Thompson v. Woodruff

232 S.W.3d 316, 2007 Tex. App. LEXIS 6099, 2007 WL 2199909
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 2, 2007
Docket09-05-511 CV
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 232 S.W.3d 316 (Thompson v. Woodruff) 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
Thompson v. Woodruff, 232 S.W.3d 316, 2007 Tex. App. LEXIS 6099, 2007 WL 2199909 (Tex. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

OPINION

STEVE McKEITHEN, Chief Justice.

Stacy Thompson and Sean Denzil Thompson appeal the dismissal of their medical malpractice suit against James J. Woodruff, Duane L. Larson, and Scott Kacy. In eight issues, the Thompsons claim the trial court erred by imposing case-determinative sanctions for discovery abuses solely attributable to their impaired lawyer, without first considering lesser sanctions. We reverse and remand.

Suit commenced on May 10, 2002. Although nineteen defendants are named in the Thompsons’ petition, only Doctors Woodruff, Larson, and Kacy were served and appeared. Due to a defect in the Thompsons’ notice letter, the trial court abated the suit for sixty days. On June 12, 2008, the day before the scheduled hearing on Woodruff’s motion for summary judgment, the Thompsons filed a motion for continuance based upon a life-threatening illness suffered by their attorney of record. The motion alleged that counsel’s extended hospitalization resulted in her absence from her practice and the loss of most of her support staff. The motion also alleged that counsel had a conflicting setting in a Harris County probate court and that the Thompsons needed to conduct additional discovery. The motion for summary judgment was not heard on the scheduled date and the Thompsons filed their response to the motion for summary judgment three months later. The Thompsons submitted the affidavit of their expert, Gerald L. Bullock, in a supplemental response filed the day after they filed their response to the motion for summary judgment. Woodruff objected to the untimely submission. The trial court denied the motion for summary judgment without ruling on Woodruffs objection.

Larson filed a motion for summary judgment on November 10, 2003. The Thomp-sons filed a motion for leave to file a late response to Larson’s motion for summary judgment. The Thompsons’ motion alleged their attorney’s health problems forced counsel into bankruptcy, that the bankruptcy court had not acted on her motions to release collateral, and that she could not obtain the expert’s report until the funds required to obtain the report were released by the bankruptcy court. The Thompsons submitted an unverified report by Bullock. Larson objected to the form of the Thompsons’ summary judgment evidence, but the trial court denied the motion for summary judgment without ruling on Larson’s objection. On April 21, 2004, an agreed scheduling order established a March 1, 2005, discovery request deadline and a trial setting for the following April.

On November 17, 2004, Larson filed a motion to compel answers to interrogatories and requests for production. The parties agreed to supplement discovery and reset the hearing on motion to compel, but the Thompsons failed to comply with the agreement. Finding a pattern of falsely promising to supplement the responses to Larson’s written discovery, the trial court overruled the Thompsons’ objections to Larson’s interrogatories and requests for production, ordered the Thompsons to respond to the interrogatories and to produce the requested records within fourteen days, and ordered the Thompsons and their attorney to pay $2,500 as attorney’s fees. Larson filed a motion for summary *319 judgment based on his limitations defense; the trial court denied the motion.

A few days before the April 2005 trial setting, Larson had heart surgery and the trial had to be reset. In June, the trial court granted Larson’s request for a preferential setting and placed the case third on the September 2005 trial docket. On July 21, 2005, Larson filed a motion to compel answers to requests for admissions and for sanctions and noticed a hearing on the motion for August 31, 2005. According to the motion, Larson served requests for admission on the Thompsons on June 6, 2005, and the Thompsons filed their response on July 11, 2005, a date Larson claimed to be five days late. The Thomp-sons argued the operation of rules governing notice by mail and weekend deadlines made their response timely.

On August 15, 2005, Larson filed a motion to strike Bullock as an expert and moved for a dismissal with prejudice. Larson’s motion to strike alleged Bullock’s deposition had been noticed for February 1, 2005, that neither Bullock nor plaintiffs’ counsel appeared for the deposition, and that Kacy obtained a certificate of nonappearance. On February 16, 2005, the deposition was again noticed for March 2; on March 1 counsel for the Thompsons called to say that she had been subpoenaed to testify at trial on March 2. The subpoena in question had been served on the Thompsons’ counsel on March 1. Counsel for Larson and Kacy were present for the deposition and obtained another certificate of nonappearance. Another notice issued on March 15 for a March 24 deposition, but Larson’s attorney cancelled the deposition at the request of the Thompsons’ attorney. On July 1, 2005, Larson noticed the deposition for July 18, 2005. For reasons not established in the record, the deposition did not occur. In a notice dated August 12, 2005, Larson added his motion to strike to the matters being heard on August 31, 2005.

On August 18, 2005, Kacy filed a motion for summary judgment based upon deemed admissions and a motion to strike Bullock as an expert, and to dismiss the Thompsons’ claims with prejudice. According to Kacy’s motion for summary judgment, the Thompsons failed to respond to requests for admissions served June 20, 2005. Kacy’s motion to strike relied upon the same events as those described in Larson’s motion to strike. The Thompsons’ response claimed that plaintiffs’ counsel had been working with a reduced staff and failed to notice that both Larson and Kacy had requested admissions. The Thompsons responded to Kacy’s request for admissions on September 14, 2005.

On August 21, 2005, Woodruff scheduled Bullock’s deposition for August 22, 2005. On September 1, 2005, Woodruff filed a motion to strike Bullock as the Thomp-sons’ expert and to dismiss the case with prejudice.

The trial court conducted a hearing on August 31, 2005. Counsel for the Thomp-sons failed to appear. The trial court noted that the Thompsons’ counsel had been set that morning in a court in another county, that the case with the conflicting setting had been continued just that morning, and that the Thompsons’ counsel could not get to Jefferson County for the scheduled hearing. Taking the case on submission without a hearing, the trial court granted Larson’s motion and in a single order prohibited Bullock from providing testimony and dismissed with prejudice all claims against Larson. The Thompsons filed a motion for reconsideration on September 8, 2005. The motion alleged that counsel traveled to Austin on August 19 and was in trial in Austin from August 22 through August 25. The motion also al *320 leged that counsel was required to appear in court in Galveston beginning August 29, that she notified counsel of the conflict by telephonic document transmission, and that she called the court on August 31 to discover the hearing had proceeded without her. The motion alleged that counsel had been unable to pay past fees owed to Bullock but that she was in the process of obtaining substitute counsel to fund Bullock’s employment. The Thompsons requested a 90 day continuance.

The trial court heard Kacy’s and Wood-ruffs motions on September 14, 2005, along with the Thompsons’ motion to reconsider Larson’s motions.

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Bluebook (online)
232 S.W.3d 316, 2007 Tex. App. LEXIS 6099, 2007 WL 2199909, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thompson-v-woodruff-texapp-2007.