In In the Guardianship of Hollis, a special needs trust’s trustee used $67,000 to build a pool on the beneficiary’s parent’s property. No. 14-13-00659-CV, 2014 Tex. App. LEXIS 12038 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] November 4, 2014, no pet.). The trial court ordered show cause hearings to determine the appropriateness of the expense. The trustee then spent $23,000 in attorney’s fees to defend itself in the show cause hearings. The trial court removed the trustee because it sought reimbursement from trust funds for defending is actions. The trustee appealed. The court of appeals held that one ground for removal is being guilty of gross misconduct or mismanagement, which means more than ordinary misconduct and implies serious and willful wrongdoing. The appellate court reversed the removal, stating that the trustee had the right to reimburse itself for reasonable costs and expenses in connection with administering or protecting the trust. Court cited to Grey v. First Nat’l Bank, which held that a trustee may charge his trust for attorney’s fees that the trustee, acting reasonably and in good faith, incurs in defending a charge of breach of trust. 393 F.2d 371 (5th Cir. 1968).

INTERESTING NOTE: A trustee has a right to retain counsel to assist with the administration of a trust. It is not entirely clear that defending breach of fiduciary duty claims is truly a matter of trust administration. Moreover, the Texas Property Code allows a court to award any party attorney’s fees arising from a trust dispute. But is not clear that a trustee can use self-help to pay those fees from the trust, in the interim, before the court awards them. This is an unclear area of the law regarding whether a trustee has the right to sua sponte pay its attorneys’ fees from the trust in the interim during the course of litigation with a beneficiary.

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Photo of David Fowler Johnson David Fowler Johnson

[email protected]
817.420.8223

David maintains an active trial and appellate practice and has consistently worked on financial institution litigation matters throughout his career. David is the primary author of the The Fiduciary Litigator blog, which reports on legal cases and issues impacting the fiduciary…

[email protected]
817.420.8223

David maintains an active trial and appellate practice and has consistently worked on financial institution litigation matters throughout his career. David is the primary author of the The Fiduciary Litigator blog, which reports on legal cases and issues impacting the fiduciary field in Texas. Read More

David’s financial institution experience includes (but is not limited to): breach of contract, foreclosure litigation, lender liability, receivership and injunction remedies upon default, non-recourse and other real estate lending, class action, RICO actions, usury, various tort causes of action, breach of fiduciary duty claims, and preference and other related claims raised by receivers.

David also has experience in estate and trust disputes including will contests, mental competency issues, undue influence, trust modification/clarification, breach of fiduciary duty and related claims, and accountings. David’s recent trial experience includes:

  • Representing a bank in federal class action suit where trust beneficiaries challenged whether the bank was the authorized trustee of over 220 trusts;
  • Representing a bank in state court regarding claims that it mismanaged oil and gas assets;
  • Representing a bank who filed suit in probate court to modify three trusts to remove a charitable beneficiary that had substantially changed operations;
  • Represented an individual executor of an estate against claims raised by a beneficiary for breach of fiduciary duty and an accounting; and
  • Represented an individual trustee against claims raised by a beneficiary for breach of fiduciary duty, mental competence of the settlor, and undue influence.

David is one of twenty attorneys in the state (of the 84,000 licensed) that has the triple Board Certification in Civil Trial Law, Civil Appellate and Personal Injury Trial Law by the Texas Board of Legal Specialization.

Additionally, David is a member of the Civil Trial Law Commission of the Texas Board of Legal Specialization. This commission writes and grades the exam for new applicants for civil trial law certification.

David maintains an active appellate practice, which includes:

  • Appeals from final judgments after pre-trial orders such as summary judgments or after jury trials;
  • Interlocutory appeals dealing with temporary injunctions, arbitration, special appearances, sealing the record, and receiverships;
  • Original proceedings such as seeking and defending against mandamus relief; and
  • Seeking emergency relief staying trial court’s orders pending appeal or mandamus.

For example, David was the lead appellate lawyer in the Texas Supreme Court in In re Weekley Homes, LP, 295 S.W.3d 309 (Tex. 2009). The Court issued a ground-breaking opinion in favor of David’s client regarding the standards that a trial court should follow in ordering the production of computers in discovery.

David previously taught Appellate Advocacy at Texas Wesleyan University School of Law located in Fort Worth. David is licensed and has practiced in the U.S. Supreme Court; the Fifth, Seventh, and Eleventh Federal Circuits; the Federal District Courts for the Northern, Eastern, and Western Districts of Texas; the Texas Supreme Court and various Texas intermediate appellate courts. David also served as an adjunct professor at Baylor University Law School, where he taught products liability and portions of health law. He has authored many legal articles and spoken at numerous legal education courses on both trial and appellate issues. His articles have been cited as authority by the Texas Supreme Court (twice) and the Texas Courts of Appeals located in Waco, Texarkana, Beaumont, Tyler and Houston (Fourteenth District), and a federal district court in Pennsylvania. David’s articles also have been cited by McDonald and Carlson in their Texas Civil Practice treatise, William v. Dorsaneo in the Texas Litigation Guide, and various authors in the Baylor Law ReviewSt. Mary’s Law JournalSouth Texas Law Review and Tennessee Law Review.

Representative Experience

  • Civil Litigation and Appellate Law