Texas Supreme Court enforces open-ended letter agreement for attorney's fees; disallows testimony about cap on fees claimed by client as impermissible under the parol evidence rule.
Sep. 26, 2008 UPDATE :
Texas Supreme Court issues Substituted Opinion in Sacks v. Haden (Tex. 2008)
Sacks v. Haden (Tex. July 11, 2008) (superseded per curiam opinion)
Client who challenged fee bill for federal appeal pays dearly as Texas Supreme Court rules for law firm in fee collection suit. Court gives effect to fee agreement which stated hourly rate, but no limit on hours or dollars, and holds that under the parol evidence rule client was not permitted to testify that the fee was capped. Houston Court of Appeals had held otherwise.
David J. Sacks, P.C. vs. Charles McIntre Haden,
No. 07-0472 (Tex. July 11, 2008) (per curiam)
(attorney fee litigation, breach of contract, parol evidence rule)
Texas Supreme Court says that Houston court of appeals erred in holding that there was no meeting of the minds necessary to form a binding contract governing appellate attorney's fees, and further erred in holding that the parol evidence rule did not bar the client’s evidence of an agreement with the law firm to cap fees. The evidence offered by Haden would alter the written fee agreement, and is therefore not admissible under the collateral and consistent exception to the parol evidence rule, the Court says.
DAVID J. SACKS, P.C. D/B/A SACKS & ASSOCIATES v. CHARLES MCINTYRE HADEN, JR., INDIVIDUALLY, AND CHARLES MCINTYRE HADEN, JR. & COMPANY D/B/A HADEN & COMPANY; from Harris County; 1st district (01-01-00200-CV, 222 SW3d 580, 03-08-07)
Pursuant to Texas Rule of Appellate Procedure 59.1, after granting the petition for review and without hearing oral argument, the Supreme Court reverses the court of appeals' judgment and reinstates the trial court's judgment. (Retrieve Per Curiam Opinion in pdf)
Saturday, July 12, 2008
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