Reynolds v. Colonial Bank
Reynolds v. Colonial Bank
Opinion
Thomas E. Reynolds, the interim Chapter 7 bankruptcy trustee for Jefferson Screening, Inc.; Laguna Resources, Inc.; and Black Creek Land and Minerals, Inc. (hereinafter referred to collectively as "the debtors"), appeals from the trial court's orders of condemnation of interpleaded funds and its award of attorney fees and expenses in favor of the garnishment liens of Colonial Bank; Komatsu Financial, L.P.; General Electric Capital Business Asset Funding Corporation; Brad Regan, Inc.; the law firm of Friedman, Leak Bloom, P.C. ("Friedman"); and the law firm of Tweedy, Jackson, Beech and Fikes, P.C. ("Tweedy"). Derrell Chamblee and Scott Chamblee, former employees of Jefferson Screening, are also named as appellees.
On October 12, 2000, the trial court entered a summary judgment in favor of Colonial Bank for its claims against the debtors in the amount of $7,446,363.16. The judgment was made final pursuant to Rule 54(b), Ala.R.Civ.P. The debtors did not appeal the summary judgment against them. The debtors assigned to Colonial Bank any potential recovery in their fraud action against Seminole, and, in return, Colonial Bank agreed to seek recovery of the debtors' indebtedness only from the proceeds recovered, if any, in the debtors' fraud action against Seminole. The trial court entered an order of attachment in favor of Colonial Bank charging with payment of Colonial Bank's judgment any monetary judgment recovered by the debtors against Seminole, subject to any liens held by the debtors' attorneys. Colonial Bank dismissed its action against Seminole.
The debtors' remaining claims against Seminole were tried before a jury. On June 26, 2001, the jury returned a verdict in favor of the debtors against Seminole in the amount of $22,196,899.69. Colonial Bank, along with Komatsu, General Electric, and Brad Regan, other creditors of the debtors, served their writs of garnishment on Seminole. Friedman and Tweedy also asserted their claims for attorney fees related to the services they provided for one of the debtors, Jefferson Screening.
Seminole subsequently appealed the trial court's judgment for the debtors on their fraud claim. On September 9, 2002, while that appeal was pending before this Court, the debtors and Seminole executed a "Release and Settlement Agreement"1 settling the debtors' judgment against *Page 500
Seminole for $6,900,000. To protect itself from competing claimants, Seminole filed a complaint for interpleader of the funds pursuant to §
On September 11, 2002, again while the appeal was still pending before this Court, the trial court conducted a hearing at which the debtors, Seminole, and Colonial Bank were present. The trial court entered an order condemning the $6,900,000 settlement amount; that order stated:
"Therefore, it is hereby ordered, adjudged, and decreed as follows:
"1. The $6.9 million settlement amount tendered and paid into court by Seminole Electric Cooperative, Inc. is hereby condemned in its entirety.
"2. The settlement amount, net of any partial distribution that may be approved by this Court in order to satisfy the attorneys' liens for reasonable fees and expenses shall be held pending further order of this Court subject to the claimants' garnishment liens.
"3. That the charging order entered by this Court on April 4, 2001, in favor of Colonial Bank and the garnishment liens of Colonial Bank, Komatsu Financial, L.P., General Electric Capital Business Asset Funding Corp., and Brad Regan, Inc. shall attach to the Court in the order of priority as determined by this Court after notice and hearing.
"4. The Clerk of the Court is directed to serve Colonial Bank, Komatsu Financial, L.P., General Electric Capital Business Asset Funding Corp., and Brad Regan, Inc. with the Complaint for Interpleader filed in this action by Seminole Electric Cooperative, Inc. and a copy of this Order. Each garnishor is directed to file an Answer establishing its claim to and priority in the interpled funds within 30 days hereof."
The trial court also approved the payment of attorney fees and litigation expenses pursuant to the employment contract Friedman and Tweedy had with Jefferson Screening.2 The trial court stated:
"It is Therefore, the Order, Judgment and Decree of this Court as Follows:
"1. The petition of [Friedman] and [Tweedy] as to [their] attorney fees is hereby granted as reasonable and the Court finds that [Friedman] and [Tweedy] receive as its attorney fees forty percent of the gross amount of the settlement for a total of $2,760,000.00.
"2. The petition of [Friedman] and [Tweedy] as to the expenses incurred in connection with the prosecution is granted. The expenses are found to be reasonable and necessary, in the sum of $964,833.70 and are approved based on the findings contained in this order.
"3. The Court has been advised that [Friedman] and [Tweedy] have arrived at a split of the monies due them for their attorney fees and expenses and so approves said split.
"4. The Clerk is ordered to instanter pay to the firms of [Friedman] and [Tweedy] the sum of $2,974,833.70 as their total amount of attorney fees and *Page 501 reimbursement of expenses owed herein. The sum of these numbers represents the payment of 40% of the gross amount of the settlement plus approved expenses.[3]
"5. The Clerk is ordered to instanter pay to Scott Chamblee the sum of $350,000.00; to Derrell Chamblee the sum of $400,000.00.
"6. The money remaining in the clerk's office after the payment of these fees and expenses as set out hereinabove is to be held by the clerk until further order of this court.
"7. Seminole Electric Cooperative, Inc., . . . is forever released from any further liability in this case and the judgment against it shall be marked satisfied by the clerk."
The trial court also entered an order sealing the record in the case.
On September 11, 2002, the same date the trial court entered its orders, the parties filed a joint motion with this Court asking us to remand Seminole's appeal of the underlying fraud action. Not until two days later, on September 13, 2002, did this Court remand Seminole's case for proceedings consistent with the release and settlement agreement. Consequently, the trial court's hearing took place and its orders were entered while Seminole's appeal was pending before this Court.
On September 13, 2002, the same date this Court remanded Seminole's case, General Electric, Cumberland Casualty and Surety Company, and Regions Bank4 filed petitions of involuntary bankruptcy against the debtors. Reynolds was appointed as interim bankruptcy trustee.5 On September 26, 2002, approximately 15 days after the trial court entered its orders, this Court dismissed the appeal on Seminole's motion.
On October 23, 2002, Reynolds appealed the trial court's condemnation order and its award of attorney fees and expenses. The named appellees are Colonial Bank, Komatsu, General Electric, Brad Regan, Friedman, Tweedy, Derrell Chamblee, and Scott Chamblee.6
Colonial Bank claims that Reynolds's jurisdictional argument is without merit because it obtained a judgment against the debtors that was made final pursuant to Rule 54(b), Ala.R.Civ.P., and that was not on appeal when the trial court's orders were entered. Colonial Bank claims that the trial court's orders were not only "collateral" to Seminole's pending appeal — they were not even a part of Seminole's appeal. Colonial Bank states that "[t]he trial court has taken no action that could prejudice any claimant's right to establish its claim to the interpled funds (only attorneys' fees and expenses were disbursed, which no competing creditor should [claim] in any event) and, even if prejudicial, these claimants have filed no appeal." Colonial's brief at p. 20.
Friedman and Tweedy argue that after the parties agreed to the settlement "[t]he only action taken by the [trial court] was approving the [debtors'] attorneys' motion for attorneys fees and the approval of payment of litigation expenses including payments to representatives of the [debtors] for extensive amounts of time expended over four years in the litigation." Friedman and Tweedy's brief at p. 28. Friedman and Tweedy argue that once the parties reached the settlement agreement, Seminole's payment of the funds to the trial court and the trial court's disbursement of such funds were "collateral" to any issue on appeal.
The question of jurisdiction is fundamental. Mobile Gulf R.R. v.Crocker,
"The question of jurisdiction is always fundamental. It would amount to usurpation and oppression for a court to interfere in a matter over which it has no jurisdiction, and its pronouncements in respect thereto would be without force, and its decrees and judgments *Page 503 would be wholly void. This is a universal principle, as old as the law itself; hence the question of jurisdiction is a question of primary importance in every case, and, if there is an absence of jurisdiction over the subject-matter, this ends the inquiry; it cannot be waived or supplied by consent."
(Emphasis added.)
Jurisdiction of a case can be in only one court at a time. Ex parteState ex rel. O.E.G.,
Colonial Bank claims that Reynolds, as bankruptcy trustee, cannot object on appeal to the trial court's orders because the debtors did not object to the orders before the trial court. However, Reynolds's objection raises a purely jurisdictional issue, and the absence of jurisdiction may be raised for the first time on appeal. Mobile Gulf R.R., 455 So.2d at 832; International Longshoremen's Ass'n v.Davis,
Reynolds acknowledges that a trial court may proceed in matters that are "collateral" to a pending appeal. See Owens,
Moreover, in Osborn, supra, the appellees filed a motion in the trial court for an additional supersedeas bond after the appellants had filed an appeal of the trial court's judgment declaring the deed in question to be void. 331 So.2d at 270. This Court concluded that the appellees' motion was properly within the jurisdiction of the trial court because it merely protected the appellees' interest in the trial court's order entered in their favor and did not involve the "rights and equities" relative to the question on appeal. 331 So.2d at 272. This Court stated that the "motion presented a question which [was] clearly collateral to the questions raised by [the] appeal of the court order setting aside the deed." 331 So.2d at 272. See also Barran v. Roden,
Reynolds claims that the trial court's orders in the present action, unlike the orders in Owens and Osborn, which protected the interests of the parties pending the appeal of the matters in question, directly affected the matters on appeal. Reynolds argues that the present action is more similar to that presented in Ex parte Elmore,
In the appeal from the debtors' fraud judgment, Seminole raised numerous issues, including whether the trial court erred in failing to dismiss the promissory-fraud and suppression claims and whether the trial court failed to give Seminole's requested jury charges and to exclude certain evidence. Seminole also raised issues related to damages, including whether the compensatory-damages award was supported by the evidence, whether Jefferson Screening was entitled to punitive damages, and whether punitive damages should be capped at $250,000. While Seminole's appeal was pending, the trial court enforced a settlement, condemned the settlement amount, awarded attorney fees and expenses from the interpleaded settlement funds, and released Seminole from further liability in this case. As in Elmore, the trial court's orders directly affected the matters involved on appeal that could have been adjudged by this Court.
Colonial Bank argues that the trial court's orders were collateral to the pending appeal. It argues that Reynolds's "fatal omission" in his jurisdictional argument is the fact that Colonial Bank's antecedent final judgment against the debtors was not on appeal when the trial court entered its orders. Colonial Bank's brief at p. 30. We agree that Colonial Bank's judgment against the debtors was made final pursuant to Rule 54(b), Ala.R.Civ.P. However, while Colonial Bank's status as a judgment creditor of the debtors had been established, the judgment debtors' rights against Seminole were dependent upon the success of their action against Seminole — which was on appeal to this Court. For all that appears, the judgment against Seminole could have been reversed and a judgment rendered for Seminole, and Seminole would have had no obligation to the debtors or to Colonial Bank, as the assignee of the debtors. Of course, a settlement of which this Court is unaware, entered into before this Court's opinion in the case is released, could necessitate proceedings to set aside this Court's opinion so as to enforce the settlement. But that circumstance *Page 505 does not alter the fact that the trial court's order enforcing, pursuant to the settlement agreement, a reduction of the amount of the judgment made the basis of the pending appeal directly rather than collaterally involved matters pending on appeal.
Friedman and Tweedy also argue that the trial court's orders were "completely collateral" to the issues presented in Seminole's pending appeal because, they say, the trial court merely approved attorney fees and litigation expenses. Friedman and Tweedy's brief at p. 34. Friedman and Tweedy cite Florida cases for the proposition that a trial court has jurisdiction to consider a motion for an assessment of attorney fees even after a notice of appeal from a final judgment has been filed. SeeCasavan v. Land O'Lakes Realty, Inc. of Leesburg,
It is clear that the debtors as well as Seminole agreed to be bound by the release and settlement agreement. However, the parties' consent cannot confer jurisdiction on the trial court. See Wilkinson,
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
MOORE, C.J., and HOUSTON, JOHNSTONE, and WOODALL, JJ., concur.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Thomas E. Reynolds v. Colonial Bank
- Cited By
- 21 cases
- Status
- Published