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1/2 PRICE CHECKS CASHED V. UNITED AUTOMOBILE INS. CO. (10-0434) - view video
2/3/2011 @ 9:50 AM (length 42:01)
Originating county: Dallas County
Originating from: 5th District Court of Appeals, Dallas
Case Documents
The issue is whether an action to recover on a dishonored check should be considered essentially a contract suit that allows awarding . In this case 1/2 Price Checks Cashed sued after United refused to pay on a check its bank would not honor. The trial court awarded attorneys fees, but the court of appeals reversed, citing its decision in Time Out Grocery v. The Vanguard Group. United argues that a contract, for attorneys fees recoverable by statute, must be a bilateral agreement. Half-Price contends Civil Practices and Remedies Code 38.001 extends to statutory obligations, citing Medical City Dallas v. Carlisle Corp. (allowing attorneys fees for warranty-breach action).
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20801, INC. V. PARKER (06-0574) - view video
9/26/2007 @ 9:50 AM (length 43:49)
Originating county: Harris County
Originating from: 14th District Court of Appeals, Houston
Case Documents
The Supreme Court will hear arguments on the issue of whether 'safe harbor' element was shown in dram shop action. The principal issue is whether the appeals court erred by holding that a bar and pool hall owner failed to establish a "safe harbor" under Texas' statutory dram shop law by proving that it did not encourage employees to serve alcohol to an intoxicated customer. Parker sued 20801, the owner of Slick Willie's, alleging that its employees provided him perhaps 15 free drinks at the bar's grand opening before he was assaulted in the parking lot by another bar patron. Parker claimed the drinks were a proximate cause of the head injuries he suffered in the fight. The trial court granted summary judgment to 20801 Inc., but the court of appeals reversed on the safe harbor provision.
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A. G. EDWARDS & SONS, INC. V. BEYER (05-0580) - view video
3/22/2007 @ 9:00 AM (length 45:29)
Originating county: El Paso County
Originating from: 8th District Court of Appeals, El Paso
Case Documents
In this case alleging a financial institution lost documentation creating a survivorship right in a joint account, the principal issues are (1) whether Texas Probate Code section 439(a) bars extrinsic evidence of intent in a contract-breach claim over creation of the joint-tenancy account and (2) whether the "intertwining" exception to the duty to segregate attorney's fees should include fees recovery in a related federal court proceeding. Beyer sued A.G. Edwards & Sons for conversion and breach of contract, among other claims, after the company allegedly lost an agreement that would have made Beyer joint owner of her father's investment account and sole owner when he died. Four days before her father lapsed into a coma, A.G. Edwards told her the agreement was missing, then froze the $1.19 million account after he died. When Beyer initially sued for negligence, the company submitted the proceeds to federal court to determine ownership. In this case Beyer sought as damages the money from the account split among her siblings to settle the interpleader action in federal court. The court of appeals affirmed a breach-of-contract verdict, admitting evidence that showed the father's intent to create the joint account, and affirmed attorneys fees that were not segregated because the court held the fees were inextricably intertwined.
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AARON FELTON V. BROCK LOVETT, D.C. (11-0252) - view video
9/13/2012 @ 10:50 AM (length 40:56)
Originating county: Potter County
Originating from: 7th District Court of Appeals, Amarillo
Case Documents
In this health care-liability claim, a principal issue is whether a chiropractor's expert testimony was improper to establish the duty to inform. Felton sued after he suffered a stroke as Dr. Lovett manipulated Felton's neck to relieve pain. Doctors determined the stroke resulted from a tear in a spinal artery. A jury found for Lovett on Felton's negligence claim, but for Felton on his second claim, that Lovett failed to inform him of the risk posed by the neck manipulation. The court of appeals reversed, noting Felton's expert, a chiropractor, testified that neck manipulations were risky only if a problem exists with the spinal artery or if the adjustment were performed improperly. In this appeal Felton argues that the appeals court relied on the chiropractor's opinion as it addressed causation, which he was not qualified by statute to give.
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AKIN, GUMP, STRAUSS, HAUER & FELD, L.L.P. V. NAT'L DEVELOPMENT AND RESEARCH CORP. (07-0818) - view video
12/9/2008 @ 9:50 AM (length 42:56)
Originating county: Dallas County
Originating from: 5th District Court of Appeals, Dallas
Case Documents
07-0818 Akin, Gump, Strauss, Hauer & Feld, L.L.P. v. National Development and Research Corp. and Robert E. Tang from Dallas County and the Fifth District Court of Appeals, Dallas For petitioner Akin, Gump: Jeffrey S. Levinger, Dallas For cross-petitioners/respondents National Development: Michael L. Jones, Dallas Among principal issues in this legal malpractice case are (1) whether the damage award should be reduced by what the plaintiff would have owed for a contingency fee in the underlying suit; (2) whether legally sufficient evidence supported damages based on stock value in the plaintiff's joint venture; and (3) whether legal fees and expenses for an appeal allegedly taken because of the malpractice were recoverable as economic damages. National Development and Research sued Akin, Gump over the trial court's determination that lawyers failed to submit proper jury questions. A jury in the malpractice action found for NDR. The trial court refused to reduce damages by the 10 percent contingency fee NDR would have paid Akin, Gump for the underlying litigation. The court of appeals reduced the award by other attorneys fees calculations, but otherwise 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
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ALICE M. WOOD AND DANIEL L. WOOD V. HSBC BANK USA, N.A., AND OCWEN LOAN SERVICING L.L.C. (14-0714) - view video
12/8/2015 @ 9:00 AM (length 45:16)
Originating county: Fort Bend County
Originating from: 14th District Court of Appeals, Houston
Case Documents
In this challenge to void a home-equity loan for constitutional defects, and to recover principal and interest, the issue is whether the borrowers' notice eight years later that the loan did not comply with constitutional requirements voids the loan or makes it voidable and subject to a four-year limitations. The Woods sued the bank and Ocwen, alleging fraud and contract breach based on alleged constitutional defects. The trial court denied the Woods' summary-judgment motion and granted the bank's and Ocwen's. The appeals court affirmed, holding a home-equity loan that does not comply with constitutional requirements is voidable, that as voidable a suit on it is subject to a four-year limitations and the Woods' suit was filed too late.
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ALLEN CHADWICK BURBAGE V. W. KIRK BURBAGE AND BURBAGE FUNERAL HOME (12-0563) - view video
1/9/2014 @ 9:00 AM (length 47:59)
Originating county: Bastrop County
Originating from: 3rd District Court of Appeals, Austin
Case Documents
The issues in this defamation case are (1) whether the common-interest privilege bars a defamation recovery in this case for allegedly libelous statements made in letters to third parties; (2) whether sufficient evidence of reputational harm supports compensatory and exemplary damages; and (3) whether a permanent injunction barring future communications is an unconstitutional prior restraint on speech. Kirk Burbage sued his brother, Chad, over allegations Chad posted on a website and included in letters to a couple who bought a mausoleum site in the family cemetery the brothers jointly owned. Chad Burbage argues in part that his statements to the couple were privileged, based on their common interest in his dispute with Kirk, and challenges the reputational damages a jury awarded to Kirk. The court of appeals affirmed the reputational-damages award, modified an exemplary-damages award and threw out an injunction against Chad on certain future communications.
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ALLEN DACUS, ET AL. V. ANNISE PARKER AND CITY OF HOUSTON (13-0047) - view video
2/24/2015 @ 9:00 AM (length 48:45)
Originating county: Harris County
Originating from: 14th District Court of Appeals, Houston
Case Documents
Two principal issues arise from this election ballot-language challenge: (1) whether the city established no material-fact issue exists that a municipal charter amendment's ballot description was legally sufficient and (2) whether the trial court abused its discretion by denying a new-trial motion based on the mayor's public statements after the election. Dacus and others sued to invalidate voters' 2010 approval of a proposition that would create a dedicated fund to pay for drainage-system improvements by charging property owners fees in addition to property taxes. They argue that those fees, a chief feature of the improvements' financing, were omitted from the ballot description and that how the ballot described it - a dedicated "pay as you go" fund - was misleading. They also cite Mayor Parker's statements after the election as new evidence that should have established their right to a new trial after the trial court granted the city summary judgment. The court of appeals affirmed summary judgment for the city, holding in part that the ballot language needed only to refer to the proposition's character and purpose, its chief features.
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ALLEN KELLER CO. V. FOREMAN (09-0955) - view video
12/7/2010 @ 10:40 AM (length 46:07)
Originating county: Gillespie County
Originating from: 4th District Court of Appeals, San Antonio
Case Documents
09-0955 Allen Keller Co. v. Barbara Jean Foreman, et al. from Gillespie County and the Fourth District Court of Appeals, San Antonio granted on rehearing For petitioner: Wade Crosnoe, Austin For respondents: Randy Howry, Austin The issue is whether a contractor working for a county owes a duty to protect the public from a danger created pursuant to a contract requiring absolute compliance. In this case a car in which Foreman's daughter was a passenger drove through a gap between a guardrail and an embankment Keller widened according to the county's mandatory specifications. Foreman's daughter drowned when the car plunged into the river. The trial court granted summary judgment for Keller, but 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
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ALLISON V. COMMISSION FOR LAWYER DISCIPLINE (08-0705) - view video
3/11/2009 @ 10:40 AM (length 45:58)
Originating from: Commission for Lawyer Discipline
Case Documents
08-0705 Boma O. Allison v. Commission for Lawyer Discipline For appellant: Wayne H. Paris, Houston For appellee: Cynthia Hamilton, Austin The issues are (1) whether the quorum requirement was met in a grievance committee evidentiary panel and, if not, (2) whether the panel's judgment was void. 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
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AM. MIDSTREAM, LLC V. RAINBOW ENERGY MKTG. CORP (23-0384)
Scheduled 1/13/2025 @ 9:00 AM (starts in 21 days, 19 hours, 40 minutes )
Originating county: Harris County
Originating from: 1st District Court of Appeals, Houston
Case Documents
This case involves contract interpretation and repudiation, lost-profits damages, and the election-of-remedies doctrine.
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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
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AMERICAN K-9 DETECTION SERVICES LLC AND HILL COUNTRY DOG CENTER LLC V. LATASHA FREEMAN (15-0932) - view video
12/7/2017 @ 9:00 AM (length 42:12)
Originating county: Bandera County
Originating from: 13th District Court of Appeals, Corpus Christi & Edinburg
Case Documents
In this dog-bite case, by a military-contractor employee against another contractor that supplied bomb-sniffing dogs and its animal supplier, principal issues are (1) whether the trial court erred by designating the Army as a responsible third party (and, if not, whether the injury claims fall under the political-question doctrine); (2) whether the Federal Tort Claims Act's combatant-activities exception preempts the injury claims; (3) whether American K-9 has official immunity by delegation of a government function; (4) whether the trial court erred by denying the plaintiff Freeman her request to replead her claims; and (5) whether the appeals court erred by reversing dismissal of claims against Hill Country Dog Center, which supplied the dogs to American K-9.
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AMERICAN STAR ENERGY AND MINERALS CORP. V. RICHARD "DICK" STOWERS, ET. AL. (13-0484) - view video
10/14/2014 @ 9:00 AM (length 42:22)
Originating county: Hutchinson County
Originating from: 7th District Court of Appeals, Amarillo
Case Documents
The issue is whether limitations to recover from general partners a partnership's judgment debt begin when the debt judgment was entered or when the underlying contract-breach action accrued. In 1993 American Star sued S&J Investments, the partnership, for breach of an operating agreement. American Star won a judgment in 2007 for almost $230,000, which was final in 2009. When partnership assets failed to satisfy the judgment, American Star sued Stowers and other general partners in 2010 to confirm their liability. The trial court granted summary judgment for the partners, ruling that the suit against the partners on the debt was brought too late because that suit accrued at the same time as the breach-of-contract claim against the partnership. In a split decision, the appeals court affirmed.
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AMERICAN ZURICH INS. CO. V. SAMUDIO (10-0554) - view video
1/10/2012 @ 9:00 AM (length 43:07)
Originating county: Harris County
Originating from: 1st District Court of Appeals, Houston
Case Documents
10-0554 American Zurich Insurance Co. v. Daniel Samudio from Harris County and the First District Court of Appeals, Houston For petitioner: Robert D. Stokes, Austin For respondent: Byron C. Keeling, Houston The principal issues in this workers-compensation impairment-rating dispute are (1) whether a trial court has jurisdiction over an impairment-rating dispute when only one rating was before the workers-comp division and (2) whether the trial court or appeals court has jurisdiction to assign a new impairment rating if the one presented to the workers-comp division was invalid. In this case Zurich contested Samudio's 20-percent impairment rating a doctor calculated for his spinal injury that resulted from a fall at work, arguing that the impairment rating was not properly calculated according to mandated American Medical Association guidelines. The court of appeals determined that the rating methodology the doctor used to establish Samudio's impairment rating might not have been proper, but the rating was valid in the absence of any other presented in the administrative hearing. 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
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AMERICO LIFE, INC., AMERICO FINANCIAL LIFE AND ANNUITY INSURANCE COMPANY, GREAT SOUTHERN LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY, THE OHIO STATE LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY, AND NATIONAL FARMERS' UNION LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY (12-0739) - view video
11/6/2013 @ 9:50 AM (length 44:00)
Originating county: Dallas County
Originating from: 5th District Court of Appeals, Dallas
Case Documents
In this arbitration case the principal issues are (1) whether an arbitration panel was improper because the American Arbitration Association removed Americo's selected arbitrator and, if the arbitration panel was improper, (2) whether arbitration award should be vacated. In this suit over Myer's sale to Americo of insurance companies, Americo contends its selected arbitrator met an arbitration provision's independence requirement. The court of appeals reversed the trial court's decision to vacate the $26 million arbitration award, holding in part that American Arbitration Association rules required arbitrator impartiality and that arbitrator independence, the term used in the arbitration agreement, encompassed impartiality.
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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.
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ANGELA DAVIS ET AL. V. TEXAS EDUCATION COMMISSIONER MIKE MORATH AND DALLAS INDEPENDENT SCHOOL DISTRICT (19-1035) - view video
3/23/2021 @ 9:50 AM (length 43:53)
Originating county: Travis County
Originating from: 3rd District Court of Appeals, Austin
Case Documents
In this challenge by Dallas teachers over the effects of a new district evaluation process the issues are (1) whether the appeals court erred by determining the commissioner had jurisdiction over the teachers' appeal because their grievance was filed on time; (2) whether the appeals court erred by holding that the teachers' appraisal grievances and grievances based on the district's new evaluation components were filed on time; and (3) whether the appeals courts erred by finding the teachers' exceptions to the administrative-law judge's proposal for decision inadequate to preserve error on allegations that the teachers' pay was reduced by higher insurance costs at a time when they could not resign without penalty.
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ANGLO-DUTCH PETROLEUM INTERNATIONAL, INC. V. GREENBERG PEDEN, P.C. (08-0833) - view video
9/14/2010 @ 9:00 AM (length 51:05)
Originating county: Harris County
Originating from: 14th District Court of Appeals, Houston
Case Documents
(Justice Guzman not sitting) 08-0833 Anglo-Dutch Petroleum International Inc. v. Greenberg Peden P.C. and Gerard J. Swonke from Harris County and the 14th District Court of Appeals, Houston For petitioners: Gregory S. Coleman, Austin For amicus curiae, Abrams Scott & Bickley: Christopher S. Johns, Austin For respondents: Robert M. (Randy) Roach Jr., Houston In this dispute over an allegedly ambiguous contingency-fee agreement involving work by an attorney acting of counsel, the principal issues are (1) whether potential ambiguity should be construed against the attorney who drafted it for an existing client and (2) whether the trial court should have instructed jurors on the lawyer's fiduciary duty to the client. In this case Swonke, of counsel to Greenberg Peden, worked for Anglo-Dutch on a lawsuit it eventually won with a $70.5-million verdict. Anglo-Dutch refused to pay Swonke the percentage he claimed he was owed because it contended Greenberg Peden, not Swonke individually, represented the company. The trial court ruled for Swonke. The court of appeals affirmed, holding in part that the ambiguous agreement should not be construed against the attorney who drafted it. 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
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APACHE DEEPWATER LLC V. MCDANIEL PARTNERS LTD. (14-0546) - view video
10/14/2015 @ 9:00 AM (length 39:37)
Originating county: Upton County
Originating from: 8th District Court of Appeals, El Paso
Case Documents
The issue is whether proceeds from bundled minerals leases must be proportionately reduced if one or more of the leases expire because production ceased. This case calls for interpreting a 1953 assignment of a production payment - an oil payment, as it's also called - from four minerals leases. McDaniel, the successor to the production payment, sued for contract breach and conversion after Apache Deepwater reduced the payment because two leases expired when production ceased. Apache argues that the production payment, like an overriding royalty interest, should be diminished when a lease ends and that Texas law does not require a proportionate-reduction clause. McDaniel contends the assignment specifies one fractional interest applied to all production from the designated surveys and, in the absence of a reduction clause, expresses the parties' intent to allocate risk. The trial court ruled for Apache, but the court of appeals reversed.
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ASHFORD PARTNERS, LTD. V. ECO RESOURCES, INC. (10-0615) - view video
2/8/2012 @ 9:00 AM (length 46:32)
Originating county: Fort Bend County
Originating from: 14th District Court of Appeals, Houston
Case Documents
10-0615 Ashford Partners Ltd. v. ECO Resources Inc. from Fort Bend County and the First District Court of Appeals, Houston For petitioner: Charles Watson, Austin For respondent: Michael P. Cash, Houston Principal issues in this lease dispute over a construction defect are (1) whether Ashford, which took over ECO's building lease when it bought the building, had a duty to complete the construction "punch list" according to ECO's plans even though ECO had signed an estoppel agreement with the previous owner "accepting the premises without exception" and (2) whether the damages measure for the construction defect should be diminished lease value instead of repair costs. After the building's foundation cracked and tilted, Ashford sued the contractor and sued to declare it had not breached the lease with ECO. ECO countersued for breach, arguing that Ashford, as the landlord by assignment, assumed the original landlord's obligation to complete the building according to plans. The trial court awarded ECO damages for diminished lease value and attorneys fees. On review, the appeals court affirmed, holding in part that Ashford exclusively failed to complete a necessary punch-list item linked to the foundation problem after it assumed the lease but before the deadline for completing the punch list. The court of appeals also held diminution of the lease value was the proper damages measure because ECO leased the building and did not own it. 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
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ASHISH PATEL, ET AL. V. TEXAS DEPARTMENT OF LICENSING AND REGULATION, ET AL. (12-0657) - view video
2/27/2014 @ 10:00 AM (length 46:25)
Originating county: Travis County
Originating from: 3rd District Court of Appeals, Austin
Case Documents
The principal issues are (1) whether this challenge under the Texas Constitution's due-course-of-law provision should be analyzed under a "real and substantial connection" test and not, as federal due-process-of-law claims, by a rational basis; (2) whether the state has immunity from declaratory-judgment claims raising constitutional challenges to statutes; and (3) whether the suit is justiciable because all plaintiffs may not have standing to challenge the licensing requirement, or the suit may not be ripe because only two of the plaintiffs face penalties for not being licensed or it may be barred by the redundant-remedies doctrine. In this case several "eyebrow threaders" and salon owners who offer threading sued the department, the commission over it and officers of both over regulations that require eyebrow threaders to be licensed facialists or cosmetologists. To be licensed, the threaders complain, involves either 750 or 1,500 hours' training that has little to do with their work. Patel and another eyebrow threader who worked at a mall kiosk, as Patel did, were cited by state inspectors for working without licenses. Together with other eyebrow-threading practitioners and the salon owners, they sued to declare the license requirement unconstitutional as it applied to them. The state responded by arguing that the suit was barred by sovereign immunity, being essentially a claim that department officers exceeded their authority. The trial court ruled that the department and the commission did not have immunity but granted summary judgment for the state on the merits. The court of appeals affirmed, holding that the eyebrow threaders had standing and their claims were ripe, but the regulation was constitutional as applied to Patel and the others.
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ASHLEY V. HAWKINS (07-0572) - view video
12/11/2008 @ 9:00 AM (length 37:11)
Originating county: Montgomery County
Originating from: 9th District Court of Appeals, Beaumont
Case Documents
07-0572 Gail Ashley v. Doris D. Hawkins from Montgomery County and the Ninth District Court of Appeals, Beaumont For petitioner: R. Brent Cooper, Dallas, and Kimberley M. Spurlock, Humble For respondent: James B. Manley, Cleveland For amicus curiae State of Texas: Rance L. Craft, Austin The issue is whether the statute of limitations is tolled during a person's absence from the state but amenable to service. In this case Hawkins sued Ashley, claiming injuries from an automobile accident. Hawkins filed a petition 60 days before the limitations period ended. The trial court dismissed the claim for failure to prosecute it, then reinstated it, then dismissed it again, then reinstated it a second time. A year after filing suit Hawkins served Ashley, who moved to California after the accident. Ashley moved to dismiss for summary judgment, based on limitations and failure to diligently pursue the claim, which the trial court granted. The court of appeals reversed, holding that Texas Civil Practices and Remedies Code section 16.063 suspended limitations regardless of Hawkins' diligence in serving process. 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
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ATMOS ENERGY CORP., ET AL. V. TOWN OF DISH, ET AL. (15-0613) - view video
3/1/2017 @ 9:40 AM (length 42:11)
Originating county: Tarrant County
Originating from: 7th District Court of Appeals, Amarillo
Case Documents
Principal issues in this nuisance and trespass case against three operators of gas-compressor stations and one pipeline company are (1) whether limitations bars the plaintiffs' claims; (2) whether state and federal clean-air laws preempt the claims; (3) whether the town of DISH (yes, all caps - named after the satellite-television provider) has statutory authority to sue; and (4) whether plaintiffs may recover for prospective injury or mental anguish, abatement of an ongoing nuisance or $1,000-a-day fines against the energy companies.
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ATMOS ENERGY CORPORATION V. THE CITIES OF ALLEN (10-0375) - view video
9/15/2011 @ 9:50 AM (length 43:52)
Originating county: Travis County
Originating from: 3rd District Court of Appeals, Austin
Case Documents
10-0375 Atmos Energy Corp., et al. v. Cities of Allen, et al. from Travis County and the Third District Court of Appeals, Austin For petitioners/cross-respondents companies: Ann M. Coffin and David Duggins, Austin For petitioners/cross-respondents cities: Jose E. de la Fuente, Austin For respondent Railroad Commission: Priscilla Hubenak, Austin The principal issues are (1) whether the Texas Railroad Commission has appellate jurisdiction over the cities' denials of a utility's interim rate-increase filing and, if so, (2) whether the cities get a contested hearing for an interim-rate adjustment. In this case Allen and other cities sued for a declaratory judgment to void an administrative rule permitting interim rates for gas utilities' infrastructure improvements because the rule did not provide for a contested hearing. Allen and the other cities rejected the rate adjustments, but the Railroad Commission granted them without an evidentiary hearing. The trial court denied the cities' request that it declare the rule void, finding the cities could conduct a ministerial review of an interim rate increase but not otherwise deny it. The court of appeals affirmed that cities were not entitled to an adjudicatory hearing on an interim rate adjustment and held the Railroad Commission did not have appellate jurisdiction to review the cities' denial. 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
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ATTORNEY GENERAL KEN PAXTON V. CITY OF DALLAS (15-0073) - view video
9/14/2016 @ 9:50 AM (length 42:12)
Originating county: Travis County
Originating from: 3rd District Court of Appeals, Austin
Case Documents
The issues in this public-information case are (1) whether the attorney-client privilege may be asserted under Public Information Act sections 552.101 or 552.107(1), or both; (2) whether attorney-client privilege constitutes a compelling reason to withhold requested public documents under section 552.302; and (3) whether avoiding harm to the city's bargaining position in a multimillion-dollar long-term transaction to without requested information.
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AUSTIN TRUST CO. V. HOUREN (21-0355) - view video
10/4/2022 @ 9:50 AM (length 47:02)
Originating county: Harris County
Originating from: 14th District Court of Appeals, Houston
Case Documents
There are three primary issues in this case. The first is whether the executor of an estate owed a fiduciary duty to trust beneficiaries. The second issue is whether a decedent's estate was required to, and did, disclose all material facts in connection with a release executed by beneficiaries to the decedent's marital trust. The third issue is whether the trial court abused its discretion in excluding certain financial documents from the summary judgment evidence.
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BADIGA V. LOPEZ (05-0801) - view video
9/9/2008 @ 9:00 AM (length 39:58)
Originating county: Hidalgo County
Originating from: 13th District Court of Appeals, Corpus Christi & Edinburg
Case Documents
05-0801 S. Murthy Badiga, M.D. v. Maricruz Lopez from Hidalgo County and the 13th District Court of Appeals, Corpus Christi/Edinburg For petitioner: Diana L. Faust, Dallas For respondent: E. A. Villareal Jr., Edinburg The Supreme Court will hear arguments on whether in a medical-malpractice case a trial court's refusal to dismiss for failure to file a timely expert report can be subject to an interlocutory appeal. In this case the expert report was served three and a half months after the 120-day deadline, after the trial court granted two motions to extend time. A principal issue in this medical-malpractice case is whether an interlocutory appeal can be taken from a trial court's refusal to dismiss the lawsuit because an expert report was not filed on time. In this case the expert report was served three and a half months after the 120-day deadline, after the trial court granted two extensions. To support the second motion, Lopez contended the report was late because of a clerical error, not indifference. The case poses a statutory conflict between a provision that prohibits interlocutory appeals from orders denying dismissal when an extension is granted to cure a deficient expert report and a provision allowing such appeals when a dismissal motion is denied when an expert report is not filed on time. In this case the court of appeals dismissed the interlocutory appeal for want of jurisdiction. 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
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BARBARA D. COSGROVE V. MICHAEL CADE AND BILLIE CADE (14-0346) - view video
3/24/2015 @ 10:40 AM (length 42:51)
Originating county: Tarrant County
Originating from: 2nd District Court of Appeals, Fort Worth
Case Documents
A principal issue is whether the discovery rule delays limitations on a suit to reform a deed based on mutual mistake. In this case the Cades sued four months after limitations ended, after attempting to get Cosgrove to fix the mistake. In conveying their home and the two acres surrounding it, the Cades specified in the real-estate contract that they, as sellers, would retain the mineral interests. But the deed did not reserve the mineral interests. The Cades argue that the discovery rule should extend limitations on their suit, that is, that they could not have known until they did that the deed was contrary to the real-estate contract. The Cades chose the title company to prepare the deed and closing documents, which includes an agreement that Cosgrove, as buyer for a trust, would adjust or correct any errors or omissions necessary to comply with the sales contract. The trial court granted summary judgment for Cosgrove. The court of appeals reversed, holding that neither the Cades nor Cosgrove were entitled to summary judgment.
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BARFIELD V. SANDRIDGE ENERGY, INC. (20-0369) - view video
1/11/2022 @ 9:00 AM (length 45:16)
Originating county: Andrews County
Originating from: 8th District Court of Appeals, El Paso
Case Documents
The issues in this case, which is governed by Chapter 95 of the Civil Practice & Remedies Code, are: (1) whether a fact issue exists about whether a landowner retained "some control" over an independent contractor's employee's work; (2) whether the common-law open-and-obvious defense applies to Chapter 95 and eliminates the landowner's duty to warn the independent contractor's employee of a danger, and if so, whether the independent contractor's employee raised a fact issue on the necessary-use exception to this defense; and (3) if the independent contractor's employee's knowledge of the dangerous condition did not obviate the landowner's obligation to issue an adequate warning, whether a fact issue exists about whether the landowner issued an adequate warning.
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BART DALTON V. CAROL DALTON (17-0155) - view video
2/27/2018 @ 9:50 AM (length 40:01)
Originating county: Nacogdoches County
Originating from: 12th District Court of Appeals, Tyler
Case Documents
The issues challenging the trial court's order to withhold wages and split retirement benefits to enforce contractual alimony are (1) whether wages may be withheld under the Texas Family Code chapter 8 to satisfy the alimony agreement and (2) whether Texas Property Code section 42.0021 exempts retirement money from seizure in this case nor whether federal retirement law (ERISA) preempts Texas law.
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BASIC CAPITAL MANAGEMENT, INC. V. DYNEX COMMERCIAL, INC. (08-0244) - view video
9/10/2009 @ 10:40 AM (length 44:08)
Originating county: Dallas County
Originating from: 5th District Court of Appeals, Dallas
Case Documents
08-0244 Basic Capital Management Inc., et al. v. Dynex Commercial Inc. and Dynex Capital Inc. from Dallas County and the Fifth District Court of Appeals, Dallas For petitioners: William Dorsaneo, Dallas For respondents: Deborah G. Hankinson, Dallas In this breach-of-contract case involving real-estate loans the principal issues question (1) whether Basic Capital Management's affiliate entities were third-party beneficiaries of a loan commitment under which they may recover; (2) whether, if so, they have capacity to recover for Single Asset Bankruptcy Remote Borrowing Entities authorized as borrowers if acceptable by the lender (or whether Dynex, the lender, waived its challenge by failing to file a verified denial); and (3) whether consequential damages for lost opportunity or, alternatively, damages for increased costs may be recovered. 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
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BCCA APPEAL GROUP INC. V. CITY OF HOUSTON (13-0768) - view video
9/2/2015 @ 9:50 AM (length 43:50)
Originating county: Harris County
Originating from: 1st District Court of Appeals, Houston
Case Documents
Principal issues are (1) whether Houston's air-quality ordinance intended to regulate emissions more stringently than state law is preempted by state law and (2) whether the ordinance unconstitutionally delegates law-making authority by incorporating state regulations and allowing changes the Texas Department of Environmental Quality may make. BCCA, a group of industrial owners in the Houston area, sued Houston over its ordinance establishing the city's own comprehensive air-quality program. Before the city passed the ordinance in 2007, it contracted with state air-quality regulators to monitor pollution standards the city imposed on businesses not regulated by the state. But Houston's newer ordinance and regulatory scheme resulted from the city's perception that the state's pollution enforcement was too lax. The trial court granted summary judgment to BCCA and enjoined the Houston ordinance's enforcement. The appeals court reversed.
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BENNETT V. REYNOLDS (08-0074) - view video
12/15/2009 @ 9:00 AM (length 47:50)
Originating county: San Saba County
Originating from: 3rd District Court of Appeals, Austin
Case Documents
08-0074 Thomas O. Bennett Jr. and James B. Bonham Corp. v. Randy Reynolds from San Saba County and the Third District Court of Appeals, Austin For petitioners: Susan S. Vance, Austin For respondent: David Keltner, Fort Worth The principal issues in this dispute over cattle belonging to one rancher allegedly sold by another are (1) whether $1.25 million in punitive damages violates due process when actual damages were $5,300; (2) whether agency principles support punitive damages against a corporation for its president's acts; and (3) whether punitive damages against the corporation may be based on "reverse veil-piercing." In this case Reynolds sued Bennett and the Bonham corporation for conversion, alleging Bennett sold Reynolds' cattle on the corporation's land. Bennett's daughters own the corporation. Bennett, the president but not a shareholder, lives on the corporate property and runs his own cattle on it without charge. The court of appeals affirmed the punitive damages. 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
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BENNY P. PHILLIPS, M.D. V. BRAMLETT (07-0522) - view video
4/22/2008 @ 10:00 AM (length 46:38)
Originating county: Lubbock County
Originating from: 7th District Court of Appeals, Amarillo
Case Documents
07-0522 Benny P. Phillips, M.D. v. Dale Bramlett from Lubbock County and the Seventh District Court of Appeals, Amarillo For petitioner: Jim Hund, Lubbock For respondents: John Smithee, Amarillo The Supreme Court will hear arguments of whether Stowers doctrine applies to avoid statutory damages cap in med-mal award. The principal issue is whether medical-malpractice damages are capped under the Medical Liability Insurance Improvement Act when the doctor's liability insurer may be liable on a bad-faith claim. In this case the trial court ruled that the insurance company's refusal to settle the case brought it under an exception to the statutory damages limit. Phillips also contends that the plaintiff's jury argument - that they should send a message and "buck the liberal treatment" of doctors by previous med-mal juries - was incurable. In his lawsuit Bramlett claimed his wife died after a hysterectomy because her surgeon did not check on her before leaving the hospital and did not check his voice mail to learn early enough that she suffered from internal bleeding after her operation. Phillips argues that the jury's multi-million verdict should have been capped by the medical-malpractice statute because the exception to those limits for an insurer that imprudently rejects a settlement offer - the basis of the Stowers doctrine - would not apply because the judgment was against the doctor, not the insurance company. Even if it does apply to the insurer, he contends, Bramlett did not prove the insurer refused an offer an "ordinary prudent insurer" should have accepted. The trial court refused to cap the damages and the court of appeals affirmed.
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BENTON STANFIELD, ET AL. V. JON T. NEUBAUM AND BARBARA NEUBAUM (15-0387) - view video
3/30/2016 @ 9:50 AM (length 1:04:05)
Originating county: Montgomery County
Originating from: 14th District Court of Appeals, Houston
Case Documents
The principal issue is whether judicial error breaks causation for a legal-negligence claim when the appeals court reversed the trial loss based on trial-court error. In this case the Neubaums claim as damages their costs for an appeal to remedy their lawyers' trial error. In the underlying lawsuit, alleging the Neubaums charged usurious interest for a loan to a customer through an agent, the jury found March, the agent, loaned the money on the Neubaums' behalf. But on review the court of appeals reversed, holding no evidence proved the agent acted for the Neubaums. In this malpractice case the Neubaums allege their lawyers in the original case were negligent in part because one lawyer's illness left the trial in the hands of a firm lawyer, Stanfield, who never tried a case before. The Neubaums contend their lawyers failed to conduct discovery early enough to find the company that sued for usury was working a Ponzi scheme; that a usury "cure" letter was never admitted as evidence (and the jury never considered it as an issue); and that their lawyers did not hire an expert to review the company's bank records until after the trial. But in the malpractice case the Neubaums did not allege Stanfield, the trial lawyer, acted negligently on the issue whether March acted as the Neubaums' agent. At trial of the usury case Stanfield objected that evidence did not prove March was the Neubaums' agent and raised that argument in moving for a new trial, both of which the trial court rejected. In this malpractice case the law firm argued that it could not be liable for the trial court's error in the underlying usury case and that error caused the Neubaums' appellate costs. The trial court granted summary judgment for the law firm. A divided court of appeals reversed in part, holding the law firm failed as a legal matter to establish that its alleged negligence did not proximately cause the Neubaums' damages. By holding that the law firm should have established by expert testimony that causation was broken, the appeals court seems to reject the rule that judicial error creates a new and independent cause.
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BERKEL & COMPANY CONTRACTORS, INC. V. TYLER LEE AND LEIGH ANN LEE, INDIVIDUALLY AND AS NEXT FRIEND OF S.R.L., A MINOR (18-0309) - view video
9/15/2020 @ 9:00 AM (length 41:31)
Originating county: Harris County
Originating from: 14th District Court of Appeals, Houston
Case Documents
A principal issue is whether the appeals court erred by remanding, in the interest of justice, the question whether the Texas Workers' Compensation Act's intentional-tort exception applies. The court of appeals at first reversed and rendered judgment against Lee, whose leg was crushed and later amputated when a crane fell under maneuvering stress. Then the court remanded, reasoning that its elaboration on the intentional-tort exception (before the Court's June 12 Mo-Vac Service Co. v. Escobedo decision) justified a remand. For the intentional-tort exception to apply in worker-comp cases, the Court held in Mo-Vac, the employer must believe that its actions are substantially certain to result in a particular injury to a particular employee, not merely highly likely to increase overall risks to employees in the workplace. The appeals court determined its outline of the substantial-certainty test's requirements required remand to allow Lee to support his argument that he was in a "danger" zone - a localized area - that Berkel's supervisor knew would result in injury.
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BERRY V. BERRY (20-0687) - view video
2/24/2022 @ 10:50 AM (length 47:38)
Originating county: Nueces County
Originating from: 13th District Court of Appeals, Corpus Christi & Edinburg
Case Documents
This case, a dispute regarding the lease of a family ranch, raises four primary issues. First, does a person named in a trust agreement as a contingent beneficiary have standing under the Trust Code to bring claims against trustees? Second, does a co-trustee of a trust have standing to bring claims against non-co-trustee third parties? Third, does a co-trustee of a trust that owns a limited partnership share of a partnership have derivative standing to bring claims on behalf of the partnership? And fourth, is a co-trustee with arguable notice of other co-trustees' likely breach of fiduciary duty required to search public records for evidence of that breach?
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BETTY PHILLIPS, M.D. V. DALE BRAMLETT, ET AL. (12-0257) - view video
2/6/2013 @ 10:40 AM (length 43:30)
Originating county: Lubbock County
Originating from: 7th District Court of Appeals, Amarillo
Case Documents
The principal issues in this dispute over calculating health care-liability damages are (1) whether the Supreme Court has exclusive jurisdiction to enforce its mandate on remand; (2) whether post-judgment interest accrues from the first trial-court judgment or from the judgment on remand; and (3) whether the trial court properly vacated its first judgment when the Supreme Court remanded without instructions to vacate. In a first appeal in this case, in which Dr. Phillips contended the trial court erred by not capping, the Supreme Court remanded, holding that damages awarded against Dr. Phillips should have been capped consistent with the Court's opinion. On remand the trial court entered a second judgment, capping damages and awarding post-judgment interest beginning with the second judgment's date. When Bramlett appealed, the appeals court rejected Phillips' dismissal motion - based on his contention that the Supreme Court retained exclusive jurisdiction - and reversed to calculate interest from the first judgment.
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BIC PEN CORP. V. CARTER (09-0039) - view video
3/23/2010 @ 9:00 AM (length 52:32)
Originating county: Matagorda County
Originating from: 13th District Court of Appeals, Corpus Christi & Edinburg
Case Documents
(Justice Green not sitting) 09-0039 BIC Pen Corp. v. Janace M. Carter from Matagorda County and the 13th District Court of Appeals, Corpus Christi/Edinburg For petitioner: Reagan W. Simpson, Austin For cross-petitioner/respondent: Lisa Powell, McAllen Principal issues in this case involving injuries resulting from a child playing with a lighter are (1) whether federal law preempts the manufacturing-defect claim and the causation theory based on it; (20 whether legally sufficient evidence supported causation and a manufacturing defect; and (3) whether legally sufficient evidence supported the jury's malice finding for exemplary damages. The Court earlier held that federal law by implication preempted a lighter design-defect claim in reversing a judgment for Carter. On remand, the court of appeals affirmed the jury's manufacturing-defect verdict for Carter, but reversed the punitive-damages award. 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
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BILL YOUNGKIN V. BILLY G. HINES JR. (16-0935) - view video
12/6/2017 @ 11:30 AM (length 43:27)
Originating county: Brazos County
Originating from: 10th District Court of Appeals, Waco
Case Documents
In this fraud suit against an attorney, the issues are (1) whether Youngkin proved by a preponderance of the evidence that Hines's claims are subject to the Texas Citizens Participation Act; (2) whether Hines demonstrated by clear and specific evidence a prima facie case on all essential elements of his claims; and (3) whether Youngkin established by clear and specific evidence his litigation-privilege defense.
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BIODERM SKIN CARE, LLC AND QUAN NGUYEN, M.D. V. VEASNA "SANDEE" SOK (11-0773) - view video
9/9/2013 @ 10:40 AM (length 39:00)
Originating county: Dallas County
Originating from: 5th District Court of Appeals, Dallas
Case Documents
The issues in this interlocutory appeal, based on the trial court's refusal to dismiss for failure to file an expert medical report, are (1) whether a laser hair-removal company owned by a physician is a health-care provider or physician as defined by the Texas Medical Liability Act and (2) whether the negligence claim for laser burns from a hair-removal process resulted from treatment directly related to health care. Bioderm Skin Care moved to dismiss Sok's claim because, as required by the medical-liability act, she did not submit a health care-expert report. The trial court refused to dismiss the suit. The court of appeals affirmed.
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BISON BLDG. MATERIALS, LTD. V. ALDRIDGE (06-1084) - view video
1/16/2008 @ 9:00 AM (length 43:51)
Originating county: Harris County
Originating from: 1st District Court of Appeals, Houston
Case Documents
06-1084 Bison Building Materials Ltd. v. Lloyd K. Aldridge from Harris County and the First District Court of Appeals, Houston For petitioner: Tom Van Arsdel, Houston For respondent: Kurt Arbuckle, Houston The Supreme Court will hear arguments on the principal issue of whether an appeal can be taken from a trial court's order vacating in part an arbitration award without a rehearing. The principal issue is whether an appeal can be taken from a trial court's order vacating in part an arbitration award without ordering a rehearing. In this case Aldridge, a Bison employee, moved for arbitration of a damages claim for a work injury under an agreement stipulating all work-related injury claims would be arbitrated but providing that an objection to an arbitration decision could be reviewed by a court. Bison moved to dismiss his claim, arguing that he had waived his right to arbitrate his damages because, after his injury, Aldridge signed a subsequent workplace-injury benefits waiver and release forgoing "the right to file a legal action ... for any and all damages sustained by me because of my injury" for benefits he got from Bison's plan. Aldridge sued to set aside the arbitration decision. Noting "unanswered questions regarding fair notice and ambiguity of the post-injury waiver agreement, the trial court vacated that part of the award precluding arbitration of the damages claim. In a split decision, the court of appeals dismissed what it called an interlocutory appeal because it had no jurisdiction.
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BITCO GENERAL INSURANCE CORP. V. MONROE GUARANTY INSURANCE CO. (21-0232) - view video
9/14/2021 @ 9:50 AM (length 42:21)
Originating from: U.S. Court of Appeals, 5th Circuit
Case Documents
1. Is the exception to the eight-corners rule articulated in Northfield Ins. Co. v. Loving Home Care, Inc. permissible under Texas law? 2. When applying such an exception, may a court consider extrinsic evidence of the date of an occurrence when (a) it is initially impossible to discern whether a duty to defend potentially exists from the eight-corners of the policy and pleadings alone; (b) the date goes solely to the issue of coverage and does not overlap with the merits of liability; and (c) the date does not engage the truth or falsity of any facts alleged in the third party pleadings? Fifth Circuit opinion (docket number 19-51012)
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BOB GREENE V. FARMERS INSURANCE EXCHANGE (12-0867) - view video
1/7/2014 @ 9:50 AM (length 44:30)
Originating county: Dallas County
Originating from: 5th District Court of Appeals, Dallas
Case Documents
The principal issues involving a home fire-loss claim are (1) whether a statutory provision bars the insurer's defense that coverage was suspended when the homeowner left the house vacant for more than 60 days (the vacancy did not contribute to the loss: fire spread from an adjacent house) and, if not, (2) whether Farmers is required to show prejudice to deny the claim. Greene sued after Farmers Insurance denied the claim he brought as the homeowner's best friend. Four months before the fire, the owner notified Farmers that she was leaving her house, putting it up for sale and moving into a retirement community. She continued paying her premiums. The trial court ruled for Greene, but the court of appeals reversed, finding the statute applied to personal-property loss but not real-property damage.
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BOEING CO. AND GREATER KELLY DEVELOPMENT AUTHORITY V. GREG ABBOTT, AS TEXAS ATTORNEY GENERAL (12-1007) - view video
2/26/2015 @ 9:00 AM (length 43:34)
Originating county: Travis County
Originating from: 3rd District Court of Appeals, Austin
Case Documents
The principal issues in this contest to get the price Boeing paid for maintenance facilities at the former Kelly Air Force Base in San Antonio are (1) whether lease information is exempt from public disclosure under Texas Public Information Act section 552.104 (protecting information that would give advantage to a competitor) and (2) whether the information falls under section 552.110's trade-secrets exemption. A former Boeing employee requested the lease information from the Kelly development entity. Boeing sued the attorney general after the attorney general, in an opinion Boeing requested, determined that Boeing's leasing costs for the Kelly space was subject to disclosure under the open-records law. The trial court agreed and the appeals court affirmed its decision. Boeing argues that its military aircraft-maintenance business, the reason it leased former maintenance hangars at Kelly, is highly competitive, so by knowing what it paid for the Kelly lease its competitors could bid for cheaper facilities elsewhere and underbid Boeing for military contracts. The attorney general contends that section 552.104's exemption for information benefitting a competitor protects the government's interests, not a private company's, and that Boeing did not prove the information it was seeking to protect was a trade secret exempted by section 552.110.
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BP AMERICA PRODUCTION CO. V. MARSHALL (09-0399) - view video
12/7/2010 @ 9:00 AM (length 49:06)
Originating county: Zapata County
Originating from: 4th District Court of Appeals, San Antonio
Case Documents
(Justice Guzman not sitting) 09-0399 BP America Production Co., et al. v. Stanley G. Marshall, et al. from Zapata County and the Fourth District Court of Appeals, San Antonio For petitioner BP America: Thomas R. Phillips, Austin For petitioner Wagner Oil: Pamela Stanton Baron, Austin For respondents Stanley G. Marshall Jr., et al.: Tim Patton, San Antonio For respondents Vaquillas Ranch Co., et al.: David M. Gunn, Houston In this case by mineral interest-holders alleging BP fraudulently continued a lease it had ceased working, the issues are (1) whether the discovery rule tolled limitations; (2) whether BP's communications with a mineral interest-holder amounted to legal opinion or created a false impression that required full disclosure; (3) whether BP, which leased its production interest, can be required to account for future net profits even though it no longer possesses producing wells; (4) whether a successor lessee to BP's interest, as co-tenant, can claim title to the mineral interests by adverse possession against the other tenant; and (5) whether BP's successor to its lease interest can be a bona fide purchaser, if it took title without knowledge of the alleged fraud. 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
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BP AMERICA PRODUCTION CO. V. RED DEER RESOURCES LLC (15-0569) - view video
1/12/2017 @ 10:40 AM (length 42:10)
Originating county: Lipscomb County
Originating from: 7th District Court of Appeals, Amarillo
Case Documents
The issues in this contest over the commercial viability of a producer's lease are (1) whether Red Deer, the top-lease holder, secured a necessary finding that a well was incapable of producing in paying quantities when BP, the producer, stopped its production and invoked a shut-in royalty clause; (2) whether the trial court's judgment that the lease lapsed was based on inconsistent jury findings, one that production in paying quantities had not failed before the well was shut in and the other that on the shut-in date the well was incapable of commercial production; (3) whether legally sufficient evidence supported the verdict; and (4) whether the trial court erred by rejecting BP's proposed instructions.
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BROOKSHIRE BROTHERS, LTD. V. JERRY ALDRIDGE (10-0846) - view video
9/12/2012 @ 9:50 AM (length 43:55)
Originating county: Angelina County
Originating from: 12th District Court of Appeals, Tyler
Case Documents
The principal issues in this premises-liability case are (1) whether the trial court erred by admitting spoliation evidence based on the grocer's retaining a security-video clip showing the plaintiff's fall and the moments before and after it but not longer, which might have borne on constructive notice of a grease spill; (2) whether the trial court generally erred by instructing the jury on spoliation (and specifically by placing the burden of disproving prejudice on Brookshire); and (3) whether legally sufficient evidence supported the jury's negligence finding. In this case Aldridge, a former professional football player, asked the see the video of his fall a few days after he slipped at the store. The store refused. After he sued, the store produced eight minutes of what store cameras caught on tape, starting a minute before Aldridge entered the store and ending a minute after he fell. The appeals court affirmed the trial court's decision to admit the spoliation evidence and its spoliation instruction.
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BROWN & GAY ENGINEERING INC. V. ZULEIMA OLIVARES (13-0605) - view video
10/15/2014 @ 10:40 AM (length 43:57)
Originating county: Harris County
Originating from: 14th District Court of Appeals, Houston
Case Documents
The issue in this wrongful-death action is whether an engineering firm working for a toll-road authority has derivative immunity involving a triple-fatality accident. Oliveres sued for negligence and premises defects after her son died in a collision with a wrong-way drunken driver who entered a tollway by way of an exit ramp. Oliveres alleged Brown & Gay failed to design proper signs to avoid the accident. Brown & Gay argues that it falls within the scope of the toll-road authority's immunity because the toll-road authority had the right to control its work. The trial court granted Brown & Gay's jurisdictional plea, but the appeals court reversed, holding that Brown & Gay was an independent contractor and not the Fort Bend County Toll Road Authority's employee.
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BUILDER RECOVERY SERVICES, LLC V. TOWN OF WESTLAKE (21-0173) - view video
3/23/2022 @ 9:00 AM (length 48:10)
Originating county: Tarrant County
Originating from: 2nd District Court of Appeals, Fort Worth
Case Documents
The issues in this case are (1) whether Texas Health and Safety Code 363.111 empowers a Type A general-law municipality to impose licensing requirements on commercial solid waste operators and impose a percentage of revenue fee; (2) whether a municipal ordinance adopted by Westlake is preempted by Texas Health and Safety Code 361.0961; (3) whether the license fee imposed by Westlake's ordinance is an unconstitutional occupation tax, and whether this issue was mooted when Westlake lowered the fee from 15% to 3%; and (4) whether the court of appeals erred by remanding the issue of attorney's fees to the trial court.
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BYRON D. NEELY, INDIVIDUALLY AND BYRON D. NEELY, M.D., P.A. V. NANCI WILSON, CBS STATIONS GROUP OF TEXAS, L.P., D/B/A KEYE-TV AND VIACOM, INC. (11-0228) - view video
9/13/2012 @ 9:55 AM (length 44:04)
Originating county: Travis County
Originating from: 3rd District Court of Appeals, Austin
Case Documents
A principal issue in this libel case based on a television report that the Texas Medical Board ordered a physician disciplined is whether Texas recognizes the third party-allegation rule that would shield a publisher or broadcaster from defamation liability if the report is substantially true. Dr. Neely, an Austin neurologist, sued Wilson and her then-employer, KEYE-TV in Austin, after a report that included interviews with two malpractice claimants against Neely and a rendition of the medical board's agreed order with Neely. The order addressed the doctor's writing his own refill prescriptions for drugs in lieu of returning to the doctors who prescribed them. The order suspended him for three years, but allowed him to practice on probation with conditions and cited his violation of a rule prohibiting inappropriate prescriptions of "dangerous drugs" and his inability to practice medicine "with reasonable skill and safety to patients, due to mental or physical condition." The trial court granted summary judgment for Wilson and the station. The court of appeals affirmed, holding that McIlvain v. Jacobs created a third party-allegation rule in Texas and that Neely's allegations that the broadcast reported false defamatory statements were either substantially true or not defamatory.
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CAFFE RIBS INC. V. STATE OF TEXAS (14-0193) - view video
9/22/2015 @ 9:00 AM (length 44:08)
Originating county: Harris County
Originating from: 14th District Court of Appeals, Houston
Case Documents
In this condemnation-valuation case a principal issue is whether harmful error resulted from trial court's excluding evidence, based on the project-influence doctrine, that the state interfered with pollution remediation and depressed the property's value. In this case Caffe Ribs challenged a condemnation award of $7.3 million for property it argues was worth $9.9 million when the state condemned it. The trial court excluded Caffe Ribs' evidence that its land was subject to a pollution-cleanup plan and that the state interfered with the remediation plan. Based on the jury's fair-market valuation, the trial court awarded $4.9 million. The court of appeals affirmed. Caffe Ribs argues that the trial court misapplied the project-influence doctrine, which bars enhancing the value of land because of a new higher use based on the plans for it after condemnation.
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CANTEY HANGER LLP V. PHILIP GREGORY BYRD, ET AL. (13-0861) - view video
12/4/2014 @ 9:50 AM (length 44:49)
Originating county: Tarrant County
Originating from: 2nd District Court of Appeals, Fort Worth
Case Documents
In this fraud suit by Byrd against the law firm that represented his ex-wife in a divorce, the issues are (1) whether attorney immunity protects lawyers who allegedly forged a bill of sale for property awarded to the ex-wife in the decree (with tax consequences to the ex-husband) and (2) whether the burden to show the attorney-immunity doctrine's fraud exception should be borne by the ex-husband as plaintiff. Byrd's suit against Cantey Hanger alleged that the firm prepared paperwork to transfer ownership of an airplane his ex-wife got in the divorce but arranged for its sale from Byrd's leasing company to a third party, falsely listing the ex-wife as the leasing company's manager. As a result, the leasing company incurred tax liability that the divorce decree specified the ex-wife would bear. The trial court granted summary judgment to the law firm on the immunity question. The appeals court affirmed.
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CANYON REG'L WATER AUTH. V. GUADALUPE-BLANCO RIVER AUTH. (06-0873) - view video
11/15/2007 @ 10:40 AM (length 41:45)
Originating county: Guadalupe County
Originating from: 4th District Court of Appeals, San Antonio
Case Documents
Canyon Regional Water Authority v. Guadalupe-Blanco River Authority from Guadalupe County and the Fourth District Court of Appeals, San Antonio For petitioner: Gregory S. Coleman, Austin For respondent: David P. Blanke, Austin The Supreme Court will hear arguments on the issue of whether 'paramount use' question in water authority's condemnation in public lake. The issue is whether the river authority, the owner of a lake, offered sufficient evidence challenging the water authority's condemnation of part of the lake to require the water authority to show its water need was paramount to the lake's prior public use. In this case, the Guadalupe-Blanco River Authority sued after negotiations broke down on the water authority's plan to build a second water intake on Lake Dunlap near New Braunfels. The river authority argues that the intake interferes with the lake's recreational use. The trial court held that Canyon Regional Water Authority had rights to construct the intake under an existing easement, but the court of appeals reversed, holding that the easement allowed only one intake and that water authority offered no evidence of a paramount public use.
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CATHOLIC DIOCESE OF EL PASO AND HERITAGE OPERATING L.P. V. RITA PORTER ET AL. (19-0190) - view video
2/2/2021 @ 9:50 AM (length 41:03)
Originating county: Harris County
Originating from: 14th District Court of Appeals, Houston
Case Documents
In this case involving burn injuries from a fire at a church fundraiser, the issues are (1) whether volunteers for a vendor on the church property are invitees under premises-liability law; (2) whether the trial court's failure to instruct jurors to disregard a "nobody's responsible" argument should be reversed when unavoidable accident was not pleaded; (3) whether families of the four injured teenagers the waived any challenge to the evidence by not contesting the jury's zero-damages finding; and (4) whether the appeals court applied the correct factual-sufficiency standard in reviewing the no-liability verdict.
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CENT. READY MIX CONCRETE CO. V. ISLAS (05-0940) - view video
3/21/2007 @ 10:40 AM (length 41:45)
Originating county: Hidalgo County
Originating from: 13th District Court of Appeals, Corpus Christi & Edinburg
Case Documents
05-0940 Central Ready Mix Concrete Co. Inc. v. Luciano Islas from Hidalgo County and the 13th District Court of Appeals, Corpus Christi/Edinburg A principal issue is whether a contractor owes any duty for the safety of an independent subcontractor's employees performing dangerous work. In this case Islas sued Central Ready Mix for injuries he suffered as he cleaned the rotating mixer on one of Central's cement trucks. Islas, employed by a subcontractor hired by Central to clean the trucks' mixing drums, was caught as he was climbing out of the mixing drum when a co-worker started the truck and the mixer began turning. A jury determined that Central was 20 percent responsible, but the trial court granted the company's motion to disregard the verdict. The court of appeals reversed.
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CENTERPOINT BUILDERS GP L.L.C. AND CENTERPOINT BUILDERS LTD. V. TRUSSWAY LTD. (14-0650) - view video
11/2/2015 @ 9:50 AM (length 40:04)
Originating county: Jefferson County
Originating from: 9th District Court of Appeals, Beaumont
Case Documents
The issue is whether an apartment-building contractor should be entitled to indemnity as a "seller" from a component manufacturer. In the underlying case a subcontractor's employee, injured as he worked on an apartment complex, settled a products-liability case with Centerpoint, the general contractor building the complex, and Trussway, manufacturer of a failed truss that led to his fall. Centerpoint then sued Trussway to be indemnified, claiming it was a seller of the Trussway truss by incorporating the truss in the apartment complex Centerpoint constructed and sold to the owners. By doing so, Centerpoint argues, it put the truss into commerce for purposes of products-liability law. Trussway contends Centerpoint sold a service - building an apartment complex - so it could not be a seller and could not qualify for indemnity. The trial court ruled that Centerpoint was a seller. The court of appeals held it was not.
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CENTOCOR, INC. V. HAMILTON (10-0223) - view video
12/8/2011 @ 9:00 AM (length 59:21)
Originating county: Nueces County
Originating from: 13th District Court of Appeals, Corpus Christi & Edinburg
Case Documents
10-0223 Centocor Inc. v. Patricia Hamilton and Thomas Hamilton, et al. from Nueces County and the 13th District Court of Appeals, Corpus Christi/Edinburg For petitioner: Robert M. (Randy) Roach Jr., Houston For respondents/cross-petitioners: Craig T. Enoch, Austin For cross-respondent Michael G. Bullen, M.D.: Thomas F. Nye, Corpus Christi For amici curiae Texas Medical Association, et al.: R. Brent Cooper, Dallas Principal issues are (1) whether the court of appeals erred by discounting the learned-intermediary doctrine when fraud allegations were based on a drug-marketing video shown to patients; (2) whether expert testimony should have been required to assist in establishing that the existing warning was unreasonably dangerous; and (3) whether the product's side-effects warning can prove causation of one of those effects. In his case the Hamiltons sued after Patricia Hamilton developed lupus-like symptoms from a drug she used to treat her Crohn's disease. They alleged Centocor, the drug manufacturer, used direct-to-patient advertising that did not include side-effects warnings about symptoms she developed. A jury found Centocor committed fraud and awarded damages, including punitive damages. On review, the appeals court rejected Centocor's argument that the learned-intermediary doctrine shielded it from liability because Mrs. Hamilton's prescribing doctor was responsible for warning her about adverse effects. It held the doctrine was defeated when the manufacturer was misleading in a promotional video by omitting potential adverse effects. 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
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CERTIFIED EMS, INC. D/B/A CPNS STAFFING V. CHERIE POTTS (11-0517) - view video
10/17/2012 @ 10:40 AM (length 42:13)
Originating county: Harris County
Originating from: 1st District Court of Appeals, Houston
Case Documents
The issue is whether in a health-care liability case the required preliminary expert assessment must address both direct and vicarious liability theories. In this case the patient sued a temporary staffing agency over a male nurse's alleged inappropriate touching and questioning, claiming Certified EMS, the employer, was vicariously liable for the nurse's conduct and negligent itself in its employee's training and supervision. On an adequacy challenge to expert reports, the court of appeals rejected Certified EMS's objections, reasoning that at least one report was adequate for vicarious liability even though it was inadequate for direct liability.
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CHARLES G. HOOKS III ET AL. V. SAMSON LONE STAR L.P (12-0920) - view video
9/17/2014 @ 9:00 AM (length 45:40)
Originating county: Jefferson County
Originating from: 1st District Court of Appeals, Houston
Case Documents
Two principal issues are (1) whether a mineral-rights owner exercised reasonable diligence, to avoid limitations, by relying on a fraudulent plat the drilling operator filed with the Texas Railroad Commission instead of a third-party survey in the commission's records would have shown the operator's fraud and (2) whether the mineral-rights owner ratified an unauthorized pooling agreement by knowingly accepting royalties from the unit. Hooks sued for underpaid royalties from Samson, the operator, alleging the operator did not pay royalties on minerals it took in slant-drilling from a "bottom hole" that was within the scope of Hooks' lease. Hooks also claimed unpaid royalties from a pooled unit that Samson created by unilaterally terminating an existing producing unit without authority to do so. Samson contends Hooks sued too late on the fraud claim because Hooks could have discovered the misleading information locating the bottom hole before the limitations deadline. Samson also argues that Hooks accepted royalties from the unauthorized unit, negating the breach-of-contract claim. The trial court ruled for Hooks and awarded damages on the fraud and contract claims, but the court of appeals reversed on both.
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CHCA WOMAN'S HOSPITAL, L.P. V. SCOTT LIDJI AND ANGELA LIDJI (12-0357) - view video
2/5/2013 @ 10:40 AM (length 43:09)
Originating county: Harris County
Originating from: 1st District Court of Appeals, Houston
Case Documents
A principal issue is whether dismissal by nonsuit of a health care-liability claim delays the statutory expert-report deadline. In this case the Lidjis, suing on their son's behalf, nonsuited their claim 116 days after its filing (four days before the expert-report deadline). When they refilled the suit more than two years later, the Lidjis served an expert report on the same day. The Lidjis argue that their nonsuit tolls the deadline for the expert report. The hospital moved to dismiss, contending the deadline for the report passed. The trial court denied the hospital's dismissal motion and the court of appeals affirmed.
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CHESAPEAKE EXPLORATION L.L.C. AND CHESAPEAKE OPERATING INC. V. MARTHA HYDER, ET AL. (14-0302) - view video
3/24/2015 @ 9:50 AM (length 39:00)
Originating county: Tarrant County
Originating from: 4th District Court of Appeals, San Antonio
Case Documents
In this case over a "cost-free" overriding royalty on gross minerals production, from wells on Hyder's property that produced from an adjoining leasehold, a principal issue is whether post-production costs may be deducted from Hyder's overriding royalties. Hyder sued Chesapeake for underpaying royalties from Chesapeake's slant-drilling production from wells on Hyder's land. The central dispute is whether Hyder's lease with Chesapeake for oil-and-gas production from her minerals estate, allowing for post-production costs, should inform a provision that provides a cost-free 5 percent royalty for directional production from adjacent estates. The trial court ruled that Hyder was entitled to an overriding royalty free of post-production costs. The court of appeals affirmed.
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CHRIS LINEGAR V. DLA PIPER US, LLP (14-0767) - view video
2/10/2016 @ 9:00 AM (length 42:13)
Originating county: Travis County
Originating from: 11th District Court of Appeals, Eastland
Case Documents
The issue is whether Linegar has standing to sue for legal malpractice and related claims if his only injury was losing his retirement money held by a corporate trustee. This case involves a temporary loan that Linegar, as chair, director and sole shareholder of the corporate trustee holding his retirement fund, authorized from the retirement fund to a company in which he was the largest shareholder. That company, IdentiPHI Inc., resulted from a merger between a company Linegar controlled and a Seattle company. Linegar alleges DLA Piper, which represented the Seattle company in the merger and became the new company's counsel, later represented him in the details of the temporary financing for the new company. Linegar claims, however, that DLA Piper failed to secure the loan properly and, when the new company declared bankruptcy, his retirement fund was his direct loss, not the corporate trustee's, and his alleged malpractice claim arose from DLA Piper's advice to him. After a jury trial, the trial court awarded Linegar the retirement fund's value and other damages. The appeals court reversed, holding that Linegar did not have standing to sue as a shareholder because the loan was from the corporate trustee.
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CHRISTUS HEALTH GULF COAST V. LINDA CARSWELL (14-0362) - view video
11/13/2015 @ 9:00 AM (length 50:28)
Originating county: Harris County
Originating from: 1st District Court of Appeals, Houston
Case Documents
A principal issue is whether a fraud claim, alleging misrepresentations to get a widow's consent for an autopsy, constitutes a health care-liability case requiring a threshold expert report. Carswell sued St. Catherine, the Katy hospital where her husband died in 2004 after his admission following emergency treatment for severe pain. The hospital treated him with narcotic pain-killers. In her complaint Carswell alleged medical malpractice, claiming in part that St. Catherine's staff did not monitor her husband after different narcotics were given to him the morning he died. He was scheduled for release later that day. A hospital worker found him crossways in his bed, unresponsive. A year and a half after filing her malpractice suit Carswell amended her case to add the fraud claim, alleging she consented to a complete and independent autopsy but the autopsy actually was done by a hospital affiliated with St. Catherine and by a pathologist who was not trained to determine a cause of death. Conflicting evidence addressed whether the Harris County Medical Examiner's Office, which has jurisdiction to conduct autopsies for unexplained or mysterious deaths, was contacted about an autopsy or what the medical examiner was told. In response to the suit, CHRISTUS Health Gulf Coast, St. Catherine's owner at the time, moved to dismiss Carswell's case, arguing that autopsies fall under the state's medical-liability law's definitions of health care-liability claims that include "professional or administrative services directly related to health care." But Carswell never filed an expert report to substantiate her fraud allegations, which the law requires before a health care-liability case can go to trial. The trial court ruled the fraud claim was not one for health-care liability and rendered judgment in her favor. The appeals court affirmed the trial court's ruling on the fraud claim.
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CHRISTUS SANTA ROSA HEALTH SYSTEM V. GERALD MARCUS FRANKLIN, M.D., ET AL. (14-1077) - view video
12/9/2015 @ 10:40 AM (length 44:03)
Originating county: Comal County
Originating from: 3rd District Court of Appeals, Austin
Case Documents
In this mandamus action the issue is whether a medical peer-review committee's report recommending no discipline must be disclosed to a physician it investigated. The physician, sued for malpractice, sought the report's disclosure after the hospital, which he named as a responsible third party, contended he was responsible for a surgery error. Franklin, the physician, argues that the Texas Occupations Code, which makes medical peer-review proceedings and records confidential, requires in section 160.007(a) disclosure to a physician the committee is investigating if the committee "takes action that could result in" discipline against the physician. By meeting to review the surgery mistake, the doctor contends, the committee took action and that could have resulted in discipline. The trial court ordered the hospital to produce the report. The court of appeals denied the hospital its requested mandamus relief.
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CHU V. HONG (06-0127) - view video
10/16/2007 @ 9:00 AM (length 45:52)
Originating county: Tarrant County
Originating from: 2nd District Court of Appeals, Fort Worth
Case Documents
06-0127 William Chu v. Chong Hui Hong from Tarrant County and the Second District Court of Appeals, Fort Worth For petitioner: Murry B. Cohen, Houston For respondent: G. Stanley Cramb, Bedford The Supreme Court will hear arguments on the issue of whether third party can be liable in tort under Uniform Fraudulent Transfer Act. A principal issue arising from this divorce proceeding is whether an independent tort claim exists against a third party under the Uniform Fraudulent Transfer Act when the alleged misconduct was fraud on the marital community. This case challenges a husband's sale of a doughnut store without his wife's consent as part-owner, allegedly with Chu's help in his capacity as attorney for the buyers. After the sale, the husband transferred the proceeds to Korean relatives before he then filed for divorce. Hong, the ex-wife, sued her ex-husband for divorce and Chu as a third party for fraud on the community estate. Jurors awarded damages for lost value and lost profits for the shop and $1.5 million in punitive damages against Chu. The court of appeals affirmed.
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CITY OF AUSTIN V. WHITTINGTON (10-0316) - view video
12/6/2011 @ 9:50 AM (length 52:50)
Originating county: Travis County
Originating from: 3rd District Court of Appeals, Austin
Case Documents
10-0316 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
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CITY OF DALLAS V. DAVID S. MARTIN, ET AL. CONSOLIDATED WITH 07-0284 CITY OF DALLAS V. KENNETH E. ALBERT, ET AL. (07-0288) - view video
12/17/2009 @ 9:00 AM (length 50:18)
Originating county: Collin County
Originating from: 5th District Court of Appeals, Dallas
Case Documents
07-0284 City of Dallas v. Kenneth E. Albert, et al. from Collin County and the Fifth District Court of Appeals, Dallas consolidated with 07-0288, City of Dallas v. David S. Martin, et al. For petitioner: Deborah G. Hankinson, Dallas For respondents: Charles W. McGarry, Dallas, and E. Lee Parsley, Austin The principal issues are (1) whether governmental immunity protects the city from a declaratory judgment that could impose a billion-dollar liability for back pay, benefits and interest to Dallas police, firefighters and emergency workers; (2) whether a suit like this, seeking to enforce an ordinance passed by referendum, is exempt from governmental immunity; and (3) whether by withdrawing a counterclaim the city may restore its immunity. Employees sued to declare the effect of a 1979 referendum imposing by ordinance, they argue, minimum salary increases across the board and for breach of contract for the city's alleged failure to provide those raises. The trial court denied the city's jurisdictional plea. The court of appeals held that a declaratory-judgment action waives governmental immunity for prospective relief, affirming the trial court in part, but the court reversed the trial court on the city's immunity on the contract-breach claims. 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
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CITY OF DALLAS V. GREG ABBOTT, ATTORNEY GENERAL OF TEXAS (07-0931) - view video
10/16/2008 @ 10:40 AM (length 42:31)
Originating county: Travis County
Originating from: 7th District Court of Appeals, Amarillo
Case Documents
07-0931 City of Dallas v. Greg Abbott, Attorney General of Texas from Travis County and the Seventh District Court of Appeals, Amarillo For petitioner: James B. Pinson, Dallas For respondent: James C. Ho, Austin The Supreme Court will hear arguments on whether delay for records clarification postpones 10-day deadline for city to seek public-information ruling by attorney general. The issues are (1) whether the Public Information Act's 10-day deadline for a government entity to seek an attorney general's opinion on records disclosure is postponed while the city awaits clarification on the records request and (2) whether the city can be compelled to disclose privileged attorney-client information if the request for the attorney general's opinion was not submitted by the statutory deadline. In this case the city got two requests for records, one that it sought to clarify and the other resulting from that clarification request. Nine days after the second request, the city asked the attorney general for an opinion on whether certain requested information was covered by the attorney-client privilege and not subject to disclosure. When the attorney general answered that the request included privileged information that had to be disclosed because the city missed the deadline, the city sued the attorney general. The trial court ruled for the attorney general and the court of appeals affirmed, reasoning in part that city did not show a compelling reason for withholding the records. The Court will hear three arguments beginning at 9 a.m. in the Hillcrest Classroom in the Underwood Law Library at Southern Methodist University's Dedman School of Law in Dallas. Each side in each case 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
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CITY OF DALLAS V. KENNETH E. ALBERT, ET AL. CONSOLIDATED WITH 07-0288, CITY OF DALLAS V. DAVID S. MARTIN, ET AL. (07-0284) - view video
12/17/2009 @ 9:00 AM (length 50:18)
Originating county: Collin County
Originating from: 5th District Court of Appeals, Dallas
Case Documents
07-0284 City of Dallas v. Kenneth E. Albert, et al. from Collin County and the Fifth District Court of Appeals, Dallas consolidated with 07-0288, City of Dallas v. David S. Martin, et al. For petitioner: Deborah G. Hankinson, Dallas For respondents: Charles W. McGarry, Dallas, and E. Lee Parsley, Austin The principal issues are (1) whether governmental immunity protects the city from a declaratory judgment that could impose a billion-dollar liability for back pay, benefits and interest to Dallas police, firefighters and emergency workers; (2) whether a suit like this, seeking to enforce an ordinance passed by referendum, is exempt from governmental immunity; and (3) whether by withdrawing a counterclaim the city may restore its immunity. Employees sued to declare the effect of a 1979 referendum imposing by ordinance, they argue, minimum salary increases across the board and for breach of contract for the city's alleged failure to provide those raises. The trial court denied the city's jurisdictional plea. The court of appeals held that a declaratory-judgment action waives governmental immunity for prospective relief, affirming the trial court in part, but the court reversed the trial court on the city's immunity on the contract-breach claims. 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
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CITY OF DALLAS V. STEWART (09-0257) - view video
2/16/2010 @ 9:00 AM (length 45:11)
Originating county: Dallas County
Originating from: 5th District Court of Appeals, Dallas
Case Documents
09-0257 City of Dallas v. Heather Stewart from Dallas County and the Fifth District Court of Appeals, Dallas For petitioner: Barbara Rosenberg, Dallas For respondent: Julius S. Staev, Dallas The issue in this takings claim over a house the city demolished as a nuisance is whether res judicata or collateral estoppel attaches to a final determination by a legislatively created, quasi-judicial board. In this case the Urban Rehabilitation Standards Board declared Stewart's house a nuisance after years of standing vacant and in disrepair. As Stewart appealed the standards board's nuisance determination to the trial court, the city demolished the house under authority granted by Local Government Code chapters 54 and 214. Stewart then pressed an unconstitutional-takings claim, arguing the city took her property without fair compensation. In response the city pleaded that the takings claim depended on relitigating the standards board's nuisance finding, but Stewart failed to appeal that specifically to the trial court. After a trial, a jury found the city had unconstitutionally taken Stewart's property and awarded damages. The trial court rejected the city's res judicata defense. 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
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CITY OF DALLAS V. VSC, LLC (08-0265) - view video
1/19/2010 @ 9:00 AM (length 50:40)
Originating county: Dallas County
Originating from: 5th District Court of Appeals, Dallas
Case Documents
08-0265 City of Dallas v. VSC, LLC from Dallas County and the Fifth District Court of Appeals, Dallas For petitioner: Charles Estee, Dallas For respondent: James C. Mosser and Alexis F. Steinberg, Dallas For amicus curiae: Bill Davis, Austin Principal issues are (1) whether the vehicle-storage company has a vested property interest in stolen cars police seized from the company's tow lot and (2) whether the cars' seizure is a compensable taking under the Texas Constitution. VSC, which operates a storage facility for vehicles towed without owners' consent, sued over as many as 277 vehicles seized by city police with search warrants for vehicles reported stolen, involved in felonies or with altered identification numbers. VSN claims it lost as much as $250,000 in fees it would have charged the owners for storage and towing. The trial court denied the city's jurisdictional plea, seeking dismissal, and the court of appeals affirmed for the most part. The appeals court held that the city's exercise of its police power in this case could be an unconstitutional taking.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
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CITY OF DESOTO, TEXAS V. WHITE (07-1031) - view video
12/11/2008 @ 9:50 AM (length 42:18)
Originating county: Dallas County
Originating from: 5th District Court of Appeals, Dallas
Case Documents
07-1031 City of DeSoto v. Justin White from Dallas County and the Fifth District Court of Appeals, Dallas For petitioner: Amber L. Slayton, Dallas For respondent: Randy Doubrava, Austin The principal issue is whether a hearing examiner had jurisdiction over an appeal from a police officer's indefinite suspension because the city failed to inform the suspended officer, as required by the Civil Service Act, that choosing a hearing examiner to review his disciplinary action limited his appeal of the examiner's decision. White sued for reinstatement when the city, in its formal suspension notification, failed to follow the requirement that it inform him of restrictions on appellate issues from a hearing examiner's decision. He had assistance of counsel when he chose the hearing examination route. The trial court granted him summary judgment and ordered his reinstatement, holding that the notification requirement on the hearing examination procedure deprived the examiner of jurisdiction over the case. 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
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CITY OF EL PASO V. HEINRICH (06-0778) - view video
11/13/2007 @ 9:50 AM (length 43:52)
Originating county: El Paso County
Originating from: 8th District Court of Appeals, El Paso
Case Documents
City of El Paso, et al. v. Lilli M. Heinrich from El Paso County and the Eighth District Court of Appeals, El Paso For petitioners: Eric G. Calhoun, Dallas, and Hadley A. Huchton, El Paso Respondent: Stewart W. Forbes, El Paso The Supreme Court will hear arguments on the issue of whether immunity protects pension board sued over recalculated pension. The principal issues in this lawsuit to determine a widow's pension benefits are (1) whether the city and pension-benefits board retain immunity if the suit essentially is for money damages and (2) whether officials sued as individuals had governmental or official immunity. Heinrich sued after the pension board reduced by a third the pension she received after her police officer husband's death. That reflected the board's calculation for benefits that, it contended, should have been for her son under bylaws in effect when her husband died. The board initially approved 100 percent of the benefits to Heinrich, then determined in the later recalculation that the full-benefits provision to a spouse became effective after Heinrich's husband died. At first she sued for an amount she alleged was owed, but later pleaded the suit as one to declare her rights to the pension as originally calculated. The trial court denied the board's immunity defense. The court of appeals affirmed.
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CITY OF HOUSTON ET AL. V. HOUSTON MUNICIPAL EMPLOYEES PENSION SYSTEM (17-0242) - view video
3/20/2018 @ 10:40 AM (length 44:17)
Originating county: Harris County
Originating from: 14th District Court of Appeals, Houston
Case Documents
In this next stage of dueling between the city and the city's pension system over onetime municipal employees employed by spinoff city corporations - and whether and how much the city owes for their pension contributions - the principal issues are (1) whether under the first stage decision by this Court, Klumb v. Houston Municipal Employees Pension System, the employees are covered by the pension system; (2) whether the pension system's ultra vires suit appropriate to enforce a meet-and-confer agreement with the city; (3) whether the pension system's public-information suit is barred because it was against the city and not a public-information officer; and (4) whether the pension system instead of its board has standing under the pension-requirements statute.
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CITY OF HOUSTON V. JAMES AND ELIZABETH CARLSON, ET AL. (13-0435) - view video
9/18/2014 @ 10:40 AM (length 39:34)
Originating county: Harris County
Originating from: 14th District Court of Appeals, Houston
Case Documents
The principal issue is whether a city order forcing homeowners to vacate their condominium units later reversed for violating their due-process rights precludes their inverse-condemnation suit for the time they were barred from their homes. After city investigations that found the building was not covered by an occupancy permit and the condominium units unsafe, Houston city officials ordered the residents to vacate their homes. In ensuing litigation, the vacate order was reversed on due-process grounds. The homeowners then sued for inverse condemnation. On that claim, the trial court granted the city's jurisdictional plea, which argued in part that the homeowners had no right to occupy the property without the required occupancy permit and that the city did not take the property for public use. A divided appeals court reversed.
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CITY OF HOUSTON V. SHAYN A. PROLER (12-1006) - view video
2/6/2014 @ 9:00 AM (length 41:03)
Originating county: Harris County
Originating from: 14th District Court of Appeals, Houston
Case Documents
Principal issues in this employment-discrimination appeal are (1) whether a fire captain's reassignment from "fire suppression" work to training duties - allegedly because he avoided firefighting - constituted unlawful discrimination without a medical evaluation and (2) whether the trial court properly gave injunctive relief without a damages award and the city, in response to an arbitration order, had returned him to firefighting duty before he filed his lawsuit. Proler also argues that the city's petition for review was not filed in time, so the Court lacks jurisdiction over this appeal. In this case the city challenges a trial court's decision affirming a hearing officer's order reinstating Proler, the fire captain, to duty in a fire station. Proler complained that his assignment to the training academy for a second time was discrimination based on a perceived but undiagnosed disability. In a split decision the appeals court upheld the trial court's employment-discrimination ruling.
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CITY OF LORENA, TEXAS V. BMTP HOLDINGS, L.P. (11-0554) - view video
11/6/2012 @ 10:40 AM (length 37:00)
Originating county: McLennan County
Originating from: 10th District Court of Appeals, Waco
Case Documents
The issue is whether a city's moratorium on sewer connections should apply to unsold lots in a platted development the city approved before the moratorium. In this case BMTP Holdings, the developer, sued to prevent the city from halting sewer connections to seven lots in two approved subdivisions. BMTP argues that Local Government Code section 212.131, defining property development for a city's moratorium such as this one, applies only when all development plans have not been completed. The trial court denied BMTP's summary-judgment motion. The court of appeals reversed the city's summary judgment, holding that section 212.131 excluded from the moratorium a subdivision that had been platted and approved.
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CITY OF N. RICHLAND HILLS, TEX. V. FRIEND (11-0367) - view video
2/28/2012 @ 9:50 AM (length 45:43)
Originating county: Tarrant County
Originating from: 2nd District Court of Appeals, Fort Worth
Case Documents
11-0367 City of North Richland Hills v. Laura Friend and Luther Friend from Tarrant County and the Second District Court of Appeals, Fort Worth For petitioner: Fredrick Wayne "Fritz" Quast, Fort Worth For respondents: Darrell L. Keith, Fort Worth For amicus curiae State of Texas: Rance L. Craft, Austin The principal issues are (1) whether the city waived its immunity when city water-park staff responded to a 12-year-old girl's heart attack with resuscitation equipment that did not include heart defibrillators available in the park and (2) whether, as in this case, the city and its employees are sued at the same time, the Texas Tort Claims Act bars suit against either or whether the city consented to suit by waiving its immunity under the act. The Friends sued the city after their daughter died. When she collapsed, employees at the city-owned park did not use available defibrillators on her. The Friends argue the city waived its immunity under the theory that the city employees misused tangible personal property because the resuscitation equipment did not contain an integral safety component. The trial court denied the city's jurisdictional plea. The appeals court 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
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CITY OF PASADENA V. SMITH (06-0948) - view video
9/10/2008 @ 9:00 AM (length 41:20)
Originating county: Harris County
Originating from: 1st District Court of Appeals, Houston
Case Documents
06-0948 City of Pasadena v. Richard Smith from Harris County and the First District Court of Appeals, Houston On rehearing For petitioner: Kevin D. Jewell, Houston For respondent: Heidi L. Widell, San Antonio For amicus curiae, State of Texas: James C. Ho, Austin The Supreme Court will hear arguments on whether a city has a right to appeal a hearing officer's decision dismissing a disciplinary proceeding when the basis for the examiner's decision was mistaken law. The principal issue is whether a city has a right to appeal a hearing officer's decision dismissing a disciplinary proceeding when the basis for the decision was mistaken law. In this case Smith, a Pasadena police officer, appealed an indefinite suspension to a hearing examiner. State law provides for an appeal from a civil service commission decision, but not from a hearing examiner's decision. The trial court dismissed the appeal on Smith's jurisdictional plea. The court of appeals affirmed. In this Court, the city argues that the hearing examiner's decision can be appealed under a provision allowing for an appeal when the examiner has exceeded her jurisdiction - and that a mistake of law is exceeding jurisdiction. 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
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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.
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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.
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CITY OF WACO V. KIRWAN (08-0121) - view video
2/3/2009 @ 9:00 AM (length 46:28)
Originating county: McLennan County
Originating from: 10th District Court of Appeals, Waco
Case Documents
08-0121 City of Waco v. Debra Kirwan from McLennan County and the 10th District Court of Appeals, Waco For petitioner: Charles D. Olson, Waco For respondent: Michael Singley, Austin For amicus curiae State of Texas: David S. Morales, Austin The principal issues in this case involving a death in a fall at a city park are (1) whether the Recreational Use Statute allows a premises-defect claim based on a natural condition and (2) whether the plaintiff presented a genuine issue of material fact regarding the city's gross negligence. Kirwan's son died when he fell 60 feet as a rock precipice gave way under him. To get to the cliff, Kirwan's son had to pass a stone wall across a path and a warning sign. Under the Recreational Use Statute, the landowner - in this case, Waco - does not owe a duty of care greater than that owed a trespasser for inherent natural dangers. Kirwan argues the statute's exception for gross negligence applies to a premises defect for a naturally occurring condition and points to a graduate student's report offered to the city that warned of falling rock dangers to walkers on paths below limestone cliffs at the park as evidence of the city's knowledge of the danger and its gross negligence in failing to fix the dangers. Waco, however, argues that gross negligence may only be established by showing a landowner created a condition that a recreational user would not reasonably expect on the property. The trial court granted to city's jurisdictional plea, but the court of appeals reversed, holding that the statute did not prohibit a premise defect based on natural conditions. The appeals court also held that Kirwan raised a material fact issue to support her gross-negligence claim. 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
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CITY OF WACO V. LOPEZ (06-0089) - view video
9/27/2007 @ 9:00 AM (length 44:46)
Originating county: Limestone County
Originating from: 10th District Court of Appeals, Waco
Case Documents
06-0089 City of Waco v. Robert Lopez from Limestone County and the 10th District Court of Appeals, Waco For petitioner: Enid Wade, Waco For respondent: R. John Cullar, Waco The Supreme Court will hear arguments on the issue of whether Commission on Human Rights Act is exclusive remedy for retaliation claim. In this employment-discrimination case, the principal issues are (1) whether the Commission on Human Rights Act offers the exclusive remedy for a retaliation claim; (2) whether the city's equal employment-opportunity policy is a "law" under the state Whistleblower Act; (3) whether the act only applies to reporting law violations detrimental to the public good; and (4) whether an alleged equal-employment policy violation was reported in good faith to an appropriate law-enforcement agency. Lopez was fired after alleged misuse of a city vehicle and claims the firing was in response to his age- and race-discrimination complaint filed months earlier with the city's equal-employment opportunity officer. The city answered Lopez's Whistleblower Act suit with a jurisdictional plea and summary-judgment motion, which the trial court denied. The court of appeals affirmed.
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CITY OF WACO, TEXAS V. KELLEY (07-0485) - view video
4/2/2008 @ 9:00 AM (length 44:15)
Originating county: McLennan County
Originating from: 10th District Court of Appeals, Waco
Case Documents
07-0485 City of Waco v. Larry Kelley from McLennan County and the 10th District Court of Appeals, Waco For petitioner: David W. Holman, Houston For respondent: LaNelle L. McNamara, Waco, and Richard W. Carter, Fort Worth The Supreme Court will hear arguments of whether hearing examiner exceeded his authority by ordering a fired police officer to be reinstated at reduced rank. A principal issue is whether state law allows a hearing examiner to order temporary suspension and reduction in rank of an assistant police chief indefinitely suspended after a drunken-driving arrest. In this case Kelley had been indefinitely suspended after his arrest in 2001. Waco argues that the hearing examiner reviewing the assistant police chief's discipline violated Texas Local Government Code section 143.053(e) because the examiner was limited, after finding the allegation to be true, to upholding Kelley's firing. Section 143.053(e) gives hearing examiners three options in reviewing a police officer's suspension: dismissal, temporary suspension or restoring the officer to previous rank. The trial court upheld the examiner's decision to suspend Kelley temporarily and to reinstate him as a sergeant. In a split decision, the appeals court reinstated Kelley as a commander, a higher rank than the examiner decided, but a rank lower than assistant chief.
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CITY OF WATAUGA V. RUSSELL GORDON (13-0012) - view video
12/4/2013 @ 9:40 AM (length 46:21)
Originating county: Tarrant County
Originating from: 2nd District Court of Appeals, Fort Worth
Case Documents
The issue is whether an intentional tort under the Texas Tort Claims Act is defined only by a government employee's intent to act or by both the intent to act and the resulting harm. In this case Gordon sued for injuries to his wrists after officers arresting him for drunken-driving handcuffed him (too tightly, he complained). The city moved to dismiss on a jurisdictional plea, arguing that Gordon's claim was barred by the intentional-tort exception to the immunity waiver for tangible personal-property use under the tort claims act because the handcuffing itself was intentional. The trial court denied the city's plea. On interlocutory review, the court of appeals affirmed, holding that Gordon pleaded facts to establish negligence and the handcuffing, in any event, followed the officers' affidavit testimony that it was according to training standards and not to intentionally injure him.
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CLINT INDEPENDENT SCHOOL DISTRICT V. SONIA HERRERA MARQUEZ ET AL. (14-0903) - view video
11/4/2015 @ 9:50 AM (length 43:01)
Originating county: El Paso County
Originating from: 8th District Court of Appeals, El Paso
Case Documents
A principal issue in this school-financing challenge to the district's alleged unequal support for certain schools is whether the parents were required to exhaust administrative remedies before suing the district on a constitutional claim. In this case parents claimed the district's disparate support among its schools violated the state Constitution's equal-rights provision. Clint school district moved to dismiss on a jurisdictional plea because the parents did not raise their challenge in an administrative proceeding before suing. The trial court granted the district's plea, but the court of appeals reversed, holding the challenge raised constitutional claims exempt from the exhaustion-of-remedies requirement.
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CMH HOMES, INC. V. PEREZ (10-0688) - view video
2/3/2011 @ 10:40 AM (length 43:26)
Originating county: Duval County
Originating from: 4th District Court of Appeals, San Antonio
Case Documents
10-0688 CMH Homes Inc., et al. v. Adam Perez from Duval County and the Fourth District Court of Appeals, San Antonio For petitioners: Mr. Scott A. Brister, Austin For respondent: Mr. Brendan McBride, San Antonio The principal issue is whether a trial court order appointing an arbitrator in lieu of the parties' impasse is subject to interlocutory review under Civil Practices and Remedies Code . If not, counsel for CMH Homes argues that the interlocutory appeal should be considered a mandamus petition, inviting the Court to adopt the concurrence in In re D. Wilson Construction Co. (at 784, suggesting an improper appeal should be treated as a mandamus petition). 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
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COINMACH CORP. F/K/A SOLON AUTOMATED SERVICES, INC. V. ASPENWOOD APARTMENT CORP. (11-0213) - view video
2/27/2013 @ 9:00 AM (length 44:14)
Originating county: Harris County
Originating from: 1st District Court of Appeals, Houston
Case Documents
The principal issues in this case brought against a tenant operating a coin-operated laundry in an apartment complex are (1) whether the tenant is entitled to limited possession until evicted and whether it's liable in tort for wrongful possession and, if so, (2) whether the continuing-tort doctrine tolls the statutory limitations for alleged torts. In this case Aspenwood bought an apartment complex in foreclosure and tried to evict Coinmach's laundry facilities, but Coinmach ultimately won on appeal. After several years during which Coinmach paid rent (Aspenwood never cashed the checks) Aspenwood sued in district court for tort damages for trespass and for interfering with a contract Aspenwood had with another laundry-machine company and claimed damages to when Coinmach's lease ended with the foreclosure sale under the continuing-tort doctrine. The trial court ruled Coinmach was a tenant at sufferance and had a right to possession until judicially evicted and granted summary judgment for the laundry operator. The court of appeals agreed that Coinmach was a tenant at sufferance, but held that Coinmach did not have a possessory interest in the leasehold and that Aspenwood could sue for trespass back to when the lease ended and for tortious interference with a contract.
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COLUMBIA RIO GRANDE HEALTHCARE, L.P. V. HAWLEY (06-0372) - view video
1/17/2008 @ 9:00 AM (length 43:32)
Originating county: Hidalgo County
Originating from: 13th District Court of Appeals, Corpus Christi & Edinburg
Case Documents
06-0372 Columbia Rio Grande Healthcare L.P. v. Alice H. Hawley and James A. Hawley from Hidalgo County and the 13th District Court of Appeals, Corpus Christi/Edinburg For petitioner: Charles Watson, Austin For respondents: Darrin Mitchell Walker, Kingwood The Supreme Court will hear arguments on among principal issues in this medical-malpractice and wrongful death case against a hospital are (1) whether the trial court erred by refusing an instruction on new and independent cause when a pathology report diagnosed cancer that the patient did not receive for almost a year; (2) whether the trial court erred by refusing a "lost chance" instruction when conflicting evidence assessed the patient's survival chances; and (3) whether by failing to instruct the jury to disregard the independent pathologist's negligence the trial court commingled valid and invalid liability theories. The Hawleys sued the hospital, claiming the hospital was at fault for the pathology report's delay and that when she learned of the cancer after it became untreatable. She died while the case was on appeal. The trial court refused instructions on new and independent cause - that the doctors' delay in reading the pathology report caused any delay in the prospect of treatment; on "lost chance" - that the delay did not harm her because her chances of survival might have been less than 50 percent; and on not taking account of the pathologist's possible negligence as negligence by the hospital, because the pathologist worked for an independent contractor, not the hospital. The court of appeals affirmed.
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COLUMBIA VALLEY HEALTHCARE SYS., L.P. V. A.M.A (20-0681) - view video
2/23/2022 @ 9:50 AM (length 46:49)
Originating county: Cameron County
Originating from: 13th District Court of Appeals, Corpus Christi & Edinburg
Case Documents
The principal issue in this case is whether the district court is required to submit questions on life expectancy and annual healthcare expenses to the jury under the Periodic Payment Statute. Ana Ramirez (Ramirez) went to Valley Regional Medical Center (Valley Regional) for premature labor with her son. Ramirez was primarily under the care of her nurses. Her obstetrician was on call. During her stay, the baby's heartbeat repeatedly dropped. Ramirez's obstetrician performed an emergency c-section. The umbilical cord was tightly wrapped around the baby's neck, cutting off oxygen. The baby was ultimately diagnosed with cerebral palsy.
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COMBS V. TEXAS ENTERTAINMENT ASSOC., INC. (09-0481) - view video
3/25/2010 @ 10:40 AM (length 50:26)
Originating county: Travis County
Originating from: 3rd District Court of Appeals, Austin
Case Documents
09-0481 Susan Combs and Greg Abbott v. Texas Entertainment Association Inc. and Karpod Inc. from Travis County and the Third District Court of Appeals, Austin For petitioner: James C. Ho, Austin For respondent: Craig T. Enoch, Austin The issue is whether the First Amendment free-speech clause prohibits the state from collecting the so-called pole tax on each patron at clubs, restaurants or bars serving alcohol with live nude entertainment. In this lawsuit, the trial court declared the $5 tax unconstitutional and permanently enjoined the state comptroller from collecting it. The court of appeals affirmed in a split decision, holding that the tax was a content-based limitation on protected speech. Texas Supreme Court advisory Contact: Osler McCarthy, Staff Attorney for Public Information (512) 463.1441 or email: osler.mccarthy@courts.state.tx.us
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COMMUNITY HEALTH SYSTEMS PROFESSIONAL SERVICES CORP. ET AL. V. HENRY ANDREW HANSEN II, M.D. (14-1033) - view video
3/2/2017 @ 9:45 AM (length 45:20)
Originating county: Brazos County
Originating from: 13th District Court of Appeals, Corpus Christi & Edinburg
Case Documents
The principal issues are (1) whether a cardiovascular surgeon's firing, under a contract provision allowing termination without cause after a set employment period, requires the employer to prove it fired the surgeon on without-cause grounds to disprove a contract-breach claim; (2) whether the employment contract's stipulation for "annual practice losses" is ambiguous and, if not, whether the hospital the employer established the condition to terminate without cause; (3) whether a tortious interference-with-contract claim is precluded if the contract was not breached; and (4) whether the Second Torts Restatement's truthful-information defense (section 772) should be adopted in this case and, if so, whether it would cover a consultant's performance assessment to preclude the tortious-interference claim.
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COMPASS BANK V. FRANCISCO CALLEJA-AHEDO (17-0065) - view video
9/12/2018 @ 10:40 AM (length 41:28)
Originating county: Harris County
Originating from: 1st District Court of Appeals, Houston
Case Documents
In this appeal challenging summary judgment for the bank's affirmative Uniform Commercial Code defenses, in a case in which an account was emptied by fraud, the issues are (1) which of two deposit agreements govern; (2) whether the bank customer was negligent as a legal matter for failing to monitor the account when the account was depleted; and (3) whether the bank sent or made "available" bank statements to the customer when it mailed them to an imposter.
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CONOCOPHILLIPS CO. ET AL. V. LEON OSCAR RAMIREZ JR. ET AL. (17-0822) - view video
9/17/2019 @ 9:00 AM (length 46:50)
Originating county: Zapata County
Originating from: 4th District Court of Appeals, San Antonio
Case Documents
The issues in this royalties dispute are (1) whether a grandmother's bequest of all "right, title and interest" in her ranch includes minerals after the surface estate was severed; (2) whether grandchildren who took remainder mineral interests from their father as life tenant can recover royalties Conoco paid on leases it executed without their signatures; (3) whether the appeals court erred by awarding prejudgment interest to the grandchildren, under the Natural Resources Code, for pressing a title dispute; and (4) whether the court erred by awarding the grandchildren $1.1 million in attorneys fees.
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CORNERSTONE HEALTHCARE GROUP HOLDING INC. V. NAUTIC MANAGEMENT VI, L.P. CONSOLIDATED WITH 14-0539 (14-0538) - view video
1/12/2016 @ 9:50 AM (length 43:38)
Originating county: Dallas County
Originating from: 5th District Court of Appeals, Dallas
Case Documents
The issues in this case, alleging Cornerstone executives wrongfully steered an opportunity for the company - purchase of a Texas-based hospital chain - to an unrelated out-of-state investment fund, are (1) whether Texas has specific personal jurisdiction over the nonresident private-equity funds' general partner for its alleged in-state due diligence for the Texas acquisition and, by deciding on the purchase, ostensibly benefited from tortious activity in Texas and (2) whether the Texas contacts of that general partner or its knowledge was shared by the limited-partner investment funds. In this case Cornerstone claimed Nautic Management, through its managing director, Scott Hilinski, furthered Cornerstone executives' wrongdoing: Charged with finding Cornerstone investment opportunities, they identified the hospital chain as an acquisition target but instead proposed to Hilinski that his private-equity funds purchase the hospital chain. Cornerstone claims Hilinski, through Nautic Management, investigated the investment prospect on trips to Texas in which he also met with the Cornerstone executives, then recommended the Texas hospital chain be acquired out-of-state subsidiaries Hilinski controlled. Cornerstone's executives, including its chief executive, resigned after the acquisition to run the chain. Cornerstone argues that Nautic Management's knowledge can be imputed to each of the subsidiary funds and that Nautic's contacts are contacts of the others because of Hilinski's central role. Nautic and the Reliant limited partnerships counter that personal jurisdiction cannot be established over nonresident entities that indirectly invested in the Texas hospital chain. The trial court granted the funds' special appearances to contest jurisdiction but denied Nautic Management's. In the intermediate appeal, the court held that the funds lacked sufficient minimum contacts with Texas, affirming the trial court, and reversed the ruling denying Nautic Management's special appearance.
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CORNERSTONE HEALTHCARE GROUP HOLDING INC. V. RELIANT SPLITTER L.P., ET AL. CONSOLIDATED WITH 14-0538 (14-0539) - view video
1/12/2016 @ 9:50 AM (length 43:38)
Originating county: Dallas County
Originating from: 5th District Court of Appeals, Dallas
Case Documents
The issues in this case, alleging Cornerstone executives wrongfully steered an opportunity for the company - purchase of a Texas-based hospital chain - to an unrelated out-of-state investment fund, are (1) whether Texas has specific personal jurisdiction over the nonresident private-equity funds' general partner for its alleged in-state due diligence for the Texas acquisition and, by deciding on the purchase, ostensibly benefited from tortious activity in Texas and (2) whether the Texas contacts of that general partner or its knowledge was shared by the limited-partner investment funds. In this case Cornerstone claimed Nautic Management, through its managing director, Scott Hilinski, furthered Cornerstone executives' wrongdoing: Charged with finding Cornerstone investment opportunities, they identified the hospital chain as an acquisition target but instead proposed to Hilinski that his private-equity funds purchase the hospital chain. Cornerstone claims Hilinski, through Nautic Management, investigated the investment prospect on trips to Texas in which he also met with the Cornerstone executives, then recommended the Texas hospital chain be acquired out-of-state subsidiaries Hilinski controlled. Cornerstone's executives, including its chief executive, resigned after the acquisition to run the chain. Cornerstone argues that Nautic Management's knowledge can be imputed to each of the subsidiary funds and that Nautic's contacts are contacts of the others because of Hilinski's central role. Nautic and the Reliant limited partnerships counter that personal jurisdiction cannot be established over nonresident entities that indirectly invested in the Texas hospital chain. The trial court granted the funds' special appearances to contest jurisdiction but denied Nautic Management's. In the intermediate appeal, the court held that the funds lacked sufficient minimum contacts with Texas, affirming the trial court, and reversed the ruling denying Nautic Management's special appearance.
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COYOTE LAKE RANCH LLC V. CITY OF LUBBOCK (14-0572) - view video
10/14/2015 @ 9:50 AM (length 42:22)
Originating county: Bailey County
Originating from: 7th District Court of Appeals, Amarillo
Case Documents
The issues in this dispute raising application of the accommodation doctrine to groundwater rights are (1) whether jurisdiction exists over this interlocutory appeal; (2) whether the accommodation doctrine applies to a severed groundwater estate; and (3) whether the groundwater-rights grant, providing access to the land to get the water, precludes the accommodation doctrine. Coyote Lake Ranch, a cattle-raising operation, sued Lubbock for property damage the city caused by mowing grass and building roads to drill wells to pump water it owns under the ranch. The trial court temporarily enjoined Lubbock from its work by applying the accommodation doctrine - a principle of oil-and-gas law that requires the mineral-rights owner to give "due regard" to the surface owner's rights. The appeals court overturned the temporary injunction, holding that the accommodate doctrine does not apply to groundwater rights held by an owner different from the surface owner.
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CROSSTEX ENERGY SERVICES, L.P. V. PRO PLUS, INC. (12-0251) - view video
9/10/2013 @ 9:50 AM (length 44:27)
Originating county: Harris County
Originating from: 1st District Court of Appeals, Houston
Case Documents
The principal issues in this case involving a Rule 11 agreement to designate experts are (1) whether the appeals court had interlocutory jurisdiction to review denial of a dismissal motion under Civil Practices and Remedies Code section 150.002(e) and the trial court's extension for plaintiff to file a merit certificate and (2) whether the defendant waived its right to dismissal based on its agreement to delay the date to designate experts. In this lawsuit Crosstex Energy Services sued the engineering firm that built its gas-compressor unit after an explosion and fire, alleging negligence and other claims. Within days of the limitations deadline for several claims, Crosstex and ProPlus agreed to delay the date to designate experts for the litigation. After the statute of limitations deadline passed, ProPlus moved to dismiss because Crosstex had not filed a certificate of merit with its complaint. Section 150.002(a) requires a certificate, based on an expert's affidavit, when a complaint is filed in a negligence case based on professional engineering services. Section 150.002(d) requires dismissal upon failure to file such an expert report and 150.002(e) specifies that a court order denying dismissal can be appealed before the case is tried. The trial court denied the dismissal motion and gave Crosstex an extension to file the certificate. On review, the court of appeals reversed, with one dissent, holding that it had interlocutory jurisdiction because the trial court denied ProPlus's dismissal motion. It held that ProPlus had not waived its right to seek dismissal when it entered the Rule 11 agreement and that Crosstex's failure to file the merit certificate required dismissal under the statute.
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CROSSTEX NORTH TEXAS PIPELINE L.P. V. ANDREW AND SHANNON GARDINER (15-0049) - view video
3/29/2016 @ 9:00 AM (length 45:15)
Originating county: Denton County
Originating from: 2nd District Court of Appeals, Fort Worth
Case Documents
In this noise-nuisance case two principal issues are (1) whether legally sufficient evidence supports the negligent-nuisance claim and (2) whether the court of appeals erred in its determination that factual support did not support the nuisance claim by failing to follow the Pool v. Ford Motor Co. analysis. In this case the Gardiners sued Crosstex over loud noise and vibrations from a gas-compressor station Crosstex built across from their undeveloped 95-acre Denton County pastureland. Crosstex tried to mitigate the noise when the Gardiners initially complained, but the sides disputed the results at trial. Among their complaints, the Gardiners alleged intentional and negligent nuisance and negligence based on the compressor station's installation and operation. The trial court directed a verdict for Crosstex on the negligent operation and installation claims. Jurors then found the company liable for negligent nuisance but not for intentional nuisance, awarding the Gardiners $2 million based on residential development as the highest and best use of their land. The court of appeals held that legally sufficient evidence supported the Gardiners' negligent-nuisance claim but that sufficient factual support did not. In this appeal Crosstex argues the Gardiners failed to offer sufficient legal support for their negligent-nuisance claim because they did not establish a standard of care or show Crosstex's use of its property for the compressor station was unreasonable. The company contends that its nuisance liability is divorced from weighing the gas compressor's benefits against the purported harm. The Gardiners, on the other hand, reject the notion that expert testimony should be needed to establish a care standard in a noise-nuisance case and that unreasonableness is shown by failure to use ordinary care in creating the nuisance.
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D.R. HORTON-TEXAS, LTD. V. MARKEL INT'L INS. CO. (06-1018) - view video
9/8/2009 @ 9:50 AM (length 46:18)
Originating county: Harris County
Originating from: 14th District Court of Appeals, Houston
Case Documents
06-1018 D.R. Horton-Texas Ltd. v. Markel International Insurance Co. Ltd. from Harris County and the 14th District Court of Appeals, Houston For petitioner: Robert B. Gilbreath, Dallas For respondent: Les Pickett, Houston A principal issue in this insurance dispute over an alleged construction defect causing mold damage is whether a duty to indemnify can exist when a duty to defend does not, based on pleading allegations. After settling with the complaining homeowners, D.R. Horton sued Markel because Markel refused to defend it in the homeowners' suit or to indemnify it as an "additional insured" under Markel's policy covering a responsible subcontractor. Markel moved for summary judgment, claiming the homeowners did not name the subcontractor in their lawsuit and arguing that D.R. Horton could not show the subcontractor's responsible without extrinsic evidence. 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
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DALLAS AREA RAPID TRANSIT V. AMALGAMATED TRANSIT UNION LOCAL NO. 1338 (06-0034) - view video
11/14/2007 @ 9:00 AM (length 45:27)
Originating county: Dallas County
Originating from: 5th District Court of Appeals, Dallas
Case Documents
Dallas Area Rapid Transit v. Amalgamated Transit Union Local No. 1338 from Dallas County and the Fifth District Court of Appeals, Dallas For petitioner: Jeffrey C. Londa, Houston For respondent: Hal K. Gillespie, Dallas The Supreme Court will hear arguments on the issue of whether preemption issue involving suit for pay against Dallas mass transit agency. The issue is whether federal law preempts the transit authority's immunity in a suit seeking money damages to enforce a grievance resolution when federal money to the transit agency is conditioned on "fair and equitable arrangements" for transit employees. In this case the union alleges that DART, the transit agency, breached an agreement for a pay increase for DART employees. The trial court denied the transit agency's jurisdictional plea, based on governmental immunity. The court of appeals held that the fair-and-equitable-arrangements language in the federal Urban Mass Transportation Act preempted state immunity.
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DANIEL GREER AND FIX THE FACTS FOUNDATION V. SALEM ABRAHAM CONSOLIDATED FOR ARGUMENT WITH 14-0987 (14-0669) - view video
1/14/2016 @ 10:40 AM (length 52:06)
Originating county: Hemphill County
Originating from: 7th District Court of Appeals, Amarillo
Case Documents
The principal issues in these cases are (1) whether, in Greer, a public official's status as a libel plaintiff alleging harm from an online publication should be according to his notoriety in his community or assessed by the Internet's worldwide reach and (2) whether, in Sullivan, the text of the Texas Citizens' Participation Act allows "justice and equity" as a basis to reduce attorney fees or only for "other expenses" for a successful defendant defeating a libel claim under the statute. These appeals arise from a political blog post that initially alleged Abraham, a school-board member in Canadian, Texas, was forced by state troopers from a campaign event 230 miles from Canadian for a state representative he opposed. When Abraham complained that he left voluntarily and that troopers were not involved, the blog corrected the story in updates. Abraham then sued for libel, naming in one suit the organization and its director publishing the blog and in the other Sullivan, a political activist Abraham accused as the story's source. The trial court dismissed both suits, based on the Texas Citizens' Participation Act. The appeals court reversed both trial-court decisions. In Greer the court held that the blog did not relate to Abraham's conduct as a school trustee, thus the liability standard Abraham had to meet to avoid dismissal was not as great as the trial court ruled. In Sullivan the court of appeals affirmed the attorney fees and costs the trial court awarded Sullivan.
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DAVIS V. FISK ELEC. CO. (06-0162) - view video
4/10/2007 @ 9:00 AM (length 49:51)
Originating county: Harris County
Originating from: 14th District Court of Appeals, Houston
Case Documents
06-0162 Donald Davis v. Fisk Electric Co., et al. from Harris County and the 14th District Court of Appeals, Houston For petitioner: Renuka Jain, Houston For respondents: J. Cary Gray, Houston In this wrongful-termination case alleging the firing was racially motivated, the principal issues are (1) whether the trial court erred by overruling so-called Batson challenges to peremptory strikes against five of six potential jurors who were black and (2) whether any difference exists between striking black potential jurors for race, which Batson prohibits, and striking them for acknowledging they had been victims of discrimination or because they reacted in voir dire to a racial epithet likely to be in trial testimony. For four of the five strikes, counsel offered as proof unsworn statements about nonverbal occurrences in the courtroom. The trial court overruled Davis's objections to the strikes. The court of appeals affirmed, holding in part that the questions about discrimination and the racial epithet were asked of all potential jurors and that Davis did not dispute Fisk's characterizations of nonverbal occurrences in the courtroom but only noted that no record evidence supported them.
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DAWN NETTLES V. GTECH CORP. (17-1010) - view video
12/3/2019 @ 9:00 AM (length 47:17)
Originating county: Dallas County
Originating from: 5th District Court of Appeals, Dallas
Case Documents
The issues in this case alleging fraud in scratch-off lottery-ticket design by one plaintiff are (1) whether GTECH, an independent contractor supervised by the Texas Lottery Commission, is protected by the commission's sovereign immunity and (2) whether evidence that GTECH's liability will result in spending public money is necessary to extend the contractor's derivative immunity. See 18-0159 below. In this case the appeals court upheld the trial court's derivative immunity for GTECH.
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DEALERS ELECTRICAL SUPPLY CO. V. SCOGGINS CONSTRUCTION CO., INC. (08-0272) - view video
2/3/2009 @ 9:50 AM (length 43:51)
Originating county: Hidalgo County
Originating from: 13th District Court of Appeals, Corpus Christi & Edinburg
Case Documents
08-0272 Dealers Electric Supply Co. v. Scoggins Construction Co. Inc. and Bill R. Scoggins from Hidalgo County and the 13th District Court of Appeals, Corpus Christi/Edinburg For petitioner: Ben L. Aderholt, Houston For respondents: William F. Kimball, Harlingen For amici curiae American Subcontractors Association Inc. and Houston Hispanic Chamber of Commerce: J. Brett Busby, Houston The principal issue is whether the McGregor Act, prohibiting liens against a public building and providing for suit against principals and sureties over payment bonds, is an exclusive remedy to recover for credit extended to a subcontractor that abandoned an elementary school construction project. In this case Dealers sued for payment on $78,000 worth of materials an electrical subcontractor got under a joint checking account before abandoning the construction and absconding with the materials. At first Dealers sued the subcontractor, Scoggins and two bond companies from which Scoggins bought bonds to meet its McGregor Act obligations. Then when Dealers dropped the suits against the bond companies because it missed statutory notice deadlines, it continued the suit for payment under the Texas Construction Trust Fund Act and under the joint checking account. The trial court determined that Scoggins owed Dealers almost $136,000 in damages, costs and interest. The court of appeals reversed, holding that the McGregor Act was Dealers' exclusive remedy, which it lost for failure to give statutory notice to the bond companies. 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
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DEBRA C. GUNN, M.D. ET AL. V. ANDRE MCCOY (16-0125) - view video
2/8/2018 @ 10:00 AM (length 46:04)
Originating county: Harris County
Originating from: 14th District Court of Appeals, Houston
Case Documents
The issues in this challenge to a medical-malpractice verdict are (1) whether legally sufficient causation evidence supports the verdict; (2) whether affidavits from subrogation agents to establish medical expenses comply with Texas Civil Practices and Remedies Code section 18.001's requirements for reasonable and necessary expenses; and (3) whether the appeals court erred by holding the trial court properly excluded the defendants' damages expert.
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DELIA PAGAYON, ET AL. V. EXXONMOBIL CORP. (15-0642) - view video
12/6/2016 @ 9:50 AM (length 41:44)
Originating county: Harris County
Originating from: 14th District Court of Appeals, Houston
Case Documents
In this wrongful-death case involving a fight at a company store between an employee and an employee's father, based on allegations of failure to supervise, a principal issue is whether ExxonMobil's effort to join an emergency physician as a third-party defendant must be supported by the doctor's ordinary negligence or by willful and wanton negligence (the emergency-physician liability standard under Civil Practice and Remedies Code chapter 74) to show proportionate responsibility under chapter 33.
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DIOCESE OF LUBBOCK V. JESUS GUERRERO (20-0005) - view video
1/6/2021 @ 9:50 AM (length 44:44)
Originating county: Lubbock County
Originating from: 7th District Court of Appeals, Amarillo
Case Documents
In this defamation case by a deacon among a list of clergy published on the church website and in a press release, the issues are (1) whether the ecclesiastical-abstention doctrine bars the libel claim when a church internally decides to disclose inside information to the public at large and (2) whether Guerrero, the deacon, presented clear and specific evidence establishing a prima facie case of each element of his defamation claim.
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DITTA V. CONTE (07-1026) - view video
1/13/2009 @ 9:00 AM (length 45:26)
Originating county: Harris County
Originating from: 1st District Court of Appeals, Houston
Case Documents
07-1026 Louis M. Ditta v. Susan C. Conte and Joseph P. Conte Jr. from Harris County and the First District Court of Appeals, Houston For petitioner: Michael J. Cenatiempo and Thomas C. Wright, Houston For respondents: Susan Conte: Karen L. Watkins, Austin Principal issues in this action to remove a trustee is whether a guardian's appointment ends the statutory delay on a lawsuit brought for a disabled trust beneficiary or whether limitations remain tolled under the discovery rule. In this case Ditta, the appointed guardian, sought to remove Susan Conte as trustee of a trust benefiting her mother, who was declared incapacitated in1997. Ditta filed his action after an accounting, ordered after his appointment, that showed Susan Conte and her brother had taken money from the trust for their personal expenses. After a final accounting in 2000, the probate court ordered Susan Conte to repay the trust but only if her mother needed the money. Then in 2004 the guardian sued to remove Susan Conte as trustee, claiming her discord with her brother jeopardized her trustee duties, her use of trust funds had been improper and her debt to the trust created a conflict of interest. The trial court removed her as trustee and modified trust terms to permit a bank to be trustee, finding that she and her brother had spent money from the trust they should not have. On review, the court of appeals reversed, holding that Ditta's lawsuit to remove Conte as trustee was barred by the statute of limitations. 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
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DOCTORS HOSPITAL AT RENAISSANCE LTD. AND RGV MED LLC V. JESUS JAIME ANDRADE AND JESSICA ANDRADE (15-0563) - view video
3/10/2016 @ 9:00 AM (length 43:56)
Originating county: Hidalgo County
Originating from: 13th District Court of Appeals, Corpus Christi & Edinburg
Case Documents
The issues are (1) whether a limited partnership that owns a hospital may be vicariously liable for a physician's negligence when the doctor is a limited partner and (2) whether the general partner may be vicariously liable too. In this case the Andrades sued for their daughter's injuries that they attribute to an obstetrician's negligence during her birth. They added as defendants the hospital limited partnership and the hospital's general partner, RGV Med. Their suit bases that vicarious liability principally on Texas Business Occupations Code section 152.303(a), which makes a partnership responsible for injuries when a partner - the doctor in this case - acts in the partnership's ordinary business or with the partnership's authority. Both the hospital limited partnership and its general partner argue that they did not control the doctor's medical judgment and that their ordinary business was providing and operating the hospital, not obstetrical services. The trial court denied summary judgment for the partnership and general partner. The appeals court affirmed on interlocutory review, holding summary judgment was precluded by an unresolved fact question: whether the doctor was acting within the scope of the partnership business or with its authority.
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DON'S BUILDING SUPPLY, INC. V. ONEBEACON INSURANCE COMPANY (07-0639) - view video
2/7/2008 @ 10:40 AM (length 40:43)
Originating from: U.S. Court of Appeals, 5th Circuit
Case Documents
07-0639 Don's Building Supply Inc. v. OneBeacon Insurance Co. certified question from the Fifth Circuit, U.S. Court of Appeals For appellant: Thomas B. Alleman, Dallas For appellee: Gene F. Creely II, Austin The Supreme Court will hear arguments on the principal issue of when property damage "occurs" for purpose of an occurrence-based policy. The threshold question is when property damage "occurs" to trigger an insurer's duty to defend in an occurrence-based general liability policy. In this case homeowners alleged a synthetic exterior stucco allowed water to seep behind it, causing wood rotting and mold. The homeowners asserted the discovery rule, arguing that the damage was hidden until discovered just before they filed suit. OneBeacon initially defended Don's Building Supply, then withdrew the defense, claiming it had no duty to defend because the homeowners discovered the property damage after its policy expired. The U.S. district court granted summary judgment for the insurance company, holding that the duty to defend becomes manifest or identifiable.
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DORIS FORTE, O.D., ET AL. V. WAL-MART STORES INC. (15-0146) - view video
9/23/2015 @ 9:50 AM (length 39:07)
Originating from: U.S. Court of Appeals, 5th Circuit
Case Documents
The Fifth Circuit asks (1) whether an action for a civil penalty under the Texas Optometry Act is one in which a claimant "seeks damages relating to a cause of action" within the meaning of Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code chapter 41 and, if so, (2) whether the penalties amount to exemplary damages such that Civil Practice and Remedies Code section 41.004(a) precludes their recovery when a plaintiff gets no more than nominal damages. Forte and other optometrists who leased space from Wal-Mart sued Wal-Mart for violating the Optometry Act's ban on prescribed office hours for optometrists. A jury found Wal-Mart liability and awarded $3.9 million in civil penalties under the act (at $1,000 a day) in lieu of actual damages. The federal trial court recommended a reduction to just under $1.4 million. The Fifth Circuit affirmed the liability ruling and initially reversed the civil-penalty award because it constituted exemplary damages disallowed by chapter 41 in the absence of compensatory damages.
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DR. ERWIN CRUZ V. ANDREWS RESTORATION, INC. (10-0995) - view video
12/7/2011 @ 9:00 AM (length 45:00)
Originating county: Dallas County
Originating from: 5th District Court of Appeals, Dallas
Case Documents
10-0995 Dr. Erwin Cruz v. Andrews Restoration Inc. and Rudy Martinez from Dallas County and the 5th District Court of Appeals, Dallas For petitioner: Jennifer G. Martin, Addison For cross-respondent Chubb Lloyds Insurance Co. of Texas: Russell W. Schell, Addison For respondent/cross-petitioner: Shawn M. McCaskill, Dallas Two principal issues are (1) whether "restore" as used in the deceptive-trade practices statute incorporates equitable rescission (requiring surrendering benefits under a contract) and (2) whether the main-purpose doctrine will allow an oral promise to pay another's debt to be enforced despite the statute of frauds. In this case Andrews Restoration (doing business as Protech Services) sued Cruz and his insurer, Chubb Lloyds, for more than $700,000 for Protech's work to control humidity - and mold growth - in Cruz's house. Cruz initially hired Protech to repair a water leak and, after mold was discovered, worked to reduce the mold growth in a damages-mediation effort Cruz ordered while Chubb Lloyds determined whether to declare the house a loss. Andrews Restoration alleged in part breach of an oral contract by Chubb Lloyds to pay for the mold remediation and also sued Cruz for breach of a written contract and to foreclose on liens against the property. Cruz counterclaimed against Andrews for deceptive-trade practices and for rescission of any contract with Protech. Chubb Lloyds counterclaimed for common-law fraud and insurance fraud. In summary-judgment proceedings the court determined Protech violated the Deceptive Trade Practices Act by omitting contract language as to Cruz and could not collect from Chubb Lloyds on an implied contract for what Protech spent to stop the spreading mold or for alleged fraud. A jury then found that Cruz was not damaged by the omitted contract language that violated the DTPA and decided the insurer breached an oral agreement with Protech to stem the mold growth. It awarded Protech the amount of its unpaid bills, just over $705,000. The court of appeals reversed the award against Chubb Lloyds, holding that the insurer's promise, if any, to pay for the mold remediation was not supported by consideration that would have satisfied the main-purpose exception to the statute of frauds' requirement that a contract to pay debts owed by another must be in writing. The appeals court also rejected Cruz's argument that he should have been awarded the more than $1 million he spent for Protech's work on his contention that would "restore" him under the deceptive-trade practices statute. 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
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DYNEGY MIDSTREAM SERVICES, L.P. V. APACHE CORPORATION (07-0043) - view video
9/9/2008 @ 9:50 AM (length 44:14)
Originating county: Harris County
Originating from: 14th District Court of Appeals, Houston
Case Documents
07-0043 Dynegy Midstream Services, Ltd. v. Apache Corp. from Harris County and the 14th District Court of Appeals, Houston For petitioners: Mike A. Hatchell. Austin For cross-petitioner/respondent: Geoffrey L. Harrison, Houston The Supreme Court will hear arguments on (1) whether the court of appeals erred by holding that the gas processor breached its percentage-of-proceeds contract by deducting "unaccounted-for" gas from what Apache was paid and (2) whether expert testimony may prove breach of an unambiguous percentage-of-proceeds contract by establishing custom for processors to pay for unaccounted-for gas even though such gas is not sold and does not generate proceeds. Principal issues are (1) whether the court of appeals erred by holding that the gas processor breached its percentage-of-proceeds contract by deducting "unaccounted-for" gas from what the producer was paid and (2) whether expert testimony may prove breach of an unambiguous percentage-of-proceeds contract by establishing custom for processors to pay for unaccounted-for gas even though such gas is not sold and does not generate proceeds. Apache sued because it claimed audits showed deduction for unaccounted-for gas in what Dynergy paid Apache under contracts that did not mention unaccounted-for gas. Jurors found for Apache, awarding more than $1.5 million, but the trial court rendered judgment notwithstanding the verdict for Dynergy. It also declared judgment for Apache on payments for future "field condensate" and awarded Apache $75,000 in attorneys fees. The court of appeals reversed, for the most part reinstating the jury's findings for Apache. 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
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EAST TEX. SALT WATER DISPOSAL, CO., INC. V. WERLINE (07-0135) - view video
1/16/2008 @ 10:40 AM (length 41:28)
Originating county: Gregg County
Originating from: 6th District Court of Appeals, Texarkana
Case Documents
07-0135 East Texas Salt Water Disposal Co. Inc. v. Richard Leon Werline from Gregg County and the Sixth District Court of Appeals, Texarkana For petitioner: Greg Smith, Tyler For respondent: Gregory J. Wright, Longview The Supreme Court will hear arguments on the issue is whether a trial court's order vacating an arbitrator's award and directing a rehearing give the court of appeals interlocutory jurisdiction. The issue is whether a trial court's order vacating an arbitrator's award and directing a rehearing gives the court of appeals interlocutory jurisdiction. In this case the company sued to vacate an arbitrator's award of two years' salary, attorney's fees and arbitration costs to an employee in a dispute over his employment agreement. The trial court vacated the arbitration award, ruling that it resulted from evident partiality, willful misconduct and gross mistake. On appeal, the court reversed and rendered judgment confirming the award, holding that the Texas Arbitration Act allows appellate review of a trial court order denying confirmation of an arbitration award.
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EBERHARD SAMLOWSKI, M.D. V. WOOTEN (08-0667) - view video
11/18/2009 @ 9:50 AM (length 44:16)
Originating county: Johnson County
Originating from: 10th District Court of Appeals, Waco
Case Documents
08-0667 Eberhard Samlowski, M.D. v. Carol Wooten from Johnson County and the 10th District Court of Appeals, Waco For petitioner: Kay Ellington, Dallas For respondent: Barney L. McCoy, Houston The principal issue is whether a trial court must grant a 30-day extension to cure a deficient but arguably curable expert report in a medical-malpractice suit. In this case the trial court dismissed the suit with prejudice - barring refiling the suit - because the expert report did not adequately show how the alleged negligence proximately caused Wooten's injuries. Wooten alleged Samlowski's initial inaccurate diagnosis led to a second surgery and complications. The court determined the report was not a good-faith effort to comply with the expert-report requirement. The appeals court reversed to allow an extension to cure the report, holding that the expert report was not a good-faith effort but was a good-faith attempt to comply with the report requirement. 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
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EDITH SUAREZ V. TEXAS CITY (13-0947) - view video
1/14/2015 @ 9:50 AM (length 42:52)
Originating county: Galveston County
Originating from: 1st District Court of Appeals, Houston
Case Documents
In this wrongful-death case, brought after a father and his two children drowned in a riptide, the issues are (1) whether the appeals court, in granting the city's jurisdictional plea under the Tort Claims Act and Recreational Use Statute, misapplied the review standard that every reasonable inference should favor jurisdiction and (2) whether the court erred by determining the deaths resulted from a naturally occurring condition. Suarez argues that her jurisdictional evidence showed the beach's artificial construction combined with natural conditions to create a particular danger and that the city failed to replace warning signs after Hurricane Ike destroyed them near where the drownings occurred.
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EDUCATION COMMISSIONER MICHAEL L. WILLIAMS V. STERLING CITY INDEPENDENT SCHOOL DISTRICT ET AL. (14-0986) - view video
12/9/2015 @ 9:00 AM (length 43:21)
Originating county: Nueces County
Originating from: 13th District Court of Appeals, Corpus Christi & Edinburg
Case Documents
In this case by school districts challenging rulings that each owes the state more money under the school-finance law because of increased property values, the issues are (1) whether the education commissioner acted without authority by his interpretation of the school-finance law to require the districts to give back money and, if so, (2) whether the trial court's relief - granting credits by an accounting adjustment - is properly prospective in an ultra vires suit. After the commissioner ordered the Sterling City district to pay more to account for higher property-tax revenues, the district sued, contending the commissioner ordered the "claw back" by going beyond three statutory factors controlling when a district could be ordered to rebate money to the state. The trial court denied the commissioner's jurisdictional plea, based on sovereign immunity, concluding the commissioner acted without authority and immunity does not protect his discretion to interpret the school-finance law without judicial review. The court of appeals affirmed.
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EDWARDS AQUIFER AUTHORITY V. CHEMICAL LIME, LTD. (06-0911) - view video
4/1/2008 @ 10:40 AM (length 42:46)
Originating county: Comal County
Originating from: 3rd District Court of Appeals, Austin
Case Documents
06-0911 Edwards Aquifer Authority, et al. v. Chemical Lime Ltd. from Comal County and the Third District Court of Appeals, Austin For petitioners: Mike Hatchell, Austin For respondent: Robert B. Gilbreath, Dallas The Supreme Court will hear arguments of whether act declared constitutional became effective when opinion was issued or when mandate was. The principal issue is whether the Edwards Aquifer Act became effective when the Court issued its 1996 opinion declaring the act constitutional in Barshop v. Medina County Underground Water Conservation District or when it issued the Barshop mandate. Chemical Lime challenged the authority's denial of Chemical Lime's water permit as an existing user after the authority ruled the application had been submitted too late. Alternatively, Chemical Lime argues, if it missed the deadline to file, it substantially complied with the deadline. In this case the Edwards Aquifer Authority rejected the company's historical water use four years after the company filed it. The company filed its application 18 days after a deadline the authority set after the Court's Barshop decision. The trial court determined the December 30, 1996, deadline was invalid and corrected it to mid-February 1997. The Austin Court of Appeals in this case held that the Edwards Aquifer Act became effective six months after the mandate issued, not six months after the Barshop opinion. The San Antonio Court of Appeals held in a separate case that the deadline properly was set from when the opinion issued.
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EL APPLE I, LTD. V. OLIVAS (10-0490) - view video
9/15/2011 @ 10:40 AM (length 44:00)
Originating county: El Paso County
Originating from: 8th District Court of Appeals, El Paso
Case Documents
10-0490 El Apple I, Ltd. v. Myriam Olivas from El Paso County and the Eighth District Court of Appeals, El Paso For petitioner: Joseph L. Hood Jr., El Paso For respondent: John P. Mobbs, El Paso A principal issue in this discrimination and retaliation suit is whether state or federal law governs attorneys-fees calculations under a state act enacted to effect a federal discrimination statute. Other issues challenge differing features of applying lodestar methods for calculating fees. In this case Olivas sued for sex discrimination and retaliation. A jury found her employer did not discriminate against her based on her gender, but that her discrimination complaint was a motivating factor in its creating a hostile-work environment. The trial court awarded attorneys fees supported by her lawyers' affidavits and not billing records, as federal law requires, and did not require the fees to break down how much time was spent separately on the discrimination and retaliation claims. The court of appeals affirmed, holding in part that the affidavits were legally sufficient to support the trial court's fees award and that work on the claims was too intertwined to separate time spent on one versus time spent on the other. 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
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EL DORADO LAND COMPANY, L.P. V. CITY OF MCKINNEY (11-0834) - view video
1/9/2013 @ 9:50 AM (length 44:28)
Originating county: Collin County
Originating from: 5th District Court of Appeals, Dallas
Case Documents
A principal issue in this case, pleaded as an inverse-condemnation claim by a developer that deeded property for a community park with a buy-back provision if the park were not developed, is whether the developer retained a property interest sufficient to support inverse condemnation because the city built a library on the land instead. When El Dorado sued, the city asserted the trial court did not have jurisdiction because El Dorado sought contract damages but did not plead a contract claim and lacked standing because it did not have a property interest in the land. The trial court granted the city's jurisdictional plea and the appeals court affirmed, holding that inverse condemnation traditionally requires a property interest and that El Dorado seeks compensation for a right to repurchase property under a contract.
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EL PASO COUNTY HOSPITAL DISTRICT, ET AL. V. TEXAS HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES COMMISSION (11-0830) - view video
2/6/2013 @ 9:50 AM (length 42:06)
Originating county: Travis County
Originating from: 3rd District Court of Appeals, Austin
Case Documents
The principal issues are (1) whether the state, enjoined in an earlier appeal from how it calculated Medicaid reimbursements to the hospital district, must refigure reimbursement for the fiscal year before the injunction issued and (2) whether the trial court's injunction covering previous years was additional, retroactive relief beyond the Supreme Court's previous judgment and barred by sovereign immunity. In this case hospital districts challenged what they alleged was an invalid rule that limited the base calculation for Medicaid reimbursement rates. The districts argue in part that the Supreme Court's holding and injunction in an earlier appeal in this case requires the commission to recalculate rates going back several years because they were founded on a void rule. The commission counters that the injunction, in 2008, applied only prospectively. The trial court ordered rate recalculations for fiscal years back to 2002. The appeals court reversed for the years 2002 through 2007. After the trial court's ruling, an administrative law judge granted recalculated reimbursement for the 2010 fiscal year but determined no authority supported recalculation for previous years.
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EL PASO FIELD SERVICES, L.P. V. MASTEC NORTH AMERICA, INC. (10-0648) - view video
1/11/2012 @ 9:00 AM (length 43:36)
Originating county: Harris County
Originating from: 1st District Court of Appeals, Houston
Case Documents
10-0648 El Paso Field Services L.P. and Gulfterra South Texas L.P. v. MasTec North America Inc., et al. from Harris County and the First District Court of Appeals, Houston For petitioners: Murray Fogler and David M. Gunn, Houston For respondents: Kevin Dubose, Houston The issues in this dispute over alleged unforeseen costs in a pipeline-replacement project are (1) whether the court of appeals correctly ruled that El Paso's contract with MasTec allocated risk of "foreign crossings" to El Paso and (2) whether the appeals court correctly applied federal common law instead of Texas common law. In this case MasTec sued for additional costs it encountered to work around and through other pipelines and obstructions for the new pipeline it contracted with El Paso to build. In the contract El Paso stated it would use due diligence to disclose such foreign crossings to MasTec, but its alignment sheets identified 250 and MasTec claimed it encountered perhaps 750. The contract specified that MasTec would assume all risks "notwithstanding" El Paso's representations. A jury awarded additional costs to MasTec, but the trial court rendered judgment for El Paso notwithstanding the jury's verdict. The court of appeals reversed, holding that under a U.S. Supreme Court decision risks were the owner's responsibility from defective specifications that the owner was better able to determine. 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
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EL PASO MARKETING, L.P. V. WOLF HOLLOW I, L.P. (11-0059) - view video
2/8/2012 @ 10:40 AM (length 43:39)
Originating county: Harris County
Originating from: 14th District Court of Appeals, Houston
Case Documents
11-0059 El Paso Marketing L.P. v. Wolf Hollow I L.P from Harris County and the 14th District Court of Appeals, Houston For petitioners: D. Mitchell McFarland and S. Shawn Stephens, Houston For respondent: Solace Kirkland, Houston A principal issue is whether contract remedies preclude a power-plant owner's negligence claim for damage from gas-delivery interruptions and contaminated gas. The plant owner, Wolf Hollow, contends it had no contract obligations because it assigned its gas-delivery contract to its agent, El Paso Marketing, its gas supplier. El Paso assumed the gas-delivery contract Wolf Hollow had with Enterprise, a pipeline company. Both the assigned contract and Wolf Hollow's supply contract with El Paso had clauses waiving consequential damages resulting from interruptions and problems with gas quality. El Paso sued Wolf Hollow to declare it had no liability and brought Enterprise into the suit as a third-party defendant. Wolf Hollow then sued Enterprise for negligently causing the gas-supply interruptions that forced Wolf Hollow to buy replacement power and for negligently delivering contaminated gas that damaged its plant. The trial court granted El Paso and Enterprise summary judgment. The court of appeals affirmed in part, but remanded Wolf Hollow's negligence claim against Enterprise. 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
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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.
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ELLIOTT V. CITY OF COLLEGE STATION (23-0767)
Scheduled 1/15/2025 @ 9:50 AM (starts in 23 days, 20 hours, 30 minutes )
Originating county: Brazos County
Originating from: 6th District Court of Appeals, Texarkana
Case Documents
At issue is whether claims under the Texas Constitution's "republican form of government" clause present a nonjusticiable political question.
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ENBRIDGE PIPELINE (EAST TEXAS) L.P. V. AVINGER TIMBER, LLC (10-0950) - view video
2/27/2012 @ 9:50 AM (length 45:39)
Originating county: Marion County
Originating from: 6th District Court of Appeals, Texarkana
Case Documents
10-0950 Enbridge Pipelines (East Texas) L.P. v. Avinger Timber, LLC from Marion County and the Sixth District Court of Appeals, Texarkana For petitioner: Stephen G. Tipps, Houston For respondent: Glenn Sodd, Corsicana The principal issues in this condemnation-valuation dispute involving land on which a gas-processing plant exists are (1) whether testimony by the landowner's valuation expert violates the value-to-the-taker rule, that is, assessing the land value with the existing plant and easements instead of its value as rural residential property without those improvements and (2) whether the expert testimony violated the project-enhancement rule that precludes valuing for condemnation purposes the property as it has been enhanced. In this case Enbridge Pipelines took over an affiliate's lease of Avinger Timber's land used for the processing plant. When Avinger and Enbridge failed to agree on renewal terms, Enbridge, as a pipeline company with condemnation power, petitioned to take the land. In the valuation trial, the court denied the pipeline's challenge to Avinger's expert, who assessed value based on factors including the existing plant, the pipelines that connected to it and how much Enbridge would pay if the lease terminated and it had to remove the plant and other improvements. The court of appeals affirmed the trial court's decision to accept the Avinger expert's testimony and reject Enbridge's. 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
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ENDEAVOR ENERGY RESOURCES, L.P. V. ENERGEN RESOURCES CORPORATION, ET AL. (18-1187) - view video
9/16/2020 @ 9:00 AM (length 41:55)
Originating county: Midland County
Originating from: 11th District Court of Appeals, Eastland
Case Documents
The issues in this dispute over a secondary lease term with a continuous-drilling provision are (1) whether the appeals court properly construed the retained-acreage clause to limit carryover days extending the lease's 150-day drilling requirement from one term only to the next and, if so, (2) whether the language is so "clear, precise and unequivocal" to enforce it as a special limitation on the grant. Under the continuous-drilling clause, mineral interests on undeveloped acreage would revert to the landowner in this case unless the lease operator undertook continuous development operations. Under the lease the operator "shall have the right to accumulate unused days in any 150-day term during the continuous development program in order to extend the next allowed 150-day term between the completion of one well and the drilling of a subsequent well."
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ENTERGY GULF STATES, INC. V. SUMMERS (05-0272) - view video
10/16/2008 @ 9:00 AM (length 57:11)
Originating county: Jefferson County
Originating from: 9th District Court of Appeals, Beaumont
Case Documents
05-0272 Entergy Gulf States Inc. v. John Summers from Jefferson County and the Ninth District Court of Appeals, Beaumont For petitioner: Jacqueline M. Stroh, San Antonio For respondent: Collyn A. Peddie, Houston The Supreme Court will hear arguments on whether a premises owner can be a contractor for workers comp purposes. The issue is whether a premises owner who hires an independent contractor and provides workers-compensation insurance for the contractor's employees can be a "statutory employer" for workers-comp purposes. Designation as a statutory employer would protect the premises owner from a negligence suit by an injured employee. In this case Summers, hired by a company to work at Entergy's plant, sued Entergy for negligence for on-the-job injuries. Summers' employer worked under a contract with Entergy that labeled it an "independent contractor" but provided also that Entergy would not be precluded from raising the standard workers comp defense. The company's employees would be considered Entergy's employees, eligible for workers compensation and precluded from suing for negligence. In a later provision Entergy agreed to provide workers comp coverage. The trial court granted summary judgment for Entergy on the coverage issue. But the court of appeals reversed, holding that under the workers comp statute a premises owner could not be a general contractor. The Court decided this case in August 2007, holding that a change in the workers comp law despite its label as a recodification without substantive change allowed a premises owner to be a general contractor. The Court granted rehearing of that decision. The Court will hear three arguments beginning at 9 a.m. in the Hillcrest Classroom in the Underwood Law Library at Southern Methodist University's Dedman School of Law in Dallas. Each side in each case 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
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ENVIRONMENTAL PROCESSING SYSTEMS L.C. V. FPL FARMING LTD. (12-0905) - view video
1/7/2014 @ 10:40 AM (length 44:29)
Originating county: Liberty County
Originating from: 9th District Court of Appeals, Beaumont
Case Documents
The principal issues are (1) whether a trespass action exists in Texas for deep subsurface-wastewater migration; (2) whether lack of consent must be proven as a trespass element or whether it's an affirmative defense; and (3) whether the trial court should have directed a verdict on the consent issue because the plaintiff, FPL Farming, could not have consented to a trespass that had not occurred. In this case FPL Farming sued Environmental Processing, a wastewater injection-well operator on adjacent land, over the projected wastewater migration 8,000 feet below FPL's rice farm. FPL sought injunctive relief and damages for trespass, negligence and unjust enrichment. Before its suit, FPL lost its administrative challenge to Environmental Processing's amended permit to allow pumping more wastewater underground. The administrative-law judge ruled that FPL's farming would not be impaired. A jury decided in Environmental Processing's favor. The appeals court reversed, holding in part that FPL could recover for common-law trespass.
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EPPS V. FOWLER (10-0283) - view video
2/3/2011 @ 9:00 AM (length 43:00)
Originating county: Williamson County
Originating from: 3rd District Court of Appeals, Austin
Case Documents
10-0283 Christopher N. Epps and Laura L. Epps v. Bruce Fowler Jr. and Stephanie L. Fowler from Williamson County and the Third District Court of Appeals, Austin For petitioners: Mr. N. West Short, Georgetown For respondents: Mr. Frank B. Lyon, Austin In this case involving the plaintiffs' dismissal of deceptive trade-practices claims by non-suiting them, the issues are (1) whether the defendant is entitled to contractual attorneys fees as the prevailing party and (2) whether the appeals court should have remanded instead of rendering judgment to allow the defendants to press a reserved sanctions motion. When the Fowlers sued over an alleged foundation defect in the house the Eppses sold them, the Eppses denied the allegations and claimed their attorneys fees, based on the home-sale contract. The Fowlers non-suited their claims, but the Eppses proceeded to trial on the fees issue and won almost $23,000. The court of appeals rendered judgment that the Eppses take nothing. 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
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ERI CONSULTING ENGINEERS, INC. V. SWINNEA (07-1042) - view video
12/17/2009 @ 9:50 AM (length 44:46)
Originating county: Smith County
Originating from: 12th District Court of Appeals, Tyler
Case Documents
07-1042 ERI Consulting Engineers Inc. and Larry G. Snodgrass v. Mark Swinnea, et al. from Smith County and the 12th District Court of Appeals, Tyler For petitioners: Sarah B. Duncan, Austin For respondents: Greg Smith, Tyler In this case principal issues are (1) whether disgorgement and forfeiture may remedy a breach of fiduciary duty in a case without fees; (2) whether the court of appeals erred in finding no evidence supported the trial court's actual-damages award; and (3) whether a defendant company incorporated after the alleged fiduciary breach may be jointly and severally liable for damages from that breach. Snodgrass and ERI, an asbestos-removal consulting company, sued Swinnea, a former partner with Snodgrass in ERI. The suit alleged Swinnea helped his wife set up an asbestos-abatement company that competed with ERI's clients. Swinnea agreed not to work for and not compete with ERI when he sold Snodgrass his interest in ERI. After a bench trial, the trial court found Swinnea breached his fiduciary duty and induced the buyout by fraud. The court of appeals reversed, in part holding that disgorgement and forfeiture cannot be a fiduciary-breach remedy in a case without fees involved. 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
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ESPERANZA ANDRADE V. NAACP OF AUSTIN (09-0420) - view video
10/12/2010 @ 9:50 AM (length 43:43)
Originating county: Travis County
Originating from: 3rd District Court of Appeals, Austin
Case Documents
09-0420 Esperanza Andrade, Secretary of State v. NAACP of Austin, et al. from Travis County and the Third District Court of Appeals, Austin For petitioner: Kristofer S. Monson, Austin For respondents: Tom Herman, Austin In this challenge to the secretary of state's electronic-voting-machine certification for Travis County's use, the principal issues are (1) whether the plaintiffs have standing by showing a concrete injury and, if so, (2) whether their allegations of election law and state constitutional violations waive sovereign immunity either under or for injunctive and declaratory relief against a state official acting without authority. In this case the NAACP, representing the voting rights of its Travis County members; a former attorney general candidate; and Travis County voters allege voting-rights violations because they contend the secretary of state certified electronic-voting machines that could not be audited. The trial court ruled all plaintiffs had standing and the court of appeals affirmed, with one dissent. 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
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EVANSTON INSURANCE CO. V. LEGACY OF LIFE, INC. (11-0519) - view video
1/12/2012 @ 9:50 AM (length 43:25)
Originating from: U.S. Court of Appeals, 5th Circuit
Case Documents
11-0519 Evanston Insurance Co. v. Legacy of Life Inc. certified questions from the Fifth Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals For appellant: Marc J. Wojciechowski, Spring For appellee: John C. Cave and Miguel Villarreal Jr., San Antonio In this insurance-coverage dispute involving a non-profit organ-collection company that allegedly sold human organs through a for-profit affiliate, the Fifth Circuit asks: (1) whether personal injury under the policy - defined as bodily injury, sickness or disease including death to any person resulting from that injury, sickness or disease - covers mental anguish for someone who did not suffer physical injury or disease and (2) whether property damage under the policy, defined as "physical injury to or destruction of tangible property, including consequential loss of use, or loss of use of tangible property that has not been physically injured or destroyed," includes coverage for the underlying plaintiff's loss of her dead mother's tissues, organs, bones and body parts. In this case Evanston refused to defend its insured, Legacy of Life, when it was sued by the daughter who donated her mother's organs and who contends the donation was contingent on the their distribution without profit. The U.S. District Court granted summary judgment for the insured, Legacy of Life, on the duty-to-defend question. 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
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EWING CONSTRUCTION CO. INC. V. AMERISURE INSURANCE CO. (12-0661) - view video
2/27/2013 @ 10:40 AM (length 41:44)
Originating from: U.S. Court of Appeals, 5th Circuit
Case Documents
The Fifth Circuit asks in this dispute over general commercial liability coverage: (1) Does a general contractor that enters into a contract in which it agrees to perform its construction work in a good and workmanlike manner, without more specific provisions enlarging this obligation, "assume liability" for damages arising out of the contractor's defective work so as to trigger the Contractual Liability Exclusion? (2) If the answer to question one is "Yes" and the contractual-liability exclusion is triggered, do the allegations in the underlying lawsuit alleging that the contractor violated its common law duty to perform the contract in a careful, workmanlike, and non-negligent manner fall within the exception to the contractual-liability exclusion for "liability that would exist in the absence of contract"?
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EX PARTE FERRIS - CONSOLIDATED WITH 20-0977 (21-0075) - view video
1/13/2022 @ 9:50 AM (length 47:13)
Originating county: Colin County
Originating from: 5th District Court of Appeals, Dallas
Case Documents
The sole issue in this petition is whether a defendant is entitled to expunction of his arrest records after acquittal when he has one prior conviction for an offense that is the same as or similar to the one for which he has been acquitted. The facts in these consolidated cases are virtually identical: The defendants, K.T. and Ferris, were each convicted of DWI; each fully discharged the resulting sentence. Four years after their respective convictions, each defendant was arrested and charged with a second DWI offense. Each was acquitted, resulting in one DWI conviction and one DWI acquittal for each defendant. Both K.T. and Ferris filed petitions for expunction of the arrest records pertaining to their acquittals, and each trial court granted the petitions. In both cases, the Texas Department of Public Safety (DPS) filed motions for new trials, contending that neither K.T. nor Ferris qualified for expunction due to an exception for acquittal expunctions. Both trial courts denied the motions for new trial; DPS appealed in both cases.
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EX PARTE K.T - CONSOLIDATED WITH 21-0075 (20-0977) - view video
1/13/2022 @ 9:50 AM (length 47:13)
Originating county: Denton County
Originating from: 2nd District Court of Appeals, Fort Worth
Case Documents
The sole issue in this petition is whether a defendant is entitled to expunction of his arrest records after acquittal when he has one prior conviction for an offense that is the same as or similar to the one for which he has been acquitted. The facts in these consolidated cases are virtually identical: The defendants, K.T. and Ferris, were each convicted of DWI; each fully discharged the resulting sentence. Four years after their respective convictions, each defendant was arrested and charged with a second DWI offense. Each was acquitted, resulting in one DWI conviction and one DWI acquittal for each defendant. Both K.T. and Ferris filed petitions for expunction of the arrest records pertaining to their acquittals, and each trial court granted the petitions. In both cases, the Texas Department of Public Safety (DPS) filed motions for new trials, contending that neither K.T. nor Ferris qualified for expunction due to an exception for acquittal expunctions. Both trial courts denied the motions for new trial; DPS appealed in both cases.
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EXXON MOBIL CORP. V. THE INSURANCE CO. OF PENNSYLVANIA (17-0200) - view video
9/17/2018 @ 9:50 AM (length 40:16)
Originating county: Harris County
Originating from: 1st District Court of Appeals, Houston
Case Documents
In this subrogation dispute between a contractor and subcontractor's insurance carrier, the issues are (1) whether the standard subrogation endorsement, referencing a written contract required to obtain it, permits a court to consider the contract requiring subrogation; (2) whether the subrogation endorsement directing a court to consider an extrinsic contract permits the court to consider another part of the contract; and (3) whether, when the contract requires the subcontractor's insurer to waive subrogation, the court may look further than the contract's indemnity provisions and, if so, whether the contract's requirement that the subcontractor obtain workers compensation constitutes a liability "assumed."
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EXXON MOBIL CORPORATION V. WILLIAM T. DRENNEN, III (12-0621) - view video
11/6/2013 @ 9:00 AM (length 43:24)
Originating county: Harris County
Originating from: 14th District Court of Appeals, Houston
Case Documents
In this contract-breach case the principal issues are (1) whether the detrimental-activity provisions in Exxon's executive-incentive programs are enforceable under Texas law and (2) whether a choice-of-law clause specifying New York law should be applied in disputes over the incentive programs should govern in this case. In this case Drennen, who retired after 31 years at Exxon when he lost his position, sued after Exxon canceled his incentive bonuses because he went to work for Hess, a company Exxon considered to be a competitor. Exxon alleged Drennen's employment with Hess created a material conflict that breached the incentive-program agreements. As he considered retirement, Drennen contends he was told his incentive awards would be secure as long as he did not work for four other major oil companies, a list that did not include Hess. The trial court decided in Exxon's favor, but the appeals court reversed, holding that the incentive agreements' detrimental-activity provisions are unenforceable under Texas law.
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EXXONMOBIL CORP., ET AL. V. GILBERTO RINCONES (15-0240) - view video
2/7/2017 @ 9:00 AM (length 54:54)
Originating county: Cameron County
Originating from: 13th District Court of Appeals, Corpus Christi & Edinburg
Case Documents
In this appeal from reversal of summary judgment against Rincones, principal issues are (1) whether limitations bars negligence and tortious interference claims against a contract drug-testing company that alleged negligent analysis of a drug screen; (2) whether the appeals court erred by its tacit approval of a "self-compelled" defamation claim, based on Rincones reporting to a subsequent employer his discharge because of the drug test; (3) whether Rincones's evidence supported his discrimination claim against the employer that fired him; (4) whether evidence supported his retaliation claim against his employer; and (5) whether ExxonMobil, which contracted with Rincones's employer to provide refinery workers, may be vicariously liability for the drug-testing company's negligence based on ExxonMobil's adoption of a drug-safety program.
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FEDERAL INSURANCE CO. V. SAMSUNG ELECTRONICS AMERICA, ET AL. CONSOLIDATED WITH 06-1030 ZURICH AMERICAN INSURANCE CO., ET AL. V. NOKIA INC. AND 07-0140 TRINITY UNIVERSAL INSURANCE CO. V. CELLULAR ONE GROUP (06-1040) - view video
2/6/2008 @ 9:00 AM (length 1:08:11)
Originating county: Dallas County
Originating from: 5th District Court of Appeals, Dallas
Case Documents
06-1030 Zurich American Insurance Co., et al. v. Nokia Inc. consolidated with 06-1040 Federal Insurance Co. v. Samsung Electronics America, et al. and 07-0140 Trinity Universal Insurance Co. v. Cellular One Group all from Dallas County and the Fifth District Court of Appeals, Dallas For petitioners: Joseph R. Knight, Austin; Russell McMains, Corpus Christi; and Kirk C. Chamberlin, Los Angeles For respondents: Eric Mayer, Houston, and Charles L. Perry, Dallas The Supreme Court will hear arguments on the issue of whether bodily injury includes harm to human cells allegedly caused by cell-phone radiation. The principal issue common to all three petitions is whether insurers have a duty to defend or indemnify cellular-telephone manufacturers from class lawsuits that allege human-cell injury from cell phone radio-frequency radiation but do not claim "individual issues of injury." These three cases arise from six class actions that allege biological cell injury to cellular phone users who talk on their phones without headsets. By declaratory judgment or on summary-judgment motions, the insurers argued that they have no duty to defend in part because the underlying suits for the most part alleged no "bodily" injury as that term is normally used. In two of the cases the trial courts ruled in the insurers' favor and in the third the trial court issued a judgment for the plaintiffs. The court of appeals held that insurers had a duty to defend against claims alleging cell injuries.
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FINANCIAL INDUSTRIES CORP. V. XL SPECIALTY INS. CO. (07-1059) - view video
4/1/2008 @ 9:50 AM (length 43:49)
Originating from: U.S. Court of Appeals, 5th Circuit
Case Documents
07-1059 Financial Industries Corp. v. XL Specialty Insurance Co. certified question from the Fifth Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals For appellant: Bart Wulff, Dallas For appellee: Gabriela Richeimer, Washington, D.C., and Elizabeth Bloch, Austin The Supreme Court will hear arguments of whether, in certified question, prejudice was required in 'claims-made' policy when policy stipulated notice as condition precedent to policy payment. Certified question: Must an insurer show prejudice to deny payment on a claims-made policy when the denial is based upon the insurer's breach of the policy's prompt-notice provision, but the notice is nevertheless given within the policy's coverage period? XL Specialty's policy required Financial Industries to notify it of any claim "as soon as practicable" and labeled the provision as a condition precedent to payment under the policy. Financial Industries gave notice of a lawsuit against it seven months after the suit was filed, but within the coverage period.
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FIRST AMERICAN TITLE INS. CO. V. STRAYHORN (05-0541) - view video
4/11/2007 @ 9:00 AM (length 43:50)
Originating county: Travis County
Originating from: 3rd District Court of Appeals, Austin
Case Documents
05-0541 First American Title Insurance Co., et al. v. Comptroller of Public Accounts, et al. from Travis County and the Third District Court of Appeals, Austin For petitioners: Steven Reed, Washington, D.C. For respondents: Christine Monzingo, Austin The principal issue is whether the comptroller's interpretation of Texas' "retaliatory" tax statute for premiums paid by out-of-state title-insurance companies violates federal and state equal-protection guaranties. Under the comptroller's recent interpretation of the law - which allows the state to tax at a rate equal to another state's higher tax on Texas title-insurance companies doing business there - Texas assesses the retaliatory rate based on how in-state insurers and agents divide the proceeds from title-insurance premiums. In Texas, by state law, insurers get 15 percent of the premiums paid and agents take 85 percent. Texas assumes insurers and agents divide the premium tax burden by the same ratio - 15 percent of the tax paid by the company, 85 percent by the agent, even if agents and insurers decide differently. The two out-of-state title insurers challenging this assessment argue that Texas charged them a retaliatory tax equal to 85 percent of the premium rate because their home states did not deem the division of the tax burden as Texas does. The companies argue in their challenge that the comptroller's assessment actually leads to Texas charging a retaliatory tax when the basis for one - higher premium tax rates in another state - may not exist and, in any case, would be higher than the home states'. The trial court held for the comptroller and the court of appeals affirmed.
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FIRST TEXAS BANK V. CHRIS CARPENTER (15-0172) - view video
2/9/2016 @ 9:50 AM (length 47:00)
Originating county: Williamson County
Originating from: 3rd District Court of Appeals, Austin
Case Documents
The issues in this case, involving a roofer's injury claim after he fell from an allegedly defective ladder, are (1) whether the bank is protected by Civil Practice and Remedies Code chapter 95 without a written agreement with a contractor who worked for the bank before; if so, (2) whether Carpenter and the bank had a "handshake" agreement to fix a roof leak; and (3) whether the roofer's injury arose from a condition or use of a real-property improvement if he only agreed to determine a leak's source and to prove it to an insurance adjuster. In this case Carpenter sued the bank after falling from the bank's extension ladder, alleging the ladder was defective. First Texas argues that Carpenter was its contractor bound by an agreement to find the leak, show the adjuster and fix the leak with insurance proceeds. Carpenter contends he agreed to find the leak, but that his previous work for the bank was based on written contracts resulting from bidding. The trial court granted the bank summary judgment, concluding the bank did not owe Carpenter a duty under chapter 95 to warn the ladder might be unsafe because he was its contractor. The appeals court reversed, holding no evidence proved a written or oral contract that Carpenter would repair the leak.
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FISCHER V. BOOZER (22-0050) - view video
3/22/2023 @ 9:50 AM (length 47:38)
Originating county: Tarrant County
Originating from: 2nd District Court of Appeals, Fort Worth
Case Documents
The issue in this case is who is liable when parties to a settlement agreement place disputed funds in an account controlled by the attorney of one party, and the attorney steals the funds.The CTMI parties and Fischer settled most of their claims arising from a previous dispute over the sale of a tax-consulting business. The settlement agreement provided that CTMI's attorney, Holmes, would hold the disputed funds in an escrow account until the conclusion of the litigation. Whichever party prevailed was entitled to the funds in the account. The Supreme Court ultimately ruled for Fischer. When Fischer went to collect the funds he was entitled to, the parties learned that Holmes had absconded with the money.CTMI sued Fischer for a declaratory judgment that CTMI had fulfilled its obligations under the settlement agreement by placing the disputed funds in Holmes' account. Fischer counterclaimed for breach of contract. The trial court rendered judgment for CTMI, but the court of appeals reversed. A main issue in the court of appeals was whether the settlement agreement created a valid escrow agreement. Relying on caselaw describing an escrow agreement as involving the deposit of funds with a neutral third party, the court held that the settlement agreement did not create an escrow agreement because Holmes was not a neutral third party. The court thus concluded that CTMI had breached the agreement by failing to pay Fischer the amount owed to him.
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FKM P'SHIP, LTD. V. BD. OF REGENTS OF UNIV. OF HOUSTON SYS. (05-0661) - view video
3/21/2007 @ 9:50 AM (length 39:31)
Originating county: Harris County
Originating from: 14th District Court of Appeals, Houston
Case Documents
05-0661 FKM Partnership Ltd. v. University of Houston Board of Regents from Harris County and the 14th District Court of Appeals, Houston In this condemnation case the principal issues are (1) whether remand is proper to allow the university to prove necessity in a condemnation proceeding and (2) whether the university must pay fees, expenses and temporary-possession damages when its amended condemnation petition proposes taking less property. FKM Partnership moved to dismiss the university's amended condemnation petition, filed after special commissioners awarded damages, because the university's new plans to take less property altered the subject matter of its original petition that the special commissioners had considered. The trial court dismissed the university's suit and awarded FKM fees, expenses and temporary damages for the university's possession of the property. The court of appeals reversed.
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FORD MOTOR CO. V. CASTILLO (06-0875) - view video
2/5/2008 @ 9:50 AM (length 47:39)
Originating county: Cameron County
Originating from: 13th District Court of Appeals, Corpus Christi & Edinburg
Case Documents
06-0875 Ford Motor Co. v. Ezequiel Castillo, et al. from Cameron County and the 13th District Court of Appeals, Corpus Christi/Edinburg For petitioner: Craig A. Morgan, Austin For respondents: Roger W. Hughes, Harlingen The Supreme Court will hear arguments on whether summary judgment for contract breach was proper to enforce settlement. In this case involving allegations of a rogue juror, the principal issues are (1) whether the trial court erred by granting summary judgment on a settlement agreement without independent breach-of-contract pleadings and (2) whether the trial court erred by refusing additional discovery on jury misconduct allegations. Castillo and Ford promptly settled Castillo's personal-injury suit, alleging an accident caused by Ford's vehicle design defects, after the presiding juror sent a note to the judge asking what the limit on damages was. After the trial court dismissed the jury, Ford contended jurors told its lawyers that the presiding juror sent the note on her own and that the jury as a whole was leaning in Ford's favor. The trial court denied Ford's later motion to set aside the settlement agreement, based on jury misconduct or mutual mistake, or both, finding neither mutual mistake nor jury misconduct and ordered payment according to the agreement. When Ford did not pay, Castillo moved for summary judgment for breach of the settlement agreement. The trial court granted the motion. In a split decision, the court of appeals affirmed.
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FORD MOTOR CO. V. GARCIA (10-0953) - view video
12/8/2011 @ 10:50 AM (length 45:07)
Originating county: Hidalgo County
Originating from: 13th District Court of Appeals, Corpus Christi & Edinburg
Case Documents
10-0953 Ford Motor Co. v. Richard H. Garcia from Hidalgo County and the 13th District Court of Appeals, Corpus Christi/Edinburg For petitioner: Michael Eady, Austin For respondent: Isaac Tawil, McAllen The principal issues are whether the trial court abused its discretion by awarding fees to a guardian ad litem for work allegedly outside the scope of his appointment or relied on insufficient evidence in its award. Ford appealed Garcia's $28,200 award for his appointment as a guardian ad litem. The trial court appointed him to protect the interests of a man in a settlement by Ford with the man, who suffered traumatic brain injury, and his wife. Ford argues the guardian ad litem billed for review of litigation documents and other work that exceeded his need to assure the injured man's interests in a proposed settlement. Ford also argued the guardian's invoice did not specify how much time was spent on his review or how much was spent by his staff. The court of appeals affirmed the trial court's award of Garcia's fee. 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
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FOREST OIL CORP. V. EL RUCIO LAND AND CATTLE CO. ET AL. (14-0979) - view video
2/8/2017 @ 9:00 AM (length 43:47)
Originating county: Harris County
Originating from: 1st District Court of Appeals, Houston
Case Documents
The issues in this arbitration-award challenge are (1) whether the Texas Railroad Commission has exclusive or primary jurisdiction over claims in this case; (2) whether the award should be vacated based on alleged evident partiality of a neutral arbitrator; (3) whether the award should be vacated because the arbitration panel refused to stay its proceeding to permit the Railroad Commission to complete an investigation; and (4) whether arbitrators exceeded their powers by awarding declaratory relief and punitive damages.
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FOREST OIL CORP. V. MCALLEN (06-0178) - view video
10/16/2007 @ 9:50 AM (length 43:30)
Originating county: Hidalgo County
Originating from: 13th District Court of Appeals, Corpus Christi & Edinburg
Case Documents
06-0178 Forest Oil Corp. and Daniel B. Worden v. James Argyle McAllen, et al. from Hidalgo County and the 13th District Court of Appeals, Corpus Christi/Edinburg For petitioners: Geoffrey L. Harrison, Houston For respondents: Craig T. Enoch and David Morris, Austin The Supreme Court will hear arguments on the issue of whether arbitration clause in settlement bars. The principal issues are (1) whether a disclaimer in a settlement contract - that no other representations were made - bars a claim that an arbitration clause in the settlement was fraudulently induced; (2) whether reliance on a representation contrary to the contracts was justified; and (3) whether reliance on a representation during settlement negotiations was justified. In this case McAllen sued for personal injuries and for death of an endangered rhinoceros that allegedly resulted from radioactive pipe that Forest Oil had used on McAllen's property and that the company donated for McAllen's use on a reserve for exotic animals. McAllen and Forest Oil's settlement agreement ended a royalties dispute and included, among other provisions, an arbitration agreement for environmental claims not covered by the settlement. When Forest Oil moved to compel arbitration, McAllen countered that he was fraudulently induced to agree to arbitration on assurances that contamination or environmental problems did not exist on the land. The trial court denied arbitration and the court of appeals affirmed.
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FPL ENERGY, LLC, FPL ENERGY PECOS WIND I, L.P., FPL ENERGY PECOS WIND II, L.P. AND INDIAN MESA WIND FARM, L.P. V. TXU PORTFOLIO MANAGEMENT COMPANY, L.P. N/K/A LUMINANT ENERGY COMPANY, LLC (11-0050) - view video
10/15/2012 @ 9:00 AM (length 43:40)
Originating county: Dallas County
Originating from: 5th District Court of Appeals, Dallas
Case Documents
In this contract dispute involving wind generated-energy sales, a principal issue is whether a liquidated-damages provision applies to sale of renewable-energy credits and to energy sales under the contract, or just to the credits, raising the question whether the provision is enforceable. In this case TXU sued for contract breach, claiming FPL Energy and two other wind-energy producers that contracted to sell it energy and renewable-energy credits - sales that helped TXU comply with to a new state law requiring renewable energy production in Texas - failed to deliver the energy and energy credits. FPL and the other wind-energy producers counterclaimed that TXU did not provide sufficient transmission lines to carry the wind-energy produced. The trial court found the liquidated damages amounted to an unenforceable penalty, that TXU was required to provide transmission capacity and that TXU should take nothing because it covered its losses by buying renewable energy from other sources. The court of appeals reversed, holding that the liquidated-damages provision is enforceable and that TXU's contract with the wind-energy producers did not require it to provide transmission capacity.
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FPL FARMING LTD. V. ENVIRONMENTAL PROCESSING SYSTEMS, L.C. (09-1010) - view video
3/1/2011 @ 9:00 AM (length 49:40)
Originating county: Liberty County
Originating from: 9th District Court of Appeals, Beaumont
Case Documents
09-1010 FPL Farming Ltd. v. Environmental Processing Systems L.C. from Liberty County and the Ninth District Court of Appeals, Beaumont For petitioner: Ms. Claudia Wilson Frost, Houston For respondents: Mr. Richard G. Baker, Liberty In this subsurface-trespass case, the principal issues are (1) whether a permit-holder with authority to inject wastewater underground can be immune because of the state-issued permit from liability when the wastewater intrudes beneath neighboring property and, if so, (2) whether that constitutes an unconstitutional taking. A turning-point issue is whether subsurface water migration can be actionable as a trespass. FPL Farming, owner of two tracts in Liberty County, initially opposed the state's 1996 wastewater-injection permits to Environmental Processing Systems on land near FPL's. FPL Farming settled with Environmental Processing, but sued when the state (then the Texas Natural Resource Conservation Commission) granted an amendment in 1999 to increase the allowed injection rate. FPL Farming alleged the wastewater migrated under its land. A jury rejected FPL's claims and 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
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FRALEY V. TEXAS A&M UNIVERSITY SYSTEM (21-0784) - view video
11/29/2022 @ 10:40 AM (length 45:20)
Originating county: Brazos County
Originating from: 7th District Court of Appeals, Amarillo
Case Documents
This case results from a single-vehicle accident after Texas A&M University changed the design of an intersection and presents the issues of (1) the scope of an exception to the waiver of governmental immunity under the Texas Tort Claims Act for a governmental unit's exercise of discretionary powers, (2) when an off-road defect constitutes a special defect under the act, and (3) whether a plaintiff should be provided an opportunity to replead when the defendant's plea to the jurisdiction challenges only the failure to plead sufficient facts and not the existence of facts establishing jurisdiction.
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FRANK LUCIANO AND HELEN LUCIANO V. SPRAYFOAMPOLYMERS.COM LLC (18-0350) - view video
1/8/2020 @ 9:00 AM (length 48:42)
Originating county: Travis County
Originating from: 3rd District Court of Appeals, Austin
Case Documents
The principal issues in this specific-jurisdiction case are (1) whether the company's contract sales representative's online LinkedIn profile, admitted to show his relationship to the defendant, was inadmissible hearsay; (2) whether the court of appeals erred by analyzing Bristol-Myers Squibb Co. v. Superior Court to determine specific jurisdiction does not exist; and (3) whether the appeals court erred by failing to analyze a "stream-of-commerce-plus" theory to find that specific jurisdiction does not exist.
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FRANKIE SIMS, ET AL. V. CARRINGTON MORTGAGE SERVICES L.L.C. (13-0638) - view video
12/4/2013 @ 10:30 AM (length 43:13)
Originating from: U.S. Court of Appeals, 5th Circuit
Case Documents
In this class action alleging changes to home-equity loans violated the state constitution, the Fifth Circuit certifies these questions: (1) After an initial credit extension, is a home-equity lender's new agreement with the borrower capitalizing past-due interest, fees, property taxes or insurance premiums into the loan principal - but not satisfying or replacing the original note - a modification or a refinance for purposes of home-equity exceptions to the protection against forced homestead sale for debt repayment? If the agreements are modifications: (2) Does capitalization of past-due interest, fees, property taxes or insurance premiums constitute an impermissible "advance of additional funds" under Texas Administrative Code section 153.14(2)(B)? (3) Must such a modification comply with requirements of Texas Constitution section 50(a)(6), including subsection B, which mandates a home-equity loan be for no more than 80 percent of a home's appraised value? and (4) Do repeated modifications like those in this case convert a home-equity loan into an impermissible open-end account?
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FRESH COAT, INC. V. K-2, INC. (08-0592) - view video
12/17/2009 @ 10:40 AM (length 40:41)
Originating county: Montgomery County
Originating from: 9th District Court of Appeals, Beaumont
Case Documents
08-0592 Fresh Coat Inc. v. K-2 Inc. from Montgomery County and the 9th District Court of Appeals, Beaumont For petitioner: Kevin Jewell, Houston For cross-petitioner/respondent: Thomas C. Wright, Houston A principal issue is whether a subcontractor hired to mix and install an allegedly defective stucco product is entitled to manufacturer's indemnity for a settlement with the homebuilder, like the subcontractor a "seller," to satisfy contractual indemnity. The issue raises the question whether the contractual liability is "independent liability" that would exclude it from Texas Civil Practices and Remedies Code section 82.002(a)'s requirement that manufacturers indemnify sellers. In this case the homebuilder settled with the homeowners and sought indemnity from Fresh Coat and K-2, the manufacturer (also known as Finestone). Fresh Coat settled claims by the homebuilder and homeowner and cross-claimed for indemnity from Finestone. A jury awarded Fresh Coat its requested indemnity damages, but the court of appeals deleted the amount Fresh Coat paid the homebuilder in their settlement. 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
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FRYMIRE ENG'G CO., INC. V. JOMAR INT'L, LTD. (06-0755) - view video
12/4/2007 @ 10:40 AM (length 43:26)
Originating county: Dallas County
Originating from: 5th District Court of Appeals, Dallas
Case Documents
06-0755 Frymire Engineering Co. Inc. v. Jomar International Ltd. and Mixer S.R.L. from Dallas County and the Fifth District Court of Appeals, Dallas For petitioner: Stewart K. Smith, Irving For respondents: Hilaree A. Casada, Dallas The Supreme Court will hear arguments on the issue of whether equitable subrogation establishes standing for subcontractor seeking reimbursement from third party manufacturer for damages paid. In this case involving premises damages attributed to a faulty water valve, the principal issues are (1) whether a subcontractor obligated by agreement to pay any damages to the premises owner has standing to sue the valve manufacturer under the equitable-subrogation doctrine; (2) whether the doctrine's application contravenes state contribution law on the theory that the contractor and the valve manufacturer are joint tortfeasors; and (3) whether applying the doctrine violates public policy on assigned claims. Through its insurer Frymire, the subcontractor repairing a water line, paid a Dallas hotel owner for flooding damages and got the hotel's release from all claims. Frymire then sued Jomar, the valve manufacturer, alleging negligence, products liability and warranty breach. In uncontradicted testimony, Frymire's expert attributed the flooding to a faulty valve. The trial court granted summary judgment in Jomar's favor. The court of appeals affirmed, holding that Frymire did not have standing to sue because it paid the hotel to satisfy its own contractual obligation, not Jomar's tort liability, and voluntarily agreed to indemnify the hotel owner.
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G.T. LEACH BUILDERS LLC, ET AL. V. SAPPHIRE V.P., L.P. (13-0497) - view video
11/5/2014 @ 10:40 AM (length 39:33)
Originating county: Cameron County
Originating from: 13th District Court of Appeals, Corpus Christi & Edinburg
Case Documents
In this arbitration dispute the principal issues include (1) whether the trial court erred by interpreting a limitations clause to bar arbitration instead of leaving that decision to the arbitrator; (2) whether that bar on arbitrating contract claims should also extend to arbitrating the lawsuit's negligence claims; and (3) whether non-signatories to the contract can compel arbitration when the contract specified that third parties could not claim rights under it. In this case Leach, a general contractor building Sapphire's South Padre Island condominium project, moved to compel arbitration after it was joined in Sapphire's lawsuit against insurance brokers and architects. Sapphire sought flooding damages caused by Hurricane Dolly in 2008, alleging the insurance brokers allowed coverage to lapse before the project was finished and the architects negligently designed the project. The brokers and architects then joined Leach and its subcontractors. Leach and later the subcontractors moved to compel arbitration based on Leach's contract with Sapphire. The trial court ruled for Sapphire that Leach's move for arbitration was too late under the contract's limitations clause and that the contract barred non-signatories from claiming any rights under it despite a provision allowing arbitration by joined parties. The appeals court affirmed.
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GALVESTON CENT. APPRAISAL DIST. V. TRQ CAPTAIN'S LANDING, L.P. (07-0010) - view video
1/15/2008 @ 10:40 AM (length 41:25)
Originating county: Galveston County
Originating from: 1st District Court of Appeals, Houston
Case Documents
07-0010 Galveston Central Appraisal District v. TRQ Captain's Landing, L.P., and American Housing Foundation from Galveston County and the First District Court of Appeals, Houston For petitioner: Michael B. Hughes, Galveston For respondents: John Ben Blanchard, Amarillo The Supreme Court will hear arguments on the issue of whether a community housing agency may claim an ad valorem tax exemption for property to which it holds equitable title but legal title is held by its development subsidiaries. The issue is whether a community housing agency may claim an ad valorem tax exemption for property to which it holds equitable title but legal title is held by a wholly owned development subsidiary. Together with TRQ Captain's Landing, its subsidiary, American Housing Foundation sued the appraisal district over the district's denial of a property-tax exemption for apartments to which TRQ held legal title. Under state tax law, such an exemption may be granted only to a qualified non-profit community housing-development organization that owns property for sale or lease to low- or moderate-income people. Galveston County Appraisal District argues that it holds equitable title in the apartments and that its intent in forming the subsidiary, to develop low-income housing, complies with the Legislature's intent for tax exemptions. The trial court granted summary judgment for the appraisal district. The court of appeals reversed.
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GARY WAYNE JASTER V. COMET II CONSTRUCTION, INC., JOE H. SCHNEIDER, LAURA H. SCHNEIDER AND AUSTIN DESIGN GROUP (12-0804) - view video
10/9/2013 @ 10:40 AM (length 39:47)
Originating county: Hays County
Originating from: 3rd District Court of Appeals, Austin
Case Documents
The issue is whether a defendant in a third-party complaint or cross-claim must file a merit certificate as a "plaintiff" under former Civil Practices and Remedies Code section 150.002(a). That provision required a professional attest in a suit alleging defective professional services that the suit had merit. In this case Jaster, a professional engineer, moved to dismiss a third-party claim Comet filed against him and a design group for allegedly negligent foundation plans Comet used in building a house. The homeowner had sued Comet for faulty construction. In his motion to dismiss, Jaster argued that complaints against him by Comet and the design group, for which he designed the foundation plans, did not file the professional report the statute required.
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GEFFREY KLEIN, M.D. AND BAYLOR COLLEGE OF MEDICINE V. HERNANDEZ (08-0453) - view video
10/7/2009 @ 9:50 AM (length 34:17)
Originating county: Harris County
Originating from: 1st District Court of Appeals, Houston
Case Documents
08-0453 Geffrey Klein, M.D., and Baylor College of Medicine v. Cynthia Hernandez from Harris County and the First District Court of Appeals, Houston For petitioners: Cameron Pope, Houston For respondent: Robert J. Talaska and Theodore G. Skarbowski, Houston In this medical-malpractice suit the principal issues are (1) whether the appeals court erred by dismissing Klein and Baylor's interlocutory appeals because Klein was not a state officer or employee and Baylor was not a governmental unit and (2) whether the trial court erred by denying Baylor and Klein's summary-judgment motions based on governmental immunity. Hernandez sued Klein and Baylor for injuries her baby suffered during a delivery at Houston's public Ben Taub Hospital by Klein, a Baylor resident acting under Baylor's contract with the Texas Higher Education Coordinating Board for training at Ben Taub. The two Houston courts of appeals have split on the question whether Baylor residents should be considered public employees entitled to take preliminary appeals when a trial court denies dismissal based on an immunity claim. 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
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GENE E. PHILLIPS, INDIVIDUALLY AND D/B/A PHILLIPS OIL INTERESTS, LLC, ET AL. V. CARLTON ENERGY GROUP, LLC (12-0255) - view video
9/11/2013 @ 9:00 AM (length 42:17)
Originating county: Harris County
Originating from: 1st District Court of Appeals, Houston
Case Documents
Three principal issues in this contract-breach and business interference-tort case over a scuttled Bulgarian gas-field venture are (1) whether evidence supporting lost-market value was speculative and based on lost future profits; (2) whether Nevada law as the incorporation state determines whether a Phillips-owned company's two subsidiaries were its alter egos (and his); and, if Texas law governs, (3) whether legally sufficient evidence established that the two companies were Phillips' alter egos. Carlton sued Phillips, its onetime partner in the Bulgarian field development, after two Phillips-related companies allegedly plotted to supplant Carlton as the principal financing partner with a company holding exclusive exploration rights to the Bulgarian field.
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GENESIS TAX LOAN SERVICES, INC. V. KOTHMANN (09-0828) - view video
11/10/2010 @ 9:00 AM (length 48:45)
Originating county: Lubbock County
Originating from: 7th District Court of Appeals, Amarillo
Case Documents
09-0828 Genesis Tax Loan Services Inc., et al. v. Kody and Janet Kothmann from Lubbock County and the Seventh District Court of Appeals, Amarillo For petitioners: G. Roland Love, Dallas For respondents: Mont McClendon, Lubbock The issues in this case between competing liens is (1) whether the appeals court erred by holding that Genesis, which claims a tax-lien transfer on four properties, was required to plead its lien superiority as an affirmative defense and (2) whether the appeals court misconstrued Texas Tax Code section 32.06 by holding that Genesis failed to effect transfer of the tax liens. The Kothmanns sold four properties on an installment plan and filed deeds of trust against the properties. Two years later the buyer borrowed money from Genesis Tax Loan Services to pay taxes on the properties and Genesis secured the loan with tax-lien transfers. When the borrower defaulted, Genesis tried to foreclose. The Kothmanns then sued Genesis, arguing that their liens were superior because they filed theirs first, Genesis did not plead its tax-lien transfers in defense and did not comply with requirements to effect the transfers. The trial court declared Genesis' liens were superior, but the court of appeals reversed, holding that Genesis had to plead its liens were superior as a defense and that the liens did not comply with statutory requirements. 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
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GENIE INDUSTRIES INC. V. RICKY MATAK, ET AL. (13-0042) - view video
9/17/2014 @ 9:50 AM (length 42:07)
Originating county: Jefferson County
Originating from: 13th District Court of Appeals, Corpus Christi & Edinburg
Case Documents
The principal issue is whether legally sufficient evidence supported a jury's design-defect finding when a fully extended indoor-utility lift fell with a worker at the top of it when it was moved contrary to warnings. Matak's estate sued Genie for defectively designing the lift, arguing that four alternative designs would have prevented his death. With Matak in a bucket 40 feet above a church floor where he was installing fiber-optic cables in a ceiling, a co-worker and a church employee tried to move the lift despite placards on the machine that moving it with the lift extended could result in death or serious injury. Jurors found the lift was defectively designed. The appeals court affirmed judgment for Matak's estate.
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GEOFFREY DUGGER V. MARY ANN ARREDONDO, INDIVIDUALLY AND AS REPRESENTATIVE OF THE ESTATE OF JOEL MARTINEZ, DECEASED (11-0549) - view video
11/6/2012 @ 9:50 AM (length 31:03)
Originating county: Dallas County
Originating from: 5th District Court of Appeals, Dallas
Case Documents
The issue is whether the statutory affirmative defense in a personal-injury or wrongful-death claim that the plaintiff was committing a felony for which he "has been finally convicted" that was the sole cause of his injuries bars the common law's unlawful-acts doctrine in a wrongful-death suit. Arredondo sued Dugger for delay in calling paramedics when her son collapsed after drinking, smoking marijuana and ingesting black-tar heroin and for failing to tell the paramedics that her son had been consuming heroin. Paramedics treated him for alcohol poisoning, not a reaction to the heroin. Dugger won summary judgment, arguing that the unlawful-acts doctrine barred Arredondo's suit. On appeal, the court reversed, holding that the more specific statutory affirmative defense - requiring proof of conviction - preempted the common-law unlawful-acts rule and that Dugger did not establish all the defense's elements.
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GERARD MATZEN V. MARSHA MCLANE, DIRECTOR, AND THE TEXAS CIVIL COMMITMENT OFFICE (20-0523) - view video
9/29/2021 @ 10:40 AM (length 37:28)
Originating county: Travis County
Originating from: 3rd District Court of Appeals, Austin
Case Documents
The issues are (1) whether the appeals court erred by finding the governing board of the Texas Civil Commitment Office, the agency responsible for treatment of sexually violent predator, has rulemaking authority; (2) whether the appeals court erred by finding Matzen's claims barred by sovereign immunity; (3) whether the appeals court erred by finding McLane's acts within the scope of her lawful authority; (4) whether Matzen alleged a viable claim that the Civil Commitment Office's cost-recovery efforts violate his constitutional rights to procedural due process and due course of law; and (5) whether Matzen alleged a viable claim that the Civil Commitment Office's cost-recovery efforts unconstitutionally took his property for public use without just compensation.
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GHARDA USA INC. V. CONTROL SOLUTIONS INC., ET AL. (12-0987) - view video
12/10/2014 @ 9:00 AM (length 43:21)
Originating county: Harris County
Originating from: 1st District Court of Appeals, Houston
Case Documents
The principal issues in this case involving a fire that burned through a pesticide plant are (1) whether expert causation testimony was reliable if each opinion was founded on other experts' assumptions; (2) whether all experts' opinions taken together constitute sufficient evidence by elimination that a certain chemical caused the fire; and (3) whether expert opinion about the chemical's ignition was adequately tested. In this case Control Solutions sued Gharda, alleging a chemical Gharda sold Control Solutions - chlorpyrifos - ignited because it was contaminated when manufactured. The trial court awarded judgment for Gharda despite the jury's verdict against it. The court of appeals reversed, with one dissent, holding that each expert's testimony was reliable.
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GILBERT TEXAS CONSTRUCTION, L.P. V. UNDERWRITERS AT LLOYD'S LONDON (08-0246) - view video
10/6/2009 @ 9:00 AM (length 47:03)
Originating county: Dallas County
Originating from: 5th District Court of Appeals, Dallas
Case Documents
08-0246 Gilbert Texas Construction, L.P. v. Underwriters at Lloyd's London from Dallas County and the Fifth District Court of Appeals, Dallas For petitioner: Craig T. Enoch, Austin For respondent: Glenn R. Legge, Houston The principal issues are (1) whether an excess general commercial liability policy's exclusion for liability assumed by contract applies to an insured's indemnification claim based on a third party-beneficiary's breach-of-contract allegation and, if so, (2) whether the policy exception for damages "the insured would have in the absence of the contract" provides coverage and requires indemnification. In this case Gilbert settled with a property owner who sued over flood damage allegedly caused by Gilbert's construction debris, which allegedly channeled heavy rain runoff to the property owner's buildings. In Gilbert's contract, to build a light-rail line, the company agreed to protect property belonging to third parties and to make repairs for damage it caused. The trial court found coverage under Gilbert's excess-insurance policy, 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
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GILBERT WHEELER INC. V. ENBRIDGE PIPELINES (EAST TEXAS) L.P. (13-0234) - view video
2/27/2014 @ 10:50 AM (length 43:36)
Originating county: Shelby County
Originating from: 12th District Court of Appeals, Tyler
Case Documents
A principal issue in this trespass and contract-breach claim is whether damages should be the cost to restore the land or the loss in the property's fair-market value after the pipeline company bulldozed the pipeline route despite an easement agreement. The agreement specified that the company would bore a tunnel for the line. The Wheelers sued for trespass and breach of their easement contract. In the easement negotiations, Enbridge Pipelines' agent agreed that the pipeline company would thread the pipeline beneath the property. Enbridge argues that damages should be measured by the property's lost value because the damage was permanent. The Wheelers contend that the loss in property value, perhaps negligible, deprived them of their bargain and requires restoration damages. Jurors determined Enbridge both trespassed and breached the contract and assessed $288,000 in damages for the trespass and $300,000 for the contract breach. The trial court then awarded the Wheelers $300,000 on the breach-of-contract theory. The appeals court reversed and rendered judgment in Enbridge's favor, holding that the Wheelers waived a jury question necessary to calculate damages: whether the property damage was temporary (allowing restoration damages) or permanent (requiring damages for property-value loss).
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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
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GRANT THORNTON LLP V. PROSPECT HIGH INCOME FUND, ML COB IV (CAYMAN), LTD. (06-0975) - view video
12/9/2008 @ 9:00 AM (length 44:22)
Originating county: Dallas County
Originating from: 5th District Court of Appeals, Dallas
Case Documents
06-0975 Grant Thornton LLP v. Prospect High Income Fund, et al. from Dallas County and the Fifth District Court of Appeals, Dallas For petitioner: Samara L. Kline, Dallas For respondents: Paul Lackey, Dallas In this auditor-liability case, the issues are (1) whether investment-fund bondholders presented enough evidence of fraud and misrepresentation to defeat traditional and no-evidence summary-judgment motions under the foreseeability standard in Ernst & Young L.L.P. v. Pacific Mutual Life Insurance Co. and (2) whether their evidence was enough to defeat summary-judgment motions on conspiracy to commit fraud and aiding and abetting fraud. The investment funds sued Grant Thornton, the auditor for the bond-issuing vacation-timeshare company, over financial statements for the bonds that failed to disclose material problems. Grant Thornton argues in part that the investments funds did not show in purchasing the bonds that they relied on the financial statements prepared for the timeshare company's purposes or that the audit information caused their losses. The trial court granted Grant Thornton summary judgment on all claims, but the appeals court reversed on fraud and misrepresentation, among others. 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
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GREATER HOUSTON PARTNERSHIP V. KEN PAXTON, AS ATTORNEY GENERAL, AND JIM JENKINS (13-0745) - view video
3/25/2015 @ 9:00 AM (length 45:10)
Originating county: Travis County
Originating from: 3rd District Court of Appeals, Austin
Case Documents
The principal issue is whether a non-profit group contracting with the city for economic-development services is subject to Texas' open-records law. Greater Houston Partnership, which is financed in part by Houston, sued the attorney general over a ruling that the partnership's check records must be disclosed under Texas' Public Information Act. Under its contract with Houston, the Greater Houston Partnership among other tasks had responsibility for executing the mayor's 10-year strategic-development plan and coordinating the city's congressional and legislative efforts and had authority to contract for the city. The partnership and the attorney general center their arguments on the statute's definition of a governmental body as one "supported in whole or in part by public funds" and whether how much support is enough should be determined by the so-called Kneeland test devised by the Fifth Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals. Employing the Kneeland analysis, the trial court ruled the statute defines the partnership as a governmental body. A divided court of appeals affirmed.
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GREG SAWYER ET AL. V. E.I. DU PONT DE NEMOURS AND CO. (12-0626) - view video
2/26/2013 @ 9:50 AM (length 45:05)
Originating from: U.S. Court of Appeals, 5th Circuit
Case Documents
The federal appeals court asks the Texas Supreme Court to answer (1) whether, under Texas law, at-will employees may bring fraud claims against employers for losing their jobs and, if not, (2) whether employees covered by a collective-bargaining agreement, subject to a 60-day cancellation notice and limiting discharge to "just cause," may sue on allegations that their employer fraudulently induced them to quit their jobs. The roots of this case are in DuPont's decision to spin off its Terathane Products Unit at DuPont's manufacturing complex in La Porte. Sawyer and 62 other former DuPont employees claim DuPont, through a company manager, assured them that DuPont's planned spinoff would result in a wholly owned subsidiary that DuPont was not planning to sell. Terathane employees were given a choice to stay with DuPont. But the company urged them to transfer to the new company and told them they would be covered by a new collective-bargaining agreement identical to the one covering them at DuPont, with the same pay and benefits. (At the time DuPont was beginning negotiations with Koch Industries to buy the Terathane unit, which it did.) All but four of the employees who sued DuPont were union members covered by a collective-bargaining agreement that specified either the union or the company could cancel it with 60 days' notice. The employees contend the Koch acquisition led to decreased pay and benefits. The U.S. District Court granted DuPont summary judgment on the fraud and fraudulent-inducement claims, finding all the employees, as at-will workers, could be terminated at any time. On appeal, the Fifth Circuit initially affirmed the trial court in a split decision, then withdrew its decision and asked the Texas Supreme Court to answer unsettled state-law questions.
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GTECH CORP. V. JAMES STEELE ET AL. (18-0159) - view video
12/3/2019 @ 9:50 AM (length 40:02)
Originating county: Travis County
Originating from: 3rd District Court of Appeals, Austin
Case Documents
The issues are in this class-action fraud case, identical to those in 17-1010, above, are (1) whether GTECH, an independent contractor supervised by the Texas Lottery Commission, is protected by the commission's sovereign immunity and (2) whether evidence that GTECH's liability will result in spending public money necessary to extend the contractor's derivative immunity. In this case, different from the ruling in Nettles, the appeals court held GTECH did not have derivative immunity.
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GUITAR HOLDING CO., L.P. V. HUDSPETH COUNTY UNDERGROUND WATER CONSERVATION DIST. NO. 1 (06-0904) - view video
12/5/2007 @ 9:50 AM (length 41:47)
Originating county: Hudspeth County
Originating from: 8th District Court of Appeals, El Paso
Case Documents
06-0904 Guitar Holding Co., L.P. v. Hudspeth County Underground Water Conservation District No. 1, et al. from Hudspeth County and the Eighth District Court of Appeals, El Paso For petitioner: Joseph L. Hood Jr., El Paso; Russell S. Johnson, Austin For respondents: Renea Hicks and Lambeth Townsend, Austin The Supreme Court will hear arguments on the issue of whether conservation district's restrictions on new water-transfer application violate state law and landowner's equal-protection rights. The issues in this water-transfer challenge arising from an attempt by El Paso to buy and transfer water from nearby Hudspeth County are (1) whether the conservation district's transfer rules violate state law prohibiting more restrictive conditions on out-of-district transfer applications and (2) whether the district's transfer rules violate the landowner's equal-protection rights. As part of its aquifer-conservation plan, the Hudspeth County district imposed restrictions on transferring water based on historical water use. That means, in this case, Guitar, which had not used as much water in the past as smaller landowners, could not transfer as much water as the smaller landowners. Guitar argues that those restrictions violate provisions of Senate Bill 2, an amendment to the comprehensive groundwater law enacted in 1997. The trial court held the conservation district's rules valid. The appeals court affirmed.
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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
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HAL RACHAL, JR. V. JOHN W. REITZ (11-0708) - view video
11/7/2012 @ 9:50 AM (length 40:33)
Originating county: Dallas County
Originating from: 5th District Court of Appeals, Dallas
Case Documents
The issues are (1) whether an arbitration clause in a trust is binding on beneficiaries under the Texas Arbitration Act and, if so, (2) whether the trustee, a successor to the inter vivos trust, has standing to enforce the arbitration agreement. In this case Reitz, whose father established the trust that named Reitz as a beneficiary, sued to remove Rachal as the trustee. In response Rachal moved to compel arbitration under a mandatory trust provision requiring beneficiaries to arbitrate their claims. The trial court denied the motion. In a decision for the entire court of appeals, the court affirmed. The court held that a valid arbitration clause binding trust beneficiaries must result from a contract, not a property conveyance by trust.
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HALLMARK MARKETING CO. LLC V. TEXAS COMPTROLLER GLENN HEGAR AND ATTORNEY GENERAL KEN PAXTON (14-1075) - view video
12/9/2015 @ 9:50 AM (length 43:24)
Originating county: Travis County
Originating from: 13th District Court of Appeals, Corpus Christi & Edinburg
Case Documents
In this tax-protest case the issue is whether Hallmark was obligated to include a net loss from sale of an investment asset when it reported its companywide gross receipts in calculating its Texas franchise tax. The comptroller alleges Hallmark underpaid by close to $200,000 its franchise tax for 2008 because it did not include in its calculations a $628 million loss on investments that the company deducted on its federal taxes. By failing to include the loss, Hallmark's gross receipts reported to Texas were greater that the comptroller believes they should have been and, as the comptroller argues, because those receipts are divided by what Hallmark sold in Texas its franchise-tax calculation was smaller than it should have been. But Hallmark argues that the franchise-tax law requires it specifically to include in its gross receipts only a net gain from an investment or capital-asset sale, not a loss. The appeals court held the comptroller's interpretation was reasonable.
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HAMPTON V. THOME (22-0435) - view video
9/14/2023 @ 10:40 AM (length 48:04)
Originating county: Jefferson County
Originating from: 9th District Court of Appeals, Beaumont
Case Documents
Under Chapter 74 of the Civil Practice and Remedies Code, notice of a healthcare claim must be accompanied by a medical-authorization form that meets statutory requirements, and notice that is "given as provided in this chapter" will toll limitations on the claim for 75 days. The issue in this case is whether a form that does not strictly comply with statutory requirements will toll limitations.
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HARRELL V. THE STATE OF TEXAS (07-0806) - view video
11/13/2008 @ 9:50 AM (length 43:09)
Originating county: Terry County
Originating from: 7th District Court of Appeals, Amarillo
Case Documents
07-0806 Walter E. Harrell v. State of Texas from Terry County and the Seventh District Court of Appeals, Amarillo For petitioner: James Caleb Scott, Dallas For respondent: Jason Bujnosek, Brownfield The principal issues are (1) whether the state is required to follow garnishment procedures to take money from a prisoner's inmate trust account to pay for his court-appointed attorney and court fees and (2) whether the court of appeals had jurisdiction to hear Harrell's 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
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HARRIS COUNTY FLOOD CONTROL DISTRICT AND HARRIS COUNTY V. EDWARD A. AND NORMA KERR, ET AL. (13-0303) - view video
12/4/2014 @ 9:00 AM (length 46:51)
Originating county: Harris County
Originating from: 1st District Court of Appeals, Houston
Case Documents
In this case, alleging Harris County in essence took the plaintiffs' property by failing to implement flood-control measures and by approving residential development without flood-mitigation efforts, the issues are whether (1) the county knew with substantial certainty that flooding damage would result; (2) its failure to implement flood controls caused damage to the plaintiffs' homes; and (3) the county's development approvals amounted to a public use. The Kerrs and other property owners contend the county's substantial certainty that the owners' homes would be damaged can be shown by allowing "unmitigated" development that aggravated runoff in heavy rains, as flood-control plans foretold; that flooding was substantially certain from the county's failure to complete a flood-control plan the county undertook; and that recurrent flooding bolstered that certainty. The county counters that the flood-control plan was abandoned because its financing did not work and faulty criteria undermined the plan's design. The trial court denied the county's jurisdictional plea. The appeals court affirmed.
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HARRIS COUNTY HOSP. DIST. V. TOMBALL REG'L HOSP. (05-0986) - view video
12/4/2007 @ 9:00 AM (length 44:51)
Originating county: Harris County
Originating from: 14th District Court of Appeals, Houston
Case Documents
Justice Willett is not sitting. 05-0986 Harris County Hospital District v. Tomball Regional Hospital from Harris County and the 14th District Court of Appeals, Houston For petitioner: Sandra Hachem, Houston For respondent: Randal L. Payne, Houston The Supreme Court will hear arguments on the issue of whether the immunity issue for hospital district sued for reimbursement by hospital authority. The issue is whether the Harris County Hospital District is immune from the Tomball hospital's suit seeking compensation because it allegedly treated indigent patients that Harris County should have under state law. Tomball sued to be reimbursed for care given to Harris County patients that Tomball alleges were turned away from Harris County hospitals or referred by those hospitals to Tomball's. Harris County claims in part that it is exempt from paying other hospitals for treating patients eligible for free care under the Indigent Health Care and Treatment Act. The trial court dismissed Tomball's suit on Harris County's jurisdictional plea. The court of appeals reversed, holding that the statute's language that a hospital district could "sue and be sued" was an unambiguous immunity waiver.
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HARRIS COUNTY V. LORI ANNAB (17-0329) - view video
3/1/2018 @ 9:50 AM (length 42:10)
Originating county: Harris County
Originating from: 14th District Court of Appeals, Houston
Case Documents
The issues in this case involving a road-rage shooting by an off-duty county deputy constable are (1) whether the county has immunity under the Texas Tort Claims Act's intentional-tort exclusion and (2) whether the deputy's firearm use authorized by the county falls under the tort-claims act's definition of negligent use of tangible personal property and, if so, (3) whether the county proximately caused the shooting injuries.
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HAYGOOD V. GARZA DE ESCABEDO (09-0377) - view video
9/16/2010 @ 9:50 AM (length 44:19)
Originating county: Angelina County
Originating from: 12th District Court of Appeals, Tyler
Case Documents
09-0377 Aaron Glenn Haywood v. Margarita Garza de Escabedo from Angelina County and the 12th District Court of Appeals, Tyler For petitioner: Mr. Peter M. Kelly., Houston For respondent: Mr. Frank G. Cawley, Addison The issue is whether Civil Practices and Remedies Code section 41.0105 annuls the collateral-source rule, either as an evidentiary rule or a damages rule, when an injured person's initial medical expenses differ from those "actually paid or incurred" by an injured person or on that person's behalf. In this case Escabedo moved to limit damages testimony that would show what Haygood, who was injured in an automobile accident, was billed. That amount differed by as much as $95,000 from what the medical-care providers would have charged him beyond what Medicare paid for his care but for Medicare restrictions. After the trial court allowed testimony on the $110,000 the hospital would have charged, the jury awarded that much as damages. The court of appeals held that section 41.0105 restricts not only recoverable damages but also relevant evidence to prove damages. 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
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HCBECK, LTD. V. RICE (06-0418) - view video
10/18/2007 @ 9:50 AM (length 49:22)
Originating county: Tarrant County
Originating from: 2nd District Court of Appeals, Fort Worth
Case Documents
06-0418 HCBeck Ltd. v. Charles Rice from Tarrant County and the Second District Court of Appeals, Fort Worth For petitioner: David Rodriguez Weiner, Dallas For respondent: Paul Boudloche, Fort Worth The Supreme Court will hear arguments on the issue of whether contractor is immune because construction-site owner pays workers comp premiums for subcontractor's employee. The principal issue is whether a general contractor has "provided" workers compensation insurance when the construction-site owner pays premiums for a subcontractor's insurance. In this case the site owner paid workers comp premiums for HCBeck employees and for those of a subcontractor, Greer, that HCBeck hired. Its contract with HCBeck, the owner reserved the right to provide workers comp insurance for HCBeck and subcontractors but, if not provided, required that HCBeck buy the insurance from the owner's designated agent. The contract required subcontractors to comply with its terms. Greer, the subcontractor, was not an additional insured under HCBeck's policy. When Rice, the subcontractor's employee, sued HCBeck for negligence over a job injury, HCBeck argued that Rice was a "deemed employee" and that HCBeck was immune because Rice's exclusive remedy was workers comp. The trial court granted summary judgment for HCBeck, but the court of appeals reversed on the immunity issue.
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HEARTS BLUFF GAME RANCH, INC. V. THE STATE OF TEXAS (10-0491) - view video
10/5/2011 @ 9:50 AM (length 39:02)
Originating county: Travis County
Originating from: 3rd District Court of Appeals, Austin
Case Documents
10-0491 ?Hearts Bluff Game Ranch Inc. v. State of Texas and Texas Water Development Board? from Travis County and Third District Court of Appeals, Austin? For petitioner: Terry Jacobson, Corsicana? For respondents: Arthur C. D'Andrea, Austin ? The issue is whether an inverse-condemnation claim is proper against the state based on allegations the state acted to cause a federal agency to deny a wetlands-preservation permit in a area the state designated for a northeast Texas reservoir. In Hearts Bluff's lawsuit against the Texas Water Development Board, the company claimed the state lobbied the federal Army Corps of Engineers to deny Hearts Bluff Game Ranch a wetlands mitigation bank for property the company bought with assurance that the mitigation bank would be approved. The proposed mitigation area lay in an area proposed for a reservoir the state Legislature eventually approved. The state pleaded that the court did not have jurisdiction, based on sovereign immunity. The trial court denied the state's jurisdictional plea, but the appeals court reversed. In addition to the elements for an inverse-condemnation claim, the court held, Hearts Bluff must have established - and did not - that the water development agency effected the taking by a direct restriction resulting from its own regulatory power. 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
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HECKMAN V. WILLIAMSON COUNTY (10-0671) - view video
11/9/2011 @ 9:50 AM (length 49:28)
Originating county: Williamson County
Originating from: 3rd District Court of Appeals, Austin
Case Documents
10-0671 Kerry Heckman, et al. v. Williamson County, et al. from Williamson County and the Third District Court of Appeals, Austin For petitioners: Harry Williams IV, Seattle For respondents: Henry W. Prejean, Georgetown, and C. Robert Heath, Austin In this proposed class action brought under section 1983, misdemeanor defendants allege the county denied their constitutional rights to appointed counsel and to open-court hearings. The issues are (1) whether the plaintiffs have standing to seek class certification even though named plaintiffs no longer suffer alleged injuries and (2) whether the claims should have been remanded to consider the county's argument that policy changes made the claims moot. Four misdemeanor defendants and the mother of a juvenile facing a marijuana-possession complaint variously complain that they were systematically denied appointed counsel in their first appearances in court (all later were appointed counsel) and that their initial appearances, in a secure section of the county jail, were closed to the public, including defendants' families. When the trial court denied the county's jurisdictional plea, the county took an interlocutory appeal. The court of appeals reversed and dismissed, holding that none of the plaintiffs had standing on all claims of the proposed class. 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
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HENRY RAWSON JR AND SUSAN RAWSON V. OXEA CORP. (17-0541) - view video
9/10/2018 @ 9:00 AM (length 44:20)
Originating county: Harris County
Originating from: 1st District Court of Appeals, Houston
Case Documents
The issues in this electrocution-injury case are (1) whether an injured contractor established a fact issue that the premises owner - the company that employed the electrician as a contractor - had actual knowledge of the danger or condition that led to the injury; (2) whether the injured contractor established a fact issue that the company exercised or retained control over how the electrician worked; and (3) whether the company owed the contracting electrician a duty.
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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.
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HLAVINKA V. HSC PIPELINE P'SHIP (20-0567) - view video
2/23/2022 @ 9:00 AM (length 47:17)
Originating county: Brazoria County
Originating from: 1st District Court of Appeals, Houston
Case Documents
The primary issues in this case are whether (1) Texas law grants eminent domain authority to a pipeline owner shipping polymer grade propylene; (2) a pipeline shipping a product from the pipeline owner’s sole manager to an unaffiliated customer constitutes a public use; and (3) the landowner may properly testify that the highest-and-best use of the taken land is as a pipeline corridor, and value the land through comparisons to past, private pipeline easement sales.
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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.
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HOLMES V. BEATTY (07-0785) - view video
1/14/2009 @ 9:00 AM (length 46:12)
Originating county: Harris County
Originating from: 14th District Court of Appeals, Houston
Case Documents
07-0784 and 07-0785 Harry Holmes II v. Douglas G. Beatty from Harris County and the 14th District Court of Appeals, Houston For petitioner: Richard P. Hogan, Jr. and Jack W. Lawter, Jr., Houston For respondent: Joseph S. Horrigan, Houston In this case challenging distribution of brokerage-account assets and securities certificates held jointly by deceased spouses, a principal issue is what the Probate Code requires to establish survivorship rights by agreement in otherwise community property. Holmes and Beatty, children from different marriages, were executors of each of their parents' estates. The parents left about $10 million in joint brokerage accounts and securities acquired as community property and variously designated as "JT TEN" and "JT WROS" on the fronts. Two the accounts were labeled "JT TEN" and a box for "Joint (WROS)" was marked for a third account. Some certificates attempted to define the designations on the back as "JT TEN - as joint tenants with right of survivorship and not as tenants in common," but others did not. The trial court found survivorship rights in two of six disputed asset categories, but the court of appeals reversed in those two and held a right of survivorship existed in one account in which the trial court had not (the box classifying the account as "Joint (WROS))." 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
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HOLMES V. BEATTY (07-0784) - view video
1/14/2009 @ 9:00 AM (length 46:12)
Originating county: Harris County
Originating from: 14th District Court of Appeals, Houston
Case Documents
07-0784 and 07-0785 Harry Holmes II v. Douglas G. Beatty from Harris County and the 14th District Court of Appeals, Houston For petitioner: Richard P. Hogan, Jr. and Jack W. Lawter, Jr., Houston For respondent: Joseph S. Horrigan, Houston In this case challenging distribution of brokerage-account assets and securities certificates held jointly by deceased spouses, a principal issue is what the Probate Code requires to establish survivorship rights by agreement in otherwise community property. Holmes and Beatty, children from different marriages, were executors of each of their parents' estates. The parents left about $10 million in joint brokerage accounts and securities acquired as community property and variously designated as "JT TEN" and "JT WROS" on the fronts. Two the accounts were labeled "JT TEN" and a box for "Joint (WROS)" was marked for a third account. Some certificates attempted to define the designations on the back as "JT TEN - as joint tenants with right of survivorship and not as tenants in common," but others did not. The trial court found survivorship rights in two of six disputed asset categories, but the court of appeals reversed in those two and held a right of survivorship existed in one account in which the trial court had not (the box classifying the account as "Joint (WROS))." 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
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HOMER MERRIMAN V. XTO ENERGY INC. (11-0494) - view video
2/5/2013 @ 9:00 AM (length 47:25)
Originating county: Limestone County
Originating from: 10th District Court of Appeals, Waco
Case Documents
In this dispute between a surface owner and the mineral-rights owner the issue is whether the accommodation doctrine requires the surface owner to prove he has no alternative for conducting his existing use of his property. In this case Merriman, a pharmacist who raised cattle in land he owned and leased, sued XTO for drilling on property he used to sort his cattle once a year and for grazing during the remainder. The trial court granted summary judgment for XTO and the court of appeals affirmed. Merriman argues that the appeals court's holding that he did not prove he had no other reasonable or practical use for his land improperly adds an element to the accommodation doctrine.
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HOTZE V. TURNER (21-1037) - view video
2/1/2023 @ 9:00 AM (length 46:34)
Originating county: Harris County
Originating from: 14th District Court of Appeals, Houston
Case Documents
This case concerns a pair of ballot propositions, Propositions 1 and 2, that were submitted to Houston voters in 2004. Both were designed to provide tax relief to city residents. The ordinance submitting them to an election included a "poison pill" provision after the text of Proposition 1. The provision stated that "[i]f another proposition for a Charter amendment relating to limitations in City revenues is approved at the same election at which this proposition is also approved, and if this proposition receives the higher number of favorable votes, then this proposition shall prevail and the other shall not become effective."
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HOUSTON BELT & TERMINAL RAILWAY CO, ET AL. V. CITY OF HOUSTON (14-0459) - view video
10/13/2015 @ 10:40 AM (length 43:06)
Originating county: Harris County
Originating from: 14th District Court of Appeals, Houston
Case Documents
In this case two principal issues are (1) whether the city's public-works director acted without authority in calculating impervious cover for imposing a drainage utility-district fee to pay for the effects of runoff and (2) whether the director acted without authority in determining which properties "benefitted" from the city's drainage system. Houston Belt & Terminal Railway and other railroads sued over drainage-utility assessments based on the public-works director's determination of how much impervious cover existed on their properties. They argue the basis for those assessments were aerial maps showing green and brown areas - brown assumed to be impervious cover - instead of digital-map data, as they contend the city ordinance requires, from tax plats, assessments and "other similar reliable data." By using the aerial maps, the director determined almost all the railroads' property was impervious. The trial court granted the city's jurisdictional plea to dismiss the challenge. The appeals court reversed in part.
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HOUSTON UNLIMITED INC. METAL PROCESSING V. MEL ACRES RANCH (13-0084) - view video
12/5/2013 @ 9:00 AM (length 46:38)
Originating county: Washington County
Originating from: 14th District Court of Appeals, Houston
Case Documents
In this challenge to "stigma" damages awarded for contaminated but remediated property, the principal issues are (1) whether stigma damages may be recovered for temporary environmental contamination in the absence of permanent physical injury; (2) whether the jury must find permanent injury before awarding such damages; and (3) whether the real estate-appraisal testimony was legally sufficient to support the stigma-damages award. Mel Acres Ranch sued for negligence, nuisance and trespass after tracing livestock deaths and defects to industrial waste that Houston Unlimited discharged for years on its nearby property. Even though Houston Unlimited worked to prevent further pollution and evidence showed contamination levels below state standards, Mel Acres sought and won damages for property-value loss, based on the contamination record on its deed.
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HYDE PARK BAPTIST CHURCH V. TARA TURNER (09-0191) - view video
9/14/2010 @ 10:40 AM (length 45:00)
Originating county: Travis County
Originating from: 3rd District Court of Appeals, Austin
Case Documents
09-0191 Hyde Park Baptist Church v. Tara Turner and Terry Curtis from Travis County and the Third District Court of Appeals, Austin For petitioner: David M. Pruessner, Dallas For respondents: Laurie Higginbotham, Austin In this case involving a teacher's intentional injury of a child at a church-run school, principal issues are (1) whether mental-anguish damages were proper against the church when (a) a significant injury arguably was not involved and (b) the church waived those damages by failing to object to how damages were submitted to the jury, by broad form; (2) whether mental-anguish damages were proper against the church when the jury found it negligent but not that it acted with malice; and (3) whether the jury improperly apportioned the church's fault for the teacher's criminal conduct. In this case parents sued after a teacher intentionally bumped their 1-year-old boy, knocking him to the ground, causing a head bump. The parents later determined this was not the first such abuse, of their child or others. Jurors awarded $100,000 in future mental-anguish damages and found the church was 80 percent responsible. 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
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ILIFF V. ILIFF (09-0753) - view video
10/13/2010 @ 9:50 AM (length 50:08)
Originating county: Hays County
Originating from: 3rd District Court of Appeals, Austin
Case Documents
09-0753 James Derwood Iliff v. Jerilyn True Iliff from Hays County and the Third District Court of Appeals, Austin For petitioner: Jeremy C. Martin, Dallas For respondent: Frank B. Suhr, New Braunfels For amicus curiae State of Texas: David S. Morales, Austin The issue is whether the Family Code provision allowing child support to be calculated on earning potential in "intentional unemployment or underemployment" requires proof that underemployment exists to avoid child support. In this case James Iliff, who after his divorce quit a job earning more than $100,000 a year, appeals a trial-court judgment calculating child support based on earning potential and his intentional underemployment. The court of appeals rejected his argument that his ex-wife must prove his unemployment is intended to avoid child support. 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
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IN RE ALFRED DEWAYNE BROWN (19-0877) - view video
10/29/2020 @ 10:30 AM (length 44:39)
Originating from: U.S. Court of Appeals, 5th Circuit
Case Documents
In this case the issues are (1) whether the comptroller erred by rejecting Brown's claim for compensation under the Tim Cole Act when the comptroller questioned the trial court's dismissal order that declared Brown actually innocent and (2) whether the trial court had authority to amend the original dismissal order to declare Brown's actual innocence.
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IN RE ALLCAT CLAIMS SERVICE, L.P. (11-0589) - view video
10/24/2011 @ 9:00 AM (length 1:07:46)
Originating from: Original proceeding filed in the Supreme Court of Texas
Case Documents
11-0589 Allcat Claims Service L.P. and John Weakly v. Susan Combs, Texas Comptroller of Public Accounts, and Greg Abbott, Texas Attorney General Direct appeal to the Texas Supreme Court For plaintiffs: James F. Martens, Austin For defendants: Danica Milios, Austin For amicus curiae businesses: Christopher S. Johns, Austin The principal issues are (1) whether the franchise tax on limited partnerships' income is an unconstitutional personal-income tax; (2) if not, whether the state comptroller's application of the tax violates the state constitution's mandate that taxes be equal and uniform; and (3) whether the Court has jurisdiction to decide the equal-and-uniform constitutional challenge. In its challenge, original and exclusive in this Court by statute, Allcat seeks a judgment declaring the tax unconstitutional on its face or as it has been applied to the company and seeks attorneys fees. Legislators approved the franchise tax on limited partnerships in 2006 as it revised the state's public-school financing law after the Court held the school-finance system unconstitutional the year before. Allcat argues that taxing limited-partnership income violates the constitutional prohibition on a personal-income tax without voters' approval because such a tax actually is on income distributed to partners and not on an entity distinct from its partners. If the franchise tax on limited partnerships is not unconstitutional for that reason, Allcat contends, the comptroller has interpreted in a way that treats Allcat differently from other taxpayers in similar situations. This Court has original jurisdiction to decide the question of how the tax has been applied, Allcat argues, citing Texas Government Code section 22.002(c). The comptroller responds that Texas law recognizes limited partnerships as entities and that taxing the limited partnership's margin - a calculation that is the lesser of 70 percent of total revenue or total revenue minus certain business costs - is a tax on the business entity, not the partners' shares of its income. As to the challenge to the comptroller's interpretation and how it applies to Allcat, the comptroller contends that goes beyond the Legislature's decision to give the Supreme Court exclusive jurisdiction over constitutional challenges to the margin tax itself. 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
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IN RE BAYLOR MED. CTR. AT GARLAND (06-0491) - view video
9/27/2007 @ 10:40 AM (length 44:31)
Originating county: Dallas County
Originating from: 5th District Court of Appeals, Dallas
Case Documents
06-0491 In re Baylor Medical Center at Garland from Dallas County and the Fifth District Court of Appeals, Dallas For relator: R. Brent Cooper, Dallas For real parties in interest: William M. Hayner Jr., Gil L. Daley II, Dallas The Supreme Court will hear arguments on the issue of whether trial court abused discretion by ordering new trial ostensibly on juror affidavits. Among the principal issues in this medical-malpractice case are (1) whether Baylor's mandamus request in this Court - on the same or similar issues dismissed as moot in an earlier proceeding before the Court - justifies bypassing the appeals court and (2) whether the trial court in one instance and its successor abused their discretion either by (a) vacating an order reinstating a judgment in Baylor's favor or (b) by ordering a new trial based on post-trial juror affidavits in the absence of other grounds supporting a new trial. In an earlier stage in the underlying proceedings, after a jury verdict for Baylor, Baylor challenged a new trial order in a mandamus petition that the court of appeals denied. Baylor filed for mandamus relief in the Supreme Court, but later moved to dismiss it as moot because a new judge vacated the new trial order and reinstated the verdict. That successor judge then vacated her order, allowing a second trial to proceed. Baylor filed for mandamus relief directly with the Supreme Court.
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IN RE BILLY FREDERICK ALLEN (10-0886) - view video
1/12/2012 @ 9:00 AM (length 46:52)
Originating from: Original proceeding filed in the Supreme Court of Texas
Case Documents
10-0886 In re Billy Frederick Allen Original proceeding under the Tim Cole Act For relator: Kristopher E. Moore, McKinney For respondent/real party in interest: Philip A. Lionberger, Austin The issue in Allen's effort to recover compensation for wrongful imprisonment is whether his habeas corpus relief was for actual innocence or whether compensation under the Tim Cole Act can be had for habeas relief by way of a so-called Schlup claim. The state comptroller denied Allen's money claim for the almost 29 years he spent in prison before the Court of Criminal Appeals granted his habeas petition. The court based its decision on ineffective assistance of counsel, but Allen's writ application - the fourth he filed - was brought on the Schlup procedure allowing a prisoner to filed such a subsequent writ petition if actual innocence were an issue despite the procedural bar against multiple habeas writ petitions. The Court of Criminal Appeals split 5-3, supporting habeas relief with a plurality opinion that addressed his ineffective-assistance-of-counsel claim but not his actual-innocence argument. After the decision, and Allen's release on bond, the Dallas County district attorney dismissed his case but left open the possibility it could be filed again. When the controller denied his Tim Cole Act application, Allen brought this mandamus petition to order the comptroller to make payment. 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
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IN RE BILLY JAMES SMITH (10-0048) - view video
11/10/2010 @ 9:50 AM (length 45:33)
Originating from: Original proceeding filed in the Supreme Court of Texas
Case Documents
10-0048 In re Billy James Smith Original proceeding for compensation under the Texas Wrongful Imprisonment Act For relator Mr. Smith: Kristopher E. Moore For real party in interest Comptroller of Public Accounts: Philip A. Lionberger, Austin The issue is whether the state should compensate a prisoner for the prison time he served after his parole was revoked based on a wrongful conviction in addition to the time he served for the wrongful conviction. In this case the comptroller, which decides requests under the Wrongful Imprisonment Act, refused to pay Smith for time he spent in prison time finishing a sentence after his parole was revoked. The comptroller argues in part that the act provides plainly that a person "is not entitled to compensation ... for any part of a sentence in prison during which the person was also serving a concurrent sentence" for a valid conviction. Smith argues that "in prison" modifies sentence and would not include parole and the Legislature passed the law to provide a remedy for wrongful convictions, not to penalize someone who would have been on parole and not in prison but for the wrongful conviction. The law should be interpreted broadly, Smith contends, to assure its remedial purpose. 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
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IN RE BP PRODUCTS NORTH AMERICA, INC. (07-0119) - view video
10/18/2007 @ 10:40 AM (length 48:30)
Originating county: Galveston County
Originating from: 1st District Court of Appeals, Houston
Case Documents
In re BP Products North America Inc. from Galveston County and the First District Court of Appeals, Houston For relator: Katherine Mackillop, Houston For real party in interest: David W. Holman, Houston The Supreme Court will hear arguments on the issue of whether apex-deposition doctrine protects retired CEO. A principal issue in this case involving deposition of a retired chief executive officer is whether the apex-deposition doctrine that protects a company's highest officers from harassing depositions, absent actual and pertinent knowledge, applies to a retired CEO. BP sought mandamus relief when plaintiffs got an order allowing BP's then CEO, John Browne, to be deposed in a lawsuit over the Texas City refinery explosion. The court of appeals denied BP's mandamus petition. When Browne resigned in May after admitting perjury in a British court, the plaintiffs moved to dismiss as moot the company's mandamus petition. BP resists that motion. Justice Gaultney sitting by appointment pursuant to Section 22.005 of the Texas Government Code.07-0119
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IN RE BRIDGESTONE AMERICAS TIRE OPERATIONS LLC (12-0946) - view video
11/5/2014 @ 9:00 AM (length 45:13)
Originating county: Montgomery County
Originating from: 9th District Court of Appeals, Beaumont
Case Documents
The principal issues in this Texas lawsuit over an accident in Mexico that Mexican children and killed their parents are (1) whether civil procedure Rule 44 allows appointment of the children's uncle, a Texas resident, as next friend to bring this claim for the children when they have legal guardians in Mexico and (2) whether a next friend can be a plaintiff as defined by the forum non conveniens statute. The trial court denied Bridgestone's dismissal motion, based on its argument that Texas was an improper forum. Under Mexican law the maternal grandparents automatically were guardians without court appointment. Texas' forum non conveniens statute defines plaintiff in pertinent part as both the injured and their personal representative as long as the personal representative does not accept the appointment in bad faith. The court of appeals denied mandamus relief.
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IN RE CARLSON (24-0081)
Scheduled 1/16/2025 @ 9:00 AM (starts in 24 days, 19 hours, 40 minutes )
Case Documents
At issue in this case is whether the state Comptroller is required to issue a final order after the State Office of Administrative Hearings dismisses a case for lack of jurisdiction.
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IN RE CITY OF GALVESTON (20-0134) - view video
2/4/2021 @ 10:40 AM (length 41:58)
Originating from: Original proceeding filed in the Supreme Court of Texas
Case Documents
In this payment dispute involving federal recovery money after Hurricane Ike, the issues are (1) whether the parties' Rule 11 agreements bars the city from seeking mandamus relief; (2) whether the state land commissioner has a ministerial duty to refer the city's breach-of-contract claims to an administrative tribunal under Government Code chapter 2260; and (3) whether, to the extent the city alleges a breach of contract involving a contract to which the city is not a party, the commissioner has a ministerial duty to refer that claim to an administrative tribunal.
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IN RE COLUMBIA MEDICAL CENTER OF LAS COLINAS (06-0416) - view video
9/27/2007 @ 9:50 AM (length 45:57)
Originating county: Dallas County
Originating from: 5th District Court of Appeals, Dallas
Case Documents
06-0416 In re Columbia Medical Center of Las Colinas, et al. from Dallas County and the Fifth District Court of Appeals, Dallas For relator: R. Brent Cooper, Dallas For real parties in interest: Ben C. Martin, Dallas The Supreme Court will hear arguments on the issue of whether mandamus is proper for new trial ordered for 'justice and fairness'. The issue is whether the trial court abused its discretion by granting a new trial "in the interest of justice and fairness." In this case Columbia argues for a higher standard for a new trial ordered after a jury has rendered a verdict. The medical center contends in part that the absence of any right to appeal a new-trial order violates its due-process rights. The real party in interest, the wife of a man claiming he died because of medical malpractice, counters that Columbia is trying to do by a writ of mandamus what the Legislature has disallowed by statute and, to be successful, the Court would have to ignore precedent. Trials have been within the province of trial courts, she argues, because trial courts are best able to judge whether another trial is warranted. The appeals court held that the trial court had sufficient reasons to order the new trial.
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IN RE COLUMBIA VALLEY HEALTHCARE SYSTEM, L.P. (08-0995) - view video
2/18/2010 @ 9:00 AM (length 50:38)
Originating county: Cameron County
Originating from: 13th District Court of Appeals, Corpus Christi & Edinburg
Case Documents
08-0995 In re Columbia Valley Healthcare System, L.P. from Cameron County and the 13th District Court of Appeals, Corpus Christi/Edinburg For relator: Mike A. Hatchell, Austin For real parties in interest: Carlos Escobar and Juan A. Magallanes, Brownsville The issue is whether a legal assistant who worked on the other side of a case disqualifies her new law firm when the extent of her involvement in the case was allegedly administrative. In this medical-malpractice case attorneys for a hospital's owners moved to disqualify the plaintiffs' law firm because one of its legal assistants had been employed by the hospital's lead counsel, responsible for filing privileged documents and handling investigative material and documents pertaining to strategy and settlement. Before she left the hospital's law firm she signed a confidentiality agreement that obligated her not to work on any matter that she previously worked on for the law firm. The counsel who hired her admonished her not to work on cases she worked on at the previous firm, although she filed correspondence involving the malpractice case and did other work, including rescheduling a docket conference, handling correspondence and calls concerning it and copying the plaintiffs' son's birth certificate and Social Security records. The trial court denied the disqualification motion. The appeals court 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
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IN RE COMMISSION FOR LAWYER DISCIPLINE (13-0161) - view video
2/6/2014 @ 9:50 AM (length 42:57)
Originating county: Galveston County
Case Documents
In this mandamus action, springing from a State Bar investigation of a prosecutor who allegedly withheld exculpatory evidence, the principal issues are (1) whether the trial court abused its discretion by denying the commission use of a partial criminal-trial transcript from an expunged case and (2) whether mandamus relief is proper because the commission did not seek relief from the court of appeals or file a direct appeal. The Commission for Lawyer Discipline began its investigation after prosecutors, ordered in mid-trial to produce all undisclosed evidence in an aggravated-robbery case, provided among other items a 911-call transcript that defense lawyers complained would have been critical for cross-examining a witness who had testified. After a hearing, and after playing the 911 tape for the jury, the trial judge ordered the defendant, Bledsoe, acquitted. Records from the case were later expunged, but after the commission got an uncertified partial-trial transcript. Before a State Bar grievance panel, Hall, the lead prosecutor, complained his defense was jeopardized because evidence he needed was unavailable. When the commission, with Bledsoe's assistance, moved to modify the order expunging the records, another trial judge ordered that evidence covered by the order could not be used and denied the commission's motion to modify the order. The judge reasoned that the commission was not a law-enforcement agency as defined by the statute on which the commission based its motion.
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IN RE COY REECE (09-0520) - view video
10/12/2010 @ 10:40 AM (length 43:46)
Originating county: Dallas County
Originating from: 5th District Court of Appeals, Dallas
Case Documents
09-0520 In re Coy Reece from Dallas County and the Fifth District Court of Appeals, Dallas For relator: Robert B. Gilbreath, Dallas For real parties in interest: Edward Jason Dennis and Mr. Jeremy A. Fielding, Dallas The issue is whether the Court has habeas or mandamus jurisdiction to review criminal contempt for perjury during a civil-suit deposition. In this case Reece petitioned the Court of Criminal Appeals for habeas-corpus relief, but that court refused to act, reasoning that it had constitutional authority to do so but the matter, arising from a civil case, was appropriate for the Texas Supreme Court. In this case, Reece restyled his petition as one for mandamus relief. He argues habeas relief is inadequate because this Court only can order someone freed from a contempt order arising from violating an existing "order, judgment or decree" in a civil case, factors not involved in this case of admitted lying in a deposition. 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
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IN RE DAVIS (07-0147) - view video
12/5/2007 @ 10:40 AM (length 46:27)
Originating county: Dallas County
Originating from: 5th District Court of Appeals, Dallas
Case Documents
07-0147 In re Calla Davis, et al. from Dallas County and the Fifth District Court of Appeals, Dallas For relator: Craig T. Enoch, Austin For real party in interest: Grant H. Brenna, Dallas The Supreme Court will hear arguments on the issue of whether county commissioners abused discretion by refusing to call liquor-sales election after election petitions certified. In this dispute over an order for a local-option election to approve beer and wine sales, the principal issues are (1) whether county commissioners abused their discretion by refusing to order the election after election petitions were certified and, if so, (2) whether the election should be called for the current justice-of-the-peace precinct (from which petitions were gathered) or separate elections for areas of two existing precincts that were in the precinct that voted "dry" in the 1870s. Commissioners acted because the Texas Alcoholic Beverage Code (section 251.80) requires a "wet" or "dry" area must remain unchanged until a vote in the same territory that comprised the precinct when its status was established. In this case the boundaries of the original JP precinct changed since it voted "dry" in 1877. The court of appeals denied mandamus relief that would have ordered commissioners to set the election.
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IN RE DEEPWATER HORIZON (13-0670) - view video
9/16/2014 @ 9:50 AM (length 43:01)
Originating from: U.S. Court of Appeals, 5th Circuit
Case Documents
In this insurance dispute over pollution damages from the Deepwater Horizon drilling-rig explosion, the Fifth Circuit asks in essence (1) whether under Evanston Insurance Co. v. ATOFINA Petrochemicals Inc. oil producer BP P.L.C. and its affiliates are covered by the driller's insurance policies as "additional insureds" and (2) whether the doctrine that an ambiguous insurance contract will be interpreted in the insured's favor applies to decide the drilling contract's insurance-coverage provision under ATOFINA. Insurance carriers sued for a declaratory judgment that BP's liability for the explosion and sinking of the Deepwater Horizon rig was not covered by driller Transocean's policies. Answering the first question, as the federal circuit court framed it, depends on whether the BP-Transocean contract's provision for additional insureds like BP is separate and independent from the drilling contract's indemnity provisions. Insurers in this case argue that the scope of additional insurance coverage contemplated by that contract was limited to pollution risks on or above the Gulf's surface, not below the water. BP contends that ATOFINA holds that insurance-policy language defines coverage regardless of the drilling contract's indemnity limits. The federal district court declared BP was not covered for below-surface pollution, but the Fifth Circuit initially reversed, then certified the questions for the Texas Supreme Court to answer.
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IN RE DEPT. OF FAMILY & PROTECTIVE SRVCS. (08-0524) - view video
11/12/2008 @ 11:30 AM (length 40:09)
Originating county: Harris County
Originating from: 1st District Court of Appeals, Houston
Case Documents
08-0524 In re Department of Family & Protective Services from Harris County and the 1st District Court of Appeals, Houston For relator: Sandra Hachem, Houston For real party in interest: Douglas Ray York, Houston The issues in this parental-rights termination case are (1) whether the trial court's new-trial order after the statutory dismissal deadline vacated a termination order rendered before the deadline passed; (2) whether an objection based on the trial court's failure to dismiss was waived because it came after the new-trial order; (3) whether mandamus relief is appropriate when the state can pursue an accelerated appeal; and (4) whether Family Code section 263.401(b) restrictions are jurisdictional. 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
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IN RE DIOCESE OF LUBBOCK (20-0127) - view video
1/6/2021 @ 9:50 AM (length 44:44)
Originating county: Lubbock County
Originating from: 7th District Court of Appeals, Amarillo
Case Documents
In this defamation case by a deacon among a list of clergy published on the church website and in a press release, the issues are (1) whether the ecclesiastical-abstention doctrine bars the libel claim when a church internally decides to disclose inside information to the public at large and (2) whether Guerrero, the deacon, presented clear and specific evidence establishing a prima facie case of each element of his defamation claim.
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IN RE EDUARDO "WALO" GRACIA BAZAN (06-0952) - view video
9/26/2007 @ 10:40 AM (length 41:19)
Originating county: Hidalgo County
Originating from: 13th District Court of Appeals, Corpus Christi & Edinburg
Case Documents
06-0952 In re Eduardo "Walo" Gracia Bazan from Hidalgo County and the 13th District Court of Appeals, Corpus Christi/Edinburg For relator: Kelly K. McKinnis, McAllen For real party in interest: Cheryl Hole, Edinburg The Supreme Court will hear arguments on the issue of whether 'forgiveness doctrine' operates to bar removal of officer convicted of crime alleged before re-election. The issue is whether is a constable may be removed from office and suspended pending appeal for a conviction that occurred years before his re-election. Bazan, a constable elected from a Hidalgo County precinct, seeks mandamus relief from a court order removing him for a felony conviction and suspending him during his appeal. Bazan was convicted of stealing a car by deception on allegations dating to October 2001, three years before he was re-elected. The trial court cited two provisions of the Texas Local Government Code requiring the removal and suspension, but Bazan argues that Local Government Code section 87.001 bars his removal for crimes that occurred before his re-election. The state argues that the Texas Constitution prohibits anyone convicted of bribery from holding public office, that Bazan's crime was bribery, so the constitution trumps Local Government Code section 87.001. The court of appeals denied Bazan's mandamus petition.
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IN RE FARMERS TEXAS COUNTY MUTUAL INSURANCE COMPANY (19-0701) - view video
9/17/2020 @ 11:00 AM (length 42:47)
Originating county: Bandera County
Originating from: 4th District Court of Appeals, San Antonio
Case Documents
The issues in this case, in which a policyholder agreed to pay $100,000 more to settle a claim than her insurer was willing to agree to, are (1) whether the appeals court abused its discretion by denying mandamus relief from the trial court's refusal to dismiss the insured's Stowers claim and (2) whether the trial court abused its discretion by refusing to dismiss the insured's breach-of-contract claim when the policy expressly allows the insurer to defend or settle the case as it "considers appropriate." Longoria, the insured, alleges in part Farmers mishandled her defense by not designating damages experts before trial.
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IN RE FORD MOTOR CO. (12-0957) - view video
12/3/2013 @ 9:40 AM (length 41:22)
Originating county: Hidalgo County
Originating from: 13th District Court of Appeals, Corpus Christi & Edinburg
Case Documents
Among issues in this effort to vacate a Texas trial setting on product-liability claims from a rollover accident in Mexico are (1) whether the person killed in the accident and his death beneficiaries are a "single plaintiff" under Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code section 71.051(h)(2) and (2) whether only the decedent's residence must be considered when determining the plaintiff's status as a legal Texas resident under section 71.051(e). In this case Juan Tueme Mendez, the driver of a Ford Explorer in the accident that killed his brother, Cesar Mendez, sued his brother's estate administrator in a Texas probate court where probate was filed. The administrator then sued Ford and the tire manufacturer. The administrator, Cesar Mendez's daughter, is a U.S. citizen and Texas resident. Both Mendez brothers were Mexican citizens with U.S. visas, although Ford and the administrator, together with Cesar's relatives who intervened, dispute whether Cesar was a Mexican resident. Two relatives who intervened, another of Cesar's daughters and her mother, are U.S. citizens and Texas residents. The trial court denied Ford's motion to dismiss, arguing that the forum was inconvenient. Ford petitioned for mandamus relief, but the court of appeals denied it.
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IN RE FRANK KENT MOTOR CO. (10-0687) - view video
11/9/2011 @ 10:40 AM (length 40:23)
Originating county: Tarrant County
Originating from: 2nd District Court of Appeals, Fort Worth
Case Documents
10-0687 In re Frank Kent Motor Co. from Tarrant County and the Second District Court of Appeals, Fort Worth For relator: Robert Ruotolo, Dallas For real party in interest: Timothy G. Chovanec, Fort Worth The issue is whether an employee may avoid a signed jury waiver in an employment handbook by claiming the waiver resulted from duress or coercion. Valdez, an ex-employee, sued Frank Kent for wrongful termination, claiming he was fired because of his age, and sought a jury trial. Frank Kent moved to strike the jury demand because Valdez had signed a jury waiver for any employment disputes a year before he was fired. Valdez countered the motion to strike with an affidavit attesting that his supervisor told him he would be fired if he did not sign the waiver. The trial court denied the company's motion to strike. On the company's mandamus petition, the appeals court denied 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
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IN RE GAYLE E. COPPOCK (08-0093) - view video
12/10/2008 @ 9:50 AM (length 45:14)
Originating county: Denton County
Originating from: 2nd District Court of Appeals, Fort Worth
Case Documents
08-0093 In re Gayle E. Coppock from Denton County and the Second District Court of Appeals, Fort Worth For relator: William E. Trantham, Denton For real party in interest: Amie S. Peace, Dan C. Coffey, Denton The issues in this habeas corpus proceeding involving an ex-spouse found in contempt for "coarse or offensive" communications are (1) whether the divorce decree ordered or commanded no coarse or offensive communication and, if so, (2) whether that would be an unconstitutional prior restraint on the ex-spouse's free speech or void for vagueness and (3) whether the trial court order substantively changed its decree after it lost jurisdiction to do so. 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
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IN RE GEN. ELEC. CO. (07-0195) - view video
11/14/2007 @ 10:40 AM (length 43:43)
Originating county: Harris County
Originating from: 1st District Court of Appeals, Houston
Case Documents
Justice O'Neill is not sitting. In re General Electric Co., et al. from Harris County and the First District Court of Appeals, Houston For relator: Kurt H. Kuhn, Austin For real parties in interest: Charles S. Siegel, Dallas The Supreme Court will hear arguments on the issue of whether statutory forum non conveniens factors, if met, compel dismissal. In this case, in which a multi-district litigation court refused to dismiss an asbestos claim for forum non conveniens, principal issues are (1) whether the dismissal motion must be granted if statutory factors are satisfied and (2) whether the supremacy clause is violated by trial court's stipulation that defendants waive their right to remove the case to federal court after dismissal for improper forum. In this case a Maine resident sued companies in Texas over asbestos disease he contracted while working in Maine. General Electric and the other companies moved to dismiss, arguing that Maine was a more appropriate forum than Texas. The multi-district litigation court refused to dismiss, reasoning that Texas was more appropriate to try the case even though neither the plaintiff nor his injury had any connection with Texas. The court noted that the defendants refused to agree not to remove the case to federal court once it was filed in Maine because the plaintiff, who was dying, would be subject to slower-acting federal MDL courts than Texas'. The court of appeals refused to grant mandamus relief.
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IN RE GLOBALSANTAFE CORP. (07-0040) - view video
1/16/2008 @ 9:50 AM (length 40:28)
Originating county: Harris County
Originating from: 14th District Court of Appeals, Houston
Case Documents
07-0040 In re GlobalSantaFe Corp. from Harris County and the 14th District Court of Appeals, Houston For relator: Christopher Dove, Houston For real party in interest: John M. Black, Houston In this mandamus seeking the pretrial court to retain jurisdiction, the Supreme Court will hear arguments on the principal issue is whether and by how much the Jones Act preempts Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code chapter 90. In this petition seeking to compel the pretrial multidistrict litigation court to retain jurisdiction over a silica case, the principal issue is whether and by how much the federal Jones Act preempts the state's multidistrict litigation procedures. Under the Jones Act, a ship's hand or sailor claiming a work injury aboard ship may file a state lawsuit free of any minimum-injury requirement imposed on personal-injury suits by state law. Lopez, who claims injury from silica, argues that restrictions imposed on his case by Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code Chapter 90, the MDL procedures, are substantive limitations forbidden by the federal law: The MDL procedures for silica cases exist to bar people with minimum injury from filing suit and a medical report that failed to meet a threshold standard to forgo the MDL pretrial process was a report the Jones Act barred. The MDL pretrial court remanded Lopez's case to the trial court and the court of appeals denied GlobalSantaFe the mandamus relief it sought.
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IN RE GULF EXPLORATION, LLC (07-0055) - view video
1/17/2008 @ 9:50 AM (length 36:59)
Originating county: Midland County
Originating from: 11th District Court of Appeals, Eastland
Case Documents
07-0055 In re Gulf Exploration LLC, et al. from Midland County and the 11th District Court of Appeals, Eastland For relators: James M. Chaney, Oklahoma City For real party in interest: Brad Miller, Midland The Supreme Court will hear arguments on the principal issues are whether the court of appeals had jurisdiction to review a trial court order compelling arbitration and, if so, whether the appeals court erred by vacating the order on grounds that claims were outside the scope of the arbitration clause. In this case working interest partners in an oil- and gas-development agreement moved to arbitrate their claim that the operating partner, Great Western, used an acquired lease adjacent to the development tract to drill offset wells that drew from the reservoir subject to their development agreement and that, under the operating agreement, the operating partners should have been given a right to participate. The agreement included an arbitration provision covering claims over areas of "mutual interest." The trial court granted the arbitration motion, but the court of appeals in a mandamus action ordered the trial court to rescind the arbitration order because the claim was beyond the scope of the arbitration provision.
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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.
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IN RE J.B. HUNT TRANSPORT INC. (15-0631) - view video
3/9/2016 @ 10:40 AM (length 43:02)
Originating county: Dallas County
Originating from: 5th District Court of Appeals, Dallas
Case Documents
The issues in this case contesting a trial court's denied abatement plea, which contended an earlier suit in another county involving the same traffic accident dominated, are (1) whether the trial court abused its discretion by denying abatement when Hunt filed first in Waller County; if so, (2) whether a Dallas County trial court actively interfered with the Waller County court's jurisdiction to justify mandamus relief; and (3) whether In re Prudential's balancing test superseded Abor v. Black's active-interference test for deciding mandamus relief when a trial court improperly denied abatement.
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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.
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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
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IN RE JOHN DOE (13-0073) - view video
11/7/2013 @ 9:50 AM (length 44:29)
Originating county: Harris County
Originating from: 1st District Court of Appeals, Houston
Case Documents
The issues in this effort to prevent discovery of an anonymous blogger's identify are (1) whether Texas court rules governing discovery before a lawsuit is filed means that the trial court must have "personal jurisdiction" over the "John Doe" defendant--that is, the authority to hear a case against a person only after he has been served with papers notifying him of a suit--before his identity may be discovered; (2) whether the trial court abused its discretion by determining that the anticipated defamation and business-disparagement suit can be tried in Harris County courts when the court doesn't have jurisdiction over the anonymous blogger; and (3) whether the court abused its discretion by ordering the blogger's identify disclosed from Google, considering a First Amendment right to anonymous speech. The John Doe relator -- the blogger's pseudonym is Trooper -- claims the Harris County court must have personal jurisdiction over him for this Rule 202 proceeding, although the Ohio company bringing the discovery action argues that personal jurisdiction is not required at this pre-suit stage as it would be after a suit is filed. It contends that personal jurisdiction would be impossible when the potential defendant to a suit is anonymous. The company chairman, Robert T. Brockman, is from the Houston area. The trial court granted the discovery petition. The court of appeals denied the blogger's mandamus petition to prevent disclosure of his identity.
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IN RE JOHN W. COOK, ET AL. (12-0308) - view video
2/6/2013 @ 11:30 AM (length 44:33)
Originating county: Travis County
Originating from: 3rd District Court of Appeals, Austin
Case Documents
The issue is whether in a deceptive trade-practices action by the Attorney General's Office the DTPA's permissive-venue provision should take priority over the mandatory venue provided by the Civil Practices and Remedies Code. In this case, alleging gasoline marketers diluted octane ratings of gas they sold, the attorney general sued for an injunction in Travis County under a DTPA provision providing suits may be filed against defendants in a county in which they have "done business." Cook and the other retailers contend Travis County is an improper venue because the Civil Practices and Remedies Code mandates venue where defendants have their principal homes, or domiciles. The court of appeals denied Cook's petition for mandamus relief after the trial court ruled the suit was proper in Travis County.
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IN RE JORDEN (06-0369) - view video
9/26/2007 @ 9:00 AM (length 44:38)
Originating county: Smith County
Originating from: 12th District Court of Appeals, Tyler
Case Documents
06-0369 In re Jack Jorden, M.D., et al. from Smith County and the 12th District Court of Appeals, Tyler For relator: R. Brent Cooper, Dallas For real party in interest: Bill Liebbe, Tyler The Supreme Court will hear arguments on the issue of whether pre-suit deposition rule supersedes medical-malpractice limits. The issue in this effort to take depositions before a lawsuit is filed on a medical malpractice claim, a procedure authorized under Texas Rule of Civil Procedure 202, is whether Rule 202 is trumped by statutory medical-malpractice restrictions. In this case a woman's son, a physician, hired a lawyer to investigate the possibility of suing doctors who treated his mother before she died of a heart attack. His counsel petitioned the trial court to depose the mother's primary-care doctor, an emergency-room doctor and representatives of the hospital and clinic where she was treated. The trial court denied the petition for pre-suit depositions. The court of appeals granted mandamus relief, holding that Texas Civil Practices and Remedies Code chapter 74, a provision of House Bill 4's sweeping tort reform, did not preclude Rule 202 depositions to investigate the merits of a suit.
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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
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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
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IN RE LAZY W DISTRICT NO. 1 (15-0117) - view video
3/9/2016 @ 9:50 AM (length 42:50)
Originating county: Henderson County
Originating from: 12th District Court of Appeals, Tyler
Case Documents
The issue in this mandamus action, arising from one government's jurisdictional plea to block another's condemnation proceeding, is whether the trial court may decide the jurisdictional challenge before special commissioners value the property. The Lazy W district argues that special commissioners cannot be appointed until the trial court decides its plea to the jurisdiction, asserting government immunity in a water pipeline-condemnation proceeding. The trial court refused to appoint commissioners. The court of appeals reversed, holding the Property Code required commissioners to value the condemned land and the trial court's order otherwise was void.
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IN RE LCS SP, LLP (20-0694) - view video
12/1/2021 @ 9:50 AM (length 45:12)
Originating county: Dallas County
Originating from: 5th District Court of Appeals, Dallas
Case Documents
In this mandamus proceeding involving the Texas Medical Liability Act's limits on discovery in a health care liability claim before the claimant has served an expert report, the issues are (1) whether the trial court abused its discretion in ordering the defendant to produce its operating policies and procedures before the claimant served the expert report; and (2) whether the court of appeals had authority to stay the expert-report deadline pending the claimant's receipt of the documents.
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IN RE LESTER COLLINS, M.D. (07-0737) - view video
1/12/2008 @ 10:40 AM (length 48:11)
Originating county: Smith County
Originating from: 12th District Court of Appeals, Tyler
Case Documents
07-0737 In Re Lester Collins, M.D. from Smith County and the 12th District Court of Appeals, Tyler For relator: R. Brent Cooper, Dallas For real party in interest: Peter Kelly, Houston The principal issues in the medical-malpractice case are (1) whether the trial court abused its discretion by prohibiting ex parte communication with non-party physicians and health-care providers who treated the plaintiff and listed by her on the statutory schedule for disclosure and release; (2) whether Civil Practices and Remedies Code section 74.052 prohibits ex parte communications with the med-mal plaintiff's physicians and health-care providers; and (3) whether federal law (HIPAA) prohibits ex parte communications and preempts section 74.052. 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
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IN RE LONGVIEW ENERGY CO. (14-0175) - view video
2/25/2015 @ 9:50 AM (length 41:38)
Originating county: Zavala County
Originating from: 4th District Court of Appeals, San Antonio
Case Documents
Both sides in this case attack by mandamus petitions an appeal bond set after the trial court's judgment against two of Longview Energy's company directors who allegedly used proprietary information to buy mineral leases that Longview was trying to purchase. The principal issues are (1) whether disgorged profits are compensatory damages for calculating a bond to supersede the judgment; (2) whether the appeals court erred by calculating the bond at $25 million, based on the judgment as a whole and not on individual defendants; and (3) whether the trial court by post-judgment discovery order properly compelled defendants to file monthly reports on assets and proceeds from the disputed leases. Longview sued the directors, Huff and D'Angelo, and their related companies, after recruiting them as investors in the planned lease purchase. In the trial court Longview got judgment for almost $100 million and a constructive trust on the disputed property and mineral rights. The trial court ordered supersedeas bonds against defendants up to $25 million, to be posted by each. The appeals court reversed the trial court's decision to impose an appeal bond against individual defendants but affirmed the ruling that disgorged profits are compensatory damages for calculating the appeal bond.
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IN RE M-I, L.L.C. (14-1045) - view video
1/13/2016 @ 9:00 AM (length 41:23)
Originating county: Harris County
Originating from: 14th District Court of Appeals, Houston
Case Documents
Beyond a question of mandamus jurisdiction, the principal issues are (1) whether the trial court abused its discretion by refusing to exclude the opposing corporate representative from a hearing at which trade-secret testimony was presented and (2) whether the trial court abused its discretion by ordering disclosure of an affidavit submitted in camera to the appeals court that contained trade-secret information. In this case M-I Swaco, M-I L.L.C.'s business-operation name, challenges the trial court's decision to allow an opposing party's corporate representative into a hearing on trade secrets. Jeff Russo, M-I Swaco's former business-development manager, sued to declare his non-competition agreement with the company unenforceable after the company demanded he stop working for a competitor. In a temporary-injunction hearing, M-I Swaco sought to exclude a representative from Russo's new company, also a party M-I Swaco sought to enjoin, during testimony about trade secrets Russo might have taken from his former employer. When the trial court refused the motion, M-I Swaco petitioned the appeals court for mandamus relief. The court of appeals denied the petition, but also denied Russo's motion to get an affidavit M-I Swaco filed for the appeals court's in camera consideration on testimony it planned to introduce. In the trial court again, the court granted Russo's motion to get the affidavit as a witness statement. M-I Swaco filed for mandamus relief in this Court.
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IN RE MAHINDRA USA INC. (17-0019) - view video
2/7/2018 @ 9:50 AM (length 44:17)
Originating county: Harris County
Originating from: 1st District Court of Appeals, Houston
Case Documents
The principal issues in this inconvenient-forum dispute are (1) whether a wrongful-death action in Texas arising from a nonresident's death in an out-of-state accident should be dismissed; (2) whether the Texas-residency exception to the forum non conveniens statute applies (a) if a plaintiff, a resident of Texas, sues as a wrongful-death beneficiary individually as well as administrator of an out-of-state estate and as next friend of another wrongful-death beneficiary and (b) a second wrongful-death beneficiary, also a Texas resident, sues only in an individual capacity; and (3) whether claims in the suit that may not be dismissed bears on the nonresident-claims analysis.
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IN RE MARK FISHER AND REECE BOUDREAUX (12-0163) - view video
10/10/2013 @ 9:00 AM (length 42:26)
Originating county: Wise County
Originating from: 2nd District Court of Appeals, Fort Worth
Case Documents
Among principal issues are (1) whether the trial court abused its discretion by refusing to enforce venue agreements under Texas' major-transaction statute and forum-selection agreements and (2) whether the trial court erred by refusing to dismiss the case for lack of standing because of a pending bankruptcy. In the underlying litigation Richey sued Fisher and Boudreaux, whose limited partnership bought Richey's oilfield-construction firm, and Bank of America, which through a predecessor bank financed the company's operations after the sale. The limited partnership later filed for bankruptcy. Richey, who continued as president of the company he sold, sued in Wise County, seeking $6.5 million he was owed from the sale, $1 million he contends he loaned the partnership and damages to his reputation. He argues Wise County, his home county, is the proper venue because of his defamation claim. Various agreements related to the Richey-company sale and for the bank's line of credit stipulated where lawsuits could be filed (none included Wise County). Fisher and Boudreaux argued that the venue and forum-selection clauses required the suit to be tried outside Wise County or in bankruptcy court. The court of appeals denied their petition for mandamus relief.
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IN RE MELISSA BLEVINS (12-0636) - view video
10/9/2013 @ 9:50 AM (length 48:44)
Originating county: Somervell County
Originating from: 10th District Court of Appeals, Waco
Case Documents
In this challenge by a foster parent to an order placing children in Mexico with their father, the issues are (1) whether the parental presumption applies in a suit to modify child custody and (2) whether the trial court abused its discretion by determining the children's best interest was served by ordering them to live in Mexico with their father. Initially the children were placed with Blevins in foster care after the Department of Family Protective Services took custody following both parents' drug use and neglect. The mother eventually terminated her parental rights and the father, after a prison term, was deported to Mexico. After a hearing and home study, the trial court ordered the father to have supervised possession of the children in Mexico. That home study found the father living with brothers in an unfurnished house -- and uninhabitable, according to Mexican authorities -- and the maternal grandparents' home only large enough for them. Blevins, the foster parent, sued to be named the children's sole managing conservator. The department then petitioned to modify the children's custody, to name the father and maternal grandmother as joint managing conservators. The trial court ordered the children to be sent to Mexico to live with their maternal grandmother. Seeking mandamus relief, Blevins sued to stop the trial court's order. The court of appeals denied her mandamus petition.
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IN RE MEMORIAL HERMANN HOSPITAL SYSTEMS, ET AL. (14-0171) - view video
2/25/2015 @ 9:00 AM (length 45:38)
Originating county: Harris County
Originating from: 1st District Court of Appeals, Houston
Case Documents
In this mandamus proceeding concerning a discovery order the issues are (1) whether the statutory medical-committee privilege protects documents potentially discoverable under the anticompetitive exception to the statutory medical peer review-committee privilege and (2) whether "anticompetitive action" requires that an anti-trust claim be pleaded. Memorial Hermann sought mandamus relief from a trial court's discovery order in a former cardiothoracic surgeon's defamation lawsuit against the hospital and several physicians. The surgeon, Dr. Miguel Gomez, alleges in part that his criticism of hospital-management changes and operations led to physicians manipulating death rates of patients he treated, submitting that data to the hospital's peer-review committees and distributing it by an Internet list service. Gomez resigned from the staff at Memorial Hermann Memorial City Medical Center and became surgery department chair at another west Houston hospital, then sued, moving to compel discovery from the statutory medical peer-review committee and the hospital's medical committee. Memorial Hermann contends that documents held by the medical committee are privileged and that privilege overcomes the anticompetitive exception to the privilege attached to documents held by the medical peer-review committee. The trial court granted Gomez's discovery motion. The court of appeals denied the hospital's mandamus petition.
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IN RE MICHAEL BLAIR (11-0441) - view video
10/17/2012 @ 9:00 AM (length 44:11)
Originating from: Direct appeal under the Tim Cole Act
Case Documents
The principal issues are (1) whether Blair is procedurally barred from a second mandamus petition seeking to order the comptroller to compensate him for a wrongful capital-murder conviction proved by DNA evidence and (2) whether his current incarceration for four child-molestation convictions (he confessed nine years after his murder conviction to molesting a witness's children) bar compensation for years he spent on death row before those convictions. Acting on Blair's initial request for compensation, the comptroller rejected it, reasoning in part that the Legislature intended to compensate only wrongfully imprisoned inmates who were freed and in part because he served concurrent sentences for parole revocation his capital-murder case triggered. The Supreme Court denied Blair's first mandamus petition. Then Blair tried again after the Court decided In re Billy James Smith last year. Smith held that the Tim Cole Act did not bar compensation because of a concurrent sentence from parole revocation because of the wrongful conviction. The comptroller rejected that request, reasoning that his arguments were the same as before.
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IN RE MORGAN STANLEY & CO. INC., SUCCESSOR TO MORGAN STANLEY DW INC. (07-0665) - view video
10/15/2008 @ 10:40 AM (length 39:37)
Originating county: Dallas County
Originating from: 5th District Court of Appeals, Dallas
Case Documents
07-0665 In re Morgan Stanley & Co. Inc. from Dallas County and the Fifth District Court of Appeals, Dallas For relators: Thomas R. Phillips, Austin For real parties in interest: Charles T. Frazier, Dallas The Supreme Court will hear arguments on whether arbitrator should decide incapacity issue of underlying contract. In this breach-of-fiduciary-duties case a principal issues is whether an arbitrator should decide if a contract is enforceable because one party allegedly lacked the mental capacity to agree to it. A guardian appointed for a Dallas woman's estate sued investors, among others, alleging that the woman had been diagnosed with dementia about the time she transferred several securities accounts to the investment firm under agreements containing arbitration clauses. Morgan Stanley's predecessor moved to compel arbitration of the dispute, but the probate court denied the motion and determined the woman did not have the capacity to conclude the agreements. The appeals court denied mandamus relief. 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
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IN RE MURRIN BROTHERS 1885 LTD. ET AL. (18-0737) - view video
10/10/2019 @ 9:50 AM (length 44:09)
Originating county: Tarrant County
Originating from: 2nd District Court of Appeals, Fort Worth
Case Documents
In this dispute over control of Fort Worth's famed Billy Bob's the issues are (1) whether the trial court abused its discretion by denying a Rule 12 motion on grounds that Fort Worth law firm Kelly Hart & Hallman, hired by one bloc in the corporate struggle, satisfied its burden to show it had "sufficient authority" to represent the company and (2) whether the trial court abused its discretion by refusing to disqualify the firm for ostensible conflict reasons: representing both individual defendants and the company in the derivative action.
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IN RE NATIONWIDE MUTUAL INSURANCE CO., ET AL. (15-0328) - view video
2/10/2016 @ 9:50 AM (length 44:30)
Originating county: Travis County
Originating from: 3rd District Court of Appeals, Austin
Case Documents
One issue in Nationwide's effort to enforce a forum-selection clause, stipulating suit in Ohio, is whether the company substantially invoked Texas courts by litigating for close to two years. In this case Brian Besch, a Nationwide insurance agent, sued Nationwide in Texas for canceling an agreement by which he would get policies a retired agent had handled. Besch filed suit in Travis County despite the forum-selection clause that disputes over the agreement must be filed in Ohio. For two years Nationwide filed discovery requests (depositions were not taken); moved for dismissal on the merits (none decided); filed counterclaims; and filed special exceptions that, after they were granted, led Besch to re-plead his claims. If by doing all that Nationwide substantially invoked the judicial process in Texas, then a second issue is whether Besch suffered sufficient prejudice to avoid the agreed forum. Besch contends he has, because limitations now could bar his suit in Ohio. Nationwide argues Besch is not prejudiced because he chose to bring suit in Texas, despite the forum agreement, and it has agreed to forfeit its limitations defense if the lawsuit is moved to Ohio. The trial court denied Nationwide's effort to enforce the forum clause, ruling the company substantially used Texas courts to Besch's detriment, citing Perry Homes v. Cull for its holding that plaintiffs' extensive litigation waived their efforts to invoke an arbitration agreement just before trial. The court of appeals denied Nationwide's request for mandamus relief.
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IN RE NESTLE, INC. (12-0518) - view video
9/18/2012 @ 9:00 AM (length 44:36)
Originating from: Original proceeding filed in the Supreme Court of Texas
Case Documents
The issues in this constitutional challenge against the state franchise tax are (1) whether the tax violates the state constitutional prohibition on taxes that are not equal and uniform; (2) whether the tax violates the federal constitution's equal-protection clause; (3) whether it violates Nestle's 14th amendment right to due process and (4) whether the tax violates Nestle's protection under the federal constitution's commerce clause by discriminating against interstate commerce. These issues duplicate the principal issues in 11-0855, Nestle USA Inc. v. Combs, dismissed February 10 for want of jurisdiction. In this case, in contrast to the earlier one, Nestle brings its challenge after paying taxes under protest, ostensibly curing the jurisdictional problem. At the heart of Nestle's argument is that its franchise-tax assessment as a manufacturer is twice what retail and wholesale businesses in Texas pay even though Nestle's business in Texas is retailing and wholesaling. Texas retail and wholesale businesses pay franchise taxes of one-half percent of their taxable margins, the revenue attributed to their Texas business, after deductions. Manufacturers pay 1 percent.
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IN RE OLSHAN FOUNDATION REPAIR CO., LLC (09-0703) - view video
3/23/2010 @ 9:50 AM (length 46:12)
Originating county: Wise County
Originating from: 2nd District Court of Appeals, Fort Worth
Case Documents
09-0432 In re Olshan Foundation Repair Co., LLC, and Olshan Foundation Repair Co. of Dallas, Ltd. from Wise County and the Second District Court of Appeals, Fort Worth consolidated for oral argument with 09-0433, 09-0474 and 09-0703 For relators: Stephan B. Rogers, Boerne For real parties in interest: Todd Lipscomb, San Antonio The principal issues are (1) whether in a dispute over home repairs the Federal Arbitration Act applies in an arbitration agreement specifying application of Texas law but that does not exclude federal law and (2) whether claims of Texas Home Solicitation Act violations should be arbitrated or decided by a court. In these cases homeowners sued Olshan based on engineering reports, written by the same engineer, concluding Olshan had not properly repaired their foundations. In three of the cases choice-of-law provisions in the contracts stipulated binding arbitration "pursuant to the arbitration laws in your state." Homeowners in those case argue that the federal arbitration statute does not apply, rendering the arbitration provisions unenforceable under Texas law (Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code section 171.002) because the contracts were not signed by the parties and their attorneys. The trial courts denied Olshan's plea to abate and compel arbitration in each case and the courts of appeals denied mandamus relief in each. 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
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IN RE RSR CORP. AND QUEMETCO METALS LTD. INC. (13-0499) - view video
9/2/2015 @ 9:00 AM (length 48:24)
Originating county: Dallas County
Originating from: 5th District Court of Appeals, Dallas
Case Documents
The principal issues are (1) whether trial counsel should be disqualified for interviewing an opponent-party's former employee who had access to and possession of confidential information involving a licensing-fee dispute (and who was later hired by opposing counsel as a consultant for the case against his former employer) and (2) whether the opponent-party's second, belated disqualification argument should be precluded because it was raised six months before trial and after extended litigation on a separate disqualification basis. In this case a Chilean company in the licensing-fee dispute moved to disqualify opposing counsel. A special master denied the motion, but the trial court and appeals court granted it, reasoning that the former employee was not just a fact witness and applying the American Home Products analysis that established rebuttable and irrebuttable presumptions to disqualify a paralegal hired by opposing counsel.
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IN RE SATTERFIELD & PONTIKES CONSTRUCTION, INC. (08-0660) - view video
10/8/2009 @ 10:40 AM (length 45:20)
Originating county: Duval County
Originating from: 4th District Court of Appeals, San Antonio
Case Documents
08-0660 In re Satterfield & Pontikes Construction Inc. from Duval County and the Fourth District Court of Appeals, San Antonio For relator: Nicholas A. Parma, San Antonio For real party in interest: Craig T. Enoch, Austin The principal issue is whether the trial court erred (a) when it severed all subcontractors from a school district's lawsuit against Satterfield, the prime contractor, even though the court previously permitted Satterfield to amend the suit to add the subcontractors, or (b) when the court refused to consolidate Satterfield's suits against the subcontractors, or (c) both. In this case Satterfield claimed its subcontractors did all construction on a high school and moved to add them to the suit alleging construction defects. The trial court granted the motion without notice to either party. Then Satterfield sued the subcontractors in a separate action and tried to consolidate those suits with the district's. The trial court denied the motion. When Satterfield learned the court granted its earlier motion to file a third-party petition against the subcontractors, Satterfield amended and served them. The trial court denied the district's motion to strike the subcontractors from the suit, but severed them on its own motion. The court of appeals denied mandamus relief. As in the Scoggins case, an important issue is whether Satterfield has an adequate remedy by appeal if the trial court clearly abused its discretion. 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
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IN RE SCOGGINS CONSTRUCTION CO., INC. (08-0544) - view video
10/8/2009 @ 9:00 AM (length 47:27)
Originating county: Hidalgo County
Originating from: 13th District Court of Appeals, Corpus Christi & Edinburg
Case Documents
08-0544 In re Scoggins Construction Co. Inc. from Hidalgo County and the 13th District Court of Appeals, Corpus Christi/Edinburg For relator: Craig A. Morgan, Austin For real party in interest: Lee H. Shidlofsky, Austin The principal issues are (1) whether the trial court clearly abused its discretion when it denied Scoggins, a general contractor for a school-construction project, permission to join subcontractors in the school district's breach-of-contract suit against Scoggins or to designate them as responsible third parties for allocating damages and (2) whether Scoggins has an adequate remedy by appeal if the trial court did abuse its discretion. After the Mercedes school district sued Scoggins, the trial court refused Scoggins' motion for leave to add the subcontractors pursuant to civil procedure Rule 38 or to designate them as responsible third parties under Civil Practices and Remedies Code chapter 33. The appeals court denied mandamus relief. 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
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IN RE STACEY BENT AND MARK BENT (14-1006) - view video
11/4/2015 @ 10:40 AM (length 42:16)
Originating county: Harris County
Originating from: 1st District Court of Appeals, Houston
Case Documents
A principal issue in this suit alleging an insurer's mishandling of a Hurricane Ike-damage claim is whether, in reviewing a new-trial order after In re Toyota Motor Sales, an appeals court can determine if factually sufficient evidence supports the verdict or if the trial court is entitled to more deference. In this case the Bents successfully moved for a new trial after a jury split its verdict on the Bents' claims that the insurer breached their policy (no) and violated the Deceptive Trade Practices Act (yes). United States Automobile Association, the insurer, petitioned for mandamus relief, which the court of appeals granted after conducting a factual review to determine whether evidence supported the jury's verdict. The Bents argue that such a review amounts to double stacking factual-sufficiency reviews, allowing the appeals court to substitute its judgment for a trial court's after that court heard evidence and observed witnesses and ruled evidence did not support the verdict. But USAA contends that such a factual review is an appropriate guard against the trial court's substituting its judgment for the jury's.
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IN RE STATE BOARD FOR EDUCATOR CERTIFICATION (13-0537) - view video
10/14/2014 @ 9:50 AM (length 42:11)
Originating county: Travis County
Originating from: 3rd District Court of Appeals, Austin
Case Documents
The issue in this mandamus action is whether a trial court properly denied a government agency its effort to supersede the court's judgment when it filed an appeal notice. In the underlying case the board brought disciplinary action against a high-school teacher acquitted of felony charges that he maintained improper relationships with students. An administrative-law judge recommended no discipline against the teacher, the school's track coach, but issued findings detailing suspect behavior, including the teacher giving female student athletes rub downs instead of referring them to the athletic trainer, allowing unsupervised students to come to his home and to use his whirlpool baths and calling one student as many as 480 times, that the administrative judge concluded did not support sexual abuse or assault or a romantic relationship. The teacher-certification board rejected the no-discipline recommendation and revoked the teacher's certificate. On appeal the trial court reversed the board and permanently enjoined it from revoking the teacher's certificate or from considering it revoked. The board then filed its appeal notice and brought this mandamus petition when the trial court refused the board's effort to post a bond to supersede the judgment. The court of appeals denied the board mandamus relief.
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IN RE STATE OF TEXAS (20-0394) - view video
5/20/2020 @ 2:30 PM (length 55:59)
Originating county: Harris County
Originating from: 14th District Court of Appeals, Houston
Case Documents
In its mandamus petition the state presents this issue: Whether county election officials, the respondents in this proceeding, must reject applications for mail-in ballots that claim "disability" under Texas Election Code section 82.002(a) based solely on the "generalized risk of contracting a virus." In related litigation Travis County initially sued to declare the novel-coronavirus-contagion fear satisfied the Election Code's disability prong for qualifying to vote by mail. In answering this mandamus petition Travis County and four others argue in part that the state's contention that county elections officials are subject to mandamus - to be ordered to comply with a "ministerial duty" to follow state election law - instead imposes on county elections officials a duty to accept and process applications for mail-in ballots without inquiring about a voter's claimed disability. Under the Texas Election Code a voter may seek to vote by mail if they claim a "disability" that would prevent them from voting in person. The attorney general contends the county elections officials who are respondents in this case have indicated that contagion fears meet the Election Code's disability definition despite the election law's confinement of it to a "sickness or physical condition" on election day. The counties' broad interpretation, the state argues, has created confusion about the law and is leading to increasing vote-by-mail applications based on what the state contends is an erroneous legal interpretation. In response, the counties contend the trial court properly determined in part that lack of coronavirus immunity is a physical condition that satisfies the disability definition.
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IN RE STATE OF TEXAS (16-0829) - view video
1/11/2018 @ 10:40 AM (length 36:02)
Originating county: Montgomery County
Originating from: 9th District Court of Appeals, Beaumont
Case Documents
In this action brought by a designated sexually violent offender, seeking mandamus relief against the state's effort to commit him for inpatient treatment under an amended statute when the original judgment specified outpatient treatment, the issues are (1) whether the appeals court erred by granting relief on an preserved ground not argued in the mandamus petition - that denial of counsel violated the petitioner's statutory rights - and (2) whether the petitioner has either a statutory or constitutional right to court-appointed counsel in the commitment proceeding.
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IN RE STATE OF TEXAS (11-0222) - view video
11/5/2013 @ 9:00 AM (length 57:19)
Originating county: Travis County
Originating from: 3rd District Court of Appeals, Austin
Case Documents
Consolidated for oral argument with 11-0024 and 11-0114. The essential question is whether a same-sex couple married legally in another state may be legally divorced by a Texas court despite the state's statutory and constitutional prohibition against such marriages in Texas. And if the Texas marriage prohibition extends to prohibit divorce, then does that violate the U.S. Constitution? These cases, involving divorces granted in Dallas County (two married men) and in Travis County (married women), raise these procedural issues: (1) whether a Texas trial court has jurisdiction over a no-fault same-sex divorce; (2) whether the state may intervene to contest the trial court's jurisdiction to grant the divorce; and, if not, (3) whether the state may challenge the trial court's judgment by a mandamus petition contesting the trial court's jurisdiction.
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IN RE STATE OF TEXAS (10-0235) - view video
3/3/2011 @ 9:50 AM (length 46:34)
Originating county: Travis County
Originating from: 3rd District Court of Appeals, Austin
Case Documents
10-0235 In re State of Texas from Travis County and the Third District Court of Appeals, Austin For relator State of Texas: Ms. Susan Desmarais Bonnen, Austin For real parties in interest: Mr. Stephen I. Adler, Austin The issue is whether the trial court acted within its discretion by splitting a condemnation action into separate actions when the property owners subdivided the original tract after the original condemnation was filed. In this case the state challenged the trial court's decision to divide compensation claims into eight separate suits. The property owners who held the original parcel subdivided it in part, they claimed, to demonstrate its higher value. Special commissioners assigned to sort from competing valuations split the difference in appraised values, the new owners moved to split the claims from the commissioners' award, arguing that none was commonly owned and none of the eight tracts bordered another. The trial court granted the motions. The appeals court denied the state's petition to prevent the split claims. The state contends in part that dividing the claims was improper because subdivision occurred after the condemnation notice involving one tract and one set of owners. But the owners argue that the subdivision occurred before the state actually took the land - the date the state pays for the land - so assessing the value of eight tracts was proper. 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
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IN RE STEPHANIE LEE (11-0732) - view video
2/28/2012 @ 10:40 AM (length 46:56)
Originating county: Harris County
Originating from: 14th District Court of Appeals, Houston
Case Documents
11-0732 In re Stephanie Lee from Harris County and the 14th District Court of Appeals, Houston For relator: Scott Rothenberg, Houston For real party in interest: Clinton F. Lawson, San Antonio The principal issue is whether a mediated settlement must be enforced that provides, in the absence of family violence, a divorced mother periodic possession of her 7-year-old daughter when the mother is married to a registered sex offender. The trial court, considering the father's testimony that the child slept between her mother and her new husband when he was naked, found the settlement not in the child's best interest and refused to enforce it. Lee, the mother, argues that the only statutory exception to enforcing a mediated settlement is when family violence can be shown. 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
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IN RE STEVEN C. PHILLIPS (14-0797) - view video
11/3/2015 @ 9:50 AM (length 42:42)
Originating from: Direct appeal under the Tim Cole Act
Case Documents
The principal issues are (1) whether the comptroller in making payment to a former prisoner for wrongful incarceration has discretion to adjust reimbursement for a prisoner's court-ordered child-support arrearages and (2) whether the comptroller, by adjusting its payment to an amount different from what a court ordered as past-due child support, violated the separation-of-powers doctrine by collaterally attacking the court's order. In this case Phillips, who spent almost 25 years in prison for sexual assaults DNA proved he did not commit, sued the state to include in his Tim Cole Act reimbursement a portion of $305,000 in child support a Bexar County court calculated he owed his ex-wife, most of it while he was imprisoned. The comptroller determined he only owed $18,500, an amount that Arkansas - where the divorce decree originated - calculated he owed before it closed its case to collect the support while Phillips was in prison. Phillips's ex-wife sued in Bexar County to calculate the arrearage, which determined Phillips owed $305,000. By this mandamus petition, Phillips seeks $246,000 from the comptroller for unpaid child support that accumulated while he was in prison.
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IN RE STEVEN LIPSKY (13-0928) - view video
12/4/2014 @ 10:40 AM (length 47:18)
Originating county: Parker County
Originating from: 2nd District Court of Appeals, Fort Worth
Case Documents
In this mandamus action arising from allegations that fracking contaminated a home-water supply, the principal issue is whether "clear and specific" evidence supporting defamation and conspiracy claims in order to thwart their dismissal requires a heightened proof standard. Lipsky and his wife, the homeowners, and Rich, an environmental consultant, moved under the Texas Citizens' Participation Act to dismiss a lawsuit against them. Range, the minerals producer drilling near the Lipsky home, claimed Lipsky defamed the company by alleging it was corrupt and "owned" state oil-and-gas regulators and by fabricating a video showing a water hose's end afire after he put a match to it. Range also alleged the Lipskys and Rich conspired to defame it. The Citizens' Participation Act permits a suit to be dismissed if it was filed to stymie a defendant's free-speech rights, but to avoid dismissal the plaintiff must present "clear and specific" evidence supporting the suit's essential elements. The trial court denied the Lipskys' and Rich's dismissal motions. The court of appeals reversed in part, dismissing claims against Mrs. Lipsky and the consultant but permitting the suit against Steven Lipsky to proceed.
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IN RE TEXAS-NEW MEXICO POWER CO. (19-0656) - view video
10/8/2020 @ 9:00 AM (length 1:10:10)
Originating county: Harris County
Originating from: 1st District Court of Appeals, Houston
Case Documents
In addition to the exclusive-jurisdiction question, an issue in this case alleging a utility power-pole contractor negligently contributed to Hurricane Harvey flooding is whether the so-called filed-rate doctrine controls. The negligence, nuisance and water code-violation claims are based on flood damage Houston homeowners blame on roadway “mats” the power company's contractor used for a power substation's construction. Those mats allegedly clogged drainage in a nearby bayou when Harvey's rains washed them away. Texas-New Mexico Power argues the company's tariff has a force-majeure clause that bears on the homeowners' claims. The company contends the filed-rate doctrine bars a customer from suing over issues that a publicly filed tariff's terms govern.
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IN RE THE COMMITMENT OF MICHAEL BOHANNAN (10-0605) - view video
11/8/2011 @ 9:50 AM (length 44:46)
Originating county: Montgomery County
Originating from: 9th District Court of Appeals, Beaumont
Case Documents
10-0605 In re Commitment of Michael Bohannan from Montgomery County and the Ninth District Court of Appeals, Beaumont For petitioner: Catherine Palmore, Huntsville For respondent: Kenneth Nash, Huntsville The issue in this sexual predator-commitment case is whether Bohannon's expert, a therapist without forensic training, was properly disqualified from testifying whether he suffered a behavioral abnormality, a necessary factor to assessing a sexually violent predator. On the state's challenge of the expert's qualifications, the trial court after a Daubert hearing barred her testimony on whether Bohannon was likely to reoffend because the court determined she is not a psychiatrist or psychologist and lacks forensic training. The appeals court reversed, holding that the expert, experienced in treating sexual offenders, was qualified to assess his recidivism risk ad her testimony would assist the jury. 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
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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.
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IN RE THE OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL (11-0255) - view video
2/27/2012 @ 10:40 AM (length 44:55)
Originating county: Tarrant County
Originating from: 2nd District Court of Appeals, Fort Worth
Case Documents
11-0255 In re the Office of the Attorney General from Tarrant County and the Second District Court of Appeals, Fort Worth For relators: Kristofer S. Monson, Austin, and Jessica Hall Janicek, Dallas For real party in interest: Thomas M. Michel, Fort Worth The issue is whether a parent in arrears on child support subject to an enforcement motion may be found in contempt if he paid the due child support covered by the motion but not support he owed in the interim before the motion hearing. In this case the Tarrant County Domestic Relations Office sought as much as $23,000 an ex-husband owed in support for his six children, including payments the office believed he would likely fail to pay. After he was served with the enforcement motion, he paid what he owned in full as of September 2008 and moved for reduction in the $5,400-a-month child-support order. By the hearing in February 2009 he was several months and more than $28,000 behind on his payments. The trial court denied his motion to modify the child-support order and found him in contempt for payments he made in September 2008 that he failed to make before the enforcement motion was filed. The court of appeals held that the trial court could not hold the father in contempt if he was current on all overdue support payments covered by the enforcement motion. 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
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IN RE TOYOTA MOTOR SALES, U.S.A., INC. AND VISCOUNT PROPERTIES II, L.P., D/B/A HOY FOX TOYOTA/LEXUS (10-0933) - view video
1/8/2013 @ 9:00 AM (length 43:02)
Originating county: El Paso County
Originating from: 8th District Court of Appeals, El Paso
Case Documents
The principal issues are (1) whether an appellate court may evaluate a new-trial order on the merits in a mandamus proceeding and (2) whether the trial court abused its discretion by granting a new trial in the interest of justice and as a sanction for alleged violation of an order barring disclosure of an investigating officer's conclusion about seatbelt use in a rollover accident. In the underlying suit a driver's family claimed he died when he was ejected from the vehicle because its restraint system failed. After the jury found for Toyota, the family moved for a new trial, contending Toyota's counsel violated the motion in limine in closing argument by referring to the officer's conclusion that the driver was not wearing a seatbelt. The trial court granted the new-trial motion, ruling that Toyota willfully disregarded its ruling on the in-limine motion and that an instruction to jurors could not eliminate the harm. The appeals court affirmed.
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IN RE UNITED SCAFFOLDING, INC. (10-0526) - view video
10/6/2011 @ 9:50 AM (length 51:55)
Originating county: Jefferson County
Originating from: 9th District Court of Appeals, Beaumont
Case Documents
10-0526 In re United Scaffolding Inc. from Jefferson County and Ninth District Court of Appeals, Beaumont For relator: Kathleen M. Kennedy, Beaumont For real party in interest: Chris M. Portner, Beaumont The issue is whether, after remand to specify reasons for a new trial ordered "in the interest of justice and fairness," the trial court's amended new-trial order abused its discretion for failing again to specify reasons. After a hearing on remand, the trial court issued another new-trial order, concluding without more on three points that the jury verdict was "against the great weight and preponderance of the evidence" and - in addition to those reasons or in the alternative - was in "the interest of justice and fairness." In a split decision the court of appeals denied United Scaffolding's second mandamus petition challenging the order. 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
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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
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IN RE UNIVERSAL UNDERWRITERS OF TEX. INS. CO. (10-0238) - view video
12/8/2010 @ 9:50 AM (length 46:37)
Originating county: Tarrant County
Originating from: 2nd District Court of Appeals, Fort Worth
Case Documents
(Justice Lehrmann not sitting) 10-0238 In re Universal Underwriters of Texas Insurance Co. from Tarrant County and the Second District Court of Appeals, Fort Worth For relator: Don Martinson, Dallas For real party in interest: Scott M. Keller, Dallas For amicus curiae Texas Trial Lawyers Association: Peter M. Kelly, Houston The issue in this insurance dispute is whether Universal waived its right to appraisal either by not invoking it at the time the parties were disputing a claim valuation or when it sent a letter to the claimant advising him of limitations on a lawsuit if he chose to sue. Grubbs Infiniti sued Universal for breaching the insurance contract after Universal paid for hail damage Grubbs claimed for its roof. Universal initially paid the hail-damage claim but not on the roof until Grubbs requested the roof's additional inspection. When Grubbs sued, Universal moved to abate and to compel appraisal under the policy's appraisal provision. The trial court denied the motions and the court of appeals denied the insurer's mandamus petition. 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
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IN RE VERNA FRANCIS COLEY THETFORD (17-0634) - view video
10/10/2018 @ 10:40 AM (length 43:12)
Originating county: Young County
Originating from: 2nd District Court of Appeals, Fort Worth
Case Documents
In this mandamus action over an attempt to disqualify counsel, the issue is whether the counsel's prior representation of Thetford, a ward subject to a guardian's appointment, is a conflict in representing the guardian whose appointment Thetford opposed. The lawyer had represented Thetford when she loaned her niece money to buy land and prepared Thetford's will that designated the niece as her "preferred" guardian, then represented the niece in the guardianship proceeding.
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IN RE WEEKLEY HOMES, L.P. (08-0836) - view video
3/31/2009 @ 10:40 AM (length 53:08)
Originating county: Dallas County
Originating from: 5th District Court of Appeals, Dallas
Case Documents
08-0836 In re Weekley Homes L.P. from Dallas County and the Fifth District Court of Appeals, Dallas For relator: Craig T. Enoch, Austin For real party in interest: Christopher H. Rentzel, Dallas The issue is whether the trial court abused its discretion by ordering computer hard drives produced for a forensic expert's copying and searching. In this mandamus action, Weekley Homes argues that the trial court granted the motion to compel under Texas Rule of Civil Procedure 192 (outlining permissible discovery) and not Rule 196.4 (production of electronic or magnetic data). A company sued Weekley Homes in the underlying action over defective lots it bought from Weekley and that Weekley had certified. The company, HFG Enclave Lane Interests Ltd., asked for emails sent to and from four Weekley employees and, based on alleged inconsistencies in what Weekley produced, asked for an order to copy the hard drivers to try to retrieve deleted documents. The court ordered production of the drives and production of any relevant emails under certain restrictions, which included first review by Weekley's lawyers. The court of appeals denied Weekley'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
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IN RE WHATABURGER (21-0165) - view video
1/13/2022 @ 10:40 AM (length 44:59)
Originating county: El Paso County
Originating from: 8th District Court of Appeals, El Paso
Case Documents
The issues in this case are (1) whether Whataburger has an adequate remedy available on appeal when it can no longer take an interlocutory appeal from a denial of a motion to compel arbitration because it had no notice of the order denying the motion until after the deadline for an appeal expired, and (2) whether the trial court abused its discretion in denying Whataburger’s motion to reconsider its motion to compel arbitration.
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IN RE XL SPECIALTY INS. CO. (10-0960) - view video
11/10/2011 @ 9:50 AM (length 40:57)
Originating county: Dallas County
Originating from: 5th District Court of Appeals, Dallas
Case Documents
10-0960 In re XL Specialty Insurance Co. and Cambridge Integrated Services Group Inc. from Dallas County and the Fifth District Court of Appeals, Dallas For relators: David Brenner, Austin For real party in interest: Alan B. Daughtry, Houston The principal issue in this workers-compensation case is whether the attorney-client privilege extends to communications between an insured party, the employer, and the workers-comp insurer's attorney. In this case XL's argument centers on the common legal-interest doctrine, which the real party in interest disputes, arguing against the purported privilege because Texas workers-comp law bars an employer other than one insuring itself from making claims-handling or settlement decisions. Wagner, the employee, sued XL Specialty, his employer's workers-comp insurer, for breaching its duty of good faith and fair dealing. Raising privilege, XL refused the employee's requested disclosure of communications between its attorney and the Wagner's employer. The trial court granted Wagner's motion to compel discovery and the appeals court denied XL's petition for 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
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IN THE ESTATE OF MIGUEL ANGEL LUIS GONZALEZ Y VALLEJO V. GUILBOT (08-0961) - view video
1/21/2010 @ 9:00 AM (length 48:36)
Originating county: Harris County
Originating from: 14th District Court of Appeals, Houston
Case Documents
(Justice Guzman not sitting) 08-0961 Maria del Carmen Guilbot Serros de Gonzalez, et al. v. Miguel Angel Gonzalez Guilbot, et al. from Harris County and the 14th District Court of Appeals, Houston For petitioners: Thomas R. Phillips, Austin For cross-petitioners/respondents: Andy Taylor, Houston Principal issues arising from a family-business fight alleging theft and trademark infringement are (1) whether a third ("tertiary") recusal motion defined by statute applies only when filed against the same judge; (2) whether a facially defective recusal motion allows the judge to take no action on the defective motion; and (3) whether, for a case remanded to state court after removal, the state court reacquires jurisdiction only if the federal clerk mails the remand order to the state court. In this case two siblings were accused of stealing the family herbal-tea companies' assets and infringing on company trademarks. They moved to recuse a Harris County probate judge scheduled to hear the suit, then moved to remove the judge assigned to hear the recusal motion and the presiding judge who made the assignment. The presiding judge dismissed the recusal motions against him and the second judge for defects. The court of appeals reversed, holding in part that the state court acquired jurisdiction but the presiding judge could not rule on the recusal motion against him. 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
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IN THE INTEREST OF A.B. AND H.B. (13-0749) - view video
4/22/2014 @ 9:00 AM (length 44:05)
Originating county: Tarrant County
Originating from: 2nd District Court of Appeals, Fort Worth
Case Documents
In this parental-rights termination, the issue is whether the appeals court, deciding this case en banc, erred in its factual-sufficiency review by failing to evaluate evidence on which a panel relied to reverse the termination order. State child-protection workers moved to terminate the father's parental rights after one of his two children was admitted to a hospital suffering a seizure while under the mother's care. Testimony established an initial diagnosis attributing the seizure to a sodium deficiency, perhaps related to inadequate nutrition. While the child was in the hospital, a doctor assessed her condition as "failure to thrive" and linked that to longstanding food deprivation. But expert testimony said the condition would not be evident to a lay person and the child did not appear emaciated. In a dissent from the court's en banc opinion, two justices on the panel that reversed the termination order objected to the court's failure to evaluate that and other evidence: that without further testing the failure to thrive could not be established, that the child appeared only slightly underweight and that, concerning the other child, limited evidence linked the child's ear injury to a slap and no evidence supported that the second child was malnourished.
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IN THE INTEREST OF B.G., C.W., E.W., B.B.W. AND J.W., CHILDREN (07-0960) - view video
9/8/2009 @ 10:40 AM (length 41:51)
Originating county: Angelina County
Originating from: 12th District Court of Appeals, Tyler
Case Documents
07-0960 In the Interest of B.G., et al. from Angelina County and the 12th District Court of Appeals, Tyler For petitioner: Brent L. Watkins, Lufkin For respondent: Trevor A. Woodruff, Austin The issue in this parental-rights termination is whether Family Code section 263.405 is constitutional by imposing a 15-day deadline to file a statement of points to preserve appellate grounds. In this case the father acted as his own attorney in the termination hearing after firing his lawyer just before trial. He filed his statement of appellate points 40 days late after the trial court appointed a second attorney to handle his appeal. The first, appointed just after the hearing, did not file anything. In the statement the father claimed the termination order could not be supported by sufficient evidence and he had been prevented from offering certain evidence. The trial court found him indigent and his appeal not frivolous, but concluded that no meaningful issue had been preserved for appellate review and denied the father his request that he be furnished the hearing transcript without cost. On appeal he argued he was denied due process, but the court of appeals held the issue should have been presented to the trial court but was forfeited because it had not. 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
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IN THE INTEREST OF D.S. (18-0908) - view video
2/27/2020 @ 9:00 AM (length 40:57)
Originating county: Collin County
Originating from: 5th District Court of Appeals, Dallas
Case Documents
In this appeal from a parental-rights-termination order, based on the father's voluntary relinquishment affidavit, the issues are (1) whether the father's collateral attack on the termination order should be allowed for his allegations that the trial court lacked subject-matter jurisdiction when it ordered his parental rights terminated and (2) whether Texas Family Code chapter 152 - incorporating the Uniform Child Custody Jurisdiction and Enforcement Act - defines the trial-court's subject-matter jurisdiction.
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IN THE INTEREST OF E.C.R., A CHILD (12-0744) - view video
4/23/2013 @ 9:00 AM (length 49:09)
Originating county: Harris County
Originating from: 1st District Court of Appeals, Houston
Case Documents
The issues in this parental rights-termination suit are (1) whether the statutory provision permitting termination on a showing that a parent failed to comply with her service plan is applicable only to a child removed by the state because he was abused and neglected and (2) whether other grounds pleaded for terminating parental rights but not found by the trial court should have been considered on appeal to affirm the termination order. In this case the child subject to the termination proceeding was removed after his mother was accused of abusing his older sister. The trial court ordered the mother's parental rights terminated on two bases of several the state alleged: That she failed to follow the service plan the state established for the child's return to her care and that termination was in the child's best interest. On the mother's appeal that insufficient evidence supported the grounds on which the trial court relied, the court of appeals held that termination under the service-plan provision required evidence that the child's removal resulted from abuse or neglect of that child. The appeals court did not consider the state's argument that other pleaded grounds sufficed to terminate the mother's parental rights.
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IN THE INTEREST OF E.N.C., J.A.C., S.A.L., N.A.G. AND C.G.L. (11-0713) - view video
9/12/2012 @ 11:30 AM (length 46:20)
Originating county: Lamar County
Originating from: 6th District Court of Appeals, Texarkana
Case Documents
The principal issues are (1) whether legally sufficient evidence supported the "best interest" standard for terminating a deported Mexican citizen's parental rights despite his continuing support for his children and visits with them with help from relatives since his deportation and (2) whether legally sufficient evidence supported the endangerment standard when that evidence was based in part on the father's conviction for criminal activity with a minor a decade earlier. This case involves a father who left Wisconsin before his probation ended, then was arrested for probation violation in Texas when he sought to renew an immigrant-work permit and eventually deported. The court of appeals affirmed the trial court's termination order.
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IN THE INTEREST OF E.R., ET AL., CHILDREN (11-0282) - view video
2/28/2012 @ 9:00 AM (length 43:48)
Originating county: Dallas County
Originating from: 5th District Court of Appeals, Dallas
Case Documents
11-0282 In the Interest of E.R., et al. from Dallas County and the Fifth District Court of Appeals, Dallas For petitioners: Jeremy C. Martin, Dallas For respondent: Kimberly Duncan, Dallas The principal issue is whether a statutory deadline for attacking a parental rights-termination order based on service by publication bars a mother from such an attack when the state could have served her in person but did not. In this case the state petitioned to terminate the mother's rights to four children and explained that publication was used for service because she told her caseworker she was moving and did not have a permanent address. Within the next month the mother met with her caseworker for a scheduled appointment, but was not served in person. She did not attend the termination hearing, although her attorney ad litem did. The trial court ordered her parental right terminated. More than six months after the decree was signed, the mother moved for a new trial. The state opposed the new-trial motion, which the trial court denied, but did not raise the six-month deadline for attacking a termination order under Family Code 161.211(b) until it filed an amended brief after the mother's reply brief to the court of appeals. That court affirmed the termination, holding that the statutory deadline constituted an absolute bar to challenging the decree after six months. 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
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IN THE INTEREST OF H.S., A MINOR CHILD (16-0715) - view video
1/10/2018 @ 11:30 AM (length 41:54)
Originating county: Tarrant County
Originating from: 2nd District Court of Appeals, Fort Worth
Case Documents
In this effort by grandparents to be designated primary decision-makers for their grandchild the issues are (1) whether the Family Code requires a showing that a parent to be either unfit or to have abdicated parental duties before the grandparents have standing to challenge the parent-child relationship and (2) whether the grandparents can show their actual care, control and possession of the child when evidence demonstrated both parents involved with the child's care.
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IN THE INTEREST OF J.O.A., T.J.A.M., AND C.T.M., CHILDREN (08-0379) - view video
10/14/2008 @ 10:40 AM (length 39:39)
Originating county: Collingsworth County
Originating from: 7th District Court of Appeals, Amarillo
Case Documents
08-0379 In the Interest of J.O.A., T.J.A.M., T.J.M. and C.T.M. from Collingsworth County and the Seventh District Court of Appeals, Amarillo For petitioners: Trevor A. Woodruff, Austin For respondents: John Franklin McDonough III, Pampa The Supreme Court will hear arguments on whether time limit on filing appellate points in parental-rights termination bars ineffective-assistance of counsel claim for attorney's failure to file appellate points. The principal issue is whether the Family Code unconstitutionally bars a parental-rights termination appeal raising ineffective assistance of counsel based on the trial counsel's failure to meet the threshold requirement to preserve such an appeal. In this case a father's attorney failed to file a statement of appellate points - a requirement to proceed with an appeal - within 15 days of the termination order. Appointed counsel for the appeal raised ineffective assistance of counsel, a constitutional challenge, after the deadline for filing appellate points. The court of appeals found the statute violated the father's due-process rights. 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
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IN THE INTEREST OF J.W. (19-1069) - view video
9/15/2021 @ 10:50 AM (length 42:59)
Originating county: Brazos County
Originating from: 10th District Court of Appeals, Waco
Case Documents
The issues in this fight against parental-rights termination by a father whose child was removed because the mother was addicted to cough syrup are (1) whether the state violated a father’s right to due process by terminating for his failure to follow a court-ordered service plan; (2) whether such compliance with a family-service plan should be measured objectively or subjectively; and (3) whether evidence of child endangerment was enough to support termination.
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IN THE INTEREST OF K.M.L., A CHILD (12-0728) - view video
6/24/2013 @ 9:00 AM (length 46:30)
Originating county: San Jacinto County
Originating from: 9th District Court of Appeals, Beaumont
Case Documents
Among the issues in this parental-rights termination case are (1) whether a trial court had a duty to appoint the pro se father an attorney for trial despite his failure to file an indigence affidavit or to request an attorney until after the trial began and (2) whether the mother's affidavit relinquishing her parental rights was voluntary, knowing and intelligent when a month later a probate court appointed a guardian for her for mental-health reasons. Father. Despite providing an address for service, the father was served by publication for status hearings and for the termination trial and appeared for trial after being subpoenaed. He told the court he was not aware that he had a right to an attorney. At the end of the first day of trial, the court told the father an attorney would have been appointed for him if he had appeared at a pretrial hearing and requested one, but at that point it was too late. Mother. Before the state took possession of the child, the mother and grandmother executed a guardianship by which the grandmother had responsibility for the child. Child Protective Services took the child after she fell on stairs in the grandmother's loft apartment. In June 2010 the mother irrevocably relinquished her rights to the child. In July 2010 the county court ordered the mother placed under the grandmother's guardianship on evidence that the mother had an IQ of 57 and was bipolar.
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IN THE INTEREST OF S.C. AND K.C. (16-0770) - view video
2/8/2018 @ 10:50 AM (length 42:26)
Originating county: Dallas County
Originating from: 5th District Court of Appeals, Dallas
Case Documents
The principal issues in this dispute over a premarital agreement with a no-contest clause are (1) whether the ex-wife's attempt to rescind the agreement violated the no-contest provision, forfeiting rights under the agreement; (2) if so, whether the clause should be unenforceable on public-policy grounds or on the basis of an implied just-cause exception; and (3) whether jurisdiction exists because the trial court found no breach in separate orders that were not appealed.
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IN THE MATTER OF B.W. (08-1044) - view video
1/20/2010 @ 9:50 AM (length 49:56)
Originating county: Harris County
Originating from: 1st District Court of Appeals, Houston
Case Documents
08-1044 In the Matter of B.W. from Harris County and the First District Court of Appeals, Houston For petitioner: Michael Choyke, Houston For respondent: Dan McCrory, Houston The principal issues are (1) whether a child 13 or younger can be adjudicated for a prostitution offense when a child under 14 cannot legally consent to sexual conduct and (2) whether the state violated the child's due-process rights by failing to investigate whether she was compelled to prostitute herself. In this case the girl, a foster-care runaway, argues that she could not be adjudicated for an offense that involved an act she was legally incapable of consenting to. That would lead to an absurd result, she argues, taking her offense outside the general scope of juvenile law making juveniles subject to penal code violations as young as 10. And she contends her due-process rights were violated because she could have had an immunity defense to prostitution if juvenile prosecutors had pursued suspicion that she was forced into prostitution by her 32-year-old boyfriend. She essentially pleaded guilty ("true") to the prostitution allegation, but moved for a new trial on her contention she was too young to be adjudicated for the offense. The trial court denied her 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
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IN THE MATTER OF H.V. (06-0005) - view video
4/12/2007 @ 9:50 AM (length 42:04)
Originating county: Tarrant County
Originating from: 2nd District Court of Appeals, Fort Worth
Case Documents
In the Matter of H.V. from Tarrant County and the Second District Court of Appeals, Fort Worth For petitioner Tarrant County District Attorney: David M. Curl, Fort Worth For respondent: Michael Shawn Matlock, Fort Worth. The Supreme Court will hear arguments on the issue of whether juvenile's request to call his mother was unequivocal request for lawyer and, if so, whether weapon discovered from statement was admissible. The issues in this murder case against a juvenile are (1) whether the boy's request to call his mother to seek an attorney was an unambiguous invocation of his right to counsel and (2) whether a gun found based on information in a suppressed statement was properly excluded as the "fruit of the poisonous tree." In this case H.V., a 16-year-old Bosnian immigrant who had been in the United States four years, was arrested as he tried to carry a bloody carpet from his house while police had the home sealed as they waited for a search warrant. In custody, a magistrate read H.V. his rights for a second time that day (this time he refused to sign a written warning). When he asked to call his mother so she could call an attorney, the magistrate told him that his only options were to ask for an attorney, make a statement to police or not make one. H.V. told the magistrate he was "only 16." The magistrate assured him that he could ask for an attorney if he wanted an attorney. H.V. then consented to talk with investigators. The trial court ruled that his request to call his mother was an unequivocal request for counsel and ordered his statement suppressed and the gun inadmissible as evidence. The court of appeals affirmed, holding that the gun was inadmissible because it was obtained as a result of police failure to honor his request for an attorney, not a mere failure to warn him of his rights.
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IN THE MATTER OF M.P.A. (10-0859) - view video
1/10/2012 @ 10:40 AM (length 47:17)
Originating county: Bell County
Originating from: 3rd District Court of Appeals, Austin
Case Documents
10-0859 In the Matter of M.P.A. from Bell County and the Third District Court of Appeals, Austin For petitioner: Dustin Howell, Austin, and Clint Broden, Dallas For respondent: James (Jim) V. Murphy and John Gauntt Jr., Belton In this juvenile-delinquency habeas-corpus review two principal issues are (1) whether the trial court erred by denying habeas relief on post-conviction evidence that a psychologist falsely testified about testing reliability by which he concluded the juvenile sex offender had pedophile propensities (and would likely offend again) and (2) whether habeas relief should have been granted on actual-innocence grounds because the complainant later recanted. Central to both issues are the differing appellate-review standards in each. In this case M.P.A. sought habeas relief because a cousin recanted her testimony that he sexually abused her when she was 7 and he was 15. He also claimed the psychologist called during his sentencing falsely testified that a test by which he concluded M.P.A. had pedophile tendencies was more reliable that it was. On review, the appeals court rejected both claims, noting for the recanted-evidence claim that conflicting evidence about reasons the cousin recanted her testimony failed the required clear-and-convincing-evidence standard for habeas relief. But on the testing-reliability claim, the court of appeals determined that M.P.A. had to show by a preponderance of evidence that the psychologist's testimony influenced the jury's decision on a 20-year sentence and that the expert testimony would have been excluded without the psychologist's false statements. 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
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IN THE MATTER OF ROLANDO CABALLERO (07-0484) - view video
4/2/2008 @ 10:40 AM (length 37:35)
Originating from: Board of Disciplinary Appeals
Case Documents
07-0484 In the Matter of Rolando Caballero from the Board of Disciplinary Appeals For appellant: Royal K. Griffin, San Antonio For appellee: Linda A. Acevedo, Austin The Supreme Court will hear arguments of whether a fully probated felony conviction requires suspension of a lawyer's license during the probation instead of disbarment. The issue is whether an attorney may be disbarred for a federal mail-fraud conviction when his sentence was fully probated. Under Rule of Disciplinary Procedure 8.05, an attorney convicted of an intentional crime that has become final must be disbarred unless, under Rule 8.06, the board suspends a lawyer for conviction of a serious crime for the length of his probation. Caballero argues that Rule 8.06 is mandatory in a case, like his, of a fully probated sentence.
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IN THE MATTER OF THE MARRIAGE OF J.B. AND H.B. (11-0024) - view video
11/5/2013 @ 9:00 AM (length 57:19)
Originating county: Dallas County
Originating from: 5th District Court of Appeals, Dallas
Case Documents
Consolidated for oral argument with 11-0114 and 11-0222. The essential question is whether a same-sex couple married legally in another state may be legally divorced by a Texas court despite the state's statutory and constitutional prohibition against such marriages in Texas. And if the Texas marriage prohibition extends to prohibit divorce, then does that violate the U.S. Constitution? These cases, involving divorces granted in Dallas County (two married men) and in Travis County (married women), raise these procedural issues: (1) whether a Texas trial court has jurisdiction over a no-fault same-sex divorce; (2) whether the state may intervene to contest the trial court's jurisdiction to grant the divorce; and, if not, (3) whether the state may challenge the trial court's judgment by a mandamus petition contesting the trial court's jurisdiction.
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INEOS USA INC., ET AL. V. JOHANNES "JOE" ELMGREN AND VALARIE ELMGRENI (14-0507) - view video
1/12/2016 @ 9:00 AM (length 41:50)
Originating county: Brazoria County
Originating from: 14th District Court of Appeals, Houston
Case Documents
The principal issues are (1) whether Civil Practice and Remedies Code chapter 95 - establishing a property owner's liability for an independent contractor's employees' injuries - applies to negligent-activity or negligent-undertaking claims and (2) whether the injured worker's claim in this case arose from his construction, repair, renovation or modification of a real-property improvement when he was burned by gases leaking from a unit separate from the one was repairing (95.002(2)). Elmgren sued for burns he suffered while working for an independent contractor doing maintenance on pipes that carry gas to one of several furnaces in a chemical plant. Gas ignited from a leak at another furnace about 100 feet from where Elmgren worked, causing a flash fire. The trial court granted summary judgment for the work-site owner, ruling that chapter 95 applied. The court of appeals reversed on Elmgren's negligent-activity and negligent-undertaking theories.
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INS. CO. OF THE STATE OF PA V. MURO (09-0340) - view video
3/3/2011 @ 9:00 AM (length 46:19)
Originating county: Dallas County
Originating from: 5th District Court of Appeals, Dallas
Case Documents
09-0340 Insurance Company of the State of Pennsylvania v. Carmen Muro from Dallas County and the Fifth District Court of Appeals, Dallas For petitioner: Mr. Robert D. Stokes, Austin For respondents: Mr. Chad Ruback, Dallas The issues in this workers compensation case are (1) whether Texas law requires a direct injury to feet and hands in order to support benefits for loss of feet and hands alleged as a result of a back, shoulder and hip injury and (2) whether the trial court should have had the jury decide whether the injuries she suffered produced the lost use of her feet and hand. In this case the insurance carrier challenged a hearing officer's determination granting Muro lifetime disability income for on-the-job injuries to her back, neck, shoulder and hips that she claimed resulted in permanent loss of a hand and her feet. A jury found Muro had permanent loss of her feet and the hand, awarded her lifetime benefits and attorneys fees. The court of appeals affirmed, holding that a direct injury is unnecessary to support the award and that the trial court did not abuse its discretion by failing to submit a producing-cause jury question. The insurance company argues that the jury should have considered the producing-cause factor because evidence indicated Muro had normal feelings in her feet and hand and use of them after the accident. 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
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INTERCONTINENTAL GROUP P'SHIP V. KB HOME LONE STAR L.P. (07-0815) - view video
3/12/2009 @ 9:50 AM (length 45:00)
Originating county: Hidalgo County
Originating from: 13th District Court of Appeals, Corpus Christi & Edinburg
Case Documents
07-0815 Intercontinental Group Partnership v. KB Home Lone Star L.P. from Hidalgo County and the 13th District Court of Appeals, Corpus Christi/Edinburg For petitioner: Jesse R. Castillo, San Antonio For respondent: Renee F. McElhaney, San Antonio The issue is whether in a contract-breach action the plaintiff can be the prevailing party, for attorney fees purposes, when the jury found the defendant breached the contract but did not award damages. 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
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INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS MACHINES CORP. V. LUFKIN INDUSTRIES LLC (17-0666) - view video
12/6/2018 @ 9:50 AM (length 43:43)
Originating county: Angelina County
Originating from: 12th District Court of Appeals, Tyler
Case Documents
In this appeal from a jury finding for Lufkin on its claims for fraud and fraudulent inducement, the issues are (1) whether reliance was clearly disclaimed despite contract language that exchanges between IBM and Lufkin staffs about project goals and objectives "is the basis of our understanding"; (2) whether fraudulent-inducement damages preclude recovery for fraud; and, assuming liability for fraud and fraudulent inducement, (3) whether Lufkin proved its damages by legally sufficient evidence; (4) whether Lufkin suffered damages for contract breach; and (5) whether Lufkin is bound by incorporation of a clause limiting damages the trial court excluded because of a verification issue.
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ITALIAN COWBOY PARTNERS, LTD. V. THE PRUDENTIAL INS. CO. OF AMERICA (08-0989) - view video
4/14/2010 @ 9:50 AM (length 43:39)
Originating county: Dallas County
Originating from: 11th District Court of Appeals, Eastland
Case Documents
08-0989 Italian Cowboy Partners Ltd., et al. v. The Prudential Insurance Co. of America, et al. from Dallas County and the 11th District Court of Appeals, Eastland For petitioners: Thomas F. Allen Jr., Dallas For respondents: G. Luke Ashley, Dallas Among issues in this restaurant lease dispute over recurring sewer odors are (1) whether a lease provision disclaiming any representations not set out in the lease negates reliance to sustain fraud and negligent-misrepresentation claims and (2) whether the implied warranty that leased premises will be suitable for the intended occupation was not implicated because the lease obligated the restaurant owners to make certain repairs. In its suit, Italian Cowboy Partnership claimed the property manager knew of the building's odor problems when another restaurant occupied it, but said the previous tenant did not have problems and continued to maintain the sewer odors had not existed before when the partnership encountered them. Prudential, the building owner, argues that the lease clearly establishes no other representations were made about the property except those written in the lease and that the lease by its terms represented the entire agreement. The trial court rescinded the lease and awarded the partnership damages. On review, 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
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J&D TOWING LLC V. AMERICAN ALTERNATIVE INSURANCE CORP. (14-0574) - view video
9/22/2015 @ 10:40 AM (length 42:52)
Originating county: Walker County
Originating from: 10th District Court of Appeals, Waco
Case Documents
The principal issue is whether loss-of-use damages may be recovered under an insurance policy when the insured vehicle, a tow truck, was destroyed and lost profits were claimed for the time before it was replaced. In this case J&D lost its only tow truck in an accident, settled with the other driver's insurance for policy limits, then claimed damages for the time it was out of business under its own policy's underinsured protection. The trial court awarded J&D damages for its lost profits, but the appeals court reversed and rendered judgment for American Alternative Insurance Co., holding precedent reserved loss-of-use damages for when a vehicle could be repaired.
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JACKSON V. STATE OFFICE OF ADMINISTRATIVE HEARINGS (10-0002) - view video
12/8/2010 @ 9:00 AM (length 47:43)
Originating county: Travis County
Originating from: 3rd District Court of Appeals, Austin
Case Documents
10-0002 Samuel T. Jackson v. State Office of Administrative Hearings from Travis County and the Third District Court of Appeals, Austin For petitioner: Samuel T. Jackson, Arlington For respondents: Brenda Loudermilk, Austin The issue is whether the Public Information Act requires disclosure of license-revocation actions in child-support actions. Jackson sued for mandamus relief after the State Office of Administrative Hearings denied his request for all decisions, opinions or orders issued by the hearings agency in child support-enforcement matters in a certain three months. In a letter ruling, the attorney general agreed with the administrative hearings office that Texas Government Code section 552.101, together with Family Code section 231.108, renders the information confidential. The trial court denied Jackson's summary-judgment motion and granted the agency's. The appeals court 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
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JAW THE POINTE LLC V. LEXINGTON INSURANCE CO. (13-0711) - view video
1/13/2015 @ 9:00 AM (length 44:23)
Originating county: Galveston County
Originating from: 14th District Court of Appeals, Houston
Case Documents
A principal issue is whether the insurer is liable for demolition and rebuilding costs prompted by Galveston's mandate that an apartment complex be razed because of hurricane damage. Owners of The Pointe sued for contract breach, deceptive-trade practices and insurance-code violations after Lexington, the primary insurer, determined that the complex was substantially damaged by flooding or by a combination of wind and flooding damage, both of which the policy excluded. Reviewing jury findings that Lexington acted in bad faith by denying the claim, the appeals court reversed, concluding in part that the apartment-complex owners failed to show that substantial damage to the complex - 50 percent or more - was caused by wind alone, a covered cause. Under the policy Lexington agreed to pay for costs imposed by ordinance or law, but the court of appeals held that Galveston's requirement that the complex be demolished must have been based on substantial damage from wind alone.
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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.
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JCB INC. V. THE HORNSBURGH & SCOTT CO. (18-1099) - view video
3/13/2019 @ 9:50 AM (length 43:31)
Originating from: U.S. Court of Appeals, 5th Circuit
Case Documents
In the underlying dispute, in which JSB (doing business as Conveying & Power Transmission Solutions) claims the Texas Sales Representative Act entitles it to treble damages for late commission payments, the Fifth Circuit asks (1) how courts should determine treble damages permitted under the act and by what timing standard and (2) whether and under what conditions attorney fees and costs may be recovered if treble damages are not awarded under the act.
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JCW ELEC., INC. V. GARZA (05-1042) - view video
10/18/2007 @ 9:00 AM (length 45:38)
Originating county: Cameron County
Originating from: 13th District Court of Appeals, Corpus Christi & Edinburg
Case Documents
05-1042 JCW Electronics Inc. v. Pearl Iriz Garza from Cameron County and the 13th District Court of Appeals, Corpus Christi/Edinburg For petitioner: Thomas F. Nye, Corpus Christi For respondents: Jane Webre, Austin The Supreme Court will hear arguments on the issue of whether implied-warranty damages are subject to comparative liability restrictions. The principal issues in this product-liability case include (1) whether damages for breach of implied warranty are subject to the proportionate-responsibility statute or comparative responsibility under the Uniform Commercial Code chapter 2; (2) whether a contractor who installed a telephone in a jail cell can be liable based on breach of implied warranty for an inmate's suicide when the inmate used a phone cord to strangle himself; and (3) whether JCW was deprived of its statutory suicide defense by the trial court's denial of a jury question on it. Among other claims, Garza, mother of the man who committed suicide, sued for negligence and for breach of an implied warranty of suitability for a particular purpose. Jurors found for Garza on the warranty claim and determined the inmate was 60 percent negligent. The trial court denied the company's motion for a take-nothing judgment, based on proportionate responsibility. The court of appeals affirmed.
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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
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JESSE C. INGRAM, PH.D. V. LOUIS DEERE, D.O. (06-0815) - view video
2/5/2008 @ 9:00 AM (length 44:34)
Originating county: Dallas County
Originating from: 5th District Court of Appeals, Dallas
Case Documents
06-0815 Jesse C. Ingram, Ph.D., et al. v. Louis Deere, D.O., et al. from Dallas County and the Fifth District Court of Appeals, Dallas For petitioners: Craig Enoch, Austin For respondents: Georganna L. Simpson, Dallas The Supreme Court will hear arguments on whether a partner's liability based on an oral contract ends when he refuses to sign a written partnership agreement. The principal issues in this breach-of-contract case are (1) whether legally sufficient evidence exists to support the jury's finding of an oral partnership agreement; (2) and, if such an agreement existed, whether liability for one partner ended when he refused to sign an employment agreement and ceased working for the clinic; and (3) whether that partner owed a fiduciary duty to the partnership as a matter of law. In this case Ingram, a psychologist, and Deere, a medical doctor, agreed to open a pain-management clinic that Ingram would operate but that he needed a medical doctor to call a clinic. They both agree Deere would get one-third of the revenue. But Deere, the medical doctor, contends Ingram agreed to take another third for himself and use the remainder for clinic expenses. Ingram contends the agreement only specified Deere's share. By mutual agreement, the partners later reduced Deere's share to one-fifth. But when Ingram tried to get Deere to sign a written employment agreement to that effect, Deere refused, claiming it violated the original contract. Ingram declared the arrangement over and Deere quit working at the clinic. Pressing contract-breach and other claims, Deere sued. A jury found for Deere, but the trial court entered a take-nothing judgment. The court of appeals reinstated $2.5 million in damages on Deere's breach of contract claim.
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JIMMY GLEN RIEMER, RICHARD COON, JR., JUNE MEETZE COON TRUST, JOHNSON BORGER RANCH PARTNERSHIP AND W.R. EDWARDS, JR. D/B/A W.R. EDWARDS, JR. OIL AND GAS ON BEHALF OF THEMSELVES AND OTHERS SIMILARLY SITUATED V. THE STATE OF TEXAS AND JERRY PATTERSON, AS CO (11-0548) - view video
11/6/2012 @ 9:00 AM (length 45:37)
Originating county: Hutchinson County
Originating from: 7th District Court of Appeals, Amarillo
Case Documents
The issue is whether named plaintiffs adequately represent a proposed landowners class in a riverbed-boundary dispute with the state General Land Office when the class would include landowners who settled with the state over the boundary and mineral rights resulting from it. A subsidiary question is whether the state, by its agreement with landowners after the class suit was filed, created a conflict with named plaintiffs. In this case the named plaintiffs, landowners along the Canadian River eastward from Lake Meredith in the Texas Panhandle, lost their effort to certify a class alleging the state took mineral rights when it established new river boundaries for the Canadian below the dam that created the lake. The state argues that the named plaintiffs do not adequately represent the putative class because many landowners along the river in the putative class settled with the state on their mineral rights based on a 1981 survey that fixed the river's streambed width. The appeals court affirmed the trial court's class-certification denial.
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JLG. TRUCKING LLC V. LAUREN R. GARZA (13-0978) - view video
2/26/2015 @ 9:50 AM (length 41:26)
Originating county: Zapata County
Originating from: 4th District Court of Appeals, San Antonio
Case Documents
The principal issues in this personal-injury case involving a car-truck accident are (1) whether the trial court erred by excluding evidence that a second car accident fewer than three months later may have caused Garza's injury and (2) whether the trial court's barring the evidence probably resulted in an improper judgment. Several days after the first accident Garza's doctor ordered X-rays and diagnosed tense muscles for her neck and back pain. Almost three months later, after her car was hit broadside in the second accident, she complained of head and neck pain but hospital X-rays showed no evident injuries. Three weeks later she returned to the orthopedic doctor who treated her after the first accident, this time for radiating pain in her arms and back. A magnetic resonating image - MRI - showed two herniated discs. Another MRI more than a year later revealed two additional herniated discs. In her negligence suit against the trucking company Garza alleged her back injury resulted from the first accident. The doctor who first treated her testified the herniated discs resulted from accident trauma in the first wreck, but he testified he had not reviewed her medical records from the second accident. JPL contends the MRI shows Garza's back injury was not the result of trauma at all. JLG sought to introduce evidence of the second accident, but the trial judge barred any reference to the second accident as not relevant because of JLG's theory that the back injury was degenerative or caused by her weight. The jury returned a $1.1 million verdict for Garza. The court of appeals affirmed.
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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
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JOHN KLUMB, ET AL. V. HOUSTON MUNICIPAL EMPLOYEES PENSION SYSTEM, ET AL. (13-0515) - view video
11/6/2014 @ 9:00 AM (length 48:21)
Originating county: Harris County
Originating from: 1st District Court of Appeals, Houston
Case Documents
In this challenge to pension-board actions involving Houston city employees the city transferred to a non-profit corporation - doing the same work, but outside the city's pension plan - the principal issue is whether the pension board acted without authority by defining the transferred workers as municipal employees subject to the pension system. Employees who were transferred from the city's convention service sued the pension system, one group arguing that they should be allowed to draw pensions because their city employment ended and another contending that they should be able to stop their pension contributions as they deferred their retirements. In its dispute with Houston, the pension system countered two moves to remove the employees from the pension plan. When the city first transferred the employees to a city-controlled government corporation, the pension system changed its definition of municipal employee to include workers hired by a local-government corporation. Then the city moved the employees to a non-profit company that would lease their services to the city-controlled corporation. The pension-system board continued to consider the employees to fall under the pension plan. The trial court granted the pension system's jurisdictional plea and the appeals court affirmed, holding in part that the pension system's employee definition was within its authority under state law.
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JOHN LELAND, D.D.S. V. BRANDAL (06-1028) - view video
11/14/2007 @ 9:50 AM (length 45:27)
Originating county: Bandera County
Originating from: 4th District Court of Appeals, San Antonio
Case Documents
John Leland, D.D.S. v. George C. Brandal and Ruth L. Brandal from Bandera County and the Fourth District Court of Appeals, San Antonio For petitioner: Kathryn A. Stephens, San Antonio For respondents: Beth Squires, San Antonio The Supreme Court will hear arguments on the issue of whether appeals court that held med-mal expert report deficient can remand for extension to cure defect. The principal issues are (1) whether an appeals court that holds a medical-expert report deficient can remand for consideration of a 30-day extension to file an adequate report or must render judgment for the defendant and, if the appellate court can remand, (2) whether the plaintiff waived the extension by filing supplemental expert reports within time limits upon the defendant's objection to the original reports. In this case Leland objected to the adequacy of two expert reports the Brandals served. The Brandals then filed supplemental reports before the 120-day deadline expired. The trial court denied Leland's objection to the supplemented expert reports. When the court of appeals reversed, it remanded the case to consider a 30-day extension to cure the defect. The case also presents a jurisdictional question - whether the interlocutory appeal to the Supreme Court can be heard by the Court, based on whether a concurring opinion in the court of appeals creates a conflict in this case.
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JOHN SAMPSON V. UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS AT AUSTIN (14-0745) - view video
11/3/2015 @ 9:00 AM (length 44:23)
Originating county: Travis County
Originating from: 3rd District Court of Appeals, Austin
Case Documents
The principal issue is whether an extension cord strung across a university sidewalk constitutes a premises defect instead of negligent use of tangible personal property. Sampson, a law professor, sued the university for injuries he suffered when he tripped in the dark over a cord across a sidewalk between the law school and a parking lot. The cord, which Sampson alleged was not taped to the sidewalk, had been used by tailgaters. The university filed a jurisdictional plea, moving to dismiss Sampson's claim or for summary judgment on it, arguing the Texas Tort Claims Act did not give the trial court jurisdiction to decide Sampson's claim because it was for a premises defect. In part UT presented evidence that the extension cord was not the university's and UT had no knowledge of it. Sampson's evidence included affidavits that UT generally provided power for a private rental company's tailgating patrons. The trial court denied the university's plea. The court of appeals reversed.
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JOSE CARRERAS, M.D., P.A. V. MARROQUIN (09-0857) - view video
10/14/2010 @ 9:50 AM (length 15:15)
Originating county: Hidalgo County
Originating from: 13th District Court of Appeals, Corpus Christi & Edinburg
Case Documents
09-0857 Jose Carreras, M.D. v. Carlos Francisco Marroquin, et al. from Hidalgo County and the 13th District Court of Appeals, Corpus Christi/Edinburg For petitioner: Ronald G. Hole, McAllen For respondents: Fernando G. Mancias, Edinburg The issue is whether the medical-malpractice limitations period is postponed under Civil Practices and Remedies Code section when the plaintiff gives pre-suit notice within the two-year limitations but not the required medical-information release. After his wife died following surgery, Marroquin sued Dr. Carreras. His notice of the lawsuit did not include a release for his wife's medical records. He then filed suit after the two-year limitations had run, but authorized the release several months later. Marroquin argues that section 74.051(c) tolls limitations when the pre-suit notice is sent and the required release, which section requires to be filed with the pre-suit notice, is independent of the tolling provision and has its own penalty for noncompliance. The trial court denied Carreras' summary-judgment motion and the court of appeals affirmed. Texas Supreme Court advisory Contact: Osler McCarthy, Staff Attorney for Public Information (512) 463.1441 or email: osler.mccarthy@courts.state.tx.us
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JOSE L. ELIZONDO AND GUILLERMINA ELIZONDO V. RONALD D. KRIST, THE KRIST LAW FIRM, P.C., KEVIN D. KRIST AND WILLIAM T. WELLS (11-0438) - view video
12/5/2012 @ 9:00 AM (length 45:16)
Originating county: Harris County
Originating from: 14th District Court of Appeals, Houston
Case Documents
The principal issues in this legal-malpractice case are (1) whether the trial court abused its discretion by striking as mere conclusion portions of an attorney's affidavit estimating damages and (2) whether plaintiffs nonetheless presented sufficient evidence to defeat a no-evidence summary-judgment motion. Elizondo and his wife sued lawyers who represented him in negotiations with BP Chemical Co. for his injuries in the Texas City refinery explosion in 2005. Jose Elizondo settled for $50,000, BP's only counter to his $2-million settlement offer. But years later he brought this malpractice claim when he discovered one of the lawyers negotiating for plaintiffs went to work for BP. In his claim Elizondo argued that his lawyers failed to obtain a larger settlement and never discussed a possible loss-of-consortium claim by his wife. The trial court struck the Elizondos' expert's affidavit as conclusion without support and ordered a take-nothing judgment against them. The court of appeals affirmed, with one dissent.
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JOSEPH E. HANCOCK V. EASWARAN P. VARIYAM (11-0772) - view video
12/5/2012 @ 10:40 AM (length 43:35)
Originating county: Lubbock County
Originating from: 7th District Court of Appeals, Amarillo
Case Documents
The principal issue in this defamation case involving two Texas Tech medical professors is whether one's statements that the other "deals in half truths, which legally is the same as a lie" and has a "reputation for lack of veracity" constitute defamation by itself. Those statements, by Dr. Hancock, were in a resignation letter to the medical school dean complaining about Dr. Variyam, his supervisor and then the gastroenterology division chair. Hancock was responding to a letter Variyam wrote him, criticizing his patient care. Jurors rejected Hancock's truth defense and awarded Variyam damages after the trial court directed a verdict that Hancock's letter to the dean was libelous per se.
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JUAN MARIO VILLAFANI, M.D. V. TREJO (06-0501) - view video
4/10/2007 @ 9:50 AM (length 38:22)
Originating county: Cameron County
Originating from: 13th District Court of Appeals, Corpus Christi & Edinburg
Case Documents
06-0501 Juan Mario Villafani, M.D. v. Adela Trejo from Cameron County and the 13th District Court of Appeals, Corpus Christi/Edinburg For petitioner: TBA For respondent: Robert E. Brzezinski, San Antonio The principal issue is whether an appellate court has jurisdiction to consider an appeal from the trial court's refusal to dismiss a medical-malpractice lawsuit, based on an allegedly inadequate expert report, when the plaintiff later took a nonsuit dropping the action but retaining the possibility of filing another. In this case, filed under the previous medical-malpractice statute, the trial court granted Trejo a nonsuit without prejudice after it denied the doctor's motion for sanctions and dismissal. The court of appeals, in a split decision, affirmed.
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KACHINA PIPELINE CO. INC. V. MICHAEL D. LILLIS (13-0596) - view video
3/24/2015 @ 9:00 AM (length 45:02)
Originating county: Concho County
Originating from: 3rd District Court of Appeals, Austin
Case Documents
The principal issues in this dispute over a gas-purchase agreement are (1) whether a pipeline company breached its contract with a gas producer by charging for downstream compression services at a plant that predated the contract and (2) whether the producer breached the contract's first-refusal option by building his own pipeline to deliver gas to a processing plant (bypassing the pipeline company). Lillis, the producer, sued Kachina Pipeline for contract breach, alleging Kachina improperly charged Lillis for compressing Lillis's gas before delivering it to the processing plant. The contract allowed Kachina to charge for installing, repairing, maintaining and operating its compression unit, plus additional costs, if Kachina installs compression equipment necessary to deliver Lillis's gas. Kachina countersued, claiming that Lillis's agreement to sell gas directly to the processor violated a contract provision that gave Kachina a right to notice of and to meet the terms of the new agreement between Lillis and the processor. The trial court granted summary judgment for Kachina, but the appeals court reversed.
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KAPPUS V. KAPPUS (08-0136) - view video
12/10/2008 @ 10:40 AM (length 44:59)
Originating county: Anderson County
Originating from: 12th District Court of Appeals, Tyler
Case Documents
08-0136 John Kappus v. Sandra L. Kappus from Anderson County and the 12th District Court of Appeals, Tyler For petitioner: Logan Odeneal, Dallas For respondent: Richard E. Swift Jr., Palestine Principal issues are (1) whether an independent executor appointed by the trial court should be removed because the executor co-owns property with the estate the amount of which is subject to dispute and (2) whether the court of appeals erred by removing the executor as trustee of a testamentary trust. Sandra Kappus, the ex-wife of John Kappus's dead brother, sued on behalf of her sons. She claims that John Kappus's intended equal distribution of sale proceeds from a farm John and his brother jointly owned did not account for improvements the brother made to the property when they were married. After the brother's death, his will transferred his interest in the farm to a trust for his sons. The trial court calculated the share of proceeds due the trust at slightly less than 59 percent, instead of 50 percent, but refused to remove John Kappus as trustee because he jointly owned property with the trust. The court of appeals affirmed the trial court's calculation but removed Kappus as trustee because his adverse claim to the property created a conflict of interest. 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
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KBMT OPERATING CO., ET AL. V. MINDA LAO TOLEDO (14-0456) - view video
11/13/2015 @ 9:50 AM (length 44:06)
Originating county: Orange County
Originating from: 9th District Court of Appeals, Beaumont
Case Documents
The issues in this libel case are (1) whether the Texas Citizens' Participation Act, intended to halt harassment suits targeting free expression, requires the plaintiff's claim to be dismissed and, if Toledo established the elements for her libel suit to get past the law's first hurdle, (2) whether KMBT sufficiently established protection under the fair-report privilege to warrant dismissal on that basis. Toledo, a Port Arthur pediatrician, sued KBMT, a Beaumont television station, for defaming her when it reported on a Texas Medical Board disciplinary action against her. In essence, she alleged the station went beyond the medical board's press release - stating that she was disciplined in part for inappropriate sexual conduct with a patient - by adding to its reports that she was a pediatrician. She claims that damaged her reputation because it suggested the medical board acted because she sexually abused a child. In the final of four broadcasts about the board's action, KBMT added that the patient was an adult (her 60-year-old boyfriend). The trial court denied the station's dismissal motion and the appeals court affirmed.
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KELLY V. GENERAL INTERIOR CONSTR., INC. (08-0669) - view video
11/18/2009 @ 10:40 AM (length 42:52)
Originating county: Harris County
Originating from: 14th District Court of Appeals, Houston
Case Documents
08-0669 Dan Kelly and Laura Hofstatter v. General Interior Construction Inc. from Harris County and the 14th District Court of Appeals, Houston For petitioners: David C. Holmes, Houston For respondent: Ross A. Sears II, Houston In this jurisdictional challenge the principal issues are (1) whether Texas contacts to establish personal jurisdiction should be limited to pleadings that did not allege a disputed contract was a contact for a fraud claim or for Texas Trust Fund Act violations by the officers individually and (2) whether asserting jurisdiction over the corporate officers complies with federal due process and the Texas long-arm statute. In this case General Interior Construction, a Texas company, sued Kelly and Hofstatter over alleged payments due from Kelly and Hofstatter's general-contracting business incorporated in Arizona. Their company agreed with another Arizona firm for improvements to a Texas hotel the other firm owned. GIC alleged breach of contract, fraud and misappropriation of trust money Kelly and Hofstatter's firm held for paying subcontractors. The trial court found specific jurisdiction existed to require Kelly and Hofstatter to defend in Texas against all claims, but the court of appeals reversed on the contract-breach claim, based on Kelly and Hofstatter's signing the contract as corporate officers. 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
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KERLIN V. SAUCEDA (05-0653) - view video
4/22/2008 @ 10:00 AM (length 54:01)
Originating county: Cameron County
Originating from: 13th District Court of Appeals, Corpus Christi & Edinburg
Case Documents
(05-0653) Gilbert Kerlin, et al. v. Conception Sauceda, et al. from Cameron County and the 13th District Court of Appeals, Corpus Christi/Edinburg For petitioners: Claudia Wilson Frost and Jeremy Gaston, Houston For respondents: Jules L. Laird Jr., Houston The Supreme Court will hear arguments of limitations issue in heirs' claim to Padre Island land. In this case, a lawsuit by descendants of an original land-grant owner of Padre Island claiming interest in thousands of acres of the island, principal issues include (1) whether the statute of limitations was tolled by Kerlin's absence from the state and (2) whether equity should bar the claim. Descendants of Juan Jose Balli - whose uncle was Padre Island's namesake - sued Kerlin, claiming breach of contract, fraud and breach of fiduciary duty arising originally from Kerlin's purchase from the Balli heirs of any Padre Island interests by quitclaim deed in the 1930s. The Balli claimants also sued two of Kerlin's companies. Kerlin's purchase reserved to the Balli heirs a fraction of gas and oil royalties, if any such royalty interest existed. Kerlin bought the interests by quitclaim deed based on the prospect that the Balli heirs might still have legal title, based on a rescinded sale of the land in 1830. Kerlin and his companies argue that the statute of limitations in this case cannot be halted because, though he was out of state since the quitclaim deeds were bought, his companies were Texas-based. And even if limitations were tolled, they argue, the heirs should be barred by laches from bringing the lawsuit because they waited too long to sue, to the point when almost all witnesses to the half-century-old dealings were dead. A jury awarded damages to the Balli heirs. The court of appeals affirmed.
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KEY OPERATING & EQUIPMENT INC. V. WILL HEGAR AND LOREE HEGAR (13-0156) - view video
2/4/2014 @ 10:40 AM (length 38:40)
Originating county: Washington County
Originating from: 1st District Court of Appeals, Houston
Case Documents
The principal issue is whether an oilfield operator has a right to use adjacent surface property to service its drilling in a pooled unit that includes non-working mineral interests beneath the adjacent tract. In this case the Hegars sued for trespass, arguing that Key continued to use a road it no longer reasonably needed to service drilling on adjacent land. Key used a road it had used for drilling operations in the so-called Rosenbaum-Curbo tract before its operating lease terminated because its well ceased production. To do so, Key acquired a mineral interest in the Rosenbaum-Curbo tract, then pooled that with the adjacent land where it operated a producing well. The Hegars, who acquired the surface estate above the Rosenbaum-Curbo tract and a fractional mineral interest beneath it, complained that heavier traffic resulted from Key's drilling a second well on the adjacent land. The trial court found for the Hegars, ruling that Key's use of the road across the Hegars' property was not reasonably necessary because its lease terminated. After first reversing the trial court, the court of appeals on rehearing held for the Hegars, holding in part that Key could use the road as long as it produced from the Rosenbaum-Curbo tract but concluded that it was not.
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KING FISHER MARINE SERVICE L.P. V. JOSE H. TAMEZ (13-0103) - view video
12/5/2013 @ 9:40 AM (length 42:44)
Originating county: Cameron County
Originating from: 13th District Court of Appeals, Corpus Christi & Edinburg
Case Documents
In this maritime case, the issues are (1) whether the trial court erred by rejecting a jury-charge modification submitted after the charge conference but before the jury was charged and (2) whether the appeals court erred by determining that Tamez was following specific orders in an emergency despite differing evidence on the point (bearing on his damage award under the Jones Act because the jury found he was 50-percent negligent). Tamez, who claimed he injured an arm when summoned to help the boat captain and another seaman, sued. At the charge conference Tamez asked for and got a question whether the injury resulted from his response to a specific order. Then after the conference, King Fisher Marine objected to the specific-order question and offered an instruction defining jury charge. The trial court ruled the objection was too late. Jurors found Tamez 50 percent responsible for his injury and awarded him damages, finding he was working under a specific order. The appeals court affirmed, then denied rehearing despite both parties arguing that Weeks Marine Inc. v. Garza, a subsequent decision defining specific order under maritime law, should be analyzed.
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KINGSAIRE INC. V. JORGE MELENDEZ (14-0006) - view video
9/3/2015 @ 10:40 AM (length 38:36)
Originating county: El Paso County
Originating from: 8th District Court of Appeals, El Paso
Case Documents
A principal issue in this retaliatory-discharge case is whether the appeals court erred by rejecting a legal-sufficiency challenge arguing that no evidence established discrimination or retaliation. In this case Melendez sued, alleging Kingsaire fired him for filing a workers-compensation claim after he was injured by a falling object in his demolition job. Evidence showed Kingsaire assisted him in applying for workers-comp and later told him it was placing him on family-medical leave, limiting him to 12 weeks' paid leave. But the company did not tell him when that time would end and did not tell him he would be fired if he did not return to work at the leave's end. Three days after his paid time ended, and before his physician cleared him to work, Kingsaire discharged him by letter. The letter specified he could seek reinstatement after his physician decided he could work. Melendez sued instead. The appeals court held the evidence legally and factually sufficient to affirm judgment for Melendez.
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KIRBY LAKE DEVELOPMENT, LTD. V. CLEAR LAKE CITY WATER AUTHORITY (08-1003) - view video
1/19/2010 @ 10:40 AM (length 46:15)
Originating county: Harris County
Originating from: 14th District Court of Appeals, Houston
Case Documents
08-1003 Kirby Lake Development Ltd., et al. v. Clear Lake Water Authority from Harris County and the 14th District Court of Appeals, Houston For petitioners: Lawrence J. Fossi, Houston For respondent: Ramon J. Viada III, The Woodlands The principal issues are (1) whether governmental immunity bars developers' contract claims alleging the water authority failed to seek bond approval for reimbursing the developers' water- and sewer-installation costs and, if not, (2) whether the water authority's failure to place the reimbursement issue on one bond ballot breached the reimbursement agreement. Kirby Lane and other developers sued the water authority for failing to seek voter approval for a bond proposal to pay developers for the water and sewer work under an agreement. After two bond issues for reimbursing developers failed, the water authority won voter approval for bonds that did not specifically call for purchasing the water and sewer facilities. The trial court granted summary judgment for developers, denying the jurisdictional plea. The appeals court reversed in part and rendered judgment against the developers, holding that the water authority did not have immunity but that the contract was not breached. 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
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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.
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LADONNA DEGAN ET AL. (19-0234) - view video
9/17/2019 @ 10:40 AM (length 42:14)
Originating from: U.S. Court of Appeals, 5th Circuit
Case Documents
In this action challenging withdrawal changes by the pension system, the Fifth Circuit asks: (1) whether the withdrawal method from the pension system's deferred retirement-option plan constitutes a state constitutionally protected retirement benefit and, if so, (2) whether the pension board's decision, pursuant to statute, altering previous withdrawal elections and to annuitize the deferred-option money over the plaintiffs' respective life expectancies violates the state constitution.
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LAN/STV, A JOINT VENTURE OF LOCKWOOD, ANDREWS & NEWMAN, INC. AND STV INCORPORATED V. MARTIN K. EBY CONSTRUCTION COMPANY, INC. (11-0810) - view video
10/8/2013 @ 9:00 AM (length 42:36)
Originating county: Dallas County
Originating from: 5th District Court of Appeals, Dallas
Case Documents
The issues in this negligent-misrepresentation case are (1) whether a contractor preparing construction plans for the Dallas Area Rapid Transit system has derivative immunity from suit and, if not, (2) whether the economic-loss rule bars Eby's negligent-misrepresentation claim. Eby Construction sued LAN/STV, a joint venture, and STV, contending that bid documents LAN/STV prepared for a light-rail project were inaccurate and led to construction delays and Eby's increased construction costs. LAN/STV argues that the state transportation code extends immunity to it for performing a function for which the transit system would be immune if it were performing the same function. But Eby argues that its negligent-misrepresentation claim is a subset of a contract breach, for which the transit authority would not be immune. The appeals court affirmed a jury award for Eby.
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LANCER INS. CO. V. GARCIA HOLIDAY TOURS (10-0096) - view video
1/4/2011 @ 9:50 AM (length 43:14)
Originating county: Jim Wells County
Originating from: 4th District Court of Appeals, San Antonio
Case Documents
10-0096? Lancer Insurance Co. v. Garcia Holiday Tours ?from Jim Wells County and the Fourth District Court of Appeals, San Antonio For petitioner: E. Thomas Bishop, Dallas?For respondents Garcia Holiday Tours, et al.: Stephen J. Chapman, Corpus Christi For respondents passengers: David George, Houston A principal issue is whether a standard commercial-automobile policy covers charter-bus passengers for tuberculosis they allegedly contracted from the bus driver as an accident "resulting from ownership, maintenance or use" of the covered bus. Garcia Holiday Tours sued Lancer after Lancer refused to defend or indemnify Garcia in a suit by students and a chaperone who contracted latent TB on an Alice High School band trip. Garcia lost a $5.25 million judgment. In the declaratory-judgment action the trial court granted summary judgment against Lancer on the duty to defend and indemnify. The appeals court reversed, concluding fact questions existed on whether the TB resulted from the bus's use, precluding the passengers' summary judgment. 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
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LARRY T. LONG, L. ALLAN LONG, AND B. VIRGINIA LONG, IN THEIR CAPACITIES AS TRUSTEES OF THE LAWRENCE ALLAN LONG TRUST, THE CHARLES EDWARD LONG TRUST, THE LARRY THOMAS LONG TRUST AND THE JOHN STEPHEN LONG TRUST D/B/A THE LONG TRUSTS V. CASTLE TEXAS PRODUCTI (11-0161) - view video
11/5/2013 @ 9:50 AM (length 38:19)
Originating county: Rusk County
Originating from: 12th District Court of Appeals, Tyler
Case Documents
The issue is whether, on the appeals court's remand to calculate pre-judgment interest, post-judgment interest accrues from the date of the appeals court's judgment or the original trial court's. On remand, Castle waived claim to prejudgment interest. The trial court then issued another judgment, ordering Castle to recover post-judgment interest from the date of the original judgment.
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LAURA BEEMAN AND JANET LOCK V. BRAD LIVINGSTON, AS EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR OF THE TEXAS DEPARTMENT OF CRIMINAL JUSTICE (13-0867) - view video
3/25/2015 @ 9:50 AM (length 44:07)
Originating county: Travis County
Originating from: 3rd District Court of Appeals, Austin
Case Documents
In this accommodations challenge by deaf prison inmates the issues are (1) whether prisons are "public facilities" under the state Human Resources Code and, if so, (2) whether the department acted without authority by refusing requested disability accommodations. Beeman and Lock sued for ready access to teletypewriters (which, unlike telephones available to hearing inmates, are locked and must be requested), videophones (so deaf inmates can use American Sign Language to communicate without delays inherent in teletypewriter communications) and sign-language interpreters for prison programs such as classes provided by a school district. The trial court ordered the prison system to provide access to videophones for its deaf inmates and qualified interpreters for certain programs. Determining that prisons are not public facilities for required accommodations, the appeals court dismissed the prisoners' claims for lacking subject-matter jurisdiction.
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LEE C. RITCHIE, ET AL. V. ANN CALDWELL RUPE (11-0447) - view video
2/26/2013 @ 9:00 AM (length 47:04)
Originating county: Dallas County
Originating from: 5th District Court of Appeals, Dallas
Case Documents
The principal issues are (1) whether shareholders and principals controlling a closely held corporation oppressed a minority shareholder by refusing to meet with potential buyers of stock she controlled; (2) whether shareholder oppression should be proved by a "reasonable expectations" standard or by one showing "burdensome, harsh or wrongful conduct"; (3) whether the Texas statute addressing oppression authorizes a court to order other shareholders to buy the minority shareholder's stock; and, if so, (4) whether such a stock-buyout remedy was appropriate in this case. This dispute involves stock in a family company, Rupe Investment Corp. of Dallas. All stock in Rupe Investment is held by descendants of Dallas businessmen Dallas Gordon Rupe Jr. ("Pops") and Robert Ritchie or by trusts for their descendants. Ann Rupe, in charge of a trust her late husband established to hold his shares ("Buddy's Trust"), sued Ritchie and other Rupe Investment directors because they refused to meet with potential buyers of the stock she controlled. The other directors cited liability problems they might face by meeting with would-be buyers. Rupe hired a broker to sell the stock after she refused the directors' offers to buy her stock for as much as $1.7 million. The broker priced it as high as $3.4 million, but testified no purchaser would buy it without meeting with the directors. Finding oppression, the trial court ordered Rupe Investment to buy the stock for $7.3 million after a jury determined that to be its fair market value. The court of appeals affirmed the trial court's oppression finding, but reversed to revalue the stock. The appeals court held that jurors should have been instructed to account for Ann Rupe's minority-shareholder status and the lack of a ready market for the stock.
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LENNAR CORPORATION, LENNAR HOMES OF TEXAS SALES & MARKETING LTD. AND LENNAR HOMES OF TEXAS LAND & CONSTRUCTION, LTD. V. MARKEL AMERICAN INSURANCE COMPANY (11-0394) - view video
10/16/2012 @ 11:30 AM (length 42:24)
Originating county: Harris County
Originating from: 14th District Court of Appeals, Houston
Case Documents
The principal issues are (1) whether the law-of-the-case doctrine bars Lennar's complaint that the court of appeals wrongly defined property damage because Lennar, as the successful party in a previous appeal, did not challenge the point in the earlier appeal; (2) whether the costs submitted to the jury were covered costs under the excess-insurance policy--that is, whether Lennar's incurred costs to determine water damage in homes was "because of" property damage and whether Lennar properly segregated covered from uncovered costs; and (3) whether Lennar was legally liable to homeowners for repairs attributed to a faulty stucco simulant to avoid a settlement-without-consent clause in the policy that barred coverage. In this case Lennar sued Markel and other insurers for refusing to pay repair costs Lennar incurred to remedy problems, actual and prospective, to homes it sold with the defective imitation stucco. Markel's policy with Lennar covered damages because of "property damage." In the earlier appeal the appeals court established damages categories that excluded costs to remove the imitation stucco to inspect homes for water damage attributed to the defective product. From a jury verdict on remand for Lennar, the court of appeals reversed in part because it held the defined damages were broader than it allowed in the initial appeal. The appeals court also determined Markel should not pay because Lennar did not prove its liability to homeowners or seek Markel's permission to make the repairs it did.
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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.
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LEORDEANU V. AMERICAN PROTECTION INS. CO. (09-0330) - view video
4/15/2010 @ 9:50 AM (length 43:41)
Originating county: Travis County
Originating from: 3rd District Court of Appeals, Austin
Case Documents
09-0330 Liana Leordeanu v. American Protection Insurance Co. from Travis County and the Third District Court of Appeals, Austin For petitioner: Bradley Dean McClellan, Austin For respondent: Jack W. Latson, Austin The issue in this workers-compensation case is whether a traveling sales representative's car accident injury was in the course and within the scope of her employment. Leordeanu sued American Protection after it denied her benefits claim and after an administrative review upheld the denial. Her injury resulted from a one-car accident as she returned from dinner with a client, intending to stop at a company-provided storage unit before going to her home office nearby. She was driving a car provided and maintained by her company. The trial court ruled her injury was employment-related, but the appeals court reversed, holding that her trip had dual business and personal purposes and rejecting her argument that her injury was covered because she fell under the "continuous coverage" principle of workers-comp law. Leordeanu argues that the appeals court's holding would preclude coverage for any traveling sales representative headed home on a business trip. 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
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LESLEY V. VETERANS LAND BOARD OF THE STATE OF TEXAS (VLB) (09-0306) - view video
9/15/2010 @ 9:00 AM (length 47:44)
Originating county: Erath County
Originating from: 11th District Court of Appeals, Eastland
Case Documents
(Chief Justice Jefferson not sitting) 09-0306 Betty Yvon Lesley, et al. v. Texas Veterans Land Board, et al. from Erath County and the 11th District Court of Appeals, Eastland For petitioners: Chris Aycock and Charles Tighe, Midland For respondent: Bluegreen Southwest One, Laura H. Burney, San Antonio For respondents lot owners: Stephen E. Haynes, Brownwood The issue is whether a residential developer holding executive mineral rights breached its duty to other mineral interest-holders by failing to lease oil and gas rights or by using restrictive covenants to prevent the mineral interests' development. In this action, arising after the Barnett Shale exploration and development west of Fort Worth, lesser mineral interest-holders sued the developer and lot owners (including the Veterans Land Board) to declare as unenforceable covenants prohibiting oil-and-gas drilling in a ranchette community. Non-executive interest-holders also contend the developer's refusal to lease the mineral rights breached a duty to lease owed to lesser mineral interest-holders. The trial court found for the non-executive interest-holders. But the appeals court held the executive mineral interest-holder only owed lesser interest-holders a duty against self-dealing if it decided to lease mineral rights. The court of appeals also reversed the trial court's ruling that the Veterans Land Board did not have sovereign immunity because the interest-holders sought damages. 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
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LEWIS V. FUNDERBURK (06-0518) - view video
11/15/2007 @ 9:00 AM (length 47:49)
Originating county: Limestone County
Originating from: 10th District Court of Appeals, Waco
Case Documents
Rory Lewis, M.D. v. Dewayne Funderburk from Limestone County and the 10th District Court of Appeals, Waco For petitioner: Andrew F. MacRae, Austin For respondent: Amy Thomas, Mexia The Supreme Court will hear arguments on the issue of whether Jurisdictional issue in appeal brought from denial to dismiss med-mal report. The principal issue is whether the court of appeals has jurisdiction over an interlocutory appeal from a trial court's refusal to strike an allegedly deficient expert report in a health-care liability claim. In this case Lewis objected to a second expert report Funderburk filed after the trial court granted him a 30-day extension to cure a defect in the original report. The trial court denied Lewis's objection to the second report and motion to dismiss. Lewis then appealed the ruling, but the court of appeals dismissed his case for lack of jurisdiction, holding that Texas Civil Practice & Remedies Code section 51.014(a)(10) does not grant an interlocutory appeal to challenge the adequacy of an expert report.
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LEZLEA ROSS V. ST. LUKE'S EPISCOPAL HOSPITAL (13-0439) - view video
11/5/2014 @ 9:50 AM (length 42:24)
Originating county: Harris County
Originating from: 14th District Court of Appeals, Houston
Case Documents
The issue is whether a hospital visitor's lawsuit for injuries from a fall on a wet lobby floor constitutes a health care-liability claim requiring a threshold expert report to proceed. After her fall, Ross sued the hospital for premises liability but did not file an expert report. As her claim was pending, the Court decided Texas West Oaks Hospital LP v. Williams, holding that a suit by a hospital employee injured by a patient constituted a health care-liability claim. The trial court dismissed Ross's claim, determining that hers also was a health-care claim that required an expert evaluation. The appeals court affirmed.
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LIBERTY MUTUAL INSURANCE COMPANY V. RICKY ADCOCK (11-0934) - view video
12/6/2012 @ 9:50 AM (length 47:05)
Originating county: Tarrant County
Originating from: 2nd District Court of Appeals, Fort Worth
Case Documents
The issues are (1) whether the Texas Workers' Compensation Division has continuing jurisdiction to consider new evidence challenging lifetime workers-compensation benefits awarded years before and (2) whether the workers-comp insurer is precluded by collateral estoppel or the prior ruling in the case from contesting the lifetime benefits. In this case Liberty Mutual in 2009 sought a new hearing to challenge lifetime-income benefits Adcock was awarded in 1997, alleging new evidence that Adcock's disability was no longer permanent. In the earlier hearing Adcock won the benefits for total and permanent functional loss of a foot and hand. On Liberty Mutual's appeal from a determination that Adcock was still entitled to the benefits, the trial court granted Adcock's summary-judgment motion. The court of appeals affirmed, holding that the Legislature intended that the Workers' Compensation Division did not have continuing jurisdiction to review lifetime benefits once awarded.
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LIFE PARTNERS INC. AND MILKIE/FERGUSON INVESTMENT INC. V. MICHAEL ARNOLD ET AL. (14-0122) - view video
1/15/2015 @ 9:00 AM (length 48:58)
Originating county: Dallas County
Originating from: 5th District Court of Appeals, Dallas
Case Documents
Consolidated for oral argument with 14-0226. The principal issue is whether life-insurance benefits purchased from the elderly or terminally ill and sold to investors are subject to Texas Securities Act regulation. If they are, petitioners ask whether such a holding should be prospective because the companies relied on a 2004 decision holding such life settlements are not securities. Life Partners' business is buying at a discount the rights to life-insurance proceeds held by the elderly - life settlements - and terminally ill - viatical settlements - who need cash. The company then sells investors rights to the insurance proceeds, payable to these buyers when the insured person dies. Life Partners pools money from investors to be held by a trustee, who pays premiums on the policies, as needed, and calculates the price to investors based on the policyholders' life expectancies.
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LOFTIN V. LEE (09-0313) - view video
1/21/2010 @ 10:40 AM (length 43:35)
Originating county: Angelina County
Originating from: 12th District Court of Appeals, Tyler
Case Documents
09-0313 Terri Loftin v. Janice Lee and Bob Lee from Angelina County and the 12th District Court of Appeals, Tyler For petitioner: Robert T. Cain Jr., Lufkin For respondents: Douglas J. McCarver, Nacogdoches Principal issues are (1) whether liability for alleged negligence in a horseback-riding accident is barred under the Texas Equine Activity Act and (2) whether a fact issue exists as to the horse owner's reasonable and prudent effort to determine the rider's ability to safely ride and manage the horse she rode. The Lees sued Loftin for Janice Lee's injuries when the horse she was riding bolted in a muddy bog and threw Lee. Lee alleged the horse panicked when it sank in the mud and Loftin was negligent in conducting the trail ride through the bog. The trial court granted Loftin summary judgment, based on the equine safety statute. But the court of appeals found fact issues existed as to whether inherent risks to horseback riding included riding on a muddy trail and whether Loftin properly assessed Lee's riding ability under the circumstances. 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
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LONGVIEW ENERGY CO. V. THE HUFF ENERGY FUND ET AL. (15-0968) - view video
2/9/2017 @ 9:50 AM (length 42:59)
Originating county: Zavala County
Originating from: 4th District Court of Appeals, San Antonio
Case Documents
In this appeal, involving allegations that directors breached fiduciary duties by usurping a corporate opportunity to invest in shale property the company was considering, principal issues are (1) whether Longview pleaded its claim that the directors competed with it without Longview's informed consent and, if not, whether the trial court properly submitted a liability question based on the competition claim; (2) whether the appeals court erred in applying Delaware corporate-opportunity law by recognizing a director's loyalty may be breached by competing against the company without authorization; and (3) whether sufficient evidence supported Longview had an interest or expectancy in shale property it was considering for investment.
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LTTS CHARTER SCHOOL, INC. V. C2 CONSTRUCTION, INC. (09-0794) - view video
12/7/2010 @ 9:50 AM (length 42:32)
Originating county: Dallas County
Originating from: 5th District Court of Appeals, Dallas
Case Documents
09-0794 LTTS Charter School Inc. v. C2 Construction Inc. from Dallas County and the Fifth District Court of Appeals, Dallas For petitioner: Thomas A. Fuller, Arlington For respondent: Brian W. Erikson, Dallas For amicus curiae State of Texas: Kristofer S. Monson, Austin The issue is whether a charter school is a governmental entity for purposes of bringing an interlocutory appeal. When C2 Construction sued LTTS over an alleged contract debt, LTTS pleaded that the court lacked jurisdiction because the charter school had immunity under Local Government Code section 271.151, the contract being oral. The trial court denied the plea. LTTS then took an interlocutory appeal, arguing the immunity issue. But the court of appeals rejected the argument, holding charter schools are not governmental entities as the Texas Tort Claims Act defines governmental unit. 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
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LUBBOCK COUNTY WATER CONTROL & IMPROVEMENT DISTRICT V. CHURCH & AKIN L.L.C. (12-1039) - view video
1/8/2014 @ 10:40 AM (length 40:26)
Originating county: Lubbock County
Originating from: 7th District Court of Appeals, Amarillo
Case Documents
The issue is whether a water district has governmental immunity from a contract claim primarily involving a real-property conveyance but contemplating services by the lessee that principally would benefit the general public. Church & Akin, which operated a marina on a lake near Lubbock (yes) under lease by the county water district, sued when the district terminated the lease. The lease was for three years, with an option to extend it so long as Church & Akin complied with its lease terms. Dissatisfied with the hours the lessee kept, the district ordered Church & Akin to vacate after the second term began and the company had paid for the year. The trial court denied the district's jurisdictional plea, based on Texas Local Government Code section 271.152 (waiving immunity in a contract suit with its essential terms providing goods and services to the local governmental entity). The appeals court affirmed.
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M & F WORLDWIDE CORP. ET AL. V. PEPSI-COLA METROPOLITAN BOTTLING CO. INC. (15-0083) - view video
10/3/2016 @ 9:50 AM (length 37:43)
Originating county: Harris County
Originating from: 14th District Court of Appeals, Houston
Case Documents
In this interlocutory appeal from a denial of a special appearance, the issues are (1) whether specific personal jurisdiction exists over defendants who were in Texas twice to discuss asbestos liability, executed agreements in Texas to divest themselves of liability and transferred an affiliate company to a trust to a Texas management company to do so; (2) whether the trial court's implied special-appearance findings should be reviewed de novo in the absence of live testimony; and (3) whether pleading defendant companies' jurisdictional contacts as a group satisfies the initial burden to plead contacts for each.
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MADELON HYSAW, ET AL. V. BRETTON GUY DAWKINS, ET AL. (14-0984) - view video
12/8/2015 @ 10:40 AM (length 44:25)
Originating county: Karnes County
Originating from: 4th District Court of Appeals, San Antonio
Case Documents
The issue is whether devise of a "double-fraction royalty" was a "fixed" fractional royalty or a "floating" fraction of royalty. In this case one line of descendants who took royalty interests bequeathed to three children in 1949 sued to declare the will split royalties equally among the three children (and, later, their descendants and successors) after other another in a line of descendants executed a lease with a royalty greater than 1/8th. The will provided an undivided one-third of an undivided 1/8th royalty to each child who got separate tracts but mineral rights in all. But did that mean sharing a one-third royalty equally or that those children - and their descendants - got a 1/24th royalty from production on the other tracts? Texas courts have been split on how such a bequest should be interpreted. In this case the trial court granted the Hysaw descendants summary judgment, ruling that the will devised to each of the three children a one-third royalty from all tracts. The court of appeals reversed, holding that descendants were entitled to a 1/24th share of production from the other two tracts.
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MAGDALENA ADRIENNA ABUTAHOUN, ET AL. V. DOW CHEMICAL CO. (13-0175) - view video
1/14/2015 @ 9:00 AM (length 44:33)
Originating county: Dallas County
Originating from: 5th District Court of Appeals, Dallas
Case Documents
In this mesothelioma case the principal issue is whether Dow, the premises owner, is shielded from liability because the stricken employee worked for a pipe-insulating contractor the work of which Dow did not control or supervise but at the same time Dow's employees were doing similar asbestos-insulation work. The issue involves interpreting Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code subsections 95.002(2) and 95.003, providing protection for a premises owner from liability for contractors' employees' job-site injuries. Henderson, working for Dow's contractor, sued Dow, attributing his cancer in part to asbestos fibers Dow's employees negligently released as they insulated pipes in the same area. Dow argued that subsection 95.002(2) protected it from Henderson's claim, but the trial court disagreed, denying denied the company's summary-judgment motion. A jury found Dow 30 percent responsible for Henderson's cancer. The court of appeals reversed, holding that the statutory protection applied to bar a claim based on Dow's negligence.
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MAN ENGINES & COMPONENTS, INC. AND MAN NUTZFAHRZEUGE AKTIENGESELLSCHAFT V. DOUG SHOWS (12-0490) - view video
10/8/2013 @ 10:40 AM (length 41:12)
Originating county: Harris County
Originating from: 14th District Court of Appeals, Houston
Case Documents
The issue is whether a purchaser who bought a yacht "as is" from a seller, the yacht's second owner, may claim breach of an implied merchantability warranty that allegedly occurred when the boat's engines were shipped by the manufacturer. In this case the appeals court reversed the trial court's judgment for Man Engines, relying on Nobility Homes of Texas v. Shivers. That case, in 1977, held that a buyer who purchases used goods may sue a manufacturer for breaching an implied warranty that the product will work as intended based on the initial sale, without the need for contract privity between the later buyer and the manufacturer.
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MANN FRANKFORT STEIN V. FIELDING (07-0490) - view video
11/13/2008 @ 9:00 AM (length 44:45)
Originating county: Harris County
Originating from: 1st District Court of Appeals, Houston
Case Documents
07-0490 Mann Frankfort Stein & Lipp Advisors Inc, et al. v. Brendan J. Fielding from Harris County and the First District Court of Appeals, Houston For petitioners: Warren W. Harris, Houston For respondent: Levon G. Hovnatanian, Houston Principal issues arising from this declaratory-judgment action are (1) whether a provision requiring an accountant to purchase clients if he left the firm was ancillary to his employment agreement and an enforceable covenant not to compete; (2) whether the Covenants Not to Compete Act preempts the plaintiff's attorneys fees claim; and (3) whether the client-purchase provisions are severable. 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
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MARCIA FULLER FRENCH, ET AL. V. OCCIDENTAL PERMIAN LTD. (12-1002) - view video
2/5/2014 @ 9:50 AM (length 43:55)
Originating county: Scurry County
Originating from: 11th District Court of Appeals, Eastland
Case Documents
In this case contesting the royalty value of minerals recovered by carbon-dioxide-injection, the principal issues are (1) whether the gas should be valued in its "native" state, before extraction, or at the wellhead commingled with CO2; (2) whether removing, compressing and transporting CO2 should be classified as production operations; and (3) whether CO2 removed at an off-site processing plant for reuse is a production or post-production operation. French and other royalty owners sued Occidental, the field producer, for paying royalties on 70 percent of gas production, not 100 percent they allege they're owed under their leases. The trial court found for the royalty owners. But the court of appeals reversed and rendered judgment for Occidental, holding that production and post-production processing occurred at the CO2-extraction plant and the royalty owners' failure to apportion these costs made their evidence legally insufficient to prove Occidental underpaid royalties due.
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MARK SILGUERO AND AMY WOLFE V. CSL PLASMA INC. (18-1022) - view video
3/13/2019 @ 9:00 AM (length 46:05)
Originating from: U.S. Court of Appeals, 5th Circuit
Case Documents
The questions certified to the Court are (1) whether, under Texas Human Resources Code section 121.002(5), a plasma-collection center is a "public facility" and, if so, (2) whether Texas law allows it to reject as a donor a "person with a disability" based on concerns for the person's health that stem from that disability and by what standard to determine the plasma center properly rejected the person instead of discriminating against her in violation of section 121.003(a).
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MARKS V. ST. LUKE'S EPISCOPAL HOSPITAL (07-0783) - view video
9/11/2008 @ 9:50 AM (length 43:46)
Originating county: Harris County
Originating from: 1st District Court of Appeals, Houston
Case Documents
07-0783 Irving W. Marks v. St. Luke's Episcopal Hospital from Harris County and the First District Court of Appeals, Houston For petitioner: James Eloi Doyle and Kimberly Hoesl, Houston For respondent: Jennifer H. Davidow, Houston The Supreme Court will hear arguments on whether an extension-of-time motion to remedy an medical-malpractice expert's report is fatally late if filed after an initial hearing on the defendant's dismissal motion. In this case alleging a hospital patient was injured when part of a bed collapsed, principal issues are (1) whether the claims implicate health-care liability and, if the claim poses medical-malpractice, (2) whether an extension-of-time motion to remedy an expert's report is fatally late if filed after an initial hearing on the defendant's dismissal motion. In the hospital recovering from back surgery, Marks fell after the footboard of his bed gave way when he grabbed it to pull himself out of bed. Among its allegations, his suit complained that the hospital failed to properly train its staff caring for him, failed to provide him necessary assistance, failed to provide a safe environment and failed to assemble the bed properly. St. Luke's moved to dismiss the suit because no expert report was filed on time. The trial court dismissed and a divided court of appeals affirmed the dismissal. 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
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MARSH USA INC. V. COOK (09-0558) - view video
9/16/2010 @ 10:40 AM (length 42:38)
Originating county: Dallas County
Originating from: 5th District Court of Appeals, Dallas
Case Documents
09-0558 Marsh USA Inc. and Marsh and McLennan Cos Inc. v. Rex Cook from Dallas County and the Fifth District Court of Appeals, Dallas For petitioners: Ms. Beverly A. Whitley, Dallas For respondent: Ms. Monica W. Latin, Dallas The issue is whether a non-competition agreement in exchange for stock options is unenforceable. Marsh sued Cook, a former employee, after Cook went to work in 2007 for a competitor. Two years earlier Cook exercised his stock option under an agreement that stipulated he would not work in the same type of business as Marsh's for two years if he left the company. Cook argues the non-compete agreement is unenforceable because, under Texas law, the stock-option deal must have given rise to the company's interest in restraining him from competing, such as promising him access to proprietary information, but the stock option did not. Both the trial court and the appeals court held the agreement to be unenforceable. 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
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MATTHEW W. WASSERMAN, M.D. V. GUGUL (10-0513) - view video
10/5/2011 @ 10:40 AM (length 49:36)
Originating county: Harris County
Originating from: 14th District Court of Appeals, Houston
Case Documents
10-0513 ?Matthew W. Wasserman, M.D. v. Christina Bergeron Gugel? from Harris County and the 14th District Court of Appeals, Houston? For petitioner: Holly H. Williamson, Houston ?For respondent: Reginald E. McKamie, Houston? For Amicus Curiae: Christopher Kaiser, Austin The issue is a whether a sexual assault alleged during a medical examination constitutes a health-care liability claim that would require an expert report. Gugel sued Wasserman for inappropriately touching her genitalia during an examination to determine the cause of pain and numbness in her lower back and legs and claimed he sexually harassed her in later calls. Wasserman moved to dismiss Gugel's complaint because she did not file a health-care expert report. The trial court denied the doctor's motion and 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
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MBM FINANCIAL CORP. V. THE WOODLANDS OPERATING CO., L.P. (08-0390) - view video
3/12/2009 @ 10:40 AM (length 42:36)
Originating county: Montgomery County
Originating from: 9th District Court of Appeals, Beaumont
Case Documents
Justice O'Neil is not sitting. 08-0390 MBM Financial Corp. and Marimom Business Systems Inc. v. The Woodlands Operating Co., L.P. from Montgomery County and the Ninth District Court of Appeals, Beaumont For petitioner: Jennifer Bruch Hogan, Houston For respondent/cross-petitioner: Karen D. Smith, The Woodlands Among principal issues are (1) whether the court of appeals erred by reversing an attorneys-fees award for a breach-of-contract allegation for which nominal damages were awarded; (2) whether the appeals court erred by determining attorneys fees were proper in a declaratory relief action; and (3) whether the court erred by failing to award fees for a fraud claim that arose from the contract 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
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MCALLEN HOSPITALS L.P. V. STATE FARM MUTUAL INSURANCE CO. OF TEXAS (12-0983) - view video
12/4/2013 @ 9:00 AM (length 48:02)
Originating county: Hidalgo County
Originating from: 13th District Court of Appeals, Corpus Christi & Edinburg
Case Documents
The issues are (1) whether a settlement check jointly payable to the hospital lienholder and claimant releases the insurer from liability under the state's hospital lien statute and (2) whether the hospital lienholder may sue the insurer when the settlement check was cashed with only the claimant's signature. In this case two people injured in accident caused by State Farm's insured got checks made out to them and to the hospital, which secured its reimbursement with hospital liens, and cashed them without the hospital's endorsement. The hospital sued to recover from State Farm, but the trial court awarded summary judgment for the insurance company. The appeals court affirmed, holding that State Farm met its statutory duty to comply with the lien and its release.
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MCGINNES INDUSTRIAL MANAGEMENT CORP. V. THE PHOENIX INSURANCE CO. (14-0465) - view video
1/15/2015 @ 9:50 AM (length 44:08)
Originating from: U.S. Court of Appeals, 5th Circuit
Case Documents
The Fifth Circuit asks whether under Texas law the Environmental Protection Agency's "potential responsible party" letters or unilateral administrative order, or both, threatening McGinnes with cleanup costs under the federal Superfund law, constitute a "suit" that would trigger the insurers' duty to defend under McGinnes' liability policies. McGinnes sued Phoenix and Travelers in federal court when Travelers refused to defend McGinnes against the EPA's threated action to recover waste-site cleanup costs and threatened penalties if McGinnes did not comply. In its refusal to defend, Travelers told McGinnes that EPA's actions under the Superfund law - the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation and Liability Act - were not a suit under McGinnes' commercial general-liability policy. The trial court agreed.
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MCI SALES AND SERVICE, INC. V. HINTON (09-0048) - view video
3/24/2010 @ 9:00 AM (length 50:36)
Originating county: McLennan County
Originating from: 10th District Court of Appeals, Waco
Case Documents
(Justice Green not sitting) 09-0048 MCI Sales and Service Inc. and Motor Coach Industries Mexico, S.A. de C.V. v. James Hinton from McLennan County and the 10th District Court of Appeals, Waco For petitioners: Thomas C. Wright, Houston For cross-petitioner/respondent: Craig T. Enoch, Austin, and Thomas K. Brown, Houston The principal issues in this suit involving a bus crash near Waco are (1) whether federal law preempts design-defect claims - that seatbelts should have been provided for bus passengers and laminated glass should have been installed on the bus - and (2) whether the trial court abused its discretion by refusing to submit the bus owners as a "settling party." Hinton sued the bus owners and its driver as well as the company that sold the bus, MCI, and the manufacturer, Motor Coach Industries, over a 2003 accident that killed seven people. Two months after the accident, the bus owners filed for bankruptcy, leaving insurance to be distributed by the bankruptcy court. MCI, tried on design-defect claims, tried to join the bus owners as responsible third parties and, when the trial court refused that, attempted to have the jury assess the owners' proportionate liability as either responsible third parties or settling parties. The trial court rejected that. The court of appeals held that federal regulations did not preempt the design-defect claims, but reversed on the trial court's refusal to submit the proportionate-liability question. 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
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MEDICAL CITY DALLAS, LTD. V. CARLISLE CORP. (06-0660) - view video
10/17/2007 @ 9:50 AM (length 42:33)
Originating county: Dallas County
Originating from: 5th District Court of Appeals, Dallas
Case Documents
06-0660 Medical Center Dallas Ltd. v. Carlisle Corp. from Dallas County and the Fifth District Court of Appeals, Dallas For petitioner: Robert B. Gilbreath, Dallas For respondent: Michael L. Knapek and William D. Ellerman, Dallas The Supreme Court will hear arguments on the issue of whether attorneys fees can be recovered in breach-of-warranty case. The issue is whether attorneys fees may be recovered in a warranty-breach action. In this case Medical Center sued Carlisle for breaching its written warranty of roofing materials against premature deterioration. Jurors awarded Medical Center $110,500 damages for the defective roof and more than $121,000 for attorneys fees. The court of appeals affirmed the judgment for warranty breach, but reversed on attorneys fees because the hospital's warranty claim was distinct from a breach-of-contract claim that would allow attorneys fees to be awarded. Justice Hecht not sitting.
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MEHRDAD MOAYEDI V. INTERSTATE 35/CHISAM ROAD L.P. AND MALACHI DEVELOPMENT CORP. (12-0937) - view video
1/8/2014 @ 9:00 AM (length 45:11)
Originating county: Dallas County
Originating from: 5th District Court of Appeals, Dallas
Case Documents
The principal issue is whether a guaranty's provision barring any defense prohibited the guarantor from using a statutory offset to factor foreclosed property's higher market price against a deficiency between the property's foreclosure price and the loan amount still owed. In the guaranty Moayedi agreed to waive any defense to his obligations under the agreement but answered Interstate 35's suit by relying on Texas Property Code section 51.003. Section 51.003 allows the higher fair-market value of foreclosed property to offset the difference between the loan amount owed and the foreclosure price. The trial court granted Moayedi summary judgment. In its review the appeals court reversed, holding that Moayedi waived his right to the section 51.003 offset.
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MEHTA V. MEHTA (23-0507)
Scheduled 2/18/2025 @ 9:00 AM (starts in 57 days, 19 hours, 40 minutes )
Originating county: Denton County
Originating from: 2nd District Court of Appeals, Fort Worth
Case Documents
The principal issue in this case is whether child-support payments should be considered when determining a spouse's eligibility for spousal maintenance.
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MEM'L HERMANN HEALTH SYS. V. GOMEZ (19-0872) - view video
10/28/2021 @ 9:00 AM (length 45:41)
Originating county: Harris County
Originating from: 1st District Court of Appeals, Houston
Case Documents
The principal issues in this defamation and business disparagement case are: (1) whether one of the statements the jury found to be defamatory had been published to a third party; (2) whether there was legally sufficient that another defamatory statement caused the plaintiff to suffer economic damages; (3) whether the statements were protected by qualified privilege; and (4) whether the plaintiff's expert testimony regarding causation and lost profits was conclusory.
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MERCEDES-BENZ USA LLC, ET AL. V. CARDUCO INC. (16-0644) - view video
12/4/2018 @ 9:00 AM (length 45:57)
Originating county: Cameron County
Originating from: 13th District Court of Appeals, Corpus Christi & Edinburg
Case Documents
In this case alleging fraud underlying a contract the issues are (1) whether reliance is precluded because the alleged misrepresentations conflict with the contract; (2) whether the contract's merger clause disclaiming reliance precludes fraud; (3) whether evidence supports that each defendant had a disclosure duty or gave affirmative misrepresentations; (4) whether separate jury instructions should have been presented on each fraud theory; (5) whether the appeals court improperly sustained a spoliation instruction; and (6) whether the appeals court erred by remitting punitive damages, from $100 million to $600,000.
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MERCK & CO., INC. V. GARZA (09-0073) - view video
1/20/2010 @ 9:00 AM (length 47:50)
Originating county: Starr County
Originating from: 4th District Court of Appeals, San Antonio
Case Documents
(Justice Willett and Justice Guzman not sitting) 09-0073 Merck & Co. Inc. v. Felicia Garza, et al. from Starr County and the Fourth District Court of Appeals, San Antonio For petitioner: Stephen G. Tipps, Houston For respondents: Kevin Dubose, Houston A principal issue is whether clinical-testing evidence showing a less-than-double risk in the general population, combined with other evidence, can legally prove toxic-injury causation under Havner's more-likely-than-not reliability standard. Garza sued Merck after her husband, who had a history of heart ailments, died of rare simultaneous arterial clots after taking Vioxx prescribed by his cardiologist. Merck challenged as legally insufficient Garza's expert testimony in a motion to disregard the jury verdict for Garza. The court of appeals initially reversed and rendered judgment for Merck, holding that Garza did not refute with reasonable certainty that her husband's pre-existing heart condition was a plausible cause of death. On rehearing, the appeals court held that Garza's expert testimony met Havner's requirements. 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
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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
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MICHAEL A. ZANCHI, M.D., MICHAEL A. ZANCHI, M.D., P.A., AND PARIS REGIONAL ANESTHESIA, P.A. V. REGINALD KEITH LANE, INDIVIDUALLY AND AS PERSONAL REPRESENTATIVE OF THE ESTATE OF JUAMEKA CYNARRA ROSS, DECEASED ET AL. (11-0826) - view video
1/8/2013 @ 9:50 AM (length 42:32)
Originating county: Lamar County
Originating from: 6th District Court of Appeals, Texarkana
Case Documents
The principal issues are (1) whether a health care-liability defendant who has not been served with process can be served as a party with an expert report to meet the statutory requirement for medical-malpractice claim; (2) if so, whether the expert report was properly served by certified mail; and (3) whether the plaintiff may be entitled to a due-diligence exception to the 120-day deadline if the report was not properly served. In this case Lane sent his expert report to Dr. Zanchi by certified mail to the hospital where the alleged negligence occurred and several other addresses. A receipt for only the one sent to the hospital was returned. Three previous attempts to serve process on Zanchi failed, but Lane's attorney did not determine that Zanchi was never served process until he readied service of the expert report and chose to serve it by certified mail. Zanchi was personally served with process 28 days past the statutory deadline for the expert report after the trial ordered substituted service. After a hearing, the trial court denied Zanchi's dismissal motion. The court of appeals affirmed the trial court in a split decision, with one dissent.
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MICHAEL MCINTYRE AND LAURA MCINTYRE V. EL PASO INDEPENDENT SCHOOL DISTRICT ET AL. (14-0732) - view video
11/2/2015 @ 10:40 AM (length 42:43)
Originating county: El Paso County
Originating from: 8th District Court of Appeals, El Paso
Case Documents
The issues in this case brought by home-schooling parents are (1) whether, under the Texas Education Code, the parents must exhaust administrative remedies before suing the school district; (2) whether school districts can require home-schooling parents to follow curriculum guidelines to assure a bona fide education; and, if so, (3) whether requiring a certain curriculum violates the parents' 14th Amendment liberty interests. A school district attendance officer threatened the McIntyres with violating compulsory-attendance laws when they would not answer requests for their curriculum for teaching their children. In response, the McIntyres sued. The trail court ruled against the school district on its jurisdictional plea, contending the court did not have subject-matter jurisdiction because the McIntyres did not exhaust administrative remedies or give pre-suit notice to the district. The court of appeals reversed.
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MICHAEL QUINN SULLIVAN V. SALEM ABRAHAM CONSOLIDATED FOR ARGUMENT WITH 14-0669 (14-0987) - view video
1/14/2016 @ 10:40 AM (length 52:06)
Originating county: Hemphill County
Originating from: 7th District Court of Appeals, Amarillo
Case Documents
The principal issues in these cases are (1) whether, in Greer, a public official's status as a libel plaintiff alleging harm from an online publication should be according to his notoriety in his community or assessed by the Internet's worldwide reach and (2) whether, in Sullivan, the text of the Texas Citizens' Participation Act allows "justice and equity" as a basis to reduce attorney fees or only for "other expenses" for a successful defendant defeating a libel claim under the statute. These appeals arise from a political blog post that initially alleged Abraham, a school-board member in Canadian, Texas, was forced by state troopers from a campaign event 230 miles from Canadian for a state representative he opposed. When Abraham complained that he left voluntarily and that troopers were not involved, the blog corrected the story in updates. Abraham then sued for libel, naming in one suit the organization and its director publishing the blog and in the other Sullivan, a political activist Abraham accused as the story's source. The trial court dismissed both suits, based on the Texas Citizens' Participation Act. The appeals court reversed both trial-court decisions. In Greer the court held that the blog did not relate to Abraham's conduct as a school trustee, thus the liability standard Abraham had to meet to avoid dismissal was not as great as the trial court ruled. In Sullivan the court of appeals affirmed the attorney fees and costs the trial court awarded Sullivan.
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MICHAEL ROBERT TEDDER V. GARDNER ALDRICH, LLP (11-0767) - view video
11/7/2012 @ 10:40 AM (length 42:16)
Originating county: Tarrant County
Originating from: 2nd District Court of Appeals, Fort Worth
Case Documents
The principal issues are (1) whether Family Code 3.201's two instances making a spouse liable for the other's debts establish the exclusive means to hold a spouse personally liable for the other spouse's debts; (2) whether the attorney fees for the spouse sued for divorce were necessities; and, if so, (3) whether the other spouse failed to discharge his support duty to make him personally liable for the fees. Tedder's wife retained the Gardner Aldrich law firm to represent her after Tedder sued for divorce and child custody. Her contract with the firm specified that she would be responsible for the attorney fees but that the firm would seek to collect from Tedder. Tedder paid $50,000 to the firm, but Gardner Aldrich intervened to secure its unpaid fees after the custody decision. The trial court awarded the firm $151,800 for its unpaid fees against the ex-wife and gave her judgment for fees against her ex-husband. Before the divorce decree was signed, however, Tedder and his ex-wife agreed to leave her solely liable for the fees. The trial court's judgment incorporated their agreement. Several days later she filed for Chapter 7 bankruptcy. On review, the appeals court reversed and rendered judgment against Tedder, holding that the fees were community debt and necessities for which he was jointly and severally liable.
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MICHAEL T. JELINEK, M.D. V. CASAS (08-1066) - view video
2/18/2010 @ 9:50 AM (length 45:05)
Originating county: Hidalgo County
Originating from: 13th District Court of Appeals, Corpus Christi & Edinburg
Case Documents
08-1066 Michael T. Jelinek, M.D., and Columbia Rio Grande Healthcare, L.P. v. Francisco Casas and Alfredo DeLeon Jr. from Hidalgo County and the 13th District Court of Appeals, Corpus Christi/Edinburg For petitioner Jelinek: I. Cecilia Garza, McAllen For petitioner Columbia: Sarah B. Duncan, Austin For respondents: John N. Mastin, San Antonio Principal issues are (1) whether the hospital preserved error in this medical-malpractice case when the claimed error concerns an instruction that is not in the record and (2) whether an expert report assessing the doctor's alleged negligence was inadequate for inferring support for the care standard and for causation. After first suing for wrongful death, Casas amended the petition to claim suffering and mental distress because his wife, after bowel surgery for a perforated colon and with a known infection, did not get antibiotics for four days because the hospital did not automatically renew her prescription. At one point in this lapse odor from the infection was so great fans were used to dissipate it. At trial, the hospital contends, it offered an "unavoidable accident" instruction that the court denied. But the instruction was not in the record. Jelinek, who prescribed the antibiotics but was on vacation when the prescription expired, argues that the expert report did not address how his deviation from the applicable care standard proximately caused Mrs. Casas' suffering and mental distress. The appeals court affirmed a jury award for Casas, holding that the claimed instructional error was not preserved, and affirmed the trial court's ruling that the expert report on Jelinek's alleged negligence was adequate. 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
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MICHAEL WILLIAMS, COMMISSIONER OF EDUCATION, ET AL. V. TEXAS TAXPAYER & STUDENT FAIRNESS COALITION, ET AL.; CALHOUN COUNTY ISD, ET AL.; EDGEWOOD ISD, ET AL.; FORT BEND ISD, ET AL.; TEXAS CHARTER SCHOOL ASSOCIATION, ET AL.; AND JOYCE COLEMAN, ET AL. (14-0776) - view video
9/1/2015 @ 9:00 AM (length 2:49:18)
Originating county: Travis County
Originating from: Direct appeal from Travis County
Case Documents
Among the principal issues: Whether the district court correctly denied the state's request to dismiss the constitutional claims on grounds that they are not capable of judicial resolution, the plaintiffs do not have standing to bring them and the claims are not ripe. The state argues in essence that financing schools is a policy consideration reserved to the Legislature and, even if the claims are justiciable, the school-district plaintiffs by seeking to enjoin the state from operating an unconstitutional public-school system do not have standing and the claims are not ripe because the Legislature has constructed a more-demanding system that is only in its beginning stages and cannot be evaluated yet. Whether the school-finance system is inadequate as a whole under the state constitution's Article VII, section 1 adequacy requirement and particularly whether it provides adequately for educating so-called English language learners - ELL students - and economically disadvantaged students. The state responds that the trial court's inadequacy ruling is based on financial "inputs" and not student performance - outputs - the standard it argues the Court has used in previous school-finance cases to evaluate adequacy. Whether the state's school system is constitutionally unsuitable under Article VII, section 1's suitability requirement. In response the state argues that suitability, the means to achieve a constitutionally adequate school system, is satisfied if the system is adequate. But the school-district plaintiffs contend an adequate school system can be unsuitable if the state fails to finance it sufficiently to meet the state's educational goals - they insist funding is not sufficient - and by the state's alleged failure to calculate the costs of providing an adequate education. Whether the school system fails the constitutional requirement that it be financially efficient. The state maintains that the gap between what so-called property-poor districts can raise by taxes and what property-wealthy districts raise has narrowed from when the Court held in the last school-finance decision that the school system was efficient. Whether the trial court erred by rejecting charter schools' particular claims that their state financing is inadequate, unsuitable and inefficient and that the state's provision for charters is unequal, relative to public schools'. Whether the trial court erred by denying intervenors' claims that the school system is "qualitatively" inefficient - that is, they argue among other factors, that mandated class sizes, limits on available charter schools and state teacher certifications breed waste, limit competition and further inefficiency. Whether the state's school-finance scheme imposes an unconstitutional statewide property tax. The standard for a statewide ad valorem tax, as the Court determined in the last school-finance decision, is whether essentially the state imposes a tax "cap" that leaves school districts with no meaningful discretion in raising and spending money.
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MIGA V. JENSEN (07-0123) - view video
10/14/2008 @ 9:00 AM (length 43:36)
Originating county: Tarrant County
Originating from: 2nd District Court of Appeals, Fort Worth
Case Documents
07-0123 Dennis L. Miga v. Ronald L. Jensen from Tarrant County and the Second District Court of Appeals, Fort Worth For petitioner: Jeffrey Levinger, Dallas For respondent: Warren W. Harris, Houston The Supreme Court will hear arguments on whether restitution is appropriate when judgment leading to a Rule 11 payment agreement is later reversed. The issue is whether restitution is appropriate when a party tenders payment under a Rule 11 agreement and the judgment leading to the agreement is later reversed on appeal. In this case Miga sued Jensen for breach of a stock-option agreement. He won a jury verdict, which the court of appeals affirmed. At that time Miga and Jensen agreed that Jensen would tender $23.4 million to the trial court to stem post-judgment interest. Under the agreement, Miga could withdraw from the account unconditionally. In an appeal of that judgment to this Court, the Court reversed for calculation of lost stock profits in the damages. Jensen then sued for restitution of the money tendered under the Rule 11 agreement. The trial court granted summary judgment for Jensen and a split 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
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MIGUEL ANGEL LOYA V. LETICIA B. LOYA (15-0763) - view video
3/21/2017 @ 9:00 AM (length 43:25)
Originating county: Harris County
Originating from: 1st District Court of Appeals, Houston
Case Documents
The principal issue is whether a medicated settlement agreement partitioning 2010 income to each spouse for filing individual tax returns and dividing future earnings as of June 2010 included a $4.5 million performance bonus Miguel Loya got in March 2011 as undisclosed property under the agreement. Subsidiary issues are (1) whether that discretionary bonus is community property after the divorce and (2) whether Leticia Loya's claim is precluded by the medicated agreement.
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MIGUEL HERNANDEZ, M.D. V. EBROM (07-0240) - view video
10/15/2008 @ 9:00 AM (length 36:33)
Originating county: Hidalgo County
Originating from: 13th District Court of Appeals, Corpus Christi & Edinburg
Case Documents
07-0240 Miguel Hernandez, M.D. v. Julious Ebrom and Richard Hunnicutt from Hidalgo County and the 13th District Court of Appeals, Corpus Christi/Edinburg For petitioner: I. Cecilia Garza, McAllen For respondents: Richard W. Hunnicutt, San Antonio The Supreme Court will hear arguments on whether failure to bring interlocutory appeal on dismissal denial waives the challenge. A principal issue in this medical-malpractice case is whether by failing to file an interlocutory appeal the defendant waived his challenge to the trial court's denial of his dismissal motion. The court of appeals held that it had no jurisdiction over Hernandez's appeal because he waited until after the plaintiff dropped the case and provided in the nonsuit that it could not be filed again. As amended, while this suit was pending in the trial court, the medical-malpractice statute stipulates that an interlocutory appeal may be taken from an order denying a dismissal motion. A key question is whether that provision is mandatory or permissive. 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
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MILES V. TEX. CEN. R.R. & INFRASTRUCTURE, INC. (20-0393) - view video
1/11/2022 @ 9:50 AM (length 1:06:59)
Originating county: Leon County
Originating from: 13th District Court of Appeals, Corpus Christi & Edinburg
Case Documents
At issue in this case is whether Texas Central qualifies as a "railroad company" or "interurban electric railway," and whether an entity must show reasonable probability of project completion to invoke eminent domain authority under Texas Rice Land Partners, LTD. v. Denbury Green Pipeline-Texas, LLC, 363 S.W.3d 192, 198, 202 (Tex. 2012). Texas Central intends to build, maintain, and operate a highspeed passenger railway between Houston and Dallas. Miles challenged Texas Central's eminent domain authority after the company attempted to survey Miles' property along the proposed route of the railway. Texas Central counterclaimed, seeking a declaratory judgment that the company was "railroad company" and "interurban electric railway" under the Texas Transportation Code. The trial court granted summary judgment for Miles. The court of appeals reversed, concluding that Texas Central was "operating a railroad" and thus, a "railroad company" under the statute. Additionally, the court of appeals concluded that, because Texas Central was chartered for the purpose required under the Transportation Code, the company also qualified as an "interurban electric railway."
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MILNER V. MILNER (10-0776) - view video
11/9/2011 @ 11:25 AM (length 42:22)
Originating county: Tarrant County
Originating from: 2nd District Court of Appeals, Fort Worth
Case Documents
10-0776 Jack Edward Milner v. Vicki Ann Milner from Tarrant County and the Second District Court of Appeals, Fort Worth For petitioner: Jeff Kobs, Fort Worth For respondent: Rebecca Tillery, Dallas In this appeal from a contest over property division, the principal issues are (1) whether a mediated settlement conveyed the husband's partnership in companies or just assigned rights to his interests; (2) whether contract law requirements - particularly a meeting of the minds - applies to enforcing a mediated settlement agreement; and (3) whether the divorce decree altered the settlement agreement by allegedly omitting substantive terms and conditions of the settlement. Upon divorce, Jack Milner agreed in a mediated settlement to convey to Vicki Milner his partnership interests in two limited partnerships. The settlement included consent signatures for Jack Milner's other partners because the partnership agreements required all partners agree to take on a new partner. One partner refused. When Vicki Milner tried to withdraw her consent to the medicated settlement, Jack Milner moved for an agreed final divorce decree that did not reference the other partners' necessary consent. After the trial court entered judgment on the mediated settlement and approved the final decree, Vicki Milner moved for a new trial, arguing that the final decree did not properly reflect the mediated settlement. The trial court denied the new-trial motion. The court of appeals reversed, holding in part that mediated settlement satisfied statutory requirements but not the mutual-consent requirement of contract law. 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
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MINTON V. GUNN (10-0141) - view video
3/1/2011 @ 9:50 AM (length 42:31)
Originating county: Tarrant County
Originating from: 2nd District Court of Appeals, Fort Worth
Case Documents
(Justice Hecht not sitting) 10-0141 Vernon F. Minton v. Jerry W. Gunn, et al. from Tarrant County and the Second District Court of Appeals, Fort Worth For petitioner: Mr. Thomas M. Michel, Fort Worth For respondents: Mr. David Keltner, Fort Worth A principal issue is whether the controlling question in this legal-malpractice suit arising from a patent-enforcement case is a substantial patent issue that must be answered exclusively by a federal court, that is, whether an exception (experimental-use doctrine) to a defense ("on sale" bar rule) could apply in the underlying patent litigation. Minton sued his attorneys for alleged malpractice, claiming he lost $100 million as a result of their failure to plead an exception to a defense. In the first suit, Minton sued to enforce a patent for an online stock-trading program. The trial court in that litigation granted summary judgment for the defendants because Minton supposedly offered his program for sale more than a year before applying for a patent. By itself, that would trigger the on-sale bar rule, which invalidates a patent if the product is offered for sale for commercial use more than a year before the patent application. The question in this case is whether Minton's attorneys failed to plead the exception to that rule, the experimental-use doctrine. Under the exception, a product offered for test or experiment more than a year before a patent application can negate the on-sale bar rule. The court of appeals affirmed, holding in part that the case presented factual questions, not issues requiring federal court interpretation that would control the state malpractice suit. 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
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MIRTA ZORRILLA V. AYPCO CONSTRUCTION II LLC AND JORGE LUIS MUNOZ (14-0067) - view video
3/26/2015 @ 9:50 AM (length 42:47)
Originating county: Hidalgo County
Originating from: 13th District Court of Appeals, Corpus Christi & Edinburg
Case Documents
The issues in this contract-breach and fraud case are (1) whether, as the court of appeals held, statutory limits on exemplary damages must be pleaded as an affirmative defense and (2) whether the appeals court erred by affirming prejudgment interest, lien foreclosures and a fraud finding without considering the jury's contract-breach finding to be legally and factually sufficient. Aypco sued Zorrilla after she allegedly quit paying for Aypco's work under a contract to build her house and for additional work not covered by the contract she ordered on another house. A jury found for the contractor on both the breach-of-contract and fraud claims. The trial court awarded slightly more than $56,000 in actual damages and $250,000 in exemplary damages, plus interest and fees, after Aypco elected to recover for fraud. The court also ordered mechanic's and materialman's liens on Zorrilla's two properties foreclosed to satisfy the judgment. The court of appeals affirmed.
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MISSION CONSOLIDATED ISD V. GARCIA (10-0802) - view video
1/10/2012 @ 9:50 AM (length 40:51)
Originating county: Hidalgo County
Originating from: 13th District Court of Appeals, Corpus Christi & Edinburg
Case Documents
10-0802 Mission Consolidated Independent School District v. Gloria Garcia from Hidalgo County and the 13th District Court of Appeals, Corpus Christi/Edinburg For petitioner: David P. Hansen, Austin For respondent: Savannah Robinson, Danbury Two principal issues in this age-discrimination claim are (1) whether a prima-facie case can be established when the replacement worker is older than the discharged employee bringing the claim and (2) whether the 60-day filing deadline in the Texas Commission on Human Rights Act includes within it service of process and, if so, whether compliance is jurisdictional. Garcia, who was 48 when she was fired, sued the district for discrimination after filing her administrative complaint with the Texas Workforce Commission. Mission school district moved to dismiss the lawsuit, based on a jurisdictional plea because Garcia failed to state jurisdictional facts to support her age-discrimination claim by showing her work replacement was older than she was. The trial court denied the district's plea. The appeals court affirmed on the age claim, reasoning that the district's contention that Garcia's replacement was three years older did not conclusively negate the required element that she might "otherwise show that she was discharged because of age" apart from showing her replacement was younger. 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
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MITCHELL V. MAP RESOURCES, INC. (21-0124) - view video
2/22/2022 @ 9:00 AM (length 49:22)
Originating county: El Paso County
Originating from: 8th District Court of Appeals, El Paso
Case Documents
At issue in this case is whether courts are barred from considering deed records in a collateral attack on a default judgment. A second issue is whether a rule that bars such evidence shields a default judgment from an otherwise meritorious due process claim. Other issues raised are whether a property owner’s due process rights were violated in obtaining the default judgment and whether the doctrine of laches or provisions in the Tax Code bar a collateral attack on the judgment.
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MO. PAC. R.R. V. LIMMER (06-0023) - view video
11/13/2007 @ 9:00 AM (length 49:34)
Originating county: Harris County
Originating from: 14th District Court of Appeals, Houston
Case Documents
Missouri Pacific Railroad Co. v. Patricia Limmer, et al. from Harris County and the 14th District Court of Appeals, Houston For petitioner: Mike A. Hatchell, Austin For cross-petitioners/respondents: Deborah G. Hankinson, Dallas, and David Gunn, Houston The Supreme Court will hear arguments on the issue of whether state negligence claim is preempted if federal money improved a railroad crossing. In this case involving a fatal car-train collision, the principal issues are (1) whether federal law preempts a state negligence claim alleging inadequate warning at an "extra-hazardous" railroad crossing if remedial provisions were provided under federal programs and (2) whether a party objecting to a jury instruction allegedly presenting an erroneous negligence theory must also object to the form of an apportionment question including the erroneous theory. Missouri Pacific argues that federal law preempts the negligence claim, but Limmer counters that the railroad did not establish federal money was used for a warning device at the accident crossing. Limmer also contends that Missouri Pacific failed to object properly to the apportionment-of-damages jury question. The trial court set damages based on a jury finding the railroad was 85 percent negligent in part because the warning sign was obscured by rock piles and overgrown vegetation. The court of appeals reversed.
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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
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MONCRIEF OIL INTERNATIONAL INC. V. OAO GAZPROM (11-0195) - view video
2/6/2013 @ 9:00 AM (length 46:03)
Originating county: Tarrant County
Originating from: 2nd District Court of Appeals, Fort Worth
Case Documents
A principal issue is whether the review standard should be greater than deference when a trial court grants a special appearance to contest personal jurisdiction without live testimony. In the underlying case Moncrief alleges Gazprom, a Russian company, used trade secrets it acquired in Texas pursuant to negotiating a joint venture with Moncrief to establish a competing gas-production and marketing firm. In response Gazprom says its purpose in the Texas discussions was to settle a related federal lawsuit. Without hearing live testimony, the trial court granted Gazprom's special appearance. The court of appeals affirmed.
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MONTGOMERY COUNTY V. PARK (05-1023) - view video
3/20/2007 @ 10:40 AM (length 49:30)
Originating county: Montgomery County
Originating from: 10th District Court of Appeals, Waco
Case Documents
05-1023 Montgomery County v. David Park from Montgomery County and the 10th District Court of Appeals, Waco In this retaliation action, the principal issues are (1) whether elimination of job duties that indirectly may affect pay constitutes an adverse personnel action under the Whistleblower Act and (2) whether alleged sexual harassment by a county commissioner reported to the sheriff's office or the county attorney constitutes a good-faith report to "an appropriate law enforcement authority." Park, a sheriff's lieutenant, sued the county after the commissioner he reported prompted a change in security-staffing responsibility for the county convention center. Because Park was responsible for scheduling convention-center security officers - including himself - he lost extra pay. His base compensation was unchanged. The trial court granted summary judgment for the county, but the court of appeals reversed, holding in part that Park raised material fact issues, including whether his work assignment and pay were adversely affected.
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MYRAD PROPERTIES, INC. V. LASALLE BANK NAT'L ASSOCIATION (08-0444) - view video
3/31/2009 @ 9:50 AM (length 45:35)
Originating county: Bell County
Originating from: 3rd District Court of Appeals, Austin
Case Documents
08-0444 Myrad Properties Inc. v. LaSalle Bank National Association from Bell County and the Third District Court of Appeals, Austin For petitioner: Miguel S. Rodriguez, Austin For respondents: Keith M. Aurzada, Dallas In this action to set aside a property sale following foreclosure the principal issues are (1) whether the foreclosure notice was sufficient, given that two properties were subject to foreclosure but only one was described, and (2) whether a correction deed may be used to add an additional property following a foreclosure sale. Myrad sued to declare its ownership in the larger of two apartment complexes supposedly conveyed by the foreclosure sale, arguing that the larger complex was not described in the foreclosure notice and that its indebtedness was satisfied by the foreclosure-sale proceeds. LaSalle, which held the note and bid at the sale, filed a corrected deed that included both apartment complexes in the sale. The trial court ruled for LaSalle, declaring the sale conveyed both properties and holding the correction deed valid. 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
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NABORS DRILLING, U.S.A., INC. V. ESCOTO (06-0890) - view video
2/5/2008 @ 10:40 AM (length 40:28)
Originating county: Willacy County
Originating from: 13th District Court of Appeals, Corpus Christi & Edinburg
Case Documents
06-0890 Nabors Drilling, U.S.A. Inc. v. Francisca Escoto, et al. from Willacy County and the 13th District Court of Appeals, Corpus Christi/Edinburg For petitioner: Reagan W. Simpson, Houston For respondents: Alex M. Miller, San Antonio The Supreme Court will hear arguments on the issue of whether employer has duty to protect against danger of its fatigued employee en route home. The principal issues are (1) whether an employer has a duty to protect third parties from a fatigued employee en route home after a 12-hour shift and (2) whether the employee has a duty to train its employees about the dangers of fatigue. In this case Escoto sued Nabors after four members of her family died in a car accident allegedly caused by Nabor's employee on his way home after working five 12-hour graveyard shifts. Escoto alleged that Nabors was liable it had a duty to protect other people when its employee drove home after a exhausting shift and because the company failed to train its employees how to handle fatigue. The trial court entered a judgment in Nabor's favor after a jury verdict for Escoto, reasoning that Nabor did not owe a duty to Escoto. The court of appeals reversed.
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NABORS WELL SERVICES LTD. AND LAURO BERNAL GARCIA V. ASUNCION ROMERO, ET AL. (13-0136) - view video
10/9/2014 @ 9:00 AM (length 50:58)
Originating county: Pecos County
Originating from: 8th District Court of Appeals, El Paso
Case Documents
The issue in this motor vehicle-accident case is whether evidence that a seat belt was not used should be admissible to mitigate damages. Aydee Romero's estate sued Nabors and its tanker-transport truck driver for Romero's death and other passengers' injuries resulting from an early morning crash outside Fort Stockton. Romero and the other passengers were thrown from the Chevrolet Suburban as it rolled after hitting the tanker truck when passing. At trial, Nabors offered doctors' testimony that the passengers' injuries indicated they were not wearing seat belts and offered an expert's conclusion that failure to employ the seat belts probably caused the injuries. But the trial court refused to admit the testimony. Jurors found both Nabors and the truck driver negligent and awarded damages. The appeals court affirmed the trial court's decision to exclude the seat-belt evidence. It reasoned that the Legislature's repeal of two statutes barring seat-belt evidence did not overturn Carnation Co. v. Wong, a 1974 decision barring such evidence and predating the statutes. In this appeal Nabors argues (1) that the Legislature's repeal should imply that seat-belt evidence is admissible to mitigate damages and (2) that Carnation should be overturned because it was based on contributory evidence, not the proportionate-responsibility framework Texas follows today.
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NAFTA TRADERS, INC. V. QUINN (08-0613) - view video
10/8/2009 @ 9:50 AM (length 45:19)
Originating county: Dallas County
Originating from: 5th District Court of Appeals, Dallas
Case Documents
08-0613 Nafta Traders Inc. v. Margaret A. Quinn from Dallas County and the Fifth District Court of Appeals, Dallas For petitioner: Alan L. Busch, Dallas For respondent: Janette Johnson, Dallas The principal issues are (1) whether the Federal Arbitration Act preempts the Texas arbitration statute on expanded judicial review if the federal act applies to an arbitration clause in this case and, if the Texas Arbitration Act is applicable, (2) whether under the state act parties can agree to limit an arbitrator's scope of authority or expand judicial review of an arbitration award. In this case Nafta challenged a $200,000 arbitration award to Quinn on her age- and sex- discrimination and retaliation claims. An arbitration provision in the company's employee handbook barred arbitration awards that contained reversible legal error or that applied a cause of action or remedy not expressly provided by law. Quinn argues that federal arbitration law controls, which, under Hall Street Associates v. Mattel, does not allow judicial review to be expanded by agreement beyond what the statute provides. The trial court confirmed the arbitration award for Quinn. The court of appeals held that Hall similarly restricted the Texas Arbitration Act. 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
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NATURAL GAS PIPELINE CO. OF AMERICA V. JUSTISS (10-0451) - view video
10/5/2011 @ 9:00 AM (length 42:58)
Originating county: Lamar County
Originating from: 6th District Court of Appeals, Texarkana
Case Documents
10-0451? Natural Gas Pipeline Company of America v. William Justiss, et al.? from Lamar County and the Sixth District Court of Appeals, Texarkana? For petitioner: Brett Busby, Houston? For respondents: James R. Rodgers, Paris? The issues are (1) whether sufficient evidence supported permanent nuisance claims that accrued within the two-year statutory limitations; (2) whether property owners' testimony was sufficient to support diminution-in-value damage to their property; and (3) whether prejudgment interest was proper if plaintiffs did not segregate past and future damages. In this case Justiss and other property owners sued over what they claim was "unbearable" noise and odor from a natural gas-compressor station built in 1992. Noise and odor complaints began shortly after the station began oprating. Justiss filed suit two months after the state cited the compressor station in 1998 for exceeding permitted emissions levels. After a jury trial, the trial court awarded more than $2.2 million for declining property values and almost $650,000 in interest. The court of appeals affirmed, holding sufficient evidence supported 1998 as the date the cause of action accrued. 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
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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.
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NESTLE USA, INC. V. COMBS (11-0855) - view video
1/12/2012 @ 10:40 AM (length 1:08:47)
Originating from: Original proceeding filed in the Supreme Court of Texas
Case Documents
11-0855 Nestle USA Inc. v. Susan Combs, Comptroller, and Greg Abbott, Attorney General Direct appeal For plaintiff: Peter A. Nolan, Austin For respondent/real party interest: Rance L. Craft, Austin In this constitutional challenge to the state franchise tax, the principal issues are (1) whether the 2006 statutory procedure permitting a direct constitutional challenge to the franchise tax in this Court allows a taxpayer to sue without first paying its tax bill under protest; if so, (2) whether the tax violates the state constitutional prohibition against taxes that are not equal and uniform; (3) whether the franchise tax violates the federal constitution's equal-protection clause; (4) whether it violates Nestle's 14th amendment's federal due-process protection; and (5) whether the tax violates Nestle's protection under the federal constitution's commerce clause by discriminating against interstate commerce. 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
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NEW TEX. AUTO AUCTION SERVS., L.P. V. DE HERNANDEZ (06-0550) - view video
10/17/2007 @ 9:00 AM (length 44:00)
Originating county: Hidalgo County
Originating from: 13th District Court of Appeals, Corpus Christi & Edinburg
Case Documents
06-0550 New Texas Auto Auction Services, L.P. v. Graciela Gomez de Hernandez, et al. from Hidalgo County and the 13th District Court of Appeals, Corpus Christi/Edinburg For petitioner: Scott T. Clark and Roger W. Hughes, Harlingen For respondents: Rebecca E. Hamilton, Dallas The Supreme Court will hear arguments on the issue of whether auctioneers are 'sellers' in products-liability actions. In this case principal issues are (1) whether auto auctioneers can be "sellers" subject to strict liability and (2) whether the auctioneer was negligent for selling a vehicle subject to a defective-tire recall notice. Hernandez sued New Texas Auto Auction after a wreck in Mexico that killed her husband when he was driving an SUV the auction service owned and sold at auction to another auctioneer. The second auctioneer later sold the SUV to a dealer, which then sold it to Hernandez's husband. She alleges the tire defect caused the accident and claims both strict liability, based on the auctioneer as seller, and negligence because New Texas sold the vehicle with defective tires. New Texas Auto Auction argues that Texas should adopt the Third Restatement of Torts, which excludes auctioneers as sellers. The trial court granted summary judgment for the auctioneer on the strict-liability question and for Hernandez on the negligence issue. The court of appeals reversed on the strict-liability claim.
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NICOLE VAN DORN PRESTON ET AL. V. M1 SUPPORT SERVICES L.P. (20-0270) - view video
9/14/2021 @ 10:40 AM (length 42:14)
Originating county: Denton County
Originating from: 2nd District Court of Appeals, Fort Worth
Case Documents
In this cas.e from a Navy helicopter accident principals issues are (1) whether the appeals court applied the proper review standard to the contractor's jurisdictional plea; (2) whether Texas's political-question doctrine applies in domestic settings; (3) whether the appeals court erred when it affirmed the case as presenting a nonjusticiable political question; (4) whether the political-question doctrine necessarily applies when the government-contractor defense has been invoked; and (5) whether allocating fault to nonparties renders the case nonjusticiable.
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NORTHLAND INDUSTRIES INC. ET AL. V. GILBERT KOUBA ET AL. (19-0835) - view video
10/7/2020 @ 10:40 AM (length 41:01)
Originating county: Colorado County
Originating from: 1st District Court of Appeals, Houston
Case Documents
The issues in this wrongful-death case, involving assumed liabilities from the sale of a treadmill manufacturer, are (1) whether the appeals court properly defined a product-liability claim under the assets-sale agreement to require both bodily injury and property damage; (2) whether the appeals court erred by holding that the company buying the other assumed the implied warranty of merchantability under the agreement; and (3) whether the cause of action for breach of the implied merchantability warranty constitutes a product-liability claim.
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OCCIDENTAL CHEMICAL CORP. V. JASON JENKINS (13-0961) - view video
9/3/2015 @ 9:50 AM (length 44:47)
Originating county: Harris County
Originating from: 1st District Court of Appeals, Houston
Case Documents
The issues are (1) whether a jury finding that a former plant owner's licensed engineers supervised equipment design blamed for a worker's injury satisfies a 10-year repose statute barring a lawsuit against licensed engineers who design, plan or supervise real-property improvements; (2) whether evidence conclusively established the former plant owner constructed the equipment to invoke a 10-year repose statute that would protect it from suit; and (3) whether recovery should be barred because the plaintiff failed to get jury findings supporting premise-liability or products-liability claims. Jenkins, injured when acid-adjustment machinery allegedly malfunctioned, sued Occidental for negligence in 2007, claiming Occidental negligently designed the acid-adjustment system 15 years earlier An Occidental engineer supervised the design team, which included licensed engineers and others who were not. An Occidental employee who oversaw the machinery's fabrication was not a licensed engineer. Based on the repose statutes, the trial court granted Occidental judgment despite the jury's verdict for Jenkins. The court of appeals reversed.
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ODELL CAMPBELL, ET AL. V. THOMAS A. WILDER, TARRANT COUNTY DISTRICT CLERK (14-0379) - view video
9/23/2015 @ 9:00 AM (length 45:41)
Originating county: Tarrant County
Originating from: 2nd District Court of Appeals, Fort Worth
Case Documents
The issues are (1) whether a second trial court has jurisdiction to enjoin execution of another's judgment and (2) whether the district clerk acted without authority by attempting to collect litigation costs from indigent parties. In this case the district clerk assessed Campbell and others divorced in Tarrant County court costs despite uncontested affidavits that they were indigent. In each case the decrees cited that individual costs would be borne by the parties. After Campbell and others sued, the cases were consolidated in a district court different from those that granted the divorces. That court then enjoined the clerk from collecting the court costs. A divided appeals court reversed and dismissed, holding that only the courts that issued the decrees had jurisdiction to enjoin the district clerk.
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OFFSHORE SPECIALTY FABRICATORS, INC. V. WELLINGTON UNDERWRITING AGENCIES, LTD. (08-0890) - view video
9/14/2010 @ 9:50 AM (length 46:30)
Originating county: Harris County
Originating from: 14th District Court of Appeals, Houston
Case Documents
08-0890 Offshore Specialty Fabricators Inc., et al. v. Wellington Underwriting Agencies Ltd., et al. from Harris County and the 14th District Court of Appeals, Houston For petitioner Houston Exploration Co., S. Shawn Stephens, Houston For petitioner Offshore Specialty Fabricators, Harry L. Scarborough, Houston For respondents: Glenn R. Legge, Houston A principal issue in this insurance appeal is whether lined-through policy language should be considered as evidence that parties did not intend coverage. Offshore Specialty Fabricators, under contract to build an offshore oil platform, sued the underwriters when they refused to pay under an "all-risks" policy for keeping repair ships on standby during storms in the Gulf of Mexico. In contracting for coverage, the parties crossed through language providing "standby charges." The trial court granted the offshore-rig builder summary judgment, ruling that the crossed-through language showed intent for a policy that otherwise was not ambiguous. In reversing that, the appeals court held that the stricken language showed unambiguous intent not to cover standby changes. 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
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OGLETREE V. MATTHEWS (06-0502) - view video
4/10/2007 @ 10:40 AM (length 45:18)
Originating county: Travis County
Originating from: 3rd District Court of Appeals, Austin
Case Documents
06-0502 Jan N. Ogletree, M.D., and Heart Hospital of Austin v. Nancy Kay Matthews and Luann Matthews from Travis County and the Third District Court of Appeals, Austin For petitioners: TBA For respondents: Charles J. Young, Austin Principal issues in this medical-malpractice action are whether, under House Bill 4 amendments, (1) interlocutory appeal is available to challenge the trial court's decision to deny a dismissal motion based on an expert report's deficiency when the court also granted an extension to cure it; (2) whether those deficiencies can be cured by a report from a new expert; and (3) whether a defendant - the hospital in this case - waives a challenge to an expert report by not objecting to omission of a report addressing the required causation element. In this case the deficient expert report bearing on a physician's alleged negligence noted that another expert was needed to support the malpractice claim. Experts assessing the hospital's nursing care were nurses, who under the malpractice statute cannot offer an opinion that links negligence to the cause of death or injury. The hospital did not object to the expert reports until it moved to dismiss the case. The trial court denied the physician's and the hospital's dismissal motions, granted an extension to the cure the report on the physician's care and held the hospital waived its objection to reports on nursing care by objecting too late. The court of appeals affirmed.
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ONCOR ELEC. DELIVERY CO. LLC V. DALLAS AREA RAPID TRANSIT (11-0079) - view video
1/11/2012 @ 10:40 AM (length 34:04)
Originating county: Dallas County
Originating from: 5th District Court of Appeals, Dallas
Case Documents
11-0079 Oncor Electric Delivery Co. LLC v. Dallas Area Rapid Transit and Fort Worth Transportation Authority from Dallas County and the Fifth District Court of Appeals, Dallas For petitioner: James C. Ho, Houston For respondents: Joycell Hollins, Dallas For amicus curiae Liberty Institute: Kelly J. Shackelford, Plano Three principal issues in this condemnation case involving the Trinity Railway Express commuter-rail line are (1) whether Oncor has authority to condemn an easement for a transmission line above the railway authority's tracks and, if so, (2) whether Trinity Railway Express has immunity from suit in such a condemnation proceeding; and (3) whether House Bill 971 (Texas Utility Code section 37.053, allowing all approved transmission lines across all public land except that owned by the state) applies. 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
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PASTOR RICK BARR V. CITY OF SINTON (06-0074) - view video
3/22/2007 @ 10:40 AM (length 45:44)
Originating county: San Patricio County
Originating from: 13th District Court of Appeals, Corpus Christi & Edinburg
Case Documents
06-0074 Pastor Rick Barr and Philemon Homes Inc. v. City of Sinton from San Patricio County and the 13th District Court of Appeals, Corpus Christi/Edinburg In this case, a challenge to a zoning restriction on houses for parolees established as a ministry, the principal issues are (1) whether the Texas Religious Freedom Restoration Act requires the city to accommodate the houses despite zoning prohibiting them and (2) whether the act requires the city to prove the regulation is the least-restrictive means of furthering a compelling governmental interest. Barr sued to declare that the zoning violates state constitutional protection and the Religious Freedom Restoration Act because it prohibits a correctional or rehabilitation facility within 1,000 feet of the church - in this case, the church that sponsors them. The trial court held that the zoning was not a substantial burden Barr's religious beliefs. The court of appeals affirmed.
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PATRICK O. OJO V. FARMERS GROUP, INC. (10-0245) - view video
10/14/2010 @ 10:40 AM (length 44:43)
Originating from: U.S. Court of Appeals, 5th Circuit
Case Documents
10-0245 Patrick O. Ojo, et al. v. Farmers Group Inc., et al. certified question from the U.S. Court of Appeals, Ninth Circuit For appellants: Sanford Svetcov, San Francisco For appellees: Harriet S. Posner, Los Angeles The ultimate issue in this class action, alleging credit scoring for pricing insurance discriminates against minority policyholders, is whether anti-discrimination provisions in Texas insurance and fair housing laws are broad enough to include unintended discriminatory effects. In its opinion certifying the question to this Court, the Ninth Circuit holds that the federal Fair Housing Act prohibits "impact" discrimination in denial and pricing of homeowners insurance. The federal court also holds that the McCarran-Ferguson Act, which essentially prohibits federal law from interfering with state insurance law, applies to claims brought under later-enacted civil rights statutes such as the Fair Housing Act. The court then certifies the "dispositive question" whether Texas law permits an insurance company to price insurance by using credit-score factors that have a racially disparate impact that, were it not for the McCarran-Ferguson Act, would violate the Fair Housing Act. Texas Supreme Court advisory Contact: Osler McCarthy, Staff Attorney for Public Information (512) 463.1441 or email: osler.mccarthy@courts.state.tx.us
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PERRY HOMES V. CULL (05-0882) - view video
3/20/2007 @ 9:50 AM (length 43:15)
Originating county: Tarrant County
Originating from: 2nd District Court of Appeals, Fort Worth
Case Documents
05-0882 Perry Homes, et al. v. Robert E. Cull and S. Jane Cull from Tarrant County and the Second District Court of Appeals, Fort Worth The principal issues are (1) whether a defendant must show prejudice to establish that plaintiffs waived their arbitration rights and (2) whether the defendant is prejudiced by the plaintiffs' pretrial discovery that would not have been available in arbitration. In this case the Culls initially resisted arbitration of their complaints against Perry Homes about construction defects. The Culls argued that arbitration was unconscionable because the chosen arbitration procedure was expensive and biased. After they pursued discovery for close to a year before trial, the Culls then moved for arbitration. Perry opposed their motion, contending the Culls had waived their right to arbitrate. The trial court granted the Culls' motion. Perry challenged the Culls' arbitration award, but the trial court confirmed it and the court of appeals affirmed.
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PERTHUIS V. BAYLOR MIRACA GENETICS LABORATORIES (21-0036) - view video
2/2/2022 @ 10:40 AM (length 49:42)
Originating county: Harris County
Originating from: 1st District Court of Appeals, Houston
Case Documents
The issue in this case is whether a sales executive who negotiated a long-term contract but was terminated before any sales were made is entitled to a million-dollar commission. Baylor Miraca Genetics Laboratories hired Brandon Perthuis to help develop genetic tests and serve as the company’s head of sales. Perthuis's employment agreement stated "Your commission will be 3.5% of your net sales" but did not define "net sales" or explain the parameters of the commission structure.
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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.
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PHILLIPS PETROLEUM COMPANY, GPM GAS CORPORATION, PHILLIPS GAS MARKETING COMPANY, PHILLIPS GAS COMPANY, AND GPM GAS TRADING COMPANY V. ROYCE YARBROUGH (12-0198) - view video
1/10/2013 @ 10:40 AM (length 43:08)
Originating county: Fort Bend County
Originating from: 14th District Court of Appeals, Houston
Case Documents
This and the related 12-0199 action involve a royalty-owners class suing for underpayment the issues are (1) whether interlocutory review or relief by mandamus or prohibition are proper to force the trial court to reconsider class certification by res judicata issues the Court arguably ordered be reconsidered on remand in the previous appeal, Bowden v. Phillips Petroleum Co.; (2) whether the Supreme Court has interlocutory jurisdiction to review the trial court's addition of implied-covenant-to-market claims on remand by the certified class and (3) whether the implied-covenant-to-market claims should be struck as matter of law. As to the first issue, Phillips and ConocoPhillips argue that Bowden required reconsideration of the class certification based on the res judicata issues. Yarbrough counters that Bowden confirmed class certification of the subclass in this appeal and ordered res judicata be considered only if the trial court certified a new class.
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PINE OAK BUILDERS, INC. V. GREAT AMERICAN LLOYDS INS. CO. (06-0867) - view video
2/7/2008 @ 9:50 AM (length 42:03)
Originating county: Harris County
Originating from: 14th District Court of Appeals, Houston
Case Documents
06-0867 Pine Oak Builders Inc. v. Great American Lloyds Insurance Co. from Harris County and the 14th District Court of Appeals, Houston For petitioner: Joseph H. Pedigo, Houston, and Joe S. Yardas, Conroe For respondent: Jennifer Bruch Hogan, Houston The Supreme Court will hear arguments on the principal issue of when duty to defend is triggered and whether evidence extrinsic to pleadings may be admitted to invoke a policy's duty to defend. The principal issues are (1) whether evidence outside the pleadings and policy provisions may be introduced to determine a duty to defend and (2) whether the "exposure rule" or "manifestation rule" should determine when the duty to defend is triggered under an insurance policy. In this case Pine Oak sued two insurers with which it had commercial general liability policies (each insurer for a different policy period) after the insurers refused to defend the homebuilder from lawsuits filed by home buyers. Both insurers argued Pine Oak's policies did not cover the home buyers' claims. Great American contends its policy with Pine Oak did not cover Pine Oak's own work - but would cover subcontractors' work - and one home buyer's suit only cited Pine Oak's work in its allegations. In that case, Pine Oak argues that it should be allowed to prove by evidence beyond the lawsuit pleadings that a subcontractor's work was at issue. Great American argues that its duty to defend Pine Oak also should depend on when the construction defects were manifest rather than when the exposure to harmful conditions began. The trial court granted summary judgment for the insurers. The court of appeals affirmed the trial court's ruling that extrinsic evidence should not be allowed to show coverage, but reversed on when coverage was triggered.
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PLAINS EXPLORATION & PRODUCTION CO. V. TORCH ENERGY ADVISORS INC. (13-0597) - view video
2/24/2015 @ 9:50 AM (length 43:08)
Originating county: Harris County
Originating from: 1st District Court of Appeals, Houston
Case Documents
The issues in this dispute over reimbursed bonuses from rescinded federal offshore-mineral leases are (1) whether disposing assets that a contract expressly excludes should be decided by contract law or by equity (the appeals court decided the case by equity) and (2) whether Torch Energy, which conveyed its lease interests by two contracts to Plains Exploration, excluded claims to the repaid bonuses under either contract. After the federal claims court ordered the federal government to reimburse the mineral-right holders what they had paid (Plains' share was $83 million) Torch sued Plains for half of that. The trial court rejected Torch's contract-breach claims and its equitable claim for money "had and received." The appeals court affirmed the trial court's ruling that Plains had not breached its contract with Torch, but found the contract ambiguous on the bonus reimbursement and remanded Torch's claim that Plains owed Torch for money had and received.
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PLAINSCAPITAL BANK V. WILLIAM MARTIN (13-0337) - view video
9/18/2014 @ 9:50 AM (length 42:41)
Originating county: Collin County
Originating from: 5th District Court of Appeals, Dallas
Case Documents
A principal issue in this challenge, involving a statutory-offset provision to determine how much a borrower may owe a lender after a foreclosed property sale, is whether the lender may calculate the loan deficiency based on the property's actual resale price rather than the foreclosure-sale price. The bank foreclosed after Martin defaulted on a $790,400 loan for a speculative house he built in 2006. The bank then bought the house at a foreclosure sale for $539,000, based on its calculation that the house's fair-market value was $770,000 and deducting its foreclosure costs. Fifteen months later the bank sold it for $599,000, crediting Martin $599,000 and adding post-foreclosure costs before it sold the house to calculate his loan deficiency. Martin sued, arguing that the statutory offset applied: that what he owed the bank should have been the difference between how much he owed on the loan when the bank foreclosed and the $539,000 the bank paid for the house. The trial court granted the bank summary judgment on its calculation, ruling that the offset did not apply because the bank credited Martin for the higher price it sold the house. The court of appeals reversed, holding the offset provision applied.
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PLEASANT GLADE ASSEMBLY OF GOD V. SCHUBERT (05-0916) - view video
4/12/2007 @ 9:00 AM (length 47:48)
Originating county: Tarrant County
Originating from: 2nd District Court of Appeals, Fort Worth
Case Documents
Pleasant Glade Assembly of God, et al. v. Laura Schubert from Tarrant County and the Second District Court of Appeals, Fort Worth For petitioners: David M. Pruessner, Dallas For respondent: William O. Wuester, Fort Worth. The Supreme Court will hear arguments on the issue of whether mental-anguish damages may be awarded for post-traumatic stress. The principal issues in this false-imprisonment and assault case are (1) whether mental-anguish damages may be awarded based on a post-traumatic stress diagnosis and (2) whether the expert testimony on post-traumatic stress syndrome was reliable. In this case, the daughter of an Assembly of God missionary alleged that members and ministers of a Colleyville church unlawfully restrained her when she was 17 for two hours on two occasions by holding her down and praying over her. In the first instance she told church members she saw a "vision," then collapsed. She claims she was carried into a church classroom and, kicking and screaming, held against her will as church members and a youth minister prayed over her. Three days later church members allegedly found her in a fetal position, took her to a room again and held her "spread eagle" against her will. Her parents initially sued on her behalf for battery and false imprisonment, claiming damages for personal injuries, mental anguish and post-traumatic stress. Defendants contend her mental anguish resulted from traumatic experiences in Africa and argue that she should not have been allowed to recover damages for mental anguish and that her expert testimony on post-traumatic stress disorder was not reliable. A jury awarded damages for mental anguish, admitting evidence of post-traumatic stress. The court of appeals affirmed in part, but reversed on damages awarded for future earnings.
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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
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PORT ELEVATOR-BROWNSVILLE, LLC V. CASADOS (10-0523) - view video
10/6/2011 @ 9:00 AM (length 43:25)
Originating county: Cameron County
Originating from: 13th District Court of Appeals, Corpus Christi & Edinburg
Case Documents
10-0523 Port Elevator-Brownsville LLC v. Rogelio Casados and Rafaela Casados from Cameron County and the 13th District Court of Appeals, Corpus Christi/Edinburg For petitioner: Mary A. Keeney, Austin For respondents: David Keltner, Fort Worth The issue is whether a temporary employee provided by a staffing company is limited to a workers-compensation recovery against the client company when its policy has classifications not explicitly including the temporary employee and the client employer does not pay premiums specifically for temporary employees. In this case Casados' parents sued Port Elevator after his work-site death. Casados was an employee of a temporary-staffing company that provided workers for Port Elevator. Port Elevator's workers-comp insurer initially refused coverage. The trial court denied the elevator company's summary-judgment motion, based on the "comp bar" provision limiting an injured worker's remedies to workers-comp insurance. A jury found Port Elevator negligent in Casados' death. On review, the appeals court held Casados was not covered under Port Elevator's workers-comp policy and affirmed the trial-court judgment. 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
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PR INV. V. STATE OF TEXAS (04-0431) - view video
3/21/2007 @ 9:00 AM (length 48:26)
Originating county: Harris County
Originating from: 14th District Court of Appeals, Houston
Case Documents
04-0431 PR Investments and Specialty Retailers Inc. v. State of Texas from Harris County and the 14th District Court of Appeals, Houston The principal issue is whether a road-design change deprives the trial court of jurisdiction to review condemnation damages when those damages were based on a different design. In this case PR Investments and Specialty Retailers argued that the trial court lost jurisdiction over the appeal because the Transportation Department eliminated the design to which they agreed for access from a street to their property. The department notified them of the change just before a trial de novo on a condemnation award. Instead of dismissing the proceeding, the trial court initially gave the department three options, including the one the department took that allowed it to proceed on the new design but likely face an inverse-condemnation lawsuit. Later the court granted PR Investments and Specialty Retailers' dismissal motion, based on their jurisdiction argument, and ordered the department to pay sanctions. The court of appeals affirmed. On rehearing before the entire court, it split 5-4, holding that the condemnation statute does not prohibit the department from changing its design plans even if that change prejudices landowners. The court also held that the statute does not require that issues in a condemnation appeal be the same as what special commissioners considered in awarding damages.
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PRAIRIE VIEW A&M UNIVERSITY V. CHATHA (10-0353) - view video
9/15/2011 @ 9:00 AM (length 44:15)
Originating county: Waller County
Originating from: 1st District Court of Appeals, Houston
Case Documents
10-0353 Prairie View A&M University v. Diljit K. Chatha from Waller County and the First District Court of Appeals, Houston For petitioner: Beth Klusmann, Austin For respondent: Ellen Sprovach, Houston The issue is whether the 180-day limitations on an employment-discrimination suit under the Texas Commission in Human Rights Act runs from the alleged discriminatory act or the last paycheck resulting from that act. In this case Chatha sued, alleging pay discrimination for her position as a full professor. She initially was denied the promotion, but promoted after she complained and applied again. But she alleged her pay was not appropriate for the promotion. Prairie View moved to dismiss on a jurisdictional plea because Chatha's discrimination complaint to administrative agencies was beyond the 180-day statutory window for when the discriminatory practice - her promotion with alleged inadequate pay - "occurred." Under a federal amendment to the federal statute that the state Human Rights Act follows in substance, occurred is defined as including the discriminatory effects of an employer's decision. That leaves a question whether the Texas statute of limitation must follow the federal amendment. The trial court denied the university's plea and the appeals court 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
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PRESIDIO ISD V. ROBERT SCOTT, AS COMMISSIONER OF EDUCATION (08-0958) - view video
1/19/2010 @ 9:50 AM (length 42:40)
Originating county: Travis County
Originating from: 3rd District Court of Appeals, Austin
Case Documents
08-0958 Presidio Independent School District v. Robert Scott, Commissioner of Education from Travis County and the Third District Court of Appeals, Austin For petitioner: Ken Slavin, El Paso For respondent: Daniel F. Geyser, Austin The principal issue is whether the education commissioner must consent to the school district's appeal to Travis County district court, under Education Code section 21.307(a), of the commissioner's reinstatement decision in a disciplinary action. In this case a Presidio school district employee fired by the district won reinstatement when he appealed his termination to the commissioner. With the employee's consent, the Presidio district sought review of the commissioner's decision in Travis County district court under section 21.307(a), which provides for review in Travis County if "all parties" consent. In a plea to the jurisdiction, the commissioner argued that his lack of consent robbed the district court of jurisdiction to hear the appeal. The district court denied the commissioner's plea and 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
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PRESTON A. OCHSNER V. VICTORIA V. OCHSNER (14-0638) - view video
11/2/2015 @ 9:00 AM (length 41:32)
Originating county: Harris County
Originating from: 14th District Court of Appeals, Houston
Case Documents
The issue is whether child-support payments should be credited when made directly to a day care facility and private school instead of, as the divorce decree specifies, to the court registry. Victoria Ochsner sued for child support owed because for years he paid tuition and daycare expenses directly to providers. The original decree provided that he pay $563 a month for their daughter to attend a certain day care center, in addition to $250 a month to Victoria Ochsner as child support. Once their child quit going to the specific day-care center, the decree stipulated that he was to pay $800 a month child support through the Harris County Child Support Center and, if he did not pay into the court registry, he might not get credit for payments. When their daughter quit going to the day care center, Preston Ochsner continued to pay for day care to another place and private-school tuition - by agreement with his ex-wife, he argues - rather than pay the $800 a month in child support. The Ochsners stipulated that he paid $22,000 more than he would have if he had paid $800 a month into the court registry. The trial court ruled that he was not in arrears on child support, but the court of appeals in a split decision held the parents' oral agreement was unenforceable and was not an approved modification of the decree. The appeals court determined he owed $55,000 in unpaid child support.
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PRODIGY COMMC'NS CORP. V. AGRIC. EXCESS & SURPLUS INS. CO. (06-0598) - view video
4/1/2008 @ 9:00 AM (length 52:38)
Originating county: Dallas County
Originating from: 5th District Court of Appeals, Dallas
Case Documents
06-0598 Prodigy Communications Corp. v. Agricultural Excess & Surplus Insurance Co. from Dallas County and the Fifth District Court of Appeals, Dallas For petitioner: Werner A. Powers and Charles C. Keeble Jr., Dallas For respondent: Joseph J. Borders, Chicago The Supreme Court will hear arguments of whether prejudice required to deny coverage under 'claims-made' policy with prompt-notice provision. A principal issue is whether under a "claims-made" insurance policy covering company directors and officers the insurer must show prejudice to deny coverage because of the insured's failure to notify the company promptly that a suit had been filed. The policy provision required notice "as soon as practicable" during the policy period, but not later than 90 days after the policy period or discovery period expires. Notice was given 11 months after the suit but before the 90-day period expired.
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PUB. UTIL. COMM'N OF TEX. V. RWE RENEWABLES AMS., LLC (23-0555) - view video
3/19/2024 @ 9:50 AM (length 47:34)
Originating county: Travis County
Originating from: 3rd District Court of Appeals, Austin
Case Documents
This case raises questions of administrative law. The first issue is whether the Public Utility Commission's approval of the Electric Reliability Council of Texas's NPRR 1081 protocol constitutes a "competition rule" under Section 39.001(e) of the Public Utility Regulatory Act and a "rule" under Section 2001.003(6)(A) of the Government Code. If the approval is considered a rule, then the second issue is whether it exceeds the Commission's statutory authority under PURA or violates the Administrative Procedure Act's mandatory rulemaking procedures.
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RAILROAD COMMISSION OF TEXAS V. GULF ENERGY EXPLORATION CORP. (14-0534) - view video
9/22/2015 @ 9:50 AM (length 44:08)
Originating county: Calhoun County
Originating from: 13th District Court of Appeals, Corpus Christi & Edinburg
Case Documents
In this case alleging the Texas Railroad Commission wrongfully plugged an oil-and-gas well, the principal issues are (1) whether the commission has a statutory immunity defense that protects it from damages in this case despite the Legislature's consent that it could be sued and (2) whether the trial court erred by not instructing jurors on good faith. Gulf sued the Railroad Commission for negligence and contract breach for plugging a well it agreed not to plug after the Legislature waived the commission's immunity from suit. In this appeal, the commission argues that a Texas Natural Resources Code provision - section 89.045 - protecting it from a good-faith mistake in plugging the well acts as an affirmative defense. The commission contends the trial court erred by refusing its good-faith jury question because the legislative waiver was from suit alone, not from liability. The appeals court affirmed.
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RAILROAD COMMISSION OF TEXAS V. TEXAS CITIZENS FOR A SAFE FUTURE AND CLEAN WATER (08-0497) - view video
4/14/2010 @ 9:00 AM (length 48:08)
Originating county: Travis County
Originating from: 3rd District Court of Appeals, Austin
Case Documents
08-0497 Railroad Commission of Texas v. Texas Citizens for a Safe Future and Clean Water and James G. Popp from Travis County and the Third District Court of Appeals, Austin For petitioner Railroad Commission: Daniel L. Geyser, Austin. For petitioner Pioneer Exploration: David B. Gross, Austin For respondents: Marisa Perales, Austin The issue is whether the Railroad Commission abused its discretion by failing to consider factors other than conservation and water pollution when determining whether an injection-well permit would be in the "public interest" under Texas Water Code section 27.051(b)(1). Popp and the Safe Future and Clean Water group sued the Railroad Commission over an injection-well permit it approved for oil- and gas-well waste without considering plaintiffs' uncontested public-interest evidence. That evidence purported to show large trucks hauling drilling waste and salt water to the injection well would be hazardous to other vehicles on narrow, winding gravel roads and endanger children and adults who walked on them. Injection wells are regulated by the Texas Environmental Quality Commission, if the waste to be injected does not come from an oil or gas well, and the Railroad Commission, if it does. On appeal from the commission, the trial court affirmed the commission's permit approval. The court of appeals reversed, holding that the public-interest factor's scope must be broader than the effect on oil and gas production. 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
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RALPH S. JANVEY, RECEIVER FOR STANFORD INTERNATIONAL BANK LTD., ET AL. V. GOLF CHANNEL INC. (15-0489) - view video
1/12/2016 @ 10:40 AM (length 38:10)
Originating from: U.S. Court of Appeals, 5th Circuit
Case Documents
In this dispute to recover close to $6 million in promotional expenses by Allen Stanford to further his long-running Ponzi scheme, the Fifth Circuit asks whether "market value" is sufficient to show reasonably equivalent value for purposes of the Texas Uniform Fraudulent Transfer Act's affirmative defense in section 24.009(a). In this case Janvey, as receiver, sued to recover money Stanford paid for advertising as part of his golf-tournament sponsorships. The U.S. District Court granted the Golf Channel summary judgment, determining that Stanford's payments were fraudulent transfers, but the Golf Channel took them in good faith and for advertising, for reasonably equivalent value. The Fifth Circuit initially reversed, holding that the Golf Channel filed to show Stanford's payments were reasonably equivalent value from the Stanford creditors' perspective. The court then vacated that opinion and certified the question.
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RAMONA ROGERS, M.D., ET AL. V. DAVID SAXON BAGLEY (19-0634) - view video
2/2/2021 @ 10:40 AM (length 41:41)
Originating county: Cameron County
Originating from: 13th District Court of Appeals, Corpus Christi & Edinburg
Case Documents
The issues in this negligence and excessive-force case, based on the death of a state-hospital patient after his restraint, brought in part under Section 1983, are (1) whether the appeals court erred by holding the federal 1983 claim constitutes a health-care-liability claim requiring a threshold health-care expert report and (2) whether the federal law preempts the Texas Medical Liability Act's expert-report requirement.her families of the four injured teenagers the waived any challenge to the evidence by not contesting the jury's zero-damages finding; and (4) whether the appeals court applied the correct factual-sufficiency standard in reviewing the no-liability verdict.
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RANDOLL MILL PHARMACY, ET AL. V. STACEY MILLER AND RANDY MILLER (13-1014) - view video
1/14/2015 @ 10:40 AM (length 40:19)
Originating county: Tarrant County
Originating from: 2nd District Court of Appeals, Fort Worth
Case Documents
In this case, alleging a pharmacy's negligence in preparing a compound for a physician to treat patients, the issues are (1) whether the pharmacy is a health-care provider under the medical-liability statute and (2) whether the Millers' negligence, fraud and warranty allegations establish health care-liability claims. The Millers sued for complications, including blindness, they attributed to bulk lipoic acid the pharmacy prepared for her doctor to treat her Hepatitis C symptoms. The pharmacy moved to dismiss the suit because the Millers did not serve an expert report required for a health care-liability claim. The Millers argue that the Texas Medical Liability Act, governing health care-liability claims, excludes pharmacists sued for mishandled or defective products. The trial court denied the pharmacy's dismissal motion. In a split decision, the court of appeals affirmed.
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RANDY AUSTIN V. KROGER TEXAS L.P. (14-0216) - view video
12/9/2014 @ 10:40 AM (length 44:15)
Originating from: U.S. Court of Appeals, 5th Circuit
Case Documents
In this worker-injury case, the Fifth Circuit asks whether under Texas law an employee may recover from a non-subscribing employer for injury caused by a premises defect he was aware of but that his job required him to remedy. As the circuit stated the question in the alternative: "Put differently, does the employee's awareness of the defect eliminate the employer's duty to maintain a safe workplace?" Austin fell, breaking a leg and dislocating a hip, while he mopped water that flooded a floor from power washing work.
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RANDY W. WILLIAMS, AS CHAPTER 7 TRUSTEE OF THE BANKRUPTCY ESTATE OF SONYA PORRETTO AND ROSEMARIE PORRETTO V. TEXAS GENERAL LAND OFFICE AND JERRY PATTERSON, IN HIS OFFICIAL CAPACITY AS TEXAS LAND COMMISSIONER (12-0483) - view video
11/5/2013 @ 10:40 AM (length 39:30)
Originating county: Galveston County
Originating from: 1st District Court of Appeals, Houston
Case Documents
Among the principal issues are (1) whether the appeals court improperly dismissed a declaratory-relief claim after the state disclaimed ownership before trial to a private beach; (2) whether the state unconstitutionally took property by leasing the private beach and by replacing the private owners' names with the state's on tax rolls; and (3) whether the "no self-help" rule applies in Texas to allow the dry-beach property owner to claim ownership of beach property the state rebuilt that extended the dry beach seaward from the definitive tide line. In this case, involving the state's actions over dry-beach property Porretto claimed in front of the Galveston Seawall, she sought to declare her property rights after the state leased parts of her beach to third parties. When she tried to sell her property, Porretto contends, she couldn't because the state's actions clouded her title and argues that the leases still encumber the property despite the state's ownership disclaimer. The trial court declared title in Porretto's favor, found the state's actions amounted to an unconstitutional taking and awarded Porretto $5 million. The appeals court reversed the title declarations and ordered that Porretto take nothing.
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RAOGER CORP. V. MYERS (23-0662)
Scheduled 1/13/2025 @ 9:50 AM (starts in 21 days, 20 hours, 30 minutes )
Originating county: Dallas County
Originating from: 5th District Court of Appeals, Dallas
Case Documents
The issue is whether the evidence is sufficient to create a fact issue about whether it was apparent to a restaurant that its patron was obviously intoxicated.
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RAUL ERNESTO LOAISIGA, M.D. V. CERDA (10-0928) - view video
2/29/2012 @ 9:00 AM (length 59:01)
Originating county: Cameron County
Originating from: 13th District Court of Appeals, Corpus Christi & Edinburg
Case Documents
10-0928 Raul Ernesto Loaisiga, M.D. and Raul Ernesto Loaisiga, M.D., P.A. v. Guadalupe Cerda and Cindy Velez from Cameron County and the 13th District Court of Appeals, Corpus Christi/Edinburg For petitioners: Carlos Escobar, McAllen For respondents: Brendan K. McBride, San Antonio The principal issues are (1) whether alleged sexual assaults during medical examinations constitute health care-liability claims and (2) whether an expert report based solely on pleadings was sufficient. In this case Cerda sued Loaisiga, her daughter's pediatrician, for assault, medical; negligence, gross negligence and intentional infliction of emotional distress after Loaisiga allegedly held her daughter's breast as he examined her for a sinus ailment. Velez, a nurse at the clinic where Loaisiga practiced, sued him after he allegedly held her breast when checking her flu symptoms. Both Velez and Cerda submitted an expert report by a family practitioner to comply with health care-liability requirements. Loaisiga moved to dismiss the claims, arguing that the expert report was insufficient because the doctor based it entirely on the lawsuit pleadings and not on interviews with Cerda's daughter or with Velez, and because the family-practice doctor was not qualified. The trial court denied the dismissal motion and the court of appeals affirmed, reasoning in part that sexual assault is not an inseparable part of medical care. 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
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RAY FISCHER AND CORPORATE TAX MANAGEMENT INC. V. CTMI, L.LC. ET AL. (13-0977) - view video
10/12/2015 @ 9:00 AM (length 42:52)
Originating county: Dallas County
Originating from: 5th District Court of Appeals, Dallas
Case Documents
The issues in this contract case involving a business purchase are (1) whether the appeals court erred by holding a severed provision for calculating sales proceeds, based on work in progress when the company was sold, constitutes an indefinite term that made the severed provision unenforceable; (2) whether a provision to agree on how to calculate a payment, based on proceeds that were unknowable when the purchase was completed several years before, constitutes an unenforceable agreement to agree; and (3) whether a term establishing the buyer's obligation for future payments in a partially performed agreement defeats the provision as an unenforceable agreement to agree. In this case Fischer agreed to sell his company in 2007 but left payments based on completing work in progress for both sides to determine. CTMI, the buyer, specifically disputes the contract's "2010 adjustment" and contends it was an unenforceable agreement to agree. Fischer argues that his completed contract obligations and CTMI's partial performance demonstrated the foundational intent to be bound. The trial court ruled the 2010 adjustment was enforceable. The appeals court reversed.
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REEDER V. WOOD COUNTY ENERGY, LLC (10-0887) - view video
2/27/2012 @ 9:00 AM (length 46:17)
Originating county: Wood County
Originating from: 12th District Court of Appeals, Tyler
Case Documents
10-0887 Wendell Reeder v. Wood County Energy, LLC, et al. from Wood County and the 12th District Court of Appeals, Tyler For petitioner: Charles Watson, Austin For respondents: Greg Smith, Tyler The principal issues are (1) whether the exculpatory clause in a model joint-operating agreement, allowing liability only for gross negligence or willful misconduct, extends to a working-interest operator's alleged breach of the operating agreement by neglect and (2) whether the appeals court erred by assessing the legal and factual evidence against a contract-breach standard instead of gross negligence or willful conduct. In this case Reeder sued to claim exclusive right, as operator, to use oil wellbores in a designated production unit. The working-interest holders countersued Reeder, claiming he breached the joint-operating agreement and allowed by his inaction the production unit to expire. On appeal, Reeder argued that the jury's award for the working-interest holders was based on insufficient evidence that he acted with gross negligence or willful misconduct even if the joint-operating agreement applied to him. Wood County and the other working-interest holders contended the gross-negligence and willful-conduct standard did not apply to the breach question and should not have been included in the jury instructions. The court of appeals determined that the gross-negligence and willful-misconduct standards from the exculpatory clause should not have been included in the jury questions, but held that Reeder breached his duties under the joint-operating agreement. 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
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REGAL FINANCE CO., LTD. V. TEX STAR MOTORS, INC. (08-0148) - view video
9/9/2009 @ 9:00 AM (length 46:56)
Originating county: Harris County
Originating from: 14th District Court of Appeals, Houston
Case Documents
08-0148 Regal Finance Co. Ltd. and Regal Finance Co. II Ltd. v. Tex Star Motors Inc. from Harris County and the 14th District Court of Appeals, Houston For petitioners: Russell S. Post, Houston For respondent: Eugene B. Wilshire, Houston A principal issue is whether the Uniform Commercial Code's provision governing a secured creditor's sale of collateral requires compliance with industry practice as proof that the sale is commercially reasonable. In this case Regal sued Tex Star, a used-car dealer, to collect the deficiency between the amount it got from selling repossessed cars and the outstanding amount owed on the car-loan notes Regal bought from Tex Star. Regal's agreement to buy notes from Tex Star obligated Tex Star to pay the unpaid balance on a defaulted note. This lawsuit arose from a dispute over which company was responsible for assuring a reserve account a bank required. The trial court awarded damages to Regal, but the court of appeals reversed, holding that Regal presented insufficient evidence that it sold the repossessed cars in a commercially reasonable way. 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
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REID ROAD MUNICIPAL UTILITY DIST. NO. 2 V. SPEEDY STOP FOOD STORES, LTD. (09-0396) - view video
10/12/2010 @ 9:00 AM (length 43:10)
Originating county: Harris County
Originating from: 14th District Court of Appeals, Houston
Case Documents
(Justice Guzman not sitting) 09-0396 Reid Road Municipal Utility District No. 2 v. Speedy Stop Food Stores Inc. Ltd. from Harris County and the 14th District Court of Appeals, Houston For petitioner: C. Charles Dippel, Houston For respondent: Bill Russell, Victoria The principal issue is whether a corporate agent under the property-owner rule - allowing a property owner to testify to its value even if unqualified to assess property belonging to someone else - is competent to testify to corporate property's value. Speedy Stop challenged a $9,300 condemnation award for a water easement, putting on as a valuation expert the general partner's vice president charged with property acquisitions. He testified to a $62,000 property-value loss. The trial court granted a no-evidence summary judgment for the utility district, ruling that the vice president, who was not a broker or licensed appraiser, could not testify because the property-owner rule did not apply to a corporate entity. 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
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RELIANCE STEEL & ALUMINUM CO. V. SEVCIK (06-0422) - view video
12/4/2007 @ 9:50 AM (length 44:56)
Originating county: Waller County
Originating from: 13th District Court of Appeals, Corpus Christi & Edinburg
Case Documents
06-0422 Reliance Steel & Aluminum Co. and Samuel Alvarado v. Michael Sevcik and Cathy Loth from Waller County and the 13th District Court of Appeals, Corpus Christi/Edinburg For petitioners: Thomas C. Wright, Houston; Russell H. McMains, Corpus Christi For respondents: David W. Holman, Houston The Supreme Court will hear arguments on the issue of whether gross sales evidence admissible in personal-injury case. Among principal issues in this personal-injury case are (1) whether the trial court erred by admitting evidence of the defendant company's gross sales when plaintiffs were not seeking punitive damages and (2) whether the appeals court erred by modifying an award for past medical expenses. Sevcik and Loth sued Reliance and its truck driver, Alvarado, over a collision that left Sevcik with physical injuries and Loth with permanent brain injury. At trial the judge rejected Reliance's attempt to show how much Loth earned before the accident, but allowed Loth to introduce evidence of Reliance's gross sales. On appeal Reliance argues that the gross sales testimony prejudiced the jury's damages awards. The court of appeals reduced an award for Loth's past medical expenses by $6,000, but otherwise affirmed damages Reliance challenged.
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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
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RICHARD D. CRAWFORD V. XTO ENERGY INC. (15-0142) - view video
9/15/2016 @ 9:00 AM (length 44:11)
Originating county: Tarrant County
Originating from: 7th District Court of Appeals, Amarillo
Case Documents
The principal issues are (1) whether the "strip and gore" doctrine applies to subsume mineral interests under a strip adjoining property conveyed by the strip owner who severed and reserved mineral rights under the strip when she deeded it surface rights to a power company for a transmission line and (2) whether the appeals court erred by affirming an order compelling joinder of adjacent mineral-interest holders mailed royalty checks. In this case Crawford contested the trial court's joinder order in his breach-of-contract suit against XTO for failure to pay royalties based on mineral rights under the strip he got from his mother.
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ROBERT KINNEY V. ANDREW HARRISON BARNES ET AL. (13-0043) - view video
1/9/2014 @ 9:50 AM (length 41:47)
Originating county: Travis County
Originating from: 3rd District Court of Appeals, Austin
Case Documents
The principal issues in this defamation appeal are (1) whether the Texas Constitution's free-speech provision imposes a stricter standard on injunctive relief than the First Amendment and (2) whether a permanent injunction constitutes a prior restraint under one or the other free-speech guarantees, or both. In this case Kinney, one of Barnes's former employees in a lawyer search-and-placement firm who left to start his own legal-recruiting firm, sued over a statement Barnes posted on two websites that accused Kinney of paying kickbacks to place clients. In his suit Kinney sought a permanent injunction as his only remedy, to force Barnes to take the statement off his websites. The trial court granted Barnes's summary-judgment motion that the injunction would be a prior restraint. The appeals court affirmed.
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ROBERT MASTERSON, MARK BROWN, GEORGE BUTLER, CHARLES WESTBROOK, RICHEY OLIVER, CRAIG PORTER, SHARON WEBER, JUNE SMITH, RITA BAKER, STEPHANIE PEDDY, BILLIE RUTH HODGES, DALLAS CHRISTIAN AND THE EPISCOPAL CHURCH OF THE GOOD SHEPHERD V. THE DIOCESE OF NORTHW (11-0332) - view video
10/16/2012 @ 9:50 AM (length 42:43)
Originating county: Tom Green County
Originating from: 3rd District Court of Appeals, Austin
Case Documents
The principal issues are the same as in 11-0265, in this property dispute between the Episcopal diocese and a breakaway San Angelo congregation. The court of appeals affirmed the trial court's decision for the diocese, holding the diocese owned the church property, not the congregation, under either "neutral principles" or "deference" analyses.
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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.
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ROBERT W. VAN BOVEN M.D., D.D.S. V. SCOTT FRESHOUR ET AL. (20-0117) - view video
9/29/2021 @ 9:00 AM (length 43:18)
Originating county: Travis County
Originating from: 3rd District Court of Appeals, Austin
Case Documents
The issues in this case by a physician whose medical license was first "restricted" after patient allegations against him is (1) whether under state law the Texas Medical Board has a ministerial duty to rectify its report to a national database when a final order removed the license restriction as "voiding" the temporary order restricting the medical license and (2) whether the Medical Board has a ministerial duty to file a "void report" in contrast to a "revision-to-action" report following a final order dismissing all allegations against the physician.
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ROBERT WAYNE SNEED, ET AL. V. LLOYD P. WEBRE JR. (12-0045) - view video
12/9/2014 @ 9:00 AM (length 43:59)
Originating county: Harris County
Originating from: 1st District Court of Appeals, Houston
Case Documents
The principal issues in this shareholder-derivative suit are (1) whether the business-judgment rule protects against challenges to board decisions involving a closely held corporation; (2) whether the shareholder bringing the challenge must plead and prove fraud by directors or self-dealing to have standing to file the derivative suit; and (3) whether a derivative action must be brought by a shareholder in the subsidiary and wholly owned operating company. In this case Webre, who owns almost a quarter of Texas United, a holding company, sued on Texas United's behalf and for United Salt, the wholly owned operating subsidiary, over an acquisition he contends was pushed on the company's board by United Salt's officers. Webre's claims include fiduciary-duty breaches by the officers and fraud. The officers and both companies challenge Webre's standing. The trial court dismissed the derivative claims for lack of standing and the appeals court reversed.
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ROBINSON V. BILL WHITE, MAYOR (08-0658) - view video
11/18/2009 @ 9:00 AM (length 47:32)
Originating county: Harris County
Originating from: 14th District Court of Appeals, Houston
Case Documents
(Justice Guzman not sitting) 08-0658 Carroll Robinson, et al. v. Bill White, City of Houston and Houston City Council, et al. from Harris County and the 14th District Court of Appeals, Houston For petitioners: Andy Taylor, Houston For respondents: Scott J. Atlas, Houston The principal issues are (1) whether proponents who drafted and campaigned for a proposition and voted for it have standing to sue to declare it effective and, if so, (2) whether a "poison pill" provision associated with a competing proposition violates state law. In this case Robinson drafted and promoted Proposition 2, for a city revenue cap, which Houston voters approved in 2004 but by a smaller margin than a proposition for a property-tax revenue cap on the same ballot. The City Council refused to adopt Proposition 2 because of a provision associated with Prop 1, that among inconsistent propositions the proposition approved by most voters would prevail, and because of a similar City Charter provision. The trial court granted summary judgment to Robinson and the other Prop 2 organizers, but the court of appeals reversed and dismissed their claims, holding the organizers did not have standing. 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
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ROBINSON V. CROWN CORK & SEAL CO., INC. (06-0714) - view video
2/7/2008 @ 9:00 AM (length 1:02:14)
Originating county: Harris County
Originating from: 14th District Court of Appeals, Houston
Case Documents
06-0714 Barbara Robinson v. Crown Cork & Seal Co. from Harris County and the 14th District Court of Appeals, Houston For petitioner: Deborah G. Hankinson, Dallas For respondents: Thomas R. Phillips, Austin, and Kimberly R. Stuart, Houston The Supreme Court will hear arguments on whether House Bill 4's "innocent successor" limits on asbestos liability violate the constitutional prohibition by retroactive application. The issue is whether the "innocent successor" limits on asbestos-related liability that House Bill 4 imposes (Civil Remedies and Practices Code Chapter 149) are unconstitutional either (1) as applied retroactively to an accrued cause of action or (2) as a special law. In this case Robinson appealed from a partial summary judgment in Crown Cork's favor. Crown Cork moved for the summary judgment based on House Bill 4 provision that became effective after Robinson sued over her husband's death from asbestos-related cancer. That provision, made applicable to pending cases, limited liability for asbestos claims involving companies that had acquired asbestos manufacturers before May 1968. In its summary-judgment motion, Crown Cork argued that it met the statutory limit on liability because it had paid more in asbestos claims than the market value of the asbestos manufacturer it acquired in 1966.
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ROCCAFORTE V. JEFFERSON COUNTY (09-0326) - view video
10/14/2010 @ 9:00 AM (length 44:34)
Originating county: Jefferson County
Originating from: 9th District Court of Appeals, Beaumont
Case Documents
09-0326 Larry Roccaforte v. Jefferson County from Jefferson County and the Ninth District Court of Appeals, Beaumont For petitioner: Laurence Watts, Missouri City For respondent: Steven L. Wiggins, Beaumont In this suit by a deputy constable alleging wrongful termination the principal issues are (1) whether Texas Local Government Code section 89.0041's is jurisdictional (whether Texas Government Code section applies to make it so) and (2) whether section 89.0041 is preempted by Section 1983 for a civil-rights violation. Roccaforte claims he was fired after filing a grievance against the county constable. He did not send notice to the county as required by 89.0041, but served the county judge. The district attorney answered within 30 days. Jefferson County challenged the trial court's jurisdiction. The court of appeals reversed the trial court, holding that compliance with section 89.0041 is not a jurisdictional requirement. Texas Supreme Court advisory Contact: Osler McCarthy, Staff Attorney for Public Information (512) 463.1441 or email: osler.mccarthy@courts.state.tx.us
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ROSSCER CRAIG TUCKER II V. LIZABETH THOMAS (12-0183) - view video
2/5/2013 @ 9:50 AM (length 41:24)
Originating county: Harris County
Originating from: 14th District Court of Appeals, Houston
Case Documents
The issues are (1) whether the trial court has authority to award attorney fees as "necessities" for child support when the nature of the action is modification and not enforcement and, if so, (2) whether awarding 6 percent compound interest on those fees abused the trial court's discretion. Tucker sued his ex-wife, Thomas, to modify final orders to give him exclusive right to designate his children's primary residence. In her counterclaim Thomas sought sole managing conservatorship and increased child support from Tucker. The trial court denied Tucker's relief and Thomas's request to be appointed joint managing conservator, but increased Tucker's child support. The court awarded Thomas attorney fees as child support, finding the fees necessities benefiting the children. The appeals court affirmed in a split decision by the whole court.
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ROY KENJI YAMADA, M.D. V. FRIEND (08-0262) - view video
3/10/2009 @ 9:50 AM (length 47:07)
Originating county: Tarrant County
Originating from: 2nd District Court of Appeals, Fort Worth
Case Documents
08-0262 Roy Kenji Yamada, M.D. v. Laura Friend, et al. from Tarrant County and the Second District Court of Appeals, Fort Worth For petitioner: Kevin Carey, Fort Worth For respondent: Jeff Kobs, Fort Worth The principal issues are (1) whether this action, claiming wrongful death because defibrillators were negligently placed and improperly used by employees of a municipal water park, should be considered a health care-liability claim and (2) whether the court of appeals erred by dividing allegations into health-care and ordinary negligence claims. In this case a 12-year-old girl collapsed at a municipal water park of a heart attack attributed to cardiac-muscle disease. Her parents sued the city then added Yamada, who provided consultant medical services to the water park, because park employees improperly used a defibrillator. Yamada moved to dismiss the claim against him, arguing that the girl's parents did not file an expert report as required in a health-care liability claim. He based that on a statutory definition of a health-care liability claim as one "for treatment, lack of treatment, or other claimed departure from accepted standards of medical care ... or safety or professional or administrative services directly related to health care...." The trial court denied the dismissal motion. On interlocutory review, the court of appeals affirmed the denial for claims it considered ordinary negligence and separated those from health-care liability claims that required an expert report. 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
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ROY SEGER, ET AL. V. YORKSHIRE INSURANCE CO. LTD. AND OCEAN MARINE INSURANCE CO. LTD. (13-0673) - view video
9/3/2015 @ 9:00 AM (length 44:38)
Originating county: Hutchinson County
Originating from: 7th District Court of Appeals, Amarillo
Case Documents
The issue is whether a post-answer default judgment may establish damages in a Stowers action an insured assigned to wrongful-death plaintiffs. In essence, the argument is whether a conflict exists between Evanston Insurance v. ATOFINA, holding that an insurer may not challenge a settlement's reasonableness when the insurer refuses a defense or coverage, and State Farm Fire and Casualty v. Gandy's reasoning that an insured's valid damages evidence must result from a fully adversarial proceeding. In the underlying wrongful-death trial, the defendant drilling company, Diatom, answered Seger's lawsuit but lost a $15-million default judgment after not appearing for trial. The company's insurers had refused to defend or settle despite offers to settle within policy limits. On the Stowers claim, the appeals court reversed the trial court's judgment for Seger, holding that the judgment was not good evidence of damages because it did not result from a fully adversarial trial.
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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.
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RUBEN ALEMAN, M.D. V. TEXAS MEDICAL BOARD (17-0385) - view video
1/22/2019 @ 9:00 AM (length 46:23)
Originating county: Travis County
Originating from: 3rd District Court of Appeals, Austin
Case Documents
In this case challenging sanctions against a physician, for not electronically signing and submitting a death certificate to a state database, the principal issues are (1) whether the medical board exaggerated Aleman's failure to follow database procedures as unprofessional or dishonorable conduct and (2) whether the medical board acted arbitrarily and capriciously by sanctioning the doctor for conduct the administrative-law judge determined was impossible because Aleman was not yet registered to access the state database.
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RUSK STATE HOSPITAL V. BLACK (10-0548) - view video
10/6/2011 @ 10:40 AM (length 37:32)
Originating county: Cherokee County
Originating from: 12th District Court of Appeals, Tyler
Case Documents
10-0548 Rusk State Hospital v. Dennis Black and Pam Black from Cherokee County and the 12th District Court of Appeals, Tyler For petitioner: Michael Murphy, Austin For respondents: Dennis Black, Tyler A principal issue is whether sovereign immunity may be raised in an interlocutory appeal from a trial court order that did not address subject-matter jurisdictional challenges that were not presented to the trial court. In this case the Blacks sued Rusk State Hospital over their son's suicide and filed expert reports required to establish a health-care liability claim. The state appealed from the trial court's order denying its challenge to the reports' adequacy and added in that interlocutory appeal its initial argument that the suit should be dismissed on immunity grounds. The court of appeals addressed the state's expert-reports challenge, but held that Civil Practice and Remedies Code section 51.014(a)(8), permitting interlocutory appeal for certain issues, does not authorize such an appeal on claims that have not been considered by the trial court. 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
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S&S EMERGENCY TRAINING SOLUTIONS INC. V. SHEILA ELLIOTT (17-0628) - view video
10/11/2018 @ 9:50 AM (length 42:31)
Originating county: Collin County
Originating from: 5th District Court of Appeals, Dallas
Case Documents
In this Texas Citizens Participation Act case, arising from a former employee's alleged breach of a non-disclosure agreement, the issues are (1) whether S&S, an emergency-medical-technician training company, provided clear and specific evidence it suffered actual damages resulting from a contract breach when the employee publicly expressed concerns about S&S's advertising to prospective students and (2) whether it sufficiently established by clear and specific evidence it was entitled to specific performance and injunctive relief.
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S. METHODIST UNIV., V. S. CENT. JURISDICTIONAL CONF. OF THE UNITED METHODIST CHURCH (23-0703)
Scheduled 1/15/2025 @ 9:00 AM (starts in 23 days, 19 hours, 40 minutes )
Originating county: Dallas County
Originating from: 5th District Court of Appeals, Dallas
Case Documents
At issue in this case is whether a nonmember nonprofit corporation may amend its articles of incorporation when those articles provided that no amendments shall be made without the prior approval of a religious conference.
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S.A.S AND L.O.S. V. BETH BRYANT, ET AL. (13-0967) - view video
12/9/2014 @ 9:50 AM (length 48:51)
Originating county: Harris County
Originating from: 1st District Court of Appeals, Houston
Case Documents
The principal issues in this challenge to an award for deceptive-trade practices, arising from a teenaged babysitter's sexual assault of two boys in his care, are (1) whether legally sufficient evidence supports the producing-cause element for liability based on flyers soliciting babysitting work for the teen and (2) whether the deceptive trade-practices act's general exclusion of bodily injury and mental-anguish claims bars all damages for personal injury. The boys' parents sued Bryant, a preschool teacher at a church school the boys attended, and the church and school, alleging Bryant's flyer promoting her son for child-care services deceived them because it did not mention his attention-deficit disorder, depression and low self-esteem or that Bryant discovered him several times viewing adult heterosexual pornography. The boys' parents had used Bryant's daughter for babysitting in the past without incident. A jury found the flyer deceptive, but the court of appeals reversed, holding that legally sufficient evidence did not support Bryant's acts as the cause that produced the boys' injuries.
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S.C. V. M.B. (20-0552) - view video
12/1/2021 @ 9:00 AM (length 50:27)
Originating county: Tarrant County
Originating from: 2nd District Court of Appeals, Fort Worth
Case Documents
The issue in this permissive interlocutory appeal is whether sections 9.201 and 9.203 of the Texas Family Code vest exclusive jurisdiction over a post-divorce partition action in the trial court that rendered the final divorce decree or whether section 23.001 of the Property Code permits a partition action over undivided community property to be filed in another court.
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SAFESHRED, INC. V. MARTINEZ (10-0426) - view video
10/4/2011 @ 9:00 AM (length 48:27)
Originating county: Travis County
Originating from: 3rd District Court of Appeals, Austin
Case Documents
10-0426 Safeshred Inc. v. Louis Martinez III from Travis County and the Third District Court of Appeals, Austin For petitioner: Craig A. Morgan, Austin For respondent: Gregory D. Jordan, Austin Principal issues are (1) whether a Sabine Pilot wrongful-discharge claim can support a punitive-damages award, (2) whether sufficient evidence supported the jury's malice finding and, if so, (3) whether the punitive damages were constitutionally excessive. Martinez sued after Safeshred allegedly fired him for refusing to drive what he considered to be an unsafe truckload of steel shelving. His refusal followed previous occasions that he complained about load-safety issues and other regulatory-compliance matters with Safeshred trucks. A jury found his firing was retaliatory and awarded $250,000 in exemplary damages, along with lost wages and mental-anguish damages. The trial court applied the statutory exemplary-damages cap to reduce the award to $200,000. 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
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SAMUEL GARCIA, JR., M.D. V. GOMEZ (09-0159) - view video
1/21/2010 @ 9:50 AM (length 41:33)
Originating county: Hidalgo County
Originating from: 13th District Court of Appeals, Corpus Christi & Edinburg
Case Documents
09-0159 Samuel Garcia Jr., M.D. v. Maria Gomez, et al. from Hidalgo County and the 13th District Court of Appeals, Corpus Christi/Edinburg For petitioner: I. Cecilia Garza, McAllen For respondents: Savannah L. Robinson, Danbury The principal issue is whether an attorney's unchallenged testimony as to what he would have charged in a case, without more, legally supports an attorneys-fee sanction for filing a medical-malpractice claim without an expert report. Gomez first sued Garcia for medical malpractice, based on Dr. Garcia's alleged failure to use a screen during surgery to prevent an embolism. The patient died after an embolism. When an X-ray revealed such a filter had been implanted, Gomez quit pursuing the claim, but did not nonsuit the case and did not file an expert report by the 120-day deadline. Garcia moved for attorneys fees under Texas Civil Practices and Remedies Code section 74.351(b). Garcia's attorney testified without challenge as to reasonable fees in such a case. The trial court denied the motion for sanctions and the appeals court 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
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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.
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SANDERS V. THE BOEING CO. (23-0388) - view video
9/12/2023 @ 10:40 AM (length 48:35)
Originating from: U.S. Court of Appeals, 5th Circuit
Case Documents
At issue in this certified-question case is the interpretation of Section 16.064 of the Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code, which tolls limitations where a prior action is dismissed "because of lack of jurisdiction" and refiled in a court of "proper jurisdiction" within sixty days after the date the dismissal "becomes final."
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SCHLUMBERGER TECHNOLOGY CORP. V. CHRISTOPHER ARTHEY AND DENISE ARTHEY (12-1013) - view video
1/8/2014 @ 9:50 AM (length 36:46)
Originating county: Refugio County
Originating from: 13th District Court of Appeals, Corpus Christi & Edinburg
Case Documents
The issues are (1) whether federal maritime law applies in a negligence suit against a business that organized a fishing retreat at which an invited guest allegedly became intoxicated on a boat and afterward drove a car that collided with a motorcycle and, if so, (2) whether the business owed a duty to the injured plaintiffs. In this case the Artheys sued Schlumberger, claiming Schlumberger should have supervised the invited guest, Huff, on the fishing boat on the morning just before the retreat ended. Schlumberger provided alcoholic drinks during the two-day retreat, but not on the boat. The trial court granted Schlumberger's summary-judgment motion, arguing it had no duty to the Artheys. The court of appeals reversed, holding that maritime law applied and that a fact question existed on the duty question.
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SCOTT AND WHITE MEMORIAL HOSPITAL V. FAIR (08-0970) - view video
12/15/2009 @ 10:40 AM (length 46:50)
Originating county: Bell County
Originating from: 3rd District Court of Appeals, Austin
Case Documents
08-0970 Scott and White Memorial Hospital, et al. v. Gary and Linda Fair from Bell County and the Third District Court of Appeals, Austin For petitioners: Stuart Smith, Waco For respondents: Rick Bostwick and Rick Brophy, Waco In this slip-and-fall case the principal issue is which rule should be applied to determine premises liability when an invitee falls on naturally occurring ice. Gary Fair sued the hospital for injuries he suffered when he fell in an ice-covered parking lot the morning after a storm. Scott and White argues for the "Massachusetts rule" that would not impose liability. The Fairs argue for the "Connecticut rule" requiring due care to eliminate ice as a hazard. The trial court granted Scott and White summary judgment, but the appeals court reversed, holding that the hospital did not meet its burden to show the ice was in its natural condition. 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
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SEABRIGHT INSURANCE CO. V. MAXIMA LOPEZ (14-0272) - view video
3/26/2015 @ 10:40 AM (length 43:23)
Originating county: Starr County
Originating from: 4th District Court of Appeals, San Antonio
Case Documents
The central issue in this worker-compensation death-benefits claim is whether an exception to the coming-and-going rule applied to a vehicle accident that killed a contract foreman working 440 miles from home, provided a company car and paid per-diem to live near his work site. When the accident occurred, Lopez was driving two subordinates to the work site, 40 miles from their temporary quarters. After his death, and after SeaBright denied his widow workers-comp benefits, she contested the denial before the Insurance Department's workers-comp division and won. SeaBright sued, but the trial court granted Mrs. Lopez summary judgment. The court of appeals affirmed, holding that Lopez's accident occurred in the course and scope of his employment.
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SERVICE CORP. INT'L V. GUERRA (09-0941) - view video
12/9/2010 @ 9:00 AM (length 43:25)
Originating county: Cameron County
Originating from: 13th District Court of Appeals, Corpus Christi & Edinburg
Case Documents
09-0941 Service Corporation International and SCI Texas Funeral Services Inc. v. Juanita G. Guerra, et al. from Cameron County and the 13th District Court of Appeals, Corpus Christi/Edinburg For petitioners: Mike A. Hatchell, Austin For respondents: Mark L. Kinkaid, Austin Principal issues are (1) whether evidence of other suits against cemeteries owned by the parent company unconstitutionally affected punitive damages awarded in this mental-anguish claim involving mishandling a corpse; (2) whether the parent company is liable for subsidiary employees' conduct; and (3) whether the recovery standard was satisfied for mental-anguish damages. In this case Guerra along with her children sued Service Corp. International and its wholly owned subsidiary, alleging, among other claims, intentional infliction of emotional distress for mishandling her husband's corpse. Finding it had sold the Guerras side-by-side funeral plots but one had previously been sold, SCI Texas asked if Mr. Guerra's body could be moved. When Mrs. Guerra said no, company employees moved his coffin a foot or more into the adjacent plot but did not tell her. During the trial the court allowed evidence of a class-action settlement involving SCI's Florida subsidiary. Jurors found SCI, the parent, directly liable, assessed its liability at 70 percent and the Texas subsidiary's at 30 percent and awarded $4 million in punitive damages. The court of appeals modified the punitive damages, then affirmed as modified. 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
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SEVERANCE V. JERRY PATTERSON, COMMISSIONER OF THE TEXAS GENERAL LAND OFFICE (09-0387) - view video
4/19/2011 @ 9:00 AM (length 55:05)
Originating from: U.S. Court of Appeals, 5th Circuit
Case Documents
(Chief Justice Jefferson not sitting) 09-0387 Carol Severance v. Jerry Patterson, et al. certified questions from the U.S. Court of Appeals, Fifth Circuit For appellant: J. David Breemer, Sacramento, Calif. For appellees: Daniel L. Geyser, Austin In this rehearing involving Hurricane Rita's beach destruction in Galveston, and consequent change in public access under the Texas Open Beaches Act, the federal circuit court asks: (1) whether Texas recognizes a "rolling" public beachfront-access easement; if so, (2) whether the rolling easement derives from common law or the Open Beaches Act; and (3) what extent the landowner would be entitled to compensation for loss of property use apart from the state's offer to remove houses on the easement. In a 6-2 opinion by Justice Wainwright issued November 5, the Court held that public easements do not "roll" onto previously unencumbered private beachfront property when avulsive events cause dramatic coastline changes. The Court reasoned that the Open Beaches Act, enacted in 1959, did not purport to create new substantive rights for public easements along Texas' ocean beaches and recognized that mere pronouncements of encumbrances on private property rights are improper. Because no public-use right exists in historic grants to private owners on West Beach exists, the Court said, the state must comply with legal principles to encumber privately owned realty along Galveston Island's West Beach. Land patents from the Texas Republic in 1840, affirmed by legislation after statehood, conveyed the state's title in West Galveston Island to private parties and reserved no ownership interests or public-use rights in Galveston's West Beach. In a dissent Justice Medina, joined by Justice Lehrmann, concluded the Open Beaches Act enforces a reasoned balance between private property rights and the public's right to free and unrestricted use of the beach. 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
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SHARYLAND WATER SUPPLY CORP. V. CITY OF ALTON (09-0223) - view video
3/24/2010 @ 9:50 AM (length 47:07)
Originating county: Hidalgo County
Originating from: 13th District Court of Appeals, Corpus Christi & Edinburg
Case Documents
09-0223 Sharyland Water Supply Corp. v. City of Alton, et al. from Hidalgo County and the 13th District Court of Appeals, Corpus Christi/Edinburg For petitioner: J.W. Dyer, McAllen For respondents: Stephen L. Tatum, Fort Worth, and Eileen M. Leeds, Brownsville Principal issues in this contract and negligence case, involving Sharyland's complaint that the city's sewer contractors violated state regulations for sewer- and water-line separation, are (1) whether those regulations (Texas Administrative Code section 317.13(1)(B)) apply to these sewer lines connecting lots to sewer mains; (2) whether the economic-loss rule bars Sharyland's negligence claim against the contractors; and (3) whether Sharyland is a third-party beneficiary of Alton's contract with the sewer-line installers. In this case Sharyland sued the city and the city's sewer-line contractors after discovering sewer lines placed above its water lines allegedly violating state regulations. Sharyland argues that it should not have to wait for sewer leakage to contaminate its water before suing for damages that would include remediation costs and loss of value to a once-legal water supply system. Alton and the sewer contractors argue that the administrative regulations do not cover the sewer lines in question because those regulations do not apply to individual connections to the sewer mains. 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
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SHELL OIL CO. AND SHELL INTERNATIONAL, E&P INC. V. ROBERT WRITT (13-0552) - view video
11/6/2014 @ 9:50 AM (length 36:13)
Originating county: Harris County
Originating from: 1st District Court of Appeals, Houston
Case Documents
In this defamation action by a former contractor Shell fired in the wake of a federal bribery investigation, the issues are (1) whether Shell's internal-investigation report to the Justice Department alleging the contractor's possible complicity is absolutely privileged and (2) whether the Justice Department's investigation of Shell under the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act constitutes a quasi-judicial proceeding. The underlying case arose from a Shell subcontractor's federal conviction for bribing Nigerian customs workers. Under threat of federal prosecution itself, Shell launched its own investigation of the company's dealings with the convicted subcontractor and reported the results to the Justice Department. Shell alleged that either Writt, who supervised payments to the convicted subcontractor, or his contract engineer approved, allowed or failed to stop the bribery scheme. After Shell fired Writt, he sued Shell for defamation and wrongful termination, contending he objected to Shell's suspect payments to certain contractors. The trial court granted summary judgment for Shell, ruling the company's report to the Justice Department was absolutely privileged. The court of appeals reversed, holding the report was not made in a judicial or quasi-judicial proceeding and was subject only to a qualified privilege.
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SHELL OIL CO. V. ROSS (10-0429) - view video
10/4/2011 @ 9:50 AM (length 42:14)
Originating county: Harris County
Originating from: 1st District Court of Appeals, Houston
Case Documents
10-0429 Shell Oil Co., et al. v. Ralph Ross from Harris County and the First District Court of Appeals, Houston For petitioners: Marie R. Yeates, Houston For respondent: Mark L. Perlmutter, Austin Among principal issues in this royalty dispute are (1) whether Shell's alleged fraudulent concealment bars limitations on the suit to recover underpaid royalties; (2) whether the lessee had a due-diligence duty to inquire about the payments based on statements and other public information; and (3) whether Shell's weighted-average calculation for royalties complied with the lease. In this case the appeals court affirmed the jury's verdict that Shell and related entities fraudulently concealed the basis for its royalty calculations on leased wells and those in pooled units and that the calculations breached Ross's lease. Ross sued after the four-year limitations period had ended, but contends limitations are tolled if Shell fraudulently concealed the price structure for paying royalties on gas from the wells. Shell argues that Ross could have discovered the pricing discrepancies from publicly available information and, as with the discovery rule, fraudulent concealment should not allow Ross to avoid limitations. 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
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SMITH V. O'DONNELL (07-0697) - view video
9/10/2008 @ 10:40 AM (length 43:22)
Originating county: Harris County
Originating from: 4th District Court of Appeals, San Antonio
Case Documents
07-0697 Paul H. Smith, et al. v. Thomas O'Donnell from Harris County and the Fourth District Court of Appeals, San Antonio For petitioners: Casey L. Dobson, Austin For cross-petitioner/respondent: Vincent L. Marable III, Wharton The Supreme Court will hear arguments on (1) whether privity must exist between an executor and the deceased's attorney for a suit over alleged failure to advise on property mischaracterization when the deceased was executor of his late wife's estate and (2) whether a no-evidence summary judgment favoring the attorney was proper on the executor's gross-negligence claim. Principal issues include (1) whether privity must exist between an executor and the deceased's attorney to support a legal malpractice suit based on the attorney's alleged failure to advise on property mischaracterization when the deceased was executor of his late wife's estate and (2) whether the no-evidence summary judgment favoring the attorney was proper on the executor's gross-negligence claim. This action followed a suit by the deceased's children against their father's estate, claiming stock owned by their mother was mischaracterized as their father's separate property and deprived them of what they should have inherited from their mother. The trial court granted the attorney summary judgment. The court of appeals reversed, in part holding that no privity existed between the attorney and the executor and in part holding no evidence existed to prove gross negligence. 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
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SMITH V. TRUST (07-0970) - view video
11/13/2008 @ 10:40 AM (length 49:15)
Originating county: Collin County
Originating from: 5th District Court of Appeals, Dallas
Case Documents
07-0970 Lauri Smith and Howard Smith v. Patrick W.Y. Tam Trust from Collin County and the Fifth District Court of Appeals, Dallas For petitioners: Robert D. Ranen, Plano For respondent: Scott Hayes, Dallas The principal issue is whether $47,000 in attorneys fees are reasonable when the judgment obtained was for $65,000, less than a third of what was sought. 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
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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.
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SONAT EXPLORATION CO. V. CUDD PRESSURE CONTROL, INC. (06-0979) - view video
2/6/2008 @ 10:25 AM (length 40:51)
Originating county: Harrison County
Originating from: 6th District Court of Appeals, Texarkana
Case Documents
06-0979 Sonat Exploration Co. v. Cudd Pressure Control Inc. From Harrison County and the Sixth District Court of Appeals, Texarkana For petitioner: Joel L. Thollander and Sam Baxter, Austin For respondent: David M. Gunn, Houston For intervenor Lumbermens Mutual Casualty Co.: Christopher Tramonte, Houston, and Arthur W. Landry, New Orleans The Supreme Court will hear arguments on the issue of whether choice of law applies to where an oilfield contract was made or where the primary indemnity obligation was performed. The principal issues are (1) whether choice-of-law analysis for an indemnification agreement is based on the place of performing the indemnity obligation or the place of performing the primary contract obligation and (2) whether, when a litigant uses the virtual-representation doctrine to appeal a trial court decision, the resulting appellate court decision binds an originally named party that did not appeal. Sonat, which agreed to mutual indemnity with Cudd in their oilfield-service contract, sued Cudd after Cudd refused to reimburse any of the $28 million that Sonat paid to settle a personal-injury suit. Cudd employees brought the suit in Texas after a Louisiana accident. Cudd argues that Louisiana law invalidates the mutual indemnity agreement. The trial court held for Sonat, concluding Texas law applied. Before an appeal, Cudd agreed that it would not appeal the choice of Texas law but would appeal the trial court's application of it. The intervenor in this case - Lumbermens, Cudd's insurer - then sought to appeal the trial court's choice-of-law ruling, employing the virtual-representation doctrine to raise the issue that Cudd agreed to abandon. The court of appeals reversed the trial court on its choice-of-law, holding that Louisiana law governed the contract.
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SOUTHERN CRUSHED CONCRETE, LLC V. CITY OF HOUSTON (11-0270) - view video
10/15/2012 @ 10:40 AM (length 41:38)
Originating county: Harris County
Originating from: 14th District Court of Appeals, Houston
Case Documents
The principal issues are (1) whether a city zoning ordinance more restrictive on locating a concrete-crushing plant than the Texas Clean Air Act allows is preempted by either the statute or the state constitution and (2) whether the zoning ordinance violates the Local Government Code's uniformity-of-requirements provision by imposing its restriction years after the company's state-permit process was begun. In this case the company sued to declare the zoning ordinance impermissibly in conflict with the state's permit. The city denied Southern Crushed Concrete's application after the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality issued its permit. The appeals court affirmed the trial court's ruling for the city.
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SOUTHWEST ROYALTIES INC. V. GLENN HEGAR, AS TEXAS COMPTROLLER; AND KEN PAXTON, AS TEXAS ATTORNEY GENERAL (14-0743) - view video
3/8/2016 @ 9:00 AM (length 41:55)
Originating county: Travis County
Originating from: 3rd District Court of Appeals, Austin
Case Documents
The issue in this tax-refund case is whether an oil-and-gas producer is exempt as a manufacturer from sales tax paid for below-ground equipment used to extract minerals. Southwest sued after the comptroller denied its tax-refund claim for purchases for "downhole" equipment under a provision exempting sales tax on equipment used or consumed during "actual manufacturing, processing, or fabrication." Initially the trial court ruled for Southwest, but on reconsideration decided for the state that below-ground equipment did not, as required for the manufacturing sales-tax exemption, directly cause a physical or chemical change in the extracted hydrocarbons. In its review the appeals court affirmed, holding the comptroller's statutory interpretation not "plainly erroneous or inconsistent" with statutory language establishing the exemption. In this Court Southwest argues that its downhole equipment separates hydrocarbons into oil, gas and condensates--at that point, personal property from what had been real property--which constitutes processing as the statute defines it. The comptroller contends that processing must be read as a part of manufacturing and that mineral extraction, under the statute, cannot be manufacturing.
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SOUTHWESTERN BELL TELEPHONE L.P. V. ED EMMETT, ET AL. (13-0584) - view video
12/10/2014 @ 9:50 AM (length 41:45)
Originating county: Harris County
Originating from: 14th District Court of Appeals, Houston
Case Documents
The issue is whether the Harris County Flood Control District's plan to demolish a bridge to widen a bayou triggered the district's statutory obligation to pay for relocating the telephone company's equipment across the bridge (by making the relocation necessary). The district contends the bridge demolition was not necessary, but Houston ordered it as part of a city public-works project that, by ordinance, obligated AT&T Texas (Southwestern Bell's business moniker) to pay its own relocation costs. AT&T argues that the district's flood-control plan had been in the works since 1998, calling for bridge demolition, and that Houston belatedly claimed the project as its own. The trial court granted the district's jurisdictional plea. Interpreting the Water Code's provision that would shift relocation costs to the flood-control district, the court of appeals affirmed, holding Houston, not the district, made AT&T's equipment relocation necessary.
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SOUTHWESTERN ENERGY PRODUCTION CO. V. TOBY BERRY-HELFAND AND GERY MUNCEY (13-0986) - view video
10/13/2015 @ 9:00 AM (length 39:30)
Originating county: Shelby County
Originating from: 12th District Court of Appeals, Tyler
Case Documents
A principal issue in this trade-secrets appropriation case is whether legally sufficient evidence supports damages based on a 3-percent reasonable-royalty calculation apparently applied to profits. In this case Helfand sued Southwestern Energy for breaching a confidentiality agreement by drilling in "sweet spots" Helfand identified by studying gas formations in five East Texas counties. Helfand offered Southwestern Energy a stake in leases she had in her study area and gave the company access to her data, subject to a one-year non-disclosure agreement and promise not to drill in the area on its own. A jury found for Helfand and awarded $11.4 million in damages, based on a 3 percent royalty Helfand argued was reasonable, based in part on negotiations with another exploration company. The appeals court affirmed those damages, but reversed others the trial court awarded for disgorgement and for contract breach.
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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
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SPIR STAR AG V. KIMICH (07-0340) - view video
12/10/2008 @ 9:00 AM (length 45:39)
Originating county: Harris County
Originating from: 1st District Court of Appeals, Houston
Case Documents
07-0340 Spir Star AG v. Louis Kimich from Harris County and the First District Court of Appeals, Houston For petitioner: Sarah B. Duncan, Austin For respondent: Scott Rothenberg, Houston The issue is whether Texas has personal jurisdiction over a German manufacturer that allegedly does business in the state only though a Texas limited partnership exclusively selling its products in North and South America. In this case Kimich was injured when a defective high-pressure hose manufactured by Spir Star AG struck him. Kimich first sued his employer for premises liability, then Spir Star Ltd., the Texas partnership, and finally Spir Star AG, the manufacturer. The trial court denied the manufacturer's special appearance to contest personal jurisdiction. Holding in part on representations made on Spir Star Ltd.'s Web site, the court of appeals concluded that the manufacturer established Spir Star Ltd. in Texas and, doing so, brought itself under Texas jurisdiction. 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
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SSP PARTNERS V. GLADSTRONG INVS. (USA) CORP. (05-0721) - view video
3/20/2007 @ 9:00 AM (length 49:12)
Originating county: Hidalgo County
Originating from: 13th District Court of Appeals, Corpus Christi & Edinburg
Case Documents
05-0721 SSP Partners and Metro Novelties Inc. v. Gladstrong Investments (USA) Corp. from Hidalgo County and the 13th District Court of Appeals, Corpus Christi/Edinburg In this indemnity action from a wrongful-death and products-liability case, the principal issues include (1) whether the court of appeals erred by holding the "apparent manufacturer" doctrine applied to a U.S. company held out as the product manufacturer by its closely allied foreign company and (2) whether the U.S. firm is the manufacturer because it and the foreign company are indistinguishable. SSP Partners sued Gladstone USA for indemnity after a judgment in a case alleging a child died as a result of a defective lighter. The trial court granted Gladstrong USA's motion asserting that no evidence showed it manufactured the lighter. The court of appeals reversed, holding in part that the common-law apparent manufacturer doctrine survives statutory indemnity provisions in Texas Civil Practices and Remedies Code chapter 82.
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STATE FARM LLOYDS V. JOHNSON (06-1071) - view video
1/15/2008 @ 9:50 AM (length 43:30)
Originating county: Collin County
Originating from: 5th District Court of Appeals, Dallas
Case Documents
06-1071 State Farm Lloyds v. Becky Ann Johnson from Collin County and the Fifth District Court of Appeals, Dallas For petitioner: Michael W. Huddleston, Dallas For respondent: Russell J. Bowman, Dallas The Supreme Court will hear arguments on the principal issue is whether an appraisal clause in a homeowner's policy gives appraisers authority to consider causation, coverage and liability in determining "amount of loss." The principal issue is whether an appraisal clause in a homeowner's policy covers a dispute over just the insurer's amount-of-damage calculation instead of one determining causation, coverage and liability questions in setting the loss amount. In this case Johnson sued State Farm after it refused her request for an appraisal under a clause providing an appraisal mechanism if the insurer and insured "fail to agree on the amount of loss...." State Farm had determined that Johnson's policy covered only $499 for hail-damaged shingles along the top of the roof, but her expert recommended a new roof, finding more extensive hail damage. The trial court granted State Farm's summary-judgment motion, but the court of appeals held in reversing the case that the dispute about the extent of hail damage was a dispute about the loss amount.
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STATE FARM LLOYDS V. PAGE (08-0799) - view video
11/19/2009 @ 9:50 AM (length 41:13)
Originating county: Johnson County
Originating from: 10th District Court of Appeals, Waco
Case Documents
08-0799 State Farm Lloyds and Erin Strachan v. Wanda M. Page from Johnson County and the 10th District Court of Appeals, Waco For petitioners: Levon G. Hovnatanian, Houston For respondent: John F. Melton, Austin Principal issues in this mold-coverage case are (1) whether the standard Texas homeowners policy provides coverage for mold damage to a dwelling resulting from plumbing leaks; or (2) whether it provides mold-damage coverage for personal property in the dwelling; or (3) whether it provides coverage for both. Page sued State Farm for its refusal to replace her carpet after it repaired mold damage in her house and personal belongings. An underlying question is whether an exclusion-repeal provision in one policy part acts to override a mold exclusion in another part. The trial court granted summary judgment for State Farm, 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
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STATE OF TEXAS V. ANGELIQUE NAYLOR AND SABINA DALY (11-0114) - view video
11/5/2013 @ 9:00 AM (length 57:19)
Originating county: Travis County
Originating from: 3rd District Court of Appeals, Austin
Case Documents
Consolidated for oral argument with 11-0024 and 11-0222. The essential question is whether a same-sex couple married legally in another state may be legally divorced by a Texas court despite the state's statutory and constitutional prohibition against such marriages in Texas. And if the Texas marriage prohibition extends to prohibit divorce, then does that violate the U.S. Constitution? These cases, involving divorces granted in Dallas County (two married men) and in Travis County (married women), raise these procedural issues: (1) whether a Texas trial court has jurisdiction over a no-fault same-sex divorce; (2) whether the state may intervene to contest the trial court's jurisdiction to grant the divorce; and, if not, (3) whether the state may challenge the trial court's judgment by a mandamus petition contesting the trial court's jurisdiction.
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STATE OF TEXAS V. BERNARD MORELLO (16-0457) - view video
12/7/2017 @ 10:40 AM (length 44:12)
Originating county: Travis County
Originating from: 3rd District Court of Appeals, Austin
Case Documents
Principal issues are (1) whether minimum fines to enforce an order to contain groundwater contamination against a limited-liability company and its sole member, based on judgments against both, are unconstitutionally excessive and (2) whether the state can hold both the company and its sole employee liable when the statute forbids a "person" from violating the state water code when the state alleges violations by both.
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STATE OF TEXAS V. CLEAR CHANNEL OUTDOOR INC. (13-0053) - view video
9/17/2014 @ 10:40 AM (length 40:19)
Originating county: Harris County
Originating from: 1st District Court of Appeals, Houston
Case Documents
The issues are (1) whether an outdoor-advertising company should be compensated for leased billboards lost when the state condemned the land on which they stood and (2) whether the trial court erred by permitting the company's expert to value the billboards based on advertising income. Clear Channel challenged the state's determination that its two billboards were personal property apart from the condemned land and subject only to the state paying for their relocation. Trial courts ruled that the billboards were not personal property and should be valued as part of the condemned real property. After hearing Clear Channel's expert testify that the billboards should be valued based on lost advertising income, a jury awarded the company $268,000. The court of appeals affirmed, holding in part that the billboards were real-estate improvements. The appeals court also held that Clear Channel's expert testimony on valuation was admissible.
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STATE OF TEXAS V. HARRIS COUNTY CLERK CHRIS HOLLINS (20-0729) - view video
9/30/2020 @ 10:00 AM (length 53:09)
Originating county: Harris County
Originating from: 14th District Court of Appeals, Houston
Case Documents
The issue is whether the Harris County clerk's plans to send mail-in ballot applications to all county voters should be halted as illegal, beyond the clerk's specified powers under the Texas Election Code, that will cause irreparable harm if not stopped. In this case the trial court denied the state's request for a temporary injunction because it determined the Harris County clerk had authority to send unsolicited mail-in ballot applications because no statute forbids him. The appeals court denied the state's interlocutory appeal, holding the state could not demonstrate irreparable harm.
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STATE OF TEXAS V. LUECK (06-1034) - view video
11/12/2008 @ 9:00 AM (length 43:25)
Originating county: Travis County
Originating from: 3rd District Court of Appeals, Austin
Case Documents
06-1034 State of Texas v. George Lueck from Travis County and the Third District Court of Appeals, Austin For petitioners: Ryan Clinton, Dallas For respondent: Gregory C. Douglass, Austin The issues in this Whistleblower Act case are (1) whether Lueck, a Texas Transportation Department employee fired for questioning an outside vendor's contract termination, properly stated a claim under the act to confer jurisdiction on the trial court and (2) whether, if so, he properly reported violation of a state or federal law to an appropriate law-enforcement authority. 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
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STATE OF TEXAS V. ONE 2004 LINCOLN NAVIGATOR (14-0692) - view video
11/4/2015 @ 9:00 AM (length 46:06)
Originating county: Nueces County
Originating from: 13th District Court of Appeals, Corpus Christi & Edinburg
Case Documents
The issue is whether suppressed evidence may establish contraband necessary to justify civil forfeiture when the contraband resulted from a search following a warrantless arrest based on an allegedly unreliable informant's tip. In trial to contest the forfeiture Herrera, the vehicle owner, moved to suppress drugs and weapons found in the car after it was searched incident to his arrest. The trial court ruled the evidence inadmissible because state troopers arrested him illegally, without sufficient cause to stop him and search his vehicle. The appeals court affirmed, holding that the forfeiture statute - Texas Code of Criminal Procedure article 59.03(b) - precluded the state's seizing the vehicle after an illegal search.
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STATE OF TEXAS V. R.R.S. (17-0819) - view video
1/7/2020 @ 9:00 AM (length 45:51)
Originating county: El Paso County
Originating from: 8th District Court of Appeals, El Paso
Case Documents
In this appeal by a juvenile who pleaded true to aggravated sexual assault of his 5-year-old brothers but moved later to withdraw his stipulation, the issues are (1) whether he properly raised, as a 13-year-old, that he could not have had the legal intent necessary to prove the alleged acts; (2) whether he properly raised an effective-assistance-of-counsel claim or, even if not, whether enough evidence supported one; and (3) whether under In re B.W., concerning a 13-year-old charged with prostitution, legal intent could be shown to establish sexual assault in this case.
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STATE OFFICE OF RISK MANAGEMENT V. LAWTON (08-0363) - view video
3/11/2009 @ 9:50 AM (length 45:56)
Originating county: Brazos County
Originating from: 10th District Court of Appeals, Waco
Case Documents
08-0363 State Office of Risk Management v, Mary Lawton from Brazos County and the 10th District Court of Appeals, Waco For petitioner: Thomas M. Lipovski, Austin For respondent: Stuart F. Lewis, Bryan For amicus curiae Office of Injured Employee Counsel: Elaine Chaney, Austin The issue is whether the State Office of Risk Management waived its compensability contest arising from a purported work-related knee injury by failing to raise the challenge within the statutory 60-day deadline. In this case the state got a magnetic resonance image (MRI) of the injured knee within a month of the injury but contested compensability only after a medical review determined the knee was subject to a degenerative disease. 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
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STATE OFFICE OF RISK MGMT. V. CHRISTY CARTY, INDIVIDUALLY AS AS NEXT FRIEND FOR B.C., J.C. AND M.C., MINORS AND AS REPRESENTATIVE OF THE ESTATE OF JIMMY CARTY, JR., DECEASED (13-0639) - view video
2/5/2014 @ 10:40 AM (length 47:46)
Originating from: U.S. Court of Appeals, 5th Circuit
Case Documents
In this case the Fifth Circuit asks the Texas Supreme Court to decide how state law allocates wrongful death-settlement proceeds among multiple beneficiaries when a workers-compensation carrier seeks reimbursement for what it paid in benefits and for future payments. Two companies settled after a trainee's death at the Texas Department of Public Safety Training Academy. In addition an allocation from the settlements for what it had paid, the State Office of Risk Management, the DPS's workers-comp carrier, sought reimbursement for future payments it would pay to the trainee's children. Specifically, the Fifth Circuit asks (1) how excess net settlement proceeds more than the amount required to reimburse the workers-compensation carrier for paid benefits should be apportioned among multiple beneficiaries under Texas Labor Code section 417.002; (2) how a workers-compensation carrier's right to treat a recovery as an advance of future benefits should be calculated involving multiple beneficiaries - that is, whether on a beneficiary-by-beneficiary basis or considering the collective recovery; and, if calculated beneficiary by beneficiary, (3) whether the surviving spouse's nonbinding statement that she will use her recovery to benefit her children makes the settlement allocation invalid.
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STEADFAST FINANCIAL L.L.C., ET AL., AND RANGE PRODUCTION I, L.P. V. BETTY LOU BRADSHAW (13-0199) - view video
10/15/2014 @ 9:00 AM (length 48:41)
Originating county: Hood County
Originating from: 2nd District Court of Appeals, Fort Worth
Case Documents
The principal issue is whether an executive mineral-rights holder, obligated to exercise "utmost good faith" to protect a non-participating royalty owner, must negotiate a market-rate royalty from leases when deeds limited future leases to a specific minimum royalty share. The question turns on the scope of the implied fiduciary-like duty the executive holder owes non-participating owners and how the deed restrictions in this case may alter that. Bradshaw, a non-participating royalty owner, sued for a greater share of royalties than Steadfast Financial, the executive rights-holder, got in leases it executed. Bradshaw inherited her royalty interests from her parents under deeds that required any future leases to pay royalties not less than one-eighth of the mineral production. As the non-participating interest-holder, she would get half of that, or one-16th. But she claims Steadfast Financial owes her twice that - one-eighth of production proceeds - because Steadfast should have sold leases at the going rate for the county. The trial court granted summary judgment for Steadfast, ruling that it did not owe Bradshaw a duty to pay her more than the minimum royalty. The court of appeals reversed.
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STOCKTON V. HOWARD A. OFFENBACH, M.D. (09-0446) - view video
3/25/2010 @ 9:50 AM (length 56:12)
Originating county: Dallas County
Originating from: 5th District Court of Appeals, Dallas
Case Documents
09-0446 Debbie Stockton v. Howard A. Offenbach, M.D. from Dallas County and the Fifth District Court of Appeals, Dallas For petitioner: Robert J. Talaska, Houston For respondent: Michael Alan Yanof, Dallas For amicus curiae Texas Trial Lawyers Association: Peter M. Kelly, Houston A principal issue is whether a due-diligence exception should be applied to toll the 120-day deadline for serving a medical-malpractice expert report when the defendant could not be located before the deadline. In this case Stockton filed suit against Offenbach, alleging his failure to recommend and perform a cesarean section caused her son's permanent arm injury when he was born in 1989. Despite numerous attempts to locate Offenbach to serve process, and an effort to effect service by publication, Stockton got court permission to use substitute service only after the statutory deadline for serving her expert report. Offenbach appeared a week after publication service and moved to dismiss. The trial court denied his motion. The appeals court reversed with instructions to render judgment for Offenbach. Texas Supreme Court advisory Contact: Osler McCarthy, Staff Attorney for Public Information (512) 463.1441 or email: osler.mccarthy@courts.state.tx.us
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SUSAN COMBS, COMPTROLLER OF PUBLIC ACCOUNTS OF THE STATE OF TEXAS, AND GREG ABBOTT, ATTORNEY GENERAL OF THE STATE OF TEXAS V. ROARK AMUSEMENT AND VENDING, L.P. (11-0261) - view video
10/15/2012 @ 9:50 AM (length 40:18)
Originating county: Travis County
Originating from: 3rd District Court of Appeals, Austin
Case Documents
The issues are (1) whether the operator of grab-it-if-you-can amusement machines is entitled to a sales- and use-tax refund for taxes paid for toys used in the machines falls under the statutory sale-for-resale exemption because the operator paid occupation tax on each machine and (2) whether the comptroller's interpretation of the statute should be given deference if the sale-for-resale exemption is ambiguous. In this case Roark sued for a refund of sales tax it paid for novelty prizes it stocks in its machines. To get the prize, players must manipulate a claw to pick it from a pile of similar toys--it will be chosen to go to a better place, as Buzz and Sheriff Woody arguably found not to be the case, if the player is successful. Roark argues that the sale-for-resale provision exempts it from paying sales tax on the toys because they are an integral part of the service for which it pays its occupational tax. The tax code provides that "tangible personal property" is not resold as part of the taxable service "unless care, custody, and control" of the toy in this case "is transferred to the purchaser of the service." The comptroller's administrative rules require that the sale-for-resale sales-tax exemption applies for amusement games like Roark's only if every player wins. The trial court ruled for the comptroller. The court of appeals held for Roark.
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SUSAN COMBS, COMPTROLLER OF PUBLIC ACCOUNTS, AND GREG ABBOTT, ATTORNEY GENERAL V. HEALTH CARE SERVICE CORPORATION (11-0283) - view video
2/27/2013 @ 9:50 AM (length 41:48)
Originating county: Travis County
Originating from: 3rd District Court of Appeals, Austin
Case Documents
Consolidated for oral argument with 11-0652. A principal issue in these challenges for tax refunds is whether a government contractor purchasing personal property and services to meet its contract obligations qualifies for the sale-for-resale sales-tax exemption under Tax Code section 151.006(a)(1). Health Care Services Corp. sued after the comptroller refused to refund all sales tax the company paid for property that, under its contracts with the federal government, the federal government would own. The comptroller argues that the sale-for-resale exemption excludes sales taxes paid for a non-taxable services. On the other hand Health Care Service Corp. contends the "resale" occurred when title passed to the government. In both cases, involving two periods, the trial court ordered the state to refund sales taxes on all categories of property the company paid. The appeals court affirmed.
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SUSAN COMBS, COMPTROLLER OF PUBLIC ACCOUNTS, AND GREG ABBOTT, ATTORNEY GENERAL V. HEALTH CARE SERVICE CORPORATION (11-0652) - view video
2/27/2013 @ 9:50 AM (length 41:48)
Originating county: Travis County
Originating from: 3rd District Court of Appeals, Austin
Case Documents
Consolidated for oral argument with 11-0283. A principal issue in these challenges for tax refunds is whether a government contractor purchasing personal property and services to meet its contract obligations qualifies for the sale-for-resale sales-tax exemption under Tax Code section 151.006(a)(1). Health Care Services Corp. sued after the comptroller refused to refund all sales tax the company paid for property that, under its contracts with the federal government, the federal government would own. The comptroller argues that the sale-for-resale exemption excludes sales taxes paid for a non-taxable services. On the other hand Health Care Service Corp. contends the "resale" occurred when title passed to the government. In both cases, involving two periods, the trial court ordered the state to refund sales taxes on all categories of property the company paid. The appeals court affirmed.
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SUSAN ELAINE BOSTIC, INDIVIDUALLY AND AS PERSONAL REPRESENTATIVE OF THE HEIRS AND ESTATE OF TIMOTHY SHAWN BOSTIC, DECEASED; HELEN DONNAHOE; AND KYLE ANTHONY BOSTIC V. GEORGIA-PACIFIC CORPORATION (10-0775) - view video
9/9/2013 @ 9:00 AM (length 59:41)
Originating county: Dallas County
Originating from: 5th District Court of Appeals, Dallas
Case Documents
The principal issue in this case is whether or how the Borg-Warner v. Flores asbestosis-causation standard - a substantial-factor test, shown by frequent, regular and proximate exposure - should apply in mesothelioma cases. Timothy Bostic's survivors sued 39 defendants including Georgia-Pacific for wrongful death after Bostic died of mesothelioma, an asbestos-caused cancer. As a child and as an adult Bostic was exposed to asbestos from his father's clothes and from his own work. Because no safe level of asbestos exposure is known for mesothelioma, in contrast to asbestosis, Bostic's survivors argue that the appeals court erred by holding Flores requires a defendant's liability must be based on exposure to a certain company's asbestos product- that is, but for exposure to a defendant's asbestos product, the plaintiff's injury would not have occurred.
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SW. BELL TEL. CO. V. MKTG. ON HOLD, INC. (05-0748) - view video
3/22/2007 @ 9:50 AM (length 39:19)
Originating county: Cameron County
Originating from: 13th District Court of Appeals, Corpus Christi & Edinburg
Case Documents
05-0748 Southwestern Bell Telephone Co. v. Marketing On Hold Inc. from Cameron County and the 13th District Court of Appeals, Corpus Christi/Edinburg In this interlocutory appeal from a class-certification order, the principal issues are (1) whether a corporation advancing claims it got by assignment can serve as class representative in a challenge to Southwestern Bell's billing for passed-along municipal fees and (2) whether the certified class met the requirement that common questions among the class predominate. Marketing On Hold, a firm that scrutinizes its clients' telephone bills for improper billing, took five claims by assignment and sought to certify the suit as a class action. The trial court named it class representative for nearly 7,000 Southwestern Bell customers in three phone-service categories. Of the claims Marketing On Hold held by assignment, none was in one of those categories. The court of appeals affirmed the class-certification order.
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SW. BELL TELEPHONE, L.P. V. HARRIS COUNTY TOLL ROAD AUTH. (06-0933) - view video
1/15/2008 @ 9:00 AM (length 47:59)
Originating county: Harris County
Originating from: 1st District Court of Appeals, Houston
Case Documents
06-0933 Southwestern Bell Telephone L.P. v. Harris County Toll Road Authority and Harris County from Harris County and the First District Court of Appeals, Houston For petitioner: Mike A. Hatchell, Austin For respondents: Bruce S. Powers, Houston The Supreme Court will hear arguments on the issue is whether the Transportation Code (section 251.102) allows for reimbursement of the utility's relocation costs and provides for waiver of governmental immunity to enforce the claim. The issues in this dispute over costs of relocating underground cables are (1) whether the Transportation Code (section 251.102) allows for reimbursement of relocation costs and provides for waiver of governmental immunity to enforce the claim and (2) whether the utility has a sufficient property interest along a right-of-way to bring an inverse-condemnation claim for costs of moving its underground cables. In this case Southwestern Bell sued the county and toll-road authority for refusing to pay the $1.5 million it billed for relocating the cables to accommodate roadway expansion. The trial court awarded costs to the telephone company, but the court of appeals reversed.
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TANNER V. NATIONWIDE MUTUAL FIRE INS. CO. (07-0760) - view video
10/14/2008 @ 9:50 AM (length 42:21)
Originating county: Caldwell County
Originating from: 11th District Court of Appeals, Eastland
Case Documents
07-0760 Greg Tanner and Maribel Tanner v. Nationwide Mutual Fire Insurance Co. from Caldwell County and the 11th District Court of Appeals, Eastland For petitioners: Don R. Cotton, Austin For respondents: Chris Heinemeyer, San Antonio The Supreme Court will hear arguments on whether fleeing driver's hard braking before wreck during police chase voids willful conduct used to avoid insurance coverage. The issue in this insurance-coverage dispute resulting from a high-speed police chase is whether sufficient evidence exists to conclude that the fleeing driver engaged in willful and intentional conduct when he collided with the Tanners' car. When he hit the Tanners' car, the pursued driver was braking hard. The Tanners and their two children were injured and sued the driver, but Nationwide, which insured him, sued to declare the policy did not cover the accident because it resulted from willful and intentional conduct. Jurors found in favor of the Tanners, but the trial court held Nationwide had no duty to defend the driver or to indemnify him. 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
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TAWES V. BARNES (10-0581) - view video
11/9/2010 @ 10:40 AM (length 42:50)
Originating from: U.S. Court of Appeals, 5th Circuit
Case Documents
10-0581 O. Lee Tawes III v. Doris Barnes certified questions from the U.S. Court of Appeals, Fifth Circuit In this suit over royalty payments, the ultimate issue is whether Tawes, one of several interest-holders in oil and gas production under Barnes' land, owes Barnes any or all unpaid royalties she claims. Tawes was an investor in two wells on property adjacent to Barnes' that tapped oil and gas under Barnes' land under a pooling arrangement. Barnes' lessee opted out of developing the wells, but a provision in the joint-operating agreement specified that interest-holders consenting to drilling the wells would be "responsible for ... all royalty." The first certified question asks whether Barnes can recover unpaid royalties under the joint-operating agreement - defining the operator and allocating expenses and revenues - or another, the working interest-unit agreement - defining allocations in a pooled operation. Her theory is that she is a third-party beneficiary of those agreements or has privity of estate because the company in which Tawes invested took over as operator from her lessee. The second certified question asks whether the working interest-unit agreement prevents Barnes from recovering from Tawes because, under that agreement, the company in which Tawes invested was liable for Tawes' obligations. The third certified question asks whether Tawes is responsible for all royalties owed Barnes or just royalties to the extent of his interest in the two wells. 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
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TENASKA ENERGY INC., ET AL. V. PONDEROSA PINE ENERGY LLC (12-0789) - view video
1/7/2014 @ 9:00 AM (length 44:15)
Originating county: Dallas County
Originating from: 5th District Court of Appeals, Dallas
Case Documents
The principal issues are (1) whether the trial court's rejection of an arbitration award properly found one arbitrator evidently partial and (2) whether Tenaska, seeking to vacate the award, waived its evident-partiality claim. Ponderosa invoked arbitration to resolve disputed issues over its purchase of Tenaska's power plant, then moved to confirm a three-arbitrator panel's $125-million award. Tenaska moved to vacate, arguing that Ponderosa's arbitrator did not fully disclose its business dealings with Ponderosa's counsel. In vacating the award, the trial court found Ponderosa's arbitrator, Stern, manifested evident partiality. The appeals court reversed and confirmed the arbitration award.
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TENET HOSPITALS LTD. V. ELIZABETH RIVERA (13-0096) - view video
2/4/2014 @ 9:50 AM (length 41:25)
Originating county: El Paso County
Originating from: 8th District Court of Appeals, El Paso
Case Documents
The principal issues in this medical-malpractice case are (1) whether the 10-year repose statute applied to a health care-liability claim by a minor injured before she turned 8 violates the Texas constitution's open-courts provision and (2) whether the repose statute, enacted in 2003, is unconstitutionally retroactive when applied to a claim that arose in 1996. Rivera, suing on behalf of her disabled daughter, claims the disability resulted from the hospital's failure to assess symptoms that led to an emergency cesarean birth a day after Rivera sought treatment. Rivera sued when her daughter was 14. In its defense the hospital argued that no evidence supported the claim because of the 10-year repose statute. The trial court granted summary judgment for the hospital. The court of appeals reversed, holding that the repose statute violated the Texas Constitution's open-courts provision.
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TERSA GAROFOLO V. OCWEN LOAN SERVICING LLC (15-0437) - view video
9/23/2015 @ 10:40 AM (length 40:48)
Originating from: U.S. Court of Appeals, 5th Circuit
Case Documents
In this dispute over terms of a home equity-loan repayment, the Firth Circuit asks essentially (1) whether, under the state constitutional home equity-loan provision, a lender is liable for forfeiting principal and interest by failing to return the canceled note and lien release upon full repayment and after notice within 60 days of the lender's failure to comply and, if not, (2) whether forfeiture of principal and interest may be had instead of actual damages under a breach-of-contract theory even if the lien release has been filed in deed records.
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TEX. COMPTROLLER OF PUBLIC ACCOUNTS V. ATTORNEY GENERAL OF TEXAS (08-0172) - view video
9/10/2009 @ 9:00 AM (length 48:51)
Originating county: Travis County
Originating from: 3rd District Court of Appeals, Austin
Case Documents
(Justice Hecht not sitting) 08-0172 Texas Comptroller of Public Accounts v. Attorney General of Texas and The Dallas Morning News from Travis County and the Third District Court of Appeal, Austin For petitioner: Jack Hohengarten, Austin For cross-petitioner/respondent Dallas News: Paul C. Watler, Dallas For respondent Attorney General of Texas: Brenda K. Loudermilk, Austin The issues in this open-records challenge are (1) whether common-law privacy exempts state employees' birth dates from disclosure under the Texas Public Information Act and (2) whether the newspaper, as intervenor, is entitled to attorneys fees under the act or under the Uniform Declaratory Judgment Act. In this case the comptroller sued the attorney general after it ruled that birth dates must be disclosed under the Public Information Act. The trial court granted the attorney general's summary-judgment motion and the court of appeals affirmed. As petitioner, the comptroller argues that the information should be exempt from the public-records law based on the privacy tort for intrusion upon seclusion. 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
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TEX. DEPT OF TRANSP. V. SELF (22-0585) - view video
11/30/2023 @ 9:50 AM (length 45:03)
Originating county: Montague County
Originating from: 2nd District Court of Appeals, Fort Worth
Case Documents
This case presents two questions involving the scope of the Texas Tort Claims Act's immunity waiver: (1) whether a governmental employee's control over a third party contractor constitutes "operation or use" under the Act's waiver of immunity for property damage "aris[ing] from" the operation or use of motor driven equipment, and (2) whether a subcontractor's workers who removed trees from private property adjacent to a public roadway were TxDOT "employees" under the statute.
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TEX. DEPT. OF PUBLIC SAFETY V. CARUANA (10-0321) - view video
9/14/2011 @ 9:00 AM (length 47:02)
Originating county: Hays County
Originating from: 3rd District Court of Appeals, Austin
Case Documents
10-0321 Texas Department of Public Safety v. Stephen Joseph Caruana from Hays County and the Third District Court of Appeals, Austin For petitioner: Kevin M. Givens, Austin For respondent: Brian L. Baker, San Marcos The issue in this license-revocation appeal is whether an alcohol-breath test officer's notarized statement about breath test's result was admissible in the revocation hearing even though the analyst did not swear to it. Caruana challenged an administrative-law judge's finding that the department proved his intoxication while driving by admission of the breath-test analyst's unsworn statement. Under the relevant Texas Transportation Code provision (section 524.011(b)(4)(D)) a sworn report relevant to a drunk-driving arrest shall be sent to the department within five business days. The pertinent administrative regulation allows a sworn report to be admissible as a public record. The trial court reversed the administrative-law judge and the appeals court 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
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TEX. DEPT. OF PUBLIC SAFETY V. COX TEXAS NEWSPAPERS, L.P. (09-0530) - view video
9/15/2010 @ 9:50 AM (length 48:09)
Originating county: Travis County
Originating from: 3rd District Court of Appeals, Austin
Case Documents
(Justice Medina and Justice Willett not sitting) 09-0530 Texas Department of Public Safety v. Cox Texas Newspapers L.P. and Hearst Newspapers L.L.C. from Travis County and the Third District Court of Appeals, Austin For petitioner: David S. Morales, Austin For respondents: William Christian, Austin The principal issues in this dispute over state troopers' travel vouchers submitted for the governor's out-of-state trips are (1) whether a common-law exception to the Texas public information law excludes the vouchers' release, or should, when disclosure allegedly could cause physical harm; (2) whether DPS waived reliance on the Texas Homeland Security Act as an "other law" that would be an exception from the public information law's disclosure requirement; and, if not, (3) whether the vouchers are collected for preventing, detecting or investigating terrorism or related criminal activity. At least two Texas newspapers sued after DPS, with the attorney general's backing, refused to disclose individual troopers' travel vouchers for the governor's past out-of-state trips. DPS cited safety concerns for the governor and troopers and the attorney general, in an opinion DPS requested, determined the Texas Public Information Act did not require the vouchers' release. The trial court ruled the vouchers were not confidential and that disclosing them would not pose any imminent physical threat. The court of appeals affirmed, holding that evidence did not demonstrate substantial risk of harm even if a common-law privacy right could be grounded on such risk. 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
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TEX. EDUC. AGENCY V. HOUS. INDEP. SCH. DIST. (21-0194) - view video
10/6/2022 @ 9:50 AM (length 40:56)
Originating county: Travis County
Originating from: 11th District Court of Appeals, Eastland
Case Documents
The issues in this case are (1) whether Mike Morath, commissioner of the Texas Education Agency, acted ultra vires by appointing a board of managers to exercise authority over Houston ISD, and by assigning a conservator to oversee Houston ISD's governance; (2) whether Dr. Doris Delaney, the conservator appointed by Commissioner Morath, had the authority to suspend Houston ISD's superintendent search; and (3) whether the trial court must reconsider its temporary injunction under the Texas Education Code as amended by Senate Bill 1365.
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TEX. MUT. INS. CO. V. LEDBETTER (06-0814) - view video
11/15/2007 @ 9:50 AM (length 37:51)
Originating county: Jones County
Originating from: 11th District Court of Appeals, Eastland
Case Documents
Texas Mutual Insurance Co. v. Paula Ledbetter, et al. from Jones County and the 11th District Court of Appeals, Eastland For petitioner: Mary A. Keeney, Austin For respondents: Lance Hall, Sweetwater The Supreme Court will hear arguments on the issue of whether challenge to nonsuit leaving only an estate in case workers comp insurer claims subrogation rights. Principal issues are (1) whether a challenge to a trial court's granting a nonsuit should be reviewed for abuse of discretion or de novo; (2) whether the trial court erred by allowing the nonsuit to be granted; and (3) whether Texas Mutual's intervention plea was proper. In this case Texas Mutual, which had been paying Ledbetter death benefits under a workers compensation policy, petitioned to intervene in a settlement hearing in a negligence suit Ledbetter filed. The insurance company claimed it had subrogation rights against the settlement proceeds for benefits it had paid. At that hearing, Ledbetter moved to drop all plaintiffs bringing claims over her husband's death, leaving only his estate in the suit. The trial court granted the nonsuit, struck Texas Mutual's intervention, ordered that it was not entitled to reimbursement and that it must continue payments. In this Court, Texas Mutual argues that the decision to grant the nonsuit must be reviewed in its entirety and that the nonsuit was improper because it prejudiced Texas Mutual's claim for affirmative relief by an adverse party. The court of appeals held that the nonsuit did not affect Texas Mutual's subrogation rights but that the trial court erred by striking the intervention.
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TEXAS A&M UNIVERSITY - KINGSVILLE V. YARBROUGH (09-0999) - view video
1/4/2011 @ 9:00 AM (length 45:41)
Originating county: Kleberg County
Originating from: 13th District Court of Appeals, Corpus Christi & Edinburg
Case Documents
09-0999? Texas A&M University-Kingsville v. Melody Yarbrough? from Kleberg County and the 13th District Court of Appeals, Corpus Christi/Edinburg For petitioner: David S. Morales, Austin ?For respondent: Kevin F. Lungwitz, Austin? The principal issues in this declaratory-judgment action are (1) whether a college professor's complaint about an evaluation stated an ultra vires claim that should have been against university officials instead of the institution and (2) whether university policy allowing an aggrieved employee to rebut an evaluation violates Texas Government Code section 617.005's provision if a public employee's complaint about working conditions is heard by an administrator without authority to remedy the problem. In this case Yarbrough complained that A&M-Kingsville's grievance policy did not provide her the right to complain to a person with authority to remedy errors in the evaluation she believed might hurt her chances for tenure. (She later got tenure, despite the evaluation, raising a question whether her suit is moot). The trial court granted the university's summary-judgment motion, but 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
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TEXAS ADJUTANT GENERAL'S OFFICE V. MICHELE NGAKOUE (11-0686) - view video
12/4/2012 @ 10:40 AM (length 35:55)
Originating county: Travis County
Originating from: 3rd District Court of Appeals, Austin
Case Documents
The issues in this case tests the operation of election-of-remedies provisions the Legislature added to the Texas Tort Claims Acts in 2003, asking in essence whether the negligence suit filed initially against the state-employee driver bars any suit against the state-agency itself when the driver shows he was driving as part of his job. In this case Ngakoue initially sued Barnum alone after an accident. Barnum then moved to dismiss the suit under section 101.106(f), contending his driving fell within the scope of his employment and the suit could have been filed against the Adjutant's General's Office. When Ngakoue amended her petition to add the state agency and to dismiss Barnum, the trial court refused to dismiss Barnum and denied the Adjutant General's Office's jurisdictional plea. Under section 101.106(b), the state argues, Ngakoue lost her chance to sue the state agency because she elected to sue the employee first by himself. The court of appeals denied the state's plea to the jurisdiction.
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TEXAS COAST UTILITIES COALITION V. RAILROAD COMMISSION OF TEXAS AND CENTERPOINT ENERGY RESOURCES CORP. D/B/A CENTERPOINT ENERGY ENTEX AND CENTERPOINT ENERGY TEXAS GAS (12-0102) - view video
9/10/2013 @ 9:00 AM (length 45:10)
Originating county: Travis County
Originating from: 3rd District Court of Appeals, Austin
Case Documents
A principal issue in this challenge to the Texas Railroad Commission's approval for CenterPoint's annual cost-of-service adjustment is whether the Gas Utilities Regulation Act gives the commission power to adjust rates either under its broad rate authority or by its implied authority to approve interim-rate adjustments to protect against "regulatory lag." In this case nine municipalities and state-agency customers in CenterPoint's Texas Coast Division protested the gas utility's rate increase, arguing the Railroad Commission has authority only to approve such rate adjustments by full rate cases, not by a formula that allows annual rate adjustments. The coalition and state agencies argue that the Gas Utilities Regulation Act contains safeguards that allow for rates to rise while full rate cases are decided, answering the implied authority to protect against so-called regulatory lag. In an appeal to district court from the commission's order, the court held the commission acted without authority by approving the rate increase. The appeals court reversed, determining that the commission had such rate-adjustment power under the regulation statute's' broad authority or implied power.
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TEXAS COMMISSION ON ENVIRONMENTAL QUALITY V. BOSQUE RIVER COALITION (11-0737) - view video
2/28/2013 @ 9:00 AM (length 45:37)
Originating county: Travis County
Originating from: 3rd District Court of Appeals, Austin
Case Documents
Consilidated for oral argument with 11-0729. In these cases the principal issue is whether the city and the Bosque River Coalition were entitled to contested-case hearings challenging amended water-quality permits allowing larger herds at dairies in the Bosque River watershed. In the Waco case the city objects to animal waste from one of the dairies polluting the drinking water it draws from Lake Waco downstream. The Bosque River Coalition, a non-profit environmental-protection group, alleges that landowners downstream from the other dairy would suffer pollution from dairy-cattle waste runoff. The underlying question in both cases is whether the Commission on Environmental Quality properly determined that neither the city nor the coalition was an "affected person" entitled to contested-case hearings challenging the commission's permit approvals. Waco and the coalition argue that determining status as an affected person is determining standing and must be, on disputed facts, decided in a contested hearing. The commission determined that the city was too remote from the dairy to show a legally sufficient interest to contest the permit and that the landowners' property was not close enough to allege injuries more particular than injuries the general public might suffer. The commission argues that its affected-person determinations should be reviewed by substantial evidence and not, as the city and coalition contend, under an arbitrary-and-capricious standard. Both Waco and the coalition counter that the commission's conclusion that the dairies' amended water permits would be more protective of water quality than the original permits was irrelevant - thus arbitrary - to determinations that the city and coalition were not affected persons. Trial courts in each case affirmed the commission's orders approving the amended water permits, but the court of appeals reversed each, agreeing that the commission acted arbitrarily and holding in part that a substantial-evidence review was inapplicable because neither the city nor the coalition had a chance to develop an evidentiary record in a contested hearing.
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TEXAS COMMISSION ON ENVIRONMENTAL QUALITY V. CITY OF WACO (11-0729) - view video
2/28/2013 @ 9:00 AM (length 45:37)
Originating county: Travis County
Originating from: 3rd District Court of Appeals, Austin
Case Documents
Consilidated for oral argument with 11-0737. In these cases the principal issue is whether the city and the Bosque River Coalition were entitled to contested-case hearings challenging amended water-quality permits allowing larger herds at dairies in the Bosque River watershed. In the Waco case the city objects to animal waste from one of the dairies polluting the drinking water it draws from Lake Waco downstream. The Bosque River Coalition, a non-profit environmental-protection group, alleges that landowners downstream from the other dairy would suffer pollution from dairy-cattle waste runoff. The underlying question in both cases is whether the Commission on Environmental Quality properly determined that neither the city nor the coalition was an "affected person" entitled to contested-case hearings challenging the commission's permit approvals. Waco and the coalition argue that determining status as an affected person is determining standing and must be, on disputed facts, decided in a contested hearing. The commission determined that the city was too remote from the dairy to show a legally sufficient interest to contest the permit and that the landowners' property was not close enough to allege injuries more particular than injuries the general public might suffer. The commission argues that its affected-person determinations should be reviewed by substantial evidence and not, as the city and coalition contend, under an arbitrary-and-capricious standard. Both Waco and the coalition counter that the commission's conclusion that the dairies' amended water permits would be more protective of water quality than the original permits was irrelevant - thus arbitrary - to determinations that the city and coalition were not affected persons. Trial courts in each case affirmed the commission's orders approving the amended water permits, but the court of appeals reversed each, agreeing that the commission acted arbitrarily and holding in part that a substantial-evidence review was inapplicable because neither the city nor the coalition had a chance to develop an evidentiary record in a contested hearing.
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TEXAS COMPTROLLER GLENN HEGAR AND ATTORNEY GENERAL KEN PAXTON V. TEXAS SMALL TOBACCO COALITION AND GLOBAL TOBACCO INC. (14-0747) - view video
12/8/2015 @ 9:50 AM (length 44:26)
Originating county: Travis County
Originating from: 3rd District Court of Appeals, Austin
Case Documents
The issue is whether taxing cigarette manufacturers that are not parties to the 1998 Texas tobacco settlement but not taxing cigarette-makers covered by the agreement violates the state Constitution's equal-and-uniform clause. In this case the tobacco companies sued for federal and state constitutional violations because the Legislature in 2013 created a tax on tobacco products sold by companies that were not part of the 1998 settlement. Unlike other states that settled with the tobacco companies, Texas never established escrow accounts into which non-settling tobacco manufacturers had to pay to credit against future recoveries. The trial court ruled the 2013 tax unconstitutional. The court of appeals affirmed, holding that tax violated the state constitution's equal-and-uniform clause.
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TEXAS DEPARTMENT OF AGING AND DISABILITY SERVICES V. MARY CANNON (12-0830) - view video
9/16/2014 @ 9:00 AM (length 43:59)
Originating county: Washington County
Originating from: 14th District Court of Appeals, Houston
Case Documents
A principal issue is whether the trial court erred by refusing to dismiss department employees from a wrongful-death lawsuit under the Texas Tort Claims Act's election-of-remedies provision when the plaintiff added federal Section 1983 claims while the department's dismissal motion was pending. Cannon sued the department and employees, alleging tort claims, after her son, a patient at the Brenham State School, died after employees restrained him. In a jurisdictional plea, the department asserted sovereign immunity, then moved to dismiss claims against the employees, arguing that Cannon could not sue both the department and the employees. Before the trial court acted on that dismissal motion, Cannon dropped her tort claims and amended the suit to allege only federal civil-rights violations under Section 1983. But the department contends claims against the employees effectively were dismissed when it moved to dismiss because the statute makes dismissal mandatory. In its review, the court of appeals affirmed the trial court's refusal to drop the claims against the employees.
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TEXAS DEPARTMENT OF HUMAN SERVICES V. OLIVER OKOLI (10-0567) - view video
10/9/2013 @ 9:00 AM (length 45:08)
Originating county: Harris County
Originating from: 1st District Court of Appeals, Houston
Case Documents
The principal issue in this Whistleblower Act case is whether a government employee's internal complaint about alleged fraud to his supervisors constitutes a good-faith report to an "appropriate law enforcement authority" when the agency has a division to prosecute such fraud but the supervisors do not have authority to do so. In this case Okoli told his supervisor at the Department of Human Services that employees illegally manipulated filing dates on assistance applications, allegedly at her instruction to show better efficiency in processing the applications. After she disciplined him, he reported the allegation to higher supervisors but not the department's inspector general, the unit charged with prosecuting law violations within the department. Three months after his initial report, the supervisor fired Okoli. Okoli sued the department, alleging retaliation under the whistleblower statute. The trial court denied the department's jurisdictional plea to dismiss the suit and the appeals court affirmed.
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TEXAS DEPARTMENT OF INSURANCE, WORKERS' COMPENSATION DIVISION V. BONNIE JONES AND AMERICAN HOME ASSURANCE CO. (15-0025) - view video
3/30/2016 @ 9:00 AM (length 54:59)
Originating county: Dallas County
Originating from: 5th District Court of Appeals, Dallas
Case Documents
The issue is whether a workers-compensation claimant denied continued benefits in an administrative challenge may settle for partial benefits with the workers-comp carrier to end judicial review. In this case the workers-comp division sued to scuttle a settlement between American Home Assurance, the workers-comp insurer, and Jones, the injured worker, that provided $1,572 in supplemental-income benefits. American denied Jones income benefits for one quarter because she did not meet state-law requirements that she search for work. An administrative review backed American's decision, but after Jones sought court review the insurer settled for income benefits less than what the state workers-compensation formula stipulated for Jones's case. The workers-comp division argues that judicial review must be for all the state formula provides, or nothing, and that allowing such "small-money" settlements disrupts a workers-comp system designed to minimize judicial review. But Jones contends state law does not bar settlements awarding partial-income benefits but only proscribes procedures for them that Jones and American satisfied. American also argues that the workers-comp law encourages settlement by allowing for dispute resolution. The trial court approved the settlement and the appeals court affirmed.
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TEXAS DEPT. OF INS. V. AMERICAN NAT'L INS. CO. (10-0374) - view video
9/14/2011 @ 9:50 AM (length 45:02)
Originating county: Travis County
Originating from: 3rd District Court of Appeals, Austin
Case Documents
(Justice Hecht not sitting) 10-0374 Texas Department of Insurance v. American National Insurance Co. and American Life Insurance Co. of Texas from Travis County and the Third District Court of Appeals. Austin For petitioner: Arthur C. D'Andrea, Austin For respondent: Susan G. Conway, Austin The issue in this appeal from a declaratory judgment is whether stop-loss agreements involving self-funded insurance plans are direct insurance, subject to state regulation and certain fees, or reinsurance outside the state's regulation. Stop-loss policies are sold to cover self-funded plans for those occasions when the self-funded plan must pay a loss that exceeds an agreed-upon amount, called an "attachment point." The insurance department contends the companies issuing stop-loss policies sell direct insurance, subject to state regulation and to fees to the Texas Health Insurance Risk Pool. The trial court found for the department, but the court of appeals reversed, holding that stop-loss agreements constitute reinsurance outside the state insurance department's regulation. 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
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TEXAS INDUSTRIAL ENERGY CONSUMERS V. CENTERPOINT ENERGY HOUSTON ELECTRIC, LLC (08-0727) - view video
10/6/2009 @ 10:40 AM (length 41:53)
Originating county: Travis County
Originating from: 3rd District Court of Appeals, Austin
Case Documents
08-0727 Texas Industrial Energy Consumers v. CenterPoint Energy Houston Electric LLC and Public Utility Commission of Texas from Travis County and the Third District Court of Appeals, Austin For petitioner: Lino Mendiola and Jonathan Day, Austin For respondent CenterPoint: Ron Moss, Austin For respondent Public Utility Commission: Brian A. Prestwood, Austin In this electric-deregulation appeal the principal issues are (1) whether state utility commissioners had authority under the Public Utility Regulation Act to award more than 11 percent interest over 14 years on so-called competition transmission charges used to recover stranded costs from consumers and (2) whether the Public Utility Commission exceeded its authority by allowing a utility to pass along to consumers costs to assess its market value after deregulation. Central to the first issue is whether CenterPoint Energy Inc. v. Public Utility Commission (Tex. 2004) invalidated in its entirety the statutory provision allowing interest to be recovered on the uncollected competition transmission charges. As to the second issue, the PUC allowed the pass-through of valuation costs despite statutory language that such costs should be borne by the 'transferee utility." 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
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TEXAS LOTTERY COMM'N V. FIRST STATE BANK OF DEQUEEN (08-0523) - view video
12/16/2009 @ 9:00 AM (length 44:58)
Originating county: Travis County
Originating from: 3rd District Court of Appeals, Austin
Case Documents
08-0523 Texas Lottery Commission v. First State Bank of DeQueen, et al. from Travis County and the Third District Court of Appeals, Austin For petitioner: James C. Ho, Austin For respondents: Jeffrey S. Boyd, Austin The issue is whether the Uniform Commercial Code (UCC 9.406(f)) makes ineffective the Texas Lottery Act's prohibition on a winner's assigning his final two annual payments. In this case Irvan, who won $9 million in the lottery in 1995, assigned all but the last two payments of his prize after the Legislature changed the lottery law in 1999. That amendment allows assignment of all annual payments but the last two. Then in 2006 he assigned the last two payments to pay a bank debt, for which he and the bank got approval from an Arkansas court. When the lottery commission refused to recognize the Arkansas court order, the bank sued in Texas to declare the UCC, which allows assignments, to render the lottery act restriction ineffective. First State Bank won a partial summary judgment, which the appeals courts 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
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TEXAS MUTUAL INS. CO. V. RUTTIGER (08-0751) - view video
4/14/2010 @ 10:40 AM (length 44:03)
Originating county: Galveston County
Originating from: 1st District Court of Appeals, Houston
Case Documents
08-0751 Texas Mutual Insurance Co. v. Timothy J. Ruttiger from Galveston County and the First District Court of Appeals, Houston For petitioner: Pete Schenkkan, Austin For respondent: Byron C. Keeling, Houston Among principal issues in this workers-compensation case alleging bad faith under the Insurance Code and common law are (1) whether an injury became an independent injury under Aranda v. Insurance Company of North America when it was aggravated because the insurer initially refused to cover it; (2) whether the worker exhausted his administrative remedies when the parties entered a "benefit dispute agreement" that the injury was covered; (3) whether lawsuits allowed under the Insurance Code apply to workers-compensation claims; and (4) whether common-law duties of good faith and fair dealing were abolished by post-Aranda Labor Code amendments. In this case Ruttiger sued after he was denied workers-comp benefits for a hernia he claimed he suffered when lifting heavy objects at work. Texas Mutual decided to investigate the claim after Ruttiger's boss, who initially signed his workers-comp claim, later told the insurer she heard Ruttiger suffered the injury playing softball. Without investigating more, the insurance company adjustor denied Ruttiger's claim. In the first-stage administrative review of the denied claim, Ruttiger and Texas Mutual agreed on a "benefit dispute agreement" that paid him benefits. The trial court awarded damages on Insurance Code violations and gave alternative remedies on common law and Deceptive Trade Practices Act claims if the Insurance Code remedies failed on appeal. The appeals court 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
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TEXAS PARKS AND WILDLIFE DEPARTMENT V. THE SAWYER TRUST (07-0945) - view video
11/19/2009 @ 9:00 AM (length 45:53)
Originating county: Donley County
Originating from: 7th District Court of Appeals, Amarillo
Case Documents
07-0945 Texas Parks and Wildlife Department v. The Sawyer Trust from Donley County and the Seventh District Court of Appeals, Amarillo For petitioner: Kristofer S. Monson, Austin For respondent: Jody Sheets, Dallas This dispute over a mining permit to take sand and gravel from what the state contends is a navigational stream bed raises these principal issues: (1) whether the state's jurisdictional immunity plea fails because the trust alleges the state is unconstitutionally "taking" its property and, if not, (2) whether state officials must be sued instead of the state itself. In this case the trust seeks to sell sand and gravel from the bed of the Salt Fork of the Red River traversing its property. By statute the state, through the parks department, owns sand and gravel in a navigable river streambed. The trust sued first to declare the Salt Fork at that point was not navigable, then added the takings claim. The trial court denied the state's jurisdictional plea 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
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TEXAS PROPANE GAS ASSOCIATION V. CITY OF HOUSTON (19-0767) - view video
10/29/2020 @ 9:50 AM (length 45:18)
Originating county: Travis County
Originating from: 3rd District Court of Appeals, Austin
Case Documents
The issues in this challenge to city ordinances arguably preempted by powers delegated to the Texas Railroad Commission are (1) whether Texas Propane Gas Association has standing to challenge all Houston's regulations on liquified-natural gas operations; (2) whether the trial court, sitting as a civil court, lacked jurisdiction to determine the validity of local ordinances that ostensibly are penal by nature; and, assuming they are, (3) whether a civil court can declare the regulations unconstitutional under its equitable powers.
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TEXAS RICE LAND PARTNERS, LTD. V. DENBURY GREEN PIPELINE-TEXAS LLC (09-0901) - view video
4/19/2011 @ 9:50 AM (length 48:35)
Originating county: Jefferson County
Originating from: 9th District Court of Appeals, Beaumont
Case Documents
09-0901 Texas Rice Land Partners Ltd. and Mike Latta v. Denbury Green Pipeline-Texas LLC from Jefferson County and the Ninth District Court of Appeals, Beaumont For petitioner: Amy Warr, Austin For respondent: Lynne Liberato, Houston The principal issue is whether a pipeline qualifies as a common carrier with condemnation power because its owner assured the Texas Railroad Commission the pipeline would be available to ship carbon dioxide for other than Denbury affiliates. Denbury initiated this suit after Texas Rice, which leases farmland to Latta, refused to let Denbury's surveyors onto its property for a pipeline survey. Before the suit, Denbury and Texas Rice had negotiated the survey details but without agreement. Denbury then applied to the Texas Railroad Commission for a common-carrier permit that would allow it to condemn a pipeline easement. The commission approved the common-carrier status and the trial court granted Denbury summary judgment and issued a permanent injunction to bar interference with the survey. Texas Rice argues, as it did to the court of appeals, that a factual dispute exists whether he pipeline will be only for private use. The appeals court affirmed the summary judgment and injunction. 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
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TEXAS SOUTHERN UNIVERSITY ET AL. V. IVAN VILLARREAL (19-0440) - view video
12/1/2020 @ 9:50 AM (length 37:30)
Originating county: Harris County
Originating from: 1st District Court of Appeals, Houston
Case Documents
In this challenge by a law student contesting his dismissal after a controversy implicating grading in a first-year course, the issues are (1) whether the dismissal is properly characterized as academic and raises due-course-of-law protections; if so, (2) whether the appeals court properly concluded the law student alleged a viable procedural due-course-of-law claim; and (3) whether the appeals court properly concluded the law student alleged a viable substantive due-course-of-law claim.
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TEXAS STATE BOARD OF PHARMACY, ET AL. V. TIANA JEAN WITCHER (14-1022) - view video
3/9/2016 @ 9:00 AM (length 45:59)
Originating county: Travis County
Originating from: 3rd District Court of Appeals, Austin
Case Documents
In this challenge to disciplinary action by Texas against a Texas pharmacist by another state where she is licensed, the issue is whether the Texas pharmacy board's unwritten policy to follow the other state's suspension and sanction constitutes an invalid rule. The appeals court held against the pharmacy board for its imposed sanction against Witcher, requiring her to comply with North Carolina's discipline to regain her license in Texas. North Carolina suspended her license for her failure to comply with monitoring for substance-abuse problems that arose there after her husband died in a car accident within weeks of their marriage in 2007. Without a job and after she lost her house in foreclosure, Witcher returned to Texas and volunteered for the Texas board's substance-abuse rehabilitation program, entered therapy and resumed pharmacy practice. The Texas board then moved to suspend her, pending North Carolina's resolution of her case. Texas argues it imposed a rule requiring reciprocal discipline for matters, like substance abuse, that Texas would enforce in Texas. But Witcher claims that reciprocal rule, being unwritten, violates the Administrative Procedure Act and its imposition against her is arbitrary and capricious.
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TEXAS STUDENT HOUSING AUTHORITY V. BRAZOS COUNTY APPRAISAL DISTRICT (13-0593) - view video
12/10/2014 @ 10:40 AM (length 42:10)
Originating county: Brazos County
Originating from: 7th District Court of Appeals, Amarillo
Case Documents
The principal issue in this contest over a tax exemption is whether a non-profit municipal corporation that owns student housing lost the basis for its exemption when it housed mostly high-school students for summer camps and programs. Specifically, did Texas Student Housing Authority satisfy exemptions provided by Texas Tax Code section 11.11(a) (used for public purposes), Texas Education Code section 53.46 (benefiting students in an accredited higher-education institution) or Tax Code 11.11(e) (not used for other than college students or state employees)? Texas Student Housing, created in 1995 by Westlake, a municipality near Denton, sued after the appraisal district revoked the tax exemption for a dorm it owns near Texas A&M University because the dorm housed students attending summer camps and programs on campus. The trial court rendered judgment for the appraisal district. The appeals court affirmed the revocation for two of three years, but reversed for the third, holding that programs for one summer were related definitely and intimately to Texas A&M's legislative mandate.
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TEXAS WEST OAKS HOSPITAL, LP V. WILLIAMS (10-0603) - view video
11/8/2011 @ 9:00 AM (length 47:34)
Originating county: Harris County
Originating from: 14th District Court of Appeals, Houston
Case Documents
10-0603 Texas West Oaks Hospital, LP v. Frederick Williams from Harris County and the 14th District Court of Appeals, Houston For petitioners: Ryan L. Clement, Houston For respondent: Charles M. Hessel, Houston The issue is whether a hospital employee's negligence claim against his employer based on a fight with a paranoid-schizophrenic patient is a health care-liability claim and, if so, whether the employee is a "claimant" under the statute who must file an expert report. Williams, injured in the fight that resulted in the patient's death, sued the hospital after the patient's estate named him as well as the hospital in a health care-liability claim. In his cross claims, Williams alleged the hospital did not train him adequately to handle dangerous patients or adequately warn or supervise him with the patient. The hospital moved to dismiss Williams' suit because he did not submit a health care-liability expert report. The trial court denied the dismissal motion and 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
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TGS-NOPEC GEOPHYSICAL CO. V. COMBS (08-1056) - view video
4/15/2010 @ 9:00 AM (length 45:24)
Originating county: Travis County
Originating from: 3rd District Court of Appeals, Austin
Case Documents
(Justice Hecht not sitting) 08-1056 TGS-NOPEC Geophysical Co. v. Susan Combs and Greg Abbott from Travis County and the Third District Court of Appeals, Austin For petitioner: James T. McBride, Houston For amicus curiae WesternGeco LLC: Thomas R. Phillips, Austin, and Renn G. Neilson, Dallas For respondents: Kevin D. Van Oort, Austin The principal issues in this franchise tax dispute are (1) whether the company's income from selling its geophysical and seismic data constitutes receipts from a use of a "license" under Tax Code section 171.103 and (2) whether the comptroller abused its discretion by determining the licenses' place of "use" by the customers' mailing or billing addresses. TGS, which collects subsurface geophysical and seismic data worldwide, sued the state comptroller for assessing higher franchise taxes on its gross receipts and charging penalties and interest for underreported and underpaid taxes from its data sales. TGS argues that its gross receipts from the data sales result from selling intangible assets, subject to allocation by a customer's state of incorporation. But under Section 171.103, as amended in 1998, the comptroller counters, allocated income from a license is to Texas if the license were used in Texas. The comptroller used TGS customers' mailing or billing addresses to establish where the licenses were used. The trial court ruled for the comptroller, but reversed the penalties and interest. 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
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THE CITY OF HOUSTON V. WILLIAMS (09-0770) - view video
10/13/2010 @ 10:40 AM (length 44:08)
Originating county: Harris County
Originating from: 14th District Court of Appeals, Houston
Case Documents
09-0770 City of Houston v. Steve Williams, et al. from Harris County and the 14th District Court of Appeals, Houston For petitioner: Reagan D. Pratt, Houston For cross-petitioners/respondents: Vincent L. Marable III, Wharton The issues in this case by firefighters claiming the city miscalculated vacation and sick-leave benefits upon retirement are (1) whether the Court has jurisdiction over this interlocutory appeal; (2) whether city ordinances are written contracts that would waive governmental immunity; and (3) whether the firefighters have standing to sue, based on or despite "meet-and-confer" or collective-bargaining agreements. A principal factor is whether the city ordinances governing these retirement benefits amount to a contract as defined by Local Government Code section 271.151(a)(2) - "a written contract stating the essential terms of the agreement for providing goods or services" - that would waive governmental immunity. The court of appeals held that the ordinances constituted a unilateral contract accepted by the firefighters when they began work. 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
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THE CITY OF HOUSTON, TEXAS V. ROGER BATES, MICHAEL L. SPRATT AND DOUGLAS SPRINGER (11-0778) - view video
1/9/2013 @ 9:00 AM (length 44:01)
Originating county: Harris County
Originating from: 14th District Court of Appeals, Houston
Case Documents
This case challenging the city's retirement-pay calculations for firefighters raises two principal issues: (1) whether the Local Government Code (section 142.0017) requires the city to pay overtime for approved absences and (2) whether a state statute preempts the city's ordinance governing retirement pay by explicitly defining "salary" and making that definition mandatory. Bates and other firefighters sued the city for failing to calculate overtime pay in their lump sum "termination pay" that normally included leftover vacation and sick days. The city claims they had been paid overtime by mistake when they were working and deducted it from their termination pay. They also allege the city miscalculated their regular salaries, reducing their termination payments. The trial court found for the firefighters on both claims. The appeals court affirmed.
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THE CITY OF ROUND ROCK, TEXAS V. RODRIGUEZ (10-0666) - view video
12/8/2011 @ 10:00 AM (length 45:59)
Originating county: Travis County
Originating from: 3rd District Court of Appeals, Austin
Case Documents
10-0666 City of Round Rock, et al. v. Jaime Rodriguez, et al. from Travis County and the Third District Court of Appeals, Austin For petitioners: Douglas W. Alexander, Austin For respondents: Craig Deats, Austin The issue is whether the Texas Labor Code provides public employees a right to have a union representative present at an investigative interview, that is, whether the Weingarten right applies to Texas labor law. Rodriguez sued to declare his right to have a union representative present when his supervisors interviewed him on a complaint that he misused sick leave. The city's fire chief denied his request for a union representative. Rodriguez argues that the Weingarten right, established for investigations under the National Labor Relations Act, should apply to similar proceedings under the Texas Labor Code because Weingarten established the right to have union representation on the rationale that the federal law protected employment, as does Texas labor law. The city contends Weingarten was decided more than 75 years after the applicable state labor law provision and the provision does not apply to public employees. The trial court decided in Rodriguez's favor and 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
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THE EDWARDS AQUIFER AUTHORITY V. DAY (08-0964) - view video
2/17/2010 @ 9:50 AM (length 54:58)
Originating county: Atascosa County
Originating from: 4th District Court of Appeals, San Antonio
Case Documents
08-0964 Edwards Aquifer Authority and State of Texas v. Burrell Day and Joel McDaniel from Atascosa County and the Fourth District Court of Appeals, San Antonio For petitioner Edwards Aquifer Authority: Pamela Stanton Baron, Austin For petitioner State of Texas: Kristofer S. Monson, Austin For cross-petitioners/respondents: Tom Joseph, San Antonio Principal issue are (1) whether landowners within the Edwards Aquifer boundaries own the groundwater under their property and (2) whether water from an artesian well that flowed into a reservoir constituted water controlled by state regulations or by the Edwards Aquifer Authority. This appeal arises from Day and McDaniel's challenge to the aquifer authority's limited irrigation permit to pump water from a reservoir on their property. In an appeal from the aquifer authority's permit ruling, the trial court sided with Day and McDaniel, deciding that the reservoir water was aquifer water subject to the authority's control. The court of appeals reversed, holding in part that the landowners had a vested right to aquifer water beneath their land but that groundwater flowing into the reservoir was "state water" subject to state regulation. 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
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THE EPISCOPAL DIOCESE OF FORT WORTH, ET AL. V. THE EPISCOPAL CHURCH, ET AL. (11-0265) - view video
10/16/2012 @ 9:00 AM (length 47:56)
Originating county: Tarrant County
Originating from: Direct appeal from Tarrant County
Case Documents
The principal issue in this case is essentially the same ownership question as those in 11-0332, Robert Masterson, et al. v. Diocese of Northwest Texas, et al., below: Whether in Texas a diocese seeking to leave the U.S. Episcopal Church or the larger Episcopal governing entity owns the church property in the diocese. The specific issue is whether ownership should be decided by "neutral principles"--using established trust and property law and taking account of deeds, the governing language employed by a local church and the larger denomination--or by "deference"--determining in a hierarchical church structure where church members place ultimate authority over property use. In this case the Fort Worth diocese, seeking to split from the larger national Episcopal church, appeals directly from summary judgment for the national church. The trial court used the deference approach to decide that the national church owned church property in the diocese.
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THE FINANCE COMM. OF TEX. V. ASSOC. OF COMMUNITY ORGANIZATIONS FOR REFORM NOW (ACORN) (10-0121) - view video
9/13/2011 @ 9:00 AM (length 48:09)
Originating county: Travis County
Originating from: 3rd District Court of Appeals, Austin
Case Documents
10-0121 Finance Commission of Texas, et al. v. Valerie Norwood, et al. from Travis County and the Third District Court of Appeals, Austin For petitioners: Mr. Evan S. Green and Mr. Craig Enoch, Austin For respondents: Mr. Nelson Mock, Austin Among principal issues in this challenge to regulations promulgated for home-equity lending in Texas are (1) whether deference should be the review standard for agency interpretations when the agencies - the Finance Commission and Credit Union Commission - were given power to interpret the constitutional home-equity provisions; (2) whether the two commissions erred by adopting the Finance Code's definition of "interest" for interpreting the constitutional provisions; and (3) whether the appeals court erred when it upheld agency rules that allow signing a home-equity loan by power of attorney instead of in specific locations set by the home-equity amendment. The trial court invalidated seven of nine challenged regulations. On review, the court of appeals held the standard of review should be the deference given to state-agency statutory interpretations. The appeals court affirmed the trial court in part and reversed and rendered judgment in part, holding the commissions' rules defining interest were contrary to the intent and plain meaning of the constitutional home-equity lending provision. 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
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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.
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The John G. and Marie Stella Kenedy Memorial Foundation v. Ann M. Fernandez from Nueces County and the 13th District Court of Appeals, Corpus Christi/Edinburg consolidated with 08-0529, Kenedy Memorial (Justice O'Neil and Justice Guzman not sitting) (08-0528) - view video
12/15/2009 @ 9:50 AM (length 44:29)
Originating county: Nueces County
Originating from: 13th District Court of Appeals, Corpus Christi & Edinburg
Case Documents
(Justice O'Neil and Justice Guzman not sitting) 08-0528 The John G. and Marie Stella Kenedy Memorial Foundation v. Ann M. Fernandez from Nueces County and the 13th District Court of Appeals, Corpus Christi/Edinburg consolidated with 08-0529, Kenedy Memorial Foundation v. Fernandez and 08-0534 Frost National Bank v. Ann M. Fernandez For petitioner Foundation: Macey Reasoner Stokes, Houston For petitioner Frost as trustee: Jacqueline M. Stroh, San Antonio For respondent: Julie Pendery, Dallas This appeal involves bills of review seeking to reopen two cases decided more than 30 years ago and a 60-year-old declaratory judgment on a will construction involving a South Texas ranching fortune. The bills to set aside the judgments were brought on behalf of Ann M. Fernandez, who claims she is a daughter born out of wedlock to famed rancher John G. Kenedy Jr. and a Kenedy housemaid. The principal issues are (1) whether the district court had jurisdiction for its summary judgment favoring the foundation when bills of review in the county probate court seeking the same relief were pending while the probate court determined the heirship claim and (2) whether the discovery rule saves the would-be heir's claim because the purported paternity was recently discovered. The district court ruled that Fernandez lacked standing to bring her suits, but the court of appeals held that the district court should have abated its cases while the probate court determined heirship, a threshold for the standing question. 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
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The John G. and Marie Stella Kenedy Memorial Foundation v. Ann M. Fernandez from Nueces County and the 13th District Court of Appeals, Corpus Christi/Edinburg consolidated with 08-0529, Kenedy Memorial (Justice O'Neil and Justice Guzman not sitting) (08-0529) - view video
12/15/2009 @ 9:50 AM (length 44:29)
Originating county: Nueces County
Originating from: 13th District Court of Appeals, Corpus Christi & Edinburg
Case Documents
(Justice O'Neil and Justice Guzman not sitting) 08-0528 The John G. and Marie Stella Kenedy Memorial Foundation v. Ann M. Fernandez from Nueces County and the 13th District Court of Appeals, Corpus Christi/Edinburg consolidated with 08-0529, Kenedy Memorial Foundation v. Fernandez and 08-0534 Frost National Bank v. Ann M. Fernandez For petitioner Foundation: Macey Reasoner Stokes, Houston For petitioner Frost as trustee: Jacqueline M. Stroh, San Antonio For respondent: Julie Pendery, Dallas This appeal involves bills of review seeking to reopen two cases decided more than 30 years ago and a 60-year-old declaratory judgment on a will construction involving a South Texas ranching fortune. The bills to set aside the judgments were brought on behalf of Ann M. Fernandez, who claims she is a daughter born out of wedlock to famed rancher John G. Kenedy Jr. and a Kenedy housemaid. The principal issues are (1) whether the district court had jurisdiction for its summary judgment favoring the foundation when bills of review in the county probate court seeking the same relief were pending while the probate court determined the heirship claim and (2) whether the discovery rule saves the would-be heir's claim because the purported paternity was recently discovered. The district court ruled that Fernandez lacked standing to bring her suits, but the court of appeals held that the district court should have abated its cases while the probate court determined heirship, a threshold for the standing question. 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
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The John G. and Marie Stella Kenedy Memorial Foundation v. Ann M. Fernandez from Nueces County and the 13th District Court of Appeals, Corpus Christi/Edinburg consolidated with 08-0529, Kenedy Memorial (Justice O'Neil and Justice Guzman not sitting) (08-0534) - view video
12/15/2009 @ 9:50 AM (length 44:29)
Originating county: Nueces County
Originating from: 13th District Court of Appeals, Corpus Christi & Edinburg
Case Documents
(Justice O'Neil and Justice Guzman not sitting) 08-0528 The John G. and Marie Stella Kenedy Memorial Foundation v. Ann M. Fernandez from Nueces County and the 13th District Court of Appeals, Corpus Christi/Edinburg consolidated with 08-0529, Kenedy Memorial Foundation v. Fernandez and 08-0534 Frost National Bank v. Ann M. Fernandez For petitioner Foundation: Macey Reasoner Stokes, Houston For petitioner Frost as trustee: Jacqueline M. Stroh, San Antonio For respondent: Julie Pendery, Dallas This appeal involves bills of review seeking to reopen two cases decided more than 30 years ago and a 60-year-old declaratory judgment on a will construction involving a South Texas ranching fortune. The bills to set aside the judgments were brought on behalf of Ann M. Fernandez, who claims she is a daughter born out of wedlock to famed rancher John G. Kenedy Jr. and a Kenedy housemaid. The principal issues are (1) whether the district court had jurisdiction for its summary judgment favoring the foundation when bills of review in the county probate court seeking the same relief were pending while the probate court determined the heirship claim and (2) whether the discovery rule saves the would-be heir's claim because the purported paternity was recently discovered. The district court ruled that Fernandez lacked standing to bring her suits, but the court of appeals held that the district court should have abated its cases while the probate court determined heirship, a threshold for the standing question. 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
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THE OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL OF TEXAS V. RICHARD LYNN SCHOLER (11-0796) - view video
12/6/2012 @ 9:00 AM (length 45:23)
Originating county: Clay County
Originating from: 2nd District Court of Appeals, Fort Worth
Case Documents
In this child-support action brought by the state, a principal issue is whether estoppel may be a defense for a father who signed an affidavit terminating his parental rights that he assumed was filed but never was. Sued over as much as $80.000 in unpaid child support, Scholer defended himself by contending he signed the affidavit his ex-wife's attorney prepared in answer Scholer's offer to terminate his rights in a dispute over his access to the child. The affidavit noted his child-support obligation would cease, that he did not want to appear in court or by counsel and that he knew he "may not be further informed about the termination suit" or any other proceedings affecting his son. In a hearing over the past-due support, Scholer testified he assumed his parental rights ended. His ex-wife testified she decided not to follow through with the termination, did not believe she had a duty to tell him and was unaware Scholer signed the affidavit. The trial court ordered Scholer to pay past-due support. The appeals court reversed, holding that estoppel was an available defense in the attorney general's enforcement action.
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THE STALEY FAMILY PARTNERSHIP LTD. V. DAVID LEE STILES ET AL. (14-0591) - view video
10/14/2015 @ 10:40 AM (length 42:59)
Originating county: Collin County
Originating from: 5th District Court of Appeals, Dallas
Case Documents
The issue is whether evidence to support an easement by necessity must show a public road to which the easement would have led when the landlocked tract was created in 1866. In this case, seeking declaration of an easement because of necessity, both the trial court and the court of appeals denied the easement the Staley Family Partnership sought across the Stiles' land. The appeals court held Staley failed to show that an easement was necessary when the Staley tract was created. Proof that an easement would have led to a public road in 1866 is unnecessary, Staley argues, when evidence showed then, as now, the only access to the land was by crossing the Stiles property.
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THE STATE OF TEXAS V. $281,420.00 IN UNITED STATES CURRENCY (08-0465) - view video
10/7/2009 @ 10:40 AM (length 51:34)
Originating county: Hidalgo County
Originating from: 13th District Court of Appeals, Corpus Christi & Edinburg
Case Documents
08-0465 State of Texas v. $281,420 in U.S. Currency from Hidalgo County and the 13th District Court of Appeals, Corpus Christi/Edinburg For petitioner: Timothy A. Davis, Edinburg For amicus curiae Solicitor General: Sean D. Jordan, Austin For respondent: Edward A. Mallett, Houston The issues in this forfeiture case are (1) whether money found bundled in plastic and secreted in a truck axle can be determined to be contraband in the absence of more than suspicious circumstances and, if not contraband, (2) whether the last person in control of the truck should get the money if all potential owners lost their interests by default judgments. Huerta, a tow-truck driver who was hired to bring a truck tractor from Houston to the Rio Grande Valley, sued to intervene in this forfeiture action. Huerta said he was promised a 30 percent finder's fee of more than $281,000 he discovered in the truck axle and turned over to state authorities. The state claimed the money as drug-related contraband. A jury found that the money was not contraband, that Huerta was in joint or actual possession of it when it was seized and that he should get a $70,000 reward. The trial court overturned that verdict, giving all the money to the state. The court of appeals reversed and awarded Huerta the money. 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
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THE STATE OF TEXAS V. BROWNLOW (08-0551) - view video
12/16/2009 @ 9:50 AM (length 43:13)
Originating county: Brazoria County
Originating from: 14th District Court of Appeals, Houston
Case Documents
(Justice Guzman not sitting) 08-0551 State of Texas v. Charles Lynn Brownlow and Marlene H. Brownlow from Brazoria County and the 14th District Court of Appeals, Houston For petitioner: Lisa Marie McClain, Austin For respondents: Bud Arnot, Houston The issue is whether the Department of Transportation's permanent easement for a water-detention pond adjacent to a widened highway allows the state to excavate soil from the easement for highway work miles away. Claiming inverse condemnation, the Brownlows sued the state for unconstitutionally taking their property, arguing they owned the dirt. Their permanent easement resulted from an earlier challenge to the state's effort to take a fee-simple interest in their land. The trial court dismissed the Brownlows' suit on the state's jurisdictional plea. The court of appeals reversed, holding the state did not have sovereign immunity because the easement did not transfer the soil's ownership from the Brownlows to the state. 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
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THE STATE OF TEXAS V. CENTRAL EXPRESSWAY SIGN ASSOCIATES (08-0061) - view video
1/13/2009 @ 9:50 AM (length 45:30)
Originating county: Dallas County
Originating from: 5th District Court of Appeals, Dallas
Case Documents
08-0061 State of Texas v. Central Expressway Sign Associates, et al. from Dallas County and the Fifth District Court of Appeals, Dallas For petitioner: Susan Desmarais Bonnen, Austin For respondents: Joe H. Staley Jr., Dallas, and Sydney Nell Floyd, Houston Among issues in this challenge to a condemnation award is whether expert testimony on billboard-advertising income and not just rental income to the landowner should have been be factored into the award. This action arose from the state's condemnation for a freeway-interchange expansion in North Dallas. Central Expressway Sign Associates leased its easement on the land for a billboard to a second company that erected the billboard and sold advertising on it. After the state acquired the land itself, special commissioners determined the value of the easement at slightly more than $2 million, to be divided among the interest-holders. The state challenged that award, but the trial court excluded its expert, who calculated the fair market value of the remaining interests at $360,000 by accounting for rental income to Sign Associates but not for Viacom's advertising sales. Jurors awarded $1.8 million after the trial court allowed testimony about advertising-sales income. The court of appeals affirmed. In this appeal, the state argues in part that its appraisal expert was improperly excluded, that his method accounted for the value of the easement and billboard lease as a whole and that advertising sales represented business income that should have been excluded. 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
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THE STATE OF TEXAS V. K.E.W. (09-0236) - view video
2/18/2010 @ 10:40 AM (length 44:13)
Originating county: Galveston County
Originating from: 1st District Court of Appeals, Houston
Case Documents
09-0236 State of Texas v. K.E.W. from Galveston County and the First District Court of Appeals, Houston For petitioner: Donald S. Glywasky, Galveston For respondent: Thomas W. McQuage, Galveston The principal issue in this challenge to an involuntary commitment order was whether the appeals court correctly applied the clear-and-convincing standard to assess likelihood of serious harm to others. K.E.W., suffering schizophrenia and at times agitated, came to a mental-health clinic looking for a specific staff member whom he said he wanted to impregnate. Aliens implanted a computer chip in him, he explained, because he was chosen to populate a new human race. The trial court ordered him committed, but the appeals court held that his talk without more than agitation was not an overt act that was clear and convincing evidence of serious harm to himself or others. The state argues that the court of appeals only needed to find a scintilla of evidence to support the commitment order and not an elevated review standard. 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
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THE STATE OF TEXAS V. NINETY THOUSAND TWO HUNDRED THIRTY-FIVE DOLLARS AND NO CENTS IN UNITED STATES CURRENCY ($90,235) AND 2000 BLACK LINCOLN NAVIGATOR VIN: 5LMPU28A7YLJ10865 (11-0642) - view video
11/7/2012 @ 9:00 AM (length 43:52)
Originating county: El Paso County
Originating from: 8th District Court of Appeals, El Paso
Case Documents
The principal issues in this forfeiture action are (1) whether the state's summary-judgment evidence established a fact question on probable cause, that is, whether an affidavit based on hearsay sufficiently established probable cause in a civil action, and (2) whether the trial court erred by disposing all the state's claims when the summary-judgment motion ostensibly addressed money seizure from illegal drug activity and not the state's other claim, that the money seized was connected to money laundering. In this case the state sued for forfeiture after officers seized $90,235 in plastic bags they found after a drug-sniffing dog indicated a narcotics smell in a vehicle (and, after the search, on the money). Bueno, the driver (his real name), moved for summary judgment, which the trial court granted. The court of appeals affirmed.
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THE STATE OF TEXAS V. PETROPOULOS (09-0652) - view video
2/1/2011 @ 9:00 AM (length 44:46)
Originating county: Travis County
Originating from: 3rd District Court of Appeals, Austin
Case Documents
09-0652 State of Texas v. Chris and Helen Petropoulos from Travis County and the Third District Court of Appeals, Austin For petitioner: Susan Desmarais Bonnen, Austin For respondent: John McClish, Austin A principal issue is whether the trial court used the wrong condemnation-compensation test by instructing that damage should be calculated by taking the remainder property's value from the whole property's value before its taking. In this case the state appealed the trial court's judgment that $303,000 compensation was due property owners for one-third of an acre condemned for a highway project of the owners' 3.5-acre tract. The trial court accepted the state expert's valuation of the property after taking to be $276,000 and the jury's valuation finding for the whole tract before its taking to be slightly more than $579,000. The state argues that the property owners had not suffered a compensable loss. The appeals court affirmed the trial court's judgment. 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
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THE STATE OF TEXAS V. PUBLIC UTILITY COMM'N OF TEXAS (08-0421) - view video
10/6/2009 @ 9:50 AM (length 1:41:09)
Originating county: Travis County
Originating from: 3rd District Court of Appeals, Austin
Case Documents
08-0421 State of Texas v. Public Utility Commission of Texas from Travis County and the Third District Court of Appeals, Austin For petitioners: Jonathan Day, Austin, and Alton J. Hall Jr., Houston For petitioners CenterPoint and Texas Genco: Thomas R. Phillips, Gregory S. Coleman, Austin For respondent: Elizabeth Sterling, Austin One principal issue in this challenge under the Public Utility Regulation Act is whether state utility commissioners properly rejected the "stranded costs" calculation for a power-generating company spun off from the parent utility. In this case CenterPoint, a Houston-based power company, established stranded costs - the difference between market value of the utilities' assets and their book value - based in part on stock in the new generating company it transferred to its own shareholders. State utility commissioners rejected the companies' partial-stock valuation method because the stock was not sold in a public offering, as the commission contends the electricity-deregulation law required. The utilities argue that market value could be established by share prices on stock that later sold. The state agrees that the partial-stock method failed to meet statutory requirements, but maintains the utility commission modified what the statute required to calculate the utilities' stranded costs. 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
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THE TRAVELERS INS. CO. V. JOACHIM (08-0941) - view video
2/17/2010 @ 9:00 AM (length 41:46)
Originating county: Lubbock County
Originating from: 7th District Court of Appeals, Amarillo
Case Documents
08-0941 The Travelers Insurance Co. v. Barry Joachim from Lubbock County and the Seventh District Court of Appeals, Amarillo For petitioner: Christopher B. Slayton, Lubbock For respondent: Stace Williams, Lubbock The issue is whether, after a nonsuit, the trial court's order dismissing a case with prejudice for failing to prosecute it is a final-merits determination that bars a later suit. In this case Travelers sought to dismiss Joachim's second suit against it because the trial court in the first suit dismissed that one in an order barring refiling. Travelers argues that dismissal of the first suit with prejudice, though otherwise improper, became a decisions on the merits when Joachim failed to challenge it. Instead of challenging the order in the first suit, Joachim filed an identical claim in a second court. After the trial court initially denied Travelers' summary-judgment motion, based on res judicata, another judge on reconsideration granted the motion. The court of appeals reversed, holding that dismissal of a case for want of prosecution was not a merits determination and could not be ordered with prejudice. 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
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THE UNIV. OF TEXAS AT EL PASO V. HERRERA (08-1049) - view video
3/25/2010 @ 9:00 AM (length 48:41)
Originating county: El Paso County
Originating from: 8th District Court of Appeals, El Paso
Case Documents
08-1049 University of Texas at El Paso v. Alfredo Herrera from El Paso County and the Eighth District Court of Appeals, El Paso For petitioner: Sean D. Jordan, Austin For respondent: John P. Mobbs, El Paso In this complaint that the university violated the Family and Medical Leave Act, a principal issue is whether Congress abrogated the state's sovereign immunity under a provision that allows leave for an employee's serious health condition ("self-care" leave provision). The argument in part depends on whether Nevada Department of Human Resources v. Hibbs, holding that Congress annulled state immunity in the family-leave act's separate "family-care provision," extends to the statute's self-care provision. UTEP argues in part that Congress acted under the commerce clause in enacting the self-care provision, a basis that cannot authorize abrogation of state sovereign immunity. The trial court denied the university's jurisdictional plea. Relying on Hibbs, the court of appeals affirmed. Texas Supreme Court advisory Contact: Osler McCarthy, Staff Attorney for Public Information (512) 463.1441 or email: osler.mccarthy@courts.state.tx.us
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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
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THE UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS SOUTHWESTERN MEDICAL CENTER AT DALLAS V. LARRY M. GENTILELLO, M.D. (10-0582) - view video
9/12/2012 @ 9:00 AM (length 46:29)
Originating county: Dallas County
Originating from: 5th District Court of Appeals, Dallas
Case Documents
The principal issues are whether (1) a medical-school department chair, by alleging Medicare- and Medicaid-rules violations to his supervisor, reported law violations to an "appropriate law-enforcement authority" under the state Whistleblower Act or (2) had a good-faith belief that his supervisor was such an appropriate law-enforcement authority. Under the whistleblower statute such a law-enforcement authority is defined as part of a government agency that can enforce the law alleged to be violated or regulate under it. Gentilello reported to his supervisor that residents were performing surgeries without supervision, violating federal rules, but sued under the whistleblower law after he was demoted. The court of appeals held that Gentilello's supervisor was an appropriate authority to report the alleged law violations because federal regulations charged the medical center with self-enforcement, that the supervisor determined federal compliance issues and the hospital's compliance office encouraged reporting violations with the promise of no retaliation.
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TIC ENERGY AND CHEMICAL INC. V. KEVIN BRADFORD MARTIN (15-0143) - view video
2/9/2016 @ 9:00 AM (length 35:49)
Originating county: Calhoun County
Originating from: 13th District Court of Appeals, Corpus Christi & Edinburg
Case Documents
The issues are (1) whether the Court has jurisdiction to decide this interlocutory appeal and, if so, (2) whether an agreement by which a contractor provides workers-compensation coverage for a subcontractor and its employees protects the subcontractor from a negligence claim by the general contractor's injured employee. The second issue raises an ostensible conflict between Texas Labor Code sections 406.122(b) and 406.123(a) and (e) on defining a subcontractor's employees as the general contractor's when workers comp is involved. (Section 406.122(b) arguably excludes them, 406.123 ostensibly does the opposite.) In this case, by agreement, Union Carbide provided workers-comp coverage for subcontractor TIC and its employees. Injured on the job, Martin first drew benefits from Union Carbide's workers-compensation insurer. Then Martin, a Carbide employee, sued TIC, claiming it negligently caused his injury and, by section 406.122(b)'s exclusion of independent subcontractors, could not be Carbide's deemed employee. The trial court denied TIC's summary-judgment motion that workers comp was Martin's exclusive remedy. Reviewing the trial court's summary-judgment decision, the court of appeals affirmed. It held on its own motion that Labor Code sections 406.122 and 406.123 were irreconcilable. But, because neither Martin nor TIC raised the conflict, the court said the company did not meet its burden to establish its exclusive-remedy affirmative defense by failing to eliminate section 406.122(b)'s bearing on the deemed-employee question.
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TIME WARNER CABLE TEXAS LLC V. CPS ENERGY ET AL. (17-0840) - view video
1/24/2019 @ 9:00 AM (length 44:36)
Originating county: Travis County
Originating from: 3rd District Court of Appeals, Austin
Case Documents
The principal issues in this case alleging CPS, the San Antonio municipal utility, discriminated against cable company Time Warner by charging it "pole attachment" fees higher than it charged telecommunications provider AT&T are (1) whether the applicable Public Utilities Regulation Act provision applies to Time Warner as a franchised cable company and (2) whether the appeals court erred by determining CPS did not violate the utility-regulation act's provisions against discriminatory charges.
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TIMPTE INDUSTRIES, INC. V. ROBERT GISH AND PINNACOL ASSURANCE (08-0043) - view video
3/11/2009 @ 9:00 AM (length 48:23)
Originating county: Hale County
Originating from: 7th District Court of Appeals, Amarillo
Case Documents
08-0043 Timpte Industries Inc. v. Robert Gish and Pinnacol Assurance from Hale County and the Seventh District Court of Appeals, Amarillo For petitioner: Gary Bellair, Lubbock For respondents: James Hoyt Wood, Amarillo The principal issues in this product-defect case are (1) whether in its summary-judgment motion Timpte waived its no-evidence point by failing to address the requisite unreasonable danger element and, if not, (2) whether Gish presented enough evidence of a design defect that posed an unreasonable danger or of a safer alternative design. 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
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TOWN OF LAKEWOOD VILLAGE V. HARRY BIZIOS (15-0106) - view video
3/8/2016 @ 9:50 AM (length 41:48)
Originating county: Denton County
Originating from: 2nd District Court of Appeals, Fort Worth
Case Documents
The issue is whether a general-law city has authority to require construction in its extraterritorial jurisdiction comply with its building-code requirements. In this case Lakewood Village sued to stop Bizios from constructing a house in the area over which it claims jurisdiction outside its city limits - its ETJ - until he got a building permit. Bizios's home site was in a subdivision approved by Denton County and Little Elm, a home-rule city, but within Lakewood Village's extraterritorial jurisdiction. The court of appeals reversed the injunction, holding that state law permitted home-rule cities to enforce building codes within their extraterritorial jurisdictions, but general-law municipalities cannot.
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TRACFONE WIRELESS, INC. AND VIRGEN MOBILE USA, L.P. V. COMMISSION ON STATE EMERGENCY COMMUNICATIONS (11-0473) - view video
10/17/2012 @ 9:50 AM (length 39:10)
Originating county: Travis County
Originating from: 3rd District Court of Appeals, Austin
Case Documents
The issue is whether companies that sell prepaid wireless-telephone service must pay a statutory emergency-service fee the commission levied to finance a system that can locate a wireless 911 caller. Under the statute--Texas Health & Safety Code chapter 771, enacted in 1997--the fee applies to "each wireless telecommunications connection" but provides for collection of 50 cents each month from wireless subscribers who are billed by their providers. TracFone and Virgin Mobile, which sell airtime cards and do not bill purchasers monthly, paid the fees but sued for refunds, arguing that the statutory emergency-service fees do not apply to their products. A trial court overturned a commission order imposing the fees. The court of appeals reversed the trial court, holding that the statute required an emergency fee for every wireless connection regardless of how companies sold their services.
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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.
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TRANSCONTINENTAL INS. CO. V. CRUMP (09-0005) - view video
1/20/2010 @ 10:40 AM (length 42:36)
Originating county: Fort Bend County
Originating from: 14th District Court of Appeals, Houston
Case Documents
(Justice Guzman not sitting) 09-0005 Transcontinental Insurance Co. v. Joyce Crump from Fort Bend County and the 14th District Court of Appeals, Houston For petitioner: David Brenner, Austin For respondent: Peter M. Kelly, Houston A principal issue is whether "producing cause" in a workers compensation death-benefits determination must meet the definition for producing cause established in Ford Motor Co. v. Ledesma (a 2007 products-liability case) - a cause that, in a natural sequence, produces a result (in this case, death) and without which the result would not have occurred. Another issues is whether a treating physician's expert testimony based on "differential diagnosis" was reliable. In this case Crump won death benefits under workers compensation for her husband's death after Transcontinental contested her claim. Transcontinental argued that the work-related injury, a knee contusion, was not the producing cause of several complications that led to Mr. Crump's death because those complications related to Crump's being prone to infection following a kidney transplant 15 years before. A jury determined the knee injury was the producing cause of death. 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
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TRAVIS CENT. APPRAISAL DIST. V. NORMAN (09-0100) - view video
12/16/2009 @ 10:40 AM (length 43:28)
Originating county: Travis County
Originating from: 3rd District Court of Appeals, Austin
Case Documents
09-0100 Travis Central Appraisal District v. Diane Lee Norman from Travis County and the Third District Court of Appeals, Austin For petitioner: Jennifer Archimbaud Powell, Austin For respondent: R. Scott Clark, Austin The principal issues are (1) whether the Labor Code provision interpreted to allow a public employee the right to sue on a workers-compensation retaliation claim should be re-examined or limited and (2) whether a public employee alleging retaliatory discharge in a workers-compensation dispute must exhaust administrative remedies before suing. The appraisal district argues that City of LaPorte v. Barfield, 898 S.W.2d 288 (Tex. 1995), holding that Texas Labor Code chapter 451 waives immunity for retaliatory discharge actions against political subdivisions, should be overturned because chapter 451 does not clearly and unambiguously waive sovereign immunity. And Barfield does not apply, the district contends, because Barfield addresses immunity from liability and not from suit, as this case. The trial court denied the appraisal district's jurisdictional plea. 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
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TRAXLER V. ENTERGY GULF SALES, INC. (10-0970) - view video
11/10/2011 @ 10:40 AM (length 41:58)
Originating county: Orange County
Originating from: 9th District Court of Appeals, Beaumont
Case Documents
10-0970 Nicholas Traxler v. Entergy Gulf States Inc. from Orange County and the Ninth District Court of Appeals, Beaumont For petitioner: Jane S. Leger, Beaumont For respondent: Jacqueline M. Stroh, San Antonio The issues in this case involving an electrocution are (1) whether "transmission line" defined by the Texas Utility Code (and requiring a certain height above a roadway) applies to the power line above the road in this case and (2) whether a utility has a duty to agree on safety precautions for lines across a roadway. In this case Traxler sued Entergy, a power-distribution company, for negligence and negligence per se after a distribution line strung across a roadway burned him. Traxler, an employee of a house-moving company, was riding atop a house to assure obstacles were cleared as the house proceeded along a road. He alleges the power line he contacted was two feet lower than the Utility Code requires for a transmission line. He also contends Entergy failed to agree with the moving company about safety procedures as he argues the state Health and Safety Code requires. A jury awarded Traxler more than $1 million. The court of appeals reversed, holding in part that the power line that burned Traxler was not a transmission line covered by the Utility Code's height requirement. The appeals court also held that state law did not impose a duty on Entergy to assure safety procedures. 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
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TRINITY UNIVERSAL INSURANCE CO. V. CELLULAR ONE GROUP CONSOLIDATED WITH 06-1030 ZURICH AMERICAN INSURANCE CO., ET AL. V. NOKIA INC. AND 06-1040 FEDERAL INSURANCE CO. V. SAMSUNG ELECTRONICS AMERICA, ET AL. (07-0140) - view video
2/6/2008 @ 9:00 AM (length 1:08:11)
Originating county: Dallas County
Originating from: 5th District Court of Appeals, Dallas
Case Documents
06-1030 Zurich American Insurance Co., et al. v. Nokia Inc. consolidated with 06-1040 Federal Insurance Co. v. Samsung Electronics America, et al. and 07-0140 Trinity Universal Insurance Co. v. Cellular One Group all from Dallas County and the Fifth District Court of Appeals, Dallas For petitioners: Joseph R. Knight, Austin; Russell McMains, Corpus Christi; and Kirk C. Chamberlin, Los Angeles For respondents: Eric Mayer, Houston, and Charles L. Perry, Dallas The Supreme Court will hear arguments on the issue of whether bodily injury includes harm to human cells allegedly caused by cell-phone radiation. The principal issue common to all three petitions is whether insurers have a duty to defend or indemnify cellular-telephone manufacturers from class lawsuits that allege human-cell injury from cell phone radio-frequency radiation but do not claim "individual issues of injury." These three cases arise from six class actions that allege biological cell injury to cellular phone users who talk on their phones without headsets. By declaratory judgment or on summary-judgment motions, the insurers argued that they have no duty to defend in part because the underlying suits for the most part alleged no "bodily" injury as that term is normally used. In two of the cases the trial courts ruled in the insurers' favor and in the third the trial court issued a judgment for the plaintiffs. The court of appeals held that insurers had a duty to defend against claims alleging cell injuries.
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TTHR LIMITED PARTNERSHIP D/B/A PRESBYTERIAN HOSPITAL OF DENTON V. CLAUDIA MORENO, INDIVIDUALLY AND AS NEXT FRIEND OF F.C., A MINOR (11-0630) - view video
11/6/2012 @ 11:30 AM (length 38:54)
Originating county: Denton County
Originating from: 2nd District Court of Appeals, Fort Worth
Case Documents
A principal issue in this health care-liability claim is whether the court of appeals erred by remanding for the trial court to consider a second extension to cure a deficiency the appeals court found in an expert report. Moreno sued doctors, nurses and the limited partnership that operates a Denton hospital where Moreno's son allegedly suffered kidney and nerve damage during a forced delivery. After the trial court granted Moreno an extension to cure a deficient expert report, and she submitted another report to address the deficiency, the defendants challenged the reports' sufficiency in an interlocutory appeal. The court of appeals determined that the expert reports were deficient as they regarded direct-liability claims against the hospital and nurses and therefore were deficient on Moreno's vicarious-liability theory against the hospital for the nurses' actions. The appeals court remanded for the trial court to consider giving Moreno time to cure the deficiency. In this interlocutory appeal from that decision, the defendants argue that the state's health-care liability law allows only one extension to cure a deficient report.
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TV AZTECA, S.A.B. DE C.V., ET AL. V. GLORIA DE LOS ANGELES TREVINO RUIZ (14-0186) - view video
10/12/2015 @ 9:50 AM (length 42:12)
Originating county: Hidalgo County
Originating from: 13th District Court of Appeals, Corpus Christi & Edinburg
Case Documents
In this interlocutory appeal from denied special appearances by a Mexican television producer, anchor and broadcaster sued for defamation in Texas, the principal issue is whether defendants have minimum contacts to establish personal jurisdiction in Texas based on the broadcast signal's international reach, their efforts to sell advertising in Texas, their sending reporters to Texas and U.S. cable channels' rebroadcast of their programming in Texas. In this case the court of appeals affirmed the trial court's denial of the special appearances to contest jurisdiction in Texas, holding that Texas has personal jurisdiction, both specific and general, over the defendants. TV Azteca and the other defendants argue that the allegedly libelous broadcasts were produced in Mexico and, although the plaintiff, Mexican pop superstar Gloria Trevi, lives in Texas, concerned events about her that occurred in Mexico and Brazil.
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TXI TRANSPORTATION CO. V. HUGHES (07-0541) - view video
10/16/2008 @ 9:50 AM (length 47:32)
Originating county: Wise County
Originating from: 2nd District Court of Appeals, Fort Worth
Case Documents
07-0541 TXI Transportation Co., et al. v. Randy Hughes, et al. from Wise County and the Second District Court of Appeals, Fort Worth For petitioners: Reagan W. Simpson, Houston For respondents: Brian Stagner, Fort Worth The Supreme Court will hear arguments on whether evidence that driver in collision was illegal immigrant was properly admitted. The principal issues are (1) whether evidence that a truck driver involved in a fatal truck-SUV collision was an illegal immigrant was properly admitted for impeachment purposes; (2) whether the trial court improperly overruled a Batson challenge over the only Hispanic venireman struck; (3) whether the trial court improperly excluded defense testimony from a state trooper regarding a tire blowout that might have contributed to cause the accident or cell phone records showing an incoming call to the SUV driver at the time of the accident; and (4) whether the trial court improperly allowed claims for wrongful death of unborn children (the verdict on those claims was not included in the judgment). The Court will hear three arguments beginning at 9 a.m. in the Hillcrest Classroom in the Underwood Law Library at Southern Methodist University's Dedman School of Law in Dallas. Each side in each case 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
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TYLER SCORESBY, M.D. V. SANTILLAN (09-0497) - view video
11/9/2010 @ 9:50 AM (length 50:49)
Originating county: Tarrant County
Originating from: 2nd District Court of Appeals, Fort Worth
Case Documents
09-0497 Tyler Scoresby, M.D. v. Catarino Santillan from Tarrant County and the Second District Court of Appeals, Fort Worth For petitioner Tyler Scoresby: Michael A. Yanof, Dallas For petitioner Yadranko Ducic, M.D.: David L. Pratt and Randy J. Hall, Fort Worth For respondent: Jason C. N. Smith, Art Brender and Eric Reyes, Fort Worth In this appeal from a trial court's failure to dismiss a health-care liability suit, a principal issue is whether an expert report can be so deficient in addressing the elements of a claim that it constitutes no report at all, requiring dismissal instead of an extension to cure the defects. Santillan sued over alleged mistakes during surgery on a minor son's nasal tumors that led to bleeding and his partial paralysis. Dr. Scoresby, an ear-nose-throat surgeon, moved to dismiss the claim because Santillan's expert report, by a neurologist, did not establish a care standard, show how the standard was breached or how the breach caused the son's injuries. The report also did not include the expert's credentials. Instead of dismissing the suit, the trial granted a 30-day statutory extension to cure a deficient report. Scoresby appealed that ruling, arguing to the court of appeals, as he does in this Court, that the expert report amounted to no report at all, requiring dismissal. The appeals court dismissed the doctor's interlocutory appeal, holding that an extension to cure a deficient report could not be reviewed. 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
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U-HAUL INTERNATIONAL, INC. V. WALDRIP (10-0781) - view video
2/8/2012 @ 9:50 AM (length 45:25)
Originating county: Dallas County
Originating from: 5th District Court of Appeals, Dallas
Case Documents
10-0781 U-Haul International Inc., et al. v. Talmadge Waldrip, et al. from Dallas County and the Fifth District Court of Appeals, Dallas For petitioners: David E. Keltner, Fort Worth, and Thomas S. Leatherbury, Dallas For respondents/cross-petitioners: Ted B. Lyon Jr., Mesquite The issues in this personal-injury case involving a rental truck's parking-brake failure are (1) whether legally sufficient evidence showed gross negligence; (2) whether legally sufficient evidence supported the jury's negligence findings; and (3) whether a Canadian consumer-safety group's report was relevant evidence or hearsay. Waldrip and his family sued U-Haul International, the company's Texas franchise and its contract dealer from which he rented a truck that crushed him as he tried to stop it from rolling away. A jury found all three companies negligent by variously failing to inspect and maintain the truck's brake system and transmission properly. Jurors also found U-Haul International and the Texas franchise grossly negligent. In its judgment the trial court awarded almost $45.7 million in actual and exemplary damages. The court of appeals reversed the gross-negligence finding against U-Haul International and the $11.7 million exemplary damages award against it and affirmed the remainder. 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
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U.S. METALS INC. V. LIBERTY MUTUAL GROUP INC. (14-0753) - view video
9/2/2015 @ 10:40 AM (length 47:38)
Originating from: U.S. Court of Appeals, 5th Circuit
Case Documents
In four specific questions the Fifth Circuit asks essentially (1) whether the terms "physical injury" and "replacement" are ambiguous in the "your product" and "impaired property" exclusions common in commercial general-liability policies and, if either is not, (2) how Texas law defines the two terms. The underlying case involved a contract under which U.S. Metals supplied defective flanges manufactured by a subcontractor to two oil refineries. U.S. Metals sued Liberty Mutual when the insurer refused to defend and indemnify, citing the exclusions. If either term is ambiguous, the court specifically asks, first, whether U.S. Metals, as the insured, offers reasonable interpretations that must be applied under Texas law. But if "physical injury" is not ambiguous, does such physical injury under the policy occur when the U.S. Metals' defective product was permanently attached to refinery equipment or when the refinery equipment was damaged when the defective product was removed? And if "replacement" is not ambiguous, does replacing the defective flanges under the policy include the refinery equipment's removal or destruction?
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ULICO CAS. CO. V. ALLIED PILOTS ASS'N (06-0247) - view video
4/11/2007 @ 9:50 AM (length 43:00)
Originating county: Tarrant County
Originating from: 2nd District Court of Appeals, Fort Worth
Case Documents
06-0247 Ulico Casualty Co. v. Allied Pilots Association from Tarrant County and the Second District Court of Appeals, Fort Worth For petitioner: Donald Colleluori, Dallas For respondent: B. Daniel Berryman, Fort Worth Principal issues are (1) whether an exception exists to the general rule that an insurer has no liability for defense costs for a claim after a policy's expiration when the insurer told the policyholder it would pay the costs and, if such an exception exists, (2) whether the court of appeals erred by characterizing the claim as one for contract breach for which attorneys fees can be awarded. In this case Ulico sued Allied for a declaration that it did not owe Allied defense costs in a suit Allied won. Allied had filed a claim when it was sued, in a separate suit, but filed it after its policy with Ulico expired. Despite that, Ulico told Allied that it would pay for Allied's defense in a letter that reserved its rights to contest coverage. In a subsequent letter the insurer restated that it would pay defense expenses "pursuant to" the earlier "reservation of rights" letter. The trial court awarded defense costs to Allied, based on waiver and estoppel - that Ulico had given up its right to deny defense costs by assuring Allied that its defense would be paid for. The court of appeals affirmed.
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UNION CARBIDE CORPORATION V. DAISY E. SYNATZSKE AND GRACE ANNETTE WEBB, INDIVIDUALLY AND AS REPRESENTATIVES AND CO-EXECUTRIXES OF THE ESTATE OF JOSEPH EMMITE, SR., JOSEPH EMMITE, JR., DOROTHY A. DAY, VERA J. GIALMALVA AND JAMES R. EMMITE (12-0617) - view video
10/10/2013 @ 9:50 AM (length 44:03)
Originating county: Harris County
Originating from: 1st District Court of Appeals, Houston
Case Documents
The issues are (1) whether physician reports on asbestos disease meet the requirements of the statutory safety-value provision for an impairment diagnosis for someone who did not or could not be diagnosed by a lung-function test and, if not, (2) whether dismissal violates the state constitutional prohibition on retroactive laws. In this case the asbestos pretrial court rejected Union Carbide's dismissal motion based on the plaintiff's failure to provide pulmonary-impairment evidence caused by asbestos. A 2005 statute requires lung-function testing before an asbestos-injury claim may proceed to trial, but the safety-valve provision provides an exception in unique and extraordinary circumstances. Based in part on a pulmonologist's evaluation, the court found that Emmite, a 35-year Union Carbide employee allegedly exposed to asbestos at work, could not physically or mentally take the lung-function test before he died but other exams confirmed asbestosis and significant impairment. A majority of the court of appeals, hearing the appeal en banc, affirmed the pretrial court's order denying dismissal. But the court split without a majority on whether the pulmonary-testing requirement was unconstitutional.
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UNION PACIFIC RAILROAD CO. V. WILLIAM R. NAMI (14-0901) - view video
11/3/2015 @ 10:40 AM (length 41:19)
Originating county: Dewitt County
Originating from: 13th District Court of Appeals, Corpus Christi & Edinburg
Case Documents
The issues in the case by a railroad employee under the Federal Employer's Liability Act are (1) whether the railroad was entitled to judgment despite the verdict against the railroad, for failing to protect the employee from contracting West Nile virus, because mosquito bites are a natural threat excluded from the federal law's scope and (2) whether sufficient evidence supports the jury's verdict that the employee contracted the virus in the course of his employment. Nami sued Union Pacific after contracting West Nile virus and encephalitis allegedly while working on track maintenance in Brazoria County, claiming Union Pacific failed to warn about mosquito-illness dangers and failed to provide repellant or require its employees to use it. The trial court denied Union Pacific's motion for a judgment notwithstanding the jury's verdict for Phillips, arguing that the so-called ferae naturae doctrine precludes recovery under the federal law and that legally sufficient evidence does not support the jury's verdict.
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UNIV. OF TEXAS SOUTHWESTERN MEDICAL CENTER AT DALLAS V. THE ESTATE OF IRENE ESTHER ARANCIBIA (08-0215) - view video
9/10/2009 @ 9:50 AM (length 42:58)
Originating county: Dallas County
Originating from: 5th District Court of Appeals, Dallas
Case Documents
08-0215 University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center at Dallas v. Estate of Irene Esther Arancibia from Dallas County and Fifth District Court of Appeals, Dallas For petitioner: Daniel L. Geyser, Austin For respondents: Lance Caughfield, Dallas A principal issue is whether a claim notice as a jurisdictional prerequisite to an action under the Texas Tort Claims Act, imposed by a 2005 amendment, applies retrospectively to this claim based on a death in 2003. In this case Arancibia's estate sued after she died days after surgery, during which a surgeon perforated her bowel. Southwestern Medical Center moved to dismiss the suit, on a jurisdictional plea based in part on the estate's failure to give notice of the suit within six months of the occurrence. Her estate argues that Southwestern had actual notice because of an investigation after the death. The trial court denied Southwestern's plea, rejecting its sovereign immunity claim and that it did not have notice. The court of appeals affirmed, holding that the 2005 amendment did not apply retrospectively to the 2003 surgery. 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
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UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS AT ARLINGTON V. SANDRA WILLIAMS AND STEVE WILLIAMS (13-0338) - view video
10/9/2014 @ 9:50 AM (length 41:46)
Originating county: Tarrant County
Originating from: 2nd District Court of Appeals, Fort Worth
Case Documents
The principal issue is whether the recreational-use statute limits the university's liability to a spectator who fell at a university stadium following an outdoor soccer game. In this case Sandra Williams sued for injuries after she tumbled five feet from the stands to a track when a padlocked gate gave way as she leaned against it. The university filed a jurisdictional plea, arguing that it did not have liability under the recreational-use statute. That argument is based on a statutory clause defining recreation as "any other activity associated with enjoying nature or the outdoors" in addition to specific activities like hunting, fishing and camping. Williams contends that watching sports, a passive activity, cannot be broadly defined by a clause amplifying a list of participatory outdoors activities. The trial court denied the university's dismissal motion. The court of appeals affirmed, holding that watching sports was not among the statute's recreation definitions.
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VALERO REFINING -TEXAS L.P. V. GALVESTON CENTRAL APPRAISAL DISTRICT (15-0492) - view video
11/9/2016 @ 10:50 AM (length 41:25)
Originating county: Galveston County
Originating from: 14th District Court of Appeals, Houston
Case Documents
The issues in this equal-and-uniform-taxation challenge are (1) whether the trial court has jurisdiction if the property owner only challenges certain component parts of the property, each with a separately assigned tax account, but not all; (2) whether the owner must prove the component parts can be separately valued apart from those parts that have not been challenged; (3) whether the owner must show evidence (and by what sufficiency standard) explaining the exclusion of unchallenged component parts; and (4) whether evidence of other refineries' valuations may be - and how so - legally sufficient to support an equal-and-uniform challenge.
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VANEGAS V. AMERICAN ENERGY SERVICES (07-0520) - view video
10/15/2008 @ 9:50 AM (length 40:11)
Originating county: Midland County
Originating from: 11th District Court of Appeals, Eastland
Case Documents
07-0520 Ed Vanegas, et al. v. American Energy Services, et al. from Midland County and the 11th District Court of Appeals, Eastland For petitioners: Allen R. Stroder, Odessa For respondents: Harper Estes, Midland The Supreme Court will hear arguments on whether promise is illusory to share future merger proceeds for at-will worker's staying with company. The issue is whether an alleged oral promise to share proceeds from a merger, conditioned on employees remaining with a young company, was illusory because the employees worked at-will and were subject to firing at any time. Vanegas and other employees sued AES for breaching a contract under which they claim AES promised them 5 percent of proceeds from selling the company if they would continue working for it until it was sold or merged. The trial court granted AES's summary-judgment motion. The court of appeals affirmed, holding that the contract, being illusory, could not be support the promised bonus because the company could fire the workers at any time. 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
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VENKATESWARLU THOTA, M.D. V. YOUNG (09-0079) - view video
11/10/2011 @ 9:00 AM (length 42:28)
Originating county: Wichita County
Originating from: 2nd District Court of Appeals, Fort Worth
Case Documents
09-0079 Venkateswarlu Thota, M.D., and North Texas Cardiology Center v. Margaret Young from Wichita County and the Second District Court of Appeals, Fort Worth For petitioners: Diana L. Faust, Dallas For respondents: J. Mark Perrin, Dallas In this medical-malpractice action, a principal issue is whether the trial court erred by submitting a contributory-negligence charge - that a patient's delay in getting treatment for internal bleeding caused his harm - instead of a damages-mitigation charge. Other issues raise questions about the trial court's submission of a new-and-independent-cause instruction and on unavoidable accident. Mrs. Young alleges Dr. Thota, who inserted a cardiac catheter in her late husband, negligently punctured the wrong artery. Thota argued either that the internal bleeding was an unavoidable accident or that Mr. Young's delay in seeking treatment for the post-surgical bleeding caused his injury. (Mr. Young later died of leukemia.) In a broad-form submission combining questions on Thota's alleged negligence, Young's alleged contribution and the unavoidable accident and new-and-independent cause theories, the jury assessed all liability to Mr. Young. The court of appeals reversed, holding the trial court's contributory-negligence instruction was wrong because Mr. Young's delay in treatment went to mitigating his damages, not negligence. 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
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VENTURE COTTON COOPERATIVE AND NOBLE AMERICAS CORP. V. SHELBY ALAN FREEMAN, ET AL. (13-0122) - view video
1/9/2014 @ 10:40 AM (length 41:49)
Originating county: Gaines County
Originating from: 11th District Court of Appeals, Eastland
Case Documents
The principal issues in this case are (1) whether an arbitration provision may be found unconscionable absent evidence that the party asserting that would be prejudiced and (2) whether an allegedly unconscionable arbitration provision may be severed if a party does not invoke a severance clause. In an agreement with Venture to buy and market their cotton, Freeman and other farmers agreed to arbitrate under a clause that provided the farmers would be liable for attorney and arbitration fees if they breached the contract. Venture did not face similar liability if it breached. Freeman and the other farmers sued for fraud, negligent misrepresentation and deceptive-trade practices. On a motion to compel arbitration, the trial court ruled the arbitration clause was unconscionable and unenforceable. The appeals court affirmed, reasoning the farmers were forced to forgo substantive rights and remedies if they prevailed on their claims.
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W&T OFFSHORE INC. V. WESLEY FREDIEU (18-1134) - view video
4/8/2020 @ 9:00 AM (length 54:57)
Originating county: Harris County
Originating from: 14th District Court of Appeals, Houston
Case Documents
Among principal issues in this oil-platform-injury case, involving for liability purposes the contention that the injured worker was a "borrowed" employee, are (1) whether such an employee's status is always a legal determination for the court; (2) whether disputed facts preclude the trial court from rendering judgment despite the evidence; and, if the borrowed-servant question is not one of law and if fact questions prohibited judgment notwithstanding the verdict, (3) whether enough evidence supports the jury's finding that the worker was not a borrowed employee.
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WAFFLE HOUSE, INC. V. WILLIAMS (07-0205) - view video
3/12/2009 @ 9:00 AM (length 50:04)
Originating county: Tarrant County
Originating from: 2nd District Court of Appeals, Fort Worth
Case Documents
07-0205 Waffle House Inc. v. Cathie Williams from Tarrant County and the Second District Court of Appeals, Fort Worth For petitioner: Mark Emery, Washington, D.C. For respondent: Susan E. Hutchison, S. Rafe Foreman, Grapevine The issues are (1) whether the court of appeals erred in its definition of the duty owed by Waffle House to an employee in a negligent supervision and retention suit based on sexual harassment allegations and (2) whether legally sufficient evidence supported the jury's punitive-damages award. 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
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WAGNER & BROWN, LTD. V. SHEPPARD (06-0845) - view video
12/5/2007 @ 9:00 AM (length 42:08)
Originating county: Upshur County
Originating from: 6th District Court of Appeals, Texarkana
Case Documents
Justice Willett is not sitting. 06-0845 Wagner & Brown Ltd., et al. v. Jane Turner Sheppard from Upshur County and the Sixth District Court of Appeals, Texarkana For petitioners: Macey Reasoner Stokes, Houston For respondent: Ben L. Mesches, Dallas The Supreme Court will hear arguments on the issue of whether oil and gas lease termination for failure to pay royalties automatically terminates the pooled unit. A principal issue is whether an oil and gas lease terminated for royalties nonpayment attributed to a clerical error automatically terminates the mineral-rights owner's participation in a pooling agreement. In this case Sheppard leased her one-eighth mineral interests in almost 63 acres to a production company, C.W. Resources, for a quarter of the royalties free of production costs. C.W. Resources and Wagner & Brown had leases on most of the other seven-eighths mineral rights. Under a pooling agreement, Wagner & Brown combined Sheppard's tract with others it leased and drilled two producing wells. Sheppard was not paid royalties within 120 days of production from those wells, which terminated her lease by its terms. She sued to declare her participation in the pooling agreement terminated because her lease had terminated and to declare she was entitled to a one-eighth share in production from the two wells producing on her tract. The trial court held that her interest was not subject to the pooled unit agreement. The court of appeals affirmed.
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WALTERS V. CLEVELAND REGIONAL MED. CENTER (08-0169) - view video
9/9/2009 @ 9:50 AM (length 46:11)
Originating county: Harris County
Originating from: 1st District Court of Appeals, Houston
Case Documents
08-0169 Tangie Walters v. Cleveland Regional Medical Center, et al. from Harris County and the First District Court of Appeals, Houston For petitioner: Christopher Bradshaw-Hull, Houston For respondents: Diana L. Faust, Dallas, and Richard Sheehy, Houston The issue is whether the Texas Constitution's open-courts provision cancels the statute of limitations on a medical-malpractice claim based on a sponge left in a patient's abdomen 10 years before a doctor finally discovered it. Walters sued, seeking in part damages for medical bills she paid over the years because of pain she suffered as doctors misdiagnosed the source. The trial court granted summary judgment for the medical center, surgeon and nurse, based on the two-year limitations on a med-mal claim. The court of appeals affirmed. Walters argues that the constitution requires she knew or should have known of her injury before the limitations period ends to show the statutory limitation is arbitrary or unreasonable. The defendants counter that an open-courts claim requires an impossibility-to-know or exceedingly difficult-to-discover standard before the constitution overrides the limitations period. 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
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WASSON INTERESTS LTD. V. CITY OF JACKSONVILLE (17-0198) - view video
2/27/2018 @ 10:40 AM (length 41:57)
Originating county: Cherokee County
Originating from: 12th District Court of Appeals, Tyler
Case Documents
In this dispute ultimately challenging the city's contention it is immune from a breach-of-contract claim (eviction based on alleged residential lease violation) the issues are (1) whether governmental immunity should bar the claim when the city's lease arguably results from both proprietary and governmental functions and (2) whether the city acted in a proprietary function by leasing lakefront residential lots outside the city then purportedly terminated the lease according to its governmental function.
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WASSON INTERESTS LTD. V. CITY OF JACKSONVILLE (14-0645) - view video
1/14/2016 @ 9:00 AM (length 45:08)
Originating county: Cherokee County
Originating from: 12th District Court of Appeals, Tyler
Case Documents
The principal issues are (1) whether governmental immunity protects a municipality sued for contract breach over an alleged proprietary function and, if so, (2) whether the city's leasing lakefront property outside city limits was a proprietary function. This case presents the umbrella question: Does the "proprietary-government dichotomy" to waive immunity in tort cases against government apply to those arising in contract? Wasson sued the city for terminating its lease without just cause on city-owned Lake Jacksonville property. The city claimed Wasson violated its restrictions on commercial use of the property, but agreed to reinstate the lease as long as Wasson only rented to small groups or families and only for terms no shorter than a month. Jacksonville later evicted Wasson, claiming Wasson's new online advertisement violated the reinstatement agreement. The city answered Wasson by a plea to the court's jurisdiction, contending it had governmental immunity from the suit. The trial court granted the plea. The court of appeals affirmed, holding in part that the city's lease did not involve goods and services, the statutory basis to waive immunity on contract claims against a government.
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WASTE MANAGEMENT OF TEXAS INC. V. TEXAS DISPOSAL SYSTEMS LANDFILL INC. (12-0522) - view video
12/3/2013 @ 9:00 AM (length 44:18)
Originating county: Travis County
Originating from: 3rd District Court of Appeals, Austin
Case Documents
The principal issues in this defamation case are (1) whether a for-profit company's reputation damages are economic damages for purposes of the statutory cap on exemplary awards; (2) whether support was legally sufficient for a $5-million reputation-damage award; and (3) whether that award violated First Amendment restrictions on defamation damages. In this case Texas Disposal Systems sued after a community "action alert" Waste Management anonymously issued while the two companies were competing for waste-disposal and landfill contracts with Austin and San Antonio. Texas Disposal alleged Waste Management falsely claimed that Texas Disposal's landfill did not protective against pollution as well as other landfills. A jury found the alert's statements deliberately false and awarded $5 million to Texas Disposal for reputational damage and added $20 million for exemplary damages. But the trial court ruled the reputational damages were non-economic damages and reduced the punitive award to $1.65 million, following punitive-damage limits based on non-economic damage awards. The appeals court affirmed.
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WAYNE VENTLING V. PATRICIA M. JOHNSON (14-0095) - view video
1/13/2015 @ 10:40 AM (length 42:28)
Originating county: Nueces County
Originating from: 13th District Court of Appeals, Corpus Christi & Edinburg
Case Documents
Two principal issues in this contest over interest from a divorce decree's enforcement are (1) whether the appeals court's decision that relief should have been granted instead of the trial court's denial of it by interlocutory order triggers interest from the interlocutory-order date and (2) whether a judgment ostensibly disposing all claims is final if a claim for attorney fees remains pending and requires additional evidence. This appeal is the third stage in a case dating to 1997, when Johnson sought to enforce agreed-upon alimony in the original decree from a common-law marriage. In its most recent decision the appeals court held that prejudgment and post-judgment interest accrued from the trial court's erroneous denial in 1998 of Johnson's enforcement motion. Ventling argues that interest should be calculated from the court of appeals' judgment in 2012 because the 2012 judgment cannot supersede the 1998 interlocutory order on the enforcement motion. Johnson contends interest should date from 1998, when the trial court should have entered a proper judgment.
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WEEKS MARINE, INC. V. GARZA (10-0435) - view video
10/4/2011 @ 10:40 AM (length 44:15)
Originating county: Starr County
Originating from: 4th District Court of Appeals, San Antonio
Case Documents
10-0435 Weeks Marine Inc. v. Maximino Garza from Starr County and the Fourth District Court of Appeals, San Antonio For petitioner: Frank E. Perez, Brownsville For respondent: Edward John "Jack" O'Neill Jr., Houston For amicus King Fisher Marine Services: Steven J. Knight, Houston Principal issues in this Jones Act action are (1) whether legally sufficient evidence supported the jury's finding that Weeks' failure to provide "maintenance and cure" aggravated Garza's original injury and (2) whether damages for negligence and for failure to provide maintenance and cure were duplicative. Garza filed suit after he was hit in the head by a swinging bar aboard a barge, claiming negligence under the federal Jones Act and aggravation of that injury by Weeks' failure to get adequate treatment for the injury. Weeks' preferred physician cleared Garza to return to work. but after Garza continued to complain of symptoms, his own doctor referred him for surgery. The trial court awarded damages for the injury and pain and suffering because of the failure to provide maintenance and cure. On review, the court of appeals affirmed, holding in part that damages did not amount to a double recovery. 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
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WELL FARGO BANK, N.A. V. PATRICK O'BRIEN MURPHY AND BEVERLY MURPHY (13-0236) - view video
10/15/2014 @ 9:50 AM (length 42:50)
Originating county: Harris County
Originating from: 14th District Court of Appeals, Houston
Case Documents
The principal issues are (1) whether Texas' constitutional home equity-lending provisions preclude as personal liability attorney fees awarded against the homeowners in a declaratory action on a home-loan default and (2) whether the appeals court erred by reframing declaratory-judgment pleadings to be pleadings instead for injunctive relief (by the homeowners) and contract breach (by the bank). In this case the Murphys sued Wells Fargo, seeking a declaration that the bank was not entitled to foreclose on the home-equity debt. Wells Fargo counterclaimed that the Murphys were obligated to make payments on the loan, failed to do so and were in default. The trial court ruled for the bank and awarded attorney fees. The court of appeals affirmed all but the fees award, holding that neither the Murphys nor the bank sought declaratory relief and, because of that, Wells Fargo could recover attorney fees against the property but not against the Murphys personally.
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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.
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WHIRLPOOL CORPORATION V. CAMACHO (08-0175) - view video
3/10/2009 @ 9:00 AM (length 53:34)
Originating county: Hidalgo County
Originating from: 13th District Court of Appeals, Corpus Christi & Edinburg
Case Documents
08-0175 Whirlpool Corp. v. Margarita Camacho and Santos Camacho. from Hidalgo County and the 13th District Court of Appeals, Corpus Christi/Edinburg For petitioner: Lynne Liberato, Houston For respondent: Kevin Dubose, Houston Among principal issues in this product-liability case are (1) whether the court of appeals erred by failing to analyze expert testimony properly under a legal-sufficiency challenge, (2) whether expert testimony was improper because it was speculative on the safer alternative design and on the causation element; and (3) whether the trial court erred by failing to give a spoliation instruction because Whirlpool did not have notice of possible suit for three months despite plaintiffs' experts evaluating a home fire scene within two days of a fatal fire. In this case the Camachos sued after fire destroyed their trailer home and killed their son. They claim defective design of a clothes dryer allowed accumulated lint to be drawn to the dryer heater, where it ignited, then started clothes in the dryer afire and spread to the house. Whirlpool's challenge to the reliability of this theory, based on testing outside a dryer, was in part that the theory failed to explain that two T-shirts in the dryer did not burn. Whirlpool also complains that the Camachos had notice they would sue within days of the fire, but did not notify the company for several months, during which the fire scene was dismantled. 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
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YORK V. STATE OF TEXAS (09-0905) - view video
12/6/2011 @ 9:00 AM (length 48:47)
Originating county: Wise County
Originating from: 2nd District Court of Appeals, Fort Worth
Case Documents
09-0905 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
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ZACHRY CONSTRUCTION CORP. V. PORT OF HOUSTON AUTHORITY OF HARRIS COUNTY (12-0772) - view video
11/6/2013 @ 10:40 AM (length 48:51)
Originating county: Harris County
Originating from: 14th District Court of Appeals, Houston
Case Documents
In this case alleging breach of a construction contract, the principal issues are (1) whether Texas law recognizes common-law exceptions to contractual no-damages-for-delay clauses for actions constituting arbitrary and capricious conduct, active interference, bad faith or fraud and (2) whether Zachry's partial lien release unambiguously released its claims that the Port of Houston Authority improperly withheld payments as liquidated damages. Zachry sued over its contract to build the port authority a wharf on the Baytown Ship Channel, alleging the port authority penalized Zachry for missing deadlines that Zachry contended resulted from changes the port authority ordered in how Zachry was building the wharf. In its judgment, the trial court awarded Zachry almost $20 million in damages. The appeals court reversed, ordering Zachry to take nothing on its claims.
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ZACHRY CONSTRUCTION CORP. V. TEXAS A&M UNIVERSITY (07-1050) - view video
9/8/2009 @ 9:00 AM (length 24:54)
Originating county: Brazos County
Originating from: 10th District Court of Appeals, Waco
Case Documents
Justice Willett not sitting 07-1050 Zachry Construction Corp., et al. v. Texas A&M University from Brazos County and the 10th District Court of Appeals, Waco For petitioners: Ben Taylor, Dallas For respondent: James C. Ho, Austin In this case arising from the 1999 Texas A&M bonfire collapse principal issues involve third-party claims against the university: (1) whether, if sovereign immunity has been waived on liability, waiver also must be necessary for a derivative contribution claim against the university; (2) whether Texas A&M's immunity is waived by use of university property for the bonfire construction under the Tort Claims Act's tangible personal or real property provision; (3) whether Texas A&M had actual notice of a premises defect; and (4) whether, if immune, the university's proportionate responsibility can be determined if it is not joined in the lawsuit. The trial court denied Texas A&M's jurisdictional plea, but the court of appeals reversed and dismissed the claims against the university. Since the Court granted the petition, A&M has argued it should be dismissed after the university settled with all injured plaintiffs last fall. 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
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ZURICH AMERICAN INSURANCE CO., ET AL. V. NOKIA INC. CONSOLIDATED WITH 06-1040 FEDERAL INSURANCE CO. V. SAMSUNG ELECTRONICS AMERICA, ET AL. AND 07-0140 TRINITY UNIVERSAL INSURANCE CO. V. CELLULAR ONE GROUP (06-1030) - view video
2/6/2008 @ 9:00 AM (length 1:08:11)
Originating county: Dallas County
Originating from: 5th District Court of Appeals, Dallas
Case Documents
06-1030 Zurich American Insurance Co., et al. v. Nokia Inc. consolidated with 06-1040 Federal Insurance Co. v. Samsung Electronics America, et al. and 07-0140 Trinity Universal Insurance Co. v. Cellular One Group all from Dallas County and the Fifth District Court of Appeals, Dallas For petitioners: Joseph R. Knight, Austin; Russell McMains, Corpus Christi; and Kirk C. Chamberlin, Los Angeles For respondents: Eric Mayer, Houston, and Charles L. Perry, Dallas The Supreme Court will hear arguments on the issue of whether bodily injury includes harm to human cells allegedly caused by cell-phone radiation. The principal issue common to all three petitions is whether insurers have a duty to defend or indemnify cellular-telephone manufacturers from class lawsuits that allege human-cell injury from cell phone radio-frequency radiation but do not claim "individual issues of injury." These three cases arise from six class actions that allege biological cell injury to cellular phone users who talk on their phones without headsets. By declaratory judgment or on summary-judgment motions, the insurers argued that they have no duty to defend in part because the underlying suits for the most part alleged no "bodily" injury as that term is normally used. In two of the cases the trial courts ruled in the insurers' favor and in the third the trial court issued a judgment for the plaintiffs. The court of appeals held that insurers had a duty to defend against claims alleging cell injuries.
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