Arriba Limited, a Bahamas Corporation v. the Petroleum Workers Union of the Republic of Mexico and the Commission of Contracts of the General Executive Committee of the Petroleum Workers Union of the Republic of Mexico

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 24, 1999
Docket10-98-00165-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Arriba Limited, a Bahamas Corporation v. the Petroleum Workers Union of the Republic of Mexico and the Commission of Contracts of the General Executive Committee of the Petroleum Workers Union of the Republic of Mexico (Arriba Limited, a Bahamas Corporation v. the Petroleum Workers Union of the Republic of Mexico and the Commission of Contracts of the General Executive Committee of the Petroleum Workers Union of the Republic of Mexico) 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
Arriba Limited, a Bahamas Corporation v. the Petroleum Workers Union of the Republic of Mexico and the Commission of Contracts of the General Executive Committee of the Petroleum Workers Union of the Republic of Mexico, (Tex. Ct. App. 1999).

Opinion

Arriba Limited, a Bahamas Corporation v. The Petroleum Workers Union of the Republic of Mexico and the Commission of Contracts of the General Executive Committee of the Petroleum Workers Union of the Republic of Mexico


IN THE

TENTH COURT OF APPEALS


No. 10-98-165-CV


     ARRIBA LIMITED, a Bahamas Corporation,

                                                                         Appellant

     v.


     THE PETROLEUM WORKERS UNION

     OF THE REPUBLIC OF MEXICO AND

     THE COMMISSION OF CONTRACTS

     OF THE GENERAL EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE

     OF THE PETROLEUM WORKERS UNION

     OF THE REPUBLIC OF MEXICO,

                                                                         Appellees


From the 281th District Court

Harris County, Texas

Trial Court # 89-07592

OPINION DENYING REHEARING

      Arriba Limited (“Arriba”) appealed from a take-nothing judgment in its suit against the Petroleum Workers Union of the Republic of Mexico and the Commission of Contracts of the General Executive Committee of the Petroleum Workers Union of the Republic of Mexico (the “Union” and the “Commission”). In an opinion dated October 27, 1999, we reversed the judgment and remanded this cause for a new trial on the basis that the court erroneously excluded deposition testimony and this error likely caused the rendition of an improper judgment.

      The Union and the Commission have filed a motion for rehearing asserting, in part, that our opinion erroneously failed to address the defense of illegality in which they assert that the joint venture agreement Arriba claims was breached was illegal and therefore unenforceable. However, the defense of illegality was raised as a ground for summary judgment. The Union and the Commission asserted on appeal and reurge in this motion for rehearing that the judgment should be affirmed because the trial court erroneously denied their motions for summary judgment on this basis.

      The denial of a motion for summary judgment is an interlocutory order and, thus, generally not appealable. See Cincinnati Life Ins. Co. v. Cates, 927 S.W.2d 623, 625 (Tex. 1996); Coker v. Cramer Financial Group, Inc., 992 S.W.2d 586, 593 (Tex. App.—Texarkana 1999, no pet.) (“Coker's motion to dismiss is in essence a motion for summary judgment because it asks the trial court to summarily rule that, as a matter of law, Cramer has no claim or right to enforce the notes. Generally, with few exceptions, the denial of a motion for summary judgment is not reviewable on appeal because it is not a final judgment.”). We will not address claims by the Union and the Commission that the court should have granted a summary judgment. Id.

      The motion for rehearing is denied.

                                                                       BILL VANCE

                                                                       Justice


Before Chief Justice Davis,

          Justice Vance, and

          Justice Gray

Motion for rehearing denied

Opinion delivered and filed November 24, 1999

Do not publish

. Jeremy testified that the fight was between Kutchka and himself. He did not see Adam or K.B. involved in the fight. He testified that a metal pipe almost hit him while he was fighting Kutchka. After the fight he threw the metal pipe in a field. After he was arrested, Jeremy testified that he called K.B. and told him that he was being charged with assaulting Kutchka with a pipe. K.B. asked why Jeremy was being charged with that offense because K.B. was the one with the metal pipe, and during the fight he almost hit Jeremy with it.

Kutchka

      Kutchka testified that before the fight, he had an argument with a kid making noises, but he did not know if that kid was K.B. That night a group of kids started coming towards him saying that they were going to molest his infant daughter. Eight to ten of them encircled him, and then the fight began. A brick was thrown at his head, but he did not see who threw it. He punched the person that threw the brick and remembers being hit with a piece of wood, but cannot remember anything after that. He testified that he does not remember being hit with a metal pipe or if K.B. was at the fight.

Laura Kutchka

      Laura is Kutchka’s twenty-year-old wife. She testified that she did not see K.B. earlier that day. The kid making noises at her was Alex, not K.B. That night, she saw eight to twelve kids all beating her husband. Kutchka was hit with a brick and then fell down. The weapons she saw involved in the fight were a metal pole, a two-by-four, and a brick, but she could not say who was wielding these items. The only one of the boys she could positively identify at the scene was K.B., but she never saw K.B. involved in the fight, or strike Kutchka with a pipe or a wrench. She testified that K.B. approached her after the fight wielding a wrench and threatened her, telling her to move out of the way.  

Florence Baker

      Florence is Laura Kutchka’s eighteen-year-old friend. She had seen K.B. earlier that day at the pond smoking cigarettes. That night she saw ten to twelve boys at the pond. Two of the boys came toward Kutchka and danced around him like boxers. Then, the two boys jumped Kutchka, and the rest of the boys attacked. She identified Adam as one of the two boys, but K.B. was not one of the two. K.B. was involved in the fight. She saw him run past her and then jump in with the rest of the boys. She saw him hit Kutchka twice in the chest, but he did not have any weapons. She saw a wrench in the fight, but cannot say who had it. During the fight, she saw Laura Kutchka throw a flashlight at the boys in the fight. In Alex’s trial, which occurred ten days before K.B.’s, she identified Alex as the boy she had seen at the pond earlier that day, and as the boy who hit Kutchka twice in the chest.

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Arriba Limited, a Bahamas Corporation v. the Petroleum Workers Union of the Republic of Mexico and the Commission of Contracts of the General Executive Committee of the Petroleum Workers Union of the Republic of Mexico, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/arriba-limited-a-bahamas-corporation-v-the-petroleum-workers-union-of-the-texapp-1999.