A2Z Transportation Co., Inc. v. Ronald Thomas

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 2, 2022
Docket05-20-00848-CV
StatusPublished

This text of A2Z Transportation Co., Inc. v. Ronald Thomas (A2Z Transportation Co., Inc. v. Ronald Thomas) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
A2Z Transportation Co., Inc. v. Ronald Thomas, (Tex. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

Affirm and Opinion Filed August 2, 2022

In The Court of Appeals Fifth District of Texas at Dallas No. 05-20-00848-CV

A2Z TRANSPORTATION CO., INC., Appellant V. RONALD THOMAS, Appellee

On Appeal from the 68th Judicial District Court Dallas County, Texas Trial Court Cause No. DC-18-19059

MEMORANDUM OPINION Before Justices Myers, Osborne, and Nowell Opinion by Justice Osborne In this premises liability case, the trial court rendered judgment for

plaintiff/appellee Ronald Thomas after a bench trial. In seven issues, Appellant A2Z

Transportation Co., Inc. (“Transportation”) contends the trial court’s judgment is

void because it was never served with process, or in the alternative, that the pleadings

and the evidence are insufficient to support the trial court’s judgment. We decide

these issues against Transportation and affirm the trial court’s judgment.

BACKGROUND

In his operative petition, Thomas alleged he was injured on January 6, 2017,

when he slipped on ice at his workplace. He alleged his employer knew or should have known about the improperly treated ice and failed to take any steps to warn

him of the danger. He offered evidence at trial that he suffered two breaks in his

ankle as a result of his fall at work and a subsequent fall in the parking lot of the

hospital where he went to seek treatment later on the same day.

Thomas named “A2Z Limos, Inc.” (“Limos”) as the defendant and served

process on that entity by serving “its registered agent Shahida Ejaz” at an address on

Merriman Parkway in Dallas on May 21, 2019. Defendant’s discovery responses,

verified by “A2Z Transportation principal officer” Jimmy Chaudhry, included the

following “general objection”:

A2Z LIMOS, INC. ceased to be a Texas entity in 1989 and is not a property [sic] named defendant herein. Plaintiff was a contract driver for A2Z Transportation, Inc.1 who leases the premises from JC Goodman Investment, Inc. the owner of the property. The following responses are made as if directed to the proper party, A2Z Transportation, Inc. Further, in response to the request to describe “how the injury-producing

events” occurred, “Defendant” stated, “Plaintiff was a driver for A2Z

Transportation, Inc. who leases the premises from JC Goodman Investment, Inc. the

owner of the property. The entity named as defendant does not exist. A2Z Limo was

used by Shahida Ejaz long ago as an operating entity.”

Neither party acted on the information in this disclosure. Thomas did not

amend his petition or request service of process on A2Z Transportation Co., Inc.,

1 The written trial amendment to the pleadings and subsequent documents, including the appellate briefing, add “Co.” to appellant’s name. –2– and Limos did not move for summary judgment or seek other relief on the ground

that it was not Thomas’s employer and was not properly named as a defendant.

Instead, the parties conducted discovery and announced ready for trial.

During opening statements in the trial before the court, the trial court asked:

THE COURT: Mr. Carney [Defense Counsel], let me just ask this. So, this building they’re at, who owned the building, was it your client, or somebody else owned the building?

MR. CARNEY: Well, that’s an important question, Your Honor. Because we have answered—we have told the Plaintiffs that the entity they’ve sued has not been in existence since 1989, and that we identified who the employer was, and who leased the building, and who owned the building that his employer leased. So even though we’ve identified the proper parties and informed them of the nonexistence of the named party they sued, they never modified their pleadings. So there is no—there is no A2Z Limos, Inc., not since 1989. THE COURT: Okay. Then why didn’t you move for summary judgment on this?

MR. CARNEY: Your Honor, because I honestly thought they would, you know, modify their pleadings. I invited it to them. I told them I’d accept service, just fix it. I told them who the right parties were. So as far as summary judgment— THE COURT: I was just curious. [Plaintiff’s counsel], is that correct? Is this the wrong entity? Where did your client get his paychecks from?

MR. PEREZ [Plaintiff’s Counsel]: Your Honor, we would respectfully —actually let me answer that question for you. One moment, Your Honor, let me grab my client’s paycheck.2 One moment. However, we would say that this isn’t [the] wrong entity altogether, we’d say that this is a misnomer. And if we could, Your Honor, we would like to actually do a trial amendment that corrects the name of the Defendant. It clearly hasn’t prejudiced Defendant, as they are here today. . . .

2 There is no paycheck in the record, nor any information about a payor.

–3– THE COURT: . . . So, Mr. Carney, did you say that your client—let’s just forget the name of the company for a second. Did your client own this building where the fall allegedly happened, or was it owned by somebody else? Like a separate entity?

MR. CARNEY: Just by way of background, this has been a family business that was started by Mr. Chaudhry’s father and mother. There are family entities that own the building, but it’s a different ownership than his business which leases the building to operate his transportation company.

Thomas called Chaudhry as his first witness, and inquired, “So you’re the

owner of A2Z Limos, right? Or A2Z Transportation, right?” Chaudhry responded,

“Yes, sir.” Chaudhry also testified that the company’s website was “A2Z

Limos.com.” He testified that the business was operated from premises on Langford

Street in downtown Dallas. Although Chaudhry testified at some length about his

company, its regular business practices and procedures, Thomas’s work schedule

and duties, the physical layout of the business premises, and the events on the day

Thomas fell, he was not asked further questions by either counsel about the

ownership or control of the corporate entities or the premises. Chaudhry also

testified he received a text message from Thomas on the day of his injury stating

“Open door/I think I broke my An[k]le/It hurts bad/Man it popped Loud/Man . . .

Real Loud Pop.”

Thomas testified about his work, his fall, and his subsequent medical

treatment. On the day of his fall, he was driving his employer’s shuttle van to

transport flight crews between the airport and local hotels. In between his assigned

trips, he went to the break room at “the shop.” His normal procedure, which he –4– followed on that day, was to call or text Chaudhry to open the locked door for entry.

Thomas testified there was “a little hill” from the parking lot to the door, and “that’s

where I slipped at right there. It was slippery right there. You know, ice right there.

It was slippery right there. And I reached for the doorknob, that’s when I slipped.”

Thomas then texted Chaudry that he had fallen, and because of the pain, called an

ambulance.

Thomas explained that although an ambulance responded to his call, he

refused transport to a hospital when the paramedics told him it was probably just a

sprain. But when he tried to walk into the break room after the ambulance left, the

pain worsened and his ankle swelled and “turned purple.” Thomas then decided to

drive himself to a nearby emergency room. Medical records from the hospital

reflected Thomas’s report that “he slipped while at work tonight; he then drove here

and fell again in the parking lot.” An X-ray revealed two fractures in Thomas’s

ankle.3 Both Thomas and one of his medical providers testified about the extent of

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A2Z Transportation Co., Inc. v. Ronald Thomas, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/a2z-transportation-co-inc-v-ronald-thomas-texapp-2022.