In re J.B. Hunt Transport, Inc.

492 S.W.3d 287, 59 Tex. Sup. Ct. J. 1031, 2016 Tex. LEXIS 414, 2016 WL 3159215
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedMay 27, 2016
DocketNO. 15-0631
StatusPublished
Cited by133 cases

This text of 492 S.W.3d 287 (In re J.B. Hunt Transport, Inc.) 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 J.B. Hunt Transport, Inc., 492 S.W.3d 287, 59 Tex. Sup. Ct. J. 1031, 2016 Tex. LEXIS 414, 2016 WL 3159215 (Tex. 2016).

Opinion

Justice Willett

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Lanes are ubiquitous in our society. On any given day, Americans pedal along bike lanes, hurl balls down bowling lanes, and take aim in gun-range shooting lanes. This is a case about traffic and jurisdictional lanes.

A J.B. Hunt' tractor-trailer' traveling on I-10 in Waller County struck a disabled vehicle that had entered the tractor-trailer’s lane: The vehicle’s occupants were injured,’ and one ultimately died. J.B. Hunt sued the occupants in Waller County to recover property-damage costs. Ten days later, the occupants sued J.B. Hunt in Dallas County to recover personal-injury damages. J.B. Hunt filed a plea in abatement in the Dallas County court, arguing that the Waller County court, where suit was first filed, has dominant jurisdiction. The occupants of the car claimed, and the Dallas County court agreed, that exceptions to the first-filed rule apply and the Dallas County court has dominant jurisdiction.

In this dispute over the primacy of jurisdictional lanes, we agree with J.B. Hunt that the Waller County court has dominant jurisdiction, and the Dallas County’ court should have granted the plea in abatement. We therefore conditionally grant j.B. Hunt’s petition for writ of mandamus.

I

On November 24, 2014, an Isuzu Rodeo arid a J.B. Hunt tractor-trailer were traveling on 1-10 in Waller County — the tractor-trailer in the far right lane, and the [290]*290Isuzu in the left adjoining lane.1 The Isuzu experienced engine failure and came to a stop in front of the tractor-trailer in the right lane. The tractor-trailer struck the Isuzu, pinning it against a construction retaining wall.. Both vehicles were damaged, and the Isuzu’s occupants, Jason Williams and his wife, Synthea Arms, (Real Parties) were seriously injured, Williams later died from his injuries.

The Real 'Parties remained in the hospital for some time. During this time, J.B. Hunt sent a claims manager and a director of litigation to the hospital, who offered to cover hotel expenses for the Real Parties’ family.; Additionally, although J.B. Hunt disputes these particular assertions, the Real Parties say that .the claims manager told Williams’s brother-in-law (1) “we figure we are liable,” and (2) J.B.'Hunt had “internal insurance that can handle this.” On December 1, the Real Parties’ counsel notified J.B. Hunt through an evidence-preservation letter that they had been retained as counsel, and J.B. Hunt thereafter retained counsel as well. Over the next few days, counsel for both sides communicated through email and coordinated examinations of the damaged vehicles and the .cell phone data from the J.B. Hunt driver’s phone.. One December 11 email from J.B. Hunt’s counsel had “Williams v. JB Hunt” in the subject line.

On December 12, J.B. Hunt sued the Real Parties and also the Isuzu’s co-owners, Charlotte Arms and Walker Shapland, in Waller County. J.B. Hunt’s petition claimed that the defendants failed to properly maintain and service the Isuzu and that this failure contributed to the mechanical problems that caused the accident and damage to J.B, Hunt’s tractor-trailer. The petition concluded that the defendants were jointly responsible for the Isuzu’s maintenance and requested actual and compensatory damages. After the clerk issued citations on December 15, J.B. Hunt’s counsel emailed the Real Parties’ counsel a courtesy copy of the petition and asked if they would accept service for their clients. The following day, J.B. Hunt’s counsel sent a similar email, stating, “We did not ask that there be personal service as we wanted to give you the professional courtesy of accepting service for the defendants.” That email concluded, ’ “Also by noon tomorrow, please let us know if you will accept service or we will- go ahead and have the constable handle it.” Three days later, J.B. Hunt’s counsel sent a third email, which stated, ‘With respect to Jason Williams and Synthea Arms we have agreed to simply hold on the service of process until the time you agree to accept service or you clear us to have them served once they have stabilized.” The Real Parties say they never responded or acceded to this agreement. J.B. Hunt then served the Real Parties on January 7, 2015, and the remaining defendants on January 20, 2015.

In the meantime, the Real Parties sued J.B. Hunt and its driver in Dallas County on December 22, 2014 — ten days after J.B. Hunt sued • the Real Parties in Waller County — and served J.B. Hunt and the [291]*291driver on December 30, 2014.2 The Real Parties’ petition claimed that the driver’s negligence caused the accident and that J.B. Hunt was liable under respondeat superior. The petition thus requested, among other things, personal-injury damages.

Both sides then filed dueling pleas in abatement in the Waller County and Dallas County courts. The Real Parties argued that the Waller County court should abate its case because the Dallas County court has dominant jurisdiction in the case, and J.B. Hunt and its driver'argued that the Dallas County court should abate'its ease because the Waller County court has dominant jurisdiction. For their part, the Real Parties offered three alternative arguments: (1) there is no dominant-jurisdiction question because the two suits are not inherently interrelated as required by this Court’s caselaw; .(2) J.B. Hunt .did not have a bona fide intent to prosecute the Waller County suit; and (3) J.B. Hunt engaged in inequitable conduct that estops J.B. Hunt from claiming the Waller County court has dominant jurisdiction.

The Dallas County court held a hearing on J.B. Hunt’s plea in abatement on March 27, 2015. The court agreed with J.B. Hunt that “[t]his is a case where I think you’ve established your prima facie; that case was filed first, because that’s the general rule.” Thus, the court instructed the Real Parties that “the burden shifts to you to show why an exception should apply.” After hearing the parties’ arguments, the court acknowledged that “it’s going to take discovery to get to the bottom of [‘the main theory of liability in the Waller case [which] is a failure to maintain the vehicle’].” The court, also acknowledged that “it’s going to take discovery to determine whether there’s any applicable insurance, because on its face it appears that you have in that case insolvent defendants.” Nonetheless, the court denied the plea in abatement: “[I]t appears to the Court it makes no sense for a rational business to have property damage in the amount stated, file a lawsuit, hiring an attorney on an hourly basis knowing that a lot of discovery is going to have to be made to even determine liability and solvency, it’s a losing proposition; It’s a money loser, which leads the Court to believe that the exception applies. So I’m going to deny the motion to abate.” The court then signed an order,- which said “the Court DENIES the Plea in Abatement” and.-“this court assumes dominant jurisdiction of this suit.” J.B. Hunt later asked the court for. clarification on which exception the court’s ruling rested and requested findings of fact and conclusions of law. The court denied both requests, stating, “I think the order is clear.” J.B. Hunt then filed a petition for writ of- mandamus in the Dallas -Court of Appeals.

While that mandamus petition was pending, the Waller County court held its own hearing and focused on “the effect of standing down or not standing down” vis-á-vis the Dallas County court. After the hearing, the Waller County court issued its own findings of fact and conclusions of law.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
492 S.W.3d 287, 59 Tex. Sup. Ct. J. 1031, 2016 Tex. LEXIS 414, 2016 WL 3159215, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-jb-hunt-transport-inc-tex-2016.