VetMoves, Moves Texas, PLLC, and Dr. Robyn Read v. Lone Star Veterinarian Mobile Surgical Specialists, PC and Charisse Davidson

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 16, 2020
Docket02-19-00340-CV
StatusPublished

This text of VetMoves, Moves Texas, PLLC, and Dr. Robyn Read v. Lone Star Veterinarian Mobile Surgical Specialists, PC and Charisse Davidson (VetMoves, Moves Texas, PLLC, and Dr. Robyn Read v. Lone Star Veterinarian Mobile Surgical Specialists, PC and Charisse Davidson) 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.

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VetMoves, Moves Texas, PLLC, and Dr. Robyn Read v. Lone Star Veterinarian Mobile Surgical Specialists, PC and Charisse Davidson, (Tex. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

In the Court of Appeals Second Appellate District of Texas at Fort Worth ___________________________ No. 02-19-00340-CV ___________________________

VETMOVES, MOVES TEXAS, PLLC, AND DR. ROBYN READ, Appellants

V.

LONE STAR VETERINARIAN MOBILE SURGICAL SPECIALISTS, PC AND CHARISSE DAVIDSON, Appellees

On Appeal from County Court at Law No. 2 Denton County, Texas Trial Court No. CV-2019-01801

Before Birdwell, Bassel, and Wallach, JJ. Memorandum Opinion by Justice Wallach MEMORANDUM OPINION

This is an accelerated interlocutory appeal from the denial of a motion to

dismiss under the Texas Citizens Participation Act. See Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code

Ann. §§ 27.003, 27.008(b), 51.014(a)(12). Appellees Dr. Charisse Davidson and Lone

Star Veterinarian Mobile Surgical Specialists, PC, (collectively, Plaintiffs) sued

Appellants Dr. Robyn Read, VetMoves, and Moves Texas, PLLC (collectively,

Defendants) for defamation and related claims. Defendants filed a motion to dismiss

Plaintiffs’ claims under the TCPA, and Plaintiffs filed a response raising the TCPA’s

commercial speech exemption. The trial court denied the motion. In two issues,

Defendants challenge the applicability of the TCPA’s commercial speech exemption.

We affirm.

Background

In Plaintiffs’ petition, they alleged the following facts. 1 Defendants and

Plaintiffs provide specialty veterinarian services to referring veterinarians; Dr.

Davidson and Dr. Read are both veterinary surgeons, and VetMoves, Moves Texas,2

and Lone Star are all businesses that provide mobile veterinary surgical services. In

June 2018, Dr. Read began contacting referral veterinarians who conduct business

1 As always when we uphold a trial court’s denial of a TCPA motion, our disposition of this case is not a comment on the merits of Plaintiffs’ claims. 2 According to Dr. Davidson’s affidavit attached to Plaintiffs’ petition, VetMoves is a national mobile veterinary surgical company, and Moves Texas, PLLC is its Texas Branch.

2 with Plaintiffs. Although Dr. Read has never been employed by or associated with

Plaintiffs, she represented herself to these referral veterinarians as an associate of, or

relief vet for, Plaintiffs. Dr. Read falsely advised those referral veterinarians that

Plaintiffs had made major surgical mistakes and that state board complaints had been

filed against them, and she solicited business from those referral veterinarians for

herself. Plaintiffs alleged that Dr. Read made these statements for the sole purpose of

inducing Plaintiffs’ clients to use Defendants rather than Plaintiffs for veterinary

surgical services. Based on these alleged facts, Plaintiffs sued Defendants for fraud,

negligent misrepresentation, tortious interference with existing business relationships,

slander, disparagement, and conspiracy. In an attached affidavit, Dr. Davidson

described losing several clients to Dr. Read because of Dr. Read’s statements to those

clients.

Defendants filed a motion to dismiss under the TCPA. In the motion,

Defendants denied that Dr. Read told anyone that she is Dr. Davidson’s associate and

denied ever contacting anyone for the purpose of advising them that Dr. Davidson or

Lone Star made major surgical mistakes or had received board complaints against

them. Defendants acknowledged that Dr. Read had made statements about Dr.

Davidson’s services but contended that she did so only after being asked for her

opinion during a consultation. They asserted that in May 2019, two staff veterinarians

at Mazie’s Mission asked Dr. Read to review some X-rays and consult with them on

the work of another veterinarian. Dr. Read provided the requested consultation for

3 free. After Dr. Read gave her opinion, the two staff veterinarians, Dr. Schultz and

Dr. Carroll, asked if she had heard other providers express frustration over Dr.

Davidson’s failure or delay in providing similar consultations. Dr. Read replied that

she had heard similar comments, and she also told them that she had performed a

consultation on another case for a surgery that Dr. Davidson had performed and, in

her opinion, Dr. Davidson’s work in that case was substandard. She told them that

the pet owners in that case were considering filing a complaint with the Texas Board

of Veterinary Medical Examiners. Defendants argued Dr. Read’s statements to Dr.

Schultz and Dr. Carroll were protected free speech regarding services in the

marketplace and, as such, the TCPA applied.

Plaintiffs filed a response to the motion that did not dispute that the statements

were communications on a matter of public concern or that Defendants had met their

burden to show the TCPA’s applicability. However, they asserted that Defendants’

TCPA motion showed that the statements at issue arose out of the sale or lease of

goods or services and that the intended audience of the statements were actual or

potential buyers or customers of Plaintiffs and that therefore the TCPA’s commercial

speech exemption applied. The trial court denied Defendants’ TCPA motion.

Discussion

I. The TCPA does not protect commercial speech.

The TCPA provides a mechanism for dismissal of a legal action that is based

on, relates to, or in response to a defendant’s exercise of the right of free speech.

4 Dallas Morning News, Inc. v. Hall, 579 S.W.3d 370, 376 (Tex. 2019). However, the

TCPA exempts commercial speech from its application. See Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem.

Code Ann. § 27.010(a)(2)). Section 27.010 provides that the TCPA does not apply to

a claim against a person who is “primarily engaged in the business of selling or leasing

goods or services, if the statement or conduct arises out of the sale or lease of goods,

services . . . or a commercial transaction in which the intended audience is an actual or

potential buyer or customer.” Id. Four conditions must be met for the commercial

speech exemption to apply:

(1) the defendant was primarily engaged in the business of selling or leasing goods [or services], (2) the defendant made the statement or engaged in the conduct on which the claim is based in the defendant’s capacity as a seller or lessor of those goods or services, (3) the statement or conduct at issue arose out of a commercial transaction involving the kind of goods or services the defendant provides, and (4) the intended audience of the statement or conduct were actual or potential customers of the defendant for the kind of goods or services the defendant provides.

Castleman v. Internet Money Ltd., 546 S.W.3d 684, 688 (Tex. 2018) (per curiam); Bejarano

v. Dorgan, No. 03-19-00182-CV, 2019 WL 4458798, at *2 (Tex. App.—Austin Sept.

18, 2019, no pet.) (mem. op.). In two issues, Defendants challenge the second and

third conditions: whether their alleged communications arose out of or proposed a

commercial transaction and whether the alleged communications were made in their

capacity as a seller of their mobile veterinary surgical services.

5 II. The trial court could review evidence on the third Castleman factor.

Plaintiffs’ arguments in their response did not fully address the requirements of

the commercial speech exemption. As Defendants point out, the motion “failed

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VetMoves, Moves Texas, PLLC, and Dr. Robyn Read v. Lone Star Veterinarian Mobile Surgical Specialists, PC and Charisse Davidson, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vetmoves-moves-texas-pllc-and-dr-robyn-read-v-lone-star-veterinarian-texapp-2020.