Sec. 25A.004. JURISDICTION AND POWERS.
(a)Subject to Subsections (b), (c), (d), (d-1), (e), and (f), the business court has the powers provided to district courts by Chapter 24 , including the power to:
(1)issue writs of injunction, mandamus, sequestration, attachment, garnishment, and supersedeas; and
(2)grant any relief that may be granted by a district court.
(b)Subject to Subsection (c), the business court has civil jurisdiction concurrent with district courts in the following actions, including actions in which a district court has exclusive jurisdiction, in which the amount in controversy exceeds $5 million, excluding interest, statutory damages, exemplary damages, penalties, attorney's fees, and court costs:
(1)a derivative proceeding;
(2)an action regarding the governance, go
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Sec. 25A.004. JURISDICTION AND POWERS. (a) Subject to Subsections (b), (c), (d), (d-1), (e), and (f), the business court has the powers provided to district courts by Chapter 24 , including the power to:
(1) issue writs of injunction, mandamus, sequestration, attachment, garnishment, and supersedeas; and
(2) grant any relief that may be granted by a district court.
(b) Subject to Subsection (c), the business court has civil jurisdiction concurrent with district courts in the following actions, including actions in which a district court has exclusive jurisdiction, in which the amount in controversy exceeds $5 million, excluding interest, statutory damages, exemplary damages, penalties, attorney's fees, and court costs:
(1) a derivative proceeding;
(2) an action regarding the governance, governing documents, or internal affairs of an organization;
(3) an action in which a claim under a state or federal securities or trade regulation law is asserted against:
(A) an organization;
(B) a controlling person or managerial official of an organization for an act or omission by the organization or by the person in the person's capacity as a controlling person or managerial official;
(C) an underwriter of securities issued by the organization; or
(D) the auditor of an organization;
(4) an action by an organization, or an owner of an organization, if the action:
(A) is brought against an owner, controlling person, or managerial official of the organization; and
(B) alleges an act or omission by the person in the person's capacity as an owner, controlling person, or managerial official of the organization;
(5) an action alleging that an owner, controlling person, or managerial official breached a duty owed to an organization or an owner of an organization by reason of the person's status as an owner, controlling person, or managerial official, including the breach of a duty of loyalty or good faith;
(6) an action seeking to hold an owner or governing person of an organization liable for an obligation of the organization, other than on account of a written contract signed by the person to be held liable in a capacity other than as an owner or governing person; and
(7) an action arising out of the Business Organizations Code.
(c) The business court has civil jurisdiction concurrent with district courts in an action described by Subsection (b) regardless of the amount in controversy if a party to the action is a publicly traded company.
(d) The business court has civil jurisdiction concurrent with district courts in the following actions in which the amount in controversy exceeds $5 million, excluding interest, statutory damages, exemplary damages, penalties, attorney's fees, and court costs:
(1) an action arising out of a qualified transaction;
(2) an action arising out of a business, commercial, or investment contract or transaction in which the parties to the contract or transaction agreed in the contract or a subsequent agreement that the business court has jurisdiction of the action, except an action that arises out of an insurance contract;
(3) subject to Subsection (g), an action arising out of a violation of the Finance Code or Business & Commerce Code by an organization or an officer or governing person acting on behalf of an organization other than a bank, credit union, or savings and loan association;
(4) an action arising out of or relating to the ownership, use, licensing, lease, installation, or performance of intellectual property, including:
(A) computer software, software applications, information technology and systems, data and data security, pharmaceuticals, biotechnology products, and bioscience technologies; and
(B) a trade secret, as that term is defined in Section 134A.002 , Civil Practice and Remedies Code; and
(5) an action arising out of Chapter 134A , Civil Practice and Remedies Code.
(d-1) The business court has civil jurisdiction concurrent with district courts in an action to enforce an arbitration agreement, appoint an arbitrator, or review an arbitral award, or in other judicial actions authorized by an arbitration agreement, Chapter 171 or 172 , Civil Practice and Remedies Code, or the Federal Arbitration Act (9 U.S.C. Sections 1 through 16), if a claim included in the controversy in arbitration is described by Subsection (b) or (d).
(e) The business court has civil jurisdiction concurrent with district courts in an action seeking injunctive relief or a declaratory judgment under Chapter 37 , Civil Practice and Remedies Code, involving a dispute based on a claim within the court's jurisdiction under Subsection (b), (c), or (d).
(f) Except as provided by Subsection (h), in an action in which the business court has jurisdiction under Subsection (b), (c), (d), or (e), the court has supplemental jurisdiction over any other claim so related to the action that the claim forms part of the same case or controversy. A claim within the business court's supplemental jurisdiction may proceed in the business court only on the agreement of all parties to the claim and a judge of the division of the court before which the action is pending. If the parties involved in a claim within the business court's supplemental jurisdiction do not agree on the claim proceeding in the business court, the claim may proceed in a court of original jurisdiction concurrently with any related claims proceeding in the business court.
(g) Unless the claim falls within the business court's supplemental jurisdiction, the business court does not have jurisdiction of:
(1) a claim in a civil action:
(A) brought by or against a governmental entity; or
(B) seeking to foreclose on a lien on real or personal property an individual owns at the time the action is filed;
(2) a claim arising out of:
(A) Subchapter E , Chapter 15 , and Chapter 17 , Business & Commerce Code;
(B) the Estates Code;
(C) the Family Code;
(D) the Insurance Code; or
(E) Chapter 53 and Title 9, Property Code;
(3) a claim arising out of the production or sale of a farm product, as that term is defined by Section 9.102 , Business & Commerce Code; or
(4) a claim related to the duties and obligations under an insurance policy.
(h) The business court does not have jurisdiction of the following claims regardless of whether the claim is otherwise within the court's supplemental jurisdiction under Subsection (f):
(1) a claim arising under Chapter 74 , Civil Practice and Remedies Code;
(2) a claim in which a party seeks recovery of monetary damages for bodily injury or death;
(3) a claim of legal malpractice; or
(4) a claim related to a consumer transaction, as that term is defined by Section 601.001 , Business & Commerce Code, to which a consumer in this state is a party, arising out of a violation of federal or state law.
(i) The amount in controversy for jurisdictional purposes under Subsection (b) or (d) is the total amount of all joined parties' claims.