Surgitek, Bristol-Myers Corp. v. Abel

997 S.W.2d 598, 42 Tex. Sup. Ct. J. 993, 1999 Tex. LEXIS 84, 1999 WL 450864
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1999
Docket98-0592
StatusPublished
Cited by290 cases

This text of 997 S.W.2d 598 (Surgitek, Bristol-Myers Corp. v. Abel) 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
Surgitek, Bristol-Myers Corp. v. Abel, 997 S.W.2d 598, 42 Tex. Sup. Ct. J. 993, 1999 Tex. LEXIS 84, 1999 WL 450864 (Tex. 1999).

Opinion

Justice ENOCH

delivered the opinion for a unanimous court.

This case presents several issues concerning section 15.003 of the Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code. Section 15.003 limits when a plaintiff may join an action in a venue that would otherwise be improper for that plaintiff. Here, 104 plaintiffs who could not independently establish venue in Bexar County attempted to join two plaintiffs in a Bexar County action against makers of silicone-gel breast implants. Concluding that the 104 plaintiffs were improperly joined, the trial court granted the defendants’ motion to transfer venue of those plaintiffs’ claims. A divided court of appeals reversed, with one justice concurring and one justice dissenting. 1 We conclude that: (1) the court of appeals had jurisdiction to hear the appeal; (2) a trial court may limit the scope of evidence on its section 15.003(a) joinder determination to pleadings and affidavits, but it has discretion to consider a broader range of evidence, including live testimony; (3) appellate courts should conduct a de novo review of the propriety of a trial court’s section 15.003 joinder decision; and (4) the plaintiffs here did not establish an “essential need” to have their claims tried in Bexar County. Consequently, we reverse the court of appeals’ judgment and reinstate the trial court’s venue transfer order.

Background

One-hundred-six plaintiffs sued Surgi-tek, Bristol-Myers Squibb Co., and Medical Engineering Corp. (Surgitek) for injuries they allegedly sustained from defective breast implants. Surgi-tek moved to transfer venue of 104 of these plaintiffs’ claims, asserting that none could establish proper venue in Bexar County and that none could establish that they were entitled to join the Bexar County suit under section 15.003.

Section 15.003(a) provides:

In a suit where more than one plaintiff is joined each plaintiff must, independently of any other plaintiff, establish proper venue. Any person who is unable to establish proper venue may not join or maintain venue for a suit as a plaintiff unless the person, independently of any other plaintiff, establishes that:
(1) joinder or intervention in the suit is proper under the Texas Rules of Civil Procedure;
(2) maintaining venue in the county of suit does not unfairly prejudice another party to the suit;
(3) there is an essential need to have the person’s claim tried in the county in which the suit is pending; and
(4) the county in which the suit is pending is a fair and convenient venue for the person seeking to join in or maintain venue for the suit and the persons against whom the suit is brought. 2

The trial court agreed with Surgitek that 104 plaintiffs did not establish that their joinder in the Bexar County suit was proper. The trial court transferred venue of 103 of these plaintiffs to Dallas County, Surgitek’s principal place of business in Texas, and one plaintiff to Tarrant County, that plaintiffs residence. (While this action was pending in this Court, 45 plaintiffs, including the Tarrant County plaintiff, have, through settlement or nonsuit, ceased being parties to this appeal. Fifty-nine plaintiffs remain, and our opinion and judgment apply only to those parties.)

The plaintiffs appealed the trial court’s order to the court of appeals, which, after *601 determining that it had jurisdiction to hear the appeal, 3 reversed and remanded.

Jurisdiction

Ordinarily, this Court does not have jurisdiction over interlocutory appeals like this one. 4 But here, we have jurisdiction because “the justices of the court of appeals disagree on a question of law material to the decision.” 5

The issue of the court of appeals’ jurisdiction in this case is more complex. Ordinarily, appeal does not immediately lie from a trial court order transferring venue. 6 But in section 15.003(c) the Legislature authorized any party aggrieved by a trial court’s determination of a section 15.003(a) joinder issue to contest the decision by an interlocutory appeal:

Any person seeking intervention or join-der, who is unable to independently establish proper venue, or a party opposing intervention or joinder of such a person may contest the decision of the trial court allowing or denying intervention or joinder by taking an interlocutory appeal.... 7

The question presented here is whether the court of appeals had jurisdiction under section 15.003(c), given that the order appealed was a venue transfer order following a motion to transfer venue. We agree with the court of appeals that it had jurisdiction.

The court of appeals reasoned that because the venue transfer order necessarily rested on the trial court’s determination of the propriety of joinder under section 15.003(a), it was appealable under section 15.003(c). 8 This functional approach to the availability of an interlocutory appeal under section 15.003(c) is in stark contrast with the holding of the Sixth Court of Appeals in Shubert v. J.C. Penney Co. 9 In Shubert, the court adopted a formalistic approach, holding that because the order before it was a venue ruling, it was not appealable, notwithstanding the trial court’s decision to transfer venue based on the propriety of joinder of six plaintiffs under section 15.003(a). 10 We reject Shu-bert ’s formalistic approach.

Section 15.003(c) contemplates that either party — -plaintiff or defendant— may take an interlocutory appeal of a section 15.003(a) joinder decision. But the Shubert rule would allow defendants to dictate at the outset, simply by how they style their request for relief, whether a plaintiff could pursue an interlocutory appeal. We should not be so constrained by the form or caption of a pleading. As the court of appeals correctly noted, we look to the substance of a motion to determine the relief sought, not merely to its title. 11 When a trial court’s order necessarily determines the propriety of a plaintiffs join-der under section 15.003(a), section 15.003(c) plainly allows for either party to “contest th[at] decision ... by taking an interlocutory appeal.” 12 Because the trial court’s venue transfer order in this case was predicated on its decision about the propriety of the plaintiffs’ joinder under section 15.003(a), the court of appeals had jurisdiction over the plaintiffs’ appeal. 13 *602 We disapprove Shubert

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Bluebook (online)
997 S.W.2d 598, 42 Tex. Sup. Ct. J. 993, 1999 Tex. LEXIS 84, 1999 WL 450864, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/surgitek-bristol-myers-corp-v-abel-tex-1999.