In Re Sears, Roebuck and Co.

123 S.W.3d 573, 2003 Tex. App. LEXIS 9438, 2003 WL 22511141
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 5, 2003
Docket14-03-00385-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 123 S.W.3d 573 (In Re Sears, Roebuck and Co.) 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 Sears, Roebuck and Co., 123 S.W.3d 573, 2003 Tex. App. LEXIS 9438, 2003 WL 22511141 (Tex. Ct. App. 2003).

Opinion

OPINION

SCOTT BRISTER, Chief Justice.

Twice in the last ten years the Supreme Court of Texas has granted the extraordinary writ of mandamus in circumstances just like those here. Both times, the Court intervened in asbestos litigation when the trial court compelled discovery relating to products the plaintiffs never used for time periods they were not employed. See In re American Optical Corp., 988 S.W.2d 711, 713 (Tex.1998); Texaco, Inc. v. Sanderson, 898 S.W.2d 813, 815 (Tex.1995). In this asbestos discovery dispute, the trial court compelled discovery relating to products the plaintiff never said he used for a time period beginning 15 years before he was born. Rather than invite the Supreme Court to answer this question a third time, we grant relator’s petition for mandamus.

The Requests

Joel Fuerstenau, a life-long Michigan resident suffering from mesothelioma, 1 sued Sears, Roebuck and Co. and 37 other defendants in Brazoria County, Texas. 2 He alleged exposure to asbestos throughout his life — as a child around his father’s dusty clothes and work, as an apprentice from 1971 to 1978 in the family’s plumbing and heating business, and as a union plumber for 24 years thereafter.

In sworn discovery responses regarding materials to which he had been exposed, Fuerstenau listed 11 categories of products made by 24 manufacturers. Only two — Homart boilers and water heaters— had any connection with Sears. Four coworkers designated for product identification added no others. As these Homart products were for residential use, Fuerste-nau’s exposure to them would have occurred before he began his 24-year career as a union plumber doing commercial jobs.

Fuerstenau’s ease was expedited due to his declining health. Two months before the trial setting, the plaintiffs served their first written discovery on Sears — a single-spaced 64-page request including 78 interrogatories (with 253 subparts) and 60 re *575 quests for production. 3 The plaintiffs’ attorneys candidly admitted this was the “standard set” of discovery sent to asbestos manufacturers. When directed instead to a retailer like Sears, the result was a series of impossible requests:

• Interrogatory No. 2 asked Sears to provide the name, date of manufacture and sale, and asbestos content of each product it sold or made available for sale, including but not limited to a list of more than 200 items ranging from bath rugs and shower curtains to lawn mowers, sewing machines, washers, dryers, toasters, and waffle irons;
• Interrogatory No. 8 asked Sears to identify the location, description, and dates of operation of every Sears warehouse or sales office in Texas;
• Interrogatory No. 17 asked for a detailed description of every product Sears ever sold containing asbestos; and
• Interrogatory No. 20 requested the identity and address of all Sears sales offices or authorized dealers of asbestos-containing home construction products in the United States.

Sears promptly objected, the plaintiffs promptly moved to compel, and the trial court promptly held a number of hearings. Fuerstenau died before the trial court issued a written order.

The First Order

On April 1st, Judge Ben Hardin issued a written order regarding discovery. In the first paragraph, he ordered all of Sears’ objections “reserved, to be addressed by this Court at a later time.” 4 But a court must address objections before it compels discovery, not after. See Tex.R. Crv P. 198.4(b) (providing no response to discovery is required if objections are sustained). Once time, labor, and money are spent on improper production, there is no undoing them; wasteful costs may be shifted, but never retrieved. By ordering discovery from Sears, Judge Hardin necessarily overruled its objections.

In the next two paragraphs, Judge Hardin ordered Sears to produce documents and information regarding listed products from the years 1940 to 1978. 5 The lists omitted the mundane household items from the plaintiffs’ original request, but required production regarding water heaters and boilers of any brand name (not just Homart), and added furnaces and heaters. Further, the lists included materials and products allegedly “associated” with these appliances, including electric elements, fittings, repair parts, accessories, pipe coverings, adhesives, pastes, cements, firebricks, and so on.

*576 In the fourth and final paragraph, Judge Hardin ordered Sears to answer “each and every” discovery request “fully, completely, specifically and substantively.” 6 This paragraph does not contain any limitations as to products or years. The order does not indicate whether the middle two paragraphs were intended to limit this global order, or supplement it.

The Stay and Clarification

After Sears filed its petition for mandamus complaining of the above order, we stayed the order for further consideration. 7 Perhaps recognizing the order went too far, the plaintiffs asked Judge Hardin to “clarify” it. During the pen-dency of our stay, he entered a new order (Sears alleges without adequate notice) that replaced and superceded the old one.

This was improper. The mere filing of a mandamus petition may not prevent a trial court from amending an order, but a stay order does. When we ordered the first order stayed, Judge Hardin was not at liberty to change it. 8 If the plaintiffs needed clarification of the trial court’s order, they should have asked us to order one.

We rarely stay trial court orders, recognizing trial judges must often make further decisions before appellate timetables and processes allow us to respond. But when we do issue a stay order, it must be obeyed. 9 We hold that Judge Hardin abused his discretion in modifying his order in violation of our stay.

The “Clarified” Order

The “clarified” order repeated the first three paragraphs of the first order, but amended the fourth to require Sears to respond to the plaintiffs’ discovery requests “as ordered by the Court on the record at the hearings on January 22 and 27, 2003.” 10 Not a single page from either *577 hearing is attached to the clarifying order itself; the transcripts included in our record are 90 pages long.

This order is inadequate for several reasons.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
123 S.W.3d 573, 2003 Tex. App. LEXIS 9438, 2003 WL 22511141, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-sears-roebuck-and-co-texapp-2003.