GDS Transport, LLC v. MV Transportation, Inc. and the Dallas Area Rapid Transit Authority

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 24, 2024
Docket05-23-00067-CV
StatusPublished

This text of GDS Transport, LLC v. MV Transportation, Inc. and the Dallas Area Rapid Transit Authority (GDS Transport, LLC v. MV Transportation, Inc. and the Dallas Area Rapid Transit Authority) 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
GDS Transport, LLC v. MV Transportation, Inc. and the Dallas Area Rapid Transit Authority, (Tex. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

Reversed, Remanded, and Opinion Filed June 24, 2024

S In The Court of Appeals Fifth District of Texas at Dallas No. 05-23-00067-CV

GDS TRANSPORT, LLC, Appellant V. MV TRANSPORTATION, INC., Appellee

On Appeal from the 101st Judicial District Court Dallas County, Texas Trial Court Cause No. DC-21-07545

MEMORANDUM OPINION Before Justices Partida-Kipness, Pedersen, III, and Garcia Opinion by Justice Partida-Kipness In this interlocutory appeal, appellant GDS Transport, LLC (GDS) seeks

reversal of the trial court’s September 9, 2022 order granting appellee MV

Transportation, Inc.’s (MV Transportation) Rule 91a motion to dismiss. We reverse

the portions of the order dismissing GDS’s claims against MV Transportation for

breach of contract and fraud and remand for further proceedings consistent with this

opinion. BACKGROUND

The Dallas Area Rapid Transit Authority (DART) is a regional transit agency

servicing thirteen cities in North Texas. To comply with the Americans with

Disabilities Act (ADA), DART contracts for ADA-compliant paratransit services,

microtransit, shuttle services, and subsidized transportation programs.1 In June of

2018, DART issued a Request for Information (RFI) to begin the process of choosing

a company to implement and manage its mobility management services. The RFI

provided for “a new service model,” under which DART would contract with one

prime contractor to perform all mobility management services. The prime contractor

would be responsible for engaging the services of subcontractor/providers.

In March 2019, DART awarded MV Transportation the contract for Mobility

Management Transportation Services (the Master Agreement). GDS was referenced

in the Master Agreement as a prospective subcontractor/provider to provide buses

and drivers for DART’s paratransit and microtransit bus service. On April 19, 2019,

MV Contract Transportation, Inc. (MV Contract) and GDS entered the Subcontract

for Transportation Services (the Subcontract) for GDS to provide ADA-compliant

paratransit and microtransit services for DART. MV Contract is a subsidiary of MV

Transportation. According to GDS, the paratransit business model that was the

originating basis for the Master Agreement called for dispatching taxis, traditional

1 ADA Paratransit is an origin-to-destination service in compliance with the ADA. DART Microtransit is a shared ride, demand-responsive service designed for the general public within specified zones within the service area, as designated by DART. –2– sedans, or wheelchair-equipped shuttle buses to transport a DART paratransit client.

GDS was the provider of the bus service.

Under the Subcontract, GDS would provide the DART paratransit and

microtransit bus service and be compensated by MV Contract based upon a pricing

schedule in the Subcontract. Before entering the Subcontract, GDS met and

exchanged emails with officials from DART, MV Transportation, and MV Contract

concerning GDS’s capabilities to provide the requested services and pricing for

those services. GDS contends MV Transportation and DART made representations

that the new paratransit model would increase profitability for GDS and efficiencies

for the public. Under the new model, GDS would be paid on a per-trip basis rather

than an hourly basis. GDS was also told MV Transportation and DART would utilize

RouteMatch software, a new software program, which would create efficiencies to

allow GDS’s business to be profitable with the per-trip compensation model. GDS

contends it agreed to the Subcontract’s pricing schedule and invested over

$3,400,000 in a new fleet of buses and vans in reliance on those representations and

the Subcontract. On June 15, 2019, GDS entered a bus lease for a nominal amount

with MV Transportation (the Vehicle Lease) so GDS could begin operations before

the arrival of its new bus fleet. The Vehicle Lease is the subject of GDS’s breach of

contract claim against MV Transportation.

GDS contends the promise of a profitable endeavor did not materialize. The

number of trips directed to GDS was much less than the number set out in the

–3– Subcontract and pricing schedule. This was exacerbated when implementation of

RouteMatch failed and the parties reverted to older software that was not compliant

with the Master Agreement’s software requirements. In November and December

2019, GDS informed MV Transportation and MV Contract that the number of trips

set forth in the Subcontract had not materialized and requested they revise the

payment schedule. GDS maintains they were unresponsive to its requests and

financial predicament. According to GDS, it was put out of business by the

misrepresentations regarding the number of trips, the failed implementation of

RouteMatch, and the debt incurred to purchase buses and hire drivers. In May 2020,

GDS filed for bankruptcy.

PROCEDURAL HISTORY

The bankruptcy trustee filed an adversary proceeding against MV Contract.

However, because the Subcontract contained an arbitration clause, the parties chose

an arbitrator and began that process. Six months into the arbitration, MV Contract

filed the underlying suit for declaratory judgment. Both sides waived arbitration and

agreed to try all issues between them in the underlying state court proceeding.

In the trial court, GDS filed a counterpetition against MV Contract and later

added MV Transportation and DART as third party defendants. GDS’s Original

Third-Party Petition and First Amended Original Counter-Petition (the Amended

Counter Petition) is GDS’s live pleading at issue on appeal.

–4– MV Transportation, MV Contract, and DART moved to dismiss the Amended

Counter Petition. The movants called the joint motion a “Motion to Dismiss for Lack

of Jurisdiction and for Failure to State a Claim” (the Rule 91a Motion) and sought

dismissal of GDS’s claims against them pursuant to Rules 85 and 91a of the Texas

Rules of Civil Procedure.2 In the Rule 91a Motion, the movants argued governmental

immunity barred the trial court from exercising subject matter jurisdiction over the

Amended Counter Petition, and contended in the alternative that GDS’s claims were

barred as a matter of law by various affirmative defenses. GDS responded to and

moved to strike the Rule 91a Motion.

Following a hearing, the trial granted in part and denied in part the Rule 91a

Motion and did not state the court’s grounds for the ruling. The order disposed of all

claims by GDS against DART and MV Transport and GDS’s tort claims against MV

Contract. GDS’s breach of contract claim against MV Contract was not dismissed;

however, the trial court ruled any damages for that claim were limited to the damages

permitted by section 271.153 of the Texas Local Government Code. The parties

agreed to sever and abate the remaining claims between MV Contract and GDS. On

December 22, 2022, the trial court signed a severance order and this appeal followed.

On appeal, GDS challenges only the dismissal of its breach of contract and fraud

claims against MV Transportation.

2 Rule 85 addresses the acceptable contents of an original answer. TEX. R. CIV. P. 85. Rule 91a addresses motions to dismiss a cause of action on the grounds that it has no basis in law or fact. TEX. R. CIV. P. 91A. –5– STANDARD OF REVIEW

A party “may move to dismiss a cause of action on the grounds that it has no

basis in law or fact.” TEX. R. CIV. P.

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GDS Transport, LLC v. MV Transportation, Inc. and the Dallas Area Rapid Transit Authority, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gds-transport-llc-v-mv-transportation-inc-and-the-dallas-area-rapid-texapp-2024.