IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE
AT JACKSON
September 20, 2005 Session
TINA COX, ET AL. v. SHELL OIL COMPANY, ET AL.
A Direct Appeal from the Chancery Court for Obion County
No. 18, 844 The Honorable William Michael Maloan, Chancellor
No. W2004-01777-COA-R3-CV - Filed October 31, 2005
In a class-action case, in which a settlement had been agreed to, certain members of the class
were allowed to opt out of the class action based on the representations of their purported attorneys
that their clients had been notified of the settlement and the proposed opt out and that they approved
of same. Subsequently, litigation was commenced by the former members of the class in another
jurisdiction, and the original defendants were compelled to defend the case incurring expenses,
including attorney fees. The original defendants, and one of the attorneys for the class, filed motions
against the purported attorneys for the opted out class members for them to show cause why they
should not be held in contempt of court for making false representations to the court that resulted
in the court allowing the opt out. The respondent attorneys moved to dismiss the motions filed on
the basis that, if there was contempt, it was criminal only and on the basis of judicial estoppel. The
trial court ruled in favor of respondent attorneys holding that any contempt was criminal and not civil
and on the basis of judicial estoppel. The motions of the original defendants and a plaintiffs' attorney
were dismissed. The defendants and plaintiffs' attorney have appealed. We affirm.
Tenn. R. App. P. 3; Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Chancery Court Affirmed
W. FRANK CRAWFORD , P.J., W.S., delivered the opinion of the court, in which DAVID R. FARMER ,
J. and HOLLY M. KIRBY , J. joined.
Langdon S. Unger, Jr. of Martin, Tennessee; Paul M. O'Connor III, Seth A. Moskowitz, and Jon
Avins of New York, New York for Appellants, Hoechst Celanese Corporation
Albert C. Harvey of Memphis, Tennessee and Charles Anthony Maness of Union City, Tennessee
for Appellants, Shell Oil Company
Gordon Ball of Knoxville, Tennessee for Petitioner/Appellant, Gordon Ball
Leo Bearman, Jr. of Memphis, Tennessee; Robert G. McDowell and Lea Carol Owen of Nashville,
Tennessee; James M. Glasgow, Jr. of Union City, Tennessee for Appellees, Richard M. Leslie,
Richard M. Leslie, P.A., and Shutts and Bowen, LLP
OPINION
During the late 1970s and 1980s, Hoechst Celanese Corporation (“HCC”) and Shell Oil
Company (“Shell”) participated in the manufacture and marketing of a polybutylene plumbing
system that allegedly caused property damage to certain homeowners. This alleged damage gave rise
to numerous lawsuits including Cox v. Shell Oil Company (the “Cox Case”), a nationwide class
action suit filed in the Chancery Court for the Twenty-Seventh Judicial District on June 13, 1995.
Both HCC and Shell were Defendants in this suit. The Plaintiff class (the “Cox Class”) in the Cox
Case was defined as:
All persons and entities that presently own structures and/or
improvements to real property in the United States of America in
which there is a polybutylene plumbing system and all persons or
entities that own or previously owned such structures and/or
improvements to real property and incurred any cost or expense by
reason of leakage from a failure, repair, or removal of, all or any
portion of a “plastic water delivery system”, [excluding] defendants,
any parent, subsidiary, affiliate or controlled person of any defendant,
the officers, directors, agents, servants, or employees of any of the
same, and the members of the immediate families of any such person.
The Cox Class was represented by a number of attorneys (the “Cox Attorneys”) and law firms who
associated with each other and filed the Complaint in the Cox Case. One of the Cox Attorneys is
Gordon Ball (“Mr. Ball,” and together with HCC and Shell, “Appellants”).
The Cox Case eventually settled and, under the Cox Settlement Agreement, HCC and Shell
agreed–without admitting liability– to provide the qualifying Cox Class members relief.1 Consistent
with the requirements of Tenn. R. Civ. P. 23, the Cox Settlement Agreement provides that all class
members are entitled to exclude themselves from the settlement. On August 24, 1995, the Chancery
Court issued an order that, inter alia, directed all Cox Class members who intended to opt-out of the
Cox Settlement to file exclusion request forms no later than October 20, 1995.
Richard M. Leslie is a Florida trial lawyer who appeared pro hac vice in the Cox Case.
Richard M. Leslie, P.A. is the professional association through which Mr. Leslie practices law.
Shutts & Bowen, L.L.P. is the Florida firm of which Mr. Leslie’s P.A. is a member (together with
Richard M. Leslie and Richard M. Leslie, P.A., the “Respondents,” or “Appellees”). Mr. Leslie,
along with Florida co-counsel, represented polybutylene plumbing plaintiffs in two cases that were
filed at about the same time as the Cox Case. These cases were Fry v. Hoechst Celanese
Corporation, Case No. 95-225-CA-B, Fla. Cir. Ct., 5th Judicial Cir. For Marion County, Florida, and
Fry v. Hoechst Celanese Corporation, Case No. 95-6414-CA-11, Fla. Cir. Ct., 11th Judicial Cir. for
1
Among other things, Shell and HCC agreed to contribute at least $950 million to provide relief.
-2-
Dade County, Florida (together with Fry v. Hoechst Celanese Corporation, Case No. 95-225-CA-B,
the “Fry Cases”).
In the course of their representation, on October 20, 1995, the Appellees petitioned the
Chancery Court for, inter alia, an order permitting them to exclude, from the Cox Settlement: (1)
seven putative class representatives from a Florida state court litigation (the “Fry Seven”); (2) nearly
9,000 Florida mobile home owners, all of whom were listed in a sealed exhibit filed with the
Chancery Court; and (3) a class of all Florida mobile home owners. By Order dated May 10, 1996,
the Chancery Court rejected the Appellees’ attempt to opt-out not only a class of all Florida mobile
home owners, but also the 9,000 Florida mobile home owners listed in the sealed exhibit. In its
“Order on Motion to Clarify Opt-Out by Florida Class of Mobile Home Owners,” filed May 10,
1996, the lower court explained that “...electing to opt-out of a class is a personal right of each class
member. The Court finds that the request to exclude what was then an uncertified class of Florida
residents was, therefore, ineffective as an opt-out.” The trial court did, however, allow the
Appellees fifteen days to file a brief demonstrating that they had the authority and consent from each
of the nearly 9,000 Florida mobile home owners listed in the sealed exhibit (the “Florida Opt-Outs”)
to exclude them from the Cox Settlement.2 On or about May 14, 1996, Appellees filed “Florida
Plaintiffs’ Response to Court Re Representation,” which Response reads, in relevant part, as follows:
During the April 29, 1996 hearing, the Court requested that
counsel for Florida Plaintiffs submit a response regarding their
representation of the owners of approximately 9,000 Florida mobile
home units. In support, the Florida Plaintiffs state:
1. Undersigned counsel represents the Florida Plaintiffs in a
certified class action lawsuit.... Florida counsel for the Florida
Plaintiffs appeared specially in this action in October 1995, to
challenge this Court’s jurisdiction over the Florida Plaintiffs and to
file notice to opt the Florida mobile home owners out of this action.
* * *
3. Undersigned counsel is co-counsel in the Florida Lawsuit
with Christopher J. MacQuarrie. A true and correct copy of Mr.
MacQuarrie’s affidavit (“MacQuarrie Aff.”) is attached and
incorporated as Exhibit “A”....
* * *
5. The Florida mobile home owners with polybutylene
plumbing systems entered into contracts of representation retaining
2
The Chancery Court did permit the Appellees to exclude the Fry Seven from the settlement.
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Hicks & MacQuarrie to represent them in bringing a class action
lawsuit in Florida....
6. Pursuant to the terms of the contracts of representation,
these Florida mobile home owners have conferred upon their Florida
counsel, Mr. MacQuarrie, his law firm, and Shutts & Bowen, the
undersigned co-counsel, the authority to act on their behalf in
prosecuting a lawsuit against Defendants....
The Affidavit of Christopher J. MacQuarrie was attached as Exhibit A to this Response. The
Affidavit reads, in pertinent part, as follows:
9. The names of the home owners represented by me, my law
firm, and co-counsel Shutts & Bowen, were filed under seal in
Tennessee on October 20, 1995, to opt those clients out of the Cox
class, and counsel was fully authorized by these clients to file the opt
out notice on their behalf.
On September 17, 1996, Appellees, on behalf of the Fry Seven and the Florida Opt-Outs,
entered into a settlement agreement (the “Florida Opt-Out Settlement”) with counsel for the Cox
Class. The Florida Opt-Out Settlement provided, inter alia, that Appellees would dismiss their
objections to the Cox Settlement, including any appeals, if the Chancery Court would recognize the
validity of Appellees’ efforts to exclude the Florida Opt-Outs from the Cox Settlement. In
consideration thereof, counsel for the Cox Class paid Appellees $5 million, which, according to
counsel for Shell, would “...be spent for the benefit of the [Florida] class, as their lawyers define the
benefits....”
On October 14, 1996, the Chancery Court held a hearing to, inter alia, determine the validity
of Appellees’ efforts to exclude the Florida Opt-Outs from the Cox Settlement. At that hearing,
counsel for HCC made the following objection:
...I would like to note on behalf of Celanese that we continue to object
to Mr. Leslie’s efforts to opt out these nine thousand individuals.
What the Court has received, to my understanding, is a list of nine
thousand individuals as well as an affidavit from Mr. Leslie stating
that he and his co-counsel represent these nine thousand individuals.
I don’t believe that squares either with what the Court has previously
stated on the record or with controlling case law.... When we last
addressed this particular issue on the nine thousand...the Court
ordered Mr. Leslie to make a showing that these individuals had made
an individual decision not to participate in the benefits of the Cox
settlement. I don’t believe that showing has been made. I think, as
has been mentioned before, what we have in Florida right now is a
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lawsuit against Shell, Celanese, and others. However, all but one of
those claims have been dismissed. The one remaining claim is a
Deceptive Trade Practices Act claim, which I believe ultimately the
defendants will prevail on. So, I believe before the individuals make
a decision not to participate in the benefits of this settlement, they
need to make an individual decision if they want to forego those
[settlement benefits] and pursue litigation....
One of the Cox Attorneys responded to this objection as follows:
MR. BARRETT: Just briefly in rebuttal to what Mr. O’Connor said.
If we accept his position, we would have to say that Mr. Leslie is a
perjurer, that an officer of this Court who has been admitted pro hac
vice, and certainly an officer of the Florida court, has committed a
felony. We’re not prepared to do that. We don’t think it’s so.
Certainly, a person ought to have a right to act through their counsel,
if, in fact, the counsel represents them.
THE COURT: Anything further, gentlemen? Mr. Leslie, you may
want to speak to this, but, to be quite frank, I do have some concerns
to allowing the nine thousand out of the Cox class. I feel that your
attempt to opt them out is legally sufficient with the authority that you
have stated that you have to act for them, but I’m concerned about
these nine thousand. Have they been advised of what relief is
available to them under Cox? Because I see somewhere down the
road–let’s look at the worse case scenario from your point of view.
What if you’re not successful in Florida and these nine thousand
people say wait a minute, we’ve litigated in Florida for something we
could have gotten for free in the Cox case. Doesn’t that put you in a
very precarious position?
MR. LESLIE: If the Court please, I don’t believe so.... But
remember, Your Honor, this isn’t something that just happened. This
happened October 20, 1995. This is when these people were opted
out. We were before you on several occasions, and we also have an
affidavit from my co-counsel who has represented some of these
people for many, many years; and, consequently, there isn’t any
question in my mind but what all of these people not only know what
they’re doing, this is what they want to do. But if Your Honor has
any worry about it, then add on Mr. O’Connor’s alternative, that
additional notice goes to these people who own these units in
Florida.... I appreciate the Court’s concern; but, again, all I can do is
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represent to the Court what the clients have said to us, as their
counsel....
THE COURT: Mr. Leslie, I don’t want to give the impression that
I’m trying to interfere with your clients’ decision about whether to opt
out of Cox or not. That’s not the point. I just want to make sure that
they’re making an informed decision in doing so.
MR. LESLIE: And that’s why we would have no problem to sending
out an additional notice, if the Court wishes. I mean, that’s up to the
Court. To me, it’s a little belt-and-suspenders. I don’t think it needs
to be done. But if the Court wishes to have it done, that’s fine. To
me, doing that again delays the thing for months and months....
* * *
THE COURT: Gentlemen, unlike many of the things the Court has
had to rule on, I’ve had time to think about this one. Considering the
Orders the Court has entered in this case, especially in light of Mr.
Fleming’s clients and that the Court has expressed concerns on
numerous occasions about the nine thousand, as I will call them, and
I feel that Mr. Leslie has complied in that he has given the Court the
comfort that he has the actual authority to represent them and that
they have made an informed decision to opt out of the class, and class
counsel appears to be satisfied also with that, I will approve your
Order. I don’t think any additional notice is necessary. I hope that
the future proves me right that we don’t have objections from class
members who said that if I had known what I was giving up for what
I was getting–but we will cross that bridge if we ever get there. I
hope we don’t. I will approve your Order.
On October 24, 1996, the Chancery Court entered an Order permitting the Appellees to
exclude the Florida Opt-Outs from the Cox Settlement. Pursuant to the Florida Opt-Out Settlement,
supra, on November 21, 1996, Appellees withdrew their objections to the Cox Settlement, and
dismissed with prejudice an appeal they had filed challenging the Cox final order and judgment.
After excluding the Florida Opt-Outs from the Cox Settlement, Appellees attempted to
prosecute the claims of the Fry Seven and the Florida Opt-Outs, and a putative class of Florida
mobile home owners against HCC, Shell, and DuPont in Florida State Court in the Fry Cases, supra.
Appellees were ultimately successful in obtaining relief from DuPont, which entered into a
settlement agreement under which the Fry Plaintiffs, who were excluded from the Cox Settlement,
were entitled to recover. Although Appellees pursued the Fry Plaintiffs’ claims against HCC and
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Shell for approximately seven years, they were ultimately unsuccessful in obtaining relief from these
Defendants.3
On January 29, 2003, a number of the Cox Attorneys, including Gordon Ball, filed a “Motion
to Show Cause why Richard M. Leslie, Richard M. Leslie, P.A., Shutts & Bowen LLP, and Stephen
D. Scofield should not be held in Contempt of Court and Motion for an Accounting and
Disgorgement” (the “Ball Motion”) This Motion asserts, inter alia, that Mr. Leslie “had no direct
contact with the ...Florida Opt-Outs, did not inform them of their rights under the Cox Settlement,
and was not ‘fully authorized’ to opt them out of the Cox Settlement.” The Cox Attorneys prayed
for a finding of contempt based upon Mr. Leslie’s alleged misrepresentations to the trial court and
for an accounting and disgorgement of the $5 million paid in connection with the Florida Opt-Out
Settlement, see supra. On March 7, 2003, HCC filed “Hoechst Celanese Corporation’s Motion to
Show Cause Why Richard Leslie, Richard M. Leslie, P.A., Shutts & Bowen LLP and Stephen D.
Scofield Should not be held in Contempt of Court.” (The “HCC Motion”). Likewise, on April 3,
2003, Shell filed “Shell Oil Company’s Motion to Show Cause why Richard Leslie, Richard M.
Leslie, P.A. and Shutts & Bowen LLP should not be held in Contempt of Court” (the “Shell
Motion,” and together with the Ball Motion and the HCC Motion, the “Contempt Motions”). The
Shell Motion adopts the argument set out in the HCC Motion, which reads, in relevant part, as
follows:
32. While Celanese has not had the opportunity to depose or question
each of the Florida Opt-Outs, it has learned through, among other
things, discovery and hearings that Respondents: (i) did not advise
each of the Florida Opt-Outs of their rights under the Cox Settlement;
and (ii) did not obtain the authorization of each of the Florida Opt-
Outs prior to filing exclusion requests on their behalf.
* * *
35. The limited discovery which Celanese has been able to take
regarding the Florida Opt-Out Settlement demonstrates that despite
Respondents’ claim to use the $5 million for the benefit of these
9,000 individuals, those individuals who Celanese has been able to
question testified that they did not receive any of the $5 million.
Moreover, those individuals who Celanese has been able to question
testified that they were not even aware of the $5 million settlement....
3
According to the HCC Motion, see infra, the Appellees specifically failed in their efforts to certify the Florida
Litigation as a class action for litigation purposes. In Hoechst Celanese Corp. v. Fry, 753 So.2d 626, 628 (Fl. Dist.
App. Ct. 2000), a Florida appellate court, en banc, found that “individual issues not only predominate, but overwhelm,
any common issues.” The HCC Motion also claims that the Florida Litigation was dismissed as a matter of law, and that
the Appellees “abandoned” the Florida Opt-Outs by withdrawing as counsel during the pendency of that Florida
litigation.
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36. Contrary to Respondents’ representations to the Court...,
Celanese has also learned that many of the Florida Opt-Outs either do
not reside in, or do not own properties in, the State of Florida. Thus,
these individuals were excluded from the Florida Litigation, and
received no relief whatsoever even though they could have applied for
full relief under the Cox Settlement.
* * *
39. Under Section 29-9-102 of the Tennessee Code Annotated, the
Court is empowered to hold a person or entity in contempt of court
for, among other things, “willful misbehavior...in the presence of the
court” or “[a]buse of, or unlawful interference with, the process or
proceedings of the court”....
40. As demonstrated above, it is indisputable that Respondents
submitted a brief and affidavit with the Court in which they falsely
represented that they had fully advised the Florida Opt-Outs of their
rights under the Cox Settlement, and that the Florida Opt-Outs had
expressly authorized Respondents to file opt out requests on their
behalf. Second, Respondents later advocated these
misrepresentations orally to the Court.
41. Consequently, Celanese respectfully submits that the Court
should find Respondents in contempt of court and impose a
punishment sufficient to deter repetition of such conduct or
comparable conduct by Respondents in the future....
(Citations omitted).
The Appellees filed numerous motions seeking to dismiss the Contempt Motions. One such
Motion was filed on August 12, 2003 as “S & B Respondents’ Motion to Dismiss the Contempt
Remedies Sought by Movants Shell and Hoechst Celanese based on T.C.A. §29-9-103" and it reads,
in pertinent part, as follows:
...[A]s grounds for this Motion, [Respondents] state that all of the
remedies sought in the Shell and HCC Contempt Motions are outside
the scope of T.C.A. §29-9-103 and are therefore unavailable to either
Shell or HCC in this criminal contempt proceeding. Because it is
clear as a matter of law that none of the remedies sought by Shell and
HCC can be awarded by the Court, the Shell and HCC Contempt
Motions should be dismissed....
-8-
In their Memorandum in Support of this Motion, the Appellees specifically state that:
The acts alleged, if proven, would be violations of [the] Rules
of the Tennessee Supreme Court; thus, under Tennessee law, they
constitute criminal, not civil, contempt, and T.C.A. §29-9-105 does
not apply. In its recent decision in Doe v. Board of Professional
Responsibility, 104 S.W.3d 465 (Tenn. 2003), the Tennessee
Supreme Court settled the issue of whether the violation of a rule of
court constitutes civil or criminal contempt. There, a layperson filed
a complaint with the Board of Professional Responsibility against an
attorney and then desired to speak or write publicly about the
complaint. Publicizing such a complaint is prohibited by Rule 9,
Section 25 of the Rules of the Tennessee Supreme Court. The court
interpreted this rule as a “standing order” of the court, id. at 472, and
thus binding on the complainant. It further held that “a charge of
contempt arising from a violation of Rule 9, Section 25 is criminal in
nature,” even where “brought by the complainant or respondent
whose rights of confidentiality have been violated.” Id. at 474.
(Footnotes omitted).
The Chancery Court held hearings pertaining to the Contempt Motions on March 3, 2003,
May 30, 2003, July 2, 2003, September 8, 2003, October 15, 2003, and March 11, 2004. At the close
of the September 8, 2003 hearing, the trial court made the following, relevant, findings from the
bench:
The heart of this matter is whether or not the proceedings are
criminal or a civil contempt matter, basically whose rights are being
sought to be vindicated. If it is to vindicate the integrity and power
of this court, then it is a criminal matter. If it is for the benefit of the
private parties to compel performance with a court order in their favor
and the Court has the power to compel a person to comply with that
court order, then it would be civil in nature.
It’s, again, important to note in this case that the five million
dollars of which the petitioners seek was paid by contract between the
parties and was not a part of any order of this court.
This court, after a careful review of the evidence and the law
in this case, especially in light of the Doe vs. Board of Professional
Responsibility case, 104 S.W.3d 465, finds that this case is a criminal
contempt case, that the allegations against the respondents, if they are
true, then the remedy is criminal in nature and not civil.
-9-
Based upon the foregoing, the trial court granted the Appellees’ motion to dismiss the civil contempt
remedies sought by HCC and Shell (i.e., their reasonable attorney fees and expenses incurred in
defending the Fry Cases). On October 1, 2003, the Cox Attorneys filed a motion to reconsider and,
on October 8, 2003, HCC and Shell also filed their joint motion for reconsideration. In addition, on
October 23, 2003, the Cox Attorneys filed a “Verified Motion for Scire Facia Writ Directing
Richard M. Leslie, Richard M. Leslie, P.A., Shutts & Bowen LLP, and Shutts & Bowen to show
cause why they should not be held in Civil Contempt and Motion to Void Exclusion of Florida Opt-
Outs from Cox Settlement Class.” This Motion was filed on behalf of the Cox Class representatives
and Darlene S. Barnhill, an absent class member residing in Florida (the “Barnhill Contempt
Motion”). In response to the Barnhill Contempt Motion, Appellees filed various motions for
dismissal, including a March 1, 2004 Motion seeking dismissal on alleged judicial estoppel grounds
(the “Judicial Estoppel Motion”). The Memorandum of Law in support of the Judicial Estoppel
Motion explains the Appellees’ position regarding the applicability of this doctrine as follows:
The [Contempt Petitioners] have filed petitions in this case
seeking to hold [the Respondents] in contempt of court. At the heart
of the Contempt Petitioners’ argument is their position that the “Opt-
Out” obtained by Fry Counsel in this case was not valid because it
was based on alleged material misrepresentations made to the Court
in a brief filed May 15, 1996, and at a hearing held October 14, 1996.
At issue is the allegation that Richard M. Leslie, Esq., deliberately
misstated that he represented some 6,000 individuals named in the
exclusion request submitted by Fry counsel on October 20, 1995.
Contempt Petitioners claim this statement was false and...that they
learned of its falsity only shortly before filing their contempt petitions
in 2003.
As [Respondents] can now demonstrate, all of the Contempt
Petitioners were in possession of all the relevant facts...no later than
July 28, 1998–more than four years before the first of the Contempt
Petitions was filed. Since 1998, each and every one of the Contempt
Petitioners has faced at least one situation requiring said Petitioner
either to embrace the Cox Opt-Out as valid or to reject it as invalid.
With full knowledge of all relevant facts as to the validity of the Cox
Opt-Out, each and every one of the Contempt Petitioners has taken,
and continues to take, actions that can only be predicated on a belief
that the Cox Opt-Out is valid.
For example, Paul M. O’Connor, III, who is counsel for
HCC..., testified under oath at a hearing held May 15, 2001 (almost
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two years before the contempt petitions were filed),4 that the Cox
Opt-Out was valid, and that the Brass Trust–comprising
representatives of HCC, Shell, and Cox Class Counsel...–had
accepted the validity of the Cox Opt-Out for the purpose of paying
claimants.... The sworn testimony of [Mr. O’Connor]–which binds
HCC, Shell, the Cox Class and Cox Class Counsel–directly
contradicts the position taken by Contempt Petitioners here, that the
Cox Opt-Out is invalid. Such a shift in position is precluded as a
matter of law in Tennessee.
Under Tennessee law, where a person has sworn to one set of
facts in one proceeding, he will not be permitted to deny these facts
in a subsequent proceeding. This rule is known as the doctrine of
judicial estoppel, and it will be applied even though the parties in the
subsequent proceeding are different from those in the first, and even
though no prejudice results from the attempted disavowal of the facts
previously sworn to be true...
The trial court entered two Orders on June 15, 2004. The first of these Orders relates to the
Contempt Motions and responses filed in connection therewith. It reads, in relevant part, as follows:
Therefore, the Court hereby finds that this is a criminal contempt
proceeding and rules as follows:
* * *
2. [Respondents’] Motion to Dismiss Accounting and
Disgorgement Claims upon reconsideration is GRANTED, and,
accordingly, the [Cox Attorneys’] Claims for Accounting and
Disgorgement are hereby DISMISSED WITH PREJUDICE.
3. [Respondents’] Motion to Dismiss for Lack of Standing is
GRANTED, and, accordingly, the [Cox Attorneys’] Show Cause
Motion is hereby DISMISSED WITH PREJUDICE.
4. [Respondents’] Motion to Dismiss the Contempt Remedies
Sought by Movants Shell and Celanese Based on T.C.A. §29-9-103
is GRANTED, and, accordingly, the contempt remedies sought by
Shell and Celanese are hereby DISMISSED WITH PREJUDICE.
4
This testimony was given in a federal bankruptcy proceeding in Texas.
-11-
The second Order entered on June 15, 2004 denied the Cox Attorneys’ Motion to Reconsider and
took the HCC and Shell Joint Motion for Reconsideration under advisement. The trial court entered
several additional Orders on July 7, 2004. One of these Orders denies HCC & Shell’s Joint Motion
for Reconsideration and reads, in relevant part, as follows:
Pending before the Court is Hoechst Celanes Corporation’s and Shell
Oil Company’s Joint Motion for reconsideration, filed October 8,
2003. Based on the record before the Court; oral arguments held
October 15, 2003; and the Court’s ruling of June 15, 2004, this
Motion is hereby DENIED.
A second Order entered on July 7, 2004 grants the Appellees’ Motion to Dismiss based upon
judicial estoppel. This Order reads, in pertinent part, as follows:
(1) [Respondents’] Motion to Dismiss filed March 1, 2004 [the
Judicial Estoppel Motion]... is hereby GRANTED. All pending
proceedings against Shutts & Bowen LLP, Richard M. Leslie, P.A.,
and/or Richard M. Leslie, Esq. are hereby DISMISSED. All pending
motions filed by any of the Contempt Petitioners or by Darleen [sic]
Barnhill are hereby DENIED.
On July 15, 2004, Gordon Ball filed a Notice of Appeal. Mr. Ball designates himself–not
the Cox Class or the Cox Attorneys–as the Appellant. Mr. Ball’s Notice of Appeal indicates that he
is appealing from the June 15, 2004 Order but does not indicate which of the two June 15, 2004
Orders he appeals. On August 5, 2004, HCC and Shell filed a “Notice of Joint Appeal”. HCC and
Shell’s “Notice of Joint Appeal” reads, in relevant part, as follows:
Please take notice that Movants Shell Oil Company d/b/a Shell
Chemical Company (“Shell”) and Hoechst Celanese Corporation
(“Celanese”) hereby jointly appeal to the Court of Appeals, Western
Section, pursuant to Tennessee Rule of Appellate Procedure 16(a),
from an order entered on July 7, 2004...in which the Court denied
Shell’s and Celanese’s Joint Motion for Reconsideration of the
Court’s prior order dismissing the contempt remedies sought by Shell
and Celanese.
The Appellants and Appellees in this matter have raised numerous issues for review.
However, we perceive that there are three (3) dispositive issues in this case:
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1. Whether Gordon Ball has standing.
2. Whether the trial court erred in its determination that the actions
of Appellees, if contemptuous at all, constituted only criminal
contempt.
3. Whether the trial court erred in dismissing HCC and Shell’s
motion on the basis of judicial estoppel.
All of the issues before us involve questions of law. As such, our review is de novo upon
the record with no presumption of correctness accompanying the trial court’s conclusions of law.
See Tenn. R. App. P. 13(d); Waldron v. Delffs, 988 S.W.2d 182, 184 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1998); Sims
v. Stewart, 973 S.W.2d 597, 599-600 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1998).
Gordon Ball’s Standing
Standing is a judge-made doctrine based on the idea that "[a] court may and properly should
refuse to entertain an action at the instance of one whose rights have not been invaded or infringed."
59 Am.Jur.2d Parties § 30 (1987). In state law it parallels the constitutional restriction on federal
court jurisdiction to "cases and controversies." U.S. Const. art. III, § 2. It has been said that no case
or controversy is presented where the plaintiff lacks standing to sue. Gilligan v. Morgan, 413 U.S.
1, 93 S.Ct. 2440, 37 L.Ed.2d 407 (1973); see also O'Shea v. Littleton, 414 U.S. 488, 94 S.Ct. 669,
38 L.Ed.2d 674 (1974). "In determining whether the plaintiff has a personal stake sufficient to confer
standing, the focus should be on whether the complaining party has alleged an injury in fact,
economic or otherwise, which distinguishes that party, in relation to the alleged violations, from the
undifferentiated mass of the public." 32 Am.Jur.2d Federal Courts § 676 (1995).
The primary focus of a standing inquiry is on the party, not on the merits of the claims. Valley
Forge Christian College v. Americans United for Separation of Church & State, Inc., 454 U.S.
464, 484, 102 S.Ct. 752, 765, 70 L.Ed.2d 700 (1982); Flast v. Cohen, 392 U.S. 83, 99, 88 S.Ct.
1942, 1952, 20 L.Ed.2d 947 (1968). Thus, a party's standing does not depend on the likelihood of
success of its claim on the merits. MARTA v. Metro. Gov't, 842 S.W.2d 611, 615
(Tenn.Ct.App.1992). However, because a party's standing may hinge on the nature of its claims, a
standing inquiry requires a "careful judicial examination of the complaint's allegations to ascertain
whether the particular plaintiff is entitled to an adjudication of the particular claims asserted." Allen
v. Wright, 468 U.S. 737, 104 S.Ct. 3315, 3325, 82 L.Ed.2d 556 (1984)
In their Motion to Reconsider, the Cox Attorney’s state that their contempt petition is brought
on behalf of the Florida Opt-Outs, to wit:[v19 2666]
[Cox Attorneys] ask this Court to reconsider its decision for
one crucial reason: if the ruling stands and this matter is considered
only as criminal contempt, then the approximately 9,000 individuals
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wrongfully excluded from the Cox settlement (the “Opt-Outs”) will be
left out in the cold and forced to commence entirely new litigation in
order to get the benefits they should have received years ago. This
Court, by construing this proceeding as solely criminal contempt, has
inadvertently taken away the very tool it needs to correct a gross
injustice that took place in its courtroom, and as a result,
[Respondents] will have essentially committed the perfect crime. [Cox
Attorneys] do not believe this was the intention of this Court.
This contempt proceeding began when the [Cox Attorneys],
who are counsel for the settlement class...filed a motion to show cause
why the [Respondents] should not be held in contempt for allegedly
lying to this Court in 1996. Since that time, [Respondents] have
argued strenuously–and undoubtedly will in response to this
motion–that this entire proceeding, including the underlying purpose
behind the motions, was centered on the return of the $5 million. This
is simply incorrect. While [Cox Attorneys] certainly contend this
Court has the authority to order the return of the $5 million, the fate of
the 9,000 Opt-Outs, and what impact this proceeding has on their
rights, is a central issue for this Court.
In their initial “Motion to Show Cause Why [Respondents] Should Not be held in contempt of Court,
and Motion for an Accounting and Disgorgement” (i.e., the Ball Motion), which is brought by the
Cox Attorneys individually, these attorneys specifically ask the court to order Respondents to:
(2) account to this Court for funds obtained [i.e., the $5 million] as a
result of the perjurious affidavit and misrepresentations; and (3)
disgorge the fruits of their perjury, misrepresentations, and contempt...
The discrepancy between the Motion for Reconsideration and the Ball Motion is one noted
by the trial court in the hearing on the Motion for Reconsideration, to wit:
THE COURT: Well, Mr. Ball, I’ve gone back–after getting your
motion to reconsider, I’ve gone back and reviewed the pleadings in
this particular case, and I see nothing in the pleadings where that the
contempt is brought on behalf of the nine thousand opt outs in Florida.
In its June 15, 2004 Order, set out above, the trial court granted Appellees’ Motion to Dismiss
for Lack of Standing. We note that the Cox Attorneys, even if they purported to bring the Ball Motion
on behalf of the Florida Opt-Outs, would have no standing to do so because the Cox Attorneys are
neither members of the Florida Opt-Outs Class, nor their legal representatives.
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Concerning the plea for disgorgement of the $5 million dollars paid by the Cox Attorneys in
consideration for the Florida Opt-Out Settlement, we note that these funds were paid under a private
agreement between the Respondents and the Cox Attorneys. Any claim that such an agreement was
entered into under the guise of fraud, misrepresentation, or other untoward circumstances was not the
proper subject of a contempt action in the Tennessee court as it did not involve either a lack of respect
for the court as an institution or a violation of a court order
Furthermore, standing requires an injury in fact. Here, the $5 million was paid in
consideration of Appellees’ agreement to dismiss their objections to the Cox Settlement, including
any appeals. Subsequently, on November 21, 1996, Appellees did withdraw their objections to the
Cox Settlement, and dismissed with prejudice an appeal they had filed challenging the Cox final order
and judgment. It appears, therefore, that the Cox Attorneys received the benefit of their bargain and
that, consequently, there was no injury in fact. Therefore, the trial court’s ruling that Mr. Ball has no
standing is correct.
We will next address the judicial estoppel issue. As set out above, the trial court entered
several orders on July 7, 2004. One of those Orders denied Shell and HCC’s Joint Motion for
Reconsideration. A separate Order granted Appellees’ Motion to Dismiss on the grounds of judicial
estoppel. The “Notice of Joint Appeal,” filed by HCC and Shell specifically states that they are
appealing from the July 7, 2004 Order “in which the Court denied Shell’s and Celanese’s Joint
Motion for Reconsideration of the Court’s prior order dismissing the contempt remedies sought by
Shell and Celanese.” Shell and HCC do not appeal from the July 7, 2004 Order granting Appellee’s
Judicial Estoppel Motion. Tenn. R. App. P. 3(f) states that “[t]he notice of appeal...shall designate
the judgment from which relief is sought.” In cases such as the one at bar, where a specific judgment
was designated but the designation was erroneous or did not include issues raised by the appellant,
this Court has limited its review to the specified judgment. In Hall v. Hall, 772 S.W.2d 432
(Tenn.Ct.App.1989), the relevant notice of appeal (as well as an earlier one that was dismissed as
premature) designated a judgment of May 13, 1987, and the order denying a motion to alter or amend
or for new trial and stated the appellant was appealing "from the alimony, support and property
divisions" in the May 13 judgment. However, the appellant had included in the record a transcript of
a contempt hearing held October 7, 1987, and in his brief the appellant challenged a contempt finding
resulting from that hearing. This court determined that the October contempt order was not
contemplated in either notice of appeal. Because of the designation required by Tenn. R. App. P. 3(f),
"[i]nasmuch as the October, 1987, order related to a supplemental issue raised after entry of final
judgment (albeit before finalized by the belated ruling on the "Motion to Amend or New Trial"), the
clear and specific wording of the notices of appeal limits the issues on this appeal to the judgment
designated in the notices." 772 S.W.2d at 436.
Relying on Hall, this Court has held that, when a specific judgment or order is designated in
the notice of appeal, Tenn. R.App. P. 3(f) limits the scope of appellate review to the judgment or
order designated. Goad v. Pasipanodya, No. 01A01-9509-CV-00426, 1997 WL 749462, at *2
(Tenn.Ct.App. Dec. 5, 1997). In that case, the appellants' claims against two different defendants were
dismissed by the trial court in two separate orders, one dated March 17, certifying the dismissal final
under Tenn. R. Civ. P. 54.02, and the second dated June 19, 1995, also certifying the dismissal as
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final. The plaintiff filed a notice of appeal on July 24 stating he was appealing the trial court's June
19 order. Not only was the appeal dismissed as untimely as to each of the orders, this court also held
that the appellant had not perfected an appeal of the earlier order because his notice of appeal
designated only the second order. "Thus, Tenn. R.App. P. 3(f) limits his appeal to the June 19, 1995
order." Id., at *2.
Likewise, in Howse v. Campbell, No. M1999-01580-COA-R3-CV, 2001 WL 459106
(Tenn.Ct.App. May 2, 2001), this court dealt with a premature notice of appeal designating a March
11, 1999, order that dismissed one of multiple defendants. That order did not become a final,
appealable order until all remaining claims among all parties were adjudicated, at which time the
premature notice of appeal, which had not been dismissed, became timely. By order dated March 22,
2000, the trial court dismissed the claims against all the remaining defendants. The appellant did not
file another notice of appeal. The question before the court was whether the appellant could pursue
appeal of the dismissal of the defendants in the March 22, 2000 order. We determined he could not,
holding that because his only notice of appeal did not state he desired to appeal from the March 22
order (and could not have, because the notice was filed months before that judgment), the notice of
appeal applied only to the order it designated and this court would only consider those issues related
to the dismissal of the first defendant. Id. at *3. In Howse, this Court discussed the notice purposes
underlying Tenn. R.App. P. 3(f) and determined that the appellant's failure to file a second notice of
appeal undermined the notice function that notices of appeal are intended to serve, leaving the other
parties to guess whether he intended to appeal either, both, or neither order of dismissal. Id.
Based upon the authority outlined above, HCC and Shell’s designation of the specific July 7,
2004 Order dismissing their Motion for Reconsideration and failure to include a notice of appeal from
the July 7, 2004 Order granting Appellees’ Judicial Estoppel Motion limits our review to only that
Order dismissing their Motion for Reconsideration (and its underlying Order). However, since the
judicial estoppel finding stands, it is dispositive in this case. Consequently, and in light of Mr. Ball’s
lack of standing, we pretermit the remaining issue concerning contempt.
For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the Orders of the trial court. Costs of this appeal are
assessed against the Appellants, Shell Oil Company, Hoechst Celanese Corporation, Gordon Ball, and
their respective sureties.
__________________________________________
W. FRANK CRAWFORD, PRESIDING JUDGE, W.S.
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