Hong Phuoc Ngo and Duyen Ngoc Dang v. Association of Woodwind Lakes Homeowner, Inc.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 17, 2020
Docket01-18-00919-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Hong Phuoc Ngo and Duyen Ngoc Dang v. Association of Woodwind Lakes Homeowner, Inc. (Hong Phuoc Ngo and Duyen Ngoc Dang v. Association of Woodwind Lakes Homeowner, 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
Hong Phuoc Ngo and Duyen Ngoc Dang v. Association of Woodwind Lakes Homeowner, Inc., (Tex. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

Opinion issued December 17, 2020

In The

Court of Appeals For The

First District of Texas ———————————— NO. 01-18-00919-CV ——————————— HONG PHUOC NGO AND DUYEN NGOC DANG, Appellants V. ASSOCIATION OF WOODWIND LAKES HOMEOWNER, INC., Appellee

On Appeal from the 190th District Court Harris County, Texas Trial Court Case No. 2018-38662

DISSENTING OPINION

The pre-amendment TCPA is a beast that, from the start, has been in need of

a corral, if not a cage. But this result goes beyond any permissible interpretation of

the statutory term “common” or the related right of association; therefore, I

respectfully dissent. When the first TCPA cases began to work their way through the appellate

process—less than ten years ago—courts gaped at the expansive language of the

statute but dutifully explained that it was not the judiciary’s role to interpret an

extremely broad statute in a restrictive way. See Better Bus. Bureau of Metro.

Houston, Inc. v. John Moore Servs., Inc., 441 S.W.3d 345, 353 (Tex. App.—Houston

[1st Dist.] 2013, pet. denied). It was the Legislature’s job to craft a statute that

accomplished what it had intended. And it was the judiciary’s job to apply the

ordinary meaning of the words chosen by the Legislature. This, we did.

Predictably, word of the expansiveness of the statute spread, and litigants

began filing TCPA dismissal motions in cases arising under virtually every area of

the law, at times when there was only a wisp of public participation involved. There

have been TCPA motions filed in cases involving complex commercial litigation,

theft of intellectual property, damages for criminal acts, discipline of lawyers, and

family law disputes. And the courts have held that the TCPA, indeed, applied,

relying on the broad wording of the statute.

At times, judges have called on the Legislature to amend the statute so that its

tentacles would no longer reach into every imaginable area of law and so that the

ever-growing number of TCPA interlocutory appeals would no longer burden the

appellate courts’ caseload. See, e.g., Serafine v. Blunt, 466 S.W.3d 352, 364–65

(Tex. App.—Austin 2015, no pet.) (Pemberton, J., concurring).

2 The Legislature eventually amended the TCPA, but before that amendment

came into effect, the Texas Supreme Court reimagined the reach of the statute and

became more stringent in its analysis of whether defendants seeking the protections

of the TCPA were exercising the rights defined in the statute. Compare Creative Oil

& Gas, LLC v. Lona Hills Ranch, LLC, 591 S.W.3d 127 (Tex. 2019) (interpreting

the TCPA more strictly than in past cases to conclude that private communications

argued to implicate the TCPA free-speech protections had to have public relevance

beyond the pecuniary interests of the private parties involved), with ExxonMobil

Pipeline Co. v. Coleman, 512 S.W.3d 895, 899 (Tex. 2017) (per curiam) (more freely

accepting that the TCPA applied broadly to private communications).

Around the same time, an intermediate appellate court held that a “common”

interest no longer meant common to the parties involved; it must be common to the

public at large, so that two tortfeasors who join together no longer triggered the

TCPA’s right of association. Compare Kawcak v. Antero Resources Corp., 582

S.W.3d 566, 569 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth 2019, pet. denied), with Elite Auto Body

LLC v. Autocraft Bodywerks, Inc., 520 S.W.3d 191, 198–206 (Tex. App.—Austin

2017, pet. dism’d) (relying heavily on Texas Supreme Court precedent to hold that

alleged tortfeasors’ theft of trade secrets triggered the right of association under the

TCPA).

3 Soon after Kawcak, this Court was called on to decide whether another set of

tortfeasors met the pre-amendment TCPA’s right-of-association standard. We noted

that Kawcak involved only two tortfeasors and that the case before us involved five.

Gaskamp v. WSP USA, Inc., 596 S.W.3d 457, 473 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.]

2020, pet. dism’d) (en banc). And we further noted that “Kawcak left unanswered

whether allegations of three or more tortfeasors acting together . . . for their own

benefits fit[ ] the definition of ‘common.’” Id. We held they did not. Id. at 475–76.

We interpreted the TCPA term “common” as “of or relating to a community

at large: public” and held that the tortfeasors’ “conduct and communications,

involved in misappropriating [a former employer’s] trade secrets and conspiring to

commit related torts, benefitted only the five alleged tortfeasors,” did not relate to

“any public or community interests,” and, thus, did not trigger the TCPA right-of-

association protection. Id. I joined that decision, fully agreeing that a group of ex-

employees accused of tortiously using trade secrets were not exercising the statutory

right of association in the TCPA.

In my view, interpreting the TCPA right of association to exclude tortfeasors

furthering their own pecuniary interests reaches the limit of how the judiciary can

and should corral this statute. The Gaskamp holding focused on the terms of the

statute, though interpreting them more narrowly with increased scrutiny of the

express purposes the statute was intended to serve. See id.; see also Newpark Mats

4 & Integrated Servs., LLC v. Cahoon Enters., LLC, 605 S.W.3d 671, 677, 679–80

(Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 2020, no pet.) (after noting that TCPA balances

protected rights against plaintiffs’ ability to pursue litigation to right a wrong,

holding that private business dispute with no public or community interest did not

trigger TCPA right of association). For any additional restraint, we must wait for the

cases to arrive that will be decided under the Legislature’s 2019 amendments that

narrowed the TCPA’s scope.

Instead, the majority has chosen to aggressively apply Gaskamp to declare

that members of an actual association—a neighborhood association—are not

exercising their right of association. This goes too far. See Amy Bresnen, et al.,

Targeting the Texas Citizen Participation Act: The 2019 Texas Legislature’s

Amendments to a Most Consequential Law, 52 St. Mary’s L.J. 1, 6 (2020) (listing a

conflict between neighborhood association and city over development as example

of strategic lawsuit against public participation). We should not justify an absurd

reading of a statute to achieve a result, even if it is a result that we suspect the

Legislature now might support. See Creative Oil & Gas, 591 S.W.3d at 133. And we

must be mindful of how the majority’s result could be applied in future cases. In its

desire to starve the beast of the TCPA, the majority holds that a whole neighborhood

does not qualify as “public.” But a neighborhood association is a form of small self-

government. See In re Keenan, 501 S.W.3d 74, 75–76 (Tex. 2016); Inwood North

5 Homeowners’ Ass’n, Inc. v.

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Shelley v. Kraemer
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INWOOD NORTH HOMEOWNERS'ASS'N v. Harris
736 S.W.2d 632 (Texas Supreme Court, 1987)
Mary Louise Serafine v. Alexander Blunt and Ashley Blunt
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