Kristofer Thomas Kastner v. Gutter Management Inc., Guttermaxx, L.P., Frank Fulco, Jack Heath, Russell Lund, and Jim McLaughlin

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 4, 2010
Docket14-09-00055-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Kristofer Thomas Kastner v. Gutter Management Inc., Guttermaxx, L.P., Frank Fulco, Jack Heath, Russell Lund, and Jim McLaughlin (Kristofer Thomas Kastner v. Gutter Management Inc., Guttermaxx, L.P., Frank Fulco, Jack Heath, Russell Lund, and Jim McLaughlin) 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
Kristofer Thomas Kastner v. Gutter Management Inc., Guttermaxx, L.P., Frank Fulco, Jack Heath, Russell Lund, and Jim McLaughlin, (Tex. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

Affirmed; Memorandum Opinion issued August 3, 2010, Withdrawn and Substitute Memorandum Opinion filed November 4, 2010.

In The

Fourteenth Court of Appeals

NO. 14-09-00055-CV

Kristofer Thomas Kastner, Appellant

v.

Gutter Management Inc., Guttermaxx, L.P., Frank Fulco, Jack Heath, Russell Lund, and Jim McClaughlin, Appellees

On Appeal from the 127th District Court

Harris County, Texas

Trial Court Cause No. 2007-26559

SUBSTITUTE MEMORANDUM OPINION[1]

The appellant brought suit against his former employer and related entities as well as several other employees seeking to recover damages arising from an alleged assault and allegedly false statements made to the Texas Board of Law Examiners regarding the appellant’s application for a law license.  The trial court granted the no-evidence summary judgment motions filed by the appellees.  On appeal, the appellant asserts that he raised more than a scintilla of evidence to rebut the no-evidence motions and that the trial court erred in granting the motion without a hearing and in denying his motion for a continuance.  We affirm.

I.         Factual and Procedural Background

Appellant Kristofer Thomas Kastner, the plaintiff in the trial court, brought suit against his former employer, appellee/defendant Guttermaxx, L.P., and its affiliate, appellee/defendant Gutter Management, Inc.  Kastner also brought suit against appellee/defendant Frank Fulco, the owner of Guttermaxx and president of Gutter Management, and appellees/defendants Jack Heath, Russell Lund, and Jim McClaughlin,[2] individually, all of whom are employees of Guttermaxx.  According to the live petition dated April 8, 2008, Kastner was employed by Guttermaxx until his employment ended in January 2006, following a dispute in which Heath allegedly “grabbed” Kastner by the arm during the dispute.  Kastner alleged in his live petition that this conduct constituted assault, which proximately caused damage to Kastner’s reputation, employment, and his application for state licensure to practice law.  Kastner asserted that because his employment was terminated, he lost his apartment and became homeless.  Kastner claimed that Heath was acting as an agent and that Fulco, Guttermaxx, and Gutter Management were liable for Heath’s conduct.  From this conduct, Kastner claimed to have suffered reputational damage, damage to his law licensure, damage to his employment prospects, loss of income, personal and emotional damage, loss of consortium, and future damages.

Kastner claimed in his petition to have filed assault charges against Heath for the January 2006 incident.  According to Kastner, at a court hearing on those charges, Heath committed slander against him by falsely testifying under oath that he did not grab him.  Kastner also alleged that both Lund and McClaughlin committed slander against him at the hearing on the assault charges by falsely testifying under oath that they denied seeing Heath grab him.  Kastner claimed that, under principles of respondeat superior, Fulco, Guttermaxx, and Gutter Management were liable for the “slander” committed by Heath, Lund, and McClaughlin in their testimony at this hearing. 

Kastner also claimed in his petition that, in the process of applying to the Texas Board of Law Examiners for a license to practice law, he was required to disclose Guttermaxx, Heath, Lund, and McClaughlin as his prior employers.  Kastner alleged that Lund and McClaughlin committed libel by making materially false statements to the Board of Law Examiners.  According to the petition, these individuals referred to Kastner as committing the offenses of criminal trespass, assault, and disorderly conduct and falsely stated that the trial judge in the hearing for the assault charges implied that Kastner was incompetent in filing charges against Heath.  Kastner also alleged that Fulco, Guttermaxx, and Gutter Management, through Lund and McClaughlin as agents, committed libel regarding these statements.  Kastner claimed that all of the appellees committed libel by making false statements to the Board of Law Examiners, indicating that he was terminated for gross insubordination and that he “possessed symptoms of bi-polar disorder and or psychosis based on their personal knowledge and experience.”  Kastner claimed that the statements negatively affected his licensure with the Board of Law Examiners and proximately caused reputational damages, damage to his law license, damage to his employment prospects, loss of income, personal and emotional damage, loss of consortium, and future damages.

Kastner also claimed that Fulco, Guttermaxx and Gutter Management owed a duty to supervise and “maintain employees [t]hat do not commit crimes, intentional torts, and libel employees and former employees” and breached that duty by negligently supervising Heath, Lund, and McClaughlin.  As evidence of this breach, in his pleading, Kastner referred to the alleged false statements made by Heath, Lund, and McClaughlin at the hearing on the assault charges, unspecified statements made to other unnamed potential employers, and the statements made by Heath, Lund, and McClaughlin to the Board of Law Examiners.  Kastner claimed the following damages proximately caused by the breach: loss of income, reputational damage, personal and emotional damage, damage to his law licensure and future earning capacity, possible loss of consortium, and exposure to future damage by disclosure of the statements.

            The appellees each filed no-evidence motions for summary judgment as to Kastner’s claims.  Kastner filed a single response to the no-evidence motions.  Although the record reflects that Kastner moved for a hearing on the motions and subsequently moved for a continuance on the no-evidence motions, the trial court granted the appellees’ no-evidence motions without an oral hearing.  The trial court awarded a take-nothing final judgment against Kastner and in favor of the defendants.  Kastner now challenges that final judgment.

II.        Issues and Analysis

A.        Did the trial court err in granting the no-evidence motions for summary judgment?

            In his first two issues, Kastner asserts that the trial court erred in granting the appellees’ no-evidence motions for summary judgment.  In reviewing a no-evidence summary judgment, we ascertain whether the non-movant pointed out summary-judgment evidence raising a genuine issue of fact as to the essential elements attacked in the no-evidence motion.  Johnson v.

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Bluebook (online)
Kristofer Thomas Kastner v. Gutter Management Inc., Guttermaxx, L.P., Frank Fulco, Jack Heath, Russell Lund, and Jim McLaughlin, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kristofer-thomas-kastner-v-gutter-management-inc-g-texapp-2010.