Court Opinion

ID: 3071629
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2015-10-16 00:38:21.759134+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T11:41:44.809580
License: Public Domain

COURT OF APPEALS
                        SECOND DISTRICT OF TEXAS
                             FORT WORTH

                            NO. 02-14-00395-CV

RICHARD F. WALSH, MEDICA-                                    APPELLANTS
RENTS CO., LTD., AND MED-RCO,
INC.

                                     V.

WOUNDKAIR CONCEPTS, INC.,                                     APPELLEES
DAN ANDERSON, AND KIM
ANDERSON

                                  ----------

         FROM THE 17TH DISTRICT COURT OF TARRANT COUNTY
                   TRIAL COURT NO. 017-217058-06

                                  ----------

                    MEMORANDUM OPINION1 ON
                    RECONSIDERATION EN BANC
                                  ----------

     Appellants Richard F. Walsh, Medica-Rents Co., Ltd., and MED-RCO, Inc.

filed a motion for reconsideration en banc of our opinion that issued on

February 5, 2015.   We deny the motion, withdraw our opinion and judgment

     1
      See Tex. R. App. P. 47.4.
dated February 5, 2015, and substitute the following to address several

arguments that Appellants raised in the motion.

      On December 18, 2014, we notified Appellants of our concern that we lack

jurisdiction over this appeal because the notice of appeal was due November 26,

2014, but was not filed until December 18, 2014. See Tex. R. App. P. 25.1(b),

26.1(a). Appellants admitted in their response that they had miscalculated the

due date for the notice of appeal,2 but they argued that we have jurisdiction over

this appeal because, as demonstrated by a number of actions that they had

taken and communications that they had made after the trial court signed the

final judgment, they had clearly expressed an intent to appeal.3 In light of a letter

that Appellants filed with the trial court on December 5, 2014, a date that was

within rule 26.3’s fifteen-day extension window, they moved that we extend the

time to file their notice of appeal and that their December 18, 2014 notice serve

to amend the December 5, 2014 letter. See Tex. R. App. P. 26.3; Verburgt v.

Dorner, 959 S.W.2d 615, 617 (Tex. 1997). Appellees Woundkair Concepts, Inc.,

Dan Anderson, and Kim Anderson replied that this appeal should be dismissed

      2
       Appellants acknowledged that “counsel mistakenly believed that the
formal notice of appeal was due 15 days after the trial court lost its plenary power
on December 11, 2014 and had prepared to file the formal notice by December
26, 2014.”
      3
       According to Appellants, “[Appellees] and the trial court knew long before
the formal notice of appeal was due that [Appellants] intended to appeal.”

                                         2
because Appellants did not timely file any document in a bona fide attempt to

invoke this court’s jurisdiction. We agree with Appellees.

      Consistent with the policy of applying rules of procedure liberally to reach

the merits of the appeal whenever possible, a court of appeals has jurisdiction

over an appeal if the appellant timely files an instrument in a bona fide attempt to

invoke the appellate court’s jurisdiction. Warwick Towers Council of Co-Owners

v. Park Warwick, L.P., 244 S.W.3d 838, 839 (Tex. 2008); see In re J.M., 396
S.W.3d 528, 530‒31 (Tex. 2013).

      Appellants argue that they timely perfected this appeal by requesting a

copy of the reporter’s record. The notice is directed to counsel for Appellants

and states, among other things, that “you are hereby notified that request has

been made for a transcript.” If anything, the notice evidenced Appellants’ desire

to obtain the reporter’s record; nothing therein evidenced a bona fide attempt to

invoke our appellate jurisdiction. See Tex. Animal Health Comm’n v. Nunley, 598
S.W.2d 233, 234 (Tex. 1980); see also Park Warwick, L.P., 244 S.W.3d at 839.

      Appellants argue that they timely perfected this appeal by filing a motion

for judgment notwithstanding the verdict, a motion for new trial, and a

supplement to those motions “in order to preserve error and identify the issues

[that they] intended to raise on appeal.” However, preserving error does not

simultaneously perfect an appeal, and unlike in J.M., in which the appellant filed

a “Motion for New Trial or, in the Alternative, Notice of Appeal,” which in part

indicated an attempt to invoke the appellate court’s jurisdiction, nothing in the

                                         3
postjudgment motions filed by Appellants represented a bona fide attempt to

invoke our jurisdiction. See J.M., 396 S.W.3d at 529‒30. This case instead falls

under the rule elaborated in In re K.A.F., in which the supreme court concluded

that “filing a motion for new trial may not be considered a bona fide attempt to

invoke the appellate court’s jurisdiction.” 160 S.W.3d 923, 924 (Tex. 2005).

      Appellants further argue that they timely perfected this appeal by filing a

certificate of written discovery and by serving responses to postjudgment

discovery requests that, among other things, indicated both a willingness and the

ability to post a supersedeas bond “if the [trial court] denies” their postjudgment

motions. Appellants rely on Gregorian v. Ewell, a case in which we held that the

appellants had invoked the jurisdiction of this court by filing a cash deposit in lieu

of a supersedeas bond within the period required for perfecting their appeal. 106
S.W.3d 257, 260 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth 2003, no pet.). However, unlike in

Gregorian, Appellants did not somehow suspend the judgment during the time for

filing the notice of appeal, and we decline to over-extend Gregorian’s limited

holding to everyday situations, such as this one, in which one party merely

notifies another party of its willingness to supersede a judgment if the trial court

denies its postjudgment motions.        Appellants direct us to nothing in their

discovery-related documents that constitutes a bona fide attempt to invoke our

appellate jurisdiction. See Park Warwick, L.P., 244 S.W.3d at 839.

      Appellants argue in their motion for reconsideration en banc that we

improperly seize on an immaterial distinction between this case and Gregorian by

                                          4
observing that Appellants did not suspend the judgment. They also contend that

the critical factor in Gregorian was not that the judgment had been superseded,

“but rather that the wording in a later-filed document (an agreed order) confirming

the sufficiency of the cash deposit ‘expressly referr[ed] to Appellants’ intent to

appeal.” Appellants are incorrect on both counts. The filing of a cash deposit in

lieu of a bond was the critical fact underlying Gregorian’s holding that the

appellants had perfected an appeal. 106 S.W.3d at 259‒60.       Indeed, in

tremendously clear language, the introductory paragraph stated:

      In this case, we must determine whether the filing by Appellants of
      their cash deposit in lieu of a supersedeas bond within the period for
      perfecting appeal constituted a bona fide attempt to appeal invoking
      this court’s jurisdiction. This specific question has not been
      addressed by the Texas courts. We hold that Appellants made a
      bona fide attempt to appeal by filing a cash deposit in lieu of
      supersedeas bond during the relevant time period and thus invoked
      appellate court jurisdiction.

Id. at 258. Moreover, suspension of the judgment is not an immaterial distinction;

significantly, the filing of a cash deposit in Gregorian represented an action that

the appellants in that case would not have taken had they not sought to invoke

the appellate court’s jurisdiction.4 Here, Appellants filed and served discovery-

related documents as part of the postjudgment discovery process.

      4
       The same can be said for the documents that were considered in the
opinions that Gregorian cited. See In re M.A.H., 104 S.W.3d 568, 570 (Tex.
App.—Waco 2002, no pet.) (affidavit of indigence); Foster v. Williams, 74 S.W.3d
200, 202‒03 (Tex. App.—Texarkana 2002, pet. denied) (docketing statement).

                                        5
      Appellants argue that they timely perfected this appeal because of

statements that were made at a hearing in the trial court on November 25, 2014,

and that “repeatedly referred to the appeal that [Appellants] would seek if the trial

court denied” their postjudgment motions. But an oral statement is not a filed

document, see Sweed v. Nye, 323 S.W.3d 873, 875 (Tex. 2010) (“[T]his Court

has consistently held that a timely filed document, even if defective, invokes the

court of appeals’ jurisdiction.” (emphasis added)), and Appellants’ conditional

statements that indicated the potential for an appeal in the future were insufficient

to invoke this court’s appellate jurisdiction. See, e.g., Southerland v. Wright, No.

07-06-00147-CV, 2006 WL 1680858, at *1‒2 (Tex. App.—Amarillo June 15,

2006, pet. denied); Yancy v. Wolfe, 523 S.W.2d 516, 517‒18 (Tex. App.—Fort

Worth 1975, writ ref’d n.r.e.).

      Appellants additionally argue that they perfected this appeal by sending a

letter to the trial court that, among other things, “address[ed] some procedural

and appellate questions that the Court posed after the hearing [on Appellants’

postjudgment motions] had concluded.” After (1) correcting several instances in

which Appellees had purportedly misconstrued the record and (2) addressing

Appellees’ “new arguments” about lost profits, Appellants (3) explained in the

letter that “[t]he Court now has three options”:

             1.     The Court can enter an order denying the Motion;

             2.     The Court can do nothing. After December 11, 2014,
                    the Court’s plenary power will expire, and the judgment
                    previously entered will become final and appealable; or

                                          6
             3.    The Court can grant the motion for JNOV.

             If the Court chooses options 1 or 2 above, then Defendants
      will be forced to appeal and incur unnecessary expenses. In the
      event the Court of Appeals holds that the Court erred in denying the
      Motion, the case will likely be remanded for a new trial. [Emphasis
      added.]

Construed in its entirety, the December 5, 2014 letter is nothing more than a

further attempt to convince the trial court to grant Appellants’ postjudgment

motions. This includes Appellants’ unambiguous, conditional statement that they

“will be forced to appeal” if their motion is not granted. By advising the trial court

of the specific action that they would take if the trial court did not grant their

postjudgment motion, Appellants did not concurrently make any bona fide

attempt to invoke this court’s appellate jurisdiction. See Southerland, 2006 WL
1680858, at *2 (“[Appellant] used the January 19th letter to threaten appeal as a

means of securing relief from the trial court. The document was a trial tactic

made to avoid appeal, not a bona fide attempt to invoke our jurisdiction.”).

      Appellants argue on reconsideration that we should not rely on

Southerland because the opinion is grounded on indistinguishable reasoning that

the supreme court rejected in J.M. Appellants specifically target the portions of

those two opinions that describe the statements contained in the documents at

issue in those cases as conditional in nature.          Appellants overlook a key

difference between Southerland and J.M. The most relevant passage contained

in the letter at issue in Southerland, which was addressed to the trial court, stated

                                          7
that “[i]f you don’t grant the Motion for New Trial or sign the remittitur order then

my client will appeal and I estimate that will cost him over $10,000 because, as I

mentioned I don’t do appeals.” Id. at *1. The court of appeals concluded that the

letter “was a trial tactic made to avoid appeal, not a bona fide attempt to invoke”

the appellate court’s jurisdiction. Id. (emphasis in original). By contrast, the

“Motion for New Trial or, in the Alternative, Notice of Appeal” that the petitioner

filed in J.M. “indicated that [she] was attempting to invoke the appellate court’s

jurisdiction” for the reasons that we discuss below. 396 S.W.3d at 530. Thus, in

Southerland, the appellant sought to avoid an appeal, but in J.M., the petitioner

sought to perfect an appeal. This is what distinguishes Southerland from J.M.,

and it is why we properly cite Southerland—like the appellant in that case,

Appellants in this case sought to avoid an appeal and, for that reason,

conditioned their statements about an appeal on a negative outcome in the trial

court.

         Arguing that they perfected this appeal, Appellants direct us to an unfiled

letter that Appellees drafted and is dated December 15, 2014, and to

discussions—or “active negotiations”—between the parties that occurred that

same week, both of which regarded suspension or enforcement of the judgment.

However, among other problems, the letter and negotiations occurred after the

window for a rule-26.3 extension had already closed (December 11, 2014), and

neither the letter nor the negotiations between the parties constituted a bona fide

                                          8
attempt to invoke this court’s appellate jurisdiction. See Park Warwick, L.P., 244
S.W.3d at 839.

      Appellants rely heavily on J.M., but it is readily distinguishable. There, the

“Motion for New Trial or, in the Alternative, Notice of Appeal” that the petitioner

filed in the trial court constituted a bona fide attempt to invoke the appellate

court’s jurisdiction because (1) it stated that the appellant “wishes to appeal this

case to” the court of appeals, (2) it was partly entitled a notice of appeal, and

(3) the notice of appeal portion specifically addressed the appellate court. J.M.,
396 S.W.3d at 530. Here, Appellants’ December 5, 2014 letter (1) contains no

language, however worded, demonstrating, in any way, that Appellants “wish[] to

appeal this case to” the court of appeals, (2) it is not partly entitled a notice of

appeal, and (3) there is no portion that addresses this court.

      On reconsideration, Appellants take issue with the three distinctions that

we draw between J.M. and this case. Regarding the first, Appellants argue that

there is no meaningful distinction between the language contained in their

December 5, 2014 letter that they “will be forced to appeal” if their postjudgment

motions are denied and the language contained in the document in J.M. stating

that the appellant “wishes to appeal.” The distinction has considerable meaning.

As explained, in J.M., the petitioner sought to perfect an appeal; in this case,

Appellants sought to avoid an appeal, explaining that a costly appeal, and

potential reversal and remand, would follow if the motions were denied.

                                         9
      Regarding the second distinction, Appellants argue that including “notice of

appeal” in the title of the document is not required. We certainly agree, but we

draw the distinction only because as part of its holding that the petitioner had

invoked the jurisdiction of the court of appeals, the supreme court in J.M. relied

on the fact that the document at issue there was partly entitled a notice of appeal.

See id. (“The document stated that Spencer ‘wishes to appeal this case to’ the

court of appeals; further, it was partly entitled a notice of appeal.”) (emphasis

added).

      Regarding the third distinction, Appellants argue that their December 5,

2014 letter does indeed address our court because it states that “[i]n the event

the Court of Appeals holds that the Court erred in denying the Motion, the case

will likely be remanded for a new trial.” The statement mentions our court; it does

not address it.

      Further comparing this case to J.M., Appellants argue that like the

petitioner in that case, who advanced her notice of appeal “in the alternative” to

her motion for new trial, Appellants “gave, in substance, an identical statement of

intent: it would appeal if the trial court denied its postjudgment motions.” The

petitioner in J.M. may have advanced her notice of appeal in the alternative to

her motion for new trial, but she did not state in her filing that she would appeal if

the trial court denied her motion for new trial; she flat out communicated that she

appeals—an unambiguous attempt to invoke the appellate court’s jurisdiction.

Appellants did no such thing.

                                         10
      Finally, Appellants place a considerable amount of emphasis on the

language in J.M. stating that the petitioner in that case “expressed an intent to

appeal to the court of appeals.” Id. at 531. They contend that they perfected this

appeal because they too “expressed an intent to appeal.” Appellants did not

express an intent to appeal like the petitioner in J.M. expressed an intent to

appeal.   Appellants’ expressions demonstrated only that they possessed an

intent to appeal if their postjudgment motions were denied; the petitioner’s

expressions in J.M. actually manifested her intent to appeal through the timely

filing of a document in a bona fide attempt to invoke the appellate court’s

jurisdiction. The latter expression perfected an appeal; the former did not.5 To

the extent that Appellants urge us to apply a standard other than the clearly

defined, workable, and well-established bona-fide-attempt-to-invoke standard

that we are bound by, we decline to do so.

      Because Appellants failed to timely file any instrument in a bona fide

attempt to invoke this court’s appellate jurisdiction, including the December 5,

      5
        In our original memorandum opinion, we stated in this footnote that “a
party can possess an intent to appeal all day and night long, but until it actually
manifests that intent by timely filing a document in a bona fide attempt to invoke
an appellate court’s jurisdiction, it is meaningless. See Tex. R. App. P. 25.1(a)
(stating that “[a]n appeal is perfected when a written notice of appeal is filed with
the trial court clerk,” not when a party merely possesses an intent to appeal).”
Contrary to Appellants’ argument on reconsideration en banc, we did not, by this
statement, “adopt[] an unduly restrictive standard for invoking appellate court
jurisdiction.”    Our intent was to clarify what Appellants now expressly
acknowledge on reconsideration, that “subjectively possessing a never-
expressed intent to appeal is insufficient to invoke appellate jurisdiction.”

                                         11
2014 letter upon which they rely for purposes of obtaining an extension to file the

notice of appeal, we have no choice but to deny Appellants’ motion for extension

of time and to dismiss this appeal for want of jurisdiction. See Tex. R. App. P.

43.2(f).

                                                   /s/ Bill Meier

                                                   BILL MEIER
                                                   JUSTICE

PANEL: MEIER, GABRIEL, AND SUDDERTH, JJ.

DELIVERED: April 2, 2015

                                        12