Industrial Specialists, Llc v. Blanchard Refining Company LLC and Marathon Petroleum Company Lp

CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJune 10, 2022
Docket20-0174
StatusPublished

This text of Industrial Specialists, Llc v. Blanchard Refining Company LLC and Marathon Petroleum Company Lp (Industrial Specialists, Llc v. Blanchard Refining Company LLC and Marathon Petroleum Company Lp) 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
Industrial Specialists, Llc v. Blanchard Refining Company LLC and Marathon Petroleum Company Lp, (Tex. 2022).

Opinion

Supreme Court of Texas ══════════ No. 20-0174 ══════════

Industrial Specialists, LLC, Petitioner,

v.

Blanchard Refining Company LLC and Marathon Petroleum Company LP, Respondents

═══════════════════════════════════════ On Petition for Review from the Court of Appeals for the First District of Texas ═══════════════════════════════════════

JUSTICE BUSBY, joined by Chief Justice Hecht and Justice Young, dissenting.

For many years, this Court has demonstrated its commitment to the efficient administration of justice, transparency, and a substance- over-form approach to procedure. Regrettably, the plurality and concurrence sound a retreat on all these fronts today, allowing courts of appeals to avoid hearing permissive appeals at their pleasure and with no explanation so long as their standard-form denials recite the following pass-phrase: “the petition fails to establish each requirement.” See ante at 15. The plurality recognizes that this approach thwarts the statute’s express goal of advancing the termination of litigation, but it concludes that the Legislature signaled an intent to sabotage its own work by including the word “may” in the statute. That conclusion is wrong: our cases have held in many contexts that “may” alone does not confer unreviewable discretion. And our appellate rules independently require courts of appeals to explain why each requirement was not met. I respectfully dissent. Section 51.014(d) of the Civil Practice and Remedies Code authorizes an appeal from an interlocutory order that (1) “involves a controlling question of law as to which there is a substantial ground for difference of opinion” when (2) “an immediate appeal . . . may materially advance the ultimate termination of the litigation.” TEX. CIV. PRAC. & REM. CODE § 51.014(d). After obtaining the trial court’s written permission to appeal, the appealing party must file “an application for interlocutory appeal” in the court of appeals. Id. § 51.014(f). Assuming the application is timely filed, the court of appeals “may accept [the] appeal.” Id. A majority of the Court reads into the word “may” a grant of unfettered discretion that empowers a court of appeals to deny a permissive interlocutory appeal for any reason (according to the plurality), or even for no expressed reason at all (according to the concurrence). This decision rests on a misreading of our rules, which require a court of appeals to issue a written opinion that explains—as to

2 “every issue . . . necessary to final disposition of the appeal”—“the court’s decision and the basic reasons for it.” TEX. R. APP. P. 47.1, 47.4. The Court’s embrace of discretion to shield such a denial from any scrutiny is a straw man. What little the court of appeals did say in its opinion shows that the only issue it decided—whether subsection (d)’s two prerequisites were satisfied—is not an issue committed to the court of appeals’ discretion, as the plurality concedes. Ante at 8 (explaining that “courts have no discretion” unless “the two requirements are satisfied”). And it cannot be disputed that the court of appeals failed to advise the parties of the reasons why it concluded those prerequisites were not met. Yet even if discretion were implicated here, neither text nor precedent supports insulating that discretion from review; our cases require courts exercising discretion to follow guiding principles and refrain from acting arbitrarily or unreasonably. The only contrary example that the plurality and concurrence identify is our discretion to deny petitions for review. But the rules expressly authorize us to do so with a brief notation rather than an opinion, and as a matter of jurisdiction and court structure we have the last word on state-law procedural matters. The opposite is true in the intermediate courts of appeals. And in the context of permissive appeals, it is particularly important that their opinions discuss and apply guiding principles for three reasons: (1) to facilitate each panel’s reasonable consideration of whether the requirements selected by the Legislature have been met in a particular case; (2) to reveal whether the panel is denying permission to appeal on

3 discretionary or non-discretionary grounds and enable further review when necessary; and (3) to develop the jurisprudence regarding non- arbitrary reasons why permissive appeals should be accepted or denied in order to supply guidance and promote comparable outcomes in future cases. Finally, the Court casts aside the Legislature’s recognized goal of providing for early, efficient appellate resolution of determinative legal issues—which the plurality candidly acknowledges courts of appeals are flouting with their “recurring rejections.” Ante at 14. In 2019, we cautioned courts of appeals to accept permissive interlocutory appeals when section 51.014(d)’s requirements are satisfied. See Sabre Travel Int’l, Ltd. v. Deutsche Lufthansa AG, 567 S.W.3d 725, 732 (Tex. 2019). But as the parties and amici note, courts of appeals continue to deny the vast majority of permissive appeals—and they do so without giving any explanation of the reasons for their actions. The plurality at least acknowledges in passing our original admonition to the courts of appeals, but there is no reason to think that finger-wagging will have any more effect this time than it did in Sabre Travel. The parties and the trial court in this case were unanimous in concluding that the requirements for a permissive appeal were met and that addressing the merits would promote the efficient resolution of this dispute. Yet the court of appeals disagreed that the requirements were met without even providing them the courtesy of an explanation, and the plurality’s effort to imagine what the reason might have been does not withstand scrutiny. To the contrary, the trial court’s determination that subsection (d)’s requirements have been met is legally correct.

4 Because the court of appeals’ opinion does not comply with our rules, and there are also compelling reasons grounded in the statute and our precedent for requiring the court to advise the parties of its reasons for denying a permissive appeal, I would reverse.

I. By failing to disclose its basic reasons for deciding that the petition did not meet each requirement for a permissive appeal, the court of appeals violated Appellate Rule 47.

In this Court, all parties contend that the court of appeals erred by failing to hand down an opinion that explained the basic reasons for its decision on each issue necessary to its denial of permission to appeal. A careful examination of our statutes, rules, and precedents demonstrates that they are correct. The plurality’s opinion skips some key steps in this inquiry, which must take into account what issues are necessary to dispose of a petition for permission to appeal, as well as what sort of explanation our rules require as to each of those issues. Here, as the plurality recognizes, the disputed issue necessary to the court of appeals’ denial of the petition was whether it established the two predicate requirements for a permissive appeal. Ante at 6. The court of appeals provided no explanation whatsoever for its decision that the petition “fails to establish each requirement.” 634 S.W.3d 760 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 2019).

A. There are four issues a court of appeals may encounter in determining whether to accept a section 51.014(d) appeal.

The Legislature has granted our courts of appeals jurisdiction to hear appeals of certain otherwise unappealable interlocutory orders if the trial court’s order permits the appeal and the appealing party timely

5 files an application—or, as our rules call it, a petition for permission to appeal—in the court of appeals. See TEX. CIV. PRAC. & REM. CODE § 51.014(d), (f); TEX. R. APP. P. 28.3; TEX. R. CIV. P. 168.

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