The U. S. Supreme Court is currently reviewing the latest 9th Circuit decision. Read More...

May 5, 2010
Stern Loses Again at the Ninth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals

Ninth Circuit Reject en banc hearing

Less than two months after it rejected all claims made by Howard K. Stern on behalf of the late Anna Nicole Smith’s estate against E. Pierce Marshall, the Ninth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals denied a motion by Smith’s attorneys to rehear the case en banc.

On March 19, 2010 the 9th Circuit upheld the Marshall family’s argument that the case has been fully adjudicated in the Texas Probate Court, which ruled in favor of E. Pierce Marshall and against Smith on every issue. The 9th Circuit ruling states in part: “The district court should have afforded preclusive effect to the Texas probate court’s factual findings and relevant legal conclusions. The determinations adverse to Vickie Lynn Marshall in the Texas probate court prevent her from establishing the elements of her counterclaim, such as J. Howard Marshall II’s intent to give her a substantial inter vivos gift, the tortious nature of Pierce Marshall’s conduct regarding the estate planning
documents, and the reasonableness and amount of her expectancy. We reverse the judgment of the district court and remand with instructions that judgment be entered in favor of the Estate of Pierce Marshall.”

“Today’s denial of a new hearing once again vindicated the efforts of the late E. Pierce Marshall to uphold his father’s estate plan,” said Marshall family spokesman David Margulies. The Ninth Circuit opinion supports the 2001 5 month jury trial in Texas Probate Court, which established that Anna Nicole Smith was never entitled to any assets from the Marshall family beyond the $7 million in cash and gifts she received from J. Howard Marshall, II. The jury also unequivocally rejected Smith’s claim that E. Pierce Marshall and others interfered with her receiving any additional gifts while her husband was alive or at his death.

March 19, 2010
A Statement from the Marshall Family

For Immediate Release

Contact:
David Margulies
(214) 368-0909
(214) 914-1275

Statement From The Family of E. Pierce Marshall

DALLAS (March 19, 2010) The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit today vindicated the efforts of the late E. Pierce Marshall to uphold his father’s estate plan.

The Ninth Circuit opinion supports the 2001 five month jury trial in Texas Probate Court, which established that Anna Nicole Smith was never entitled to any assets from the Marshall family beyond the $7 million in cash and gifts she received from J. Howard Marshall, II . The jury also unequivocally rejected Smith’s claim that E. Pierce Marshall and others interfered with her receiving any additional gifts while her husband was alive or at his death.

“The lies that were told about told about E. Pierce Marshall have finally been put to rest,” said a statement issued by the Marshall family. “Pierce Marshall was never intimidated by Anna Nicole and her bevy of contingency fee lawyers’ use of her celebrity and the legal system to try to loot J. Howard ‘s estate. We are proud to have supported his efforts and continue that fight. Our only wish would be that Pierce were here to see his vindication.”

“Many people have asked over the many years if the fight to uphold my father’s last wishes was worth it,” Pierce Marshall said in a statement issued in 2004. “I know Anna and her lawyers were counting on our family giving up and paying them an absurd sum to go away. That was never going to happen. We never wavered from our belief that, in the end, justice based on the rule of law would prevail.

“We are deeply appreciative that the Ninth Circuit took the time to closely examine the important legal issues raised by this case and agreed with our analysis of the law and facts regarding those issues,” said G. Eric Brunstad, Jr. who represented the Marshall family.

“Anna Nicole Smith and her attorneys never presented a single witness on document that upheld her absurd claims,” said David Margulies, a spokesperson for the Marshall family.
“Texas jurors in the Probate Case listened carefully to all the evidence Smith and her lawyers presented and ruled in favor of E. Pierce Marshall on every point.”

The 9th Circuit upheld the Marshall family’s argument that the case has been fully adjudicated in the Texas Probate Court, which ruled in favor of E. Pierce Marshall and against Smith on every issue. The 9th Circuit ruling states in part: “The district court should have afforded preclusive effect to the Texas probate court’s factual findings and relevant legal conclusions. The determinations adverse to Vickie Lynn Marshall
in the Texas probate court prevent her from establishing the elements of her counterclaim, such as J. Howard Marshall II’s intent to give her a substantial inter vivos gift, the tortuous nature of Pierce Marshall’s conduct regarding the estate planning
documents, and the reasonableness and amount of her expectancy. We reverse the judgment of the district court and remand with instructions that judgment be entered in favor of the Estate of Pierce Marshall.”





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May 25, 2001

Anna Nicole and J. Howard III (Howard Junior) No Shows in Houston Courtroom; Both Could Face Millions in Sanctions

"People who start knife fights shouldn't complain when they get cut."
Lee Ware Marshall Family Defense Team

"He (Howard Junior) intentionally committed fraud and meant to hurt his family,"
Jeff Chambers Marshall Family Defense Team

The California lawyer who threatened to "take Pierce Marshall down," was nowhere to be seen as attorneys convened in Judge Mike Wood's Houston courtroom. Faced with more than $35 million in damages for fraud, tortuous interference with inheritance with his brother's inheritance,

J. Howard Marshall III (Howard Junior), his wife and his California legal team left it up to a newly hired local attorney to try to get him out of the mess they and their client created.

Hoping to find a legal loophole Howard Junior's lawyer argued that he had a right to challenge is father's will, even if he fabricated the notes he used to support his claim. Dragging his brother, his brother's family and his father's legal advisors through more than five years of litigation and a trial that lasted almost half a year, doesn't add up to tortuous interference," Howard Junior's attorney argued. The jury clearly disagreed, finding Howard Junior's claims that he had an oral agreement with his father for equal participation in the estate with his brother, Pierce, a total fabrication and an attempt to loot his father's estate at the expense of the Marshall family defendants. Jurors learned during the trial that despite J. Howard Junior's unsupported claim of an oral contract, Howard Senior specifically wrote Howard Junior out of his estate plan in a series of six wills and seven trusts created over a ten-year period.

Sometimes It Pays to Take Your Own Advice
A. Lee Ware, representing E. Pierce Marshall, noted that Howard Junior's lawyers were well aware of the danger of filing a will contest based on only their client's unsupported claim of an oral agreement. Ware presented the court with an article written by one of Howard Junior's attorneys warning fellow lawyers that bringing cases of "questionable merit" may indeed be actionable and warning them to take "extreme caution." The cases, Howard Junior's lawyer warned, "could be a disaster for both the client and the attorney. We know this case is without merit," Ware told the court.

Attorney Jeff Chambers, who is also a member of the Marshall Family defense team charged that Howard Junior's attorney tried to force a $30 million dollar settlement of the case through an "extortionist threat." He reminded the court that unrefuted testimony showed that Howard Junior's attorney, Avi Peretz, threatened to interfere with an IRS case involving the late J. Howard Marshall II's estate unless his client (Howard Junior) received $30 million dollars from his father's estate. Chambers noted that although Peretz sat in the courtroom throughout the trial he never took the stand to refute the allegation. "The threat was to destroy the entire estate," Chambers told the court. "That is tortuous conduct."

Referring to Howard Junior, Chambers told the court, "he wanted to destroy his own brother and what his father had set up. He brought this upon himself."

Howard Junio told the court he had a net work of approximately $26 million during the trial. Total damages, awarded by the jury, would wipe out his net worth.

Smith Also Faces Sanctions
What Ever Happened to "Light of My Life?"

In what may be a first in this case, Vickie's (Anna Nicole Smith) attorney did not say, "light of my life," as he argued that his client should not have to pay hundreds of thousands of dollars in attorneys fees to the Marshall family defendants.

Vickie also faces the possibility of sanctions in her case, although she was protected from millions in potential claims by a California bankruptcy court. Her attorneys urged the court not to expand on the jury's answer to Question 66, which confirmed that Vickie had no claim on her late husband's estate.

Judge Wood will continue to hearing on May 29th in his Houston probate court.

Vickie's attorneys reminded the court that she had non-suited in Texas as soon as a California bankruptcy court entered a judgment awarding her almost half a billion dollars. Woops. A California district judge has now vacated that judgment and says he will review the bankruptcy court's decision.

Bad news for the bevy of contingency fee attorneys who only get paid if Vickie wins.

-30-

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The U. S. Supreme Court is currently reviewing the latest 9th Circuit decision. Read More...

May 5, 2010
Stern Loses Again at the Ninth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals

Ninth Circuit Reject en banc hearing

Less than two months after it rejected all claims made by Howard K. Stern on behalf of the late Anna Nicole Smith’s estate against E. Pierce Marshall, the Ninth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals denied a motion by Smith’s attorneys to rehear the case en banc.

On March 19, 2010 the 9th Circuit upheld the Marshall family’s argument that the case has been fully adjudicated in the Texas Probate Court, which ruled in favor of E. Pierce Marshall and against Smith on every issue. The 9th Circuit ruling states in part: “The district court should have afforded preclusive effect to the Texas probate court’s factual findings and relevant legal conclusions. The determinations adverse to Vickie Lynn Marshall in the Texas probate court prevent her from establishing the elements of her counterclaim, such as J. Howard Marshall II’s intent to give her a substantial inter vivos gift, the tortious nature of Pierce Marshall’s conduct regarding the estate planning
documents, and the reasonableness and amount of her expectancy. We reverse the judgment of the district court and remand with instructions that judgment be entered in favor of the Estate of Pierce Marshall.”

“Today’s denial of a new hearing once again vindicated the efforts of the late E. Pierce Marshall to uphold his father’s estate plan,” said Marshall family spokesman David Margulies. The Ninth Circuit opinion supports the 2001 5 month jury trial in Texas Probate Court, which established that Anna Nicole Smith was never entitled to any assets from the Marshall family beyond the $7 million in cash and gifts she received from J. Howard Marshall, II. The jury also unequivocally rejected Smith’s claim that E. Pierce Marshall and others interfered with her receiving any additional gifts while her husband was alive or at his death.

March 19, 2010
A Statement from the Marshall Family

For Immediate Release

Contact:
David Margulies
(214) 368-0909
(214) 914-1275

Statement From The Family of E. Pierce Marshall

DALLAS (March 19, 2010) The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit today vindicated the efforts of the late E. Pierce Marshall to uphold his father’s estate plan.

The Ninth Circuit opinion supports the 2001 five month jury trial in Texas Probate Court, which established that Anna Nicole Smith was never entitled to any assets from the Marshall family beyond the $7 million in cash and gifts she received from J. Howard Marshall, II . The jury also unequivocally rejected Smith’s claim that E. Pierce Marshall and others interfered with her receiving any additional gifts while her husband was alive or at his death.

“The lies that were told about told about E. Pierce Marshall have finally been put to rest,” said a statement issued by the Marshall family. “Pierce Marshall was never intimidated by Anna Nicole and her bevy of contingency fee lawyers’ use of her celebrity and the legal system to try to loot J. Howard ‘s estate. We are proud to have supported his efforts and continue that fight. Our only wish would be that Pierce were here to see his vindication.”

“Many people have asked over the many years if the fight to uphold my father’s last wishes was worth it,” Pierce Marshall said in a statement issued in 2004. “I know Anna and her lawyers were counting on our family giving up and paying them an absurd sum to go away. That was never going to happen. We never wavered from our belief that, in the end, justice based on the rule of law would prevail.

“We are deeply appreciative that the Ninth Circuit took the time to closely examine the important legal issues raised by this case and agreed with our analysis of the law and facts regarding those issues,” said G. Eric Brunstad, Jr. who represented the Marshall family.

“Anna Nicole Smith and her attorneys never presented a single witness on document that upheld her absurd claims,” said David Margulies, a spokesperson for the Marshall family.
“Texas jurors in the Probate Case listened carefully to all the evidence Smith and her lawyers presented and ruled in favor of E. Pierce Marshall on every point.”

The 9th Circuit upheld the Marshall family’s argument that the case has been fully adjudicated in the Texas Probate Court, which ruled in favor of E. Pierce Marshall and against Smith on every issue. The 9th Circuit ruling states in part: “The district court should have afforded preclusive effect to the Texas probate court’s factual findings and relevant legal conclusions. The determinations adverse to Vickie Lynn Marshall
in the Texas probate court prevent her from establishing the elements of her counterclaim, such as J. Howard Marshall II’s intent to give her a substantial inter vivos gift, the tortuous nature of Pierce Marshall’s conduct regarding the estate planning
documents, and the reasonableness and amount of her expectancy. We reverse the judgment of the district court and remand with instructions that judgment be entered in favor of the Estate of Pierce Marshall.”





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Copyright 2008   |   http://factweb.net
E. Pierce MarshallJ. Howard Marshall