I’m beginning to feel sorry for him.
Eric Dick was fined $40,000 by the Texas Ethics Commission. A formal complaint was filed against him as a HCDE Trustee. Two judges in Harris and Galveston County sanctioned him in two different lawsuits. A judge recently questioned the signature of a dead inspector. And his wife filed for divorce. And now another case has surfaced.
Last month, a judge ordered Eric Dick, an insurance attorney and HCDE Trustee, to clarify how an inspector could have signed a document he submitted to the court after having died nearly a year earlier. Dick responded as did the attorneys for the insurance company Dick sued. Dick claimed it was the inspectors son that signed the documents, not the dead guy. I have my doubts about Dick’s response but that is for later. The Judge has yet to make a ruling on this.
But according to My San Antonio, Dick did it in 2023 with a lawsuit against USAA. According to the article Dick’s client claimed damage to his home from an explosion and filed suit. From My San Antonio:
Then, a series of peculiar incidents happened, primarily centered around everyone’s inability to get ahold of Mitchell. A court-ordered inspection and appraisal of damage was cancelled after nobody could get ahold of Mitchell. Then, his attorney said it’s because he died. Mitchell had, in fact, not died, and his attorney withdrew the death notification shortly before a hearing on the matter.
The response, by the attorneys representing USAA, is almost funny.
“Thus, based simply on the record, it appears that Mr. Dick expired the Plaintiff, revived him to answer interrogatories, and expired him once more,” a USAA Insurance motion fighting Mitchell’s claims states – an unusually candid response in a public document from the company.
The case was dismissed.
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[…] A judge recently questioned the signature of a dead inspector. Another judge in San Antonio dismissed a suit against USAA because Dick claimed his client had died. (He didn’t) And his wife filed for […]
[…] of a dead inspector on documents submitted to the court by Dick. Another judge in San Antonio dismissed a suit against USAA because Dick claimed his client had died. (He didn’t) His wife filed for divorce. […]
[…] sued for filing lawsuits without the clients permission and accepting a […]
[…] of a dead inspector on documents submitted to the court by Dick. Another judge in San Antonio dismissed a suit against USAA because Dick claimed his client had died. (He didn’t) His wife filed for divorce. […]