Opinion issued July 14, 2015




                                     In The

                               Court of Appeals
                                    For The

                        First District of Texas
                          ————————————
                               NO. 01-02-00114-CV
                         ———————————
HOWARD STERN AS EXECUTOR OF THE ESTATE OF VICKIE LYNN
                 MARSHALL, Appellant
                                       V.
ELAINE MARSHALL AS INDEPENDENT EXECUTRIX OF THE ESTATE
  OF E. PIERCE MARSHALL, ROBERT MCINTYRE AS TEMPORARY
 ADMINISTRATOR OF THE ESTATE OF J. HOWARD MARSHALL, II,
   APPLICATION TO APPOINT ELAINE MARSHALL PENDING, IV
       ELAINE MARSHALL AS TRUSTEE OF THE MARSHALL
   GRANDCHILDREN’S TRUST FOR THE BENEFIT OF E. PIERCE
    MARSHALL, JR., ELAINE MARSHALL AS TRUSTEE OF THE
   MARSHALL GRANDCHILDREN’S TRUST FOR THE BENEFIT OF
    PRESTON MARSHALL, E. PIERCE MARSHALL, JR., ELAINE
   MARSHALL, AND PRESTON MARSHALL AS TRUSTEES OF THE
MARSHALL PETROLEUM, INC. STOCK HOLDING TRUST, E. PIERCE
MARSHALL, JR., ELAINE MARSHALL, AND PRESTON MARSHALL AS
TRUSTEES OF THE MARSHALL HERITAGE FOUNDATION AND THE
    MARSHALL LEGACY FOUNDATION, ELAINE MARSHALL AS
 TRUSTEE OF THE BETTYE B. MARSHALL LIVING TRUST, ELAINE
   MARSHALL AS TRUSTEE OF THE J. HOWARD MARSHALL, II,
 MARITAL TRUST NUMBER TWO, ELAINE MARSHALL AS TRUSTEE
 OF THE E. PIERCE MARSHALL FAMILY TRUST CREATED UNDER
  THE BETTYE B. MARSHALL LIVING TRUST INDENTURE DATED
     OCTOBER 30, 1990, ELAINE MARSHALL INDIVIDUALLY
      ELAINE MARSHALL AS TRUSTEE OF THE MARSHALL
   GRANDCHILDREN’S TRUST FOR THE BENEFIT OF E. PIERCE
    MARSHALL, JR., ELAINE MARSHALL AS TRUSTEE OF THE
   MARSHALL GRANDCHILDREN’ TRUST FOR THE BENEFIT OF
   PRESTON MARSHALL, E. PIERCE MARSHALL, JR., PRESTON
 MARSHALL, TROF, INC., FINLEY HILLIARD, ELAINE MARSHALL
     AND STEPHEN COOK AS TRUSTEES OF THE J. HOWARD
 MARSHALL, II LIVING TRUST, E. PIERCE MARSHALL, JR., ELAINE
     MARSHALL AND PRESTON MARSHALL AS TRUSTEES OF
   THE MARSHALL PETROLEUM, INC. STOCK HOLDING TRUST,
                          Appellees


                   On Appeal from the Probate Court No. 2
                           Harris County, Texas
                      Trial Court Case No. 276815402


                                   OPINION

      This is an appeal from a probate court judgment. We reverse the attorneys’

fees awarded in favor of one of the appellees and render judgment that appellee

take nothing on that claim. We additionally modify the trial court’s judgment and

affirm the judgment as modified.

                               BACKGROUND

      J. Howard Marshall II (Marshall II) died on August 4, 1995, in Houston,

Texas at the age of 90. He was survived by three heirs: his widow, Vickie Lynn




                                        2
Marshall (a/k/a Anna Nicole Smith) (“Vickie”), and two sons, J. Howard Marshall,

III (“Marshall III”) and E. Pierce Marshall (“Pierce”).

A.    Pierce’s Application for Probate of Marshall II’s Will and Codicil in
      Texas
      On August 8, 1995, on a Petition for Probate of Foreign Testament filed by

Pierce and Finley Hilliard (who were both named as executors in Marshall II’s

will), a Louisiana district court signed an Order for Probate of Foreign Testament

and Codicil recognizing Marshall II’s December 22, 1992 will and June 11, 1993

codicil as valid “in form under the laws of the state of Texas” and ordering that

Pierce and Hilliard “be confirmed as testamentary co-executors . . . to serve

without bond . . . and that letters testamentary are to be issued to” Pierce and

Hilliard.

      On August 16, 1995, Pierce and Hilliard filed—in Texas probate court—a

joint Application for Probate of Will and Codicil and for Appointment of

Independent Co-executors. That application stated that, “[p]rior to his death, the

Decedent transferred all of his assets to a trust, known as the J. Howard Marshall,

II, Living Trust; however, there is a necessity for an administration of this Estate in

Texas as there are claims owing to the Estate and there may be claims against the

Estate.” That application attached a copy of the Louisiana probate order and

requested that the Texas probate court admit the will and codicil into probate and

that Letters Testamentary as Independent Co-Executors without bond be issued to

                                          3
Pierce and Hilliard. In an amended application in the Texas probate court, Pierce

and Hilliard further explained that the Marshall II’s Living Trust was a Louisiana

trust being administered by the Louisiana courts, but that there were interests of

Marshall II’s estate “involving claims peculiar to Texas” in need of administration

in Texas.

      On September 20, 1995, Pierce filed a document in the Texas probate

proceedings explaining that Hilliard and each successor co-executor named in

Marshall II’s will declined to serve as executor. Accordingly, Pierce requested that

he be appointed as sole Independent Executor. That filing also identified the sole

devisee named in Marshall II’s will as the Trustee of the Howard Marshall II

Living trust. Pierce and Hilliard are the co-executors of that Living Trust.

      On March 7, 1996, Pierce filed another amended application for probate

representing that, because Marshall II transferred all of his assets to the Living

Trust prior to his death, there are no assets subject to administration in Texas.

Alternatively, Pierce requested that he be appointed sole Independent Executor.

Robert McIntyre was then appointed by the Texas probate court as temporary

administrator of the estate.

B.    Marshall III’s Will Contest and Tort Claims

      In the Texas probate proceedings, Marshall III filed a will contest and claims

against (1) Pierce (individually and in his capacities as trustee of several trust and


                                          4
attorney in fact for Marshall II under a power of attorney), (2) Hilliard

(individually and in his capacity as trustee of several trusts), (3) Kenn Farrar,

(individually and in his capacity as trustee of two trusts), (4) Marshall Petroleum,

Inc., (5) Harvey Sorensen (individually and as trustee of a trust), (6) Foulston &

Siefkin, L.L.P., (7) Elaine T. Marshall (individually and in her capacity as trustee

of two trusts), (8) E. Pierce Marshall, Jr., and (9) Preston Marshall.

      Marshall III alleged that he and his father, Marshall II, entered a contract in

1980 under which Marshall III agreed to sell to Marshall II his Koch Industries

stock. Marshall III asserted that, in return, Marshall II promised to treat Marshall

III equally to Pierce and his family with regard to estate planning and property.

Marshall III sued for breach of this contract, as well as fraud, breach of fiduciary

duty, promissory estoppel, and tortious interference, seeking damages, a

declaration, and a constructive trust. These claims are based on the allegation that

Marshall II established a Living Trust and transferred most of his estate to Pierce

through that trust, to the exclusion of Marshall III. In addition, Marshall III

claimed that Marshall II made inter vivos transfers of property to Pierce and his

family for less than full and adequate consideration, and that he failed to make

equal gifts to Marshall III. Marshall III complained that, beginning in 1994, Pierce

and others caused Marshall II to sign several overreaching documents that operated




                                           5
to put Pierce in control of Marshall II’s vast wealth, including a power of attorney

in favor of Pierce, and an amendment to the Living Trust, rendering it irrevocable.

      With regards to Marshall II’s will and codicil, Marshall III asserted that they

were invalid based upon defects in their execution. Alternatively, Marshall III

alleged that they were both executed as the result of undue influence. In the

further alternative, Marshall III asserted that Marshall II lacked testamentary

capacity when the will and codicil were executed.            Marshall III similarly

complained that the Living Trust and its amendments were executed as a result of

undue influence and duress, such that transfers to the purported trusts should be

invalidated.

      Marshall III requested that the Texas probate court deny the application for

probate and impose a constructive trust on all Marshall II’s property that had been

transferred to others.

C.    Vickie’s Bankruptcy Case in California

      On January 25, 1996, Vickie filed for Chapter 11 Bankruptcy in California,

where she lived. Pierce filed a proof of claim in the Bankruptcy proceedings,

alleging that Vickie had defamed him when her lawyers told the press that Pierce

had engaged in forgery, fraud, and overreaching to gain control of Marshall II’s

assets.   Pierce sought a declaration that his claim was not dischargeable in

bankruptcy. Vickie asserted truth as a defense. Later, Pierce filed a proof of claim


                                         6
for the defamation, seeing to recover defamation damages in the bankruptcy

proceedings.

      Vickie also asserted counterclaims against Pierce in the bankruptcy action,

among them a claim that Pierce tortiously interfered with an intended gift from

Marshall II. According to Vickie, Marshall II intended to gift to her half of his

income during their marriage in the form of a “catchall” trust that would be formed

for the purpose of capturing their “new community” estate. The basis of both her

defense to Pierce’s defamation claim and her affirmative tortious interference

claim was the allegation that Pierce prevented Marshall II’s intended gift to her by,

among other things, effectively imprisoning Marshall II by surrounding him with

hired guards to prevent contact with Vickie, making misrepresentations to Marshall

II, and transferring Marshall II’s property against his express wishes.

      Vickie’s counterclaims turned her objection to Pierce’s claim into an

adversary proceeding. See FED. R. BANKR. P. 3007. On November 5, 1999, the

Bankruptcy Court granted summary judgment in Vickie’s favor on Pierce’s

defamation claim and, after a bench trial, entered judgment for Vickie on her

tortious interference counterclaim (based upon both evidence presented at trial and

facts found against Pierce as sanctions for discovery abuse). That Bankruptcy

Court judgment, signed December 29, 2000, awarded Vickie approximately $450

million in compensatory damages and $25 million in punitive damages.


                                          7
D.    Vickie’s Will Contest in Texas Probate Court

      While the Bankruptcy proceedings were pending in California, Vickie filed

her own will contest in the pending Texas probate proceedings against Pierce and

numerous other defendants. Her pleading acknowledged the claims pending in the

California proceedings, and specified that the relief she sought in Texas was

requested only “as to such remedies and as against such parties who are not subject

to the jurisdiction of the Bankruptcy Court.”

      Vickie challenged the validity of Marshall II’s Living Trust, and argued that

trust could not receive assets under the residuary clause in Marshall II’s 1992 will.

Accordingly, Vickie asserted, interests subject to the residuary clause must pass by

intestate succession.    She also sought an accounting of trust income and

community property, and sought damages for alleged fraudulent transfers and

fraud on the community estate. She later added claims for breach of fiduciary

duties, aiding and abetting, civil conspiracy, promissory estoppel, equitable

estoppel, tortious interference, conversion, unjust enrichment, and breach of

contract.

      On January 3, 2000, Pierce and his wife Elaine Marshall (in their individual

capacities and in their capacities as trustees of various trusts) filed, in the Texas

probate proceeding, counterclaims against Vickie. That filing alleged:

            3.     The petition filed by Vickie Lynn Marshall is frivolous
      and violated § 10.001, et seq. of the Texas Civil Practice & Remedies
                                         8
      Code and Rule 13, Texas Rules of Civil Procedure. The allegations
      made by Vickie Lynn Marshall were known by Vickie Lynn Marshall
      to be false when she first made them. Discovery has further proven
      that Vickie Lynn Marshall[’s] claims are frivolous. Accordingly, the
      Marshall Family Defendants are entitled to recover damages for
      Vickie Lynn Marshall’s frivolous claims including attorney’s fees and
      expenses incurred because of this litigation.
      At least one line from the fourth paragraph appears to be missing as the text

on the next page begins in the middle of a sentence:

      decedent Howard, Sr., and the benefits and rights of the Marshall
      Family Defendants as set forth in the will and trust established by
      Howard, Sr. Vickie Lynn Marshall has tortiously interfered with the
      inheritance rights of the Marshall Family Defendants by filing this
      lawsuit which contains false and fraudulent allegations. Vickie Lynn
      Marshall has intentionally invaded the personal and property rights of
      the Marshall Family Defendants and has acted without any just cause
      or excuse. Further the actions of Vickie Lynn Marshall as set forth
      above amount to intentional interference with administration of the
      estate of Howard, Sr.
             5.    As a result of the tortious actions of Vickie Lynn
      Marshall, the estate of Howard, Sr. and its intended beneficiaries,
      including the Marshall Family Defendants, have suffered damages
      including loss of benefit of the estate or trust, fees and expenses
      charged or collected by the Temporary Administrator, attorney’s fees,
      expenses, and harm to the corpus of the estate. These damages
      continue and exceed the minimum jurisdictional limits of this court.
      Vickie Lynn Marshall is liable to the Marshall Family Defendants for
      all actual damages caused by her tortious interference with inheritance
      rights of the Marshall Family Defendants and her intentionally
      interference with the administration of the estate of Howard, Sr.
      Vickie Lynn Marshall is further liable for punitive damages because
      she has acted intentionally with malice.
             6.    As a result of Vickie Lynn Marshall’s purported, but
      frivolous, will contest, E. Pierce Marshall has been forced to defend or
      prosecute this proceeding in good faith and with just cause. Pursuant
      to Texas Probate Code and any other applicable law or statute, E.
      Pierce Marshall, as executor of the applicable wills, is entitled to his
                                         9
      necessary expenses and disbursements, including reasonable
      attorney’s fees, for defending or prosecuting this action in good faith
      and with just cause.

      Trial of all the probate court claims began on September 18, 2000. Three

months into trial (and less than a week after judgment was entered in Vickie’s

favor by the California Bankruptcy Court), on January 5, 2001, Vickie filed a

Notice of Entry of Final Judgment by the Federal Bankruptcy Court and Notice of

Voluntary Non-Suit without Prejudice of All Claims in the Texas probate

proceedings.

      On February 9, 2001, Pierce and Elaine Marshall amended their

counterclaims against Vickie in the probate court, alleging she individually, and in

conspiracy with others, “through a pattern of misrepresentations, defamation,

creation of false documents, perjured testimony, filing of false pleadings and

fraudulent acts, Vickie Lynn Marshall has tortiously interfered with Counter-

Plaintiffs’ rights and expectancy in the estate of J. Howard Marshall from a date

well before his death until the present.” This amended petition also contained a

request for a declaratory judgment:

      Counter-Plaintiffs seek a declaration of the respective rights of
      Counter-Plaintiffs and Counter-Defendant with respect to the estate of
      J. Howard Marshall and a declaration that Vickie Lynn Marshall has
      no right to estate property of J. Howard Marshall II.
      Counter-Plaintiffs further seek a declaration that Vickie Lynn
      Marshall had no agreement or contract for half of J. Howard Marshall
      II’s estate. Vickie Lynn Marshall’s action in dismissing or non-
      suiting her claims without prejudice creates the prospect that she may
                                        10
      attempt to refile her baseless and frivolous claims at a later date even
      though barred by res judicata forcing all these Counter-Plaintiffs to
      waste additional time and resources defending them. Thus, the Court
      in justice and equity should permit the jury to consider the issue (TEX.
      CIV. PRAC. & REM. CODE § 37.007) and issue a declaratory judgment
      with respect to whether Counter-Defendant has any rights to property
      of the Estate of J. Howard Marshall II to prevent frivolous and
      harassing litigation against them, and Counter-Defendant will not be
      surprised or prejudiced by submission of this issue as Counter-
      Defendant intended until recently to submit the same issue.”

      On February 12, 2001, Vickie filed an objection to these claims, asserting

that the amended counterclaims (1) were untimely and prejudicial, (2) violated the

permanent injunction arising out the California Bankruptcy Court 1999 discharge,

(3) failed to satisfy the requisites of the Declaratory Judgment Act, (4) constituted

an improper request for a declaration of non-liability in a tort action, (5) sought to

impermissibly undermine the prior California Bankruptcy Court Judgment, and (6)

were improperly brought after Vickie’s nonsuit, which the Probate Court was

obligated to enter as a ministerial act.

      On February 16, 2001, in compliance with a California Bankruptcy Court

order declaring that defendants’ Texas probate court tortious interference claims

violated the bankruptcy court’s discharge order and threatening contempt if those

claims were not dismissed, those defendants dismissed the intentional interference

claims against Vickie, leaving only the request for sanctions and request for

declaratory relief.



                                           11
E.    The Texas Probate Court’s Judgment

      Eighty questions were summited to the jury in the underlying probate case,

which found in favor of the defendants on all issues. Most of the questions were

specific to Marshall III’s will contest and claims (and the defendants’ affirmative

defenses to those claims), but one question was specific to Vickie:

                               QUESTION NO. 66

      Do you find that Vickie Lynn Marshall did not have an agreement with J.

Howard Marshall, II, that he would give her one-half of all of his property?

      Answer “We do so find” or “We do not so find”.

      Answer:            We do so Find

      This jury finding was memorialized in the Probate Court’s December 7,

2001 Second Amended Final Judgment, which stated that “IT IS, THEREFORE,

ORDERED, ADJUDGED, AND DECREED by the Court that counterdefendant

VICKIE LYNN MARSHALL, A/K/A ANNA NICOLE SMITH, did not have an

agreement with J. HOWARD MARSHALL II that he would give her one-half of

all his property.” That judgment also contained several other recitations related to

Vickie, many of which are the subject of her appeal here, including: “IT IS

FURTHER ORDERED, ADJUDGED, AND DECREED by the Court” that,

       This Court has exclusive and dominant jurisdiction over (1) all
        claims regarding the property owned by J. Howard Marshall II; . . .
        . (6) all affirmative claims and all filed and possible compulsory
        counterclaims raised by . . . VICKIE LYNN MARSHALL; and (7)
                                         12
   all plaintiffs’ and defendants’ claim raised and that could have
   been raised against the Estate of J. Howard Marshall II, concerning
   the making of any inter vivos or testamentary gift or transfer by J.
   Howard Marshall II of any of his property.
 VICKIE LYNN MARSHALL, A/K/A ANNA NICOLE SMITH,
  abandoned any claim as to any property interest, other interest, or
  claim of any kind or sort in the estate of J. HOWARD
  MARSHALL II, in the property or assets of the J. Howard
  Marshall, II, Living Trust, or in any property that is the subject
  matter of this proceeding . . . .
 any and all claims by VICKIE LYNN MARSHALL against the
  Estate of J. HOWARD MARSHALL II or against the property in
  the J. Howard Marshall, II, Living Trust, including but not limited
  to claims that J. HOWARD MARSHALL II intended but failed to
  give her or to leave her any portion of such property during his life
  or upon his death, were required by law to have been asserted as
  compulsory counterclaims in this proceeding pursuant to Tex. R.
  Civ. P. 97. The Court further finds that the jury answered the
  foregoing questions that J. HOWARD MARSHALL II possessed
  mental capacity as required by law when he executed the Amended
  and Restated Living Trust indenture dated the 13th day of July
  1994 and that the jury has failed to find that said execution was
  procured through undue influence exercised by E. PIERCE
  MARSHALL. The Court further finds that the jury answered the
  foregoing questions that J. HOWARD MARSHALL II possessed
  testamentary capacity as required by law when he executed the
  Last Will and Testament of J. Howard Marshall, II, dated the 22nd
  day of December 1992, and that the jury has failed to find that said
  execution was procured through undue influence exercised by E.
  PIERCE MARSHALL. The Court further finds that all defendants
  are also entitled to a take-nothing judgment based on any claim
  that VICKIE LYNN MARSHALL, A/K/A ANNA NICOLE
  SMITH, should have made in this proceeding as a compulsory
  counterclaim.
 as a matter of law VICKIE LYNN MARSHALL, A/K/A ANNA
  NICOLE SMITH, does not possess any interest in and is not
  entitled to possession of any property within the Estate of J.
  HOWARD MARSHALL II or any property of the J. Howard

                                  13
   Marshall, II, Living Trust because of any representations,
   promises, or agreements made by J. HOWARD MARSHALL II to
   or with VICKIE LYNN MARSHALL, A/K/A ANNA NICOLE
   SMITH;
 as a matter of law any and all claims that have been or should have
  been asserted by VICKIE LYNN MARSHALL A/K/A ANNA
  NICOLE SMITH, based upon alleged representations, promises, or
  agreements made by J. HOWARD MARSHALL II to or with
  VICKIE LYNN MARSHALL, A/K/A ANNA NICOLE SMITH,
  have been disposed of in this proceeding;
 J. HOWARD MARSHALL II did not intend to give and did not
  give to VICKIE LYNN MARSHALL, A/K/A ANNA NICOLE
  SMITH, a gift or bequest from the Estate of J. HOWARD
  MARSHALL II or from the J. Howard Marshall, II, Living Trust
  either prior to or upon his death; and
 VICKIE LYNN MARSHALL, A/K/A ANNA NICOLE SMITH,
  shall take nothing from any claim that she should have made in this
  proceeding as a compulsory counterclaim against . . . E. Pierce
  Marshall.
 pursuant to the Uniform Declaratory Judgment Act, Tex. Civ. Prac.
  & Rem. Code Ann. §§ 37.009 (Vernon 1987), E. PIERCE
  MARSHALL is entitled to an award of his reasonable and
  necessary attorneys’ fees as is equitable and just against VICKIE
  LYNN MARSHALL A/K/A ANNA NICOLE SMITH. The
  attorneys’ fees awarded herein against VICKIE LYNN
  MARSHALL A/K/A ANNA NICOLE SMITH are solely and
  exclusively based upon evidence relating to the attorneys’ fees
  incurred during the trial which occurred in this cause between
  September 18, 2000 and February 18, 2001.
 PIERCE MARSHALL have and recover from VICKIE LYNN
  MARSHALL, A/K/A ANNA NICOLE SMITH, attorneys’ fees in
  the sum of FIVE HUNDRED FORTY-ONE AND N0/100
  DOLLARS ($541,000.00) for services rendered through the trial of
  this cause, . . . ONE HUNDRED THOUSAND AND N0/100
  DOLLARS ($100,000.00) from VICKIE LYNN MARSHALL,
  A/K/A ANNA NICOLE SMITH, as additional reasonable
  attorneys’ fees [for an appeal to the court of appeals and] ONE

                                 14
           HUNDRED         THOUSAND           AND     N0/100        DOLLARS
           ($100,000.00) [for an appeal to the supreme court].

      The probate court’s plenary power expired over its December 7, 2001 final

judgment on February 11, 2002.

E.    Back in the Federal Courts . . . .

      Pierce appealed the bankruptcy court’s December 29, 2000 judgment to the

California District Court.

      1.      The District Court’s June 19, 2001 opinion – Jurisdiction and
              Core vs. Non-Core Analysis

      In Pierce’s appeal, the federal district court first issued an opinion

addressing only jurisdiction and standard of review. In re Marshall, 264 B.R. 609,

618 (C.D. Cal. June 19, 2001). The court concluded that the bankruptcy court did

have jurisdiction over Vickie’s tortious interference with an inter vivos gift

counterclaim against Pierce, thereby rejecting Pierce’s argument that the “probate

exception” (which bars federal courts from probating a will) precluded the federal

courts from exercising jurisdiction over Vickie’s claim. Id. at 619. The court

reasoned that Vickie’s counterclaim is asserted against Pierce “individually and

makes no claim against the estate or even against the trusts existing” when

Marshall II died. Id. at 622. The court recognized that “Vickie’s counterclaim is

at least in part premised on the theory that she is entitled to nothing either from the

living trusts or from the estate itself” but, rather, that “Pierce prevented J. Howard,


                                           15
Sr. from including her in the living trusts.” Id. at 623; see also id. (“Thus, it is

entirely possible that the trusts, as currently structured, are legally valid but also

that Pierce owes Vickie damages for preventing J. Howard, Sr. from structuring the

trusts in another way.).

      The district court rejected, however, the bankruptcy court’s conclusion that

Vickie’s counterclaim was a “core Bankruptcy proceeding.” Id. at 626. This was

important because a bankruptcy court can only enter final judgment over core

bankruptcy matters. Id. at 625. If a matter is non-core, the Bankruptcy Court may

only entered proposed findings of fact and conclusion of law. Id. The district

court then reviews those proposed findings and conclusion de novo, and it is the

district court that ultimately enters the final judgment. Id. The district court thus

vacated the bankruptcy court’s December 20, 2000 purported final judgment and

announced it would undertake a comprehensive review of the bankruptcy court’s

record, as well as take additional evidence, to decide whether Marshall II promised

a gift to Vickie, whether Pierce interfered with that gift, and whether Pierce

destroyed or failed to provide relevant evidence in a way that justified the

imposition of sanctions.

      2.     The District Court’s December 21, 2001 Opinion – Claim
             Preclusion

      The California District Court ordered Pierce to produce additional

documents and set a hearing date to hear additional evidence. In re Marshall, 271

                                         16
B.R. 858, 862 (C.D. Cal. 2001). Before that hearing, Pierce filed a motion for

summary judgment, asserting that (1) “Vickie’s claims are precluded by the

doctrine of claims preclusion by the [December 7, 2001] judgment in the Texas

Probate Court,” and, alternatively, (2) “Vickie is estopped from arguing the key

elements of her claim for tortious interference with an inter vivos gift under the

doctrine of issue preclusion because of the Texas probate judgment.” Id. at 862.

The district court concluded that res judicata did not apply, as Vickie did not, and

was not required to, litigate her claim for interference with an inter vivos gift in

Texas. Id. at 863 (citing exception to compulsory counterclaim rule that a party is

not required to bring a counterclaim if that claim is the subject of a pending action

elsewhere). As for collateral estoppel, the court held that the Texas Probate Court

judgment was not yet final under Texas law because the court’s plenary power had

not expired. Id. Finally, the court held that Pierce’s arguments were untimely, as

the court’s de novo review was not a new trial, but an examination of the trial in

bankruptcy court. Id. at 865 (“The Court is not aware of any authority, nor does

Pierce’s counsel point to any, that would support the proposition of applying res

judicata or collateral estoppel after a trial has been had.”). The court also noted

that the issues in the Texas Probate proceedings were not the same as the ones put

at issue before the California Courts. Id.




                                         17
      3.     The District Court’s March 7, 2002 Opinion and Judgment
             Adopting as Modified Bankruptcy Court’s Proposed Findings of
             Fact and Conclusions of Law

      From December 11, 2001 to January 8, 2002, the California District Court

“conducted an evidentiary hearing wherein it accepted the testimony of the central

figures in the case, documentary evidence, and arguments of counsel” resulting in

it adopting the bankruptcy court’s findings of fact and conclusions of law with

certain modification and making independent findings of fact and conclusions of

law. In re Marshall, 275 B.R. 5, 7–8 (C.D. Cal. 2002). The district court did not

rule on the propriety of the bankruptcy court’s sanctions, as it concluded—after

considering all the evidence, including Pierce’s evidence and testimony that had

previously been excluded by the bankruptcy court’s sanctions—that Vickie was

entitled to judgment on her claims. Id. at 57. Although the district court noted that

“the facts are much more egregious than even the bankruptcy court suspected and

found,” it concluded that the evidence supported an award of actual damages that

is less than the bankruptcy court awarded. Id. It signed a judgment awarding

$44,292,767.33 in actual damages and $44,292,767.33 in exemplary damages. Id.

      4.     The Ninth Circuit’s December 30, 2004 Opinion – Probate
             Exception

      Pierce appealed the District Court’s judgment. The Ninth Circuit reversed,

concluding that the probate exception to federal jurisdiction deprived the

bankruptcy court of jurisdiction to hear Vickie’s counterclaim against Pierce. In re

                                         18
Marshall, 392 F.3d 1118, 1137 (9th Cir. 2004). The court agreed with Pierce that

Vickie’s counterclaim in the bankruptcy proceeding was “simply a disguised attack

on J. Howard Marshall II’s 1982 trust, as amended, and on the postmortem

disposition of his property as provided in the trust.” Id. Having concluded that the

Texas probate court had “exclusive jurisdiction,” the court directed the lower

courts to dismiss Vickie’s claims against Pierce, and consider the effect of the

probate exception on other procedural matters and sanctions awarded. Id.

      5.     The U.S. Supreme Court’s May 1, 2006 Opinion – Probate
             Exception

      Vickie appealed the Ninth Circuit’s judgment. The Supreme Court reversed,

holding that the probate exception did not apply. Marshall v. Marshall, 547 U.S.

293, 312, 126 S. Ct. 1735, 1749 (2006). It noted that Vickie’s tortious interference

claim did not “involve the administration of an estate, the probate of a will, or any

other purely probate matter”; rather she “seeks an in personam judgment against

Pierce” not the res in the custody of the probate court. Id. The Supreme Court also

rejected the Ninth Circuit’s determination that the federal court lacked jurisdiction

because the Texas Probate Court had declared it had exclusive jurisdiction over all

of Vickie’s claims against Pierce. Id. at 312–13; 126 S. Ct. at 1749–50. It

reasoned that, while Texas law governs the substantive elements of Vickie’s

counterclaim, “Texas may not reserve to its probate courts the exclusive right to

adjudicate a transitory tort.” Id. The Supreme Court reversed and remanded to the

                                         19
Ninth Circuit, noting that the issues not previously reached by the Ninth Circuit—

including “the question whether Vickie’s claim was core” and “Pierce’s arguments

concerning claim and issue preclusion”—remained “open for consideration on

remand.” Id. at 314–15; 126 S. Ct. at 1750.

      6.    The Ninth Circuit’s March 19, 2010 Opinion – Core vs. Non-Core
            and Issue Preclusion

      On remand, the Ninth Circuit held that Vickie’s tortious interference claim

was a compulsory counterclaim to Pierce’s defamation claim in the bankruptcy

proceeding, but nonetheless concluded that it was “not a core proceeding arising in

a case under the Bankruptcy Code because it is not so closely related to Pierce

Marshall’s defamation claim that it must be resolved in order to determine the

allowance or disallowance of his claim against her bankruptcy estate.” In re

Marshall, 600 F.3d 1037, 1059 (9th Cir. 2010). Because the bankruptcy court

could not render final judgment over non-core claims, the final judgment resolving

Vickie’s claim in federal court was the district court’s March 7, 2002 judgment,

not the bankruptcy court’s December 29, 2000 purported final judgment. Id. at

1060. Reasoning that because “the Texas probate court’s judgment was the earliest

final judgment entered on matters relevant to this proceeding,” the court held that

the district court erred by refusing “to give preclusive effect to any of the jury

findings incorporated into the Texas probate court’s judgment or to any of the



                                        20
Texas probate court’s other factual findings of legal conclusions.” Id. at 1064. The

Ninth Circuit thus again reversed and remanded the District Court’s judgment.

      7.     The U.S. Supreme Court’s June 23, 2011 Opinion – Core vs. Non-
             Core and Article III Power

      Vickie again appealed to the Supreme Court.            That Court held that—

contrary to the District Court’s and Ninth Circuit’s holdings—“Vickie's

counterclaim against Pierce for tortious interference is a ‘core proceeding’ under

the plain text of § 157(b)(2)(C).” Stern v. Marshall, ___ U.S. ___, 131 S. Ct. 2594,

2604 (2011). The Supreme Court nonetheless held that by resolving Vickie’s core

state law tortious interference claim in a final judgment as statutorily permitted, the

bankruptcy court exceeded its powers under Article III of the United States

Constitution. Id. at 2608. Because it concluded that the Bankruptcy Court “lacked

the constitutional authority to enter a final judgment on a state law counterclaim

that is not resolved in the process of ruling on a creditor’s proof of claim,” the

Court affirmed the Ninth Circuit’s judgment reversing the District Court’s

judgment in Vickie’s favor. Id. at 2620. It did not address issue preclusion.

      8.     Motion for Sanctions on Remand

      On May 29, 2013, the district court addressed motions for sanctions filed by

Stern alleging misconduct in the underlying bankruptcy proceedings. See in re

Marshall, No. SACV 01-97, 2013 WL 2370711, at *1 (C.D. Cal. May 29, 2013).

Several parties, including Pierce’s estate and related companies and successors in

                                          21
interest, filed motions requesting a stay of the court’s entry of final judgment

pending disposition of the sanctions motion and pending disposition of this appeal

of the probate case. Id. The court granted a stay pending resolution of the

sanctions, issued sua sponte show cause order against an attorney to demonstrate

why he should not be sanctioned for bad faith conduct and, finally, denied the

requested stay pending this appeal. Id.

      On August 18, 2014, the district court revisited the issue, concluding that “it

would be unlawful and repugnant” for the court to “issue an order designed to

undermine or rewrite the Circuit’s precedent or the Texas judgment.”            In re

Marshall, 8:01-cv-00097-DOC (C.D. Cal. Aug. 18, 2014).             Accordingly, the

district court dismissed Stern’s motion for sanctions. Id.

                                  THIS APPEAL

      Numerous parties filed notices of appeal of the probate court’s December 7,

2001 final judgment. On August 15, 2002, we abated this appeal pursuant to a

notice stating that Marshall III had filed for bankruptcy protection. See TEX. R.

APP. P. 8.1, 8.2. On March 13, 2014, we reinstated the appeal on Howard III’s

motion indicating his bankruptcy case had concluded.

      Shortly thereafter, all of the appellants except Vickie filed notices to dismiss

their respective appeals, which we granted. Howard Stern, as Executor of the

Estate of Vickie Lynn Marshall, filed a Suggestion of Death of Vickie Lynn


                                          22
Marshall and requested that we name him in place of Vickie and allow the appeal

to proceed in the name of the estate. We granted his motion. Stern then notified

the court that “the grounds for [Vickie’s Estate’s] appeal are not dependent upon a

reporter’s record and for that reason a reporter’s record has not been requested.”

We in turn notified the parties that, pursuant to Texas Rule of Appellate Procedure

37.3(c), we would “consider and decide only those issues or points that do not

require a reporter’s record for a decision.”1

      We use the name “Vickie” to refer to appellant during her lifetime, and the

name “Stern” when referencing Vickie’s estate.              Appellees are referred to

throughout this opinion as either “appellees” or “Marshall defendants.”2

      Stern’s brief raises the following issues:

1.    Vickie had tortious interference claims against Pierce pending in both
      the Probate Court and in a California court. After Vickie won her case
      in California, she nonsuited all of her claims in the Probate Court.
      Rather than dismissing Vickie, the Probate Court allowed the
      [Marshall defendants] to file new, post-nonsuit counterclaims against
      Vickie seeking, among other things, improper and unsupportable
      declaratory relief. Did the Probate Court err in allowing, rendering
      judgment on, and awarding damages and fees on those declaratory
      judgment counterclaims?

2.    Vickie’s tortious interference claims required no findings that she was
      entitled to take under J. Howard’s will or that she was entitled to
1
      After Stern’s appellant’s brief was filed, appellees filed a Motion for Leave to File
      Partial Reporter’s Record, stating that a “partial reporter’s record would assist the
      Court in understanding the factual and procedural background of this dispute and
      in assessing the merits of the issues on appeal.” We denied that motion.
2
      We note that appellee Pierce is also now also deceased.
                                           23
      property that passed through J. Howard’s estate or trusts. Only Vickie
      and Pierce, not J. Howard’s estate or the appellee trusts, were parties
      in the California case. Did the Probate Court err in finding that
      Vickie’s claims were compulsory counterclaims and that she
      abandoned her claims by taking a nonsuit after she won her California
      case?

3.    The only claim that Vickie asserted in California was about a gift—
      that Pierce tortiously interfered with J. Howard’s inter vivos gift to
      her. The only question that the jury was asked regarding Vickie was
      about a contract—whether she and J. Howard had an agreement that J.
      Howard would give her half of his estate. The Probate Court’s final
      judgment recited findings outside and beyond the jury verdict,
      including that there had been no intent for J. Howard to give Vickie an
      inter vivos gift and that all of Vickie’s claims against Pierce were
      disposed of. Did the Probate Court err in rendering a final judgment
      against Vickie that was unsupported by the pleadings, jury’s verdict,
      and law?

                   THE EFFECT OF VICKIE’S NONSUIT

      Stern argues that Texas Rule of Civil Procedure 162 “gives Vickie an

absolute right to take her nonsuit which completely terminated her case from the

moment it was filed.” See Epps v. Fowler, 351 S.W.3d 862, 868 (Tex. 2011). He

contends that “no cognizable claim for affirmative relief was pending at the time

Vickie filed her nonsuit, and the Probate Court’s failure to enter an order granting

Vickie’s nonsuit without prejudice and dismissing her from the case was error.”

He acknowledges that Appellees’ pleadings against Vickie at the time of the

nonsuit were labeled “affirmative claims” and that they contained the words

“tortious interference,” but he contends that reference to the actual facts pleaded

and relief sought demonstrate that their “affirmative” claims were only for

                                        24
sanctions. Because Rule 162 provides that “a dismissal . . . shall have no effect on

any motion for sanctions,” Stern argues that the Appellees’ pending request for

sanctions did not prevent Vickie’s nonsuit from being effective, as she did not need

to remain a party for the court to rule on the sanctions request.

      Finally, Stern asserts that the probate court compounded its error by

allowing the Appellees to add counterclaims, including declaratory judgment

action claims, against Vickie weeks after her nonsuit. See Progressive Ins. Cos. v.

Hartman, 788 S.W.2d 424, 426 (Tex. App.—Dallas 1990, orig. proceeding) (“A

counterclaim filed after the motion to nonsuit is ineffective.”). Accordingly, Stern

requests that we hold the court lacked jurisdiction to enter judgment against Vickie

on the improper counterclaims.

      Appellees respond that the probate court correctly determined that their

claims for sanctions and for tortious interference with inheritance rights—both of

which were pending at the time of Vickie’s nonsuit—were counterclaims for

affirmative relief that prevented Vickie’s dismissal from the case. Regardless of

whether they later prevailed on these claims, Appellees contend that their request

for sanctions and request for tortious interference damages in the form of “loss of

benefit of the estate or trust, fees and expenses charged or collected by the

Temporary Administrator, attorneys’ fees, expenses, and harm to the corpus of the

estate” survived Vickie’s nonsuit. Because these were live counterclaims pending


                                          25
at the time of the nonsuit, the trial court was within its power and discretion to

allow Appellees to later amend those counterclaims to add declaratory judgment

action claims.     Appellees further argue that allowing such amendment was

required, as Vickie was considered “a necessary and indispensable party to the

probate of her husband’s estate” under Texas Rule of Civil Procedure 39. Cf.

Minga v. Peralez, 603 S.W.2d 240, 241 (Tex. Civ. App.—Corpus Christi 1980, no

writ) (heirs in law to decedent who died intestate are indispensable parties when

suit against estate involves title to real estate).

       Appellees also point out that when Vickie nonsuited, Marshall III’s live

pleadings requested judicial declarations that Marshall II’s will was invalid, that

the Living Trust was void, and that all of Marshall II’s property should pass

through intestacy to Pierce, Marshall III, and Vickie. Because Vickie would be

affected by the resolution of this claim, she was an indispensable party such that

the probate court had no authority to dismiss her.

       A. Applicable Law

       Rule 162 provides, in relevant part:

       At any time before the plaintiff has introduced all of his evidence
       other than rebuttal evidence, the plaintiff may dismiss a case, or take a
       non-suit . . . .
       Any dismissal pursuant to this rule shall not prejudice the right of an
       adverse party to be heard on a pending claim for affirmative relief or
       excuse the payment of all costs taxed by the clerk. A dismissal under
       this rule shall have no effect on any motion for sanctions, attorney’s

                                             26
      fees or other costs, pending at the time of dismissal, as determined by
      the court.

TEX. R. CIV. P. 162.

      A motion for “sanction[s] for filing a frivolous lawsuit . . . survive[s]

nonsuit, else its imposition would rest completely in the plaintiff’s hands, defeating

its purpose.” CTL/Thompson Tex., LLC v. Starwood Homeowner’s Ass’n, Inc., 390

S.W.3d 299, 300 (Tex. 2013).          The supreme court has noted, however that

“[a]lthough the Rule permits motions for costs, attorney’s fees, and sanctions to

remain viable in the trial court, it does not forestall the nonsuit’s effect of rendering

the merits of the case moot.” Univ. of Tex. Med. Branch at Galveston v. Estate of

Blackmon, 195 S.W.3d 98, 101 (Tex. 2006) (per curiam); see also id. at 100–01

(holding Rule 162’s provision providing that a nonsuit shall “have no effect on any

motion for sanctions, attorney’s fees or other costs, pending at the time of

dismissal” allows the court to rule on a defendant’s request for an award of costs

post-dismissal, but that request is considered “collateral to the merits of the

underlying case” rather than a request for affirmative relief).          “A claim for

affirmative relief must allege a cause of action, independent of the plaintiff’s

claim, on which the claimant could recover compensation or relief, even if the

plaintiff abandons or is unable to establish his cause of action.” Id. at 101 (citing

BHP Petroleum Co., Inc. v. Millard, 800 S.W.2d 838, 841 (Tex. 1990)). “The use

of a creative pleading that merely restates defenses in the form of a declaratory

                                           27
judgment action cannot deprive the plaintiff of this right” to nonsuit under Rule

162. Millard, 800 S.W.2d at 841. Similarly, a request for declaratory relief that

amounts to only denial of plaintiff’s cause of action is not a counterclaim that

seeks affirmative relief that survives a nonsuit. Id.; see also Gen. Land Office v.

Oxy U.S.A., 789 S.W.2d 569, 570 (Tex. 1990) (“If a defendant does nothing more

than resist plaintiff’s right to recover, the plaintiff has an absolute right to the

nonsuit.”).

      B. Analysis

      Mootness implicates subject-matter jurisdiction. Meeker v. Tarrant Cnty.

Coll. Dist., 317 S.W.3d 754, 758 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth 2010, pet. denied). We

review subject-matter jurisdiction de novo. Id.

      Appellees’ live pleadings at the time of Vickie’s nonsuit included a January

3, 2000 filing entitled “Affirmative Claims of Marshall Family Defendants against

Vickie Lynn Marshall.” That pleading states that Vickie’s petition is frivolous and

violates Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code § 10 and Rule 13 of the Texas

Rules of Civil Procedure. It also alleges that,

      Vickie Lynn Marshall has tortiously interfered with the inheritance
      rights of the Marshall Family Defendants by filing this lawsuit
      which contains false and fraudulent allegations. Vickie Lynn
      Marshall has intentionally invaded the personal and property rights of
      the Marshall Family Defendants and has acted without any just cause
      or excuse. Further, the actions of Vickie Lynn Marshall as set forth
      above amount to intentional interference with administration of the
      estate of Howard, Sr.
                                          28
(emphasis added) The petition alleges harm in the form of “loss of benefit of the

estate or trust, fees and expenses charged or collected by the Temporary

Administrator, attorney’s fees, expenses, and harm to the corpus of the estate.” It

also seeks recovery from Vickie for the administration costs of defending the will,

trust, and codicil. The prayer requests the court award “actual damages, punitive

damages, attorney’s fees and court costs,” “damages caused by Vickie Lynn

Marshall’s frivolous pleadings including attorney’s fees and expenses incurred by

the Marshall Family Defendants in defending this action,” and “necessary

disbursement and expenses, including reasonable attorney’s fees.”

      One week after her nonsuit, Vickie filed “Exceptions and Objections to, and

Motion to Dismiss and/or Sever, the Purported ‘Counterclaims’.” She complained,

among other things, that the counterclaims should not survive her nonsuit. Her

filing was discussed by the parties and trial court at a bench conference held to

address the scope of permissible questioning of Vickie in light of her nonsuit.

Vickie’s counsel argued that because the specific conduct cited in the Marshall

defendant’s pleading in support of their tortious interference claims was the same

conduct for which they sought sanctions, those tort claims were not affirmative

claims under Rule 162. In response, counsel for the Marshall defendants argued

that their pleadings were sufficient under notice pleading rules to inform Vickie of

their counterclaims for tortious interference, and that identifying her filing of a


                                        29
frivolous lawsuit as an example of tortious interference did not limit the bases of

their tort claims. The court agreed with the Marshall defendants, stating that—

while the claims were “very vague[ly]” pleaded—he did not interpret the Marshall

Family’s counterclaims to be limited to a request for sanctions, but instead to also

plead a claim for tortious interference with inheritance and tortious interference

with administration of an estate. The court further stated it would reconsider

Vickie’s special exception and order the Marshall Family Defendants to re-plead

their claims if she requested.

      A Rule 162 “‘claim for affirmative relief’ must be a pleading that states facts

showing a cause of action independent of the plaintiff’s claim.” Baca v. Hoover,

Bax, & Shearer, 823 S.W.2d 734, 737 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] 1992,

writ denied). And, as Stern correctly points out, “[w]hether a pleading is an

affirmative claim for relief is determined by the facts alleged and not by the name

given the plea or by the form of the prayer for relief.” Id. From this, Stern reasons

that—even if the Marshall defendants pleaded a recognized cause of action that

provides potential recovery independent from Vickie’s claims—if the facts the

Marshall Family defendants pleaded in support of a claim would not support

recovery under that cause of action, the claim cannot be “a pending claim for

affirmative relief” that survives nonsuit. Stern does not cite any cases, and we

have located none, applying Rule 162 in this manner. Rather, three of the cases


                                         30
Stern relies upon focus on whether the purported affirmative claim seeks relief

independent of the nonsuiting party’s claim, and the other case turns on the timing,

rather than the substance, of the party’s counterclaim. Quanto Int’l Co. v. Lloyd,

897 S.W.2d 482, 486 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 1995, orig. proceeding)

(holding that defendant’s motion to compel arbitration was affirmative claim for

relief that survived plaintiff’s nonsuit); Baca, 823 S.W.2d at 738 (holding

defendant’s motion for restitution was an affirmative claim for relief surviving

opposing party’s nonsuit); Gen. Land Office, 789 S.W.2d at 570 (holding

defendant’s claim “seeking an advisory opinion on the constitutionality of the

statutes in question does not constitute affirmative relief under Rule 162”);

Greenberg v. Brookshire, 640 S.W.2d 870, 872 (Tex. 1982) (holding that granting

of a non-suit is merely a ministerial act and that defendant’s counterclaim filed

after plaintiff’s nonsuit was filed could not prevent dismissal of case).

      Our Court has recognized a cause of action for tortious interference with

inheritance rights. See King v. Acker, 725 S.W.2d 750, 754 (Tex. App.—Houston

[1st Dist.] 1987, no writ). But see Jackson Walker, LLP v. Kinsel, No. 07-13-

00130-CV, 2015 WL 2085220, at *3 (Tex. App.—Amarillo April 10, 2015, no pet.

h.) (mem. op.) (on reh’g). The elements are “(1) that an interference with one’s

property or property rights occurred; (2) such interference was intentional and

caused damage; and (3) the interference was conducted with neither just cause nor


                                          31
legal excuse.” In re Estate of Valdez, 406 S.W.3d 228, 233 (Tex. App.—San

Antonio 2013, pet. denied). Stern does not dispute that the Marshall defendants

pleaded this claim; rather, he argues that the probate court “could not have

reasonably believed” that her conduct cited by the Marshall defendants, i.e., filing

a will contest, constituted tortious interference. In support, he notes that the filing

of a will challenge is a lawful action that cannot constitute tortious interference.

See id.; see also TEX. EST. & G’SHIP CODE ANN. § 54.0014(a) (“The filing or

contesting in probate court of a pleading relating to a decedent’s estate does not

constitute tortious interference with inheritance of the estate.”). And he argues that

the probate court “further affirmed this view” by ultimately denying the Marshall

Family defendants’ motion for sanctions.

      We agree with the probate court that, at the time of Vickie’s nonsuit, the

Marshall Family defendants had tortious-interference claims pending that qualified

as affirmative claims for relief under Rule 162. The Marshall Family defendants

pleaded that Vickie has “intentionally interfered with the inheritance rights of the

Marshall Family Defendants by filing this lawsuit,” and that she “intentionally

invaded the personal and property rights of the Marshall Family Defendants . . .

without any just cause or excuse,” which amounted to “intentional interference

with administration of the estate of Howard, Sr.”        While Stern offers several

reasons that any tortious interference claim based upon the conduct cited in the


                                          32
Marshall Family defendant’s pleadings would ultimately fail, his arguments

conflate the concepts of affirmative independent claims for relief and claims for

relief that will ultimately lead to recovery. We believe that whether an affirmative

claim is pleaded for purposes of Rule 162 turns on the former, not the latter.

      Because the Marshall defendants had pending affirmative claims for relief in

the form of tortious interference claims against Vickie, the probate court did not err

in refusing to dismiss Vickie from the underlying suit when she nonsuited her

claims.

            THE MARSHALL DEFENDANTS’ DECLARATORY
                    JUDGMENT ACT CLAIMS
      On February 9, 2001, during trial but after Vickie’s nonsuit of her claims,

the Marshall defendants added claims for declaratory relief against Vickie to their

pending claims for sanctions and tortious interference.       A few days later, on

February 12, 2001, the Marshall defendants dropped their tortious interference

claims and moved forward on only their declaratory judgment action and request

for sanctions because the California Bankruptcy Court ruled that the tortious

interference claims violated a bankruptcy discharge order.

      The Marshall defendants specifically sought a “declaration that Vickie Lynn

Marshall has no right to estate property of J. Howard Marshall II” and that she

“had no agreement or contract for half of J. Howard Marshall II’s estate.”



                                         33
       Stern argues that the trial court “committed reversible error when it

permitted the Defendants to assert and pursue declaratory relief under the Uniform

Declaratory Judgments Act.”

      A. Justiciable Controversy

      The stated purpose of the Declaratory Judgments Act is “to settle and afford

relief from uncertainty and insecurity with respect to rights, status, and other legal

relations.” TEX. CIV. PRAC. & REM. CODE ANN. § 37.002(b) (West 2014). The

statute expressly provides that it is “remedial” and “is to be liberally construed.”

Id.

      “[A] declaratory judgment action may lie only where there is a ‘substantial

controversy involving genuine conflict of tangible interests.’” City of Dallas v.

USC, LLC, 347 S.W.3d 231, 240 (Tex. 2011); see also Bonham State Bank v.

Beadle, 907 S.W.2d 465, 467 (Tex. 1995) (“A declaratory judgment is appropriate

only if a justiciable controversy exists as to the rights and status of the parties and

the controversy will be resolved by the declaration sought.”). “To constitute a

justiciable controversy, there must exist a real and substantial controversy

involving genuine conflict of tangible interests and not merely a theoretical

dispute.”   Bonham State Bank, 907 S.W.2d at 467.              Whether a justiciable

controversy exists is a question of law that we review de novo. Tex. Dep’t of Pub.

Safety v. Moore, 985 S.W.2d 149, 153–54 (Tex. App.—Austin 1998, no pet.).


                                          34
      The Marshall defendants pleaded, in support of their Declaratory Judgment

Act claims,

      Vickie Lynn Marshall’s action in dismissing or non-suiting her claims
      without prejudice creates the prospect that she may attempt to refile
      her baseless and frivolous claims at a later date even though barred by
      res judicata forcing all these Counter-Defendants to waste additional
      time and resources defending them. Thus, the Court in justice and
      equity should permit the jury to consider the issue (Tex. Civ. Prac. &
      Rem. Code § 37.007) and issue a declaratory judgment with respect to
      whether [Vickie] has any rights to property of the estate of J. Howard
      Marshall II or any promise to receive half of J. Howard Marshall II’s
      estate to prevent frivolous and harassing litigation against them, and
      [Vickie] will not be surprised or prejudiced by submission of this
      issue as [Vickie] intended until recently to submit the same issue.
      Stern contends that the theoretical possibility that Vickie could refile her

claims against the Marshall defendants does not make for a justiciable controversy;

instead the Marshall defendants’ declaratory judgment claims seek no more than an

improper denial of liability on Vickie’s dismissed claims and an advisory opinion

that serves no useful purpose.

      Specifically, Stern points out that, after Vickie filed her nonsuit, she never

threatened to refile her claim. Indeed, she had already prevailed in California and

won a substantial personal judgment against Pierce for his tortious interference

with her inter vivos gift. In support, Stern cites numerous non–probate cases

holding that the possibility that a plaintiff may file a future suit is insufficient to

create a justiciable controversy. See, e.g., Howell v. Mauzy, 899 S.W.2d 690, 706

(Tex. App.—Austin 1995, writ denied) (claimed “legitimate fear that [the plaintiff]

                                          35
would bring future actions” is not sufficient to prove the existence of a dispute

necessitating declaratory relief particularly where there was no ongoing

relationship); Pace Concerts, Ltd. v. Resendez, 72 S.W.3d 700, 703 n.4 (Tex.

App.—San Antonio 2002, pet. denied) (“fact that [plaintiff] may assert future

claims arising out of the same set of circumstances is not alone sufficient to entitle

[defendant] to declaratory judgment absent a continuing relationship”); Sanchez v.

AmeriCredit Fin. Servs., Inc., 308 S.W.3d 521, 525 (Tex. App.—Dallas 2010, no

pet.) (“potential that another suit might be filed” reasserting nonsuited claims was

“irrelevant and should not be considered by the trial judge”); Stein v. First Nat’l

Bank, 950 S.W.2d 172, 175 (Tex. App. —Austin 1997, no pet.) (despite plaintiff’s

refusing to sign a release after he dismissed his suit, declaratory judgment was

improper because “the mere possibility that [plaintiff] might refile and that the

[defendant] would be in another lawsuit is not enough to ripen the controversy . .

.”); Graves v. Diehl, No. 01-00-00412-CV, 2006 WL 1699527, at *9 (Tex. App.—

Houston [1st Dist.] June 22, 2006, pet. denied) (mem. op.) (error to grant

declaratory relief, after nonsuit, because the “mere possibility” that the offending

conduct will resume “that may require the parties to again engage in litigation did

not ‘ripen’ this controversy”); Peacock v. Schroeder, 846 S.W.2d 905, 912 (Tex.

App.—San Antonio 1993, no writ) (possibility of having to refile suit did not ripen

matter into an actual controversy that was proper for declaratory relief).


                                          36
      Appellees argue that these cases are distinguishable, and that the

declarations they sought against Vickie in the probate court are specifically

contemplated by the Texas Declaratory Judgment Act. They direct us to section

37.004, which provides that any person interested under a will “may have

determined any question of construction or validity arising under the instrument . .

. and obtain a declaration of rights, status, or other legal relations thereunder.” TEX.

CIV. PRAC. & REM. CODE ANN. § 37.004(a) (West 2014). Additionally, they cite

section 37.005, which provides that anyone interested “in the administration of a

trust or of the estate of a decedent . . . may have a declaration of rights or legal

relations in respect to the trust or estate” to identify “devisees, legatees, heirs, next

of kin, or others,” or “to determine any question arising in the administration of the

trust or estate, including questions of construction of wills and other writings.”

TEX. CIV. PRAC. & REM. CODE ANN. § 37.005(1), (3) (West 2014).

      We agree with Stern that the Marshall family defendants’ stated reason for

requesting the trial court allow them “in justice and equity” to add declaratory-

judgment claims mid-trial—i.e., the allegation that Vickie’s “dismissing or non-

suiting her claims without prejudice creates the prospect that she may attempt to

refile her baseless and frivolous claims at a later date”—does not provide a basis

for finding a justiciable controversy. But we are not constrained by this statement

of the Marshall family’s reason in deciding the legal question of whether the trial


                                           37
court properly determined that the Marshall defendants’ request for a declaratory

relief presented a justiciable controversy.

          Stern has repeated emphasized that Vickie’s tort claims against Pierce

individually (founded on the allegation that he interfered with Marshall II’s

intended inter vivos gifts to her) are separate and apart from her claims against

Howard II’s estate, and that “after her non-suit, Vickie had no claim against the

estate, against estate assets, or challenging her husband’s will or living trust.” Be

that as it may, we disagree with the proposition—implicit in Stern’s argument—

that Vickie’s lack of claims pending in the estate case rendered declarations sought

by the Marshall defendants improper and irrelevant to the probate issues still

pending before the probate court in adjudicating respective rights to Marshall II’s

estate.

          The trial court had pending before it a multitude of issues related to Marshall

II’s estate even after Vickie’s nonsuited her claims. To properly determine if a

justiciable controversy was presented by the Marshall defendants’ request for

declaratory judgment, we must view this claim as it relates to these matters that

remained pending in the probate court, rather than—as Stern urges—as it relates to

Vickie’s nonsuited claims.

          Appellees cite this Court’s decision in In re O’Quinn, which held that a

foundation designated as a will beneficiary could intervene in probate proceedings


                                             38
over the objection of the alleged common-law wife of the decedent who argued

that the foundation lacked a sufficient justiciable interest. 355 S.W.3d 857, 861

(Tex. App.—Houston 2011, orig. proceeding). The foundation sought declarations

that (1) the decedent was not married at the time of his death; (2) all of the

decedent’s personal effects were devised under the will to the Foundation; and (3)

the foundation is the sole residual beneficiary of the decedent’s law firm

testamentary trust.   Id. We noted that the foundation had a vested interest in the

property owned by the decedent, and that the purported wife made several claims

that—if successful—would significantly reduce the amount of assets that are part

of the probate estate. Id. Accordingly, we concluded that the dispute between the

foundation and purported wife was not “merely theoretical, hypothetical or

contingent.” Id. at 865. We further held that the foundation, as the devisee under

the will, may permissibly seek declaratory relief pursuant to Civil Practice and

Remedies Code section 37.005(3) to determine “any question arising in the

administration” of the estate, including questions of whether the decedent was

married and whether the decedent made gifts and financial promises to his

purported wife. Id. at 866.

      Stern insists that appellees’ “reliance on O’Quinn is misplaced,” because the

purported wife in that case actively pursued estate assets, meaning she was

attempting to keep the foundation from getting what the estate planned to give to it.


                                         39
This case is distinguishable, Stern argues, because Vickie nonsuited claims against

estate and was instead pursuing only tort claims in a different forum, recovery

from which would not impact the size of the probate estate.

      After Vickie’s nonsuit, Pierce’s request that Marshall II’s will and codicil be

entered into probate and that testamentary letters be issued was still pending. Also

pending was Marshall III’s challenge to the validity of the will and codicil and

numerous tort claims against various parties related to Marshall II’s intentions

during his life, as well as the circumstances surrounding the execution of numerous

probate and will documents. Marshall III sought to invalidate numerous inter vivos

and testamentary gifts, and to have Marshall II’s assets pass through intestacy to

the three heirs, rather than through Marshall II’s will and codicil.

      Vickie is Marshall II’s widow and was one of his three surviving heirs. The

Marshall defendants’ requested declaration that “Vickie Lynn Marshall has no

right to estate property of J. Howard Marshall II” and that she “had no agreement

or contract for half of J. Howard Marshall II’s estate” falls within the plain

meaning of the Act’s provisions allowing declaratory judgment claims to

determine each interested party’s rights and how to properly and comprehensively

administer Marshall II’s estate. Stern’s protestations that Vickie had opted to only

pursue tort claims to recover in a different forum does not vitiate the probate




                                          40
court’s broad ability to adjudicate claims and resolve questions related to the

administration of an estate.

          We hold that the trial court did not err in concluding that appellees’

demonstrated a justiciable controversy to support their request for declaratory

relief.

          B. Declaration of Non-Liability and Prior Pending Action

          Stern next argues that “[g]ranting declaratory relief was erroneous in this

case because it was impermissibly used to defeat Pierce’s potential and actual tort

liability in California.” In support, he cites several cases for the proposition that it

is error for trial courts to exercise jurisdiction over a declaratory judgment action

seeking to determine tort liability. See Abor v. Black, 695 S.W.2d 564, 566–67

(Tex. 1985) (trial court should decline to exercise jurisdiction over a declaratory

judgment suit that seeks to determine potential tort liability because exercising

jurisdiction will deprive the “real plaintiff of the traditional right to choose the time

and place of suit”); Averitt v. PriceWaterhouseCoopers, L.L.P., 89 S.W.3d 330,

333-34 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth 2002, no pet.) (reversing declaratory judgment

and dismissing claim because “PWC’s use of the Act to determine potential tort

liability was improper”); Hous. Auth. v. Valdez, 841 S.W.2d 860, 865 (Tex. App.

—Corpus Christi 1992, writ denied) (error to bring declaratory judgment

counterclaim to adjudicate tort liability); Stein, 950 S.W.2d at 174 (“In general, a


                                           41
potential defendant may not use a declaratory judgment to determine potential tort

liability”). This is particularly true when, as here, the defendant files a declaratory

judgment counterclaim after the plaintiff takes a nonsuit. Tex. Elec. Utils. Co. v.

Rocha, 762 S.W.2d 275 (Tex. App.—El Paso 1989, writ denied) (improper to

bring declaratory action after nonsuit to attempt to litigate potential liability);

K.M.S. Research Labs. v. Willingham, 695 S.W.2d 564, 566 (Tex. App.—Dallas

1982, no writ) (“litigation of liability by a potential defendant in a tort action is an

improper use of declaratory judgment legislation”).

         Relatedly, Stern argues that the declaratory judgment counterclaims were

also erroneous because the Act is not available to settle disputes, i.e., Vickie’s

tortious interference claims, already pending before a different forum in a different

court.

         Appellees respond that their “declaratory judgment counterclaims did not

ask the court to determine their potential tort liability.” Rather, they argue, they

“asked for declarations concerning [Marshall II]’s estate plan and the parties’

rights to his assets [pursuant to] TEX. CIV. PRAC. & REM. CODE ANN. §§37.004–

37.005.”

         We agree with appellees.     Stern does not complain that the Marshall

defendants actually requested a declaration of non-liability for a tort from the

Texas probate court.      Instead, he complains that Pierce was able to use a


                                          42
declaration in the Texas probate court to defeat a tort award in California. But our

concern here is whether the probate court properly found the Marshall defendants’

requested declarations to be within the gamut of the Texas Declaratory Judgment

Act, not whether those declarations–once obtained—could be used elsewhere for a

different purpose.

      C. Timeliness

      Finally, Stern argues that the Marshall defendants’ “declaratory judgment

action, filed five weeks after Vickie nonsuited her claims and almost five months

into the trial, were not timely filed since Vickie had an absolute right to her

nonsuit.”   He argues that Vickie timely objected to the new counterclaims, and

proved that the new pleadings substantively changed the nature of the case and

trial, were prejudicial and a surprise.”

      A court must allow pleadings to be amended during trial “when the

presentation of the merits will be subserved thereby and the objecting party fails to

satisfy the court that the amendment would prejudice that party in maintaining the

action or defense on the merits.” State Bar of Tex. v. Kilpatrick, 874 S.W.2d 656,

658 (Tex. 1994) (citing TEX. R. CIV. P. 66). “A court may not refuse a trial

amendment unless (1) the opposing party presents evidence of surprise or

prejudice, or (2) the amendment asserts a new cause of action or defense, and thus




                                           43
is prejudicial on its face.” Id. (citing Greenhalgh v. Serv. Lloyds Ins. Co., 787

S.W.2d 938, 939 (Tex.1990)).

       The burden of showing surprise or prejudice rests on the party resisting the

amendment. Id. If the trial amendment is not mandatory, then the decision to

permit or deny the amendment rests within the sound discretion of the trial court.

TEX. R. CIV. P. 66; Greenhalgh, 787 S.W.2d at 939. In such a case, the court’s

decision to allow or deny a trial amendment may be reversed only if it is a clear

abuse of discretion. Hardin v. Hardin, 597 S.W.2d 347, 349–50 (Tex. 1980).

      Because Stern is proceeding without a reporter’s record, he cannot meet his

burden of showing “surprise or prejudice” and we presume the record supports the

trial court’s exercise of its discretion. See Christiansen v. Prezelski, 782 S.W.2d

842, 843 (Tex. 1990) (per curiam). We also conclude that the amendments were

not prejudicial on their face.   The Marshall defendants’ declaratory judgment

counterclaims concerned the very topics already at issue before the court and were

issues that Vickie put at issue in the Texas probate court and the federal courts. In

this situation, Stern cannot demonstrate that allowing the Marshall defendants to

add their counterclaims was an abuse of discretion. See Kilpatrick, 874 S.W.2d at

658 (holding that trial amendment adding new cause of action was not prejudicial

on its face because it involved the same subject matter and trial court could have




                                         44
reasonably believed that the trial amendment did not impair defendant’s ability to

present defense).

                                    THE JUDGMENT

      The remainder of Stern’s complaints concern the trial court’s judgment.

Specifically, Stern complains that the judgment contains recitations adjudicating

rights that are not supported by the pleadings, the verdict, or the law.

      “The judgment of the court shall conform to the pleadings, the nature of the

case proved and the verdict, if any, and shall be so framed as to give the party all

the relief to which he may be entitled either in law or equity.” TEX. R. CIV. P. 301.

      A.     Conforming to the Pleadings

      Stern argues that aspects of the judgment do not conform to the pleadings.

By electing to proceed with this appeal without a reporter’s record, however, Stern

has waived any complaint about the judgment not conforming to the pleadings.

See Gutierrez v. Gutierrez, 86 S.W.3d 721, 729 (Tex. App.—El Paso 2002, no

pet.) (recognizing that appellate court cannot determine if unpleaded issue has been

tried by consent without reporter’s record).

      B.     Abandonment v. Nonsuit

      The final judgment recites throughout that Vickie shall take nothing against

various defendants because of “her non-suit and abandonment of such claims” that

were, or could have been, brought against those defendants. Stern argues that this


                                          45
is erroneous, as her nonsuiting certain claims under Rule 162 of the Texas Rules of

Civil Procedure, see TEX. R. CIV. P. 162 (“At any time before the plaintiff has

introduced all of his evidence other than rebuttal evidence, the plaintiff may

dismiss a case or take a non-suit.”), is not an abandonment of those claims under

Rule 165, see TEX. R. CIV. P. 165 (“A party who abandons any part of his claim or

defense, as contained in the pleadings, may have that fact entered of record.”).

Stern concedes that, “in some circumstances the nomenclature might be

immaterial,” but argues that that such is not the case here, given her pending

claims in California at the time of the nonsuit and the California court’s reliance on

the probate court’s judgment to dismiss her claims in California.

      Appellees argue that the judgment does not specifically identify the claims

that it deems abandoned, such that the abandonment findings “do not have the

effect Stern fears of preventing Vickie from recovering on her claim against Pierce

in California.” They point to this Court’s observation that the difference between a

nonsuit and abandonment is “largely academic, because it is a rare situation in

which a defendant is harmed by such action.” C/S Solutions, Inc. v. Energy Maint.

Servs. Group LLC, 274 S.W.3d 299, 307 n.7 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.]

2008, no pet.). Finally, they contend that we should not disturb the judgment

because the “practical effect of either designation is the same – any claim Vickie

had concerning J. Howard’s estate was foreclosed and could not be brought later


                                         46
because the estate was closing and the probate court had exclusive jurisdiction over

those claims.”

      The parties appear in agreement that Vickie nonsuited certain claims, and

that the reference to abandonment in the judgment is not correct. The parties focus

on the impact of the abandonment language, and disagree about whether it caused

the California court to rule that her tortious interference claim against Pierce in

California was precluded by the Texas probate court’s judgment. It is not within

our purview to assess the effect of a Texas judgment on a California court

proceeding. Rather, we only determine whether there is error in the judgment we

are reviewing on appeal. Given Stern’s argument that this case presents the rare

situation in which this misnomer matters (the correctness of which we do not

opine), as well as the parties’ agreement that judgment’s reference to

“abandonment” of claims is erroneous, we reform the judgment to eliminate the

phrase “and abandonment” from paragraphs 3.26, 2.27, 2.28, 3.29, 3.31, 3.32, and

3.33 of the judgment, and to replace the word “abandoned” with “nonsuited” in

paragraph 3.24. See TEX. R. APP. P. 43.2(b); see also In re Estate of Tyner, 292

S.W.3d 179, 283 (Tex. App.—Tyler 2009, no pet.) (“We have the authority to

modify incorrect judgments when the necessary information is available for us to

do so.”); Monk v. Pomberg, 263 S.W.3d 199, 208 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.]

2007, no pet.) (“When an appellant raises an issue challenging a matter that may be


                                        47
resolved by the modification of the trial court’s judgment, a court of appeals may

modify the trial court’s judgment.”).

      C.     Compulsory Counterclaims

      Stern contends that the probate court erred in entering “judgment that Vickie

take nothing against Pierce individually as to any claims that should have been

brought against him as ‘compulsory counterclaims,’ including claims relating to J.

Howard’s intent to make a gift to Vickie from his property during his life.” Stern

argues that the judgment is worded such that it renders judgment against Vickie on

her tortious interference claims that were pending in California. Stern asserts that

these claims cannot be compulsory counterclaims in Texas probate court because

the claims were already pending in California. TEX. R. CIV. P. 97(a) (claims

pending elsewhere are not compulsory counterclaims). Finally, Stern complains

that the findings in the probate court’s judgment related to compulsory

counterclaims are unlawfully vague and run afoul of the purpose of a judgment: “to

define in clear, specific and unambiguous terms the duties or obligations imposed

upon a party.”

      Stern’s complaints are specifically lodged at the following recitations in the

judgment:3



3
      Stern also complains of the language of paragraph 3.2, but that section of the
      judgment does not relate to counterclaims.
                                        48
       3.1. This Court has exclusive and dominant jurisdiction over (1)
all claims regarding the property owned by J. Howard Marshall II; (2)
the Last Will and Testament of J. Howard Marshall II, dated the 22nd
day of December 1992; (3) the Codicil to Last Will and Testament of
J. Howard Marshall II, dated the 11th day of June 1993; ( 4) the
Amended and Restated Living Trust Indenture dated the 13th day of
July 1994; (5) all prior wills, codicils, and trusts executed by J.
Howard Marshall II; (6) all affirmative claims and all filed and
possible compulsory counterclaims raised by J. HOWARD
MARSHALL III and VICKIE LYNN MARSHALL; and (7) all
plaintiffs’ and defendants’ claims raised and that could have been
raised against the Estate of J. Howard Marshall II, concerning the
making of any inter vivos or testamentary gift or transfer by J.
Howard Marshall II of any of his property.
       3.34. The Court finds that any and all claims by VICKIE
LYNN MARSHALL against the Estate of J. HOWARD MARSHALL
II or against the property in the J. Howard Marshall, II, Living Trust,
including but not limited to claims that J. HOWARD MARSHALL II
intended but failed to give her or to leave her any portion of such
property during his life or upon his death, were required by law to
have been asserted as compulsory counterclaims in this proceeding
pursuant to TEX. R. CIV. P. 97. The Court further finds that the jury
answered the foregoing questions that J. HOWARD MARSHALL II
possessed mental capacity as required by law when he executed the
Amended and Restated Living Trust indenture dated the 13th day of
July 1994 and that the jury has failed to find that said execution was
procured through undue influence exercised by E. PIERCE
MARSHALL. The Court further finds that the jury answered the
foregoing questions that J. HOWARD MARSHALL II possessed
testamentary capacity as required by law when he executed the Last
Will and Testament of J. Howard Marshall, II, dated the 22nd day of
December 1992, and that the jury has failed to find that said execution
was procured through undue influence exercised by E. PIERCE
MARSHALL. The Court further finds that all defendants are also
entitled to a take-no thing judgment based on any claim that VICKIE
LYNN MARSHALL, A/K/A ANNA NICOLE SMITH, should have
made in this proceeding as a compulsory counterclaim.



                                  49
             3.35. IT IS, THEREFORE, ORDERED, ADJUDGED, AND
      DECREED by the Court as a matter of law that VICKIE LYNN
      MARSHALL, A/K/A ANNA NICOLE SMITH, does not possess any
      interest in and is not entitled to possession of any property within the
      Estate of J. HOWARD MARSHALL II or any property of the J.
      Howard Marshall, II, Living Trust because of any representations,
      promises, or agreements made by J. HOWARD MARSHALL II to or
      with VICKIE LYNN MARSHALL, A/K/A ANNA NICOLE SMITH;

            3.36. IT IS FURTHER ORDERED, ADJUDGED, AND
      DECREED by the Court as a matter of law that any and all claims that
      have been or should have been asserted by VICKIE LYNN
      MARSHALL A/K/A ANNA NICOLE SMITH, based upon alleged
      representations, promises, or agreements made by J. HOWARD
      MARSHALL II to or with VICKIE LYNN MARSHALL, A/K/A
      ANNA NICOLE SMITH, have been disposed of in this proceeding;

            3.37. IT IS FURTHER ORDERED, ADJUDGED, AND
      DECREED by the Court that J. HOWARD MARSHALL II did not
      intend to give and did not give to VICKIE LYNN MARSHALL,
      A/K/A ANNA NICOLE SMITH, a gift or bequest from the Estate of
      J. HOWARD MARSHALL II or from the J. Howard Marshall, II,
      Living Trust either prior to or upon his death; and

            3.38. IT IS FURTHER ORDERED, ADJUDGED, AND
      DECREED by the Court that VICKIE LYNN MARSHALL, A/K/A
      ANNA NICOLE SMITH, shall take nothing from any claim that she
      should have made in this proceeding as a compulsory counterclaim
      against any of the following persons and/or legal entities: 1. E. Pierce
      Marshall;

      Appellees respond that Stern’s reading of the judgment is wrong and that

none of these provisions can be interpreted to mean that Vickie’s tortious

interference claims against Pierce were compulsory counterclaims in the Texas

probate court. According to appellees, Vickie’s tortious interference claims in

California were foreclosed by “the numerous declarations in the probate judgment


                                        50
that validated J. Howard’s estate plan, not because tortious interference was

compulsory in the probate court.”         Appellees also note that the judgment

recitations dealing with claims against Marshall II’s estate or Living Trust cannot

operate to foreclose against a tort claim against Pierce individually.        As for

recitations dealing with claims against Pierce individually, appellees argue that—

because this is a probate proceeding—the compulsory counterclaims referred to

should be interpreted as limited to “claims related to the estate.”           Finally,

Appellees dispute that the judgment is vague and argue that the probate court was

not required to identify specifically what claims should have been brought in the

probate proceeding.

      We agree with appellees that the trial court’s rendering judgment on any of

Vickie’s claim against Marshall II’s estate or Living Trust cannot purport to

adjudicate or foreclose Vickie’s tortious interference claims against Pierce.      As

the Supreme Court recognized in holding that the probate exception to federal

jurisdiction did not preclude the federal courts from exercising jurisdiction over her

claims, Vickie’s tortious interference claims do not seek judgment to recover

property in the probate court’s “custody,” Marshall v. Marshall, 547 U.S. 293,

296–97, 126 S. Ct. 1739–10 (2006); rather, these claims seek damages from Pierce

individually. Thus, it necessarily follows that the probate court’s recitation in the

judgment that any claims against the estate or Living Trust were compulsory


                                         51
counterclaims in the underlying proceeding cannot render Vickie’s tortious

interference claims against Pierce individually compulsory counterclaims. We

reject Stern’s contrary interpretation.

      The judgment’s recitation that “[t]his [Probate] Court has exclusive and

dominant jurisdiction over . . . all claims regarding the property owned by J.

Howard Marshall II, . . . [and] all affirmative claims and all filed and possible

compulsory counterclaims raised by . . .        VICKIE LYNN MARSHALL” is,

however, an overly broad statement of the trial court’s jurisdiction, reserving to the

Texas probate court exclusive jurisdiction over torts and probate claims alike

without regard for whether those claims were subject to a prior proceeding

elsewhere. This is erroneous. See Marshall, 547 U.S. at 313–14, 126 S. Ct. 1740

(“Texas may not reserve to its probate courts the exclusive right to adjudicate a

transitory tort.”). Accordingly, paragraph 3.1 of the judgment is modified to read,

             3.1. This Court has exclusive and dominant jurisdiction over (1)
      all claims to regarding the property owned by J. Howard Marshall II;
      (2) the Last Will and Testament of J. Howard Marshall II, dated the
      22nd day of December 1992; (3) the Codicil to Last Will and
      Testament of J. Howard Marshall II, dated the 11th day of June 1993;
      ( 4) the Amended and Restated Living Trust Indenture dated the 13th
      day of July 1994; (5) all prior wills, codicils, and trusts executed by J.
      Howard Marshall II; and (6) all affirmative claims and all filed and
      possible compulsory counterclaims raised by J. HOWARD
      MARSHALL III and VICKIE LYNN MARSHALL; and (7) all
      plaintiffs’ and defendants’ claims and compulsory counterclaims
      raised and that could have been raised against the Estate of J. Howard
      Marshall II, concerning the making of any inter vivos or testamentary
      gift or transfer by J. Howard Marshall II of any of his property.
                                          52
      D. The Verdict and Judgment

      Stern contends that several of the probate court “findings” were erroneous,

as they are not supported by the only jury finding relating to Vickie at trial—the

finding that Vickie “did not have an agreement with J. Howard Marshall II that he

would give her one-half of all his property.” Specifically, Stern complains that this

single finding does not “support the probate court’s “broad findings, such as that

Vickie ‘take nothing’ against Pierce individually,” and that “her husband ‘did not

intend to give’ her a gift ‘prior to’ his death.”   Stern thus asks us to reverse the

numerous factual findings in the jury he argues were not supported by the jury’s

verdict. See Saden v. Smith, 415 S.W.2d 450, 470 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.]

2013, pet. denied) (holding it was error to include “fraud, defalcation, and

embezzlement” findings in the judgment because these claims were not included in

the pleadings, and not all the elements were submitted to the jury); Freedman v.

Briarcroft Prop. Owners, Inc., 776 S.W.2d 212, 218 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th

Dist.] 1989, writ denied) (concluding that finding in order was “beyond the scope

of the jury’s verdict” reforming order to delete language, and affirming as

modified).

      Appellees disagree that the verdict does not support the judgment, and argue

that all the findings must be viewed together to determine what the jury found with

regard to Marshall II’s property and estate plan.
                                          53
      We have reviewed all the paragraphs cited by Stern, and reject the

arguments aimed at the recitations addressing (1) compulsory counterclaims

(which we have held do not include the tortious interference claims against Pierce),

(2) allegedly abandoned claims (which we have reformed to indicate they were

nonsuited), and (3) Vickie’s claim to assets in the estate or Living Trust (which are

separate from claims against Pierce’s individual assets).      The only remaining

finding that can be read to sweep too broadly is the declaration that any and any

and all claims that “have or should have been asserted” by Vickie “based upon

alleged representations, promises, or agreements made by J. Howard Marshall II to

or with” Vickie have been “disposed of in this proceeding.” We accordingly

reform the following recitation to include the limiting language found elsewhere in

the judgment,

            3.36. IT IS FURTHER ORDERED, ADJUDGED, AND
      DECREED by the Court as a matter of law that any and all claims
      against the Estate of J. HOWARD MARSHALL II or against the
      property in the J. Howard Marshall II, Living Trust that have been or
      should have been asserted by VICKIE LYNN MARSHALL A/K/A
      ANNA NICOLE: SMITH, based upon alleged representations,
      promises, or agreements made by J. HOWARD MARSHALL II to or
      with VICKIE LYNN MARSHALL, A/K/A ANNA NICOLE SMITH,
      have been disposed of in this proceeding.




                                         54
      We otherwise reject Stern’s contention that “the judgment is too vague and

indefinite to be enforceable” and, as such, the “Final Judgment cannot stand.”4

                               ATTORNEYS’ FEES
      Finally, Stern argues that the attorneys’ fees awarded against Vickie were

erroneous and should be reversed. Only three questions presented to the jury

involved attorneys’ fees. The first asked the jury to find “necessary expenses and

disbursements, including reasonable attorneys’ fees, expenses and costs including

fees paid to expert witnesses, incurred by Pierce Marshall in defending J. Howard

Marshall, II’s December 22, 1992 Will for the purpose of having the Will admitted

to probate?”    The jury found trial legal fees of $833,000.00 and conditional

appellate fees of $400,000.00 for an appeal to the Court of Appeals, and

$89,000.00 for an appeal to the Texas Supreme Court.

      The second question asked the jury to find “necessary expenses and

disbursements, including reasonable attorneys’ fees, expenses and costs including


4
      The parties devote significant portions of their respective briefs arguing about the
      effect of the probate court’s judgment in the California litigation, with Stern
      contending that the judgment was used to improperly foreclose Vickie’s California
      claims, while appellees urge that we should not disturb the probate judgment
      because “it needs to be remembered that what Stern actually seeks is not truly any
      relief in the Texas probate court, but merely the opportunity to take yet another
      shot at relief in the federal courts in California.” Given these arguments, we
      reiterate that although we have made some reformations of the judgment, our
      review has been limited to assessing the correctness of the judgment. We do not
      ascribe any legal significance to those particular modified finding, nor should our
      modification be read to endorse or repudiate anyone’s view of the scope of the
      original judgment or judgment as reformed here.
                                           55
fees paid to expert witnesses, incurred by trustees Finley Hilliard and Ken Farrar in

defending J. Howard Marshall, II’s December 22, 1992 Will for the purpose of

having the Will admitted to probate?”          The jury found trial legal fees of

$147,500.00 and conditional appellate fees of $200,000.00 for an appeal to the

Court of Appeals, and $44,500.00 for an appeal to the Texas Supreme Court.

      The third question asked the jury to find the “necessary expenses and

disbursements, including reasonable attorneys’ fees, expenses and costs, incurred

by the Temporary Administrator, Robert S. Macintyre, Jr.?” The jury answered

$1,200,000.00.

      The probate court’s judgment contains an award to Pierce consistent with the

jury’s verdict on the cost of defending Marshall II’s will:

             IT IS FURTHER ORDERED, ADJUDGED, AND DECREED
      by the Court that E. PIERCE MARSHALL have and recover from the
      ESTATE OF J. HOWARD MARSHALL II attorneys’ fees in the sum
      of EIGHT HUNDRED THIRTY-THREE THOUSAND AND N0/100
      DOLLARS ($833,000.00) for services rendered through the trial of
      this cause. In the event of an appeal by J. HOWARD MARSHALL III
      to the court of appeals, if such appeal is unsuccessful, E. PIERCE
      MARSHALL will be further entitled to recover FOUR HUNDRED
      THOUSAND AND N0/100 DOLLARS ($400,000.00) from the
      ESTATE OF J. HOWARD MARSHALL II as additional reasonable
      attorneys’ fee. In the event of an appeal by J. HOWARD
      MARSHALL III to the Supreme Court of Texas, if such appeal is
      unsuccessful, E. PIERCE MARSHALL will be further entitled to
      recover EIGHTY-NINE THOUSAND AND N0/100 DOLLARS
      ($89,000.00) from the ESTATE OF J. HOWARD MARSHALL II as
      additional reasonable attorneys’ fees;



                                          56
      The judgment also contains an award of attorney’s fees to Pierce from

Vickie on Pierce’s declaratory judgment action:

      The Court finds that, pursuant to the Uniform Declaratory Judgment
      Act, TEX. CIV. PRAC. & REM. CODE ANN. §§ 37.009 (Vernon 1987), E.
      PIERCE MARSHALL is entitled to an award of his reasonable and
      necessary attorneys’ fees as is equitable and just against VICKIE
      LYNN MARSHALL A/K/A ANNA NICOLE SMITH. The attorneys’
      fees awarded herein against VICKIE LYNN MARSHALL A/K/A
      ANNA NICOLE SMITH are solely and exclusively based upon
      evidence relating to the attorneys’ fees incurred during the trial which
      occurred in this cause between September 18, 2000 and February 18,
      2001.
      IT IS, THEREFORE, ORDERED, ADJUDGED, AND DECREED by
      the Court that E. PIERCE MARSHALL have and recover from
      VICKIE LYNN MARSHALL, A/K/A ANNA NICOLE SMITH,
      attorneys’ fees in the sum of FIVE HUNDRED FORTY-ONE AND
      N0/100 DOLLARS ($541,000.00) for services rendered through the
      trial of this cause. In the event of an appeal by VICKIE LYNN
      MARSHALL, A/K/A ANNA NICOLE SMITH, to the court of
      appeals, if such appeal is unsuccessful, E. PIERCE MARSHALL will
      be further entitled to recover ONE HUNDRED THOUSAND AND
      N0/100 DOLLARS ($100,000.00) from VICKIE LYNN
      MARSHALL, A/K/A ANNA NICOLE SMITH, as additional
      reasonable attorneys’ fees. In the event of an appeal by VICKIE
      LYNN MARSHALL, A/K/A ANNA NICOLE SMITH, to the
      Supreme Court of Texas, if such appeal is unsuccessful E. PIERCE
      MARSHALL will be further entitled to recover ONE HUNDRED
      THOUSAND AND N0/100 DOLLARS ($100,000.00) from VICKIE
      LYNN MARSHALL, A/K/A ANNA NICOLE SMITH, as additional
      reasonable attorneys’ fees;

      Stern first argues that this award was erroneous because “the declaratory

judgment action on which such fees and costs are based is improper.” Because we

have rejected Stern’s argument that appellees did not have a proper declaratory


                                        57
judgment action, we likewise reject the argument that the Declaratory Judgment

Act did not provide a basis for an attorneys’ fee award. See TEX. CIV. PRAC. &

REM. CODE § 37.009 (providing that “the court may award costs and reasonable

and necessary attorney’s fees as are equitable and just” in proceeding under

Declaratory Judgment Act).

       Stern next argues that the “determination of the amount of reasonable and

necessary attorneys’ fees under the Act presented issues of fact that were required

to submitted to the jury.” Stern asserts that “Pierce’s failure to request and submit

any such issues against Vickie waives his claim for attorneys’ fees against her.”

Appellees respond that the court was permitted to award attorneys’ fees against

Vickie as a matter of law because “they are conclusively established by the

evidence” and because “Vickie did not object to the fact that the jury was not being

charged on the reasonableness and necessity of the fees, thus waiving that

argument for the purposes of Stern’s appeal.” We agree with Stern that Pierce

waived recovery of attorneys’ fees from Vickie by failing to request submission of

that issue to the jury.

       The judgment identifies each claim that the trial court resolved as a matter of

law in response to a motion for summary judgment, directed verdict, or judgment

notwithstanding the verdict. While appellees insist that the trial court decided the

issue of Pierce’s entitlement and the amount of attorneys’ fees from Vickie as a


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matter of law, such a determination was never requested, and the trial court’s

judgment instead categorizes the attorney’s fees award against Vickie as being

based on the jury’s verdict.5

      “Whether attorney’s fees are reasonable and necessary are fact issues that

must be submitted to a jury.” Bocquet v. Herring, 972 S.W.2d 19, 21 (Tex. 1998).

Failure of the party seeking fees to request a jury submission “regarding the

reasonableness and necessity of” attorneys’ fees waives that recovery.             RDG

P’Ship v. Long, 350 S.W.3d 262, 277 (Tex. App.—San Antonio 2011, no pet.).

Thus, because it is appellees who sought attorney’s fees, Vickie did not waive—by

failing to object—her complaint about the trial court awarding attorneys’ fees

without a finding by the jury that the fees awarded were reasonable and necessary.

TEX. R. APP. P. 279. It was Pierce’s burden to seek a jury finding on the issue, and

he is the party that accordingly waived the issue. RDG P’Ship, 350 S.W.3d at 277;

see also Cruz v. Andrews Restoration, Inc., 364 S.W.3d 817, 821 (Tex. 2012)

(affirming court of appeals’ holding that prevailing party at trial was not entitled to

a new trial on attorneys’ fees because that party failed to object to trial court’s

5
      The judgment is separated in sections entitled: (1) Appearances, (2) Dispositions
      Prior to Trial (identifying specific settlements and interlocutory summary
      judgments), (3) Trial of the Case (identifying directed verdicts granted and
      nonsuits, as well as awards entered on the jury’s verdict), (4) Motion for Judgment
      Notwithstanding the Verdict (identifying those granted and denied), (5) Sanctions
      Motions, and (6) Reconsideration of Discovery Sanctions. The attorney’s fees
      awarded against Vickie are in the section identifying claims entered on the jury’s
      verdict.
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inadvertent omission of certain categories of attorneys’ fees from the jury charge).

We reverse the attorneys’ fees awarded to Pierce from Vickie and render judgment

that Pierce take nothing on that claim.

                                  CONCLUSION

      We reverse the attorneys’ fees awarded to Pierce from Vickie and render

judgment that Pierce take nothing on that claim. We reform the remainder of the

judgment and affirm the judgment as modified.

      All pending motions are dismissed as moot.




                                               Sherry Radack
                                               Chief Justice

Panel consists of Chief Justice Radack and Justices Brown and Lloyd.




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