in Re Daybreak Community Services Texas, LLC and Daybreak Community Services, Inc.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 26, 2020
Docket10-19-00395-CV
StatusPublished

This text of in Re Daybreak Community Services Texas, LLC and Daybreak Community Services, Inc. (in Re Daybreak Community Services Texas, LLC and Daybreak Community Services, 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
in Re Daybreak Community Services Texas, LLC and Daybreak Community Services, Inc., (Tex. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

IN THE TENTH COURT OF APPEALS

No. 10-19-00395-CV

IN RE DAYBREAK COMMUNITY SERVICES TEXAS, LLC AND DAYBREAK COMMUNITY SERVICES, INC.

Original Proceeding

DISSENTING OPINION

What happened to Alice is a crime. Mack committed the crime. Because of Mack’s

mental defect, it appears he will not be prosecuted for the crime. The persons and entities

to whom their care was entrusted have been sued for failing to meet the standard of care

for a health care provider. Alice’s guardian, therefore, Alice, wants to punish those

entities in addition to recovering economic and compensatory damages. Alice wants to

recover exemplary damages.

Net worth of an entity is not relevant if there is no possibility of obtaining

exemplary damages. But the net worth of an entity is relevant to determine the amount

of exemplary damages to be awarded. If and when she gets to that issue, Alice wants to be prepared to show the jury how much these entities are worth so that the jury will know

how much to award as exemplary damages to punish them for their failure to protect

Alice from the crime committed against her. She sought discovery of the net worth of

these entities. The entities resisted. There was a hearing. There was a pleading amended.

There was a ruling. The trial court ordered the entities to produce certain net worth

information in response to the discovery request.

The Daybreak entities have brought this mandamus proceeding seeking a writ of

mandamus to prevent the discovery of their net worth. We are not yet to the issues of

whether Alice can prove by clear and convincing evidence the elements of her exemplary

damages claim. See TEX. CIV. PRAC. & REM. CODE ANN. § 41.003(b). We are only at the

discovery stage “of Evidence of Net Worth for [an] Exemplary Damages Claim.” See id.

§ 41.0115.

The relevant statute related to the discovery of net worth provides that “[a] trial

court may authorize discovery of evidence of a defendant’s net worth if the court finds

in a written order that the claimant has demonstrated a substantial likelihood of success

on the merits of a claim for exemplary damages. Evidence submitted by a party to the

court in support of or in opposition to a motion made under this subjection may be in the

form of an affidavit or a response to discovery.” TEX. CIV. PRAC. & REM. CODE ANN. §

41.0115(a).

In Re Daybreak Community Services Texas, LLC, et. al Page 2 Interestingly, the legislature specifically limited what this Court could consider

when reviewing a trial court’s decision. The statute provides that “[w]hen reviewing an

order authorizing or denying discovery of net worth evidence under this section, the

reviewing court may consider only the evidence submitted by the parties to the trial court in

support of or in opposition to the motion described by Subsection (a).” Id. § 41.0115(c)

(emphasis added).

Because of the restrictions on what we can consider in our review of the trial

court’s ruling, much of the 883-page record submitted by the entities is at best

unnecessary; and at worst, it is distracting. First, there was no evidence submitted during

the course of the August 23, 2019 hearing. There was only argument. Thus, we turn to

the motion for discovery of net worth and the response. This is further complicated by

the fact that most of the discovery motion, Plaintiff’s Second Motion to Compel with

Appropriate Sanctions and Motion to Allow Discovery of Net Worth, was directed

towards alleged discovery violations and for sanctions, as were the related attachments

to the motion, and not to the discovery of net worth. As to the discovery of net worth,

the focus was primarily on showing what the corporate and individual defendants knew

about Mack, his history of violence and sexual proclivities, and how it was gross

negligence to allow him to be in a room with Alice without adequate supervision.

Moreover, there was no effort to show if any of the individual defendants or which, if

either, of the separate corporate defendants could be criminally liable for Mack’s conduct,

In Re Daybreak Community Services Texas, LLC, et. al Page 3 specifically his aggravated sexual assault on Alice. And, the evidence of an exemption to

the general rule of a prohibition must be specific as to which corporate entity, if either,

could be held criminally liable for Mack’s conduct for that entity to have to produce net

worth information. There was no evidence that we can consider for this issue to show

who the individual defendants worked for as is necessary to establish not only the

vicarious liability for damages, but their corporate liability for the crime.

Like the plaintiff’s motion, the response of the defendants, Defendants’ Response

to Plaintiff’s Motion to Compel and to Allow Discovery of Net Worth, primarily

addressed the alleged discovery violations and for sanctions, and not the discovery of net

worth.

While the defendants, collectively, resisted net worth discovery on three grounds,

the only one directly argued in this proceeding is the bar on recovery of exemplary

damages and, therefore, the relevance of net worth data if the plaintiff’s damages are

based on the criminal act of another. TEX. CIV. PRAC. & REM. CODE ANN. § 41.005(a). As

relevant to the exercise in which we are currently engaged, that being the search of the

record for evidence we can rely upon to review the trial court’s order compelling the net

worth discovery, the defendants reference only Plaintiff’s Original Petition. That petition

has now been twice amended. For the sake of argument, we will give the trial court the

benefit of possible reliance on the original and both amended petitions, if it helps in

affirming the trial court’s discovery order. It does not. All three petitions, taken

In Re Daybreak Community Services Texas, LLC, et. al Page 4 individually or collectively, establish that this medical malpractice case is, at its core,

about Daybreak’s failure to protect Alice from the aggravated sexual assault committed

by another client, Mack. But beyond that, we really have nothing that helps us with the

application of section 41.005(a) of Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code and its

exemptions. TEX. CIV. PRAC. & REM. CODE ANN. § 41.005(a) and (b).

Both parties have initially struggled with whether Mack’s conduct was a “criminal

act” within the meaning and purpose of the statutory bar to exemplary damages. The

Court, assumes “without deciding that Mack’s actions constituted an assault or other

criminal act.” I need not assume. Due to Alice’s mental defect, she could not consent to

sexual intercourse. This is true even though she had not yet been adjudicated mentally

incompetent and a guardian appointed over her person and estate. To suggest that it

could have been consensual intercourse borders on the absurd for both parties.

If it was legally consensual from Alice’s perspective, then she would be criminally

liable for having sex with Mack if it is determined that due to his mental incapacity, he

could not legally consent to having sex with her. Moreover, if the plaintiff prevails in this

proceeding for the discovery of net worth due to this Court’s reliance on the defendants’

argument that it was not criminal because it was consensual, plaintiff will have won the

battle but lost the war. This is because having prevailed on the argument of the

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Related

Graham v. State
566 S.W.2d 941 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 1978)

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