 2005. (CR 51) The attestation act is referred to in the past tense ―have hereunto subscribed‖ (CR 51) because Mr. Olsen had been informed the witnesses would have to go to the notary, and attest to a prior act. (CR 242; CR 245) Otherwise, if the notary had been present at Baylor, the clause would have 24 been written in the present tense and read ―do hereunto subscribe‖. While the refusal of the notary prevented Mary Ellen from have a selfproved will, the act of notarization did conclusively establish the date on which the will was attested to. Since Mary Ellen was still embroiled in Giron‘s involuntary guardianship action, it was reasonable to presume that Giron would contest Mary Ellen‘s Last Will and Testament. Hence, Mr. Olsen did the best he could do under the circumstances to document Mary Ellen‘s wishes and bulletproof them (hence the videotaping plus the fixing of the date of the will via the notarization). F: ISSUE FIVE: The trial court erred in granting summary judgment that Mr. Olsen violated 8.04(a)(3), 3.03(a)(1), 3.03(b), and in granting summary judgment that Mr. Olsen’s statements to the court were dishonest, constituted a misrepresentation to the court, and that Mr. Olsen was not candid with the court and intended to mislead the court. The Commission alleges that ―Mr. Olsen‘s statements [sic] to the court are dishonest and constitute a misrepresentation to the Court.‖ (The Commission‘s MPSJ at p. 8-9 of 18; CR 35-36) and alleges that Mr. Olsen ―misled the court‖. (The Commission‘s MPSJ at p. 12 of 18, CR 39) Actually, the singular – not plural – statement at issue is Mr. Olsen‘s response to a question of Judge Price‘s made after he had just adjourned court. Judge Price, standing up, asked: ―And also, where is Ms. Bendtsen now? What is her current residence?‖ Mr. Olsen volunteered the statement: ―Your Honor, she was at Ashley before.‖ (CR 336; emphasize added) These are the facts established by the summary judgment record: Fact: Mary Ellen had been informed by Ashley Court that Medicare would not longer cover her stay at Ashley Court. (CR 350) Fact: Mary Ellen had consequently checked herself out of Ashley Court on January 31, 2005. (CR 350) Fact: The first hearing on Giron‘s effort to be appointed Mary Ellen‘s temporary guardian took place on January 31, 2005 after Mary Ellen checked herself out of Ashley Court. (CR 309) Fact: Giron pled that Mary Ellen‘s residence was 4949 Swiss Avenue, Dallas, TX, in her Application for Appointment of Temporary Guardian and Application for Appoint of Permanent Guardian. (CR 353) Fact: Mary Ellen was present in court on January 31, 2005, seated at the table directly before Judge Price. (CR 311) Fact: Judge Price adjourned court in the midst of witness testimony.(CR 336) 25 Fact: As Mary Ellen sat at the table before him, Judge Price asked: ―And also, where is Ms. Bendtsen now? What is her current residence?‖ Fact: At the time, ME‘s residence was 4949 Swiss Avenue, Dallas, TX (CR 353) Fact: At that moment, Mary Ellen was in court. (CR 311) Fact: Mr. Olsen answered the question, using the past-tense twice: ―Your Honor, she was at Ashley before.‖ (CR 336; emphasis added) Fact: Judge Price never signed an order ordering Mary Ellen back to Ashley Court. (CR 289) Fact: Absent a ruling appointing a guardian for Mary Ellen, she was free to go where she wished. (CR 252) Fact: Mr. Olsen had no motive to mislead the court. (CR 238) Fact: Mr. Olsen did not believe he had misled the court. (CR 238) Fact: Mr. Olsen‘s mental focus was on Mary Ellen‘s property tax payment deadline (due postmarked by midnight that evening). (CR 238) Fact: Mary Ellen‘s ad-litem counsel was present throughout the hearing, and throughout the discussion that took place after Judge Price adjourned the hearing, and made no statements contradicting Mr. Olsen. (CR 309) Summation: All these facts are set forth in the record. facts are material. facts had to be All of these As this was a summary judgment proceeding, all these construed in favor of the non-movant, Mr. Olsen. The Commission offers no evidence that contradicts these facts. The threshold event that started all the litigation that has been spawned in the Mary Ellen matter is Giron‘s filing of her Application for Appointment of Temporary Guardian and Application for Appoint of Permanent Guardian on January 21, 2005. (CR 353) The Commission chose not to include in its MPSJ either Giron‘s January 21, 2005 Application for Appointment of Temporary Guardian and Application for Appointment of Permanent Guardian (CR 353) or her February 2, 2005 Applicant’s Motion For Emergency Order. (CR 246) to include as exhibits both of Mr. Olsen‘s The Commission did choose Responses filed to these pleadings, but not the original pleadings themselves. The Commission claims that Mr. Olsen‘s answering questions: ―And also, where is Ms. Bendson [sic] now? residence?‖ was misleading and dishonest because of Judge Price‘s What is her current Mr. Olsen accurately answered ―Your Honor, she was at Ashley before.‖ (CR 336; emphasis added) The Commission mischaracterizes the setting by stating: ―During the course of the hearing, the following exchange took place between Mr. Olsen 26 and the Honorable Robert E. Price, Judge of Probate Court No. 2, Dallas County, Texas.‖ (Commission‘s MPSJ at p. 9 of 18; CR 36; emphasis added) To the contrary, Judge Price had suddenly interrupted the proceedings to announce that the hearing was adjourned and had stood up. (CR 228) Mr. Olsen had not had the opportunity during the hearing to raise the issue that Mary Ellen‘s property taxes on her home at 4949 Swiss Avenue where due that day postmarked by midnight or a late penalty would be imposed, it being January 31st. (CR 228) This was the foremost issue on Mr. Olsen‘s mind. (CR 228) The transcript of the January 31, 2005 hearing is attached as exhibit 7 to the Deposition of Judge Price. (CR 309-349) page 26 through 29. The relevant portion is at Judge Price interjects at line 19, p. 26 (CR 336): THE COURT: Excuse me, Ms. Kenney. It‘s 4:00 o‘clock now. We‘re going to adjourn. The witness may step down. We‘re going to continue this matter until February the 19 th and the lawyers can get together and see if they can agree upon a setting within that period of time. And also, where is Ms. Bendtsen now? What is her current residence? Mr. Olsen then volunteered the answer quoted earlier that the Commission claims is dishonest and done for the purpose of misrepresentation. The Commission ignores three key points is its claim and fails to note that there was no dispute pertaining to the key issue. First, Giron‘s January 21, 2005 Application for Appointment of Temporary Guardian and Application for Appointment of Permanent Guardian stated itself on page one, paragraph one: ―The Respondent, MARY ELLEN LOGAN BENDTSEN, is a female whose date of birth is July 13, 1916. She currently resides at 4949 Swiss Avenue, Dallas, Texas 75214.‖ (Application at p. 1; CR 353) Giron through her attorney Ms. Kenney had agreed with Mr. Olsen as counsel for Mary Ellen on January 20, 2005 to allow Mary Ellen to check herself into Ashley Court on January 21, 2008 when Baylor Hospital was discharging her. (CR 229) Thus, when Ms. Kenney filed Giron‘s Application on January 21, 2005, she knew that Mary Ellen was at Ashley Court. 27 This in where Mary Ellen was served Giron‘s Application on January 25, 2005. Knowing that Mary Ellen was at Ashley Court, Giron‘s Application states that Mary Ellen ―currently resides at 4949 Swiss Avenue, Dallas, Texas 75214.‖ (Application at p. 1, CR 353) Giron‘s Application was verified by Giron. (Application at p. 9, CR 361) Thus, with regard to Judge Price‘s compound questions, Mary Ellen‘s ―current residence‖ was her home at 4949 Swiss Avenue of fifty-five (55) years (CR 125). As to ―where is she now?‖, at that moment in time, Mary Ellen was seated directly before Judge Price. (CR 229) Mr. Olsen answered Judge Price‘s compound question as best he could under the circumstances at the time, stating accurately that ―Your Honor, she was at Ashley before.‖ (CR 336; emphasis added) The ―was‖ is the past tense of ―is‖, which is why Mr. Olsen used it, since Mary Ellen was no longer at Ashley Court. Furthermore, ―before‖ is a reference to the past. Judge Price in his deposition testimony agreed that both words refer to the past tense. (CR 265) It was not Mr. Olsen‘s intent or desire to misrepresent or be dishonest. (CR 229) misrepresent. Mr. Olsen did not have any motive to be dishonest or Indeed, if Mr. Olsen had had – counter-factually – any intent to be dishonest or to misrepresent, a more effective answer would have been: ―She is at Ashley‖ instead of ―she was at Ashley before.‖ Mr. Olsen thought the language he had employed under the circumstances informed Judge Price of this reality, which is why the statement concerning a visitation order to Ashley court did not make sense to Mr. Olsen. (CR 230) But after Judge Price had hurriedly closed down the hearing while waiving off the issues raised by the various counsel, Mr. Olsen asked the bailiff whether any orders had been signed and heard the bailiff state to him that none had been. (CR 230) Judge Price confirms in his deposition that he never signed any order regarding visitation at Ashley Court. (CR 268) 28 Nor did Judge Price receive a draft of such an order. (CR 268-9). Nor did Judge Price order Mr. Olsen to draft such an order. (CR 269). The summary judgment evidence provided by the Commission consists solely of two items: (1) six admissions Mr. Olsen made with regard to basic factual predicates: i.e. that he represented at and accompanied Mary Ellen to the January 31, 2005 hearing (Olsen Admissions #8 and #10; CR 36), and knew prior to the hearing that Mary Ellen had checked out and been discharged from Ashley Court (Olsen Admissions #4, #6, #10, #11; CR 37). (2) Judge Price‘s October 3, 2008 Affidavit. (CR 113) The Commission offers no evidence that Mr. Olsen intended to deceive Judge Price. The Commission does not dispute that seven days later (Feb. 7, 2005), any misunderstanding that Judge Price had was gone (CR 283; CR 296; CR 371; CR 414) and that Judge Price took no action against either Mr. Olsen (CR 283; CR 284; CR 296) or with regard to compelling Mary Ellen to return to Ashley Court. (CR 368-402) In fact, four days further on (Feb. 11, 2005), Judge Price denied Giron‘s Application for Temporary Guardianship. (CR 308) Judge Price never granted Giron‘s Motion for Emergency Orders. (CR 289) The key summary judgment evidence offered by the Commission is Judge Price‘s affidavit signed three years, eight months, and three days after the fact. The Price Affidavit was written by the Commission (CR 257; CR 291), presented by the Commission to Judge Price (CR 257; CR 291), and accompanied by no documents. (CR 257) Judge Price reviewed only the transcript of the January 31, 2005 hearing; not the follow-up February 7th and 11th, 2005 transcripts. (CR 257; CR 258; CR 291). Judge Price signed the Commission‘s affidavit without him having any memory at the time he signed the affidavit of the outcome of Giron‘s guardianship action. (CR 259) Before signing the Commission‘s affidavit, Judge Price did not review Giron‘s Motion for Emergency Orders that triggered the February 7, 2005 hearing (CR 291), he did not review the transcripts of the hearings of 29 February 7 and February 11, 2005 (CR 291), nor did he review any of the pleadings that were filed nor the orders that he signed. (CR 291) Judge Price did not even recall that he had denied Giron‘s Application for Temporary Guardianship. (CR 259: ―Q. Do you remember denying the application for appointment of a temporary guardianship? A. [Judge Price] I don’t recall denying it.‖). (emphasis added) What this boils down to is that Judge Price just took the Commission‘s word that Mr. Olsen had mislead him, and performed no due diligence to investigate the merits or the context of the Commission‘s allegation. ―Q: And you didn‘t review any of the motions that were filed? A. [Judge Price] I just dealt with what happened on this January 31st.‖ (CR 291; emphasis added) As summary judgment evidence, Judge Price‘s affidavit had to be construed in conjunction with Judge Price‘s deposition testimony and weighed in favor of the non-movant, Mr. Olsen. fact to consider testimony, Judge Judge Price‘s At a minimum, it should be up to a trier of Price‘s actual affidavit, testimony in his revealing court subject deposition to cross- examination, and Mr. Olsen‘s rebuttal testimony in determining whether Mr. Olsen violated the disciplinary rules by correctly using the past tense to answer Judge Price‘s compound question in the rush to adjournment that Judge Price himself had insisted on. Giron‘s February 2, 2005 Motion for Emergency Order made the very same allegation to Judge Price that the Commission now makes (CR 415: ―Olsen did not inform the Court that Respondent discharged from the nursing facility.‖). [Mary Ellen] had already been At the time, Judge Price did nothing, he did not find Mr. Olsen in contempt of court for allegedly being dishonest or misrepresenting a material fact. (CR 283; CR 284; CR 296) Giron‘s February 2, 2005 Emergency Order Motion was filed two days after Mary Ellen returned home to her residence of fifty-five (55) years (CR 125), and two days after the first January 31, 2005 hearing. 30 In her motion, Giron as ―Applicant asks this court to order MARY ELLEN LOGAN BENDTSEN to return to Ashley Court at Turtle Creek . . . to be admitted into the assisted living section of such institution.‖ (Emergency Order Motion at 1; CR 414) Giron states that ―it was inferred that MARY ELLEN LOGAN BENDTSEN would remain at Ashley Court until the hearing on the Application for Temporary Orders was resolved.‖ (Emergency Order at 1-2; CR 414-415). Giron states that ―On February 1, 2005, Kenny [Giron‘s attorney] learned that Olsen did not inform the Court that Mr. Olsen had already been discharged from the nursing facility. . . ― (Emergency Order at 2; CR 415). Giron further claimed that ―The Respondent‘s [Mary Ellen‘s] attorney failed to adequately inform the Court and did not obtain permission for Respondent [Mary Ellen] to return to her home . . .‖ (Emergency Order at 3; CR 416). Thus, the very charges that the Commission alleged against Mr. Olsen were also alleged by Giron‘s attorney Ms. Kenney directly to Judge Price in her February 2, 2005 Motion for Emergency Order three (3) years and eight (8) months earlier. continued the Judge Price heard Giron‘s Motion on February 7, 2005, then hearing to February 11, 2005, when he denied Giron‘s Application for Appointment of Temporary Guardian in its entirety (CR 308). He later ordered Giron to pay Mary Ellen‘s attorney-ad-litem‘s attorney fees of $10,470.00 personally. (CR 307) Thus, at the very time in question, Judge Price considered the same allegations that the Commission now alleges and found them to be without merit. If he had found them to be of merit, he would have found Mr. Olsen in contempt but never did. (CR 252) G: ISSUE SIX: The trial court erred in granting summary judgment that Mr. Olsen violated 8.04(a)(3), 3.03(a)(1) & 3.03(b), and in granting summary judgment that Mr. Olsen’s Opposition to Giron’s Motion for Emergency Orders was dishonest, constituted a misrepresentation to the court, and that Mr. Olsen was not candid with the court and intended to mislead the court. The Commission alleges that ―Mr. Olsen‘s statement in the Opposition to Applicant‘s Motion for Emergency Order 31 is dishonest and constitutes a misrepresentation to the Court.‖ (The Commission‘s MPSJ at p.11of 18; CR 38) The Commission makes this claim because Mr. Olsen stated therein that he had ―informed the Court that [Bendtsen] was discharged from Ashley Court.‖ (The Commission‘s MPSJ at p.11 of 18; CR 38) In full, what Mr. Olsen wrote is: ―Seeking guidance from this Court, Mr. Olsen‘s Counsel informed the Court that Respondent [i.e. Mary Ellen] was discharged from Ashley Court and that her postmarked that evening to avoid a penalty.‖ property taxes had to be Mary Ellen‘s Opposition to Applicant’s Motion for Emergency Order, at 1-2 of 6 (filed February 7, 2005 at 2:52 p.m., just prior to the Court‘s 3:00 p.m. hearing on this matter. Contrary to the Commission‘s characterization, this statement accurately reflects what Mr. Olsen thought he had informed the Court the previous week. (CR 231) Mr. Olsen‘s statement in Mary Ellen‘s Opposition to Applicant’s Motion for Emergency Order accurately reflects his memory of what he thought he had represented to the Court and was what he had intended to represent to the Court. (CR 231) Mr. Olsen believed when he wrote Mary Ellen‘s Opposition to Applicant’s Motion for Emergency Order that the words he had used in court had informed Judge Price that Mary Ellen had been discharged from Ashley Court. (CR 231-232) Subsequently review of the January 31, 2005 hearing transcript reveals that better words could have been employed, but when Mr. Olsen wrote Mary Ellen‘s Opposition to Applicant’s Motion for Emergency Order, he did not have a copy of the January 31, 2005 hearing transcript. (CR 232) The January 31, 2005 hearing transcript was not produced until February 9, 2005, (see page 30 of hearing transcript of January 31, 2005 hearing; CR 340). Consequently, Mr. Olsen wrote Mary Ellen‘s Opposition on February 6-7, 2005 from memory. (CR 403) Finally, lawyers frequently have only their memories to go by in drafting rebuttal legal documents. As example, in Giron‘s Applicant’s Motion for Emergency Order Ms. Kenney states: ―At the end of the hearing, the Court, 32 ordered that no one visit the Respondent [Mary Ellen] without prior Court Order and directed Attorney EDWIN C. OLSEN, IV to draw up that Order and the Order denying Applicant‘s Motion in Limine.‖ (Applicant’s Motion for Emergency Order at 1; bolding, underline added). Ms. Kenny‘s statement is not true as (1) demonstrated by the hearing transcript and (2) confirmed by Judge Price in his deposition: ―Q. And did you instruct me to prepare such an order? A. [Judge Price]. No.‖. (CR 269) A review of the hearing transcript shows that the Court ordered Mr. Olsen to draft only one order, not two: namely the Order denying Giron‘s Motion in Limine. (CR 316) Judge Price in his deposition confirms that Mr. Olsen was ordered solely to draft one order, the Order denying Applicant‘s Motion in Limine (CR 269), and that he, Judge Price, had not ordered any attorney to draft the order directed at Ashley Court. (CR 268-9) Judge Price himself found no issue with Mr. Olsen‘s drafting of Mary Ellen‘s Opposition to Applicant’s Motion for Emergency Order. Again, four days after it was first heard, he denied Giron‘s Application for Appointment of a Temporary Guardian in its entirety. (CR 308) Mr. Olsen‘s did not intend to mislead the Court, the Court failed to consider, much less find, that Mr. Olsen mislead it as alleged by Giron, and never considered finding Mr. Olsen in contempt. (CR 232; CF 296) The Commission, alleged that ―Mr. Olsen‘s mislead the Court‖, a violation of Rule 3.03(a)(1) and Rule 3.03(b). (The Commission‘s MPSJ at p.12 of 18; CR 39) Regarding Rule 3.03(a)(1), Mr. Olsen did not ―knowingly make a false statement of material fact or law to a tribunal‖ when he wrote the statement at issue. (CR 233) Mr. Olsen believed that he had communicated to Judge Price that Mary Ellen was gone from Ashley Court, and the document Mr. Olsen filed on February 7th – Mary Ellen‘s Opposition to Applicant’s Motion for Emergency Order — reflected that belief. (CR 230; CR 232; CR 233) Finally, misleading the Court was 33 factually impossible. Mary Ellen‘s Opposition scheduled was filed 3:00 p.m. at 2:52 start p.m. time of (CR the Emergency Order on February 7, 2005. 403), eight hearing on minutes before the Giron‘s Motion for Judge Price never read Mr. Olsen‘s last minute filing. (Price Deposition, lines 14-15; CR 282) H: ISSUE SEVEN: The trial court erred in granting summary judgment that Mr. Olsen violated Rule 8.04(a)(1). The Commission finally alleged that Mr. Olsen violated rule 8.04(a)(1), because he allegedly violated others of listed disciplinary rules discussed above. Mr. Olsen incorporates in full that preceeding analyses herein. As the trial court erred in ruling he had violated any disciplinary rules, it thus errs in ruling that Mr. Olsen violated rule 8.04(a)(1). I: Procedural History of the Disciplinary Case: This factual history applies to Issues Eight through Fifteen and is derived from the District Clerk‘s ―Case Summary‖, at CR 469-472. 08 October 2008: The Commission‘s Motion for Partial Summary Judgment [hereinafter ―MPSJ‖] filed (CR 28); included as Exhibit 6 the October 03, 2008 Affidavit of Judge Price. (CR 113) 29 October 2008: Date of Mr. Olsen‘s letter requesting two hours depose Judge Price regarding his October 3, 2008 Affidavit. (CR 303) to 31 October 2008: Date of the Commission‘s letter notifying Mr. Olsen of MPSJ hearing date and time, stating set for ―teleconference hearing . . .on December 5, 2008, at 10:30 a.m.‖ (CR 149) 06 November 2008: Date of Deposition of Judge Price (CR 252), adjourned by Judge Price (CR 296, line 17-20) after fifty-five minutes (CR 252, line 21: ―from 2:04 p.m. to 2:59 p.m.). 21 November 2008: Mr. Olsen‘s Verified Motion to Continue Summary Judgment Hearing filed (CR 143), requested continuance because of (1) need to conclude deposition of Judge Price (set for December 12, 2008) (CR 144), and (2) conflicting hearing settings (Giron‘s wrongful death suit against Mr. Olsen – representing himself pro se (CR 6) – had hearing set for December 5, 2008, at 10:00 a.m. [thirty minutes before setting of teleconference hearing in MPSJ]. (CR 144; CR 154; CR 155) 25 November 2008: The Commission‘s Response to Mr. Olsen‘s Verified Motion to Continue Summary Judgment Hearing filed. (CR 188) In it, the Commission asserted that ―Petitioner [the Commission] has learned that this conflicting setting does not involve Respondent [Mr. Olsen].‖ (CR 188) The Commission further asserted that ―Since these hearings do not involve Respondent [Mr. Olsen], he is free to attend the summary judgment hearing set in this matter on December 5.‖ (CR 189) The Commission provided no 34 evidence nor source for its assertions. emailed to Mr. Olsen on 24 November 2008. The Commission‘s Response was 24 November 2008: Mr. Olsen‘s Verified Reply to the Commission‘s Response to Mr. Olsen‘s Verified Motion to Continue Summary Judgment Hearing filed (CR 170). Mr. Olsen disputed the Commission‘s assertions, attaching as evidence the affidavit of Nicholas Acuff, counsel for Mr. Burgess and Mr. McCay (the primary beneficiaries of Mary Ellen‘s Last Will and Testament, and the other two defendants in Giron‘s wrongful death suit). Mr. Acuff states regarding Giron‘s December 5, 2005 wrongful death hearing: In particular, there is an ongoing battle over discovery. To date, Ms. Giron’s attorney has not produced a single document in any of defendants’ request for production of documents (either for my clients’ requests, Mr. Olsen’s requests, or those of the Baylor Defendants). I expect this issue concerning document production to arise at the hearing on December 5, 2008. Additionally, there are long standing motions to dismiss that have not been ruled on, and I expect Judge Emily G. Tobolowsky to give guidance to the parties regarding these outstanding issues as well as to the future scheduling of this case. As such, I consider it important for me to be at this hearing on December 5, 2008 even though my clients are not the direct subject of the motions on the docket. I would also understand why Mr. Olsen would consider it important for he to be there as well. (CR 184-185) 28 November 2008: Mr. Olsen‘s MPSJ Response timely filed. (CR 216) 02 December 2008: Order denying Mr. Olsen‘s continuance motion signed by Judge Quisenberry, presiding judge. (CR 203) 02 December 2008: Mr. Olsen‘s Verified Objection to Conducting Summary Judgment Hearing via Telephone, Verified Emergency Motion for Continuance, Request for Hearing on his Verified Emergency Motion for Continuance, and Request for the Presence of a Court Reporter filed. (CR 191) Mr. Olsen attached Giron‘s wrongful death attorney‘s December 1, 2005 email to Mr. Olsen as Exhibit B (CR 200), which stated that issues directly germane to Mr. Olsen would be the subject of the conflicting December 5, 2008 wrongful death hearing [Giron the complainant] [(CR 200; bolding in original)]: A hearing is set December 5, 2008 at 10:00 a.m. along with Plaintiff’s Motion for Summary Judgment as to Request for Declaratory Judgment and Plaintiff’s Third Motion to Compel Discovery. Next, at the hearing I will also ask the Court about a new trial date. Please let me know when you think we can reset the trial is this case. If our trial will conflict with your criminal trial [Giron the complainant] or with your state bar trial [Giron the complainant], we can work around those dates. Please advise. 04 December 2008: The Commission‘s Reply to Mr. Olsen‘s Response to the Commission‘s MPSJ filed. (CR 204) The Commission objects to Mr. Olsen‘s verified Response, and all of Mr. Olsen‘s affidavits (his, Mr. Burgess‘ and Mr. McCay‘s). (CR 204, 205, 206) 04 December 2008: Mr. Olsen‘s Verified Emergency Motion for Continuance granted (CR 455: The Commission confirms: ―2. Respondent‘s Motion for Continuance Was Granted.‖) The Commission cites Mr. Olsen‘s 08 June 2009 35 Affidavit at p. 2 (CR 455), which states in part: On December 4, 2008, at approximately 6:00 o’clock p.m. I [Mr. Olsen] retrieved a voice message from a clerk of Judge Quisenberry’s Court in Weatherford advising me that the motion for continuance had been Granted and that I would later be advised of the rescheduled date and time [of the hearing on the Commission‘s MPSJ]. (CR 439) 04 December 2008: Deposition conducted by Giron‘s attorney Dunleavy of Mark McCay, defended by Mr. Olsen, concludes close to 9:00 p.m. Mr. Olsen received the Commission‘s MPSJ Reply after 9:00 p.m. upon returning to his office. (CR 209-210) 05 December 2008: 10:00 a.m. hearing conducted in Frances Ann Giron v. Mark McCay, Justin Burgess, Edwin C. Olsen IV, Baylor Health Care System, and Baylor University Medical Center, DC-06-02257-M, 298th Judicial District Court Dallas County, Texas. Concludes at approximately 11:00 a.m. (CR 439) 05 December 2008: At approximately 11:16 a.m., Mr. Olsen received a voicemail from a clerk of Judge Quisenberry‘s Court in Weatherford advising Mr. Olsen that the hearing on the Commission‘s MPSJ was re-set for 2:00 p.m. that afternoon, less than three hours later. (CR 439; CR 210) 05 December 2008: Mr. Olsen‘s Request To Serve Additional Affidavits and Summary Judgment Evidence and TRCP 166a(f) Request to Amend Affidavits filed at 1:27 p.m. (CR 209), after which Mr. Olsen commenced driving to Judge Quisenberry‘s court in Weatherford, Texas. 05 December 2008: Judge Quisenberry convened the telephonic hearing on the Commission‘s MPSJ at approximately 2:00 p.m. 05 December 2008: Mr. Olsen objected to the hearing being conducted over the phone, citing his 02 December 2008 Verified Objection to Conducting Summary Judgment Hearing via Telephone, filed on the basis of the Commission‘s reliance on Mr. Olsen‘s videotape of Mary Ellen‘s will signing and of the amount of documents involved. (CR 439) Judge Quisenberry allowed Mr. Olsen to finish driving to Weatherford. (CR 439) 05 December 2008: Mr. Olsen presented Judge Quisenberry the file-stamped courtesy copy of Mr. Olsen‘s 05 December 2008 Request To Serve Additional Affidavits and Summary Judgment Evidence and TRCP 166a(f) Request to Amend Affidavits. (CR 212) Mr. Olsen verbally repeated his filed written request for record of the proceedings. (CR 440) Even though Judge Quisenberry‘s court reporter was present in court through the hearing, Judge Quisenberry denied Mr. Olsen‘s request for the creation of a record. (CR 440) 05 December 2008: Judge Quisenberry conducted the hearing on Commission‘s MPSJ. (CR 215) He sustained the Commission‘s December objections to Mr. Olsen‘s verification and affidavits, striking them; not permit Mr. Olsen to approach the bench to present documents for Court‘s consideration, and did not permit Mr. Olsen to play or analyze Olsen‘s videotape of Mary Ellen‘s will signing, which was attached by Commission as Exhibit 4 to it‘s MPSJ. (CR 215; CR 35) 11 December 2009: and striking Mr. the 4th did the Mr. the Orders signed granting the Commission‘s MPSJ (CR 214), Olsen‘s Verification and Affidavit, and sustaining 36 objections to the Affidavits of Mr. Burgess and Mr. McCay regarding Mary Ellen‘s Will. (CR 215) 12 January 2009: Mr. Olsen Motion for New Trial, Request To Serve Additional Affidavits and Summary Judgment Evidence and TRCP 166a(f) Request to Amend Affidavits filed. New affidavits from Mr. Olsen, Mr. McCay and Mr. Burgess attached, curing the defects alleged by the Commission. (CR {missing from the clerk’s record}; listed on the District Clerk‘s ―Case Summary‖: ―01/12/2009 MOTION – NEW TRIAL‖; CR 471) 08 May 2009: Default Final Judgment of Disbarment signed. (CR 423) The default judgment notes that ―Respondent, Edwin Carl Olsen IV, State Bar Number 00789527, did not appear.‖ (CR 423; emphasis added) 08 May 2009: Mr. Olsen Verified Motion To Continue Sanctions Hearing [―VMCSH‖] filed (CR {missing from the clerk’s record}; listed on the District Clerk‘s ―Case Summary‖: ―05/08/2009 MOTION – CONTINUANCE Party: DEFENDANT OLSEN, EDWIN CARL, IV SANCT HEARING”; CR 471)). In it Mr. Olsen states his belief (CR 440) that ―Petitioner‘s request for a Sanctions Hearing has a first setting of May 9, 2009‖ (VMCSH, p. 1), and requests a continuance because he has just secured representation, quoting ―T.R.C.P. 7 ―May Appear by Attorney‖, which provides: ―Any party to a suit may appear and prosecute or defend his rights therein, either in person or by an attorney of the court.‖ Respondent heretofore has be[en] pro se. In the interest of justice and fair adjudication, Respondent has concluded that being represented by counsel is essential.‖ (VMCSH, p. 1). Mr. Olsen states therein that undersigned council, R. Deryl Edwards, Jr., agreed on May 2, 2009 to represent Mr. Olsen if he was admitted pro hac vice. (VMCSH, p. 1) Mr. Olsen asked for the continuance to allow pro hac vice status to be granted: ―On this basis, Respondent respectfully requests a continuance of this Sanctions Hearing until a determination of Mr. Edwards‘ pro hac vice application is made.‖ (VMCSH, p. 2) 09 May 2009: Mr. Olsen arrived for the 9:00 a.m. at the 162nd Judicial Court of Dallas County, Texas with his five witnesses – Dixie Tidwell, Bea Grayson, Cary Richards, Mark McCay and Justin Burgess. (CR 440) 09 June 2009: Mr. Olsen‘s First Amended Verified Motions for New Trial, Reconsideration, Set Aside Final Judgment, and Set New Sanctions Hearing Date filed by counsel Jeff Forrest Smith. (CR428; CR 6) 19 June 2009: The Commission‘s Response to Mr. Olsen‘s First Amended Verified Motions for New Trial, Reconsideration, Set Aside Final Judgment, and Set New Sanctions Hearing Date filed. (CR 454) 02 July 2009: Order denying Mr. Olsen‘s First Amended Verified Motions for New Trial, Reconsideration, Set Aside Final Judgment, and Set New Sanctions Hearing Date signed without conducting hearing. (CR 466) J: ISSUE EIGHT: The trial court erred in giving Mr. Olsen only three hour’s notice of the re-set December 5, 2008 summary judgment hearing date and time, and erred in not complying with the procedural requirements of T.R.C.P. 166a. On December 4, 2009, Mr. Olsen‘s Verified Emergency Motion for Continuance was granted (CR 455) and the summary judgment hearing on the 37 Commission‘s Motion for Partial Summary Judgment was continued to a date and time not yet set. On December 5, 2009, Mr. Olsen was informed at approximately 11:16 a.m. that the re-setting of the Commission‘s MPSJwas that afternoon at 2:00 p.m. (CR 439; CR 210) Less than three hours notice of the re-setting of a summary judgment hearing is not proper and is an abuse of discretion. ―Proper notice of a summary judgment proceeding is itself a prerequisite to summary judgment.‖ Birdwell v. Texins Credit Union, 843 S.W.2d 246, 249-50 (Tex. App. – Texarkana 1992, no writ). ―Reasonable notice‖ of the re-setting of a summary judgment hearing is required under Texas law. Birdwell, Id. ―Reasonable notice‖ is defined as a period of time that is a minimum of ―seven days‖. Birdwell, Id. (―All that is required thereafter is ‗reasonable notice‘ of the re-set hearing, which is at least seven days in advance of the hearing.‖) (emphasis added) Three hours notice is not reasonable, as such the trial court erred, and did not comply with the procedural requirements of T.R.C.P. 166a. The ruling of the trial court was arbitrary, unreasonable and constitutes an abuse of discretion. K: ISSUE NINE: The trial court erred in denying Mr. Olsen’s written and oral request for the creation of a written record, and erred in not permitting the court reporter to perform her duty as mandated by the Texas Rules of Appellate Procedure. T.R.A.P. 13.1 ―Duties of Court Reporters and Court Recorders‖ provides: ―The official sessions and court make a reporter full or record court of recorder the must: proceedings (a) attend unless court excused by agreement of the parties.‖ (emphasis added) Mr. Olsen timely requested by written motion filed three days in advance of the hearing the creation of a written record by the court reporter. See Mr. Olsen‘s 02 December 2008 Verified Objection to Conducting Summary Judgment Hearing via Telephone, Verified Emergency Motion for Continuance, 38 Request for Hearing on his Verified Emergency Motion for Continuance, and Request for the Presence of a Court Reporter. (CR 216) At the re-set summary judgment hearing conducted on December 5, 2008, Mr. Olsen orally re-urged his request for the creation of a written record by the court reporter. (CR 440) Mr. Olsen never agreed to excuse the court reporter from making a full record of the proceedings. (CR 440) Even though Judge Quisenberry‘s court reporter was present in court through the hearing, Judge Quisenberry denied Mr. Olsen‘s request for the creation of a record. (CR 440) This ruling is in violation of the Texas Rules of Appellate Procedure, which provide that the official court reporter ―must attend court sessions and make a full record of the proceedings unless excused by the agreement of the parties.‖ T.R.A.P. 13.1. The trial court ‘s denial of the request for a court reporter constitutes an abuse of discretion as Mr. Olsen was thereby denied of his right to a record for appellate review of the proceedings. ―[W]hen a trial court conducts a hearing and an appellant exercising due diligence is unable to obtain a proper record of the evidence introduced through no fault of his own, a new trial is required if the appellant‘s right to appellate review cannot be preserved in any other way.‖ Smith v. Smith, 544 S.W.2d 121, 123 (Tex. 1976). The ruling of the trial court denying Mr. Olsen‘s request for a written record by the court‘s reporter was arbitrary, unreasonable and constitutes an abuse of discretion. L: ISSUE TEN: The trial court erred in striking Mr. Olsen’s Response verification and affidavit, and in sustaining the Commission’s objections to Mr. McCay’s and Burgess’ affidavit portions pertaining to Mary Ellen’s will. The trial court struck Mr. Olsen‘s verification of his MPSJ Response and attached affidavit; sustained the Commission‘s objections to the affidavits of Mr. McCay and Mr. Burgess regarding Mary Ellen‘s Will. (CR 215) The trial court did so on the basis on the Commission‘s Reply to Mr. 39 Olsen‘s Response to the Commission‘s Motion for Partial Summary Judgment. Because the Commission‘s Reply was untimely, the trial court should not have considered the Commission‘s objections to Mr. Olsen‘s verification of his Response to the Commission‘s MPSJand attached affidavit, nor sustained the Commission‘s objections to the affidavits of Mr. McCay and Mr. Burgess regarding Mary Ellen‘s Will. The Commission‘s Reply was filed on December 4, 2008 at 2:36 p.m. (CR 204), less than twenty hours before the original hearing time (CR 438) and less than twenty three and one-half hours before the re-set hearing time (CR 438). The summary judgment hearing took place on December 5, 2008. (CR 214) Under the Local Rules of The Commission‘s Reply was untimely. Civil Courts of Dallas County, the Local Rule 2.09 ―Briefs‖ provides: ―Rely briefs in support of a motion for summary judgment must be filed and served no less than three days before the hearing.‖ The without trial court merit. also As a erred pro se because the respondent, Commission‘s Mr. Olsen‘s Commission‘s MPSJ was written by himself on his behalf. case cited by the Commission is does not apply. objections Response to were the Consequently, the In Webster v. Allstate Insurance Co., 833 S.W.2d 747, 749 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 1992, no writ), a response was filed on behalf of ―plaintiffs‖ entities], which was ―verified by their attorney‖. Id. [i.e. plural Thus, in Webster, the actual parties filing the summary judgment response did not themselves verify the response. Compounding matters is that there were multiple persons on whose behalf the summary judgment response was filed. Webster is thus distinguishable, because Mr. Olsen was not represented by counsel during the summary judgment proceeding, so Mr. Olsen personally authored and signed his Response (CR 236), in addition to verifying his Response. (CR 237) And, as Mr. Olsen is a single person, there was no question as to which party was verifying which fact. 40 Also, Mr. Olsen‘s attached affidavit specifically ―incorporate[d] all the factual statements‖ made in his verified Response ―as if stated in full herein‖. (CR 238) ‗the affidavit competence, The Commission asserts that ―To satisfy Rule 166a(f), itself and the must set allegations forth facts contained in and it show must the be affiant‘s direct and unequivocal, so that perjury can be assigned to it.‘ Webster at 749.‖ (CR 205, emphasis the Commission‘s) Webster has already been distinguished, but the test set forth in Webster is satisfied by Mr. Olsen‘s Response. The Commission quotes Webster for the test that ―the allegations contained in it [the affidavit] must be direct and unequivocal, so that perjury can be assigned to it.‘ Id. at 749.‖ Mr. Olsen Response meets the Webster test, as he is the sole author of his Response, signed it, and verified it by swearing to it before a notary. Perjury can thus be assigned to it if the factual statements Mr. Olsen made in his Response were shown to be false. Since Mr. Olsen wrote his entire Response and swore to it by attaching his Verification, there is no possibility that Mr. Olsen could blame someone else for the words therein. This is why the Webster test is met by Mr. Olsen‘s Response, but not by the verified response in Webster written by the plaintiffs‘ attorney on behalf of the multiple plaintiffs. with a perjury charge could written the down, attorney There, any of the plaintiffs confronted blame could their attorney for blame any of the misstatements the plaintiffs for misinforming him, the plaintiffs could blame each other. The Commission‘s emphasis on ―the affidavit itself‖ (CR 205) implies that affidavits cannot incorporate other documents. This is gainsaid by T.R.C.P. 166a(f), which provides that ―Sworn or certified copies of all papers or parts thereof referred to in an affidavit shall be attached thereto or served therewith.‖ Mr. Olsen‘s Response is a ―sworn . . . paper‖, ―attached to his affidavit‖ and was ―served‖ with it upon the Commission. 41 Lastly, the Commission‘s objections to the affidavits of Mr. McCay and Mr. Burgess pertained to the inadvertent collation error of not attaching an exhibit of Mary Ellen‘s will. This error was cured with the January 12, 2009 re-filing of the affidavits of Mr. McCay and Mr. Burgess with Mr. Olsen‘s Motion for New Trial, Request To Serve Additional Affidavits and Summary Judgment Evidence and TRCP 166a(f) Request to Amend Affidavits. There was only one will that was produced on February 22, 2005 and signed by Mary Ellen on February 22, 2005. Thus there was no ambiguity regarding the will Mr. McCay and Mr. Burgess are referring to in their affidavits. Since the Commission filed a certified copy of Mary Ellen‘s will as Exhibit 2 to its MPSJ (CR 49-53), a copy of the will in question was already part of the summary judgment record. For example, Mr. Burgess‘ sworn affidavit states: The three page document he [Mr. Olsen] printed out on my computer on February 22, 2005 is the same as the three page document that is attached hereto as Exhibit 1. This is the same three page document that I couriered to Dallas County Probate Court for filing on March 2, 2005. The first two pages of this three page document are the same two pages that Mr. Olsen explained and presented to Mary Ellen on February 22, 2005. The second page is the same page that Mary Ellen signed in my presence in the Baylor University Emergency Room on February 22, 2005. (CR 242) Because Mr. Burgess and Mr. McCay couriered Mary Ellen‘s will to the Dallas County Probate Court for filing (as they testifiy), that means that the will they are referring to is the one that the Commission attached to its MPSJ, as the Commission attached a copy of Mary Ellen‘s will certified to by the Dallas County Probate Court. (CR 49) Striking the language in their affidavits pertaining to ―exhibit 1‖ – i.e. striking ―is the same as the three page document that is attached hereto as Exhibit 1‖ – does not diminish the factual content of Mr. Burgess‘ affidavit, nor Mr. McCay‘s. Consequently, even with the striking of Mr. Olsen‘s verification and Mr. Olsen‘s affidavit, and the striking of the references to ―Exhibit 1‖ in Mr. Burgess‘ affidavit and Mr. McCay‘s affidavit, still left in the summary 42 judgment record is unrefuted evidence that the two-page will seen in the video signed by Mary Ellen on February 22, 2005, was the first two pages of the three page will document filed on March 2, 2005. Consequently, the ruling of the trial court was arbitrary, unreasonable and constitutes an abuse of discretion. M: ISSUE ELEVEN: The trial court erred in denying Mr. Olsen’s motion to cure the alleged defects in the affidavits attached to his Response, his motion to supplement the record with additional affidavits and discovery, and his motion to continue the summary judgment hearing until the deposition of Judge Price was completed. The Commission, in its untimely December 4, 2008 Reply to Mr. Olsen‘s Response to the Commission‘s MPSJ objected to Mr. Olsen‘s affidavit and the affidavits of Mr. Burgess and Mr. McCay. (CR 204) TRCP 166a(f) provides that ―Defects in the form of affidavits or attachments will not be grounds for reversal unless specifically pointed out by objection by an opposing party with opportunity, but refusal, to amend.‖ (emphasis added). Mr. Olsen, pursuant to TRCP 166a(f), expressly agreed to amend and requested the opportunity to amend those affidavits on December 5, 2008. (CR 209) Mr. Olsen did so in his motion filed on December 5, 2005: Request To Serve Additional Affidavits and Summary Judgment Evidence and TRCP 166a(f) Request to Amend Affidavits. (CR 209) Mr. Olsen had no opportunity to do so prior to the summary judgment hearing: Respondent [Mr. Olsen] only received Petitioner’s December 4, 2008 Reply on December 4, 2008 after 9:00 p.m. upon returning from the Deposition of Mark Patrick McCay conducted by complainant Frances Ann Giron’s attorney William Dunleavy. Respondent spen[t] the following morning – i.e. this morning December 5, 2008 -preparing for and participating in the conflicting hearing scheduled for 10:00 a.m. regarding the motions filed by Frances Ann Giron’s attorney William Dunleavy in Giron v. McCay et al., Cause No. 06-02257-M, in the 298th District Court of Dallas County, Texas. Respondent did not learn until late morning at approximately 11:15 a.m. on December 5, 2005 . . . that this Court, having granted Respondent’s Verified Emergency Motion for Continuance, was resetting the hearing for 2:00 p.m. that same afternoon. (CR 209210; bolding added) Mr. Olsen requested additional time to conclude the deposition of Judge 43 Price, file supplemental affidavits, and supplement the record with additional discovery in his motion. (CR 210; CR 211): Respondent [Mr. Olsen] has previously noticed the Court – in his, inter alia, Verified Motion To Continue Summary Judgment Hearing – that Judge Price’s complete deposition is essential to this case and is set for conclusion on December 12, 2008. Further, Affiant Mark McCay’s deposition was conducted in part by Frances Ann Giron’s attorney William Dunleavy from 10:15 a.m. to 7:00 p.m. with breaks yesterday, December 4, 2008. In his deposition, Mr. Dunleavy specifically asked Mr. McCay about several of the components of Petitioner’s Motion for Partial Summary Judgment. Mr. McCay gave sworn testimony directly probative on Petitioner’s Motion for Partial Summary Judgment. His deposition transcript is not yet available. These depositions are directly germane to Petitioner’s Motion for Partial Summary Judgment and vitally important to Respondent’s defense. Consequently, Respondent requests the opportunity to supplement the summary judgment evidence with additional affidavits and deposition testimony. . . . TRCP 166a(g) provides that “the court . . . may order a continuance to permit affidavits to be obtained or depositions to be taken or discovery to be had . . .” Respondent requests such a continuance to permit said and additional affidavits to be obtained and said depositions to be taken. (CR 210; CR 211; bolding added) Mr. Olsen properly filed his verified Emergency Motion for Continuance (CR 219) because he had not had an adequate opportunity for discovery before the summary judgment hearing. ―When a party contends that it has not had an adequate opportunity for discovery before a summary judgment hearing, it must file either an affidavit explaining the need for further discovery or a verified motion for continuance.‖ Tenneco Inc. v. Enterprise Products Co., 925 S.W.2nd 640, 647 (Tex. 1996). Nevertheless, the trial court did not permit Mr. Olsen to do so. The ruling of the trial court was arbitrary, unreasonable and constitutes an abuse of discretion. N: ISSUE TWELVE: The trial court erred in granting summary judgment to the Commission, there by denying Mr. Olsen’s right to a trial by jury and his right to due process. The Texas State Constitution grants a right to trial by jury. ―The function of the summary judgment is not to deprive a litigant of his right to a trial by jury, but to eliminate patently unmeritorious claims and 44 untenable defenses.‖ City of Houston v. Clear Creek Basin Authority, 589 S.W.2d 671, 678 n.5 (Tex. 1979). For the reasons set forth above, the trial court should not have granted the Commission‘s Motion for Partial Summary Judgment. Nevertheless, the trial court did grant the Commission‘s Motion for Partial Summary Judgment. The ruling of the trial court denied Mr. Olsen‘s right to a trial by jury and his right to due process, and was arbitrary, unreasonable and constitutes an abuse of discretion. O: ISSUE THIRTEEN: The trial court erred in not following the Texas Rules of Disciplinary Procedure’s requirement to consider all the factors set forth in § 3.10 in determining the appropriate sanction for attorney misconduct. Texas Rule of Disciplinary requires the trial Procedure court to consider twelve elements is mandatory: 3.10 ―Imposition twelve elements. of Sanctions‖ Considering all ―In determining the appropriate Sanctions, the court shall consider: A . . . L‖ (T.R.D.P. 3.10, emphasis added). A thirteenth (13th) element is admissible, namely the respondent‘s disciplinary record: private ―In addition, the Respondent‘s disciplinary record, including any reprimands, in admissible on the appropriate Sanction to be imposed.‖ (T.R.D.P. 3.10). The Supreme Court of Texas emphasizes that considering all twelve elements is mandatory, holding that the trial court ―must‖ consider all twelve elements of T.R.D.P. 3.10: In determining the appropriate sanction for attorney misconduct, a trial court must consider the nature and degree of the sanctioned misconduct, the seriousness of the misconduct and the surrounding circumstances, the loss or damage to clients, the damage to the profession, the assurance that future clients will be insulated from this type of professional misconduct, the profit to the attorney, the avoidance of repetition, the deterrent effect on others, the maintenance of respect for the legal profession, the attorney's conduct during the course of the Commission action, the trial of the case, and other relevant evidence concerning the attorney's personal and professional background. TEX. R. DISCIPLINARY P. 3.10; State Bar of Texas v. Kilpatrick, 874 S.W.2d 656, 659 (Tex. 1994) (emphasis added). 45 The court reporter‘s transcript of the May 8, 2009 default sanctions hearing shows that the Commission only presented testimony on two of the twelve elements, specifically ―D. The damage to the profession.‖ (RR 10, lines 14-16), and ―I. The maintenance of respect for the legal profession.‖ (RR 34, lines 4-20) Because only one of the two witnesses presented by the Commission was sworn in, the Commission only presented admissible evidence on only one of the twelve elements, specifically ―I. The maintenance of respect for the legal profession.‖ (RR 34, lines 4-20). The Commission‘s witness regarding ―I.‖ was Giron, who was the only witness sworn in. (RR 11, line 15) Giron testified that Mr. Olsen had NOT damaged the maintenance of respect for the legal profession, so her testimony was actually exculpatory for Mr. Olsen. The testimony presented by the Commission pertaining to ―I. The maintenance of respect for the legal profession.‖ (RR 34, lines 4-20) was as follows: Q. [Commission]: Okay. Has the Respondent’s [Mr. Olsen’s] conduct in the last few months of your life and in dealing with your mother’s estate affected your perception of the legal profession? A. [Giron]: Yes. But it’s ever -- you know, it’s -- every profession, and it doesn’t matter which one, every profession has its bad apples. And I have been ex -- and -- and he’s a bad apple. There’s no two ways about it. But I’ve been very blessed because I have a group of attorneys that have stood by me and hung in there with me and been on my side and are moral, good people. And I have friends that are attorneys, and I chose to think that they’re the majority, and he’s the minority. Q. [Commission]: Okay. And when you say who, you’re referring to? A. [Giron]: Mr. Olsen. The other witness presented by the Commission was Judge Price, who addressed only ―D. The damage to the profession.‖ (RR 10, lines 14-16). His unsworn (RR 7, lines 4-5) testimony was as follows: Q. [the Commission]: In your opinion, did the Respondent’s [Mr. Olsen’s] conduct in your court damage the legal profession? A. [Judge Price]: It did. (RR 10, lines 14-16). Judge Price‘s testimony is inadmissible, because he was not sworn in. Further, as Judge Price was offering opinion testimony, he should have 46 been designated as an expert by the Commission. Answer requested Rule 194.2 Disclosures. (CR Mr. Olsen‘s 29 May 2008 12) T.R.C.P. 194.2(f)(3) requires that ―for any testifying expert‖ that ―the general substance of the expert‘s mental impressions and opinions and a brief summary of the basis for them . . .‖ be provided to the opposing party. The Commission did not designate Judge Price as a testifying expert nor provide the information required by T.R.C.P. 194.2(f)(3) to Mr. Olsen. Commission established that Judge Price was not a lay witness. examination, Judge The Under direct Price testified that he was ―Judge of Dallas County Probate No. 2‖ (RR 7, line 11), that he had been ―Presiding Judge of that court‖ ―Since September the 30th, 1986‖ (RR 7, lines 12-14), that he was licensed to practice law in the State of Texas (RR 7, lines 15-17), and that he had been licensed since ―September the 30th of 1954‖ (RR 7, lines 18-20). Because the Commission did not comply with the requirements of T.R.C.P. 194.2(f)(3), Judge Price‘s unsworn testimony is not admissible. Because the Commission offered no negative admissible evidence against Mr. Olsen at the default sanctions hearing (recall Giron‘s testimony was exculpatory], the Court had otherwise before it only the summary judgment evidence. This evidence the trial court had to interpret in accordance with summary judgment law, namely construing all material facts in favor of the non-movant, Mr. Olsen. While the summary judgment evidence did address Section 3.10 elements A & B, it did not address the also required elements C, E, F, G, H and L. The summary evidence established that: 1. 2. 3. 4. Mr. Olsen was not a material fact witness needed to establish an essential fact on behalf of his client and thus he did not need to withdraw from representation of Mary Ellen‘s Estate under rule 3.08. The three page will document that was filed was the one that Mary Ellen signed, so Mr. Olsen did not file a fraudulent document. The three sentence notary language on page three was inadvertently not edited after the notary Marian Gibson refused to go to the hospital, and was not written to deceive the court Mr. Olsen did not make a statement to mislead the court 47 5. Mr. Olsen did not file a document that was false. If Mr. Olsen had been present at the sanctions hearing conducted on May 8, 2009, he would have presented evidence through himself and his five witnesses on all twelve elements required by T.R.D.P. 3.10, along with the thirteenth (13th) element: his disciplinary record. Specifically, the evidence would have established regarding each element T.R.D.P. 3.10: A. ―Nature and degree of misconduct‖: The three allegations of misconduct pertaining to Mary Ellen‘s Will were known to Giron and were never made an issue of by Giron during the Will Contest before Judge Loving. The two aspects of alleged misconduct pertaining to Mary Ellen‘s Guardianship action were charged by Giron and never acted upon by Judge Price. B. ―Seriousness of misconduct:‖ Each instance of alleged misconduct took place at the beginning of both court proceedings, respectively Mgiron‘s attempted guardianship action and Giron‘s will contest. Neither presiding judge took any action against Mr. Olsen, thus the alleged misconduct was not – at minimum – ―serious‖. C. ―Loss or damage to clients‖: ZERO. D. ―The damage to the profession‖: ZERO E. ―Assurance seekers of legal services insulated in future‖: Guranteed. F. ―Profit to Attorney‖: ZERO G. ―Avoidance of Repetition‖: GUARANTEED. H. ―Deterrent effect on others‖: Punishing Mr. Olsen only ―deters‖ attorneys defending elderly persons re actions brought by their children. I. ―Maintenance of respect for legal profession‖: One Hundred Per Cent (as concurred in by the Commission‘s witness Giron). J. ―Conduct of Respondent during Committee action‖: Mr. Olsen actively participated in the action, timely complied with every element of the disciplinary case, responding timely to every pleading and discovery request. The only event Mr. Olsen missed was the disbarment hearing. Judge Quisenberry notes: ―And he [Mr. Olsen] showed up in my courtroom in Weatherford, Texas some months ago without a setting, didn‘t he?‖ (RR 40, lines 10-12) K. ―The trial of the case‖: No trial took place. L. ―Other relevant evidence‖: Mr. Olsen practices law for the purpose of helping the powerless, and is not driven by pecuniary motivations. 13th: ―Respondent‘s Disciplinary Record‖: Mr. Olsen has never been grieved by a client.(CR 441-442) P: ISSUE FOURTEEN: The trial court erred in deciding that the appropriate sanction for attorney misconduct was disbarment, disbarment was not a “just” 48 punishment under the circumstances. ―The judgment of a trial court in a disciplinary proceeding may be so light, or so heavy, as to constitutes an abuse of discretion. See State v. Ingram, 511 S.W.2d 252, 253 (Tex. 1974). At the same time, the trial court has broad discretion to determine whether an attorney guilty of professional misconduct should be reprimanded, suspended, or disbarred. Id.; State v. O'Dowd, 158 Tex. 348, 312 S.W.2d 217, 221 (Tex. 1958). The State Bar v. Kilpatrick, 874 S.W.2d 656, 659(Tex. 1994). (emphasis added) The very authorization of a wide range of sanctions for violations of the disciplinary rules contemplates just discipline for the misconduct committed. Daves v. State Bar of Texas, 691 S.W.2d 784, 791 (Tex. App.-Amarillo 1985, writ ref'd n.r.e.), dism'd, 474 U.S. 1043 (1986), citing State v. Ingram, 511 S.W.2d 252, 253 (Tex. 1974). (emphasis added) Disbarring discipline‖. Mr. Olsen for the alleged misconduct was not ―just This ruling of the trial court was arbitrary, unreasonable and constitutes an abuse of discretion. Q: ISSUE FIFTEEN: The trial court erred in refusing to conduct a hearing on Mr. Olsen’s timely filed Verified motion for new trial regarding the default disbarment judgment. The trial court signed the Final Judgment of Disbarment on May 8, 2009. Mr. Olsen timely filed his First Amended Verified Motions for New Trial, Reconsideration, Set Aside Final Judgment, and Set New Sanctions Hearing Date on 09 June 2009. (CR428) Despite timely requests from new counsel Jeff Forrest Smith‘s Office for the setting of a hearing on Mr. Olsen‘s motion, the trial court denied Mr. Olsen‘s verified motion without conducting the required hearing on July 2, 2009. (CR 466) Fluty v. Simmons Co., 835 S.W.2d 664, 667 (Tex. App.—Dallas 1992, no writ) (―A motion for new trial to set aside a default judgment is a complaint on which evidence must be heard.‖). R: ISSUE SIXTEEN: The trial court erred in awarding attorney’s fees to the Commission because no admissible evidence exists in the record supporting the reasonableness nor amount of the Commission’s alleged attorney fees. 49 At the May 8, 2009 default sanctions hearing, the Commission introduced no evidence that its alleged attorney‘s fees were reasonable and it provided no admissible testimony regarding the amount of its alleged attorney‘s fees because the testimony of Susan Farris was unsworn. (RR 35, lines 6-19). There is no affidavit in the record regarding the amount of the Commission‘s attorney fees nor the reasonableness of the Commission‘s attorney fees. Either sworn testimony is required or an affidavit on file for the award of attorney’s fees in a disciplinary action. Bastine v. Comm'n for Lawyer Discipline, 252 S.W.3d 413,416-7 (Tex.App.–Houston [1stDist.] 1996, no writ). CONCLUSION AND PRAYER Mr. Olsen requests that this Court reverse the trial court‘s summary judgment ruling, and find the summary judgment record evidence demonstrates that the Commission has not met its burden, and thus the Commission‘s Motion for Partial Summary Judgment should have been denied. Olsen requests that creates a fact issue. this Court hold that the Alternatively, Mr. summary-judgment evidence As such, Mr. Olsen requests that this court reverse the trial court‘s summary judgment and remand for new hearing. Mr. Olsen requests that this Court order the creation of a written record by the court reporter at said hearing. Alternatively, Mr. Olsen requests that this Court order the trial court to conduct an evidentiary hearing on Mr. Olsen‘s June 9, 2009 Verified Motion for New Trial. (CR 428) Mr. Olsen also requests that this Court vacate the trial court‘s default final judgment of disbarment. Alternatively, Mr. Olsen requests that this Court order the trial court to conduct a new sanctions hearing and take evidence on all twelve elements required by T.R.D.P. 3.10. Mr. Olsen also requests general relief. Mr. Olsen respectfully requests such further and additional relief as the Court deems appropriate. 50 Respectfully submitted, _________________________ R. Deryl Edwards, Jr. Missouri State Bar #48277 606 S. Pearl Ave. Joplin, MO 64801 (417) 624-1962 (o) (417) 624-1965 (f) ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT EDWIN C. OLSEN IV CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE I certify that on Monday, March 08, 2010, Appellant‘s brief was filed with the Fifth District Court of Appeals at Dallas via deposit into U.S. mail, First Class, Certified, Return-Receipt Requested, and a copy was mailed First Class, Certified, Return-Receipt Requested to opposing lead counsel Jeremy Kernodle, Haynes & Boone, L.L.P., 2323 Victory Ave, Suite 700, Dallas, TX 75219. Additionally, courtesy copies were mailed to Cynthia W. Hamilton, P.O. Box 12487, Austin, TX 78711-2487 and Jeff Forrest Smith, 6750 Hillcrest Plaza, Suite 214, LB16, Dallas, TX 75230. ______________________ R. Deryl Edwards, Jr. 51 APPENDIX INDEX: 1. Mary Ellen‘s Last Will and Testament, February 22, 2005 (CR 49-52) 2. June 12, 2009 Letter of Jeff Forest Smith to Judge Quisenberry requesting hearing on Mr. Olsen‘s verified motion for new trial. 3. July 2, 2009 Letter of Jeff Forest Smith to Judge Quisenberry repeating request for hearing on Mr. Olsen‘s verified motion for new trial. 52