Attorney’s Fees for travel time are recoverable under Chapter 38 of the Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code, according to the San Antonio Court of Appeals. In Wilkerson v. Atascosa Wildlife Supply, Atascosa sought recovery of attorney’s fees inclusive of $5,500 for travel time. Atascosa offered evidence that the travel time was reasonable
Attorney's fees
Supreme Court Limits Entitlement to Attorney’s Fees
The Texas Supreme Court recently narrowed the right to attorney’s fees based on uncontroverted evidence. The Court held that compentent, uncontroverted, unchallenged evidence of attorney’s fees does not entitle a party to an award of attorney’s fees as a matter of law. Distinguishing its opinion in Ragsdale v. Progressive Voters League, the Court held…
Finality in Probate proceedings and Attorney Ad Litem Fees
In probate proceedings it is not always clear when the court has rendered an appealable order. Probate proceedings can produce multiple final, appealable orders. The San Antonio Court of Appeals recently addressed one of those circumstances in In re Guardianship of Glasser.
In Glasser, the Probate Court appointed litigation counsel to help an Attorney Ad Litem in a guardianship proceeding. The court’s appointment order approved employment of litigation counsel and ordered that costs associated with the representation would be paid by the estate after being presented to the court and approved. The court subsequently signed two orders approving fees and a final order at the conclusion of the proceeding approving fees and discharging the attorney ad litem and the litigation counsel. The temporary guardian appealed the fee orders and the ad litem and litigation counsel sought dismissal, contending that the appeal was untimely because the court’s initial orders of appointment and approval of fees were final, appealable orders at the time they were signed.
The Court of Appeals disagreed, noting that the order of appointment simply set the stage for what followed and did not resolve a particular phase of the case. The parties and the court understood and intended that there would be interim fee awards and that all awards were subject to a final hearing. Accordingly, the interim orders were not final and appealable. Continue Reading Finality in Probate proceedings and Attorney Ad Litem Fees