In Re Daredia

317 S.W.3d 247, 53 Tex. Sup. Ct. J. 983, 2010 Tex. LEXIS 476, 2010 WL 2636025
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 2, 2010
Docket09-1014
StatusPublished
Cited by74 cases

This text of 317 S.W.3d 247 (In Re Daredia) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Daredia, 317 S.W.3d 247, 53 Tex. Sup. Ct. J. 983, 2010 Tex. LEXIS 476, 2010 WL 2636025 (Tex. 2010).

Opinion

*248 PER CURIAM.

American Express Centurion Bank and American Express Bank, FSB (“American Express”) sued Pervez Daredia and Map Wireless, Inc. to recover $769,789.91 due on three credit card accounts. Daredia answered, but Map Wireless did not, and American Express moved the court “to award ... the relief requested ... by signing and entering the attached DEFAULT JUDGMENT.” That judgment, drafted by American Express’s counsel, recited Map Wireless’s default and awarded damages and attorney fees against Map Wireless. The last two sentences of the judgment stated: “All relief not expressly granted herein is denied. This judgment disposes of all parties and all claims in this cause of action and is therefore FINAL.” The trial court signed the judgment, and no one appealed. More than fifteen months later, 1 American Express moved for judgment nunc pro tunc to correct what it called “typographical errors on behalf of the attorney in charge”, who “should have used the word ‘Interlocutory’ in both the motion and judgment”, so that the case could proceed against Daredia. Daredia responded that the judgment was final and that the court had lost plenary power over it thirty days after it was signed. See Tex.R. Civ. P. 329b. But the court granted the motion, and the court of appeals denied Daredia mandamus relief. 317 S.W.3d 274 (Tex.App.-Fort Worth 2009) (mem. op.).

The court of appeals concluded that the judgment “is ambiguous on its face” because it “fails to address any of American Express’s claims against Daredia, yet it contains language that clearly and unequivocally indicates that it is a final judgment.” Id. at 277. Given this ambiguity, the court held that “the judgment was interlocutory”, it “did not resolve American Express’s claims against Daredia”, and therefore “the trial court retains jurisdiction over this case.” Id. The court relied on our decision in Lehmann v. Har-Con Corp., 39 S.W.3d 191, 205 (Tex.2001), but Lehmann is to the contrary. There we explained that

the language of an order or judgment can make it final, even though it should have been interlocutory, if that language expressly disposes of all claims and all parties. It is not enough, of course, that the order or judgment merely use the word “final”. The intent to finally dispose of the case must be unequivocally expressed in the words of the order itself. But if that intent is clear from the order, then the order is final and appealable, even though the record does not provide an adequate basis for rendition of judgment.

Id. at 200. We held that “the inclusion of a Mother Hubbard clause — by which we mean the statement, ‘all relief not granted is denied’, or essentially those words— does not indicate that a judgment rendered without a conventional trial is final for purposes of appeal.” Id. at 203-204. But we suggested that “[a] statement like, ‘This judgment finally disposes of all parties and all claims and is appealable’, would leave no doubt about the court’s intention” to finally dispose of the case. Id. at 206. And we cautioned that

if the language of the order is clear and unequivocal, it must be given effect despite any other indications that one or more parties did not intend for the judgment to be final. An express adjudica *249 tion of all parties and claims in a case is not interlocutory merely because the record does not afford a legal basis for the adjudication. In those circumstances, the order must be appealed and reversed.

Id.

We agree with the court of appeals that the language of the judgment in this case clearly and unequivocally indicates that it is intended to be final. The use of the word “final” in the last sentence is slightly less clear than “appealable”, the example offered in Lehmann. A judgment might possibly be said to be “final” as to only some claims or parties, while it would not be “appealable” unless it disposed of all. But the language of this judgment is clear enough. The court of appeals’ holding that the failure to mention Daredia creates an ambiguity that makes the judgment interlocutory is contradicted by Lehmann.

American Express argues that, in Leh-mann’s words, “[t]o determine whether an order disposes of all pending claims and parties, it may of course be necessary for the appellate court to look to the record in the case”, id. at 205-206, and here the record clearly shows that a default judgment against Daredia, whose answer was on file, would have been improper. Further, American Express argues, the trial court itself recognized that the judgment was not intended to affect the claim against Daredia because it corrected (by initialed strikeouts) two typographical errors in the judgment as follows:

IT IS, THEREFORE, ORDERED, ADJUDGED, AND DECREED that said Defendant, and Map Wireless, Inc., is indebted to the Plaintiff, American Express Centurion Bank and American Express Bank, FSB, and that the Plaintiff is entitled to recover from the Defendant, and Map Wireless, Inc., the principal amount sued for, accrued interest, reasonable attorney fees, and all court costs.

The plain implication of these changes, American Express argues, is that the judgment was intended only to affect Map Wireless. The trial court simply erred in failing to strike the last two sentences.

But the lack of any basis for rendering judgment against Daredia did not preclude dismissing him from the case. Even if dismissal was inadvertent, as American Express insists, it was nonetheless unequivocal, and therefore effective. American Express complains that the trial court never made a substantive disposition of its claims against Daredia, but dismissal is not a ruling on the merits. We conclude that the judgment by its clear terms disposed of all claims and parties and was therefore final.

Even so, American Express contends that the dismissal of its claim against Daredia was a clerical error, not a judicial one, which could still be corrected after the judgment became final. But only errors made in entering a judgment are clerical; an error in rendition is judicial. Escobar v. Escobar, 711 S.W.2d 230, 231 (Tex.1986). “[Provisions alleged to have been inserted by mistake of the attorney nevertheless become a part of the court’s judgment and therefore are judicial errors when thus rendered in writing by the court.” Dikeman v. Snell, 490 S.W.2d 183, 185-186 (Tex.1973). By American Express’s own admission, that fairly characterizes what occurred in this case.

American Express also argues that the error was clerical because a trial court has a ministerial duty to grant no more relief than a party requests, at least by way of dismissal or nonsuit, and if it does so, a party is entitled to correction nunc pro tunc. See In re Bridges,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
317 S.W.3d 247, 53 Tex. Sup. Ct. J. 983, 2010 Tex. LEXIS 476, 2010 WL 2636025, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-daredia-tex-2010.