Sheerin v. Exxon Corp.
This text of 923 S.W.2d 52 (Sheerin v. Exxon Corp.) 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.
Opinions
OPINION ON MOTION FOR REHEARING
We grant the appellants’ motion for rehearing, withdraw our opinion and judgment of August 31, 1995, and substitute the following opinion in its place.
The issue in this appeal is whether the transcript has been timely filed. We conclude that it has been.
The appeal arises out of an oil and gas lease dispute in which the appellants1 brought claims for (1) breach of various covenants in the lease, (2) breach of the duty of good faith and fair dealing, and (3) unlawful divestment of their overriding royalty inter[54]*54est in the lease. Two of the appellants, Robert V. Crow and Montez Crow Merritt, filed a plea in intervention on February 3, 1994, to enter the ease as intervenors. On August 1,1994, a fifth amended original petition was filed that added Robert V. Crow and Montez Crow Merritt as plaintiffs; this petition did not mention the plea in intervention. The appellees2 filed motions for summary judgment, and the district court signed a summary judgment on November 4, 1994.3 On November 29, 1994, appellants filed both a certificate of cash deposit to perfect their appeal and a written designation specifying matters to be included in the transcript. See TexR.App.P. 41(a)(1) (time to perfect appeal), 51(b) (written designation of transcript).
Appellants informed this Court that a Harris County deputy district clerk called on January 12,1995 and told them she could not prepare the transcript because the district clerk’s computer indicated the judgment was interlocutory. Relying on this telephone call, appellants filed a motion to modify the alleged interlocutory summary judgment on January 13, 1995. The ground for the motion to modify was to dismiss the claims stated in Robert V. Crow and Montez Crow Merritt’s plea in intervention.
The motion to modify states that the February 3, 1994 claims are duplicative of claims asserted by Robert V. Crow and Montez Crow Merritt in the fifth amended original petition filed August 1, 1994. The motion to modify requested the district court (1) to dismiss the February 3, 1994 plea in intervention and (2) to sign a new final summary judgment dated after the dismissal of the plea in intervention. The district court signed an order dismissing the plea in intervention on January 23, 1995. The district court did not sign a new final summary judgment, but did state that the plea in intervention was dismissed “in order to make the Summary Judgment on file herein final as to all claims and parties.”
Appellants timely perfected their appeal on November 29, 1994, regardless of whether the judgment was final on November 4, 1994 or January 23, 1995. Tex R.App.P. 41(e), 58 (premature appeals). The date of the final judgment, however, determines whether the transcript was timely filed when it was received by the Clerk of this Court on March 23, 1995. No timely motion for new trial or to modify the judgment was filed,4 so the transcript was due to be filed 60 days after the final judgment was signed, ie., either January 3 or March 24, 1995.5 TexR.App.P. 54(a). If the judgment was final on January 23, 1995, the transcript has been timely filed. If, however, the judgment became final on November 4, 1994, the transcript was filed 79 days late, and this Court is prohibited from granting a motion for extension of time to allow the transcript to be filed. B.D. Click Co. v. Safari Drilling Corp., 638 S.W.2d 860, 862 (Tex.1982); see TexR.App.P. 54(c) (governing motions for extensions of time to file the record). The Clerk of this Court duly notified the parties that the transcript would not be filed until a [55]*55proper showing was made to the Court. Tex.R.App.P. 56(a).
The first issue we must decide is whether the plea in intervention was still a live pleading at the time of the November 4, 1994 summary judgment. Texas civil procedure does not require an intervenor to file a motion for leave to intervene, but rather places the burden on any party who is opposed to the intervention to move to strike the intervention. Tex.R.Civ.P. 60. No one opposed the plea in intervention that was filed on February 3,1994. The question then is whether the plaintiffs’ fifth amended original petition filed on August 1, 1994, which included Robert V. Crow and Montez Crow Merritt as plaintiffs but not as intervenors, superseded the previously filed plea in intervention.
The general rule is that an amended pleading takes the place of the original pleading and that the original pleading is superseded and is no longer a part of the live pleadings.6 Tex.R.Civ.P. 65; Ludwig v. Enserch Corp., 845 S.W.2d 338, 339 (Tex.App.— Houston [1st Dist.] 1992, no writ); 2 Texas Civil PRACTICE § 7:3, at 125, § 10:14, at 504 (Diane M. Allen at al. eds., 1992 ed.). Texas Rule of Civil Procedure 64, however, requires the party amending the previous pleading to point out which instrument is being amended. This is normally done in the caption of the pleading, e.g., “amended original petition.” In this case, neither the caption of the plaintiffs’ fifth amended original petition nor the body of that pleading indicated any express intent to supersede the plea in intervention. See Klein v. Klein, 641 S.W.2d 387, 389 (Tex.App. — Dallas 1982, no writ). Rule 64 requires a party to abandon a pleading by an express act rather than by implication, so we hold that the plea in intervention was still a live pleading at the time of the November 4,1994 summary judgment.
We must next decide whether the November 4, 1994 summary judgment disposed of the plea in intervention, thus making that summary judgment a final judgment. In Mafrige v. Ross, the supreme court considered whether an appellate court had jurisdiction to consider the merits of an appeal from an “interlocutory” summary judgment that, on its face, appeared to be “final” because it expressly stated it disposed of all parties and issues. Mafrige, 866 S.W.2d 590 (Tex.1993). The supreme court held:
Because the language in the summary judgment orders in this case clearly evidences the trial court’s intent to dispose of all claims, the court of appeals erred in dismissing the appeal for want of jurisdiction. The propriety of the trial court’s granting of the summary judgments on the merits is a matter to be resolved by the courts of appeals.
Id. at 592 (emphasis added).
Mafrige is distinguishable from the present case in that here the record “clearly evidences the trial court’s intent” that the November 4, 1994 summary judgment was “interlocutory.” This “clear intent” is shown by the trial court’s subsequent signing of the January 23,1995 order dismissing the plea in intervention that specifically states the intervention was being dismissed “in order to make the Summary Judgment on file herein final as to all claims and parties.”
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923 S.W.2d 52, 1995 Tex. App. LEXIS 2803, 1995 WL 669258, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sheerin-v-exxon-corp-texapp-1995.