Showing posts with label Pedersen. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Pedersen. Show all posts

Judicial Admissions: Be Careful What You Plead, and How

Advantage Aviation Technologies, Inc. v. Axcess Aviation Maintenance Services, Inc.
Dallas Court of Appeals, No. 05-23-00344-CV (December 27, 2023)
Justices Molberg (Opinion, linked here), Pedersen III, and Smith
Axcess secured judgment against Advantage Aviation for breach of two contracts. Advantage challenged that judgment on appeal by arguing that it had no contracts with Axcess and that the contracts on which the judgment was based were between Axcess and a different party. Problem was, in the trial court Advantage had counterclaimed, unsuccessfully, for breach of the very same contracts that it tried to deny on appeal. And it had done so “without equivocation and not in the alternative,” alleging it sustained damages of more than $90,000 from Axcess’s breach of those contracts. Oops.

Citing its prior opinion in Murphy v. Killer Ridez, Inc., No. 05-13-00035-CV, 2014 WL 428987, the Dallas Court of Appeals summarily rejected Advantage’s appeal and affirmed, saying: 
Assertions of fact, not pleaded in the alternative, in the live pleadings of a party are regarded as formal judicial admissions. … A judicial admission that is clear and unequivocal is conclusive upon the party making it; it relieves the opposing party of the burden of proving the admitted fact and bars the admitting party from disputing it.

Rule 91a: “Just the Facts Pleadings, Ma’am” … Even if It’s Not Briefed?

Davis v. Homeowners of American Insurance Co.
Dallas Court of Appeals, No. 05-21-00092-CV (May 31, 2023)
Justices Molberg (Opinion, linked here), Pedersen (Dissent, linked here), and Kennedy
A defendant insurer successfully moved to dismiss the plaintiff’s claims under Rule 91a, based on limitations. But the Dallas Court of Appeals reversed, 2-1. The problem? The insurer’s motion to dismiss relied heavily on a variety of documents submitted with that motion to establish the limitations point. Rule 91a, however, expressly provides that a “court may not consider evidence in ruling on the motion and must decide the motion based solely on the pleading of the cause of action.” “In the Rule 91a context, only the non-movant’s pleading may be looked to when determining whether the cause of action pleaded has a basis in law.” A Rule 91a motion to dismiss, the Court explained, “is not a substitute for … summary judgment,” and so “the court may not resort to evidence proffered by the movant, such as through affidavits, transcribed testimony, or documents.” The majority therefore reversed the Rule 91a dismissal, but cautioned that it was not addressing the merits of the limitations argument, which might yet succeed on summary judgment.

Seems straightforward, right? So, why a dissent? Well, said Justice Pedersen, the plaintiff did not preserve error in the trial court. More specifically, the plaintiff did not object to the trial court’s considering the movant-insurer’s proffered documentary evidence, choosing instead to argue the merits of the insurer’s argument and the “evidentiary value” of the documents on which it relied. “Issues not timely preserved for appeal are waived,” and the procedural misstep identified by the majority wasn’t objected to or otherwise preserved in the trial court here.

Compounding the problem, the plaintiff-appellant did not raise the Rule 91a pleadings/evidence issue on appeal. That, argued Justice Pedersen, also should have precluded the majority’s decision. Per the Texas Supreme Court in Pike v. Texas EMC Management, “Our adversary system of justice generally depends ‘on the parties to frame the issues for decision and assign[s] to courts the role of neutral arbiter of matters the parties present.’” 610 S.W.3d 763, 782 (Tex. 2020) (quoting Greenlaw v. United States, 554 U.S. 237, 243 (2008) (discussing the “party presentation principle”)). “A court of appeals may not reverse a trial court judgment on a ground not raised” on appeal. Id. “Accordingly,” said Justice Pedersen, “this Court’s precedent … prohibits our panels from reversing trial court judgments on unassigned, nonfundamental error”—as he contended the majority did here.

Curiously, the majority opinion does not respond to the dissent’s preservation and waiver arguments.

Distribution Center Deemed “Principal Office” Under Venue Statute

Deere & Co. v. Bernal
Dallas Court of Appeals, No. 05-22-00916-CV (January 17, 2023)
Justices Pedersen (Opinion, linked here), Goldstein, and Smith
Bernal had a fatal accident in Comanche County, Texas while he was operating a tractor manufactured by Deere. Bernal’s next of kin sued Deere and Bernal’s employer in Dallas County. They pleaded venue was proper in Dallas County under section 15.002(a)(3) of the Civil Practice and Remedies Code, which provides for venue in a county where at least one defendant has a “principal office.” Plaintiffs alleged that Deere has a principal office in Dallas County. Deere moved to transfer venue, denying that it had a principal office in Dallas County and arguing the case should be transferred to Comanche County, where the accident occurred, or Lamar County, where Bernal’s employer purportedly had its principal office. The trial court denied the motion to transfer, and Deere brought an interlocutory appeal.

When a defendant challenges venue, the plaintiff has the burden of presenting a prima facie case that venue is proper in the county in which it brought the lawsuit. Any venue facts pleaded by the plaintiff and not specifically denied by the defendant are treated as true. As to venue facts the defendant has specifically denied, the plaintiff must submit affidavits and documents authenticated by its affidavits to support its pleaded venue facts. Deere specifically denied the plaintiffs’ pleaded venue facts, so the plaintiffs had the burden of establishing a prima facie case that Deere had a principal office in Dallas County.

The venue statute defines “principal office” as the “a principal office of the corporation … in this state in which the decision makers for the organization within this state conduct the daily affairs of the organization.” A principal office must have decision makers for the company who have at least substantially equal authority and responsibility to other company officials in Texas. The plaintiffs submitted evidence that Deere operates a 230,000-square-foot regional distribution center in Dallas County that distributes parts to dealers in several states. The manager of the distribution center supervises over fifty-five employees, including several employees who themselves have supervisory responsibilities, and the manager does not report to anyone above him in Texas. The court of appeals concluded that these facts established that the Dallas County distribution center was “a principal office” in Texas and therefore affirmed the trial court’s denial of the motion to transfer.

Preserving Objections to Arbitration, and the Limited Scope of the FAA Exemption for “Workers Engaged in Foreign or Interstate Commerce”

Gordon v. Trucking Resources, Inc.
Dallas Court of Appeals, No 05-21-00746-CV (November 15, 2022)
Justices Myers (Opinion, linked here), Pedersen III, and Garcia 
Gordon and Trucking Resources compete in recruiting truck drivers for transportation companies. Two of Trucking Resources’ employees—each of whom had signed a non-compete that included an arbitration agreement—resigned and went to work for Gordon’s competing company. Trucking Resources sued the employees for breach of their agreements and sued their new employer, Gordon and his company, for tortious interference and conspiracy. It then moved to compel arbitration of that dispute. One of the former employees objected, but Gordon and his company did not. The trial court granted the motion to compel arbitration. After the arbitrator ruled for Trucking Resources, Gordon and his company asked the trial court to vacate the arbitration award, arguing (1) Section 1 of the FAA expressly exempted this dispute from arbitration and (2) Gordon and his company could not be compelled to arbitrate because they were not signatories to the arbitration agreement. But the Court of Appeals rejected both challenges.

The FAA states that it does not “apply to contracts of employment of … workers engaged in foreign or interstate commerce.” 9 U.S.C. § 1. Drawing from recent U.S. Supreme Court decisions, the appeals court explained that, for this exemption to apply, the workers in question “must at least play a direct and ‘necessary role in the free flow of goods’ across borders”—they “must be actively ‘engaged in transportation.’” While the truck drivers they recruited likely would fit that description, the recruiters themselves would not. And so the exemption did not apply here.

Beyond that, however, the Court stated that “an objection to arbitration under the 9 U.S.C. § 1 exemption from arbitration must be raised before the trial court rules on a motion to compel arbitration.” Here, Gordon and his company did not raise their objection until after the arbitration had concluded and the award had been confirmed. Because “they did not assert the exemption from arbitration before the arbitration took place, they [did] not preserve[] the argument for appellate review.”

Similarly, the Court explained, the “opportunity for the trial court to cure any error from requiring nonsignatories to arbitrate is before the court rules on the opposing party’s motion to compel arbitration, not after the arbitration proceeding.” Here, Gordon and his company didn’t raise this and other arbitrability arguments until after the arbitrator had rendered his award. Consequently, they failed to preserve error on those issues, and the Court of Appeals could not address them.

Primer on Proving Up Attorneys’ Fees

Canadian Real Estate Holdings, LP v. Karen F. Newton Revocable Trust
Dallas Court of Appeals, No. 05-20-00747-CV (September 29, 2022)
Justices Pedersen, III (opinion available here), Goldstein, and Smith
The Dallas Court of Appeals provided additional guidance on proving up attorneys’ fees in this declaratory judgment action. After the trial court dismissed the plaintiffs’ claim as moot, it awarded plaintiffs $45,529.13 in incurred attorneys’ fees plus $21,000.00 in conditional attorneys’ fees on appeal. The defendant, Canadian REH, appealed, arguing plaintiffs had failed to prove the amount of reasonable and necessary attorneys’ fees.

Canadian REH first argued that plaintiffs were required to provide “hard” or “disinterested” evidence of a reasonable hourly rate, such as affidavits of other attorneys, the State Bar of Texas Hourly Rate Fact Sheet, or fees awarded in similar cases. But the Court disagreed, noting that the affidavit of plaintiffs’ counsel, who testified he was “familiar with the hourly rates and costs customarily charged in and around” Collin County, Texas, was sufficiently detailed to establish reasonable hourly rates. And his experience was sufficient to back up his assertions of familiarity. The Court noted that neither Rohrmoos nor prior Dallas Court of Appeals cases have required additional “disinterested” evidence.

Canadian REH next argued that plaintiffs failed to establish the reasonable hours worked because the billing records were heavily redacted and contained block billing. Again, the Court disagreed. It noted that attorney invoices are “routinely redacted” when offered as evidence, in order to protect the attorney-client and work-product privileges, and that such redactions do not “obscure[e] meaningful review of attorney time” as Canadian REH claimed. The Court also disagreed that plaintiffs’ counsel’s use of “block billing” was a problem, noting that no entry included more than one day’s work for a timekeeper, and many entries included related tasks charged for fractions of one hour.

Canadian REH did get some traction with its complaint about conditional appellate fees, however. Plaintiffs’ counsel did not provide any explanation for his estimated appellate fees of $14,000 in the Court of Appeals and $7,000 in the Supreme Court. The Court reiterated prior holdings that an award of conditional appellate fees must be based on testimony about the services the attorney reasonably believes will be necessary to defend the appeal and a reasonable hourly rate for those services. Counsel’s conclusory opinion provided neither. The Court therefore vacated that portion of the award.

Don’t Sleep on Mandamus in Dallas

In re Ruff, No. 05-21-00886-CV (Tex. App.—Dallas February 15, 2022) Justices Molberg, Reichek (Opinion, linked here), and Garcia

In re Perez-Merino, No. 05-22-00082-CV (Tex. App.—Dallas February 14, 2022) Justices Schenck, Reichek (Opinion, linked here), and Carlyle

In re Tekin & Associates, LLC, No. 05-21-00219-CV (Tex. App.—Dallas February 9, 2022) Justices Osborne, Pedersen, III (Opinion, linked here), and Goldstein
There is no hard and fast deadline for filing a mandamus petition. But, although mandamus is not technically “an equitable remedy,” it is guided by principles of equity—including laches. And in the last week alone, the Dallas Court of Appeals has summarily denied three mandamus petitions for what it deemed to be excessive delays in filing. In each opinion the Court said, “[A]n unexplained delay of four months or more can constitute laches and result in denial of mandamus relief,” citing Rivercenter Associates v. Rivera, 858 S.W.2d 366 (Tex. 1993) (orig. proceeding), and decisions from the Dallas Court of Appeals and others to the same effect. With these three short, substantially identical opinions in a single week, the Court would seem to be signaling that, absent a good explanation, a delay of four months in filing for mandamus relief can (will?) trigger denial of a petition irrespective of the merits. Moral of the story: if you’re considering filing a mandamus in the Dallas Court of Appeals, get on with it.

HIGHLAND PARK IMMUNE FROM SUIT FOR DEATH OF OFFICER PERFORMING EXTRA-DUTY SECURITY SERVICE AT PRIVATE RESIDENCE

Town of Highland Park v. McCullers
Dallas Court of Appeals, No. 05-19-01431-CV (June 29, 2021)
Chief Justice Burns (Dissent linked here), and Justices Pedersen, III (Opinion linked here) and Goldstein (Concurrence linked here)

               The Town of Highland Park cannot be sued by the survivors of an off-duty police officer killed in a flash flood while providing security at a private residence through an arrangement coordinated by the Town, according to a divided Dallas Court of Appeals panel. 

        SMU police officer Calvin Marcus McCullers accepted an assignment offered by the Highland Park Department of Public Safety to provide after-hours security, at a property owner’s expense, for a private residence then under construction. A little more than two hours after he arrived at the property in his personal car, a torrential downpour flooded the area where he was parked and swept him and his car over an embankment into Turtle Creek. His body was discovered several weeks later on the banks of the Trinity River more than three miles downstream. 

        Officer McCullers’s survivors sued Highland Park and others for negligence and other torts. Asserting governmental immunity from such claims, Highland Park filed a plea to the jurisdiction, which the trial court denied after the parties conducted limited discovery. On interlocutory appeal, the core issue was whether coordinating a program to provide security services to private residences by off-duty police officers is an exercise of “police protection” and thus a governmental function for which the Town is generally immune from suit, or a “proprietary” function to which immunity does not apply. 

        The distinction between governmental and proprietary functions, which applies only to municipalities, is codified in the Texas Tort Claims Act, chapter 101 of the Civil Practice and Remedies Code. The TTCA defines proprietary functions as those “that a municipality may, in its discretion, perform in the interests of the inhabitants of the municipality”—but not including the list of 36 functions expressly identified as governmental functions. The first item on this list is “police and fire protection and control.” Justices Pedersen and Goldstein, in separate opinions, held “the Town’s coordination of Officer McCullers to provide law enforcement services” at the residence was an exercise of “the governmental function of police protection.” Justice Goldstein’s concurrence, elaborating on the statutory analysis, cited precedent that plaintiffs “may not split various aspects of a city’s operation into discrete functions and recharacterize certain of those functions as proprietary.” She concluded her opinion by noting “the ongoing struggle associated with judicial analysis and application of the governmental-proprietary dichotomy” and other aspects of governmental immunity. She urged the Legislature to provide “more certainty” on these issues for Texas citizens and governmental bodies. 

        Chief Justice Burns, dissenting, said his “colleagues rely on labels instead of function.” He denied that coordinating “private security services for private property owners,” so that an off-duty officer was “essentially functioning as a night-watchman for one citizen,” fits within the statutory meaning of “police protection.” Instead, applying the factors articulated by the Texas Supreme Court for breach-of-contract claims in Wasson Interests, Inc. v. City of Jacksonville (1998), he concluded that “in providing private security services” Highland Park “was acting in a proprietary role.” 

        One final note: finding the program is a governmental function does not necessarily end the immunity analysis. Under the TTCA, governmental immunity is waived in circumstances involving “personal injury or death caused by a condition or use of tangible personal or real property”—if the plaintiff complies with statutory notice requirements or the governmental entity has “actual notice” of the injuries and its potential liability. Justice Pedersen, extensively describing the record and controlling precedent, concluded plaintiffs failed to provide timely notice and rejected plaintiffs’ argument that Highland Park had actual subjective knowledge of its alleged fault in causing or contributing to the officer’s death. Justice Goldstein concurred in a footnote, while identifying the “actual subjective awareness” test as ripe for review by the Legislature. Chief Justice Burns did not mention this issue.  

THE JOSH BRENT CASE: “APPARENT” INTOXICATION IS AN OBJECTIVE TEST FOR DRAM-SHOP-ACT LIABILITY

Beamers Private Club d/b/a Privae Lounge v. Jackson
Dallas Court of Appeals, No. 05-19-00698-CV (April 21, 2021)
Justices Osborne, Pedersen III (Opinion, here), and Goldstein


In the wee hours of the morning on December 8, 2012, after a night of drinking, Dallas Cowboys defensive lineman Josh Brent crashed his car while speeding. Brent’s best friend and teammate, Jerry Brown, was a passenger in the car and died in the accident. Brown’s mother, Stacey Jackson, sued Brent and Beamers d/b/a Privae, the club where Brent had been drinking immediately before the crash, securing multi-million-dollar judgments against each. Brent did not appeal. Beamers did, challenging, among other things, the legal and factual sufficiency of the evidence to support the judgment against the club under the Texas Dram Shop Act.

Under the Act, providing an alcoholic beverage to someone can lead to statutory liability if, “at the time the provision occurred it was apparent to the provider that the individual being sold, served, or provided with an alcoholic beverage was obviously intoxicated to the extent that he presented a clear danger to himself and others.” Focusing on the requirement that it be “apparent to the provider” that the person being served “was obviously intoxicated,” Beamers pointed to testimony from servers and other club employees, as well as from some of Brent’s teammates who were present, that Brent did not appear to them to be “obviously intoxicated.” The jury, of course, disagreed.

The Dallas Court of Appeals affirmed the verdict and judgment, holding that “the test for liability under the Act is an objective one.” The Court explained that “the requirement that intoxication be ‘apparent to the provider’ does not mean that the provider must actually observe such signs of intoxication; if it did, any provider of alcohol could escape liability by turning a blind eye to signs of intoxication that would otherwise be plain, manifest, and open to view.” Here, Brent failed a series of “roadside intoxication tests” at the accident scene, and a video showed Brent—who “was quiet and reserved by nature”—dancing at the club while drinking from two open bottles of alcohol. Especially viewed in the light most favorable to the verdict, the evidence was legally and factually sufficient to satisfy the Act’s objective test.

One procedural note, highlighting the recent turnover on the Dallas Court: Both the late Justice David Bridges and former Justice David Evans had participated in this case through submission. Justices Osborne and Goldstein, having studied the briefs and record, replaced them in the final determination of the appeal.

THE CONTRACT MEANS WHAT THE CONTRACT SAYS


Anubis Pictures, LLC v. Selig
Dallas Court of Appeals, No. 05-19-00817-CV (March 3, 2021)
Justices Pedersen, III and Reichek (Opinion, available here)*
This case arises out of Anubis Pictures’ attempted financing of a film based on a screenplay written by the late Stanley Kubrick. When the deal fell through, Anubis sued its would-be business partner for, among other things, violation of an NDA and letter of intent. The trial court granted summary judgment against Anubis on all claims, and Anubis appealed.

Anubis argued the trial court should not have granted summary judgment on its NDA claims because fact issues existed regarding whether the defendant had misused confidential information provided to her. The Court of Appeals disagreed. The NDA required that, for written material to be considered confidential, it must be marked confidential on its face. None of the emails or other materials at issue had been explicitly marked confidential when sent to the defendant, and a later email stating “Please do not forward the script” did not retroactively protect the script as confidential.

Anubis also argued that, even if the documents were not marked confidential, the parties treated them as confidential, as evidenced by the defendant’s request for permission to share the script and information about the project with some of her contacts. The Court did not reach the merits of that argument because it noted that, as to the documents the defendant asked for permission to disclose, she had permission to disclose them.

Anubis also complained the trial court erred in granting summary judgment on its claim for breach of a letter of intent, but the Court rejected that argument as well. It was undisputed that the defendant never signed the letter of intent, but Anubis argued the parties had an oral agreement to proceed in accordance with the terms, regardless of whether it was signed. The Court looked back at the NDA, which was the only agreement signed by both parties. It provided that neither party was “bound to proceed with any transaction between them unless and until both parties signed a formal, written agreement setting forth the terms of such transaction.” This “No Obligation to Complete Transaction” provision prevented the formation of an oral contract on the letter of intent as a matter of law. 

*Justice Bill Whitehill participated in the oral argument and submission of this case, but not the issuance of the opinion, which occurred after the expiration of his term on December 31, 2020.

NO CONTINUANCE TO AVOID BENCH TRIAL BY VIDEO

In re John Sakyi
Dallas Court of Appeals, No. 05-20-00574-CV (August 20, 2020)
Chief Justice Burns and Justices Pedersen, III and Reichek (Opinion available here)
The fact that you don’t want to conduct your bench trial via videoconference in order to maintain social distancing is not a valid basis for continuance. In this mandamus proceeding arising out of a divorce case, the Dallas Court of Appeals found that the trial court abused its discretion in denying the husband’s motion for continuance based on his need to conduct additional discovery into whether his purported wife was still married to another man at the time of their wedding. But the Court rejected the husband’s other basis for requesting a continuance—that he did not consent to participate in the bench trial via videoconference. He also expressed concern about his counsel’s inability to talk to him without violating social distancing recommendations.

The Court held the trial court did not abuse its discretion by overruling the husband’s objection to trial via videoconference. In its emergency orders, the Supreme Court of Texas expressly granted trial courts the discretion, “subject only to constitutional limitations” and “without a participant’s consent,” to require that all participants in hearings, depositions, “or other proceeding[s] of any kind” participate remotely, “such as by teleconferencing, videoconferencing, or other means.” Although the emergency orders do not specify bench trials, the Court held they would fall under the category of “other proceeding[s] of any kind.” The husband did not claim a bench trial by videoconference would violate any of his constitutional rights, so the trial court did not abuse its discretion in requiring him to participate in this manner.

JURY SELECTION IN FATAL-ACCIDENT CASE SPARKS BATSON BATTLE IN APPELLATE COURT

United Rentals North America, Inc. v. Evans
Dallas Court of Appeals, No. 05-18-00665-CV (August 18, 2020)
Justices Pederson III, Reichek (Opinion linked here), and Carlyle Dissents from Denial of En Banc Reconsideration by Justices Evans (Dissent linked here) and Schenck (Dissent linked here)
A Dallas Court of Appeals panel unanimously affirmed a judgment for plaintiffs in a wrongful death case, overruling the defendant’s objections to the trial court’s Batson rulings in jury selection. The case apparently sparked internal controversy in the 12-member Court. On the same day the panel opinion issued, two Justices who were not on the panel filed dissents to the denial of en banc reconsideration. The competing opinions provide roadmaps for applying the Batson guidelines to civil lawsuits.

A big rig hauling an oversized “boom lift” for United Rentals struck a bridge in a highway construction zone, which caused a bridge beam to collapse on a pickup truck, killing the driver. The decedent’s mother and son brought a wrongful-death and survival suit against several defendants. Before judgment, all defendants except United Rentals settled or were dismissed. During voir dire, the court granted two of Plaintiffs’ Batson challenges to United Rentals’ use of preemptory strikes, and denied United Rentals’ competing Batson challenges. The jury found for Plaintiffs and the court entered judgment awarding $2.79 million in damages. United Rentals appealed.

Before addressing the Batson issues, the appeals court overruled United Rentals’ substantive issues, including its arguments that the negligence verdict was error because United Rentals, “as a shipper, had no duty to see that the carrier … shipped its cargo safely,” and there was insufficient evidence to support the damages awarded for the decedent’s “conscious pain and mental anguish” in the few seconds between the collision and his death. Those holdings consume over 35 pages of the panel’s opinion, and Justice Schenck’s dissent to the denial of en banc review urges the Texas Supreme Court “to establish the proper review standard to govern pain and suffering awards.” These issues could be the subject of a separate blog post.

Turning to the Batson dispute, the Court summarized United Rentals’ argument: The “trial court erred in granting appellees’ challenges to two of United Rentals’ peremptory strikes of black women while denying United Rentals’ challenges to appellees’ use of strikes on men, four of whom were white.”

The Batson rules were originally promulgated to prevent criminal prosecutors from using peremptory strikes to exclude jurors solely because they were of the same race as the defendant. See Batson v. Kentucky, 476 U.S. 79, 89 (1986). Batson has since been extended to civil trials and to other “suspect” grounds for striking potential jurors. See Edmonson v. Leesville Concrete Co., 500 U.S. 614, 618-28 (1991); Goode v. Shoukfeh, 943 S.W.2d 441, 444-45 (Tex. 1997).

Applying Batson involves a three-step process similar to the test for employment discrimination. First, the party objecting to a preemptory strike must establish a prima facie case it “was used to exclude a venire member on the basis of race or gender.” Second, the proponent of the strike must articulate “a race- or gender-neutral reason for the strike.” Finally, the party challenging the strike has an opportunity to rebut the explanation and show it is a pretext for unlawful discrimination. The standard for evaluating a strike under Batson is “whether race [or gender] was a motivating factor in counsel’s exercise of the strike.” The trial court’s rulings, often based on credibility assessments, are subject to review for abuse of discretion.

Here, Plaintiffs objected to United Rentals’ use of all five of its peremptory strikes on black women, and United Rentals objected to Plaintiffs’ striking four white men and one Hispanic man. The judge granted two of Plaintiffs’ Batson challenges, and denied all of United Rentals’ challenges. After reviewing the voir dire colloquies and arguments of counsel, the Court of Appeals held the judge did not abuse her discretion in finding that race was a motivating factor for United Rentals striking one of the two jurors. Central to the Court’s holding was that the record did not support counsel’s stated reason for striking the prospective juror. The second juror placed on the jury over United Rentals’ objection did not join in the jury’s adverse verdict, so the appeals court held any error in allowing her to serve was harmless.

As for the trial court’s denial of United Rentals’ challenge to Plaintiffs’ strikes, the appeals court rejected the argument that Plaintiffs’ counsel admitted unlawful discrimination by telling the judge, “We know from our focus groups that the African-American female is the most favorable juror for this case for whatever reason.” The court concluded counsel made this statement in the context of “explaining why they believed United Rentals’ strike of [a] particular black panelist was pretextual,” and did not evidence Plaintiffs’ “intent to seat a jury without whites or males.” And although the Court acknowledged the gender and racial “disparities suggest something more than happenstance,” they did not alone “establish that appellees’ explanations of the strikes were pretextual.” The Court then conducted a “comparative analysis” of the record relevant to each of Plaintiffs’ strikes and concluded the judge did not abuse her discretion in denying the challenges. The Court explained, “Disparate treatment is not shown where a party strikes a juror because of multiple characteristics and does not strike jurors of other races or genders who share one or more of those characteristics.”

The online docket does not reveal a request for en banc review or a vote on such a request. Nevertheless, two dissents from a denial of en banc consideration, released at the same time as the panel opinion, indicate a vote did occur. See Tex. R. App. P. 41.2(c). Justice Evans, joined by Justices Whitehill and Schenck, submitted a lengthy opinion supporting reversal and remand for a new trial on the grounds that “a race- and gender-based goal—the substantial motivation—in selecting the jury was plainly and openly stated, and 100% of the peremptory challenges were perfectly consistent with that goal.” The dissent characterized the statement of Plaintiffs’ counsel that “the African-American female is the most favorable juror for this case” as rare “direct evidence of discriminatory intent,” which, combined with evidence of the plan’s execution, “may well stand for itself and obviate any need of further analysis.” Nevertheless, the dissent reviewed in detail the record relevant to each of the jurors excluded by Plaintiffs. In addition to Plaintiffs’ stated “discriminatory goal,” the dissent found “misstatements of the record” and “pretextual reasons about which [Plaintiffs] did not ask questions.” According to the dissent, “the only possible conclusion” is that Plaintiffs “intended to strike non-black men from the jury in violation of Batson” and its progeny.

NURSING HOME POLICIES AND PROCEDURES NOT SUBJECT TO CHAPTER 74 DISCOVERY STAY

In re: Kenneth Smith
Dallas Court of Appeals, No. 05-20-00497-CV (August 12, 2020)
Justices Burns, Pedersen (Opinion available here), and Carlyle
Kenneth Smith sued the nursing home where his wife had stayed during the months before her death, alleging the facility failed to provide adequate care and supervision to prevent his wife from suffering several falls during her stay. Under Chapter 74, discovery in a health care liability claim is stayed until an expert report has been filed, except for “information, including medical or hospital records or other documents or tangible things, related to the patient’s health care.” Relying on that discovery stay, the trial court denied a motion to compel that sought to require the nursing home to produce several policies and procedures that are statutorily required to be kept and made available to patients and their families.

The Dallas Court of Appeals conditionally granted mandamus, concluding the trial court abused its discretion in denying discovery of the requested policies. Texas courts have reached different conclusions about whether policies and procedures fall within the exception to the Chapter 74 discovery stay. But the Court noted in this case that the requested policies (1) were required by statute to be publicly available; and (2) were “related to the patient’s health care.” “As there is no dispute that relator’s claims—alleging inadequate supervision and services to meet a nursing home resident’s health care needs and protect her from harm—are health care claims, it logically follows that “training and staffing policies” are “integral components of [the nursing home’s] rendition of health care services.” In particular, the requested policies and procedures were “relevant to assessing the standard of care that should have been given to Mrs. Smith,” and Mr. Smith and his expert should have had access to those documents before having to produce their expert report.

The Court also found that Mr. Smith had no adequate remedy by appeal because, without the requested documents, he would be severely hampered in his ability to file an adequate expert report, which could result in his claims being dismissed. Although he would be able to appeal from the grant of a motion to dismiss, the Court would be limited in its ability to cure the error because it would only be able to remand for the trial court to consider whether to grant a thirty-day extension to file an adequate report. The Court therefore vacated the trial court’s order and directed it to issue an order granting discovery of the requested documents.

DALLAS COURT OF APPEALS CONTINUES TO REIN IN THE TCPA’S APPLICABILITY TO BUSINESS DISPUTES

Palladium Metal Recycling, LLC v. 5G Metals, Inc.
Dallas Court of Appeals, No. 05-19-00482-CV (July 28, 2020)
Justices Bridges, Molberg (Opinion, linked here), and Partida-Kipness

Woods Capital Enterprises, LLC v. DXC Technology Services, LLC
Dallas Court of Appeals, No. 05-19-00380-CV (July 29, 2020)
Justices Pedersen, III, Reichek (Opinion, linked here), and Carlyle (Concurrence, linked here)
In a pair of opinions this week, the Dallas Court of Appeals continued its trend of holding the TCPA inapplicable to many private business disputes. Palladium arose from a disagreement regarding a joint venture to acquire and re-sell scrap metals. Woods Capital grew out of a failed agreement for the sale of a large tract of commercial real estate. In each case, the Court of Appeals held the TCPA’s free-speech and right-of-association protections did not apply to communications and conduct focused on the business dealings of the parties involved. In each case, the Court referenced the stated purpose of the TCPA to protect “public participation” and drew upon the Supreme Court’s decision last year in Creative Oil & Gas, LLC v. Lona Hills Ranch, LLC, 591 S.W.3d 127 (Tex. 2019). A sampling of the Court’s observations in the two cases:

• “The TCPA’s purpose of curbing strategic lawsuits against public participation is not furthered by a construction finding a right of association based simply on communications between parties with a shared interest in a private business transaction.”

• Rejecting a TCPA free-speech attack, the Court held the allegations targeted by the motion “lack any communications regarding matters of public concern as opposed to private pecuniary interests and thus do not implicate the TCPA’s protection of Palladium’s exercise of the right of free speech.”

• Acknowledging that the TCPA defines “matters of public concern”—the linchpin of TCPA free-speech protection—to include “issues related to health or safety; environmental, economic, or community well-being; the government; a public official or public figure; or a good, product, or service in the marketplace,” the Court cautioned that “not every communication related to one of the broad categories set out in [the statute] always regards a matter of public concern.” Because the record was “devoid of allegations or evidence that the dispute had any relevance beyond the pecuniary interests of the private parties involved,” the Court refused to find TCPA free-speech protections applicable.

• “This Court has consistently held that to constitute an exercise of the right of association under the TCPA, the nature of the communication between individuals who join together must involve public or citizen participation.”

Beyond its pronouncements on the applicability of the TCPA to business disputes, each decision also included an additional holding to which litigants should be alert. In Palladium, the Court held the TCPA movant had waived its objections to the non-movants’ evidence because it had not obtained a ruling on those objections and had not objected to the trial court’s failure to rule.

In Woods Capital, the Court ruled that the movant had “forfeited its [TCPA] motion” by failing to schedule a hearing within the period prescribed by statute. The TCPA allows the parties to delay a hearing by agreement for up to 90 days after service of the motion. A hearing may be delayed up to 120 days only if the court, upon a showing of good cause, “allows” limited discovery related to the TCPA motion. Reaffirming its ruling earlier this summer in Walker v. Pegasus Eventing, LLC, the Court held that the parties’ agreement to conduct discovery and the court’s acquiescence does not equate to “allowance” by the court that triggers the extra 30 days. Consequently, failure to schedule a hearing within the 90-day period, without court “allowance” of discovery, resulted in forfeiture of the motion.

DOCTORS’ DISPUTE IS NOT A “HEALTH CARE LIABILITY CLAIM”

Baylor Scott & White Health v. Roughneen
Dallas Court of Appeals, No. 05-18-00966-CV (June 9, 2020)
Justices Whitehill, Schenck, and Pedersen, III (Opinion, available here)
Doctors Conferring
Not all claims involving doctors and hospitals are health care liability claims subject to the procedural protections of TEX. CIV. PRAC. & REM. CODE Chapter 74. Roughneen involves a long-running dispute among various doctors and other health care providers. In 1999, Dr. Roughneen joined a group of physicians practicing cardiology, cardiothoracic surgery, and vascular surgery (CSANT). Dr. Roughneen left CSANT in 2005, and the following year he filed suit against the practice. The litigation ended in a settlement, with the CSANT physicians agreeing that “they would voluntarily recuse themselves from any voting, deliberation and/or decision-making relating to any peer review matters involving [Dr.] Roughneen.” Years later, when the doctors worked together at Heart Hospital and Baylor Grapevine, the CSANT doctors participated in purportedly “sham peer review proceedings” against Roughneen in alleged violation of their settlement agreement. Other disputes followed, resulting in claims and counterclaims for breach of contract, tortious interference, improper restraint of trade, and other causes of action. The CSANT parties filed a motion to dismiss under Chapter 74, arguing that Roughneen’s claims were health care liability claims and that he had failed to timely serve an expert report as required by the statute.

The trial court and the Dallas Court of Appeals both held that the claims were not health care liability claims under the statute and so the expert report requirement did not apply. The CSANT parties argued that all of Roughneen’s claims arose out of the peer review process and that “credentialing activities are an inseparable part of the medical services” a patient receives. The Court disagreed, noting that “at their heart, appellees’ complaints do not relate to how any patient was treated, but to how Dr. Roughneen was treated in the business of practicing medicine.” The Court distinguished a prior opinion holding that a claim that a faulty peer review process caused harm to a patient is a covered health care liability claim. In contrast, Dr. Roughneen’s causes of action did not involve any specific patient-physician relationship and were not rooted in the care and treatment of any patient. When claims against a health care provider “do not directly relate to any patient’s medical care, treatment, or confinement,” those claims are not health care liability claims. The motion to dismiss was, therefore, appropriately denied. 

RECEIVER ENTITLED TO “DERIVED JUDICIAL IMMUNITY”

Manning v. Jones
Dallas Court of Appeals, No. 05-18-01140-CV (December 4, 2019)
Justices Pedersen III (Opinion, linked here), Reichek, and Carlyle
Jones was appointed as Receiver in a divorce case, to take charge of, maintain, and sell a building that was part of the marital estate. When Jones ended up selling the building for far less than had been hoped, Manning, one of the divorcing parties, sued Jones for her supposed failures in managing and selling the property. The trial court, however, granted summary judgment to Jones based on “derived judicial immunity,” and the court of appeals affirmed.

Judges enjoy absolute immunity for “all judicial acts unless such acts fall clearly outside the judge’s subject-matter jurisdiction.” When a judge delegates his or her authority or appoints someone to perform services for the court, that person may have “derived judicial immunity” for performing those delegated responsibilities. A “person entitled to derived judicial immunity receives the same absolute immunity from liability as a judge acting in his or her official judicial capacity.”

Texas uses a “functional approach” to decide whether a party is entitled to derived judicial immunity. One may claim such immunity if he or she carried out duties “intimately associated with the judicial process” and “exercised discretionary judgment comparable to a judge, as opposed to ministerial or administrative tasks.” Such immunity has been extended to trustees and receivers, among others.

The acts and omissions of which Manning complained were clearly the product of discretionary judgments by Jones on matters delegated to her by the court. So, just as the NFL’s all-time leading receiver Jerry Rice (above) seemed immune from defenders seeking to hold him in check, so also was Jones immune from Manning’s attempts to hold her accountable for her actions as Receiver here.

CITY EMPLOYEE CAN’T SUE RISK POOL FOR DENYING CANCER TREATMENT

Stegall v. TML Multistate Intergovernmental Employee Benefits Risk Pool, Inc.
Dallas Court of Appeals, No. 05-18-00239-CV (October 2, 2019)
Justices Whitehill, Pedersen (Opinion linked here), and Partida-Kipness (Dissent linked here)
The Dallas Court of Appeals, in a 2-1 decision, held a municipal risk pool providing health benefits for city employees cannot be sued for wrongfully denying medical treatment.

Joe Stegall was the CFO for Royse City, and participated in the city’s medical-benefits plan provided through the TML Risk Pool. When Mr. Stegall was diagnosed with liver cancer, TML refused to authorize the use of a specific drug prescribed by his oncologist, and threatened to terminate coverage entirely if he used the drug without its authorization. Although TML later reversed its position, Mr. Stegall died several weeks later. His widow sued TML for “wrongful denial of medical benefits and additional acts of interference with the decedent’s access to prescribed chemotherapy.” TML filed a plea to the jurisdiction asserting governmental immunity from suit, which the trial court granted, dismissing the case. The Dallas Court of Appeals affirmed.

Writing for the Court, Justice Pedersen described the case as “an emotional and tragic scenario,” but held Texas law granted TML immunity from suit. The Court first determined TML was a distinct governmental entity, “an intergovernmental self-insurance risk pool that operates under the Interlocal Cooperation Act,” Government Code chapter 791. It then rejected the argument that TML’s “claims-adjusting” involved “proprietary,” not “governmental” functions, which would have meant immunity did not attach. Municipalities are immune from suit when exercising their governmental functions, but not when the actions are proprietary, i.e., discretionary actions that can be, and often are, performed by private parties. The Court held, however, the distinction did not apply to TML, which, like other political subdivisions created by the legislature for public purposes, performs only governmental functions.

In dissent, Justice Partida-Kipness argued the governmental-proprietary distinction applied to TML, and that although creating and participating in the risk pool was a governmental function, claims adjusting and coverage decisions were proprietary functions not subject to immunity. She criticized the majority opinion as reaching “an absurd result—the removal of logic and humanity from application of the law.”

COURT CAN’T PUT OFF HOLDING HEARING ON TCPA MOTION

In re Herbert
Dallas Court of Appeals, No. 05-19-01126-CV (September 19, 2019)
Justices Whitehill (Opinion available here), Partida-Kipness, and Pedersen, III
The Dallas Court of Appeals granted mandamus relief and ordered the trial court to conduct a hearing on the movant’s TCPA motion to dismiss by the statutory deadline—a deadline that expires the day after the appellate court’s decision. The Relator, Aaron Herbert, filed a TCPA motion to dismiss counterclaims brought against him for defamation and invasion of privacy. Although he tried several times to get the trial court to schedule a hearing on the motion before the 60-day deadline (August 21) or to acknowledge the crowded docket conditions and schedule a hearing within 90 days (September 20), the court would not do so. The trial court’s staff informed him that (1) the court wanted the parties to mediate before conducting a hearing; (2) the court only heard dispositive motions on Fridays; and (3) the earliest hearing date available was October 18.

Herbert sought mandamus relief, which the Dallas Court granted. It held that, although trial courts generally have the discretion to schedule hearings within a “reasonable time,” the trial court must set a TCPA motion to dismiss for hearing within the applicable statutory deadline if the movant makes reasonable efforts to obtain a timely hearing. If the movant does not receive a timely hearing, he is deprived of his rights under the TCPA. And because a failure to hold a hearing is not subject to interlocutory appeal, the movant lacks an adequate remedy on appeal. So on September 19, the Court ordered the trial court to conduct a hearing on the TCPA motion “no later than September 20.”

LIMITATIONS: NO STANDING ON INDIVIDUAL CLAIMS = NO RELATION BACK FOR DERIVATIVE CLAIMS ADDED LATER

Cooke v. Karlseng
Dallas Court of Appeals, No. 05-18-00206-CV (August 14, 2019)
Justices Brown, Schenck, and Pedersen, III (Opinion, linked here)
In this looooong-running business dispute with a tangled and protracted procedural history, Cooke sued his ex-partners for alleged wrongs that occurred in 2005 and 2006. Originally, he asserted his claims individually, back in 2006. But the Dallas Court of Appeals concluded those claims were predicated on alleged injuries to the partnerships, rather than to Cooke directly (even though the value of his partnership interests may have been diminished in the process). Therefore, he lacked standing to bring those claims individually. But, Cooke argued, he surely had the right to assert the claims derivatively, and Tex. Bus. Org. Code § 21.563(c)(1) authorizes a court to treat a derivative claim “as a direct action” in certain circumstances. So, no problem, right? Wrong, said the Dallas Court. “Section 21.563 does not turn a derivative claim into an individual claim.” It just allows a court to treat a derivative claim like a direct claim in certain procedural respects, where appropriate. And here, even if Cooke could have brought his claims derivatively at the outset, “the fact remains he did not,” and he lacked standing to bring them as he did.

One door closed, Cooke tried another. In an amended petition he recharacterized all his claims as asserted both individually and derivatively on behalf of the partnerships. But he waited until 2014 to do that. When his ex-partners argued the newly asserted derivative claims were barred by limitations, Cooke contended (1) the derivative claims clearly arose from the same facts as the substantially identical claims he had asserted on an individual basis back in 2006, and (2) the derivative claims therefore “related back” to that original filing under Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code § 16.068. Wrong again, the Court concluded. Remember, Cooke lacked standing to pursue those claims as originally filed. “For that reason, the trial court never obtained jurisdiction over his [original] claims.” Consequently, there was nothing to which the amended, derivative claims could relate back. And so they were barred by limitations.

DEC ACTION: IS A HARASSING DEFENDANT A JUDICIABLE CONTROVERSY?

Gutman v. Richard Wayne Wells and Real Estate Arbitrage Partners, Inc.
Dallas Court of Appeals, No. 05-18-01227-CV (August 5, 2019)
Justices Whitehill (Opinion, linked here), Partida-Kipness (Dissent, linked here), and Pedersen
In a split panel decision, the Dallas Court of Appeals held that a “petition alleging that a defendant has repeatedly harassed and threatened the plaintiff because he refuses to accede to the defendant’s unlawful demands presents” a judiciable controversy under the Declaratory Judgments Act.

The Court considered this issue in an appeal of the trial court’s dismissal under Rule 91a. In previous lengthy litigation, Greg Gutman had obtained a judgment against one defendant, Real Estate Arbitrage Partners, LLC (“Arbitrage”) but not against the other defendant, Richard Wayne Wells. After the judgment was affirmed, Arbitrage paid the judgment, and Gutman delivered to Arbitrage a fully executed release of judgment. But Defendants wanted more. According to the petition, they repeatedly demanded an executed release of judgment against Wells, and harassed and threatened Gutman for his refusal to do so.

The majority held there was a real and substantial dispute under the Declaratory Judgments Act: “This sets out a controversy—whether Gutman must provide the requested release—that is real and not hypothetical.” And a declaratory judgment resolving that issue “will serve a useful purpose of terminating the parties’ controversy and ending the harassment and threats.” The dismissal was therefore reversed.

Justice Partida-Kipness dissented. Gutman did not seek construction of a contract or any other written instrument. Justice Partida-Kipness construed Gutman’s petition as asserting a claim for civil harassment, which sounds in tort, and does not fall within the parameters of the Declaratory Judgments Act. She disagreed “with the majority’s expansion of the statute,” and would have affirmed the trial court’s dismissal.

So, this case is precedent that a dec action can be used to resolve all sorts of disputes, not just those involving contracts, deeds, wills, and other writings.

GOVERNMENTAL IMMUNITY: “A POLICE OFFICER IS ALWAYS A POLICE OFFICER”

CKJ Trucking, L.P. v. City of Honey Grove
Dallas Court of Appeals, No. 05-18-00205-CV (July 23, 2019)
Justices Partida-Kipness (Opinion, linked here), Pedersen, III, and Carlyle
In May, the Supreme Court of Texas confirmed that State statutes “explicitly contemplate[] that peace officers will, in certain circumstances, stop crime wherever it occurs” and “whenever it occurs.” Garza v. Harrison, 574 S.W.3d 389 (Tex. 2019). Because of that, the Court concluded, an off-duty police officer was acting in his official capacity when he fatally shot a suspect during the course of an attempted arrest outside the officer’s primary jurisdiction; the decedent’s parents therefore could sue only the “governmental unit” for which he worked—the City of Navasota—and not the officer, individually. Looking at the other side of that coin, the Dallas Court of Appeals has now applied Garza to deny governmental immunity to another city, Honey Grove, regarding a claim based on the off-duty acts of one of its police officers outside his primary jurisdiction.1

Williamson, a Honey Grove police officer, was driving in or near Trenton, Texas (another Fannin County town) while off duty. In the parking lot of a “liquor store attached to a gun shop,” Williamson observed suspicious activity—including a Trenton police car with its lights activated, blocked in by other cars, with no one in sight. Because he “was concerned that a crime was being committed in the parking lot,” Williamson quickly switched on the red and blue emergency lights on his squad car and made a U-turn to go back and investigate and help the missing Trenton officer, if needed. Unfortunately, his abrupt U-turn led to an accident with other vehicles traveling on that same road. The driver and owner of one of those vehicles sued the City of Honey Grove, arguing the accident was caused by the negligent acts of Williamson while operating a motor vehicle within the scope of his employment—allegations that, if true, were sufficient to bring the claims within a statutory waiver of the city’s governmental immunity under the Texas Tort Claims Act, specifically, TCPRC § 101.021(1)(A). Honey Grove filed a plea to jurisdiction, arguing that Williamson was not acting within the scope of his employment, because he was off duty, was not being paid, was outside his jurisdiction, and had not been acting pursuant to an assignment from or under the supervision of the Honey Grove police department. The trial court granted the plea to jurisdiction and dismissed Honey Grove from the case.

The Dallas Court of Appeals reversed. Applying the freshly minted reasoning of the Supreme Court in Garza, the Court ruled that because Williamson’s actions were “triggered by reasonable suspicions” of criminal activity and potential safety concerns he was bound to address as a peace officer, he was acting within the scope of his employment. Therefore, the allegations against Honey Grove fell within the statutory waiver of governmental immunity.




1 The website of the City of Honey Grove reports how the town supposedly got its name: “According to legend, in 1836 as Davy Crockett was traveling to join the Texas Army at San Antonio, he camped in a grove just west of the present town square, on the bank of Honey Grove Creek. In letters he wrote to Tennessee, he told of the ideal place where he had camped, the ‘honey grove.’ It was so named due to the abundance of honey in the hollow trees.”
Print Friendly and PDF