Bilal Burki v. Janette D. Dansby

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 4, 2023
Docket01-22-00046-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Bilal Burki v. Janette D. Dansby (Bilal Burki v. Janette D. Dansby) 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
Bilal Burki v. Janette D. Dansby, (Tex. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

Opinion issued May 4, 2023

In The

Court of Appeals For The

First District of Texas ——————————— NO. 01-22-00044-CV NO. 01-22-00046-CV ——————————— BILAL BURKI, Appellant V. JANETTE D. DANSBY, Appellee

On Appeal from the 268th District Court Fort Bend County, Texas Trial Court Case Nos. 19-DCV-265591 & 21-DCV-289522

MEMORANDUM OPINION

This case involves two related appeals. In the first appeal, appellant, Bilal

Burki, challenges the trial court’s order denying his petition for bill of review to set

aside the summary judgment rendered by the trial court in favor of appellee, Janette D. Dansby, in her suit against Burki for breach of contract, fraud, conversion, money

had and received, unjust enrichment, breach of implied warranty, and violations of

the Texas Deceptive Trade Practices Act (“DTPA”)1 (the “underlying

summary-judgment case”).2 In the second appeal, Burki challenges the trial court’s

rendition of summary judgment in favor of Dansby in the underlying

summary-judgment case.3 In three issues, Burki contends that the trial court erred

in denying his petition for bill of review.

We affirm the trial court’s order denying Burki’s petition for bill of review.

We dismiss for lack of jurisdiction Burki’s appeal from the trial court’s July 8, 2020

order granting Dansby summary judgment.

Background

In his amended original petition for bill of review, Burki alleged that he and

his wife, Sheila Burki (“Sheila”) (collectively, “the Burkis”), were named as

defendants in the underlying summary-judgment case brought by Dansby in August

2019, in which Dansby asserted claims against them for breach of contract, fraud,

conversion, money had and received, unjust enrichment, breach of implied warranty,

and violations of the DTPA. The Burkis, proceeding pro se, filed handwritten

1 See TEX. BUS. & COM. CODE ANN. §§ 17.01–.955. 2 Appellate cause no. 01-22-00044-CV; trial court cause no. 21-DCV-289522. 3 Appellate cause no. 01-22-00046-CV; trial court cause no. 19-DCV-265591. 2 answers in response to Dansby’s petition in the underlying summary-judgment case

using a form provided by the trial court clerk.

According to Burki, Dansby then filed a summary-judgment motion against

the Burkis on June 5, 2020 (the “June 5th summary-judgment motion”) and a notice

that a hearing on the motion was set for July 2, 2020. After Dansby agreed to settle

her claims against Sheila in the underlying summary-judgment case, she filed a

second summary-judgment motion against Burki only on June 26, 2020 (the “June

26th summary-judgment motion”). Burki alleged that Dansby “did not file or serve

a notice of hearing” as to the June 26th summary-judgment motion. On June 29,

2020, Dansby and Sheila filed a rule 11 agreement4 about their settlement in the

underlying summary-judgment case, and on July 8, 2020, Dansby nonsuited her

claims against Sheila in that case.5

Burki further alleged that also on July 8, 2020, the trial court, in the underlying

summary-judgment case, signed an order granting Dansby summary judgment

against Burki. According to Burki, Dansby “misrepresented to the [trial court] that

[Burki] had notice” of the summary-judgment hearing and “erroneously led” the trial

court to believe that she had complied with the notice requirements of Texas Rule

of Civil Procedure 166a, even though Dansby “never requested a hearing or notified

4 See TEX. R. CIV. P. 11. 5 See TEX. R. APP. P. 162. 3 [Burki]” of a hearing setting for the June 26th summary-judgment motion. As a

result, Burki asserted, he “did not have actual, or even constructive, notice of a

hearing or submission date” for the June 26th summary-judgment motion. Burki

also asserted that he did not receive notice of the trial court’s July 8, 2020 order

granting Dansby summary judgment as required by Texas Rule of Civil Procedure

309A and was not aware of the July 8, 2020 order until he looked at the trial court’s

records in “late 2020 or early 2021.”6

Burki argued that he was entitled to a bill of review because he had a

meritorious defense to Dansby’s claims against him in the underlying

summary-judgment case, he was prevented from making that defense by Dansby’s

“fraud, accident or wrongful act,” and that those elements were “unmixed with any

fault or negligence” of his own. Burki also asserted that setting aside the judgment

in favor of Dansby in the underlying summary-judgment case would not cause unfair

injury because Dansby had already received $10,000 in compensation from her

settlement of her claims against Sheila.

Dansby answered, generally denying the allegations in Burki’s petition for bill

of review and asserting that she had served the Burkis with discovery requests in the

6 Burki filed his original petition for bill of review in December 2021, after Dansby started collection proceedings in the underlying summary-judgment case and the trial court had appointed a receiver to assist her in the judgment’s enforcement. About the same time Burki filed his original petition for bill of review, he also filed a motion to stay the receiver’s actions in the underlying summary-judgment case. 4 underlying summary-judgment case in October 2019, but they did not respond to

those requests. Dansby then filed a motion to compel the Burkis’ responses to her

discovery requests and served them with a notice of hearing on the motion. Yet the

Burkis did not respond to Dansby’s motion to compel and did not attend the hearing.

The trial court signed an order granting Dansby’s motion to compel and ordering the

Burkis to respond to Dansby’s discovery requests by April 1, 2020 and reimburse

Dansby $1,500.00 in attorney’s fees. Neither of the Burkis complied with the trial

court’s order.

On June 5, 2020, Dansby electronically filed and served on the Burkis her

June 5th summary-judgment motion as well as a notice setting her motion for a

hearing on July 2, 2020. According to Dansby, she served Burki with the June 5th

summary-judgment motion through the electronic filing service provider for the

State of Texas, which used the same email address that Burki had provided in his

original answer and used to serve Dansby with his answer. While Dansby’s June

5th summary-judgment motion was pending, Dansby and Sheila settled Dansby’s

claims against Sheila.7 On June 26, 2020, Dansby filed an “agreed judgment” as to

her claims against Sheila and an “amended” summary-judgment motion “removing”

the grounds asserted against Sheila but otherwise asserting the same grounds and

7 Dansby alleged that the Burkis were in the process of divorcing each other at the time of the settlement. 5 legal arguments against Burki that she had raised in the June 5th summary-judgment

motion and relying on the same exhibits that were filed with that motion. (Internal

quotations omitted.) Dansby asserted that she “filed the amendment as a courtesy to

the [trial court] to clean up the issues for its final review.”

According to Dansby, the deadline for Burki to file a response to her June 5th

summary-judgment motion was seven days before the July 2, 2020

summary-judgment hearing, i.e., June 25, 2020—a deadline that had passed before

Dansby filed the June 26th summary-judgment motion. As to Burki, the grounds,

arguments, and exhibits in Dansby’s June 26th summary-judgment motion were the

same as those set forth in her June 5th summary-judgment motion. Thus, Dansby

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