Court Opinion

ID: 4571745
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2020-10-01 07:13:05.343476+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T13:31:00.423630
License: Public Domain

In The
                                   Court of Appeals
                          Seventh District of Texas at Amarillo

                                          No. 07-20-00240-CV

                          IN RE AMARILLO URGENT CARE, LLC, AND
                               NAEEM KHAN, M.D., RELATORS

                    ORIGINAL PROCEEDING FOR WRIT OF MANDAMUS

                                         September 24, 2020

                                  MEMORANDUM OPINION
                      Before QUINN, C.J., PARKER, J. and HANCOCK, S.J.1

       Amarillo Urgent Care, LLC, and Naeem Khan, M.D., (Amarillo) petitioned this Court

for a writ of mandamus directing the Honorable John Board, 181st District Court, Potter

County, to vacate his July 13, 2020 order staying all proceedings in Cause Nos. 109545-

B-CV, 109546-E-CV, and 109547-E-CV.2 We conditionally grant the petition.

       1   Senior Justice Mackey K. Hancock, retired, sitting by assignment.
       2  The trial court also consolidated those cases.     Amarillo does not question the decision to
consolidate.
Background

       The aforementioned cause numbers represent lawsuits commenced by Amarillo

against Darrell Kimbrough, MSN, FNP-C, Mary Benard, MSN, FNP-C, and Tina Spohn-

Ledford, MSN, FNP-C, respectively.          Through each suit, Amarillo pursued claims

sounding in breached contract, tortious interference, and breached fiduciary duty.

Kimbrough, Benard, and Spohn-Ledford moved the trial court to stay the suits and

contended that the actions were filed in retaliation for their pursuing Fair Labor Standards

Act (FLSA) claims against Amarillo through a suit pending in the United States District

Court for the Northern District of Texas. The trial court granted their motion. In doing so,

it ordered that:

       this matter [i.e., Cause No. 109545-B-CV] which now includes Cause No.
       109547-E-CV and Cause No. 109546-E-CV is hereby stayed until final
       resolution, including any rights of appeal, of the claims asserted against
       Plaintiffs in Case No. 2: 18-cv-00082-Z-BR, Darrell Kimbrough, MSN, FNP-
       C, et. al, v. Naeem Khan, MD. And Amarillo Urgent Care, LLC, pending in
       the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Texas, Amarillo Division
       (“FLSA Case”). The Court instructs the parties to advise the Court within
       thirty (30) days of final resolution of the pending FLSA Case.

       Analysis

       As we all know, a petition for writ of mandamus is one seeking extraordinary

equitable relief. Specific criteria must be established before that relief issues. Those

criteria are 1) a clear abuse of discretion on the part of the trial court and 2) the lack of an

adequate legal remedy. See In re Christus Santa Rosa Health Sys., 492 S.W.3d 276,

279 (Tex. 2016) (orig. proceeding). A clear abuse of discretion arises when the trial court

“‘reaches a decision so arbitrary and unreasonable as to amount to a clear and prejudicial

error of law.’” Id. (quoting Walker v. Packer, 827 S.W.2d 833 (Tex. 1992) (orig.

proceeding)). For instance, the failure to analyze or correctly apply the law constitutes

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such an abuse. See In re M-I L.L.C., 505 S.W.3d 569, 574 (Tex. 2016) (orig. proceeding).

As for the absence of an adequate legal remedy, an appellate court’s inability to cure the

error is an example of same. See In re Christus Santa Rosa Health Sys., 492 S.W.3d at

279.

        We address the matter of an inadequate legal remedy first. An adequate legal

remedy does not exist when a litigant is effectively denied any means, other than

mandamus, of challenging a court’s decision to suspend proceedings in a lawsuit for an

indefinite period of time. In re Lombana, 542 S.W.3d 699, 701–02 (Tex. App.—Houston

[14th Dist.] 2017, orig. proceeding); see In re Discovery Operating, Inc., 216 S.W.3d 898,

905 (Tex. App.—Eastland 2007, orig. proceeding) (holding that relator had no legal

remedy because abatement of proceedings effectively denied it of any other manner of

challenging abatement); accord In re Benge, No. 13-18-00283-CV, 2018 Tex. App. LEXIS

4981, at *4 (Tex. App.—Corpus Christi July 3, 2018, orig. proceeding) (mem. op.) (stating

that an abatement order may be reviewed by petition for writ of mandamus when the

abatement is for an indefinite duration).3

        The order at bar stays proceedings until the “final resolution” of the federal court

suit. “Final resolution” includes “any rights of appeal.” While “final resolution” of an action

in an independent court may suggest some finite time, when that end actually arrives is

left to conjecture. It could be within a month, a year, or longer. The end of the stay being

        3  Kimbrough and the others attempt to distinguish authority like Benge by asserting that the trial
court at bar did not abate the proceedings but simply stayed them. We view that as the proverbial
“distinction without a difference.” Whether deemed abated or stayed, the effect is the same here. Amarillo
is barred from undertaking further action. That is what it complains about, and that is what Benge and the
other authority we cited were addressing. So, like the court in Lombana, we see little problem in considering
authority involving abatement to the circumstances at bar. See In re Lombana, 542 S.W.3d at 702 (wherein
the trial court stayed proceedings in one suit pending disposition of an action in a Colombian Labor Court
and appellate court nonetheless turned to authority involving abatement to address the request for a writ of
mandamus).

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unknown, the stay’s duration actually is indefinite. See In re Benge, 2018 Tex. App.

LEXIS 4981, at *6–7 (wherein the trial court ordered the “abatement of the underlying

case ‘pending the conclusion (by trial or settlement) of cause no. 11466 pending in the

Probate Court of De Wittt [sic] County, Texas’” and concluded that “[t]hough the order is

not by its technical terms indefinite, the abatement’s uncertain termination date causes

us to conclude that it was an abuse of discretion”). Thus, under the authorities mentioned

above, we conclude that Amarillo lacks means to attack the trial court’s decision other

than by seeking a writ of mandamus. In short, it has no adequate legal remedy.

       As for the matter of abused discretion, Kimbrough and the others pursued

suspension of the suits because they were purportedly instances of retaliation. They

based their argument upon Martinez v. Deaf Smith County Grain Processors, Inc., 583 F.

Supp. 1200 (N.D. Tex. 1984), and Judge Robinson’s discussion of retaliation found

therein. In Martinez, the court observed that an employer’s initiation of “a lawsuit in state

court may be a form of retaliation prohibited under § 15(a)(3) of the Fair Labor Standards

Act.” Id. at 1209. Yet, the jurist did not hold that filing such a suit “is” prohibited retaliation.

Rather, she mentioned a test used to determine when it was. Additionally, that test

contained two elements. One required evidence of a retaliatory motive while the other

demanded the absence of “a reasonable basis in fact and law” underlying the suit. Id. at

1210. Because both elements were established in Martinez, the trial court decided to

enjoin Martinez’s former employer from pursuing the state court breach of contract/fraud

suit filed against Martinez after the latter commenced his FLSA suit in federal court. Such

was within the realm of “equitable relief” allowed when an employer was found to have

committed an act of retaliation. See id. at 1210–11 (quoting 29 U.S.C. § 216(b), which

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provides that the any employer who violated the statute “shall be liable for such legal and

equitable relief as may be appropriate”).

       We do not question the validity of the federal trial court’s analysis in Martinez. Yet,

there are material differences between the circumstances there and those before the

181st District Court and us here. First, and most obvious, is the circumstance of a federal

court utilizing an injunction as a component of relief upon finding the commission of a

retaliatory act prohibited by the FLSA. Here, we have no federal court enjoining Amarillo

from pursuing the state suits. Nor do we have a finding by a federal court that Amarillo

engaged in a prohibited act of retaliation under FLSA. Instead, we have before us a

request by Kimbrough and the others to bar Amarillo from litigating claims based upon

Texas law while their FLSA suit proceeds down the federal road to possible relief. They

attempt to take the square peg of injunctive relief available upon proving a violation of the

FLSA and place it in the round hole of a stay pending the possibility of obtaining favorable

relief from a federal court.

       Second, and equally obvious, is the absence of any attempt by Kimbrough and the

other employees to address the second element of the test used to determine whether

an act was retaliatory. Their attack both below and here merely focused on the first

element, that is, retaliatory motive. No effort was made to show that Amarillo’s state court

actions lacked reasonable basis in law or fact.        So, even assuming arguendo that

equitable remedies granted a federal court to redress violations of the FLSA may be used

by a state court to indefinitely stay an action pending before it, Kimbrough and the others

failed to satisfy the elements triggering the availability of those remedies.

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       Kimbrough and the others did not urge the trial court to stay proceeding on the

grounds of comity. Nor did they invoke the doctrine of comity in response to the petition

for writ of mandamus and as a means of insulating the trial court’s decision from attack.

Therefore, we do not consider it. Nor did they request the federal court to stay the state

actions because they purportedly were an act of retaliation. Instead, the three turned to

injunctive relief available to remedy a violation of the FLSA, remodeled that relief to fit

their purpose, and offered it to the trial court as basis to issue a stay. Yet, we find

ourselves guided by that old adage about the good for the goose being the good for the

gander. In other words, one attempting to morph federal remedies to fit state court

purposes should also have to satisfy the prerequisites for obtaining those remedies.

Kimbrough and the others failed in that regard. They did not satisfy the prerequisites to

securing the relief discussed in Martinez and afforded to those found to have suffered

retaliation. So, in being induced to nonetheless grant the stay, the trial court clearly

abused its discretion.

       Amarillo established a clear abuse of discretion and an absence of adequate legal

remedy. Thus, we conditionally issue a writ of mandamus. Should the trial court fail to

vacate its July 13, 2020 order staying prosecution of cause numbers 109545-B-CV,

109546-E-CV, and 109547-E-CV on or before October 22, 2020, we will issue the

requested writ directing it to do so.

                                                       Brian Quinn
                                                       Chief Justice

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