When does evidence of intent equate with causation?

In Aquaplex, Inc. v. Rancho La Valencia, Inc., the Texas Supreme Court appears to have equated intent with causation in a fraud case.  Aquaplex sued Rancho for fraud.  Aquaplex asserted that it lost the sale of a piece of real property due to Rancho having filed a lis pendens on the property.  On appeal following an adverse verdict, Rancho argued that there was no evidence as to why Aquaplex lost the sale of the property and therefore there was no evidence of causation between the alleged fraud and Aquaplex's damages.  In its per curiam opinion, the Supreme Court holds that there was legally sufficient evidence because both parties knew of the offer for the property and Rancho testified it filed the lis pendens to prevent the sale. 

It is unclear how this holding fits with prior precedent holding that evil motive or intent does not necessarily establish a cause of action.  This opinion should give concern to those who file lis pendens. The purpose of lis pendens is give initial notice of a claim to property.  According to the Aquaplex decision, the filing of a lis pendens might well constitute a complete claim for fraud.

For appellate practitioners, there's another holding in Aquaplex that may be of interest.  The court holds that a Respondent need not raise an alternative ground for affirmance as a cross-point in response to the Petition for Review.  Rather, to request that the Supreme Court consider alternative grounds for affirmance raised in the court of appeals but not decided by that court, the respondent may raise those issues in the petition, the response to the petition, the reply, any brief, or a motion for rehearing.  Here, Rancho preserved a cross-point by raising it in its brief on the merits for the first time.

The court's opinion may be found here.

Dallas DWOP Redux

 

In the wake of the Dallas Court of Appeals' en banc decision last week in Crown Asset Management, L.L.C. v. Loring, there's a handful of other opinions addressing dismissals for want of prosecution using the same "aggressive docket management" procedures as in Crown

In Newburyport Capital L.L.C. v. Corrales, the Court affirmed the trial court's dismissal because the Appellant did not bring forward a clerk's record containing documents to support its sole issue on appeal challenging the trial court's error in failing to grant a default judgment. The opinion may be found here.

In AIS Services, LLC v. Mendez, the Court affirmed the trial court's dismissal because it determined that AIS did not preserve error for its single issue on appeal--whether the trial court erred in failing to grant its motion for default judgment. The panel in this case consists of the same 3 justices who dissented from the majority opinion in the Crown case. The panel held that error had not been preserved since no ruling was obtained on the motion for default judgment. The panel distinguished Crown by pointing out that the record in Crown showed that the trial court was aware of Crown's pending motion for default judgment when the trial court dismissed the case for want of prosecution because AIS had filed it motion for default judgment, but nothing in the record showed that the trial court knew the motion for default had been filed. The opinion may be found here.

In Oliphant Financial LLC v. Angiano, the court affirmed the dismissal. Oliphant brought two issues on appeal. In the first, it challenged the dismissal for want of prosecution. The court of appeals held that any error was harmless because Oliphant had not challenged an independent ground supporting the dismissal, which was the failure to attend a trial or hearing of which notice was had. The court does not address the second issue concluding that it was unnecessary to do so in light of its disposition of the first issue. The opinion may be found here.

In Resurgence Financial, LLC v. Taylor, the court affirmed the trial court's dismissal.  On appeal, Resurgence complained that the trial court erred in failing to grant its motion for default judgment and in dismissing for want of prosecution.  Focusing only on the damages portion of the motion for default judgment, the court of appeals concludes that Resurgence did not establish its right to a default judgment because the damages were liquidated.  It is unclear why the court does not address Resurgence's right to default on the issue of liability.   Finally, in reliance on Crown, and on similar facts but with an even shorter time period between dismissal and a third motion for default than that in Crown, the court of appeals summarily concludes that the trial court did not err in dismissing for want of prosecution.  The opinion may be found here.
 

Finally, in Unifund CCR Partners v. Smith, the court holds that Unifund did not preserve error on its complaint that the trial court erred in failing to grant its second motion for default judgment.  The facts are strikingly similar to those in Crown but with a different result.  It is surprising that the Unifund panel does not cite Crown to explain the differenceIt appears that the difference is that the last act at the time of the dismissal was Unifund's filing of its second motion for default and there is nothing in the record to show the court was aware of it, so there was no "ruling" under Crown.  One must wonder what the result would be if Unifund were to have complained that the trial court erred in failing to grant its first motion for default judgment after which the trial court returned Unifund's proposed order unsigned--as in Crown. The opinion may be found here.

Dallas Court Reviews "Aggressive Docket Administration"

The end of the courts of appeals' fiscal year is upon us and as a result we are seeing a stream of opinions.   One recent opinion that was of particular note is Crown Asset Management, L.L.C. v. Loring.  It is noteworthy for at least two reasons: (1) it was issued by the Dallas Court of Appeals sitting en banc--a rare occurrence, and (2) its holdings are surprising, if not controversial--controversial enough to draw a three-justice dissent, another rarity   This case may merit watching in the event it proceeds further.  Because of its importance, all three of Reverse & Render's bloggers have decided to review this case en banc, and therefore join the following summary.

Bottom line, the Court held that a trial court did not abuse its discretion by dismissing a case for want of prosecution four months after it was filed while the plaintiff was actively attempting to secure a default judgment.   Readers may want to read the majority and dissenting opinions for themselves.  We summarize and briefly discuss the three holdings below.

Crown filed suit to collect on an alleged deficiency following foreclosure on collateral securing a contract with Loring.   Embedded in the petition were requests for admission.  Almost immediately after the suit was filed, the trial court sent a letter to Crown's counsel advising that the case had been placed on the dismissal docket and it would be dismissed within approximately 4 months unless Crown took one of several alternatives, one of which was to prove up a default judgment if no answer was filed.  We recently blogged on an opinion with similar procedural treatment from the same trial court judge.   In compliance with the court's notice, Crown timely moved for default judgment and sent a proposed order of default to the trial court.  The trial court returned the proposed judgment unsigned stating that the motion was defective for several reasons, including that the petition did not give fair notice of the claim.  Crown filed an amended motion, which received a similar response.   The trial court then dismissed the case for want of prosecution and Crown appealed, raising two issues: (1) whether the trial court erred in failing to grant its motion for default judgment and (2) whether the trial court erred in dismissing for want of prosecution. 

The threshold question addressed by both majority and dissent is whether error was preserved as to the complaint that the trial court should have granted Crown's motion for default judgment.   Appellate Rule 33.1 requires a party to obtain a ruling as a predicate to complaint and if the court will not rule, the complaining party must object to the refusal to rule.   Here's the first BIG holding: The majority treated the trial court's refusal to sign the proposed judgment as a denial of the requested relief and overruled unnamed previous opinions to the contrary.  The dissent argued that error was not preserved because there was no ruling and Crown did not object to the failure to rule.  It now appears that if a party submits a proposed order and the trial court does not sign it, that may be sufficient to preserve error.

Next, the majority opinion held that the "denial" of the default judgment was not error because Crown's pleading failed to give fair notice of the claim asserted.  The dissent took issue with this "fair notice" holding and also discussed each of  the trial court's other listed reasons for refusal to grant the default and systematically determined the reasons given were invalid for one reason or another.  Of note is the majority's implicit approval of the trial court's refusal to give effect to the admissions contained in, and served with, the plaintiff's petition.  With no explanation, the trial court stated that the admissions must be served after the petition.  The dissent opined, without comment from the majority, that there is no authority for the proposition that admissions cannot be served with the petition and that the admissions supported the plaintiff's request for default judgment. 

The Court's resolution of the third and final issue is perhaps the most startling.   The majority held that there was no abuse of discretion in dismissing the suit for want of prosecution.   It appears that the majority concluded there was no abuse of discretion because Crown did not respond to either a September 10th or September 15th notice that returned the default judgment before the case was dismissed the following October 2nd.  The majority characterized this as "aggressive administration of the court's docket timetable" and concluded there was no abuse of discretion, but it cautioned that "such aggressive administration in other cases may result in an injustice."  This phrasing implies that there was no injustice in this case, and it appears that the majority equates injustice with abuse of discretion.  The dissent pointed out that "the majority takes no position as to whether appellant acted with due diligence in prosecuting its case."  The dissent also questioned how the case could be dismissed for want of prosecution in the face of Crown's attempts to obtain a default judgment.  Finally, the dissent argued that to the extent the majority treated the dismissal for want of prosecution as proper under the trial court's inherent power to sanction, it erred by doing so.

 

Get Written Ruling on Objections to Summary Judgment Evidence

The Waco Court of Appeals recently held, once again, that parties should obtain written orders on objections to summary judgment evidence in order to preserve error for review on appeal.  The Court went on to analyze when rulings are implicit and held that while rulings can be inferred, they can only be inferred from the record of which the docket sheet is not a part.  As a result, the Court treated the objections as not having been ruled upon.  The Court's opinion in Willis v. Nucor Corp. can be found at this link.

Notice of appeal not required to name all orders

Following rendition of a final, appealable judgment, does a notice of appeal have to name all preceeding interlocutory orders as a prerequisite to complaining of those orders?  Apparently not.  This has been a question of concern for many appellate practitioners and it's a question that's been percolating around in the courts of appeals.  We now have an answer. 

In Perry v. Cohen, Defendants filed special exceptions to the Plaintiffs' petition, which were sustained and the trial court ordered Plaintiffs to replead.  Subsequently, Plaintiffs filed an amended petition, and Defendants moved to dismiss because the amendment failed to comply with the order on the special exceptions.  The trial court dismissed Plaintiffs' claims.

On appeal, Defendants argued that Plaintiffs had waived their complaints because their notice of appeal listed only the order of dismissal, and not the order sustaining the special exceptions.   The Texas Supreme Court held that Plaintiffs "were required only to state the date of the judgment or order appealed from--in this instance the order dismissing their suit."  The Court's opinion also goes on to examine whether Plaintiffs also preserved error by challenging both orders in their brief and concludes under its rules requiring liberal construction of briefs that Plaintiffs preserved error.  The Court's opinion may be found at this link.