|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Months:
October 2007, January 2008, April 2008, September 2008, November 2008, December 2008, January 2009, March 2009, September 2009,
October 2009, February 2010, September 2010, October 2010, January 2012, February 2012, September 2012, October 2012, January 2013, November 2013, February 2014, September 2014, October 2014, January 2015, February 2015, October 2015, January 2016, December 2016, March 2017, September 2017, October 2017, November 2017, February 2018, September 2018, December 2018, January 2019, February 2019, December 2019, January 2020, February 2020, September 2020, October 2020, December 2020, January 2021, February 2021, September 2021, October 2021, November 2021, October 2022, January 2023, February 2023, January 2024, October 2024, December 2024
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
SOLAR APPLICATIONS, INC. V. T. A. OPERATING ENG'G CORP. (06-0243) - view video
10/16/2007 @ 10:40 AM (length 44:53)
Originating county: Bexar County
Originating from: 4th District Court of Appeals, San Antonio
Case Documents
06-0243 Solar Applications Engineering Inc. v. T.A. Operating Corp. from Bexar County and the Fourth District Court of Appeals, San Antonio For petitioner: Douglas W. Alexander, Austin For respondent: Sharon E. Callaway, San Antonio The Supreme Court will hear arguments on the issue of whether lien-release provision before final payment in construction contract is condition precedent to suit over the contract. The issue is whether a construction-contract provision that required the contractor and subcontractors to release liens before final payment constitutes a condition that must be satisfied before a suing over a contract breach. Solar sued T.A. for breach after T.A. terminated the contract under which Solar was building T.A.'s truck stop in San Antonio in its last stages before final payment. T.A. responded to Solar's suit by arguing that Solar could not sue it for breach before releasing liens. Solar contends that its contract with T.A. required lien releases before final payment, but that provision could not be a condition precedent to a breach-of-contract suit because, in essence, liens were assurance that Solar would be paid. Even if the lien release was a condition precedent, Solar argues, it was not triggered because T.A. terminated the contract. A jury found for Solar. The court of appeals initially affirmed, then reversed and rendered judgment against Solar on rehearing. Note: Justice Green not sitting.
|
|
|
TRAMMELL CROW CENT. TEX., LTD. V. GUTIERREZ (07-0091) - view video
1/17/2008 @ 10:40 AM (length 46:43)
Originating county: Bexar County
Originating from: 4th District Court of Appeals, San Antonio
Case Documents
07-0091 Trammell Crow Central Texas Ltd. v. Maria Gutierrez, et al. from Bexar County and the Fourth District Court of Appeals, San Antonio For petitioner: W. Wendell Hall, San Antonio For respondents: Joe Stephens, Katy The Supreme Court will hear arguments on the issues are (1) whether past crimes were similar enough to make a crime foreseeable, triggering a duty to protect an invitee and (2) whether legally sufficient evidence supported the conclusion that breach of the duty proximately caused the invitee's injuries. In this case Gutierrez's husband was killed in an attack in shopping center parking lot outside a theater he and his wife had left. Trammel Crow's trial evidence suggested Gutierrez may have been targeted for a "hit" because, after his arrest for burglary, Gutierrez turned information on other suspects and told police he feared a drive-by shooting as retaliation. But Gutierrez's wife presented evidence that he was not afraid of an attack; that his wallet was stolen in the attack and his gold bracelet was broken (indicating a robbery by strangers); and that 10 robberies occurred on the premises among 220 crimes reported there in the previous two years. Her evidence indicated five of those robberies involved deadly weapons. Jurors awarded her a multi-million dollar verdict. The court of appeals affirmed, finding jurors could have determined the attack was a robbery by strangers, not a targeted killing, and was foreseeable.
|
|
|
IN RE HAROLD R. SCHMITZ (07-0581) - view video
4/2/2008 @ 9:50 AM (length 32:11)
Originating county: Bexar County
Originating from: 4th District Court of Appeals, San Antonio
Case Documents
(Chief Justice Jefferson not sitting) 07-0581 In re Harold R. Schmitz, et al. from Bexar County and the Fourth District Court of Appeals, San Antonio For relators: Debra J. McComas, Dallas For real party in interest: Kevin K. Green, San Diego The Supreme Court will hear arguments of whether a lawyer's letter challenging a proposed merger was sufficient as a pre-suit demand before a derivative-shareholder lawsuit. Principal issues are (1) whether a letter objecting to a merger agreement constituted a proper demand letter required to file a shareholder-derivative suit under Texas law; (2) whether irreparable injury was established that justified waiver of the 90-day waiting period before suit; and (3) whether an adequate remedy by appeal existed. In this case a shareholder sued Lancer Corp. board members after the board accepted a merger offer valued at $1 a share less than another offer, citing what the board considered to be more favorable sales conditions. Two months after the proposed merger's announcement, an attorney faxed the company a letter attacking the merger. Three days later a shareholder sued to stop the merger and to declare board members breached their fiduciary duties by selling at an alleged inadequate and unfair price. Lancer shareholders later approved the merger. Board members then moved to dismiss the suit, arguing that Dillingham, the shareholder who challenged the merger, had not satisfied a statutory requirement under the Texas Business and Corporation Act article 5.14 to present her demands before filing her suit. The trial court denied the dismissal motion. On a petition for mandamus relief, to order the trial court to dismiss, the court of appeals rejected the petition.
|
|
|
IN RE LABATT FOOD SERVICE, L.P. (07-0419) - view video
9/9/2008 @ 10:40 AM (length 41:26)
Originating county: Bexar County
Originating from: 4th District Court of Appeals, San Antonio
Case Documents
07-0419 In re Labatt Food Service L.P. from Bexar County and the Fourth District Court of Appeals, San Antonio For relator: Nissa Dunn, San Antonio For real party in interest: Leo D. Figueroa, San Antonio The Supreme Court will hear arguments on (1) whether a pre-death arbitration agreement binds a person's wrongful-death beneficiaries and (2) whether the prohibition of pre-injury waivers of personal-injury or death claims under Texas Labor Code section 406.033(e) defeats the decedent's arbitration agreement. Principal issues are (1) whether an agreement to arbitrate occupational injury or death claims binds a person's wrongful-death beneficiaries and (2) whether the arbitration agreement is barred by the statutory prohibition of personal-injury or death-claim waivers under Texas Labor Code section 406.033(e). In this case the trial court refused to compel arbitration of wrongful death and survivors' claims after a Labatt employee died in a work accident. The court of appeals denied the company's mandamus petition. The first argument begins at 9 a.m. in the courtroom in Austin. Each side will have 20 minutes for argument. This advisory serves only as an abbreviated guide to oral argument. Summaries are prepared by the Court's staff attorney for public information and reflect his judgment alone on facts and legal issues and in no way represent the Court's opinion about case merits. Texas Supreme Court advisory Contact: Osler McCarthy, Staff Attorney for Public Information (512) 463.1441 or email: osler.mccarthy@courts.state.tx.us
|
|
|
JOHN CHRISTOPHER FRANKA, M.D. AND NAGAKRISHNA REDDY, M.D. V. VELASQUEZ (07-0131) - view video
9/10/2008 @ 9:50 AM (length 45:05)
Originating county: Bexar County
Originating from: 4th District Court of Appeals, San Antonio
Case Documents
07-0131 John Christopher Franka, M.D., et al. v. Stacey Velasquez and Saragosa Alaniz from Bexar County and the Fourth District Court of Appeals, San Antonio For petitioners: Thomas H. Crofts Jr., San Antonio For respondents: Gene Hagood, Alvin The Supreme Court will hear arguments in this medical-malpractice case against two doctors at the University of Texas Health Science Center in San Antonio, the issue is whether they should be dismissed from the suit because it "could have been brought" against the Health Sciences Center. The issue in this medical-malpractice case against two doctors at the University of Texas Health Science Center in San Antonio is whether they should be dismissed from the suit because it "could have been brought" against the Health Sciences Center. Both doctors, one a professor and the other a resident, moved for summary judgment under Texas Civil Practices & Remedies Code section 101.106(f). That section provides that a suit against a government employee over conduct within the scope of the employee's work shall be dismissed if not amended to name, in this case, the UT Health Sciences Center instead. The trial court denied the summary-judgment motion and the court of appeals affirmed. The first argument begins at 9 a.m. in the courtroom in Austin. Each side will have 20 minutes for argument. This advisory serves only as an abbreviated guide to oral argument. Summaries are prepared by the Court's staff attorney for public information and reflect his judgment alone on facts and legal issues and in no way represent the Court's opinion about case merits. Texas Supreme Court advisory Contact: Osler McCarthy, Staff Attorney for Public Information (512) 463.1441 or email: osler.mccarthy@courts.state.tx.us
|
|
|
RETAMCO OPERATING, INC. V. REPUBLIC DRILLING CO. (07-0599) - view video
9/11/2008 @ 9:00 AM (length 47:05)
Originating county: Bexar County
Originating from: 4th District Court of Appeals, San Antonio
Case Documents
07-0599 Retamco Operating Inc. v. Republic Drilling Co. from Bexar County and the Fourth District Court of Appeals, San Antonio For petitioner: James L. Drought, San Antonio For respondent: Douglas W. Alexander, Austin The Supreme Court will hear arguments on whether Texas has personal jurisdiction over Republic, a California company that acquired passive, non-operating mineral interests with a liability assumption for a pro rate share of operating and well-abandonment expenses. The issue arising from this fraud and contract action over royalties is whether Texas has personal jurisdiction over Republic, a California company that acquired passive, non-operating mineral interests with a liability assumption for a pro rate share of operating and well-abandonment expenses. Republic got the mineral interests from Paradigm Oil in transactions in California and Colorado while Retamco's fraud and breach-of-contrast suit was pending. Paradigm later declared bankruptcy. The trial court denied Republic's special appearance to challenge personal jurisdiction, but the appeals court reversed. The first argument begins at 9 a.m. in the courtroom in Austin. Each side will have 20 minutes for argument. This advisory serves only as an abbreviated guide to oral argument. Summaries are prepared by the Court's staff attorney for public information and reflect his judgment alone on facts and legal issues and in no way represent the Court's opinion about case merits. Texas Supreme Court advisory Contact: Osler McCarthy, Staff Attorney for Public Information (512) 463.1441 or email: osler.mccarthy@courts.state.tx.us
|
|
|
SPECTRUM HEALTHCARE RESOURCES, INC. V. MCDANIEL (07-0787) - view video
9/11/2008 @ 10:40 AM (length 42:55)
Originating county: Bexar County
Originating from: 4th District Court of Appeals, San Antonio
Case Documents
07-0787 Spectrum Healthcare Resources Inc. and Michael Sims v. Janice and Patrick McDaniel from Bexar County and the Fourth District Court of Appeals, San Antonio For petitioners: Richard C. Harrist and Robert R. Biechlin, San Antonio For respondents: Jeffrey C. Anderson, San Antonio The Supreme Court will hear arguments in this health-care liability case involving an agreed docket-control order that established a time line for an expert report. The issue is whether that order extends the 120-day statutory deadline for an expert report. The trial court dismissed the complaint for failure to submit the report, but a divided court of appeals reversed en banc. In this health-care liability case involving an agreed docket-control order that established a time line for an expert report, the issue is whether that order extends the 120-day statutory deadline for an expert report. The McDaniels sued after Janice McDaniel fell during physical therapy. Less than two months after the suit was filed, the parties agreed to a schedule for designating expert witnesses and their reports outside the statutory limits and stipulating that the agreed order would take precedence over deadlines set by rule or statute. The trial court dismissed the complaint for failure to submit the report, but a divided court of appeals reversed en banc. The first argument begins at 9 a.m. in the courtroom in Austin. Each side will have 20 minutes for argument. This advisory serves only as an abbreviated guide to oral argument. Summaries are prepared by the Court's staff attorney for public information and reflect his judgment alone on facts and legal issues and in no way represent the Court's opinion about case merits. Texas Supreme Court advisory Contact: Osler McCarthy, Staff Attorney for Public Information (512) 463.1441 or email: osler.mccarthy@courts.state.tx.us
|
|
|
IN RE JAMES ALLEN HALL (07-0322) - view video
11/12/2008 @ 9:50 AM (length 40:53)
Originating county: Bexar County
Originating from: 4th District Court of Appeals, San Antonio
Case Documents
07-0322 In re James Allen Hall from Bexar County and the Fourth District Court of Appeals, San Antonio For relator: Tim Patton, San Antonio For real party in interest: Kevin Patrick Yeary, San Antonio The principal issue is whether an adult held over from juvenile-delinquency confinement on a 40-year determinate sentence has a right to an attorney for a habeas corpus action. The first argument begins at 9 a.m. in the courtroom in Austin. Each side will have 20 minutes for argument. This advisory serves only as an abbreviated guide to oral argument. Summaries are prepared by the Court's staff attorney for public information and reflect his judgment alone on facts and legal issues and in no way represent the Court's opinion about case merits. Texas Supreme Court advisory Contact: Osler McCarthy, Staff Attorney for Public Information (512) 463.1441 or email: osler.mccarthy@courts.state.tx.us
|
|
|
IN RE UNITED SERVICES AUTOMOBILE ASSOCIATION (07-0871) - view video
12/9/2008 @ 10:40 AM (length 45:06)
Originating county: Bexar County
Originating from: 4th District Court of Appeals, San Antonio
Case Documents
07-0871 In re United Services Automobile Association from Bexar County and the Fourth District Court of Appeals, San Antonio For relator: Pamela Stanton Baron, Austin For real party in interest: Jeff Small, San Antonio In this age-discrimination suit, the principal issue after a question of proper mandamus jurisdiction is whether the plaintiff filed his action in district court too late. The mandamus proceeding questions whether the limitations period under Texas Labor Code chapter 21 remains mandatory and jurisdictional after Dubai Petroleum Co. v. Kazi, 12 S.W.3d 71 (Tex. 2000). Also at issue is whether the time periods in Chapter 21 are subject to tolling under Texas Civil Practices & Remedies Code section 16.064. This suit was the second by the complainant. His first, filed in county court at law, was reversed on appeal because the county court did not have jurisdiction. Five years after the initial complaint, he filed in district court. The trial court in the second suit denied USAA's jurisdictional plea. The court of appeals denied the company's mandamus petition, concluding USAA had an adequate remedy by appeal. The first argument begins at 9 a.m. in the courtroom in Austin. Each side will have 20 minutes for argument. This advisory serves only as an abbreviated guide to oral argument. Summaries are prepared by the Court's staff attorney for public information and reflect his judgment alone on facts and legal issues and in no way represent the Court's opinion about case merits. Texas Supreme Court advisory Contact: Osler McCarthy, Staff Attorney for Public Information (512) 463.1441 or email: osler.mccarthy@courts.state.tx.us
|
|
|
GILBRAITH ENGINEERING CONSULTANTS, INC. V. POCHUCHA (07-1051) - view video
12/11/2008 @ 10:40 AM (length 41:31)
Originating county: Bexar County
Originating from: 4th District Court of Appeals, San Antonio
Case Documents
07-1051 Galbraith Engineering Consultants Inc. v. Sam Pochucha and Jean Pochucha from Bexar County and the Fourth District Court of Appeals, San Antonio For petitioner: Stephen E. Walraven, San Antonio For respondents: Robert W. Loree, San Antonio The issue is whether a 10-year repose statute barring a lawsuit against an engineer prohibits joining an engineer as a responsible third party under another statute that allows joinder despite expiration of a statute of limitations. The Pochuchas sued the contractor who built the house, then joined him as a defendant after the contractor designated him as a responsible third party. The trial court granted Galbraith summary judgment because he had not been sued within10 years. The court of appeals reversed, holding that joinder was permitted even after limitations expired. The first argument begins at 9 a.m. in the courtroom in Austin. Each side will have 20 minutes for argument. This advisory serves only as an abbreviated guide to oral argument. Summaries are prepared by the Court's staff attorney for public information and reflect his judgment alone on facts and legal issues and in no way represent the Court's opinion about case merits. Texas Supreme Court advisory Contact: Osler McCarthy, Staff Attorney for Public Information (512) 463.1441 or email: osler.mccarthy@courts.state.tx.us
|
|
|
HAGEN V. HAGEN (07-1065) - view video
1/14/2009 @ 9:50 AM (length 37:27)
Originating county: Bexar County
Originating from: 4th District Court of Appeals, San Antonio
Case Documents
07-1065 Raoul Hagen v. Doris J. Hagen from Bexar County and the Fourth District Court of Appeals, San Antonio For petitioner: Ryan G. Anderson, San Antonio For respondent: Gary A. Beahm, San Antonio The issue is whether an action to determine if a 1976 divorce decree award of "Army Retirement Pay or Military Retirement Pay" includes disability benefits is a collateral attack barred by res judicata. When the Hagens divorced in 1976, Doris Hagen got rights to almost half of Raoul Hagen's military retirement pay. Then, after the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs determined in 2003 he was 40 percent disabled, Raoul Hagen elected to draw 40 percent of his retirement pay as disability benefits, which under federal law cannot be divided as property. As a result, Raoul began paying his ex-wife her percentage share of the 60 percent he got in military retirement. When Doris sued, the trial court determined the divorce decree did not require him to split his disability payments. The court of appeals reversed, holding that Raoul's retroactive advantage of the federal Uniformed Services Former Spouses' Protection Act's exclusion of disability pay was barred because it was a matter a court already decided. The first argument begins at 9 a.m. in the courtroom in Austin. Each side will have 20 minutes for argument. This advisory serves only as an abbreviated guide to oral argument. Summaries are prepared by the Court's staff attorney for public information and reflect his judgment alone on facts and legal issues and in no way represent the Court's opinion about case merits. Texas Supreme Court advisory Contact: Osler McCarthy, Staff Attorney for Public Information (512) 463.1441 or email: osler.mccarthy@courts.state.tx.us
|
|
|
AMERICAN GENERAL FINANCE, INC. V. ALLEN (08-0110) - view video
3/31/2009 @ 9:00 AM (length 47:02)
Originating county: Bexar County
Originating from: 4th District Court of Appeals, San Antonio
Case Documents
08-0110 American General Finance Inc. v. Kyle Allen from Bexar County and the Fourth District Court of Appeals, Corpus Christi/Edinburg For petitioner: Richard C. Danysh, San Antonio For respondent: Thomas H. Crofts Jr., San Antonio A principal issue is whether a borrower qualifies as a consumer under the Deceptive Trade Practices Act when the lender promised escrow services in addition to the loan. In this case Allen sued American General Finance on a counterclaim after foreclosure of a house he owned on which the company made a home-equity loan and promised to pay outstanding taxes. Before this suit, Allen won excess proceeds from the house sale, which American General Finance then tried to get by imposing a constructive trust. Allen counterclaimed in that the company violated the Deceptive Trade Practices Act. On that claim the trial court granted summary judgment against Allen. The court of appeals reversed. The first argument begins at 9 a.m. in the courtroom in Austin. Each side will have 20 minutes for argument. This advisory serves only as an abbreviated guide to oral argument. Summaries are prepared by the Court's staff attorney for public information and reflect his judgment alone on facts and legal issues and in no way represent the Court's opinion about case merits. Texas Supreme Court advisory Contact: Osler McCarthy, Staff Attorney for Public Information (512) 463.1441 or email: osler.mccarthy@courts.state.tx.us
|
|
|
METHODIST HEALTHCARE SSYTEM OF SAN ANTONIO, LTD., L.L.P. V. RANKIN (08-0316) - view video
9/9/2009 @ 10:40 AM (length 45:10)
Originating county: Bexar County
Originating from: 4th District Court of Appeals, San Antonio
Case Documents
08-0316 Methodist Healthcare System of San Antonio Ltd., L.L.P. v. Emmalene Rankin from Bexar County and the Fourth District Court of Appeals, San Antonio For petitioners: Carl Robin Teague and Rosemarie Kanusky, San Antonio For respondent: R. Brent Cooper, Dallas The principal issue is whether the 10-year statute of repose on medical-malpractice claims violates the Texas Constitution's open-courts provision when Rankin discovered a sponge had been left i her abdomen almost 11 years after surgery. In the trial court the defendants got summary judgment, based on the statute of repose. But the court of appeals declared the repose unconstitutional, reasoning that the statute deprived Rankin of her right to compensation before she had a reasonable opportunity to discover the injury. The first argument begins at 9 a.m. in the courtroom in Austin. Each side will have 20 minutes for argument. This advisory serves only as an abbreviated guide to oral argument. Summaries are prepared by the Court's staff attorney for public information and reflect his judgment alone on facts and legal issues and in no way represent the Court's opinion about case merits. Texas Supreme Court advisory Contact: Osler McCarthy, Staff Attorney for Public Information (512) 463.1441 or email: osler.mccarthy@courts.state.tx.us
|
|
|
THE UNIV. OF TX HEALTH SCIENCE CENTER AT SAN ANTONIO V. BAILEY (08-0419) - view video
10/7/2009 @ 9:00 AM (length 44:07)
Originating county: Bexar County
Originating from: 4th District Court of Appeals, San Antonio
Case Documents
08-0419 University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio v. Kia Bailey and Larry Bailey from Bexar County and the Fourth District Court of Appeals, San Antonio For petitioner: Michael P. Murphy, Austin For respondents: Steven E. Aldous, Dallas The issue is whether an amended medical-malpractice petition naming a state medical-school hospital relates back to the original filed against a doctor, a hospital employee, who successfully moved for substitution or dismissal after limitations had run. In this case the Baileys sued the doctor for malpractice in his individual capacity. More than a year after they filed the suit, and several months after the two-year limitation on filing suit, the doctor moved for dismissal under a Texas Tort Claims Act provision. That provision - section 101.106(f) - considers a public employee sued for job-related conduct to be acting in his official capacity and allows him to be dismissed from the suit and the governmental entity substituted instead. Section 101.106(f) does not mention the common-law relation-back doctrine. The trial court dismissed the suit, but the court of appeals reversed. The first argument begins at 9 a.m. in the courtroom in Austin. Each side will have 20 minutes for argument. This advisory serves only as an abbreviated guide to oral argument. Summaries are prepared by the Court's staff attorney for public information and reflect his judgment alone on facts and legal issues and in no way represent the Court's opinion about case merits. Texas Supreme Court advisory Contact: Osler McCarthy, Staff Attorney for Public Information (512) 463.1441 or email: osler.mccarthy@courts.state.tx.us
|
|
|
JEFFERSON STATE BANK V. LENK (09-0269) - view video
2/16/2010 @ 9:50 AM (length 42:44)
Originating county: Bexar County
Originating from: 4th District Court of Appeals, San Antonio
Case Documents
09-0269 Jefferson State Bank v. Christina C. Lenk from Bexar County and the Fourth District Court of Appeals, San Antonio For petitioner: Ellen B. Mitchell, San Antonio For respondent: S. Mark Murray, San Antonio Principal issues in this case involving estate funds paid to an imposter administrator are (1) whether a bank can rely under the Probate Code on fraudulent administration letters to give the imposter administrator access to the decedent's account without liability and (2) whether the bank's making bank statements available started time running to bar any action on an unauthorized transaction. In this case an administrator for two estates sued for money a onetime Bexar County probate clerk took from the estates using fraudulent letters of administration. The bank argues that the letters were "facially valid" and protected it from liability and bank statements were given by a receiver to the court-appointed administrator more than a year before she demanded payment from the bank. The bank contends that her payment demand was beyond the Uniform Commercial Code's one-year repose period. The trial court granted summary judgment for the bank. The court of appeals reversed. The first argument begins at 9 a.m. in the courtroom in Austin. Each side will have 20 minutes for argument. This advisory serves only as an abbreviated guide to oral argument. Summaries are prepared by the Court's staff attorney for public information and reflect his judgment alone on facts and legal issues and in no way represent the Court's opinion about case merits. Texas Supreme Court advisory Contact: Osler McCarthy, Staff Attorney for Public Information (512) 463.1441 or email: osler.mccarthy@courts.state.tx.us
|
|
|
IN RE JOSEPH CHARLES RUBIOLA (09-0309) - view video
9/16/2010 @ 9:00 AM (length 44:10)
Originating county: Bexar County
Originating from: 4th District Court of Appeals, San Antonio
Case Documents
09-0309 In re Joseph Charles Rubiola, et al. from Bexar County and the Fourth District Court of Appeals, San Antonio For relator: Ms. Elizabeth Conry Davidson, San Antonio For real parties in interest: Mr. Bryan A. Woods, San Antonio The issue is whether arbitration can be compelled for misrepresentation claims involving a home sale when (a) the home-sale agreement did not contain an arbitration provision but the mortgage contract did and (b) the principals selling the house and financing it were the same. The mortgage-agreement arbitration clause covered "each and all persons and entities signing this agreement or any other agreements between or among any of the parties as part of this transaction." The trial court refused to compel arbitration. The court of appeals denied the sellers mandamus relief. This advisory serves only as an abbreviated guide to oral argument. Summaries are prepared by the Court's staff attorney for public information and reflect his judgment alone on facts and legal issues and in no way represent the Court's opinion about case merits. Texas Supreme Court advisory Contact: Osler McCarthy, Staff Attorney for Public Information (512) 463.1441 or email: osler.mccarthy@courts.state.tx.us
|
|
|
MOLINET V. PATRICK KIMBRELL, M.D. (09-0544) - view video
10/13/2010 @ 9:00 AM (length 46:11)
Originating county: Bexar County
Originating from: 4th District Court of Appeals, San Antonio
Case Documents
09-0544 Jeremy Molinet v. Patrick Kimbrell, M.D. and John Horan, M.D. from Bexar County and the Fourth District Court of Appeals, San Antonio For petitioner: Eugene W. Brees, Austin For respondents: R. Brent Cooper, Dallas The issue is whether the two-year medical-malpractice limitations on suit ("notwithstanding any other law") is trumped by the proportionate-responsibility law's provision to join third parties ("even though such joinder would otherwise be barred by limitations"). Molinet sued a podiatrist for malpractice, then after the podiatrist designated Kimbrell and Horan as responsible third parties, Molinet amended his suit to include them. Kimbrell and Horan moved to dismiss, arguing that the joinder was beyond the limitations in a health-care liability action. The trial court denied their motion. The court of appeals reversed.This advisory serves only as an abbreviated guide to oral argument. Summaries are prepared by the Court's staff attorney for public information and reflect his judgment alone on facts and legal issues and in no way represent the Court's opinion about case merits. Texas Supreme Court advisory Contact: Osler McCarthy, Staff Attorney for Public Information (512) 463.1441 or email: osler.mccarthy@courts.state.tx.us
|
|
|
PNS STORES, INC. V. RIVERA (10-1028) - view video
1/11/2012 @ 9:50 AM (length 41:19)
Originating county: Bexar County
Originating from: 4th District Court of Appeals, San Antonio
Case Documents
10-1028 PNS Stores Inc. v. Anna E. Rivera from Bexar County and the Fourth District Court of Appeals, San Antonio For petitioner: David A. Oliver Jr., Houston For respondent: Daniel J. T. Sciano, San Antonio, and Kimberly S. Keller, Boerne Three principal issues arise from this petition from a denied bill of review: (1) whether a default tort judgment in 2000 is void or voidable for defects in service of process; (2) whether the four-year bill-of-review limitations applies to an attack on a void default judgment (or whether alleged extrinsic fraud can toll the limitations); and (3) whether an amended summary judgment in a federal suit on the same facts - the amended judgment, with prejudice, barred the case from being refiled - renders the state default judgment void. In seeking to overturn the default judgment, PNS Stores claimed it did not have knowledge of the suit, which was served on the company's registered agent, and alleged defects in the method of service. PNS argues in part that the service-of-process defects render the default judgment void and subject to direct attack or voidable and subject to indirect or collateral attack. The company also contends that limitations should be delayed because of extrinsic fraud. It argues that notice of the $1.2-million default judgment in the underlying negligence case was served on the registered agent, not the company as party, and execution to collect the judgment - when the company claims it had first notice of the judgment - was delayed by design for almost 10 years. The trial court denied PNS Stores' effort to overturn the judgment. The court of appeals affirmed. This advisory serves only as an abbreviated guide to oral argument. Summaries are prepared by the Court's staff attorney for public information and reflect his judgment alone on facts and legal issues and in no way represent the Court's opinion about case merits. Texas Supreme Court advisory Contact: Osler McCarthy, Staff Attorney for Public Information (512) 463.1441 or email: osler.mccarthy@courts.state.tx.us
|
|
|
KOPPLOW DEVELOPMENT, INC. V. THE CITY OF SAN ANTONIO (11-0104) - view video
9/13/2012 @ 9:00 AM (length 47:31)
Originating county: Bexar County
Originating from: 4th District Court of Appeals, San Antonio
Case Documents
The principal issues in this inverse-condemnation action are (1) whether legally sufficient evidence supports damages from a flood-control structure on an easement that Kopplow claims would cause flooding on its remainder property during a 100-year flood; (2) whether Kopplow's inverse-condemnation claim is ripe; and (3) whether Kopplow's claim is barred by the rule that damages cannot be recovered by a property owner when the government takes adjoining land. Kopplow's suit alleged that the city's building a flood-control wall on a utility easement through its property for a nearby flood-diversion project raised the 100-year-flood plain and forced it to elevate its property to meet federal development requirements. The court of appeals reversed the damages award for the remainder property, holding that insufficient evidence supported the claim.
|
|
|
NELDA GONZALES V. SOUTHWEST OLSHAN FOUNDATION REPAIR COMPANY, LLC, D/B/A OLSHAN FOUNDATION REPAIR COMPANY (11-0311) - view video
10/15/2012 @ 11:30 AM (length 42:29)
Originating county: Bexar County
Originating from: 4th District Court of Appeals, San Antonio
Case Documents
The principal issues are (1) whether a common-law action exists for breach of an implied warranty to perform good and workmanlike repairs and (2) whether evidence existed to support a jury finding that the discovery rule or fraudulent-concealment doctrine tolled limitations for a warranty claim under the Deceptive Trade Practices Act. In this case Gonzales sued in part for breach of an implied warranty to repair foundation defects she hired Olshan to fix. The jury found Gonzales should not have discovered that Olshan failed to properly repair the foundation until after she hired her own engineer, more than two years after she complained about cracking appeared after Olshan's work on her house. Before then, Olshan had assured her the cracks she saw were not the result of a faulty foundation or of Olshan's work. The company sent an engineer who supported its contention. The engineer's firm was half-owned by Olshan's chief executive officer. Reviewing a judgment awarding Gonzales damages, the court of appeals reversed, holding in part that an implied common-law warranty for good and workmanlike repairs does not exist in Texas and overturned the jury's decision that the discovery rule delayed the effect of the two-year limitations that allowed her deceptive trade-practices claim.
|
|
|
HIGHLAND HOMES LTD. V. STATE OF TEXAS (12-0604) - view video
11/7/2013 @ 9:00 AM (length 49:22)
Originating county: Bexar County
Originating from: 8th District Court of Appeals, El Paso
Case Documents
In this dispute over unclaimed settlement proceeds from a class-action settlement, the principal issues are (1) whether the court has jurisdiction when Highland Homes, the sole petitioner, has expressly disclaimed interest in the unclaimed money; (2) whether identified but non-participating class members have a property right in the settlement money; and (3) whether an agreement to distribute unclaimed money to a non-profit (the Nature Conservancy) improperly circumvents statutory abandoned-property provisions. One of Highland Homes' subcontractors sued to recover money the construction company withheld from its paycheck after the company told its subcontractors it would do so if they could not provide proof that they carried liability insurance. That subcontractor then converted the lawsuit into a class action. For its part Highland Homes contended the money it withheld was to pay its extra insurance costs, but the subcontractors believed Highland Homes was providing insurance coverage for them. After the class was approved, but before trial, Highland Homes agreed to a settlement that provided any settlement checks that were not claimed after 90 days would be given to the Nature Conservancy. As the trial court considered the settlement, the state moved to intervene to prevent distribution of the leftover money to the Nature Conservancy, arguing that state law prevented such private agreements to distribute unclaimed money and provided a procedure for unclaimed property to revert to the state after three years. The trial court denied the state's intervention, but the court of appeals reversed, holding that the unclaimed-property law applied.
|
|
|
HMC HOTEL PROPERTIES II L.P. V. KEYSTONE-TEXAS PROPERTY HOLDING CORP. (12-0289) - view video
2/4/2014 @ 9:00 AM (length 48:17)
Originating county: Bexar County
Originating from: 4th District Court of Appeals, San Antonio
Case Documents
The principal issues in this title-slander and tortious-interference case involve legal-sufficiency questions going to support for the verdict and causation in both the slander and interference claims and whether legally sufficient evidence supports the malice finding on which exemplary damages were awarded. In this case HMC, a Host Hotels & Resorts subsidiary that leased property beneath its San Antonio hotel, sued Keystone, alleging Keystone breached a lease provision that HMC would be notified if Keystone decided to sell the property and would not sell it at a price more favorable than HMC offered if HMC wanted it. HMC had 90 days to negotiate such a sale. HMC notified Keystone that it wanted to buy but disputed the offer Keystone had from a third party. In negotiations that followed, Keystone asked HMC to waive the 90 days' negotiation period it had under the lease because the other buyer faced a federal tax-advantage deadline. HMC certified that the lease was not in default, then three days later told Keystone the lease was in default and demanded 90 more days for negotiating its purchase. When HMC and Keystone failed to close, HMC sued, arguing that the other proposed sale violated its right of negotiation in its lease with Keystone. Keystone countered, alleging HMC interfered with its contract to sell to the third party and, by HMC's letter claiming the lease in default, slandered its title and scuttled the transaction. A jury found for Keystone on both the tortious-interference and title-slander claims and awarded punitive damages, but the trial court granted HMC's motion to disregard the malice finding supporting the exemplary damages and awarded damages for slander. The appeals court reinstated the punitive-damage award.
|
|
|
RSUI INDEMNITY CO. V. THE LYND CO. (13-0080) - view video
9/18/2014 @ 9:00 AM (length 44:42)
Originating county: Bexar County
Originating from: 4th District Court of Appeals, San Antonio
Case Documents
The principal issue over a disputed insurance policy covering 15 properties is whether the policy permits the insurer to calculate losses on a property-by-property basis either for actual damage or on a percentage of a property's scheduled value. The policy specified losses determined on actual loss or 115 percent of how much Lynd valued each property. In its suit Lynd contends that RSUI should have aggregated losses to all covered properties before deciding to pay by one basis or the other, a $4.1 million difference to cover its losses from Hurricane Rita from RSUI's calculation. Lynd seeks actual losses for two damaged properties, not the percentage of their scheduled values. RSUI paid actual losses on the other 13 properties, losses less than 115 percent of scheduled values for each property. The trial court granted RSUI summary judgment. The appeals court reversed.
|
|
|
THE FREDERICKSBURG CARE CO. L.P. V. JUANITA PEREZ, ET AL. (13-0573) - view video
10/14/2014 @ 10:40 AM (length 44:18)
Originating county: Bexar County
Originating from: 4th District Court of Appeals, San Antonio
Case Documents
A principal issue in this interlocutory appeal is whether the Texas Medical Liability Act's arbitration-enforcement provision constitutes a law regulating insurance that would remove it from preemption by the Federal Arbitration Act. In this case patients or their heirs sued a San Antonio nursing home, alleging inadequate medical care, abuse and neglect. The nursing-home operator, Fredericksburg Care, moved to compel arbitration, based on signed arbitration agreements that failed to satisfy the medical liability act's requirement that arbitration clauses be in bold-faced type and signed by a patient's attorney. Fredericksburg Care contends that federal arbitration law preempts the state statutory-enforcement standards. Perez and others who sued the home argue the standards regulate insurance under the federal McCarran-Ferguson Act, making federal arbitration law inapplicable. The trial court denied Fredericksburg Care's motions. The court of appeals affirmed.
|
|
|
SAN ANTONIO WATER SYSTEM V. DEBRA NICHOLAS (13-0966) - view video
1/13/2015 @ 9:50 AM (length 42:22)
Originating county: Bexar County
Originating from: 4th District Court of Appeals, San Antonio
Case Documents
A principal issue in this retaliation-discharge case is whether the San Antonio Water System properly raised a legal-sufficiency point to the appeals court by arguing that Nicholas failed to prove she engaged in "protected activity," an element that would have waived the agency's governmental immunity. Nicholas sued the water agency after her boss, a man whom she counseled and reprimanded three years earlier when she was the agency's staff chief, eliminated her position in a staffing reorganization. The reprimand involved the propriety of his asking women at work to lunch when he was married and among the agency's management. The reprimand was not in response to a formal harassment complaint. Nicholas was assigned to work under him when a new chief executive officer appointed his own staff chief. A jury found that Nicholas lost her job because she engaged in protected activity and the court of appeals affirmed. The water agency argues that it did not lose its governmental immunity because Nicholas failed to show she acted to stop sexual harassment as defined by the Texas Commission on Human Rights Act.
|
|
|
ROBERT VALDEZ AND FIDELITY AND CASUALTY CO. OF NEW YORK V. DAVID HOLLENBECK, ET AL. (13-0709) - view video
2/24/2015 @ 10:40 AM (length 44:26)
Originating county: Bexar County
Originating from: 4th District Court of Appeals, San Antonio
Case Documents
The principal issues are (1) whether an equitable bill of review may set aside a 10-year-old probate judgment when extrinsic fraud on the estate can be shown; (2) whether the heirs sufficiently proved they are entitled to a bill of review to reopen the probate case; and (3) whether Fidelity, the original administrator's surety, is liable for its bond as well as $80,000 in prejudgment interest. This case arose after a Bexar County probate consultant pleaded guilty to stealing from estates, including this one. After that criminal case Hollenbeck, an heir in this case, sued to reopen the estate, discovered unreported bank accounts and sought to collect from Valdez, the original administrator, and Fidelity. The probate court denied Hollenbeck's statutory bill of review, but granted the heirs one in equity and awarded them almost $466,000. The court of appeals affirmed.
|
|
|
PHILADELPHIA INDEMNITY INSURANCE CO. V. CARMEN A. WHITE (14-0086) - view video
10/13/2015 @ 9:50 AM (length 40:47)
Originating county: Bexar County
Originating from: 4th District Court of Appeals, San Antonio
Case Documents
The principal issue is whether a standard apartment lease's allocating risk to a tenant for any damages not caused by the landlord's negligence is void on public-policy grounds. Philadelphia Indemnity sued White over damage from a clothes-dryer fire that destroyed her apartment and others in her complex. The fire's cause was not determined, but Philadelphia pursued its claim based on the lease. A jury found White did not cause the fire but was liable under her lease. The trial court rendered judgment for White despite that verdict. A divided court of appeals affirmed, holding that the agreement's risk-allocation provision went beyond specific limits the state property code imposed on allocating damage a tenant's risk. By doing so, the court reasoned, the lease violated public policy.
|
|
|
LEONARD K. HOSKINS V. COLONEL CLIFTON HOSKINS AND HOSKINS INC. (15-0046) - view video
1/13/2016 @ 9:50 AM (length 43:03)
Originating county: Bexar County
Originating from: 4th District Court of Appeals, San Antonio
Case Documents
The issues are (1) whether the Texas Arbitration Act preempts common-law grounds for vacating an arbitration award and (2) whether the arbitrator, in dismissing supplemental claims, denied the challenging party a right to a hearing on those claims. This case involves initial claims by a son against his mother, against his brother and against the family company. All parties settled with an agreement approved in bankruptcy court, but as part of that settlement the bankruptcy court enjoined them from continuing litigation without the court's approval. Despite that, Leonard Hoskins sued the company, his mother and the other brother, Clifton Hoskins, over the company's sale of a ranch to Clifton. Leonard's mother owned half the company under her late husband's will and was trustee and beneficiary of a marital trust that owned the other half of the company. The bankruptcy court ordered all parties to arbitration. Leonard Hoskins then challenged the sale anew in arbitration and also a loan Clifton got from the family company years earlier, complaining his brother was acting as de facto trustee and breaching fiduciary duties he owed to beneficiaries of his father's estate. After the arbitrator dismissed Leonard Hoskins's claims on the loan and conveyance, he then brought challenges to two different conveyances. Without a hearing, the arbitrator dismissed Leonard's additional claims against Clifton and the company and awarded attorney fees. A trial court confirmed the arbitration award and denied Leonard's motion to vacate the award, based on manifest disregard for the law. The court of appeals affirmed, holding the Texas Arbitration Act's grounds to vacate were exclusive and Leonard did not have a hearing right on his supplemental claims because he lacked standing to bring them.
|
|
|
WHEELABRATOR AIR POLLUTION CONTROL INC. V. CITY OF SAN ANTONIO (15-0029) - view video
1/14/2016 @ 9:50 AM (length 41:27)
Originating county: Bexar County
Originating from: 4th District Court of Appeals, San Antonio
Case Documents
In addition to the proprietary-function issue in Wasson Interests v. Jacksonville, above, a principal issue is whether the Court can decide that proprietary function waives a municipality's immunity in a contract action when the trial court grants a jurisdictional plea to dismiss a claim for attorney fees. In this case Wheelabrator sued for contract breach or, alternatively, to recover money for services rendered when San Antonio's public electric utility refused to make final payment for work on a power plant. In a first appeal, the court of appeals reversed the trial court's rejection of the city's jurisdictional plea on the quantum meruit claim, to recover for services rendered, holding in part that the proprietary-function rationale cannot support waiving the city's immunity. On remand, the trial court granted the city's jurisdictional plea, dismissing Wheelabrator's attorney-fees claim. The appeals court affirmed that decision, holding the proprietary-function rationale does not apply to waive immunity on the attorney-fees claim.
|
|
|
JBS CARRIERS INC. AND JAMES LUNDRY V. TRINETTE L. WASHINGTON ET AL. (17-0151) - view video
9/19/2018 @ 9:00 AM (length 50:56)
Originating county: Bexar County
Originating from: 4th District Court of Appeals, San Antonio
Case Documents
In this wrongful-death case resulting from truck-pedestrian accident, the issues are (1) whether the trial court abused its discretion by excluding as prejudicial evidence that the pedestrian suffered from paranoid schizophrenia and bipolar disease, had not taken her medication the day of the accident and had drugs and alcohol in her system when she was hit as she stepped into a street and (2) whether her family, as wrongful-death claimants, properly submitted a negligent-training claim against the truck driver's employer when the employer conceded its vicarious liability for the driver's negligence.
|
|
|
ANDREW BRADFORD WEST V. OSCAR LEO QUINTANILLA (17-0454) - view video
1/9/2019 @ 10:40 AM (length 41:00)
Originating county: Bexar County
Originating from: 4th District Court of Appeals, San Antonio
Case Documents
In this dispute involving agreements between West, the chief executive for several of Quintanilla's businesses, the issues are (1) whether the Court has jurisdiction over this appeal under expanded authority giving the Court broad power to determine questions important to the state's jurisprudence, enacted in 2017 after the dispute arose, and (2) whether the parol-evidence rule bars West's evidence of an alleged separate agreement to discharge West's debts to Quintanilla.
|
|
|
IN RE J.J.R.S. AND L.J.R.S. (20-0175) - view video
10/28/2020 @ 10:40 AM (length 39:57)
Originating county: Bexar County
Originating from: 4th District Court of Appeals, San Antonio
Case Documents
In this case challenging a trial court's order establishing a mother's aunt and uncle permanent custodians of her children but allowing the mother visitation at their sole discretion, the issues are (1) whether "as-agreed" visitation orders violate Texas Family Code section 153.006(c) requiring specificity for visitation schedules and (2) whether Texas Family Code section 262.201(o), allowing a temporary custody proceeding before service can be shown by publication, violates a parent's due-process rights.
|
|
|
CITY OF SAN ANTONIO V. JIMMY MASPERO AND REGINA MASPERO (19-1144) - view video
9/28/2021 @ 9:00 AM (length 43:51)
Originating county: Bexar County
Originating from: 4th District Court of Appeals, San Antonio
Case Documents
The issues in this case, involving one vehicle under police pursuit colliding with a third car when the pursued car traveled the wrong way on a highway access road, are (1) whether a nexus exists between injuries and operation of the patrol car enough to waive the city' immunity; (2) whether the Masperos showed enough evidence of recklessness by the police officer to be an exception to the immunity waiver; and (3) whether negligent policy implementation constitutes an independent ground for immunity waiver.
|
|
|
CITY OF SAN ANTONIO V. ARMANDO D. RIOJAS (20-0293) - view video
9/28/2021 @ 9:50 AM (length 41:30)
Originating county: Bexar County
Originating from: 4th District Court of Appeals, San Antonio
Case Documents
The issues, involving a motorcyclist injured when he tried to avoid traffic slowing as a patrol officer used his car's emergency lights, the issues are (1) whether enough evidence established a nexus between the patrol car's use and the motorcyclist's injuries; (2) whether bystanders' statements that the accident was the police officer's fault were speculative; (3) whether the police officer's use of his patrol car's lights was too attenuated from the accident; and (4) whether needs-risk balancing the correct standard for determining good faith in non-pursuit officer immunity cases.
|
|
|
IN RE THE GUARDIANSHIP OF JAMES E. FAIRLEY (20-0328) - view video
9/30/2021 @ 9:00 AM (length 45:12)
Originating county: Bexar County
Originating from: 4th District Court of Appeals, San Antonio
Case Documents
In this interlocutory appeal, from denial of a dismissal motion in a guardianship dispute in which the petitioner alleges lack of subject matter jurisdiction because the proposed ward was not properly served under the Texas Estates Code, the issues are (1) whether the petition is moot and (2) whether James Fairley, the ward, was served in compliance with Texas Estates Code chapter 1051 and, if not, (3) whether the probate court lacks subject-matter jurisdiction.
|
|
|
ELEPHANT INS. CO. V. KENYON (20-0366) - view video
11/30/2021 @ 9:00 AM (length 47:54)
Originating county: Bexar County
Originating from: 4th District Court of Appeals, San Antonio
Case Documents
In this permissive appeal regarding insurance, the primary issues are: (1) whether an insurer's duty of "good faith and fair dealing" included the insured's accidental death that occurred during the investigation of covered accident, (2) whether the insurer created a new duty by "instructing" the insured after the accident, and (3) whether the court recognized a new direct-liability, extra-contractual cause of action against the insurer for the insured's death.
|
|
|
|
|