Allison Camille Lartigue A/K/A Allison C. Lartigue, LLC and the Freelance Paralegal, LLC v. Karleana L. Farias

CourtTexas Court of Appeals, 1st District (Houston)
DecidedApril 30, 2026
Docket01-24-00755-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Allison Camille Lartigue A/K/A Allison C. Lartigue, LLC and the Freelance Paralegal, LLC v. Karleana L. Farias (Allison Camille Lartigue A/K/A Allison C. Lartigue, LLC and the Freelance Paralegal, LLC v. Karleana L. Farias) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Court of Appeals, 1st District (Houston) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Allison Camille Lartigue A/K/A Allison C. Lartigue, LLC and the Freelance Paralegal, LLC v. Karleana L. Farias, (Tex. Ct. App. 2026).

Opinion

Opinion issued April 30, 2026.

In the

Court of Appeals for the

First District of Texas ———————————— NO. 01-24-00755-CV ——————————— ALLISON CAMILLE LARTIGUE A/K/A ALLISON C. LARTIGUE AND THE FREELANCE PARALEGAL, LLC, Appellants v. KARLEANA L. FARIAS, Appellee

On Appeal from the 234th District Court Harris County, Texas Trial Court Case No. 2024-23723

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Appellee Karleana L. Farias sued appellants Allison Camille Lartigue and

The Freelance Paralegal, LLC (collectively, Lartigue) for stalking.1 See TEX. CIV.

1 In the notice of appeal, the first appellant is erroneously named “Allison Camille Lartigue a/k/a Allison C. Lartigue, LLC.” The original petition names two PRAC. & REM. CODE §§ 85.001-.006. Lartigue filed a motion to dismiss Farias’s

action under the Texas Citizens Participation Act (TCPA). See id. §§ 27.001-.011.

The trial court denied Lartigue’s motion, and Lartigue appeals from that

interlocutory order. See id. § 51.014(a)(12) (providing right to interlocutory appeal

from order denying motion to dismiss made under TCPA).

On appeal, Lartigue contends that the trial court erred in denying her motion

because: (1) Lartigue met her burden to demonstrate that the TCPA applies to

Farias’s stalking claim; (2) Farias failed to establish, by clear and specific

evidence, a prima facie case for each essential element of her stalking claim; and

(3) Lartigue established affirmative defenses that bar Farias’s claim. Because we

conclude that Farias’s stalking claim is not based on or in response to Lartigue’s

exercise of any right or act that the TCPA protects, we affirm the trial court’s order

denying her motion to dismiss.

Background

The instant suit is related to a separate proceeding not before us. On

December 14, 2023, the Unauthorized Practice of Law Committee of the State of

Texas (the UPLC) filed suit against Lartigue and sought to enjoin her from

practicing law without a license (the UPLC Litigation). Prior to filing suit, the

defendants: (1) Allison Camille Lartigue a/k/a Allison C. Lartigue and (2) The Freelance Paralegal, LLC. There is no entity named “Allison C. Lartigue, LLC” that is party to the instant suit. 2 UPLC had assigned Farias, an attorney, to investigate complaints made against

Lartigue that Lartigue was practicing law without a license. Among other things,

the UPLC alleged that Lartigue communicated with a potential client named Dale

Keating and offered to draft a demand letter and notice of intent to sue on his

behalf.

While the UPLC Litigation was pending, Lartigue sent Farias multiple

emails and repeatedly called Farias’s law firm. On February 29, 2024, Lartigue

sent an email to Farias that stated, in part, “You need to come forward and state

immediately who Dale keating is or else I will have the police knocking on your

door.”2 That same day, Farias responded, stated that she was copying Lartigue’s

attorney on the email exchange, and requested that Lartigue stop communicating

with her directly. Lartigue replied, “nah.”

On April 7, 2024, Lartigue sent an email to Farias that referenced several

provisions of the Texas Penal Code and Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code,

suggesting that Faris committed criminal and civil violations. In that same email,

Lartigue wrote, “It’s worth mentioning that your ‘Office’ bears a striking

resemblance to the shed (dump, as some may call it), positioned on the southwest

corner of my Parents’ $13 Million Dollar Beach House.” That afternoon, Farias

forwarded a copy of Lartigue’s email to an email address associated with the

2 Unless an alteration is noted, the parties’ communications are transcribed exactly as they appear without changes to spellings, capitalization, or punctuation. 3 Houston Police Department. A little over an hour later, Farias then sent an email to

Lartigue’s lawyer with the subject line: “I have pressed charges against Lartigue.”

In the body of the email, Farias wrote, “After the repeated calls to my office and

multiple emails making threats, I made that decision for myself and my family, to

make a report and file charges against Ms Lartigue.”

The next morning, Lartigue sent an email to Farias that stated, among other

things, “You are going to tell me who Dale Keating is today as a precaution for my

safety. . . . You are also going to turn over my entire file of alleged ‘Complaints.’

. . . I never did anything wrong. Period. You are going to suffer now as much as I

have....go to sleep bitch[.]” The subject line read: “Dale – See you today.” A

minute later, Lartigue sent a separate email to Farias with the subject line: “Ill be

by your pig pen ..... around....whatever time works best for my busy schedule.”

Approximately two hours later, Farias sent an email—the recipients of which are

unclear from the record—stating that Lartigue “has sent three emails this morning

saying that she’s coming to my office i have alerted police.” Lartigue responded to

Farias’s email minutes later: “Correction : 1 email. You aren’t getting away with

fabricating stories for much longer[.]”

Four days later, on April 12, 2024, Farias filed the instant suit against

Lartigue for stalking and sought temporary and permanent injunctive relief. In her

petition, Farias alleged that, after the start of the UPLC Litigation, Lartigue

4 “engaged in inappropriate, harassing and profane contact with [Farias], members

of the Farias Law Firm, members of the law firm staff, and the after-hours

answering service hired by [Farias] and her law firm.” She further alleged that

Lartigue made “credible threats” and went to her law firm offices, preventing

Farias from conducting “her regular activities of daily business and meet[ing]

safely with her clients.” Farias attached an affidavit to her petition, in which she

stated that:

Lartigue sent repeated emails and placed multiple calls to my office’s after-hours answering service. . . . She has repeatedly [and] falsely accused me of being a criminal and aiding and abetting criminal conduct, and publicly made comments that I deserve to be disbarred. Lartigue has made clear that she is coming to my office . . . . I have reason to believe that Lartigue is aware of my home address. I am in fear for my life and my immediate safety.

Farias attached her and Lartigue’s email correspondence to her affidavit.

On June 12, 2024, in the UPLC Litigation, the trial court entered an “Agreed

Final Judgment and Permanent Injunction,” bringing the UPLC Litigation to an

end.

On July 31, 2024, in the instant suit, Lartigue filed a motion to dismiss under

the TCPA. In the motion, Lartigue argued that the TCPA applied to Farias’s

stalking claim because “Plaintiff’s claim of illegal stalking . . . is based on or in

response to”: (1) “Defendant’s exercise of her right of free speech,”

(2) “Defendants’ exercise of her right to petition,” and (3) “acts of the Defendant

5 described by” section 27.010(b) of the Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code.

See TEX. CIV. PRAC. & REM. CODE § 27.003(a) (setting forth grounds for motion to

dismiss under TCPA). In support of her motion, Lartigue submitted an affidavit in

which she stated that all her and Farias’s emails “related to” the UPLC Litigation

and that in those communications Lartigue “was demanding . . . to see [Farias’s]

file containing all of the complaints, their content, and who Dale Keating was.”

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Allison Camille Lartigue A/K/A Allison C. Lartigue, LLC and the Freelance Paralegal, LLC v. Karleana L. Farias, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/allison-camille-lartigue-aka-allison-c-lartigue-llc-and-the-freelance-txctapp1-2026.