in Re Baylor Medical Center at Garland
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Opinion
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF TEXAS
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No. 06-0491
In re Baylor Medical Center at Garland, Relator
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On Petition for Writ of Mandamus
Argued September 27, 2007
Justice Brister delivered the opinion of the Court, in which Chief Justice Jefferson, Justice Hecht, Justice O’Neill, Justice Wainwright, Justice Green, Justice Medina and Justice Willett joined.
Justice Johnson filed a dissenting opinion.
Mandamus will not issue against a new judge for what a former one did.[1] In this medical malpractice case, the jury found for the defendant hospital, but the trial judge granted a new trial, allegedly based on juror affidavits prohibited by the rules.[2] As a new judge now presides over the trial court, Rule 7.2 requires abatement of this original proceeding to allow the successor to reconsider the order.[3]
But another rule prevents a trial judge from “ungranting” (i.e., vacating) a new trial order more than 75 days after it is signed.[4] As that deadline has passed, we can hardly ask the new judge to reconsider this order if he has no power to do so. The hospital urges us to reconsider this deadline, pointing out that it contradicts the general rules of plenary power and is unsupported by the current rules of civil and appellate procedure, stemming instead from a provision that has long since been repealed.
We agree. As with any other order, a trial court should be able to reconsider a new trial order as long as a case is still pending. Accordingly, we abate this proceeding for the current judge to reconsider the order.
I. Background
Tammy and Steve Williams brought a medical malpractice lawsuit against Baylor Medical Center at Garland. The case was tried to a jury, which found in Baylor’s favor. On May 6, 2005, Judge Joe Cox signed a final take-nothing judgment, but 82 days later granted a new trial after further hearings. Baylor unsuccessfully sought mandamus relief in the court of appeals, and then sought relief in this Court.
In the meantime Judge Nancy Thomas succeeded Judge Cox, so we abated the case pursuant to Rule 7.2:
(a) Automatic Substitution of Officer. When a public officer is a party in an official capacity to an appeal or original proceeding, and if that person ceases to hold office before the appeal or original proceeding is finally disposed of, the public officer’s successor is automatically substituted as a party if appropriate. . . .
(b) Abatement. If the case is an original proceeding under Rule 52, the court must abate the proceeding to allow the successor to reconsider the original party’s decision.[5]
Two months later, Judge Thomas vacated the new trial order and reinstated judgment on the jury verdict. As required by our order, Baylor notified us of the development and moved to dismiss its petition as moot. But the same day we did so, the Williamses asked Judge Thomas to reconsider, which she did and once again reinstated Judge Cox’s new trial order.
Baylor petitioned this Court for relief. While the case was pending, Judge Jim Jordan was elected to take Judge Thomas’s place.[6]
II. Must Baylor File Again in the Court of Appeals?
As a preliminary matter, we must decide whether Baylor had to seek relief again in the court of appeals. Generally, a party must seek relief in the court of appeals before seeking it in this Court.[7] But the court of appeals has already considered this very order and denied relief; it was only because Baylor was misled into believing that its first petition was moot that a new one had to be filed. As this proceeding is nothing more than a continuation of the former one, it belongs here rather than in the court of appeals.
II. Can the New Trial Orders be Vacated?
Nowhere but Texas can one find a single appellate opinion discussing when a court can “ungrant” a motion. Texas has more than 20, almost all dealing with our unique rule that an order granting a new trial cannot be “ungranted” more than 75 days after it is signed.[8]
This ungrammatical rule stems from Fulton v. Finch, a 1961 opinion in which we held that an order granting a new trial could not be set aside after the deadline for ruling on new trial motions.[9] That was because rule 329b at the time provided that all motions for new trial “must be determined” within 45 days:
All motions and amended motions for new trial must be determined within not exceeding forty-five (45) days after the original or amended motion is filed, unless by written agreement of the parties in the case, the decision of the motion is postponed to a later date.[10]
Because reinstating the original judgment was “tantamount to overruling [the] motion for new trial,” we held the 45-day deadline imposed an absolute limit on when an order of new trial could be “undetermined” and the original judgment reinstated.[11]
Rule 329b was amended effective January 1, 1981 to eliminate this “must be determined” provision.[12] Now, the rule terminates the trial court’s plenary power 30 days after all timely motions for new trial are overruled,[13] but there is no provision limiting its plenary power if such motions are granted. Under the current rules, if no judgment is signed, no plenary-power clock is ticking.
But some 33 years after Fulton this Court issued
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