Court Opinion

ID: 3067623
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2015-10-15 22:54:51.818512+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T11:49:52.932265
License: Public Domain

Dissenting and Opinion Filed September 22, 2014

                                         S   In The
                               Court of Appeals
                        Fifth District of Texas at Dallas
                                      No. 05-13-00068-CV

                             ROBERT D. COLEMAN, Appellant
                                         V.
                              REED W. PROSPERE, Appellee

                       On Appeal from the 68th Judicial District Court
                                   Dallas County, Texas
                             Trial Court Cause No. 11-02288

                               DISSENTING OPINION
                        Before Justices FitzGerald, Fillmore, and Evans
                           Dissenting Opinion by Justice FitzGerald

       The rules of appellate procedure require a concise statement of the issue and a clear and

concise presentation of argument in support of the issue with appropriate citations to authorities

and the record. Appellant’s brief is so deficient under the rules of appellate procedure that we

should affirm the judgment without discussion of the merits.

       According to the majority, appellee’s no-evidence motion asserting “there is no evidence

of breach of contract” does not specifically identify breach as an element of a breach-of-contract

cause of action and is therefore legally insufficient. I believe the motion does specifically

identify breach as an element of the claim and, therefore, the trial judge properly granted

appellee’s motion for summary judgment on no-evidence grounds.
                                                        BRIEFING DEFICIENCIES

           I disagree with the majority’s conclusion that appellant’s brief substantially complies

with the briefing standards set forth in Texas Rule of Appellate Procedure 38.1.1

           I will focus on the two areas in which appellant’s brief is most notably deficient. The

first is the statement of the issues presented. “The brief must state concisely all issues or points

presented for review.”2 Practically speaking, a proper issue must reveal the question of law that

we are called on to answer.3 Moreover, we may disregard any assignment of error that is

multifarious, i.e., that generally attacks a trial court’s order with numerous arguments.4 This is a

case in which we should deem appellant’s issues multifarious. Here are appellant’s issues:

           Issue 1: D’s Improper Statements. Texas law and rules require fair notice for
           challenges to claims, for affirmative defenses and for counterclaims, and they
           prohibit conclusory statements, ipse dixit assertions, generality (insufficient
           specificity), vagueness and loaded contentions. [Appellee’s] summary-judgment
           motion consists of conclusory, ipse dixit, general, vague, loaded statements and
           fails to provide fair, adequate notice and sufficiently specific grounds. Did the
           trial court fail to observe Texas law and rules requiring nonconclusory, specific
           claims challenges, defenses and counterclaims?

           Issue 2: D’s Frivolous Perjurious MSJ. TDRPC Rule 3.01 Comments 2-4, Rule
           8.04(a)(2),(12),(b) and the Texas Penal Code prohibit frivolous, perjurious
           motions in all judicial systems. [Appellee’s] Motion for Summary Judgment
           contained six frivolous, perjurious statements in the Introduction, Undisputed
           Facts, Exhibit “A,” Exhibit “B” and Certificate of Service. Did [appellee’s]
           summary-judgment motion violate TDRPC Rule 3.01, Rule 8.04(a)(2),(12),(b)
           and or the Texas Penal Code?

           Issue 3: D’s Intentional Sham Affidavit. Texas common law and doctrine
           indicates that a sham summary-judgment motion or sham affidavit raise a fact
           issue for a trier of facts to resolve. [Appellee’s] MSJ and affidavit in Exhibit “B”
           are shams as defined by all of the considerations known to be used in sham
           affidavit analyses and were intentionally fraudulent. Did [appellee’s] sham MSJ

   1
       See TEX. R. APP. P. 38.9 (“[S]ubstantial compliance with this rule is sufficient . . . .”).
   2
       TEX. R. APP. P. 38.1(f).
   3
       See Bolling v. Farmers Branch Indep. Sch. Dist., 315 S.W.3d 893, 896 (Tex. App.—Dallas 2010, no pet.).
   4
       Rich v. Olah, 274 S.W.3d 878, 885 (Tex. App.—Dallas 2008, no pet.).

                                                                          –2–
and sham affidavit raise a genuine issue of material fact, according to Texas
common law and doctrine?

Issue 4: D’s Expert Witness Affidavit. Texas common law indicates that the
affidavit of a witness who is not properly designated may not be used as evidence
in a summary judgment context. [Appellee’s] summary-judgment motion expert-
witness affidavit by Robert Hinton was ipse dixit, conclusory and violated the
trial court ruling that [appellee] would not be allowed any substitution of his
properly designated 23 witnesses that excluded Mr. Hinton. Did the trial court
misapply Texas law and ignore the court’s prior ruling?

Issue 5: D’s Ambiguous Contract. Texas common law allows parol evidence to
interpret ambiguous written contracts. [Appellee’s] summary-judgment motion
Exhibit “A” attorney employment contract with [appellant] dated November 7,
2007, provides evidence of essential elements in [appellant’s] claims, and the
contract is ambiguous. Did the trial court ignore the contract ambiguity and
misapply Texas common law?

Issue 6: D’s MSJ Burdens. TRCP and Texas common law require [appellee] to
satisfy his burdens on his challenges to claims, affirmative defense or rebuttal,
and counterclaim. [Appellee’s] summary-judgment motion did not disprove any
element in [appellant’s] claims, did not prove every element of his affirmative
defense/rebuttal, did not prove his contract was legal, and did not prove every
element of his counterclaim. Did [appellee] fail to satisfy his burdens and violate
TRCP and Texas common law?

Issue 7: D’s Affirmative Defense/Rebuttal. The U.S Constitution Sixth
Amendment and federal common law protect [appellant’s] right to counsel, and
the TRCPs require [appellee] to conclusively prove his affirmative defense or
rebuttal. [Appellee] refused to use the successful money-motive (extortion)
defense strategy for [appellant’s] retrial and deprived him of effective assistance
of counsel, and [appellee’s] suborning-perjury defense/rebuttal alleged merely
conclusory generality. Did [appellee] violate [appellant’s] right to counsel, and
did [appellee] fail to prove his defense/rebuttal as required?

Issue 8: D’s Contract Fee and Deposit. Texas Ethics Opinions, ethics rules and
common law require a refundable attorney fee to be deposited in a trust account.
[Appellee’s] contract with [appellant] stated his fee would not be placed or held in
a trust account, and [appellee] provided no evidence that the refundable fee was
deposited in a trust account. Did [appellee] deposit and hold [appellant’s]
refundable fee payment in a trust account as required by Texas ethics opinions,
rules and law?

Issue 9: D’s Counterclaim. TRCP rules and Texas common law require
[appellee] to conclusively prove each element of his counterclaim of quantum
meruit. [Appellee’s] conclusory summary-judgment motion failed to prove every
element of quantum meruit as a matter of law, and [appellant’s] affirmative
defenses of illegal contract, unclean hands and offset, negated [appellee’s]

                                        –3–
             counterclaim. Did [appellee] prove his counterclaim and disprove [appellant’s]
             affirmative defenses as required by Texas rules and law?

             These issues are not concise. They are barely comprehensible. Most importantly, they

do not suffice to raise the issue that actually serves as a basis for the majority’s decision—

appellee’s purported failure to identify the specific elements of appellant’s claims that lack

evidence, as required by Texas Rule of Civil Procedure 166a(i) and caselaw such as Timpte

Industries, Inc. v. Gish.5

             Appellant’s argument—the heart of every appellate brief—is even worse than his

statement of the issues. “The brief must contain a clear and concise argument for the contentions

made, with appropriate citations to authorities and to the record.”6 “If we must speculate or

guess about what contentions are being made, then the brief fails.”7 The majority acknowledges

some of the ways in which appellant’s brief fails to satisfy Rule 38.1(i): the brief is indeed

“[r]ambling in argument and jumbl[es] citations, case summaries, and discussion in a chaotic

way.” But this description does not do full justice to the incoherence of appellant’s argument,

which sprawls over about forty-four-and-one-half pages of his brief.8 I will describe only the

argument presented in alleged support of appellant’s first issue. First, appellant spends over a

page on a bare list of citations to twenty authorities (even though they already appear in the

Index of Authorities at the front of the brief). Then appellant quotes two sentences from his

motion for new trial before presenting more than a page of single-spaced quotations from

random cases without applying them to the facts of this case. The four remaining pages of

argument under Issue 1 present a random miscellany of legal and factual assertions with only a

     5
         286 S.W.3d 306 (Tex. 2009).
     6
         TEX. R. APP. P. 38.1(i).
     7
         Bolling, 315 S.W.3d at 896.
     8
        Another court once aptly observed that “long briefs have a tendency to confuse rather than clarify the points to be passed on by the
courts.” Lang v. Harwood, 145 S.W.2d 945, 947 (Tex. Civ. App.—Waco 1940, no writ).

                                                                   –4–
light sprinkling of citations to the record. Nothing in these four pages resembles a logical

argument based on propositions of law, record-based assertions of fact, and reasoned application

of the law to the facts. Much of the argument consists of general complaints about supposedly

improper statements in appellee’s motion for summary judgment, but these complaints are not

supported by record references or appropriate citations to authority.9

            The majority justifies its decision to address the merits of the appeal despite appellant’s

deficient brief by referencing the Texas Supreme Court’s instruction in Republic Underwriters

Insurance Co. v. Mex-Tex, Inc. to “construe the Rules of Appellate Procedure reasonably, yet

liberally, so that the right to appeal is not lost by imposing requirements not absolutely necessary

to effect the purpose of a rule.”10                        The majority then quotes two isolated sentences from

appellant’s brief that, it concludes, fairly raise the issue of the sufficiency of appellee’s motion

for summary judgment.11 But the first requirement of the Republic Underwriters dictum is to

construe the rules reasonably, and, as shown above, appellant’s brief is completely deficient

under any reasonable interpretation of Rule 38.1.

            “[B]riefs are meant to acquaint the court with the issues in a case and to present argument

that will enable the court to decide the case . . . .”12 Because appellant’s brief accomplishes

neither of those purposes, we should not address the merits of the case. We should hold that

appellant waived all issues on appeal and affirm the judgment.

     9
      Appellant cites frequently to a separate twenty-seven page document attached to his brief as an appendix and called “[Appellee] MSJ
Improper Statements Analysis.” This document amounts to additional briefing in excess of size limitations, and the majority properly ignores it.
     10
          Republic Underwriters Ins. Co. v. Mex-Tex, Inc., 150 S.W.3d 423, 427 (Tex. 2004) (internal quotation and footnote omitted).
     11
        The majority says, “Appellant argues ‘[Appellee’s] MSJ was a conclusory motion and a general no-evidence challenge to [appellant’s]
case. Timpte at 310: “The motion must state the elements as to which there is no evidence.”’”
     12
          TEX. R. APP. P. 38.9.

                                                                      –5–
                                              NO-EVIDENCE SUMMARY JUDGMENT

             I also disagree with the majority’s holding on the merits of appellee’s no-evidence

motion for summary judgment.13

A.           The requirements of Rule 166a(i)

             Under Rule 166a(i), appellee was required to “state the elements as to which there is no

evidence.”14 The purpose of the rule is to give the nonmovant fair notice of the issues the

nonmovant must address in order to survive summary judgment.15 The rule does not require the

movant to list all the elements of the cause of action—only the elements that the movant is

challenging on no-evidence grounds.16 For example, we have held that a no-evidence motion

was sufficient to challenge proximate cause when it stated simply, “Nor is there any evidence

[movant’s] construction of the foundation proximately caused [P]laintiff’s injuries.”17                                                   The

nonmovant then bears the burden of presenting enough evidence to raise a genuine issue of

material fact as to each challenged element of the claim. If the nonmovant fails to produce

enough evidence to raise a genuine issue of material fact on each challenged element, the trial

judge must grant the no-evidence motion for summary judgment.18

B.           Analysis of appellee’s no-evidence motion

             The majority does not quote appellee’s no-evidence motion for summary judgment or

place it in proper context. The majority addresses the motion as follows:

     13
         By way of background, appellee asserted in his motion for summary judgment that appellant had twice been convicted of felony sex
offenses involving child victims before retaining appellee to defend him against a new sex offense involving a child victim. In his summary-
judgment motion, appellee averred, “[Appellant] changed significant details regarding the allegations after retaining [appellee] as counsel and
while being interviewed for the purposes of a polygraph exam. [Appellant’s] acknowledging certain conduct on his part excluded the ability to
use certain defenses. [Appellee] could not legally pursue defenses desired by [appellant] in this case because of the admissions of appellant.”
According to appellee, appellant refused to cooperate in his defense and the parties’ relationship so deteriorated that appellee had to withdraw
from the representation.
     14
          TEX. R. CIV. P. 166a(i).
     15
          Timpte Indus., 286 S.W.3d at 311.
     16
          Driskill v. Ford Motor Co., 269 S.W.3d 199, 203 (Tex. App.—Texarkana 2008, no pet.).
     17
          Yost v. Jered Custom Homes, 399 S.W.3d 653, 660 (Tex. App.—Dallas 2013, no pet.).
     18
          See Gold’s Gym Franchising LLC v. Brewer, 400 S.W.3d 156, 160 (Tex. App.—Dallas 2013, no pet.).

                                                                     –6–
               Appellee’s summary judgment motion generally asserts that appellant’s claims
       for breach of contract, deceptive trade practices, and intentional infliction of emotional
       distress are not supported by any “credible evidence.” Appellee’s motion restates the
       name of each cause of action but fails to challenge or even mention a single element of
       any of these claims as to which there is no evidence. Accordingly, appellee’s no-
       evidence grounds for summary judgment are legally insufficient to support the trial
       court’s summary judgment. See Timpte Indus., Inc., 286 S.W.3d at 310.

(Emphases added).

       In the interest of accuracy, I quote the language from the appellee’s motion. Appellee’s

motion for summary judgment contains the heading “ARGUMENT AND AUTHORITIES,”

under which appears the following paragraph:

       7. There is no evidence of Breach of Contract -[Appellant’s] cause of action
       for Breach of Contract against [appellee] is not supported by any credible
       evidence. [Appellee] did not engage in Breach of Contract and any failing of the
       contract was the result of conduct on the part of [appellant] as evidenced by the
       Affidavit of [appellee] attached hereto as Exhibit “B” and incorporated for
       reference herein.

For clarity, I divide the paragraph into separate sentences:

       1.      There is no evidence of Breach of Contract.

       2.      [Appellant’s] cause of action for Breach of Contract against [appellee] is
               not supported by any credible evidence.

       3.      [Appellee] did not engage in Breach of Contract and any failing of the
               contract was the result of conduct on the part of [appellant] as evidenced
               by the Affidavit of [appellee] attached hereto as Exhibit “B” and
               incorporated for reference herein.

       Let me be clear. If the paragraph under review in the no-evidence motion asserted only

that appellant’s cause of action for breach of contract against appellee is not supported by any

credible evidence, I would conclude it is insufficient. The fundamental flaw in the majority’s

holding is that it addresses only the second sentence above while ignoring the balance of the

paragraph. We are obligated to consider the entire paragraph.

                                                –7–
           In our analysis we begin with the elements of a cause of action for breach of contract,

which are: (1) a contract existed between the parties; (2) the contract created duties; (3) the

defendant breached the contract; and (4) the plaintiff sustained damages.19

           The first sentence of the relevant quoted paragraph specifies which element was under

attack—the element of breach of contract. Why? Because a party may properly challenge the

element of breach in a breach-of-contract case by filing a no-evidence motion asserting there is

no evidence of breach of contract. Appellee’s motion makes this assertion. If the majority is

requiring the motion to assert there is no evidence of breach as opposed to breach of contract, a

complete analysis with supporting authority should accompany such a holding. I believe the

record speaks for itself. The plain language of the first sentence not only shows the majority

inaccurately characterizes the motion,20 but also clearly refutes the majority’s holding.21

           The second sentence refers to appellant’s cause of action for breach of contract and the

lack of any credible evidence to support it.                            If this sentence were the sum total of appellee’s

motion, a dissent on the merits would not be necessary. This sentence, however, poses a

formidable problem for the majority for a different reason: it clearly demonstrates appellee’s

awareness of the difference between a cause of action and an element of that cause of action.

           If “Breach of Contract” in the first sentence really means “cause of action for Breach of

Contract,” why does appellee use the phrase “cause of action for Breach of Contract” in the

second sentence? That is both inconsistent and redundant. If “Breach of Contract” in the first

     19
        Nat’l Health Res. Corp. v. TBF Fin., LLC, 429 S.W.3d 125, 131 (Tex. App.—Dallas 2014, no pet.); Cadle Co. v. Castle, 913 S.W.2d
627, 631 (Tex. App.—Dallas 1994, writ denied) (en banc).
     20
         The breach element and the name of the cause of action, that is, breach of contract, are identical. But that should pose no problem
because as the reader can readily see, when appellee intends to refer to the breach of contract as a cause of action, appellee does so, as in the
second sentence, but not in the first sentence. In addition, given the identity of names—breach of contract—surely the majority would not deem
it reasonable to arbitrarily conclude the motion, particularly the first sentence, referred only to the cause of action, not the element of breach,
particularly without attributing a reason therefor.
     21
        Further, nowhere in this first sentence does the motion assert the breach of contract is not supported by any credible evidence; to the
contrary, the first sentence states there is no evidence of breach of contract. The majority does not even suggest how it interprets this language to
mean the motion “restates the name of the cause of action.”

                                                                       –8–
sentence really means “cause of action for Breach of Contract,” would not appellee have said

“Breach of Contract” in the second sentence just as he does in the first sentence? But appellee

asserts breach of contract in the first sentence to mean the element of the cause of action, and

appellee asserts cause of action for breach of contract in the second sentence to mean the cause

of action for breach of contract. Thus, while the second sentence may be legally insufficient by

itself to identify an element, it is instructive in differentiating between element and cause of

action.

          The third sentence also identifies the element of breach. The third sentence reads:

“[Appellee] did not engage in Breach of Contract and any failing of the contract was the result of

conduct on the part of [appellant] as evidenced by the Affidavit of [appellee] attached hereto as

Exhibit ‘B’ and incorporated for reference herein.”

          This sentence identifies a specific element, breach, by focusing on the conduct of

appellee and appellant.             Nowhere in this sentence does the motion refer to a cause of action.

The third sentence stresses appellee did not engage in breach of contract but appellant did. The

sentence turns on the words “engage” and “conduct.” In other words, the sentence first asserts

appellee did not engage in any conduct breaching the contract. It then asserts it was appellant’s

conduct that caused “any failing of the contract,” emphasizing that appellant, not appellee,

breached the contract and that appellant was the sole cause of the breach. The third sentence also

demonstrates the motion distinguished between a cause of action for breach of contract and the

specific element of breach of contract.

          Appellee’s motion is comparable to the one in In re D.W.G.22 The appellee in that case

filed a no-evidence motion for summary judgment challenging the appellant’s affirmative

defense of res judicata, and the appellee’s motion simply stated “‘there is not a “prior final

   22
        391 S.W.3d 154 (Tex. App.—San Antonio 2012, no pet.).

                                                                –9–
judgment on the merits by a court of competent jurisdiction” because prior to January 1, 1974,

this remedy did not exist.’”23 The court of appeals held that this was sufficient to attack one, if

not two, elements of the res judicata defense.24 In this case, by the same token, appellee’s

assertions “There is no evidence of Breach of Contract” and “[Appellee] did not engage in

Breach of Contract” were sufficient to challenge the breach element of appellant’s breach-of-

contract claim. This case is not one in which the movant completely failed to specify any

element that was lacking in evidentiary support.25 Appellee did specify the element he was

challenging. If appellant found appellee’s motion unclear or ambiguous as to which element he

was challenging, appellant had to object in order to preserve error.26 He did not and thus may not

be heard to complain on appeal.

                For these reasons, I disagree with the majority’s conclusion that appellee failed to present

a sufficient no-evidence challenge to appellant’s breach-of-contract claim. Because appellant

adduced no evidence that appellee breached the contract, the take-nothing judgment should be

affirmed as to appellant’s breach-of-contract claim.27

     23
          Id. at 166.
     24
          Id.
     25
        See Jose Fuentes Co., Inc. v. Alfaro, 418 S.W.3d 280, 287–88 (Tex. App.—Dallas 2013, pet. filed) (en banc) (concluding nonmovant was
not required to object in trial court in order to argue on appeal that no-evidence motion failed to specify the element or elements being
challenged).
     26
          Crocker v. Paulyne’s Nursing Home, Inc., 95 S.W.3d 416, 420 (Tex. App.—Dallas 2002, no pet.).
     27
          The same analysis applies to appellant’s other two claims as well. In his motion, appellee challenged appellant’s DTPA claim as follows:
                There is no evidence of Deceptive Trade Practices – [Appellant’s] cause of action for [appellee] allegedly violating the
                Texas Deceptive Trade Practices Act is not supported by any credible evidence.
The elements of a DTPA claim are (1) the plaintiff was a consumer of the defendant’s goods or services, (2) the defendant engaged in a deceptive
trade practice listed in the statute, (3) producing cause, and (4) actual damages. By the bold-faced language in his motion, appellee adequately
challenged the evidence in support of the second element of the claim. Because appellant adduced no evidence that appellee violated the DTPA,
the take-nothing judgment should be affirmed as to appellant’s DTPA claim.
     Appellee challenged appellant’s claim for intentional infliction of emotional distress as follows:
                There is no evidence of Intentional Infliction of Emotional Distress – [Appellant’s] cause of action for Intentional
                Infliction of Emotional Distress is not supported by any credible evidence.
The elements of the claim are (1) the defendant acted intentionally or recklessly, (2) the defendant committed extreme and outrageous conduct,
(3) the conduct caused the plaintiff to suffer emotional distress, and (4) the emotional distress was severe. By the bold-faced language in his
motion, appellee adequately challenged the first three elements of appellant’s claim. Because appellant adduced no evidence in support of those
elements, the take-nothing judgment should be affirmed as to appellant’s claim for intentional infliction of emotional distress.

                                                                        –10–
                                                            CONCLUSION

            This case sets a bad precedent. This Court should apply basic appellate rules that are

applied in every other case. If a party fails to adequately state the issue or present argument in

the appellant’s brief as required by the rules, we should hold the party waives the issue and

affirm the judgment. And let us remember, this is not a pro se case; appellant was represented by

a lawyer who filed the appellant’s brief.

            On the merits, I also conclude that appellee’s no-evidence motion is legally sufficient

because it identifies the specific element of breach of contract.28 To the extent the motion is

ambiguous, the majority should not address the sufficiency of appellee’s no-evidence motion for

summary judgment because appellant did not object to appellee’s motion for summary judgment

in the trial court as he was required to do in order to preserve the point for appeal.29

            I would affirm the trial court’s judgment. Because the majority does not, I dissent.

            130068DF.P05
                                                                          /Kerry P. FitzGerald/
                                                                          KERRY P. FITZGERALD
                                                                          JUSTICE

     28
         To the extent Jose Fuentes Co., Inc. v. Alfaro, 418 S.W.3d 280 (Tex. App.—Dallas 2013, pet. filed) (en banc), applies, the majority’s
resolution is an improper application of or an unjustified extension of this opinion.
     29
          See Crocker, 95 S.W.3d at 420.

                                                                   –11–