Shagufta Khan v. Salim Valliani and Agha Juice and Cafe

439 S.W.3d 528, 2014 WL 3672986, 2014 Tex. App. LEXIS 8013
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 24, 2014
Docket14-13-00582-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 439 S.W.3d 528 (Shagufta Khan v. Salim Valliani and Agha Juice and Cafe) 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
Shagufta Khan v. Salim Valliani and Agha Juice and Cafe, 439 S.W.3d 528, 2014 WL 3672986, 2014 Tex. App. LEXIS 8013 (Tex. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

OPINION

TRACY CHRISTOPHER, Justice.

Shagufta Khan filed this personal injury action, claiming that Salim Valliani had sexually assaulted her when she was fifteen years old. The trial court dismissed the suit with prejudice based on a finding that Khan had “failed to follow the Court’s Orders on several occasions.” We consider two issues on appeal: (1) whether the trial court abused its discretion by assessing a $400 sanction for discovery abuse against Khan, and (2) whether the court *531 acted within its authority by dismissing the suit with prejudice when Khan failed to pay the $400. We conclude that the trial court did not abuse its discretion by assessing the discovery sanction because there is evidence that Khan had abused the discovery process. However, we also conclude that the trial court had no authority, inherent or statutory, to dismiss the suit with prejudice upon Khan’s failure to pay the sanction. We affirm the discovery sanction, but we reverse the trial court’s order dismissing Khan’s suit and remand for additional proceedings consistent with this opinion.

BACKGROUND

This appeal focuses on a contentious discovery dispute over one of Khan’s personal journals. Khan testified during a deposition that she had a journal in her possession and that it contained writings about her alleged sexual assault. After the deposition, Valliani served a request for production, asking for the journal because it was relevant to the suit. In response to the request, Khan’s attorney, Alphonsus Ezeoke, filed the following equivocal objection: “Plaintiff objects to this request because the information is intrusive and irrelevant. Plaintiff does not have the document responsive to this request.”

Defense counsel responded to Ezeoke by written letter, asking his client to comply with the discovery request because the response “is in direct conflict with our understanding.” Defense counsel stated, “It is our understanding that the Plaintiff is in possession of her journals.” Defense counsel warned that he would file a motion to compel if the journal was not produced. Ezeoke responded to the warning as follows: ‘You may have to file the motion with the court because my client does not have the requested information. Furthermore, the diary contains other personal information that cannot and will not be provided to your perverted client.”

Defense counsel accepted Ezeoke’s invitation and filed the motion to compel, asserting that Khan was making inconsistent representations regarding the existence of the journal. The motion was brought under Rule 215 and requested an award of attorney’s fees. Ezeoke filed another equivocal response, reciting simultaneously that the journal “does not exist” and that its contents are “irrelevant.”

The trial court conducted a hearing on January 28, 2013, which only the attorneys attended. Ezeoke asserted that the request for production was overbroad because defense counsel was seeking all of Khan’s journals, including those that predated the assault. The trial court rejected this characterization, stating that the discovery request was specifically tailored to “any journals, diaries, and/or writings reflecting the incident made the basis of this lawsuit and/or the injuries for which Plaintiff seeks recovery.”

Ezeoke then responded that his client had lost the one journal that described the alleged assault. Ezeoke claimed that Khan had shown him another journal, but that it did not describe the assault. When asked to account for her deposition testimony, Ezeoke explained that Khan was confused. The trial court instructed Ez-eoke that he needed to either “produce the diary that she’s talking about in the deposition, or you can bring her down here, and I’ll put her on the stand and let [defense counsel] question her about why she answered the question the way she did.” The court then granted the motion to compel and ordered Khan to comply with the discovery request in a month’s time. To compensate Valliani for the time spent prosecuting the motion to compel, the court also ordered Khan to pay $400 in *532 attorney’s fees to opposing counsel. The order did not specify the payment of the fees by any set time.

When Khan did not comply with the trial court’s order, Valliani moved the court to hold her in contempt. The motion was brought under Rule 215, just as before. Valliani also requested a show cause order, and asked the court to sanction Khan by assessing additional attorney’s fees against her. Ezeoke filed a response to the motion saying that Khan had searched for her journals but could not find them. Ezeoke did not explain why the $400 had not been paid or make any argument that the trial court’s order was unclear as to the date of payment.

The trial court conducted a contempt hearing on April 8, 2013. During the hearing, Khan personally testified that she no longer writes in journals and that she could not comply with the court’s order because all of her journals have been lost. Khan suggested that her younger sister might have taken the journals and irretrievably misplaced them.

Khan also testified that she could not pay the $400 in attorney’s fees because of other financial obligations. Khan stated that she is currently paying off a car note and college tuition, and that any extra money she gets from her job is sent to her mother because her father is in the hospital and unable to work. The trial court suggested that Khan should give up her cell phone and use the money from that bill to pay the attorney’s fees. Khan testified that her cell phone bill was approximately fifty dollars per month.

Ezeoke argued during the hearing that the court should not have sanctioned Khan because her discovery response was true. The court refused to reconsider the sanction, saying that defense counsel was “entitled on behalf of his client to get to the bottom of [Khan’s deposition testimony] and find out what happened to those diaries.” Ezeoke then argued that the $400 award was a judgment of the court, and that Valliani should attempt to collect it himself. Ezeoke objected that the court was “trying to enforce his attorney’s fee for him.” The court responded that “these are attorney’s fees for contempt of court,” and that Khan is “either going to pay the $400 or I’m going to dismiss her lawsuit.” The court ordered payment by June 7, 2013, affording Khan roughly two months to collect the money.

The court did not assess any additional sanctions against Khan, citing her testimony that she did not have the journals and her inability to comply with the motion to compel. Valliani requested a spoliation instruction for the destruction of the journals, which the court refused. The court ruled orally, however, that it would exclude any testimony regarding the journals when the case proceeded to trial. This ruling was noted on the court’s docket sheet but it was not included in the order. The order also contained no warning that Khan’s suit would be dismissed for failing to pay the fee.

When Khan did not pay the $400 by the required date, Valliani filed a motion to dismiss the lawsuit. Valliani referenced the previous order and the court’s oral admonishment that the case would be dismissed if Khan did not pay the fee. Vallia-ni did not cite any specific authority for the dismissal.

Ezeoke moved for a continuance, claiming that he needed to make an emergency trip to Africa.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
439 S.W.3d 528, 2014 WL 3672986, 2014 Tex. App. LEXIS 8013, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shagufta-khan-v-salim-valliani-and-agha-juice-and-cafe-texapp-2014.