John v. Marshall Health Services, Inc.

58 S.W.3d 738, 44 Tex. Sup. Ct. J. 1183, 2001 Tex. LEXIS 86, 2001 WL 1095316
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 20, 2001
Docket00-0324
StatusPublished
Cited by121 cases

This text of 58 S.W.3d 738 (John v. Marshall Health Services, 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
John v. Marshall Health Services, Inc., 58 S.W.3d 738, 44 Tex. Sup. Ct. J. 1183, 2001 Tex. LEXIS 86, 2001 WL 1095316 (Tex. 2001).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

There are two questions here. First: is a judgment rendered after the close of trial final and appealable if it does not expressly dispose of the plaintiffs claims against defendants with whom the plaintiff was negotiating settlement? Second: must a motion to extend post-judgment deadlines under Rule 306a(5) of the Texas Rules of Civil Procedure 1 be filed within thirty days of the date the movant learned that judgment had been signed? The court of appeals answered both in the affirmative and dismissed the appeal for want of jurisdiction. 2 We agree that the trial court’s judgment was final and ap-pealable, but not that the appeal was untimely perfected. Accordingly, we reverse the judgment of the court of appeals and remand the case to that court for consideration of the merits.

Plaintiff Christopher Leigh John sued six defendants: Trinity Mother Frances Health System, Tom Cammack, and Trin-care Inc. (“the Trinity defendants”); Harrison County Hospital Association, Inc. and Marshall Health Services (“the Marshall defendants”); and Dianna Taylor. John alleged fraud, breach of contract, and tortious interference. The trial court granted partial summary judgment for the Marshall defendants on John’s breach-of-contract claims. Shortly before trial, John reached a preliminary settlement with the three Trinity defendants, but no final agreement was made and the Trinity defendants were not dismissed from the case. The other three defendants moved for a continuance because of uncertainty about the effect of the settlement on the trial. The trial court denied the motion, and the case proceeded to trial on John’s claims against Taylor and the Marshall defendants. John nonsuited Taylor during the trial, and only his claims against the Marshall defendants were submitted to the jury. After the jury failed to reach a verdict, the trial court at first declared a mistrial, then withdrew that ruling and granted the Marshall defendants’ earlier motion for a directed verdict. The Marshall defendants drafted and submitted a judgment, which the trial court signed on September 8. Entitled “Final Judgment”, it recited the nonsuit of Taylor and ordered that John take nothing against the Marshall defendants. The judgment awarded costs against John and contained a “Mother Hubbard” clause, that “[a]ll other relief not expressly granted in this judgment is denied.” The judgment did not mention the three settling Trinity defendants, and the record does not reflect whether their settlement was finalized.

The judgment was not filed by the clerk until September 13. John did not receive the defendants’ proposed draft until several days later, and never received written notice from the clerk that a final judgment had been signed. 3 John first learned of the judgment in a telephone conversation with the clerk on September 30. The clerk stated that the judgment had been signed September 13. John filed a motion for new trial on October 13, more than thirty days after the judgment was signed *740 when such motions must ordinarily be filed. 4 Post-judgment deadlines may be extended under Rule 306a, but John did not file the requisite motion under Rule 306a(5) until December 10. After a hearing, the trial court agreed that John first learned of the judgment on September 30, but that the Rule 306a(5) motion was filed too late, and therefore the time for filing a motion for new trial was not extended. On December 13, John filed a notice of appeal which was timely only if post-judgment deadlines ran from September 30 instead of September 8.

On appeal, John argued that the judgment was not final because it did not dispose of the claims against the Trinity defendants. The court of appeals held that because the judgment followed a conventional trial on the merits and contained a “Mother Hubbard” clause, it- was presumed final, 5 citing this Court’s opinions in North East Independent School District v. Aldridge 6 and Mafrige v. Ross. 7 The court of appeals further held that John’s Rule 306a(5) motion should have been filed within thirty days of the date he first learned of the judgment and because it was not, neither the motion for new trial nor the notice of appeal were timely filed. 8 Accordingly, the court of appeals dismissed John’s appeal for want of jurisdiction.

We first consider whether the judgment was final. Recently in Lehmann v. Har-Con Corp., we observed that “[t]he presumption that a judgment rendered after a conventional trial on the merits is final and appealable has proved fairly workable for nearly a century....” 9 John here argues that this presumption should not be rigidly applied to make judgments final contrary to litigants’ reasonable expectations. We do not disagree with this argument in general, especially given today’s frequency of separate trials of parties and claims in a single case, and bifurcated trials required in certain instances. However, we believe the presumption is entirely appropriate in a case like this. John did not move for separate trials; he went to trial against the only defendants against whom he still wished to prosecute his claims. The trial court and all of the parties were aware of the pending settlement, and there is nothing to indicate that the trial court did not intend the judgment to finally dispose of the entire case. John did not move for dismissal of his claims against the Trinity defendants or for an agreed judgment. Whether the judgment was final should not depend on one party’s testimony that he did or did not finalize a settlement with parties from whom he sought no relief at trial. The Aldridge presumption fits just such circumstances.

We next consider the Rule 306a issue. Rule 306a(l) provides that the periods within which parties may file various post-judgment motions and trial courts may exercise their plenary jurisdiction all run from the date the judgment is signed. Rule 306a(3) requires clerks to notify parties or their attorneys immediately when a judgment is signed. Rule 306a(4) provides the following exception to Rule 306a(l):

If within twenty days after the judgment or other appealable order is signed, a party adversely affected by it or his attorney has neither received the notice required by paragraph (3) of this rule nor acquired actual knowledge of *741 the order, then with respect to that party all the periods mentioned in paragraph (1) shall begin on the date that such party or his attorney received such notice or acquired actual knowledge of the signing, whichever occurred first, but in no event shall such periods begin more than ninety days after the original judgment or other appealable order was signed.

Rule 306a(5) prescribes the procedure for claiming this exception:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
58 S.W.3d 738, 44 Tex. Sup. Ct. J. 1183, 2001 Tex. LEXIS 86, 2001 WL 1095316, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/john-v-marshall-health-services-inc-tex-2001.