Isias Ivan Garcia Martinez v. Kanga Park Inc.
This text of Isias Ivan Garcia Martinez v. Kanga Park Inc. (Isias Ivan Garcia Martinez v. Kanga Park 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.
Opinion
Opinion issued September 24, 2019
In The
Court of Appeals For The
First District of Texas ———————————— NO. 01-18-01070-CV ——————————— ISAIAS IVAN GARCIA MARTINEZ, Appellant V. KANGA PARK, INC., Appellee
On Appeal from the County Civil Court at Law No. 4 Harris County, Texas Trial Court Case No. 1122104
MEMORANDUM OPINION
The county court entered an order denying Isaias Ivan Garcia Martinez’s
appeal from a judgment of eviction on the basis that he did not timely perfect his
appeal and the court therefore lacked jurisdiction to hear the appeal. Because we agree that Martinez did not timely perfect his appeal from the underlying judgment
of eviction, we do not have jurisdiction to hear this appeal and therefore dismiss it.
BACKGROUND
Kanga Park, Inc. filed an eviction suit in justice court against its tenant,
Martinez, alleging that he failed to pay his rent and refused to vacate the premises.
After a trial, the justice court rendered a judgment in Kanga Park’s favor. The justice
court set Martinez’s appeal bond at $7,862.
Martinez appealed from the adverse judgment to the county court. In lieu of
an appeal bond or cash deposit, he filed in the justice court a statement of his inability
to afford an appeal bond or to make a cash deposit.
Kanga Park contested Martinez’s statement of inability. After a hearing, the
justice court sustained Kanga Park’s contest and ordered Martinez to file an appeal
bond or make a cash deposit in lieu of bond within 5 days. Martinez appealed from
this ruling to the county court. The county court likewise sustained Kanga Park’s
contest but reduced the amount of Martinez’s appeal bond to $1,000.
Kanga Park objected to the reduction in the bond amount and scheduled an
emergency hearing on the matter. But Kanga Park ultimately decided not to pursue
this objection and passed the hearing. The county court never ruled on Kanga Park’s
objection.
2 Two days after the county court issued its order reducing the bond amount
and one day after the emergency hearing had been scheduled to take place, Martinez
deposited $1,000 into the registry of the justice court, which sent the case file to the
county court to hear Martinez’s appeal from the adverse judgment rendered in the
eviction suit. After a hearing, however, the county court denied Martinez’s appeal
on the basis that he had not timely perfected his appeal and the county court therefore
lacked jurisdiction to hear it.
Martinez now appeals from the county court’s order denying his appeal.
DISCUSSION
Standard of Review
The county court ruled that it lacked jurisdiction to hear Martinez’s appeal
because he did not timely perfect it. The existence of jurisdiction to hear an appeal
is a legal question, which we review de novo. Pichini v. Fed. Nat’l Mortg. Ass’n,
569 S.W.3d 192, 193 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 2018, no pet.).
Applicable Law
A suit for eviction must be filed in justice court. TEX. PROP. CODE § 24.004(a).
A party may appeal from a judgment of eviction by filing an appeal bond,
making a cash deposit, or filing a statement of inability to afford a bond or deposit
in the justice court. TEX. R. CIV. P. 510.9(a). The appealing party must do so within
five days after the eviction judgment is signed by the justice court in order to perfect
3 the appeal. TEX. R. CIV. P. 510.9(a), (c)(1), (f). If the appeal is timely perfected, the
county court will try the eviction suit de novo. TEX. R. CIV. P. 510.10(c).
An opposing party may contest a statement of inability to afford a bond or
deposit. TEX. R. CIV. P. 510.9(c)(2). If the justice court sustains the contest, the
appealing party may appeal from the decision sustaining the contest to the county
court, which will hear the contest de novo. TEX. R. CIV. P. 510.9(c)(3). If the county
court likewise sustains the contest, then the appealing party “may, within one
business day, post an appeal bond or make a cash deposit.” TEX. R. CIV. P.
510.9(c)(4).
The appellate deadlines as to justice-court judgments cannot be extended.
TEX. R. CIV. P. 500.5(c), 510.2. They are jurisdictional. Pichini, 569 S.W.3d at 194.
Analysis
The county court sustained Kanga Park’s contest of Martinez’s statement of
inability to afford an appeal bond or cash deposit. Once the county court did so,
Martinez was required to file an appeal bond or deposit cash into the justice court’s
registry in lieu of a bond within one business day in order to perfect his appeal. TEX.
R. CIV. P. 510.9(c)(4). It is undisputed that Martinez did not meet this deadline.
While Rule 510.9(c)(4) provides that an appealing party “may, within one
business day, post an appeal bond or make a cash deposit,” this provision is
mandatory. Its use of “may” must be read in the context of Rule 510.9(a), which
4 generally requires the bond or deposit “within 5 days after the judgment is signed.”
In other words, Rule 510.9(c)(4) grants an appealing party permission to file his
appeal bond or make a cash deposit by a specified deadline later than the one that
otherwise applies in cases not involving a contest of a statement of inability to afford
bond or deposit.1 Because Martinez did not meet Rule 510.9(c)(4)’s deadline, he did
not timely appeal.
Martinez contends that his deadline to file an appeal bond or make a cash
deposit instead ran from the date set for the emergency hearing on Kanga Park’s
objection to the reduction in the bond amount ordered by the county court. Because
he deposited cash in the registry of the justice court within one day of the date
scheduled for the emergency hearing, Martinez argues, he timely appealed.
Martinez does not cite any authority in support of this contention, and we have
not located any. His position conflicts with the deadline expressly set forth in Rule
510.9(c)(4), which requires an appeal bond or cash deposit “within one business
1 “May” can be interpreted as “shall” when the context in which it appears necessarily requires this interpretation. See Dallas Cty. Cmty. Coll. Dist. v. Bolton, 185 S.W.3d 868, 874 (Tex. 2005) The context in which “may” appears in Rule 510.9(c)(4) necessarily requires one to interpret it as a mandatory deadline. To interpret the rule otherwise would be to interpret the five-day deadline in subsection (a) as mandatory but the one-day deadline in subsection (c)(4), which merely operates to extend the five-day deadline under particular circumstances, as non-mandatory. “May” is permissive in this context only in the sense that subsection (c)(4) permits an appealing party to file a bond or make a cash deposit later than usual to perfect his appeal. 5 day” when “the county court denies the appeal.” We therefore reject Martinez’s
contention that his deadline ran from the date on which the never-held emergency
hearing on Kanga Park’s objection to the bond reduction was scheduled.
CONCLUSION
The county court correctly held that it lacked jurisdiction to hear Martinez’s
appeal because he did not timely perfect it. Our appellate jurisdiction extends no
further than that of the county court from which this appeal is taken. Univ. of Tex.
Sys. v.
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