Court Opinion

ID: 9889688
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-10-11 06:09:27.387353+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T12:48:08.438290
License: Public Domain

Concurring Opinion Filed September 26, 2023

                                       In The
                            Court of Appeals
                     Fifth District of Texas at Dallas
                               No. 05-22-01374-CV

                QUALITY CLEANING PLUS, INC., Appellant
                               V.
                   PREFERRED STAFF, LLC, Appellee

               On Appeal from the 134th Judicial District Court
                            Dallas County, Texas
                    Trial Court Cause No. DC-22-08606

                         CONCURRING OPINION
                   Before Justices Carlyle, Smith, and Kennedy
                      Concurring Opinion by Justice Smith

      I agree with the majority’s analysis and disposition of this case; however, I

write separately to address my concerns regarding appellant Quality Cleaning Plus,

Inc.’s use of this interlocutory appeal to further delay the proceeding pending below.

      Over the last two decades, there has been a dramatic increase in interlocutory

appeals as is reflected in the growing list of orders from which a party can pursue

such an appeal. See TEX. CIV. PRAC. & REM. CODE § 51.014(a). An interlocutory

appeal generally stays the commencement of a trial. Id. § 51.014(b). Because of the

mandatory discovery stay provided by statute for motions to dismiss filed under the
Texas Citizens Participation Act (TCPA), delay is inevitable. Id. § 27.003(c).

Although this is sometimes necessary, many times I have found that it creates

unnecessary delay to the judicial process. A recent law review article, in discussing

the Texas Legislature’s 2019 amendment to the TCPA, which added a new definition

of “legal action” in order to limit the use of a TCPA motion to dismiss, see id. §

27.001(6), commented:

             It’s been said that the fertile mind of a lawyer will attempt to
      stretch the parameters of any law. In the case of the TCPA, many fertile
      minds decided to test novel interpretations of the statute in ways that
      led to a significant abuse of the judicial process. Litigants employed
      the TCPA in response to a litany of procedural motions, unnecessarily
      tying cases up in the courts, overburdening the judicial system, and
      turning the purpose of the statute on its head.

Laura Lee Prather and Robert T. Sherwin, The Changing Landscape of the Texas

Citizens Participation Act, 52 Tex. Tech L. Rev. 163, 169 (2020) (internal footnotes

and citations omitted).    While the Legislature addressed the specific concern

mentioned in this article, lawyers are still using the TCPA motion to dismiss “in

ways that [lead] to a significant abuse of the judicial process.” Id.

      In this case, the trial court entered a temporary restraining order and granted

Preferred’s motion for expedited discovery. Quality Cleaning did not respond to

discovery by the trial court’s initial, or subsequent, deadline and, instead, seven days

past the subsequent deadline, filed a motion to dismiss under the TCPA. See TEX.

CIV. PRAC. & REM. CODE § 27.003(a). The parties then litigated whether the TCPA

stayed expedited discovery ordered before the TCPA motion to dismiss was filed.

                                          –2–
See id. §§ 27.003(c), 27.006(b). The issue was litigated in the trial court for over a

month. Quality Cleaning then filed a petition for writ of mandamus in this Court

seeking a stay of discovery in the trial court. We granted conditional relief less than

a month later.

      When the case returned to the trial court, the court denied Quality Cleaning’s

TCPA motion to dismiss. As the majority explains, Preferred argued in part that the

TCPA did not apply to this suit because it clearly fell under one of the new

exemptions. The code expressly provides that the TCPA does not apply to “a legal

action arising from an . . . employee-employer . . . relationship that: (A) seeks

recovery for misappropriation of trade secrets or corporate opportunities; or (B)

seeks to enforce a non-disparagement agreement or a covenant not to compete.” Id.

§ 27.010(5). The trial court denied the motion to dismiss without elaboration, and

Quality Cleaning filed this interlocutory appeal.

      Not only did Quality Cleaning fail to address this exemption in its opening

brief and explain how it did not apply, Quality Cleaning also did not file a reply brief

addressing the exemption after Preferred re-urged it in its response brief. In my

opinion, there is no question that this exemption applied. In fact, in its “Statement

of the Case” section, Quality Cleaning represents that this “case arises from the

employment of Richard Cardona, a former employee of Preferred.”                At oral

argument, Quality Cleaning maintained that it did not have an employer-relationship

with Preferred and that, while the exemption applied to Cardona, it did not apply to

                                          –3–
Quality Cleaning because Quality Cleaning was a competitor and competitors were

not excluded by the exemption. In addition to not offering any argument or case

citations in its brief regarding this assertion, Quality Cleaning was not able to proffer

any legal authority supporting its assertion at oral argument. Thus, I am left with

the question of whether Quality Cleaning pursued the TCPA motion to dismiss and

this interlocutory appeal in good faith or simply to delay adjudicating the case in the

trial court.

        Preferred represented to this Court at oral argument that it believed Quality

Cleaning had been violating the temporary restraining order while this case has been

pending and that the stay required by the TCPA precluded Preferred from obtaining

any relief. In response to Preferred’s allegation, counsel for Quality Cleaning

responded at oral argument that any purported covenant had expired because it was

only in effect for two years and such time had passed. Such representation only

increases my suspicion that Quality Cleaning used the TCPA as a delay tactic in this

case.

        Although the TCPA permits the trial court to award costs and reasonable

attorney’s fees to the responding party if it finds that the motion to dismiss was

“frivolous or solely intended to delay,” see id. § 27.009(b), and this Court has the

authority to sanction a party for filing a frivolous appeal, see TEX. R. APP. P. 45,

sanctions are inadequate to provide plaintiffs with the protection they need to seek

justice without unnecessary delay. And, often, awarding sanctions invites further

                                          –4–
delay in resolving the underlying claim, as it gives the sanctioned party another

opportunity to pursue appellate review.

      This use of the TCPA for delay is not an isolated occurrence. I have observed

similar abuses of the TCPA and its resulting delay over the last several years. I

caution practitioners to use it in good faith and not as a delay tactic, and I urge the

legislature to again revisit the TCPA so that plaintiffs are not stranded in a stay

unable to pursue time-sensitive claims.

221374cf.p05                                /Craig Smith//
                                            CRAIG SMITH
                                            JUSTICE

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