Allday Dental V.the Dental Solution

309 S.W.3d 606, 2010 Tex. App. LEXIS 1299, 2010 WL 653428
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 25, 2010
Docket14-08-00746-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 309 S.W.3d 606 (Allday Dental V.the Dental Solution) 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
Allday Dental V.the Dental Solution, 309 S.W.3d 606, 2010 Tex. App. LEXIS 1299, 2010 WL 653428 (Tex. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

OPINION

KEM THOMPSON FROST, Justice.

This appeal arises out of a contract dispute between a dental employer and a dental-placement service over placement fees. Following a trial on the merits in which the jury found in favor of the placement service, the trial court rendered a judgment against the employer. On appeal, the employer claims that the placement service operated illegally under the Texas Occupation Code because it did not meet state licensure requirements, thereby rendering the contract between the parties void and unenforceable. We affirm.

*608 I. Factual and PROCEDURAL Background

Appellee The Dental Solution is a company that places dental employees in dental clinics on a temporary or permanent basis for a fee. The Dental Solution filed suit against appellants Allday Dental, a dental clinic, and Amar Al-Kutob, who, along with his wife, owned Allday Dental. According to the live petition, The Dental Solution and Allday Dental entered into a “Placement Agreement,” which provides in relevant part:

5. CLIENT shall pay TDS [The Dental Solution] a placement fee for each day that a DENTIST, DENTAL HYGENIST, or DENTAL ASSISTANT referred to CLIENT by TDS [The Dental Solution] performs service for CLIENT, with such placement fee to be in the following amounts:
a. CLIENT shall pay TDS [The Dental Solution] a placement fee of $54.00 for each eight hour day a DENTIST provides services to CLIENT, and $47.00 for each four hour day minimum scheduling.

At trial, the parties referred to this section of the Placement Agreement as pertaining to temporary placement fees. The parties referred to the following section of the Placement Agreement as pertaining to a permanent placement fee:

9. In the event CLIENT employs, joint ventures with, associates with or in any manner affiliates with a SERVICE PROVIDER, or enters into any contractual relationship with a SERVICE PROVIDER referred to the CLIENT by TDS directly, or indirectly, through any TDS [The Dental Solution] placement, on a full time basis anytime during a period of one (1) year after the date of termination of this Agreement or one (1) year after the last day of actual work by any Service Provider based upon any referral by TDS (whichever is later), CLIENT agrees to pay TDS [The Dental Solution] a placement fee equal to fourteen 14% of the yearly gross compensation to be paid to the SERVICE PROVIDER.

According to the terms of the parties’ agreement, in addition to signing the agreement on behalf of Allday Dental, Al-Kutob also individually agreed to perform under the terms of the Placement Agreement.

In addition to suing Allday Dental and Al-Kutob, The Dental Solution also brought suit against Dr. Sharhonda Washington, a dentist whom The Dental Solution referred to Allday Dental. 1 Washington’s agreement with The Dental Solution provides in relevant part:

In the event Applicant [Washington] works for a dental office in any capacity within the period of one year from the date of initial referral, oral or written, without notifying TDS [The Dental Solution] prior to commencing such assignment, Applicant [Washington] shall be fully liable for any and all damages incurred by TDS [The Dental Solution] as a result of Applicant [Washington] failing to notify TDS [The Dental Solution] of such employment.

In its live petition, The Dental Solution claimed to have placed Washington at All-day Dental on a temporary basis for a single day on June 26, 2004. The parties do not dispute that Allday Dental paid The Dental Solution $54.00 in connection with the services Washington provided on this *609 date. However, The Dental Solution alleged that without providing notice to The Dental Solution, Washington worked at the Allday Dental clinic on a regular basis after the original placement date and up until the time she purchased the clinic. On this basis, The Dental Solution sought to recover both temporary and permanent placement fees, jointly and severally, from Allday Dental and Al-Kutob (hereinafter the “Allday Dental Parties”) under the Placement Agreement. The Dental Solution also sought damages from Washington, claiming that she breached her agreement with The Dental Solution, by failing to notify The Dental Solution of her additional work at, and undisclosed affiliation with, Allday Dental. The Dental Solution alleged violation of section 2501.101 of the Texas Occupation Code, asserting that the Allday Dental Parties knowingly made false statements and concealed material facts from The Dental Solution in an effort to obtain Washington’s services as an employee without compensation to The Dental Solution. The Dental Solution sought to recover attorney’s fees, costs, and pre- and post-judgment interest.

At a hearing on February 20, 2008, just prior to jury selection and trial, the Allday Dental Parties moved for a continuance so that The Dental Solution could supplement discovery responses on the method of calculating damages. For this reason, the trial court reset the trial for April 15, 2008. The following exchange occurred at the time of this resetting:

[ALLDAY DENTAL PARTIES’ TRIAL COUNSEL]: Is the Court precluding dispositive motions like motions for summary judgment?
[TRIAL COURT]: Yes, we’re done. We’re trying it. I’m continuing this and opening discovery only for the purpose of ascertaining the economic damages that was the basis of the defendant’s [sic] motion today stating that they had no idea of the theory, the amounts being sought by the plaintiff. We’ll answer that question and on we go to trial. Otherwise, we’re locked in. We’re not changing anything else about it.

About a month later, on March 14, 2008, the Allday Dental Parties each filed a document entitled “Plea to the Jurisdiction, First Amended Verified Answer, and Counterclaim.” These pleadings turned on the Allday Dental Parties’ assertions that The Dental Solution was operating a personnel service in violation of the Texas Occupation Code because The Dental Solution did not have a certificate of authority, as required by the code, and was not exempt under the code from obtaining the certificate. The Allday Dental Parties alleged that the contract upon which The Dental Solution’s claims are based is void and unenforceable as it relates to personnel service placement fees. On this basis, the Allday Dental Parties each asserted that The Dental Solution lacked standing to bring suit for personnel service placement fees and the trial court lacked subject matter jurisdiction to award personnel service placement fees to The Dental Solution. 2 The Allday Dental Parties also each asserted as a verified denial that The Dental Solution lacked the capacity to bring suit for personnel service placement fees. Additionally, the Allday Dental Parties each asserted affirmative defenses of illegality of the contract and failure to perform conditions precedent by obtaining a *610 certifícate of authority under the Texas Occupation Code.

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Related

in Re Amar Al-Kutob
Court of Appeals of Texas, 2012

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
309 S.W.3d 606, 2010 Tex. App. LEXIS 1299, 2010 WL 653428, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/allday-dental-vthe-dental-solution-texapp-2010.