Fultz v. Cummins Sales & Service, Inc.

587 S.W.2d 515
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 30, 1979
Docket1405
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 587 S.W.2d 515 (Fultz v. Cummins Sales & Service, Inc.) 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
Fultz v. Cummins Sales & Service, Inc., 587 S.W.2d 515 (Tex. Ct. App. 1979).

Opinion

OPINION

BISSETT, Justice.

This case involves an appeal from an order dismissing a subrogation action with prejudice as to all defendants for alleged failure of the nominal plaintiff (subrogor) to comply with a discovery order. The sub-rogation action arose out of an accident wherein a yacht purchased by Wilford Fultz (insured; subrogor; nominal plaintiff) was damaged by fire allegedly resulting from the negligent and defective manufacture and repair of the vessel. The action was brought in plaintiff’s name by Insurance Company of North America (INA; subro-gee, insuror) against Cummins Sales and Service, Inc. (Cummins Sales), Cummins Engine Company, Inc. (Cummins Engine), North Shore Boat Works (North Shore), Miller Yacht Sales, Inc. (Miller Yacht), Egg Harbor Boat Company, Inc. (Egg Harbor) and Aeroquip, Inc. (Aeroquip).

The relevant pre-trial history of this case began on September 9, 1977, when Egg Harbor and Miller Yacht propounded written interrogatories to Fultz, plaintiff. These were followed on the 17th and 18th of January, 1978, by interrogatories and supplemental interrogatories propounded to Fultz by Cummins Engine.

Never having received a response from Fultz, Egg Harbor and Miller Yacht moved the court on February 27, 1978, to compel Fultz to answer the September 9, 1977, interrogatories. An order to that effect was signed by the trial judge on March 10, 1978. This order instructed Fultz to answer the September 9,1977, interrogatories on or before March 13, 1978. In the meantime, Cummins Engine had not received any response from Fultz. Hence, on March 30, 1978, Cummins Engine filed a motion to compel discovery.

Eight months after their interrogatories had been propounded and a month and a half after the court-imposed deadline, Egg Harbor and Miller Yacht moved on May 1, 1978, to dismiss the cause for Fultz’s failure to answer the interrogatories propounded to him. The following day, May 2, 1978, an “agreed” order was signed by the court. The order, in relevant part, provided:

“ . . . Cummins Engine Company, Inc. having asked for the following Order and it appearing to the Court that neither the Plaintiff, Wilford Fultz, nor the Defendant, Miller Yacht Sales, Inc., had any objections thereto and, in fact, agreed thereto, it is therefore
ORDERED and DECREED by the Court:
*517 1. That the plaintiff, Wilford Fultz, make answers to the Rule 168 Interrogatories propounded to him by the Defendant, Cummins Engine Company, Inc., and file the same with the Clerk of the Court on or before May 3, 1978, at 5:00 PM in the form required by Rule 168, T.R.C.P., upon penalty of having his cause dismissed pursuant to Rule 170, T.R.C.P.
2. That the Plaintiff, Wilford Fultz, makes answers to the Supplemental Rule 168 Interrogatories served upon him by the Defendant, Cummins Engine Company, Inc., as required by Rule 168, T.R. C.P., and file them with the Clerk of this Court on or before May 3, 1978, at 5:00 PM upon penalty of having his cause dismissed pursuant to Rule 170, T.R.C.P.”

In response to the agreed order, Fultz, on May 3, 1978, filed answers to the interrogatories and supplemental interrogatories propounded by Cummins Engine and the interrogatories propounded by Egg Harbor and Miller Yacht. None of the answers, however, were signed or sworn to by him. Instead, his attorney signed all three replies, swearing only that the answers were “true and correct to the best of [the attorney’s] knowledge.”

The next day Cummins Engine filed a motion to strike plaintiff’s answers and to dismiss his cause of action “with prejudice pursuant to the May 2 order” because 1) the answers were not properly verified and 2) the answers were so inadequate as to demonstrate “bad faith.” At that time, the trial judge also had before him the joint motion of Yacht Sales and Egg Harbor filed April 28, seeking the imposition of discovery sanctions for plaintiff’s failure to answer their interrogatories. A hearing was held on May 5, 1978, to determine the issue of compliance with discovery. No decision was made at this hearing and the matter was continued until June 16, 1978. In the meantime, on June 14,1978, Fultz filed new responses to the interrogatories propounded by Cummins Engine and the interrogatories propounded by Miller Yacht and Egg Harbor. These answers, while substantively unchanged, were properly signed and verified by him.

On June 16, 1978, the matter of compliance with the agreed order of May 2, 1978, was taken up again by the court. As a result of this hearing, judgment was rendered on June 21, 1978, that the cause be dismissed with prejudice. In relevant part, the judgment recited:

“ . . . an agreed Order by and between the Plaintiff, Wilford Fultz, and the Defendant, Cummins Engine Company, Inc. was entered by the Court under the terms of which it was agreed and ordered that the Plaintiff, Wilford Fultz, would make answers to Rule 168 Interrogatories propounded to him by the Defendant, Cummins Engine Company, Inc. in the form required by Rule 168, Texas Rules of Civil Procedure, and file the same with the Clerk of Court on or before May 3,1978, at 5:00 p. m. upon penalty of having his cause dismissed pursuant to Rule 170, Texas Rules of Civil Procedure; that the Plaintiff, Wilford Fultz, would make answers to Supplemental Rule 168 Interrogatories served upon him by Cum-mins Engine Company, Inc. as required by Rule 168, Texas Rules of Civil Procedure, and file them with the Clerk of the Court on or before May 3, 1978, before 5:00 p. m. upon penalty of having his cause dismissed pursuant to Rule 170, Texas Rules of Civil Procedure, ...”

Fultz attacks the judgment on the grounds that the trial court abused its discretion in choosing such, a harsh sanction, and that he was in essentia] compliance with the agreed order of discovery as of June 16, 1978, when the court reached its decision. In the alternative, Fultz contends that even if it could be said that he failed to comply with the agreed order, it was error for the trial court to dismiss the cause as to all defendants.

The May 2 order is not an order which is founded upon an agreement reached by the parties. It is an order by the trial judge which was agreed to by plaintiff and Cummins Engine. Therefore, the rules discussed by our Supreme Court in *518 Vickrey v. American Youth Camps, Inc., 532 S.W.2d 292 (Tex.Sup.1976) and in Matthews v. Looney, 132 Tex. 313, 123 S.W.2d 871 (1939) do not apply. However, we will (and do) discuss the terms of the order, together with the effect of the agreement by plaintiff and Cummins Engine that the same be made by the trial court.

Rule 11, T.R.C.P., expressly states:

“No agreement between attorneys or parties touching any suit pending will be enforced unless it be in writing, signed and filed with the papers as part of the record, or unless it be made in open court . and entered of record.”

Here, the only agreement that purports to comply with Rule 11 is the May 2 agreed order.

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587 S.W.2d 515, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fultz-v-cummins-sales-service-inc-texapp-1979.