David Lucas v. Best Pest Control
This text of David Lucas v. Best Pest Control (David Lucas v. Best Pest Control) 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.
Opinion
David Lucas ("plaintiff") appeals from a trial-court judgment dismissing his suit against Best Pest Control ("defendant"), which the record shows is a trade name employed by Don H. Caffey. We will dismiss the appeal for want of jurisdiction.
Plaintiff filed his original petition on September 27, 1994, alleging against defendant a cause of action for money damages. In three successive orders, signed January 8, 1996, March 5, 1997, and May 14, 1997, the trial court required the parties to participate in mediation and to be personally present at the mediation conferences. Plaintiff filed on December 3, 1997, a first amended original petition, superseding thereby his original petition. See Tex. R. Civ. P. 64, 65. Much later in the litigation, the following transpired:
March 13, 1998. Defendant filed a motion to dismiss plaintiff's original petition for his failure to participate in mediation and requested that the motion be determined on March 25, 1998, based on documents attached to the motion and without a hearing unless one was requested.
March 25, 1998. The trial judge signed an "Order of Dismissal" based on defendant's motion, dismissing "with prejudice" plaintiff's original petition, ordering costs taxed against the parties incurring them, and declaring that all relief not expressly granted was denied.
April 1, 1998. Plaintiff filed a motion to reinstate the "cause" dismissed by the order signed March 25, 1998, stating that "[t]he act or omission resulting in dismissal was not intentional or the result of conscious indifference but was due to an accident or mistake, in that no hearing was held on the issue of dismissal."
April 13, 1998. Defendant filed a pleading opposing plaintiff's motion to reinstate the cause; the defendant's pleading pointed out that the motion to reinstate "had nothing to do with the continuing prosecution of the case" and that plaintiff had never complied with the mediation orders. See Tex. R. Civ. P. 165a, § 1.
April 14, 1998. The trial judge signed an order denying plaintiff's motion to reinstate the cause.
May 5, 1998. In a letter of this date, the trial judge ordered a hearing on plaintiff's motion to reinstate; a copy of the letter appears in the appellate record but it does not bear the file mark of the trial-court clerk.
June 25, 1998. The trial judge signed an order declaring as follows: (1) plaintiff's motion for reinstatement had been heard on June 3, 1998, and all counsel had appeared; (2) plaintiff's motion was granted; (3) the court's order of March 25, 1998 (dismissing plaintiff's original petition) and the order of April 14, 1998 (denying plaintiff's motion to reinstate the cause) were vacated; and (4) plaintiff was ordered to pay defendant's attorney's fees in the amount of $1441.00 within ten "days of the entry of this Order," or the trial judge will sign another order dismissing the suit "with prejudice."
July 29, 1998. The trial judge signed an order dismissing "with prejudice" plaintiff's original petition based on defendant's affidavit that plaintiff had failed to pay the attorney's fees required by the previous order.
August 5, 1998. The trial judge signed an "Order of Dismissal with Prejudice Nunc Pro Tunc," dismissing "with prejudice" plaintiff's first amended original petition.
September 3, 1998. Plaintiff filed a notice of appeal from the order signed August 5, 1998.
Plaintiff contends on appeal that the trial court erred because it lacked authority under Rule 165a to condition reinstatement of the suit on plaintiff's payment of defendant's attorney's fees, as required by the order signed June 25, 1998. (1) See Price v. Firestone Tire & Rubber Co., 700 S.W.2d 730, 732-34 (Tex. App.--Dallas 1985, no writ). Defendant rejoins that Rule 165a "is wholly inapplicable to this case and this appeal"; that the attorney's fee requirement was but a "lesser sanction" imposed by the trial court for plaintiff's failure to participate in mediation; and the dismissal sanction was within the trial court's inherent powers necessary to enforce its mediation orders. See Gleason v. Lawson, 850 S.W.2d 714, 717 (Tex. App.--Corpus Christi 1993, no writ); Luxenberg v. Marshall, 835 S.W.2d 136, 141 (Tex. App.--Dallas 1992, orig. proceeding).
We tend to believe, in light of the record as a whole, that the trial court's order of March 25, 1998, was based on a want of diligence and thus within the scope of Rule 165a. Cf. McGregor v. Rich, 941 S.W.2d 74, 75-76 (Tex. 1997). We need not decide that point, however, because we lack jurisdiction of the appeal under either view of the dismissal order signed March 25, 1998.
We conclude first that the order signed March 25, 1998, was a final and appealable order. We reach that conclusion by construction. On its face, the order of that date purports to dispose finally of all issues and parties. It is not clear from the record that the order was rendered after a hearing; we have no reporter's record in that regard. If the order was rendered without a hearing, that would not render the order void because the record demonstrates beyond doubt that the trial court had jurisdiction of the parties and the subject matter. See State ex rel. Latty v. Owens, 907 S.W.2d 484, 485 (Tex. 1995).
We should refer also to the fact that the order signed March 25, 1998, purports to dismiss the plaintiff's original petition, as opposed to the case itself; aggravating the defect, the record indicates that plaintiff's original petition had been superseded by his first amended original petition well before March 25, 1998. We believe these defects do not deprive the dismissal order of its intended finality and meaning. If construed literally to be simply a dismissal of the plaintiff's original petition, the order would be meaningless--that petition had already been deprived of any legal effect by the filing of plaintiff's first amended original petition. See Tex. R. Civ. P. 65. And such a literal construction would deny any legal effect whatever to the remaining provisions of the order taxing costs and denying all relief not expressly granted.
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