Winnie Stacey Alwazzan v. Isa Ali Alwazzan

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 26, 2020
Docket01-16-00589-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Winnie Stacey Alwazzan v. Isa Ali Alwazzan (Winnie Stacey Alwazzan v. Isa Ali Alwazzan) 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
Winnie Stacey Alwazzan v. Isa Ali Alwazzan, (Tex. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

Opinion issued March 26, 2020

In The

Court of Appeals For The

First District of Texas ———————————— NO. 01-16-00589-CV ——————————— WINNIE STACEY ALWAZZAN, Appellant V. ISA ALI ALWAZZAN AND INTERNATIONAL AGENCIES CO., LTD., Appellees

On Appeal from the 306th District Court Galveston County, Texas Trial Court Case No. 13-FD-0848

OPINION DISSENTING FROM DENIAL OF EN BANC RECONSIDERATION

Appellant, Winnie Stacey Alwazzan (Winnie), moved for en banc reconsideration of the panel’s majority opinion dated December 6, 2018.1 A majority

of the Court has voted to deny en banc reconsideration. I would grant it due to the

importance of the law at issue in this case and its interpretation and application by the

panel majority.

I believe the panel opinion and judgment are contrary to established

jurisdictional case law and contrary to the Rules of Appellate Procedure, which require

that a panel issue an opinion that is “as brief as practicable but that addresses every

issue raised and necessary to final disposition of the appeal.” TEX. R. APP. P. 47.1.

Here, the panel opinion fails to resolve the controlling issue of subject-matter

jurisdiction. Accordingly, it keeps alive a jurisdictional and legal dispute that should

have been resolved in accordance with law long ago.

This case involves subject-matter jurisdiction over four divorce actions in the

same marriage filed by Winnie against her husband Isa Ali Alwazzan (Isa) and a

Bahrani company owned in part by Isa’s family, International Agencies Co., Ltd.

(IACL). Winnie non-suited each of the first three actions. Two of those non-suits were

improper because Winnie non-suited after she and Isa had both appeared and all issues

had been resolved, but before a final decree of divorce had been entered. This appeal

is from the fourth action, which Winnie improperly filed in the Galveston County

1 Alwazzan v. Alwazzan, —S.W.3d —, No. 01-16-00589-CV, 2018 WL 6382061 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] Dec. 6, 2018, no pet. h.). 2 district court after the Harris County associate judge had ruled on the merits of every

issue in the divorce in the third action and all that remained was entry of the decree of

divorce. The disposition of this case is thus controlled by Hyundai Motor Co. v.

Alvarado, 892 S.W.2d 853, 855 (Tex. 1995) (per curiam), which prohibits a party from

taking advantage of a non-suit on issues that were already decided on the merits by

filing another suit on those issues.

Here, the Galveston County district court, in the decision on appeal, reversed an

earlier decision of that court by a visiting judge exercising jurisdiction over the divorce

suit filed in that county by Winnie after she non-suited the Harris County action. The

visiting judge found that Isa, who no longer lives in the United States, was adequately

served by publication in a Galveston County newspaper and that IACL was adequately

served by mail to an improper and incomplete address in Bahrain. The visiting judge

then, in the absence of both Isa and IACL, awarded Winnie half a billion dollars in

damages against IACL. Later, the presiding judge vacated all previous orders of that

court, dismissed Winnie’s petition for lack of subject-matter jurisdiction, and awarded

sanctions against Winnie for her improper actions in Galveston.

The majority dismisses the Galveston County divorce action on residency

grounds for refiling in some subsequent court. I would affirm the dismissal of the suit

for lack of subject-matter jurisdiction under Hyundai. I would hold that the Galveston

County district court did not err when it concluded that it lacked subject-matter

3 jurisdiction over this divorce action and granted Isa’s plea to the jurisdiction. I would

further hold that the Harris County associate judge’s December 21, 2012 report was a

final decision on the merits of all claims in the divorce, including the right to entry of

a final decree of divorce, and that none of those claims were subject to the April 10,

2013 non-suit Winnie filed just before filing suit in Galveston County. Accordingly, I

would hold that subject-matter jurisdiction over the parties’ divorce action not only

did not attach in Galveston County but could not attach and that the Galveston County

court correctly entered judgment dismissing the case for lack of jurisdiction. I would

further hold, contrary to the panel majority, that all matters pertinent to the divorce

proceedings were properly adjudicated by the associate judge in the Harris County

district court, in which Winnie filed her third divorce action, as clearly demonstrated

by the record. Therefore, the divorce action was not subject to Winnie’s later invalid

non-suit. I would modify the trial court’s judgment solely to condition the award of

attorneys’ fees as sanctions on Winnie’s failure to prevail on appeal. I would affirm

the judgment of the trial court as modified.

The panel majority opinion, in my view, misconstrues Hyundai and rejects it as

inapplicable. It improperly decides that jurisdiction could have been established in

Galveston County if Winnie had lived there long enough to establish residency (which

she has never done). And it leaves the parties in legal limbo by failing to recognize the

finality of the 2012 Harris County divorce proceedings and failing to establish the

4 court of proper jurisdiction over those proceedings, in violation of Texas Rule of

Appellate Procedure 47.1, which expressly requires the resolution of all issues “raised

and necessary to final disposition of the appeal.” TEX. R. APP. P. 47.1.

Both law and equity require a resolution to this case that recognizes Hyundai’s

preclusive effect on future re-litigation of issues non-suited by a party after final

resolution in a trial court, that fixes the court of exclusive jurisdiction over the

underlying divorce proceedings in this case, and that brings to an end this endless

relitigation of settled issues. Accordingly, I respectfully dissent from the panel opinion

and from denial of en banc reconsideration, and I set forth more fully below, in

response to the panel majority opinion, the grounds for applying Hyundai to dispose

of all issues in this case.

Hyundai Motor Co. v. Alvarado

In Hyundai Motor Co. v. Alvarado, the Texas Supreme Court addressed the

effect of the plaintiffs’ non-suit filed after the trial court had granted partial summary

judgment in favor of the defendant on several of the plaintiffs’ claims. See 892 S.W.2d

at 854. The Hyundai plaintiffs, who had been injured in a car accident, sued Hyundai

in Webb County and alleged several theories of liability. Id. Hyundai moved for partial

summary judgment, arguing that most of the claims were preempted by federal law,

and the trial court granted the motion. Id. The plaintiffs then non-suited their case in

Webb County and filed a new lawsuit against Hyundai in Duval County, raising claims

5 identical to those claims raised in their first petition in Webb County, including the

claims on which the Webb County court had granted partial summary judgment. Id.

The Webb County court signed an order of non-suit. Id. Hyundai then requested the

Webb County court modify that order, arguing that the plaintiffs could not refile the

claims on which partial summary judgment had been granted. Id.

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