
In The


Court of Appeals


Ninth District of Texas at Beaumont


____________________


NO. 09-03-074 CV

____________________


ANN D. EWTON, INDIVIDUALLY AND AS INDEPENDENT EXECUTRIX

OF THE ESTATE OF MERLE CLEMENT EWTON, D.D.S., DECEASED,

										Appellant

V.


DAWN GAYKEN, D.D.S., Appellee




On Appeal from the 284th District Court
Montgomery County, Texas

Trial Cause No. 01-02-00972-CV




OPINION
 The sole issue presented by the appellant, Ann Ewton, contends that the trial court
erred in failing to find that she met her preliminary burden for sustaining a bill of review. 
Ewton had the burden of proving the three elements of a bill of review:  (1) a meritorious
claim, (2) which she was prevented from making by a mistake or error of the court or a
court official in the discharge of official duties, (3) unmixed with any fault or negligence
of her own.  See Baker v. Goldsmith, 582 S.W.2d 404, 406-07 (Tex. 1979).  Neither she
nor her attorney received actual notice of intent to dismiss the underlying suit for want of
prosecution.  The clerk did not mail the notice of the signing of the order dismissing the
case for want of prosecution.  The issue is whether the dismissal occurred due to official
mistake unmixed with the negligence of Ewton or her attorney.  We hold there is sufficient
evidence to support each element of the bill of review, and reverse the judgment. 
	The underlying dispute arose out of the May 14, 1993 sale of Merle Ewton's dental
practice to Dawn Gayken for $221,000.  Under the agreement, Gayken signed a $163,000
promissory note and was to pay over to Ewton accounts receivables over the first $25,000
collected.  Gayken made only one payment on the note.  Claiming the business was not
worth $221,000, Gayken sued the Ewtons for deceptive trade practices in December 1993.
In January 1995, the Ewtons sued Gayken on the promissory note that Gayken signed in
connection with her purchase of the business, for recovery of accounts receivable, and for
defamation.  After Merle Ewton died in August 1995, Ann Ewton prosecuted the suit in
her own behalf and in her capacity as the independent executrix of Merle's estate.  	In September 1994, Gayken turned over to the FBI information regarding the
Ewtons' practice of "pre-billing" insurance companies for dental work that had not been
performed on patients.  A federal criminal prosecution ensued.  One of the lawyers who
handled Ann Ewton's criminal defense testified that the defense lawyers asked the civil
attorney to set aside the civil case until after they disposed of the criminal case.  In
November 1997, Ann pleaded guilty to defrauding insurance companies out of $3,250. 
She was sentenced and served one year on probation and a $100 fine. 
	In part, Ewton attributed her failure to pursue her civil claim to medical problems
she and family members suffered during the pertinent time period.  Merle discovered that
he had cancer in 1990.  In 1993, he endured cranial surgery for treatment of cancer after
which he was no longer able to work.  After her husband died, Ewton began caring for her
chronically ill daughter, who developed systemic lupus erythematosus.  Ann's mother had
a stroke and died in May 1997.  Ewton suffered from personal medical problems, too,
including clinical depression, asthma, carpal tunnel syndrome.  Since 1997, she has been
physically and mentally unable to pursue her claim against Gayken.  Her daughter inquired
about the status of the case in late December 2000, after coming across a box of records. 
	The parties had engaged in settlement negotiations that culminated in a draft
settlement agreement in December 1995.  The settlement did not materialize, and in
January 1998, Ewton's attorney obtained discovery from Gayken and sent Ewton the box
of records to review.  The attorney handling Ewton's civil litigation moved his office in
the spring of 1998.  He notified the post office of his change of address, effective March
30, 1998.  The lawyer's assistant explained that through an oversight she failed to notify
the Montgomery County courts of the change of address.  Gayken's attorney also moved.
On April 3, 1998, he filed a notice of change of address in the trial court. 
	On May 4, 1999, the trial court placed the case on the dismissal docket.  The notice
was mailed to both attorneys at their old addresses.  Both notices were returned to the clerk
undelivered.  The envelope on the notice that was mailed to Ewton's attorney is stamped
with a notation to return to sender, forwarding time expired.  The attorney's forwarding
address is clearly printed on a label on the envelope.  The trial court did not send the
notice to the attorney's new address.  The trial court dismissed the case for want of
prosecution on June 15, 1999.  Although the court had both attorneys' new addresses in
the file of the case, and both notices had been returned undelivered and placed in the file,
no notice of judgment was mailed to either attorney.  In January 2001, Ewton's attorney
learned that the case had been dismissed for want of prosecution.  Ewton filed her bill of
review on February 13, 2001. 
	Before a lawsuit may be dismissed for want of prosecution, the trial court must mail
notice of its intention to dismiss and the date and place of the dismissal hearing to each
attorney of record.  Tex. R. Civ. P. 165a(1).  Failure to send the Rule 165a notice to the
address shown in the file of the case being dismissed meets the second prong of the test for
a bill of review.  Osterloh v. Ohio Decorative Prod., Inc., 881 S.W.2d 580, 582 (Tex.
App.--Houston [1st Dist.] 1994, no writ).  Rule 165a(1) also requires the trial court to give
notice of the signing of the dismissal order in the manner required by Rule 306a.  Tex. R.
Civ. P. 165a(1); 306a(3).  Failure of the clerk to provide notice of signing of the judgment,
as required by Rule 306a(3), is grounds for granting relief if the other bill of review
elements have been met.  Petro-Chemical Transp., Inc. v. Carroll, 514 S.W.2d 240, 245
(Tex. 1974).  In Dickerson v. Sonat Exploration Co., 975 S.W.2d 339, 341-42 (Tex.
App.--Tyler 1998, pet. denied), the court held that the trial court erred in failing to mail
the notice of intent to dismiss to the more recent address included on the lawyer's
letterhead instead of to the address listed on the party's live pleading.  Although the
circumstances surrounding that dismissal are similar to Ewton's case, Dickerson is a
restricted appeal, not a bill of review.  Ewton is not entitled to equitable relief unless she
establishes that her negligence did not contribute to the dismissal.
	Gayken argues that by sending notices to both attorneys of record to the addresses
they provided, the district clerk did all that the law requires.  Actually, the notice of the
dismissal hearing was not sent to either attorney at the most recent address provided by the
attorney.  Gayken's counsel filed a formal change of address in Gayken v. Ewton several
months before the notice was mailed to his former address.  Ewton's attorney failed to file
a formal notice of his change of address to the clerk of the court, but his forwarding
address was printed on the envelope when the notice of intent to dismiss was returned to
the clerk undelivered.  The dismissal hearing was more than a month away when the clerk
was provided with notice of the change of address through a mechanism put into motion
by counsel.  Although the clerk obtained the attorney's new address, neither the notice of
intent to dismiss nor the notice of the dismissal for want of prosecution was mailed to that
address.  Since the Rule 306a notice was not mailed even to the expired address, the
negligence of Ewton's attorney certainly did not contribute to the court's error.  As in
Osterloh, where the lawyer could have updated the Harris County registry of attorneys but
did not, that oversight did not negate the fact that the trial court obtained his true address. 
Osterloh, 881 S.W.2d at 582. 
	The trial court also found that Ewton failed to establish a meritorious claim.  In a
bill of review action, the petitioner's burden in the preliminary hearing is to establish that
her claim is not barred as a matter of law or that she is entitled to judgment on retrial if
no contrary evidence is offered.  Baker v. Goldsmith, 582 S.W.2d at 409.  Ewton
produced a promissory note executed by Gayken and payable to Merle Ewton.  It is
undisputed that the note is in default.  The trial court held that Ewton's federal conviction
precluded a showing of a meritorious claim on the promissory note.  Ewton pleaded guilty
to committing mail fraud in the dental practice for which the promissory is consideration.
Thus, one might reasonably anticipate Gayken will present a defense to the action on the
note.  It does not follow, however, that Ewton is barred from pursuing her action on the
note.  
	We hold that Ann Ewton established a prima facie claim in support of her bill of
review.  The appellant's issue is sustained.  The trial court's judgment is reversed.  We
remand the cause to the trial court for trial on the merits of the bill of review.
	REVERSED AND REMANDED.

									PER CURIAM

Submitted on February 16, 2004
Opinion Delivered March 4, 2004

Before McKeithen, C.J., Burgess and Gaultney, JJ.
