In Re Richardson

252 S.W.3d 822, 2008 Tex. App. LEXIS 2996, 2008 WL 1835578
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 25, 2008
Docket06-08-00030-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 252 S.W.3d 822 (In Re Richardson) 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 Richardson, 252 S.W.3d 822, 2008 Tex. App. LEXIS 2996, 2008 WL 1835578 (Tex. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

OPINION

Opinion by

Justice MOSELEY.

This involves a case pending in a trial court in which Charles William Richardson and Regions Bank are defendants and Southwest Construction Receivables, Ltd., Construction Invoice Funding, Ltd., Dennis O’Banion, and Dan A. Moore are plaintiffs.

Relator, Charles William Richardson, co-defendant below (joined by Regions Bank), has filed his petition for writ of mandamus and for writ of prohibition. At issue is the continued authority of the Honorable Paul Banner, sitting by assignment to the case pending in the 202nd Judicial District Court of Bowie County; relator maintains that Banner’s assignment terminated in February 2007.

Richardson and Regions (to whom we make reference jointly herein simply as Richardson unless it is necessary to specify certain acts taken individually by Regions) and the real parties in interest (whom we jointly call Southwest herein) have been embroiled in litigation of allegations of fraud and civil conspiracy for almost ten years; the suit was the subject of a prior appeal to this Court 1 wherein we addressed a partial summary judgment signed by the then-presiding judge of the 202nd Judicial District Court, the late Honorable William L. Peek, Jr. This Court remanded the case to the 202nd Judicial District Court.

By the time the case was received by the trial court on remand, the Honorable Leon F. Pesek, Jr., had succeeded Judge Peek and had become the presiding judge of the 202nd Judicial District Court. Judge Pesek signed an order of referral on the trial court’s own motion to recuse on February 27, 2007, and stated that he “re-cuse[d] [himself] and requested] that the Presiding Judge of the First Administrative Region assign a judge to hear the above case,” citing Tex.R. Civ. P. 18a. 2

In response to the trial court’s order of referral and request, the Honorable John Ovard, Presiding Judge of the First Administrative Region, signed an order of assignment, assigning the Honorable Paul Banner in Judge Pesek’s stead; the parties are now at odds over the purpose and extent of Banner’s assignment. The order of assignment is consistent in form with the several orders of assignment we and the other courts in Texas regularly see each year 3 and reads as follows:

Pursuant to Article 74.056, Texas Government Code, I hereby assign the:
Honorable Paul Banner,
Senior Judge of The 196th District Court
*825 To The 202nd District Court of Bowie County, Texas,
This assignment is for the period of 1 days [sic] beginning 2/28/2007, providing that the assignment shall continue after the specified period of time as may be necessary for the assigned Judge to complete trial of any case or cases begun during this period, and to pass on motions for new trial and all other matters growing out of cases tried by the Judge herein assigned during this period, or the undersigned presiding judge has terminated this assignment in writing, whichever occurs first.
CONDITION(S) OF ASSIGNMENT [IF ANY]:
To hear Cause No. 99C985-202; Southwest Construction Receivables, Ltd, et al v. Regions Bank. 4

On May 24, 2007, Judge Banner presided over a hearing on Southwest’s motion to reconsider the trial court’s granting of summary judgments at issue in the aforementioned appeal decided in 2005 by this Court.

I. Examining Availability of Mandamus

We must first respond to Southwest’s contention that the issue before us is not yet ripe because Richardson’s suggestion of expiration of the appointment is still pending before the trial court, understanding that contention to be one challenging the availability of mandamus relief on these facts. 5 Regions filed a similar suggestion of expiration on January 22, 2008, and Judge Banner denied that suggestion. With that in mind, we look to the principles explained in In re Perritt, 992 S.W.2d 444 (Tex.1999), in which the Texas Supreme Court addressed a similar issue.

In Perritt, individuals who had eaten at a Golden Corral restaurant (real parties in interest in the Perritt case), brought suit against the Perritts as franchisees, along with Golden Corral Corporation and Golden Corral Franchising Systems, franchisors. Id. at 445. Golden Corral Corporation (Golden Corral) objected to the judge who had been assigned to hear the Per-ritts’ motion to recuse the trial judge and the assigned judge overruled Golden Corral’s objection. Based on Golden Corral’s objection, the Perritts sought mandamus relief from an intermediate court of appeals. The court of appeals denied the Perritts’ petition, and the Perritts then sought mandamus relief from the Texas Supreme Court. Id. at 446. Golden Corral moved to join as relators. Id. The court noted that the record showed that the Perritts neither joined Golden Corral’s objection at the trial court nor independently lodged an objection to the assigned judge. Id.

The real parties in interest maintained that the Perritts’ failure to independently object defeated their right to mandamus. Id. The court explained that, as a general rule, the right to mandamus relief does require a predicate request by the applicant for relief and a refusal of that request. Id. On “rare occasions,” however, the court relaxes that requirement, one occasion being a situation in which “the request would have been futile and the refusal little more than a formality.” Id. at 446 (quoting Terrazas v. Ramirez, 829 S.W.2d 712, 723 (Tex.1991)). The court *826 pointed out that Golden Corral’s objection advised the trial court of the grounds for objection and noted that the Perritts’ objections would have been the same as Golden Corral’s. The court concluded, therefore, that the Perritts need not have joined in Golden Corral’s objection, again with the notation that these are “unusual circumstances.” Id.

In the present case, we first note that Regions has joined in Richardson’s petition as Golden Corral similarly did in the Perritts’ petition to the Texas Supreme Court. Here, we need not speculate that Richardson’s suggestion of expiration would have been the same as Regions; here, both suggestions of expiration are in the record and are essentially the same. Due to this, we know that Richardson’s suggestion takes the precise position as that taken by Regions in its suggestion of expiration which had been previously rejected, making this an appropriate circumstance in which to relax the “refused request” requirement for seeking mandamus relief.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
252 S.W.3d 822, 2008 Tex. App. LEXIS 2996, 2008 WL 1835578, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-richardson-texapp-2008.