the City of Houston v. Atser, L.P.
This text of the City of Houston v. Atser, L.P. (the City of Houston v. Atser, L.P.) 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.
Opinion
Concurring and dissenting opinion issued April 5, 2012
In The
Court of Appeals
For The
First District of Texas
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NO. 01-10-00240-CV
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The City of Houston, Appellant
V.
Atser, L.P., Appellee
On Appeal from the 334th Judicial District Court
Harris County, Texas
Trial Court Case No. 2008-48039
CONCURRING AND DISSENTING MEMORANDUM OPINION
I respectfully concur in the judgment with respect to the first issue (the $5M claim), and I respectfully dissent from the judgment with respect to the second (the $250K claim). Although a majority of the panel has agreed on the judgment in this appeal, see Tex. R. App. P. 41.1(a), the fact that a justice concurring in the judgment has declined to provide or join any legal opinion means that there is no majority reasoning to explain the outcome, except to the extent that the two opinions partially agree about why we lack appellate jurisdiction with respect to the City’s $5M claim. The panel opinions in this appeal thus lack any precedential value except to the extent of our agreement as described in this opinion. Cf. Univ. of Texas Med. Branch at Galveston v. York, 871 S.W.2d 175, 177 (Tex. 1994) (noting that plurality opinions are “not authority for determination of other cases” because “the principles of law involved have not been agreed upon by a majority of the sitting court”); Rothenberg v. State, 176 S.W.3d 53, 57 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 2004, pet. ref’d) (observing that plurality opinions may be persuasive authorities, but they lack precedential value).
I conclude that this appeal should be dismissed in its entirety for want of interlocutory appellate jurisdiction. “Appellate courts have jurisdiction to consider immediate appeals of interlocutory orders only if a statute explicitly provides such jurisdiction.” Texas A & M Univ. Sys. v. Koseoglu, 233 S.W.3d 835, 840 (Tex. 2007) (citing Stary v. DeBord, 967 S.W.2d 352, 352–53 (Tex. 1998)). The City appealed only from the trial court’s March 9, 2010 interlocutory order denying its motion for partial summary judgment, and we have interlocutory jurisdiction only if that order denied a plea to the jurisdiction. See Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code Ann. § 51.014(a)(8) (West 2008). A summary judgment motion that “clearly challenged the trial court’s subject matter jurisdiction” is treated as a plea to the jurisdiction for the purpose of determining interlocutory appellate jurisdiction. Thomas v. Long, 207 S.W.3d 334, 339 (Tex. 2006). The availability of an interlocutory appeal is not “constrained by the form or caption of a pleading,” but will instead be determined by “the substance of a motion to determine the relief sought, not merely its title.” Id. (quoting Surgitek, Bristol–Myers Corp. v. Abel, 997 S.W.2d 598, 601 (Tex. 1999)).
The general thrust of the City’s arguments on appeal is that its motion for partial summary judgment challenged the existence of jurisdictional facts necessary to plead and prove the waiver of governmental immunity for contract claims pursuant to Local Government Code section 271.152. We cannot address the merits of the City’s arguments on appeal because, as I explain below, they were not presented to the trial court as jurisdictional arguments. The statute authorizing an appeal from an interlocutory order that “grants or denies a plea to the jurisdiction by a governmental unit as that term is defined in Section 101.001 [of the Civil Practice and Remedies Code],” Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code Ann. § 51.014(a)(8), is strictly construed as a “narrow exception to the general rule that only final judgments are appealable.” Koseoglu, 233 S.W.3d at 841 (quoting Bally Total Fitness Corp. v. Jackson, 53 S.W.3d 352, 355 (Tex. 2001)). Although the question of the trial court’s subject matter jurisdiction can be raised for the first time on appeal by the court or by the parties, see Texas Ass’n of Bus. v. Texas Air Control Bd., 852 S.W.2d 440, 445–46 (Tex. 1993), that principle presupposes that we are properly exercising our appellate jurisdiction, and on this record we cannot do so.
$5M claim. With respect to the first issue, a careful examination of the substance of the motion for partial summary judgment reveals that the City did not “clearly challenge” the trial court’s subject matter jurisdiction as to ATSER’s $5M claim. Although the argument, excerpted in the majority’s opinion, made reference to the governmental immunity statute, it did so only with specific reference to the kinds of claims that ATSER could not pursue against a governmental unit, i.e., a purported “tort or quasi-contract claim” and “these types of claims.” ATSER did not allege such claims in the third amended petition, the live pleading. Thus, in context, the City’s reference to the statutory waiver of governmental immunity under section
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