Attorney Trey Wilson - RL Wilson Law

24 March 2009

R L Wilson Law Firm takes On Case for Coach Randy Palmer -- Pro Bono

In a renewed effort to prevent injustices throughout Texas, R L Wilson, P.C. Law Firm has undertaken the representation of Randy Palmer -- Athletic Director and Head Football Coach for the Poteet ISD. Coach Palmer is a man of stellar character, humility and impeccable credentials. He is a Pleasanton native who rose to the ranks of the NFL, and decided to return to South Central Texas to give back to his community. Unfortunately, South Texas School Board politics has consumed Coach Palmer's job, and he is fighting for his position at Poteet.

Attorney Bob Schaezler of R L Wilson, P.C. Law Firm has been Coach Palmer's public face during this trying ordeal. The media storm has been overwhelming, and Bob has appeared on KENS 5 TV, and on KTSA's Trey Ware radio show.

Watch the Video here.


By Zeke MacCormack - Express-News

POTEET — The school board’s latest spin of its revolving door for athletic directors unleashed a flood of tears and questions — and a walkout by angry students the morning after.

Trustees voted to not extend the contract of first-year athletic director Randy Palmer despite testimonials and demonstrations of support from many in a crowd of about 200 at Monday’s board meeting.

The vote means a fifth new coach in five years will lead the Aggie football squad. Under Palmer, the team went to the playoffs with a 6-5 season — which included beating archrival Pleasanton for the first time in at least 40 years, according to Express-News archives.

Trustee Dicki Lee Sparks, who backed Palmer, said many in the emotional crowd surrounded the board after the vote and wouldn’t disband for an hour.

“We had 15- and 16-year-old boys bawling and demanding to know why, asking ... ‘Why, why are you doing this to us?’” Sparks said. “They wanted answers.”

About 100 students left the Poteet High School campus in protest starting at midmorning Tuesday, Principal Andy Castillo said.

The students will be counted as absent, but whether the absence is excused will vary because “we evidently have some parents who were aware of where their kids were,” he said.

Two other coaches who are already with the district and have family links to trustees voting to oust Palmer have been mentioned as likely successors.

The high turnover among athletic directors is unhealthy for students, parent Irma Estrada told trustees.

“It’s not too late to do the right thing here and do what’s best for our kids, and that is to keep Coach Palmer,” she said.

Morgan Wagner, a senior on the Aggies offensive line, told trustees that Palmer was “liked and beloved” by most students.

But the board’s resolve against Palmer was even stronger than on Feb. 23, when trustees voted 4-3 to recommend termination of his contract, despite support for extending his $57,000-a-year contract by interim Superintendent Tim Coyle.

Trustees didn’t cite any specifics Monday before voting 5-2 for a motion that said terminating Palmer was “in the best interest” of the district.

“I still don’t understand why, what the reasoning is,” Palmer, 33, said early Tuesday. “There was a lot of people in support of me, and there were a select few against me.”

Trustee Barbara Reyes, who changed her stance to favor dismissing Palmer, could not be reached for comment.

School board President Mike McIntyre denied Palmer was dismissed so that a relative of a trustee could get the job, and he said Palmer will soon receive written notification of the basis for the board’s action.

“Once that happens, if he wants to disclose it, he can do it,” McIntyre said. “There are legitimate concerns, and if people were more aware of them there wouldn’t be such a big deal, but that’s sort of the nature of the beast. We’re given access to information that not everybody else gets to see.”

He said he respects the students’ right to express their displeasure but said of the walkout that the weeks before the Texas Assessment of Knowledge and Skills testing “is not the time to have this kind of distraction.”

Sparks said she waited to hear a valid reason for firing Palmer but that none was provided.

Fellow trustees cited “piddly little things, but nothing to me that would warrant someone losing their job,” Sparks said.

Superintendent Coyle said Palmer had no blemishes on his record.

“I can’t believe we couldn’t come to some kind of different solution,” Coyle said Tuesday, calling the mood on campus “disappointed and frustrated.”

11 March 2009

R L Wilson, P.C. Law Firm Now Accepts Credit Cards and Paypal

As part of the re-vamp and update of our flagship website R L Wilson, P.C. Law Firm now accepts credit card and Paypal payments online, over the phone, or as an added payment option for monthly invoices. The service is made available through a merchant account procured from the San Antonio Bar Association.

Our law firm merchant account is compliant with ABA and State Bar guidelines for credit acceptance. Unlike a standard merchant account, the Law Firm Merchant Account is designed specifically for the client-attorney transaction, and safeguards and separates client funds.

We hope that this new feature provides convenience to our existing and prospective clients, reduces our costs associated with billing and collections, and encourages prompt payment promptly by providing additional payment options.

Of course, we will continue to accept checks.

08 March 2009

Rio Grande Valley Water Case -- View TCEQ Consideration of Our Request for Emergency Order

On November 5, 2008, San Antonio Attorney Trey Wilson presented a request for Emergency Order to the Commissioners of the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality. The requested Order was intended to direct the East Rio Hondo Water Supply Corporation to restore water service to RL Wilson, P.C. Law Firm Clients Carl & Janel Parker and Carolina Ruiz. The Parkers and Mrs. Ruiz are elderly residents of Cameron County whose water service was terminated by East Rio Hondo Water when the residents refused to grant punitive easements requested by the utility.

On October 20, 2008 -- approximately 2 weeks prior to the TCEQ Agenda Meeting -- a staff attorney with the TCEQ issued a memorandum opining that the actions of East Rio Hondo Water were illegal. In the memorandum, the TCEQ staff attorney recommended that the TCEQ issue the Emergency Order requested by Trey Wilson. The final sentence of the Legal Recommendation of the staff memorandum was "The WSC has various avenues available to it, such as trying to work out an agreement with the customers or using its eminent domain powers, but terminating the customers' service is not one of them."

Undaunted, East Rio Hondo persisted in its illegal deprivation of water service to our clients. On November 5, 2008, the utility was called to task about its actions. The following Agenda item was considered at the TCEQ Commissioners' Agenda Meeting of November 5, 2008:

EMERGENCY ORDER

Item 73. TCEQ Docket No. 2008-1646-UCR. Consideration of a request by Carl & Janel Parker and Carolina Ruiz for an emergency order to require East Rio Hondo Water Supply Corporation to provide continuous and adequate water service pursuant to Section 13.041 of the Texas Water Code and Title 30, Section 291.14 of the Texas Administrative Code. East Rio Hondo Water Supply Corporation provides retail water service in Cameron County, Texas, under Certificate of Convenience and Necessity No. 11552. (Stefanie Skogen, Lisa Fuentes)


In the end, the TCEQ issued the Emergency Order, and our firm's clients' water was restored with State intervention. But East Rio Hondo didn't go down without a fight. The video of the fight is somewhat entertaining. To view a video of the TCEQ Commissioners' discussion of this item, Click HERE.

TEXAS REP. SOLOMONS PLANS REFORM OF HOMEOWNERS’ ASSOCIATION LAWS

Press Release from Rep. Burt Solomons, R- Carrollton
Friday, February 27, 2009

AUSTIN -- State Rep. Burt Solomons (Carrollton) today announced plans for a sweeping reform of the state's homeowners’ association laws, including a constitutional amendment that would prohibit foreclosure of a homestead by a homeowners’ association. Solomons, a recognized real estate attorney in the North Texas area who served for fourteen years on the House committee with jurisdiction over homeowners’ associations, said the legislation is necessary. “It’s clear to me that while homeowners’ associations are valuable” said Solomons, “things have just gotten out of control with some of them. I think it’s amazing that in Texas the courts, not the legislature, have allowed homeowners’ associations to foreclose on a homestead.”

Solomons’ constitutional amendment, HJR 76, would give citizen of Texas the right to vote on whether to prohibit foreclosures by homeowners’ associations on homesteads, whereas HB 1976, filed today, proposes sweeping reforms to the operation of homeowners’ associations, including requirements to allow homeowners access to all homeowners’ association records, meetings, and to fair and transparent elections. Solomons’ proposed changes also give homeowners powerful tools to enforce the law. “Many homeowners’ associations have abdicated their responsibilities to management companies and attorneys who can not be held accountable and use penalties and attorneys’ fees to harass and intimidate homeowners who question the use of their association dues or the arbitrary enforcement of rules or bylaws,” stated Solomons. In response, he has proposed changes that will give homeowners greater access to the courts to battle homeowners’ associations by providing court and attorney fees to homeowners if the homeowners’ associations fail to comply with statutory requirements, as well as granting the courts the authority to assess fines against the associations.

The proposed legislative changes also address a myriad of issues which have negatively impacted homeowners, including priority of payment and prohibiting bans of solar panels. Homeowners are monetarily disadvantaged by prohibitions of solar panels, the use of which could dramatically lower the energy consumption and costs to homeowners. “At a time when the entire nation is focusing on renewable energy and the reduction of negative impacts on our air quality” said Solomons, “it is beyond me why we allow homeowners’ associations to ban the right of individuals to generate their own electricity in a reliable, environmentally-friendly method.”

The bill also addresses the priority of payment issue. While homeowners’ associations are currently prohibited from foreclosing on a home for failure to pay fines or attorneys’ fees, many associations will redirect a homeowners’ payment of association dues to pay for those outstanding fines or fees, which leaves their dues in arrears. Under the law now, failure to pay dues is the only reason for which an association may foreclose on a home; thus redirecting payments allows a homeowners’ association to foreclose on homeowners who have made good faith efforts to stay current with their obligations.

Solomons offered major reforms to homeowners’ association laws last session, but they died on the last day of session. “It is estimated that there are over 20,000 homeowners’ associations in Texas impacting citizen throughout the state,” said Solomons. “While some are conscientious about their fiduciary duties to their neighbors, others tend to operate like little fiefdoms. This is a strong property rights state and I believe we should ensure that homeowners’ associations can not intimidate and harass Texans out of their homes.”

Contact:
Bonnie Bruce, Legislative Director
Phone:(512)463-0487

07 March 2009

Wrongful Water Service Interruption Case Makes the Valley Media Again

Elderly residents to take Rio Hondo utility to trial
March 6, 2009 - 10:18 PM

By FERNANDO DEL VALLE/Valley Morning Star

RIO HONDO - Lawyers this week will take depositions from three elderly residents who claim the Rio Hondo Water Supply Corp. cut off water to their homes because they refused to grant an easement across their land for a water pipeline, an attorney said Friday.

Carl and Janel Parker and Carolina Ruiz plan to take the company to trial in state district court on May 13 for cutting off water to their homes on FM 510, Bob Schaezler, a San Antonio attorney who represents them, said.

Meanwhile, the water company has filed a request in state district court to condemn the customers' property. The company wants the land for a pipeline that is needed to provide water service to the growing area, said J.W. Dyer, a McAllen attorney who represents the company.

The customers claim the water company cut off their water because they refused to grant 20-foot easements for the pipeline, Schaezler said. "It's extortion," Schaezler said.

But Dyer said the company had the right to cut off water to Ruiz and the Parkers. The company said the water service was shut off because the customers failed to comply with an agreement that allows this action if an easement is refused, Dyer said.

The Texas Commission on Environmental Quality ordered the company to restore water service in the precedent-setting case, Andrea Morrow, a spokeswoman for the agency in Austin, said. "I have not heard of it before," Morrow said, referring to the company's action.

About 30 feet of land separates the customers' front doors from the proposed easement's edge, said family members who spoke for the customers. The water company refused the customers' officer of 10-foot easements, Schaezler said.

Ruiz's water was shut off for about three months last summer as the area recovered from Hurricane Dolly, said Patty Fajardo, Ruiz's granddaughter. Ruiz, who uses crutches to walk, hauled water from an irrigation canal to wash dishes, drank bottled water, and drove to her daughter's San Benito home to bathe, Fajardo said.
"She doesn't want (the water company) to have what she's worked for for so long," Fajardo said of her grandmother's refusal to grant the easement. "She worked out in the fields for years and years."

Dyer said Ruiz's home was damaged by Hurricane Dolly and she wasn't living there for months. But Fajardo said her grandmother remained in her home after the water was turned off. Dyer also said Ruiz wanted the company to pay her about $25,000 in exchange for an easement. But Fajardo denied her grandmother tried to sell the land.

Water to the Parkers' home was turned off from July 30 to 31 and Aug. 13 to 22, Linda Swartz, the couple's granddaughter, said. They used bottled water to drink and bathe, she said. The couple fears the company would cut some trees if they granted the easement, Swartz said.

But Dyer said the company would cut only one tree to install the pipeline.

TCEQ ordered the water company to restore water service to the customers.

In a Nov. 12 order, TCEQ said the company is prohibited by law from cutting off water if customers refused to grant it easements.

"I think (TCEQ) way overstepped their bounds," Dyer said of the agency's order.

Trey Wilson --Named By Scene in SA Magazine As One of San Antonio's Best Real Estate Litigation Attorneys -- September 2008 -- As voted on by peers