Trish R. Calloway v. James N. Hull & Associates, P.C. A/K/A Hull & Associates, P.C. and LVNV Funding LLC

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 24, 2009
Docket14-07-00834-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Trish R. Calloway v. James N. Hull & Associates, P.C. A/K/A Hull & Associates, P.C. and LVNV Funding LLC (Trish R. Calloway v. James N. Hull & Associates, P.C. A/K/A Hull & Associates, P.C. and LVNV Funding LLC) 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
Trish R. Calloway v. James N. Hull & Associates, P.C. A/K/A Hull & Associates, P.C. and LVNV Funding LLC, (Tex. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

Affirmed and Memorandum Opinion filed February 24, 2009

Affirmed and Memorandum Opinion filed February 24, 2009.

In The

Fourteenth Court of Appeals

____________

NO. 14-07-00834-CV

TRISH R. CALLOWAY, Appellant

V.

JAMES N. HULL & ASSOCIATES, P.C. A/K/A HULL & ASSOCIATES, P.C. AND LVNV FUNDING LLC, Appellees

On Appeal from the 113th District Court

Harris County, Texas

Trial Court Cause No. 2006-79792

M E M O R A N D U M   O P I N I O N

Appellant Trish R. Calloway appeals from the trial court=s grant of summary judgment for appellees James N. Hull & Associates, P.C. a/k/a Hull & Associates, P.C. and LVNV Funding, LLC.  Calloway contends the trial court (1) abused its discretion by granting Hull=s motion for protective order, (2) erred in denying her objections and special exceptions, and (3) erred in granting Hull=s and LVNV=s motions for summary judgment.  We affirm.


Background

In 2006, LVNV filed a lawsuit against Calloway to collect on a revolving credit account debt.  Hull was LVNV=s counsel in the lawsuit.  Shortly before the trial date, LVNV non-suited the case.  Calloway then filed this lawsuit against LVNV and Hull, alleging that LVNV and Hull intentionally and maliciously filed the lawsuit against her on a false or fictitious account and, rather than produce a legible, enforceable account agreement, LVNV instead non-suited its case three days before the scheduled trial date.  Calloway originally alleged malicious civil prosecution and intentional infliction of emotional distress against LVNV and Hull, and later amended her petition to add a claim for fraud by nondisclosure.

Calloway served interrogatories on Hull, which primarily requested the factual bases for the allegations LVNV had made in the earlier lawsuit.  Unsatisfied with Hull=s responses, Calloway filed a motion to compel.  Hull responded to Calloway=s motion to compel and also moved for a protective order.  Hull contended that, among other things, if any cause of action existed, the proper defendant would be its client, LVNV, because Hull, as LVNV=s counsel, could not be sued solely for representing its client in court.  Further, Hull contended that Calloway=s discovery would likely involve significant issues surrounding the attorney-client and work-product privileges.  Hull alternatively requested that the trial court stay all discovery against it until a motion for summary judgment could be heard and ruled on, Aso issues can be narrowed.@  Similarly, in its motion for protective order, which was incorporated into its response to Calloway=s motion to compel, Hull asserted that Calloway had propounded discovery to it that was not necessary in the case and asked the trial court to stay discovery until the issues could be narrowed with a motion for summary judgment.  The trial court granted Hull=s motion for protective order, ordering that Ano further discovery [was] required@ of Hull.[1]


Hull then filed a motion for traditional and no-evidence summary judgment.  In its traditional motion, it alleged that (1) filing a lawsuit cannot constitute Aextreme and outrageous conduct@; (2) Hull is protected by the doctrines of litigation immunity and quasi-judicial immunity, and if Calloway believed the earlier lawsuit to be wrongfully instituted against her, she should have sought sanctions in that lawsuit; and (3) Hull relied on information from LVNV and conducted an independent investigation to determine if Calloway was the proper defendant to sue in the earlier lawsuit, and so it could not be liable for fraud, intentional infliction of emotional distress, or malicious prosecution.  Hull attached two affidavits in support of its traditional motion for summary judgment.  In its no-evidence motion, Hull asserted that Calloway had no evidence to support most or all of the elements of the three causes of action alleged against it. 

In response to Hull=s motion for traditional and no-evidence summary judgment, Calloway asserted that there had not been adequate time for discovery due to Hull=s and LVNV=s resistance to her requests for discovery and the trial court=s grant of Hull=s motion for a protective order.  Calloway also responded to the substance of Hull=s motion, objected to Hull=s supporting affidavits, and asserted that genuine issues of material fact could be inferred from LVNV=s original petition filed in the earlier suit, a copy of which she purported to attach as Exhibit AA@ to her response.[2]  Calloway did not attach any other evidence to support her response.  Calloway separately filed objections and special exceptions to the affidavits attached in support of Hull=s motion for traditional summary judgment.[3] 


LVNV separately filed a motion for no-evidence summary judgment, alleging that Calloway had no evidence of most or all of the elements of her claims for civil malicious prosecution, intentional infliction of emotional distress, and fraud by nondisclosure.

Calloway responded to LVNV=s no-evidence motion for summary judgment by first asserting that adequate time for discovery had not passed because of LVNV=s and Hull=s resistance to her discovery requests and the protective order granted Hull.  She also contended that genuine issues of material fact could be inferred from the petition LVNV filed in the earlier lawsuit.  A copy of LVNV=

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Trish R. Calloway v. James N. Hull & Associates, P.C. A/K/A Hull & Associates, P.C. and LVNV Funding LLC, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/trish-r-calloway-v-james-n-hull-associates-pc-aka--texapp-2009.