Aguilar, Anthony C. and Susan B. Aguilar v. Lvdvd, L.C.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 25, 2002
Docket08-01-00438-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Aguilar, Anthony C. and Susan B. Aguilar v. Lvdvd, L.C. (Aguilar, Anthony C. and Susan B. Aguilar v. Lvdvd, L.C.) 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
Aguilar, Anthony C. and Susan B. Aguilar v. Lvdvd, L.C., (Tex. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS

COURT OF APPEALS

EIGHTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS

EL PASO, TEXAS

                                                                              )

ANTHONY C. AGUILAR and                             )    

SUSAN B. AGUILAR,                                         )                    No.  08-01-00438-CV

Appellants,                         )                             Appeal from

v.                                                                           )                 County Court at Law No. 7

LVDVD, L.C.,                                                      )                 of El Paso County, Texas

Appellee.                           )                        (TC# 2001-3867)

O P I N I O N

Anthony C. Aguilar and Susan B. Aguilar (the Aguilars) appeal from a summary judgment granted in favor of LVDVD, L.C. (the Dairy).  Finding no error, we affirm.

FACTUAL SUMMARY

This case arises out of a dispute between the owners of adjacent properties with frontage on North Loop in Socorro, El Paso County, Texas.  The Aguilar property is a farm and consists of a main house, utility house, separate office, a barn, and storage facilities.  The Aguilars obtained their water from a well located on the property.  Adjacent to the Aguilars= property is land owned by the Trujillo family.  The Aguilars allege that in November and December 1996, Henry Trujillo dumped a large amount of manure onto the Trujillo property which was subsequently plowed.  After the Trujillo property was irrigated, the water from the Aguilars= well changed.  Flies proliferated, the


water had a sewer odor, and the family stopped drinking it.  The flies and odor continued but to a lesser extent each year.  The Aguilars filed an original petition in 1997 against several defendants, including members of the Trujillo family.  On November 12, 1998, the Aguilars filed a second amended original petition and added the Dairy as a defendant.  On June 27, 2001, the Aguilars filed a motion for partial summary judgment pursuant to Tex.R.Civ.P. 166a(c).  On August 27, 2001, the Dairy filed a no-evidence motion for summary judgment.  The court conducted a hearing on the Aguilars= motion on September 7, 2001 and orally denied the motion.  A written order was signed by the trial court on October 12, 2001.

On September 27, 2001, the Aguilars filed special exceptions to the Dairy=s motion for summary judgment.  The next day, they filed a fifth amended original petition alleging that the Dairy acted in concert with the Trujillos to discharge industrial and/or agricultural waste such that it was jointly and severally liable for the Aguilars= damages.  The Aguilars claimed that the Dairy hired and paid Henry Trujillo to transport and discharge the waste and that the discharge created a nuisance.  The Aguilars also sought a permanent injunction.  On September 28, and 29, 2001, the defendants--including the Dairy--supplemented their responses to discovery requests and named several expert witnesses whom the defendants anticipated would be called by them to testify.  In response, the Aguilars sought a continuance of the hearing on summary judgment.  Following a hearing on October 5, 2001, the trial court denied the Aguilars= motion for continuance and special exceptions; it orally granted the Dairy=s no-evidence motion for summary judgment.  Counsel for the Dairy orally requested a severance which the trial court orally granted.  Written orders were signed on October 12, 2001.  This appeal follows.


SPECIAL EXCEPTIONS TO THE DAIRY=S

MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT

In Point of Error No. One, the Aguilars contend that the trial court erred in denying their special exceptions to the Dairy=s motion for summary judgment because the motion was Avague and ambiguous.@  Specifically, they complain that the style of the motion did not indicate that the Dairy was a party to the summary judgment proceeding.  They also alleged that because the motion named only Anthony C. Aguilar as a plaintiff, they did not know whether an answer was required from Susan B. Aguilar as well.[1]

We apply an abuse of discretion standard in reviewing a trial court=s ruling on special exceptions.  Burgess v. El Paso Cancer Treatment Ctr., 881 S.W.2d 552, 554-55 (Tex.App.--El Paso 1994, writ denied).  We will reverse only if the trial court acted without reference to any guiding rules or principles, or in other words, acted in an arbitrary and unreasonable manner.  Id.  Appellants rely on a litany of cases and statutes holding that the omission of a party operates to dismiss that party from a suit or indicates an intention to non-suit.  Their reliance upon these cases is misplaced.


As to the status of the Dairy as a party to the summary judgment proceeding, usage of the designation Aet al@ in the style of a pleading to refer to additional parties named in a previous pleading is proper.  See Abramcik v. U.S. Home Corp

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