Moritz v. Preiss

121 S.W.3d 715, 46 Tex. Sup. Ct. J. 784, 2003 Tex. LEXIS 77, 2003 WL 21356011
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJune 12, 2003
Docket01-1270
StatusPublished
Cited by291 cases

This text of 121 S.W.3d 715 (Moritz v. Preiss) 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
Moritz v. Preiss, 121 S.W.3d 715, 46 Tex. Sup. Ct. J. 784, 2003 Tex. LEXIS 77, 2003 WL 21356011 (Tex. 2003).

Opinion

Justice SCHNEIDER

delivered the opinion for the Court.

The trial court rendered a judgment against petitioner that did not name one of the defendants. We must decide whether the trial court’s original judgment was final. If it was, then the petitioner’s amended motion for new trial filed more than thirty days after the trial court signed the judgment was untimely. Concerned that the original judgment was not final, the court of appeals abated the appeal and remanded to the trial court to enter a final judgment that expressly disposed of all parties. 60 S.W.3d at 287. The trial court then signed a new judgment that included the originally unnamed defendant. The court of appeals then reversed the trial court’s judgment based on the amended new trial motion’s merits. Id. at 295. We disagree that the trial court’s original judgment was not final. Therefore, the amended new trial motion was untimely, and the court of appeals should not have considered it. Accordingly, we reverse the court of appeals’ judgment and render judgment that petitioner take nothing.

I. BACKGROUND

Traci Preiss died three weeks after a kidney biopsy. Her husband, Duane Preiss (individually, and on behalf of his children and his wife’s estate) sued the healthcare providers — Dr. Charles Mor-itz, Central Texas Kidney Associates, P.A. (CTKA), Wilbert Poison, and Austin Radiological Association, P.A. — for medical malpractice. Traci Preiss’s mother, Shirley Rasmussen, also sued. 1 Preiss claimed the doctors negligently performed the kidney biopsy, and their negligence caused Traci’s death. The claim against CTKA was limited to vicarious liability for Mor-itz’s acts.

The jury failed to find that Moritz, Poison, or Austin Radiological Association proximately caused Traci’s death. The jury charge did not include a question about CTKA’s liability. On August 29, 2000, the trial court rendered judgment based on the jury’s verdict that Preiss take nothing from defendants Moritz, Poison, and Austin Radiological Association. The judgment named all the defendants except CTKA. Afterward, at the request of CTKA’s attorney, Preiss prepared and executed a notice of non-suit for CTKA. Preiss delivered the document to CTKA’s attorney; however, the non-suit was never filed with the court.

*718 Preiss filed a timely motion for new trial and alleged juror misconduct. Then, more than thirty days after the trial court signed the judgment, Preiss filed an amended motion for new trial and alleged another juror was disqualified. Preiss simultaneously filed a motion for leave to file the amended new trial motion. At the hearing on the new trial motions, the trial court questioned Preiss regarding the propriety of granting leave for an untimely motion. Preiss conceded that the amended new trial motion preserved no error for appeal. But, relying on Kalteyer v. Sneed, Preiss argued that the trial court could consider the arguments and facts in the untimely motion to determine whether it should exercise its inherent power and grant a new trial. See Kalteyer v. Sneed, 837 S.W.2d 848, 851 (Tex.App.-Austin 1992, no writ) (stating that an untimely motion’s only purpose is to guide the trial court in the exercise of its inherent plenary power). The trial court granted the motion for leave, and after the hearing, denied both the motion for new trial and the amended motion for new trial.

Later, Preiss discovered the non-suit of CTKA was never filed with the trial court and filed a “Motion to Vacate Interlocutory Order and Enter Final Judgment.” Preiss asserted that the trial court’s original judgment was interlocutory, because it did not expressly dispose of CTKA. The trial court denied the motion.

Preiss appealed and argued, among other things, that the trial court erred in denying its motion to vacate. Expressing concern that it did not have jurisdiction absent a final judgment from the trial court, the court of appeals abated Preiss’s appeal and remanded to the trial court to enter a final judgment disposing of all parties. 60 S.W.Sd at 287; see also Tex. R.App. P. 27.2 (allowing an appealed order that is not final to be modified so as to be made final). In response, the trial court rendered a new judgment that included CTKA as a party. Preiss then filed a motion for the trial court to reconsider the amended motion for new trial, and the trial court denied the motion. See Tex.R. Civ. P. 329b(b).

Back before the court of appeals, Moritz and the other healthcare providers (Mor-itz) argued that the trial court’s original judgment rendered August 29, 2000, was final, and therefore, the court of appeals could not consider whether the trial court abused its discretion in denying Preiss’s untimely amended motion for new trial. The court of appeals concluded in a footnote that the trial court’s signing the amended final judgment and overruling Preiss’s subsequent motion for new trial rendered this argument moot. 60 S.W.3d at 287 n. 1. Then, based on the juror disqualification issue raised in Preiss’s amended new trial motion, the court of appeals reversed and remanded for a new trial. Id. at 295.

Moritz petitions this Court for review and asks us to reverse the court of appeals’ judgment. Moritz contends the trial court’s original judgment was final, and therefore, the court of appeals erred in reviewing the trial court’s denial of Preiss’s untimely amended motion for new trial. Alternatively, Moritz argues that, because the juror in question was not disqualified, the court of appeals erred in holding the trial court abused its discretion in denying the amended motion for new trial.

II. ANALYSIS

A. Final Judgment

This Court has long recognized a presumption of finality for judgments that follow a trial on the merits:

When a judgment, not intrinsically interlocutory in character, is rendered and *719 entered in a case regularly set for a conventional trial on the merits, no order for a separate trial of issues having been entered pursuant to [our procedural rules,] it will be presumed for appeal purposes that the Court intended to, and did, dispose of all parties legally before it and of all issues made by the pleadings between such parties.

N.E. Indep. Sch. Dist. v. Aldridge, 400 S.W.2d 893, 897 (Tex.1966); see also John v. Marshall Health Serv., Inc., 58 S.W.3d 738, 740 (Tex.2001); Lehmann v. Har-Con Corp., 39 S.W.3d 191, 198 (Tex.2001). If a judgment actually disposes of every issue in a case, then it is not interlocutory simply because it does not include one of the parties. See Lehmann, 39 S.W.3d at 200; see also Trammell v. Rosen, 106 Tex. 132, 157 S.W. 1161, 1162 (1913) (if a judgment implicitly, but necessarily, disposes of all claims it is presumed final).

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
121 S.W.3d 715, 46 Tex. Sup. Ct. J. 784, 2003 Tex. LEXIS 77, 2003 WL 21356011, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moritz-v-preiss-tex-2003.