Court Opinion

ID: 2926273
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2015-09-11 22:26:39.840113+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T11:39:17.307468
License: Public Domain

NUMBER 13-07-00363-CV

                                     COURT OF APPEALS

                       THIRTEENTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS

                           CORPUS CHRISTI - EDINBURG

FREDDIE RECORDS, INC.,
AND FREDDIE MARTINEZ, INDIVIDUALLY,
AND D/B/A FREDDIE RECORDS,
JOINTLY AND SEVERALLY,                                                                      Appellants,

                                                          v.

RAMON AYALA,                                                                                  Appellee.

  On appeal from the 370th District Court of Hidalgo County, Texas.

                               MEMORANDUM OPINION
                         Before Justices Yañez, Garza, and Vela
                         Memorandum Opinion by Justice Yañez

      This is an interlocutory appeal of an anti-suit injunction issued by a Hidalgo County

district court in favor of appellee, Ramon Ayala (“Ayala”).1 By a single issue and several

sub-issues, appellants, Freddie Records, Inc. and Freddie Martinez, individually and d/b/a

      1
          See T EX . C IV . P RAC . & R EM . C OD E A N N . § 51.014(a)(4) (Vernon 2008).
Freddie Records, jointly and severally (“Freddie”), challenge the anti-suit injunction. We

affirm.

                                             I. Background2

          Ayala is a recording artist, and Freddie is a record company. Pursuant to various

agreements over the years, the parties have had a business relationship whereby Ayala

records “master recordings” for Freddie, and Freddie converts those recordings into

albums and compact discs for sale and distribution in the United States. In the underlying

litigation, the parties dispute whether obligations have been met under a recording

agreement dated January 4, 1995 (“the agreement”).

          Ayala contends he has delivered the required number of recordings to Freddie, but

that he has not been paid certain royalties and income due under the agreement. On

November 8, 2006, Ayala sued Freddie in the 92nd District Court in Hidalgo County (“the

Hidalgo County suit”),3 seeking a declaratory judgment that he has met his recording

obligations under the agreement. Ayala later amended his petition, adding causes of

action for breach of contract and breach of fiduciary duty.

          On November 21, 2006, Freddie sued Ayala in County Court at Law Number 4 in

Nueces County (“Nueces County I”),4 alleging that Ayala breached the agreement by failing

to record the required number of albums and record the albums in a timely manner. On

          2
          Many of the background facts are taken from this Court’s opinion in a related original proceeding.
See In re Ayala, No. 13-07-140-CV, 2007 Tex. App. LEXIS 3319, at **1-5 (Tex. App.–Corpus Christi Apr. 27,
2007, orig. proceeding) (m em . op.).

          3
         The Hidalgo County suit was styled Ramon Ayala, Individually and d/b/a Los Bravos del Norte v.
Freddie Records, Inc. and Freddie Martinez, Individually, and d/b/a Freddie Records, Jointly and Severally,
and was assigned trial court cause num ber C-2660-06-A in the 92nd District Court of Hidalgo County.

          4
          The first Nueces County suit was assigned trial court cause num ber 06-62635-4 in Nueces County
Court at Law Num ber 4. W e note that this petition is not included in the record before us, but is described in
In re Ayala, 2007 Tex. App. LEXIS 3319, at **2-3.

                                                       2
December 18, 2006, Ayala filed a plea in abatement in Nueces County I, based on an

assertion that the Hidalgo County suit acquired dominant jurisdiction. After the Nueces

County Court denied Ayala’s plea, he filed a petition for writ of mandamus with this Court.5

This Court stayed the proceedings in the Hidalgo County and Nueces County I suits during

its consideration of Ayala’s petition for writ of mandamus.6

        On or about April 18, 2007 (during the stay and this Court’s consideration of the

petition for writ of mandamus), Freddie filed a second suit in Nueces County Court at Law

Number 2, requesting injunctive relief (“Nueces County II”).7 In its petition, Freddie alleged

that: (1) Ayala breached the agreement by failing to deliver the required number of albums

under the agreement; and (2) Ayala had recorded sufficient “masters” to constitute a new

album and planned to deliver them to Sony,8 without first delivering them to Freddie, as

required under the agreement. In requesting injunctive relief, Freddie alleged that “Ayala’s

threatened action to deliver the Masters to Sony and not to Freddie will cause [Freddie]

irreparable harm.” The Nueces County II court granted a temporary restraining order on

April 19, 2007, and set the temporary injunction hearing for April 30, 2007.

        On April 24, 2007, Ayala filed, in his then-pending original proceeding in this Court,

an emergency motion to show cause why Freddie “should not be held in contempt of court,

for stay of proceedings, for sanctions, and for expedited review.” In the motion, Ayala

        5
            See id. at *1.

        6
            See id. at *4.

        7
         The second Nueces County suit was styled Freddie Martinez, Individually and Freddie Records, Inc.
v. Ramon Ayala, Individually and d/b/a Los Bravos del Norte and was assigned trial court cause num ber 07-
60924-2 in Nueces County Court at Law No. 2.

        8
          The agreem ent recognizes that Ayala has a contract “with Sony Record Com pany, its subsidiaries
or related com panies in Mexico.”

                                                    3
alleged that by filing the Nueces County II suit, Freddie had engaged in “a bad faith attempt

to circumvent this Court’s [stay order] and nullify its effect.”

       On April 27, 2007, this Court found the Hidalgo County court had acquired dominant

jurisdiction, conditionally granted Ayala’s petition for writ of mandamus, and directed the

County Court at Law Number 4 to abate Nueces County I.9 Without discussion or

explanation, this Court granted Ayala expedited review of his emergency motion, but

otherwise denied the relief he requested in that motion .

       On April 30, 2007, in the Nueces County II suit, the Nueces County Court at Law

Number 2 held the scheduled hearing on Freddie’s requested temporary injunction.

Counsel for Ayala did not appear at the hearing.10 At the hearing, Freddie presented the

testimony of John Martinez, an employee of Freddie. Martinez testified that: (1) Ayala

owed Freddie six recordings under the agreement; and (2) Freddie had learned of Ayala’s

plan to release a master recording to Sony, in violation of the agreement. During the

hearing, the trial court signed a temporary injunction, dated April 30, 2007, enjoining Ayala

from delivering any new masters to Sony until they were first delivered to Freddie.

       On May 8, 2007, in the Hidalgo County suit, Ayala filed his third amended petition,

seeking: (1) the dissolution of the temporary injunction in Nueces County II; and (2) an

anti-suit injunction enjoining Freddie from pursuing the Nueces County I and Nueces

County II suits and from filing additional suits against Ayala. On May 22, 2007, the Hidalgo

County court held a hearing on Ayala’s request for an anti-suit injunction. Both parties

       9
           See In re Ayala, 2007 Tex. App. LEXIS 3319, at **16-19.

       10
            Ayala later testified that he was not served with citation in the Nueces County II suit.

                                                        4
appeared and introduced documents into the record.11 Ayala was the only witness who

presented testimony. On May 23, 2007, the Hidalgo County court issued an anti-suit

injunction. The court stated that “[i]n order to protect [its] jurisdiction,” it enjoined Freddie

from:

        (1) filing or pursuing any motions, pleadings, or any other papers, other than
        an unconditional dismissal or abatement, in the First or Second Nueces
        County Court cases, or otherwise prosecuting these cases in any manner,
        including any enforcement of the Temporary Injunction in the Second
        Nueces County Court Case;

        (2) filing any original petitions, complaints or lawsuits against Ayala in any
        court, forum, or jurisdiction other than this Court, based on or stemming from
        the claims that are made or could have been made in the First and Second
        Nueces County Court Cases or this cause; and

        (3) taking any action to delay or prevent Ayala from fulfilling his contractual
        and legal obligations to Sony.

        The court also made the following additional findings:

                Based on the Application, the Pleadings, the evidence, and the
        arguments of counsel[,] the Court finds and concludes that a) [Ayala] does
        not owe any additional albums to [Freddie] and has not refused to deliver any
        albums to [Freddie] under the Recording Agreement; b) [Ayala] was not and
        is not required to deliver albums to [Freddie] contemporaneously with albums
        delivered to Sony de Mexico, S.A. de C.V. (“Sony”) for release outside the
        United States; c) [Freddie] waived any right to require that [Ayala] record his
        albums at [Freddie’s] studio in Corpus Christi; d) [Freddie has] breached and
        violated the Recording Agreement between the parties; and e) [Ayala] has
        shown a strong and substantial likelihood that he will prevail on the merits.
        The Court also finds that Ayala has established the existence of very special
        circumstances and the potential for an irreparable miscarriage of justice to
        warrant an anti-suit injunction. [Freddie has] demonstrated their bad faith and
        total disregard for the lawful orders and jurisdiction of this Court and, if

        11
           At the May 22, 2007 hearing, counsel for Freddie advised the trial court that they believed the
hearing concerned a tem porary restraining order, rather than a hearing on a tem porary injunction, because
they had not received notice of the Hidalgo County court’s previously-issued TRO. Freddie’s counsel
acknowledged that “there are several counsel of record in this m atter and only one counsel of record was
provided with notice of the TRO itself.” Freddie’s counsel requested a continuance, but following an off-the-
record discussion (and without ruling on the request), the trial court proceeded with the tem porary injunction
hearing.

                                                      5
       unrestrained, will:

               1) continue their evasion and threats to this Court’s jurisdiction by
               forum shopping;

               2) continue the wrongful multiplication of proceedings with the intent
               to thwart this Court’s dominant jurisdiction and the Court of Appeals’
               Mandamus Order, causing havoc and a waste of judicial and
               appellate resources;

               3) continue to harass and force Ayala to the great personal and
               financial burden of having to defend himself against vexatious
               proceedings, and the resulting disruption of the judicial process,
               risking the loss of his right to proceed to trial in Hidalgo County;

               4) continue to attempt to prevent Ayala from fulfilling his contractual
               and legal obligations; and

               5) alter the status quo and cause a miscarriage of justice.

       This appeal ensued. Freddie contends that the Hidalgo County court abused its

discretion in issuing the anti-suit injunction. By six sub-issues, Freddie argues the trial

court abused its discretion because: (1) the Hidalgo County and Nueces County II suits

involve separate provisions of the agreement; (2) this Court had already rejected Ayala’s

request for injunctive relief; (3) Ayala presented no evidence of special circumstances

required for an anti-suit injunction; (4) the trial court decided the ultimate issues in the case;

(5) the injunction was too broad; and (6) it enjoined Freddie from interfering with Ayala’s

obligations to Sony, even though Sony is not a party and Ayala’s contractual and legal

obligations to Sony have not been established.

                       II. Standard of Review and Applicable Law

       Whether to grant or deny a temporary injunction is within the trial court’s sound

                                                6
discretion.12 A reviewing court should reverse an order granting injunctive relief only if the

trial court abused its discretion.13 The reviewing court must not substitute its judgment for

the trial court's judgment unless the trial court's action was so arbitrary that it exceeded the

bounds of reasonable discretion.14 In reviewing the trial court’s order, we are to draw

inferences from the evidence in the manner most favorable to the trial court’s ruling.15

Although a trial court does not abuse its discretion when it bases its decision on conflicting

evidence, that evidence must reasonably support the trial court's decision.16                            On

interlocutory appeal of an order granting a temporary injunction, we do not reach the merits

of the dispute, but determine only whether the record supports the trial court's exercise of

discretion.17

        Texas courts have the power, through anti-suit injunctions, to prevent persons from

proceeding with litigation filed in other state courts.18 However, this equitable power is to

be exercised sparingly, and only in very special circumstances.19 The party seeking the

injunction has the burden to show that a clear equity demands the injunction.20 The

        12
         Yarto v. Gilliland, 287 S.W .3d 83, 89 (Tex. App.–Corpus Christi 2009, no pet.) (citing Butnaru v.
Ford Motor Co., 84 S.W .3d 198, 204 (Tex. 2002)).

        13
             Id.

        14
             Id.

        15
           London Mkt. Insurers v. Am. Home Assur. Co., 95 S.W .3d 702, 705 (Tex. App.–Corpus Christi
2003, no pet.).

        16
             Harbor Perfusion, Inc. v. Floyd, 45 S.W .3d 713, 717 (Tex. App.–Corpus Christi 2001, no pet.).

        17
             Bank of Tex., N.A. v. Gaubert, 286 S.W .3d 546, 552 (Tex. App.–Dallas 2009, no pet.).

        18
             Gannon v. Payne, 706 S.W .2d 304, 305 (Tex. 1986); London Mkt., 95 S.W .3d at 706.

        19
             London Mkt., 95 S.W .3d at 706.

        20
             Id.

                                                       7
applicant must demonstrate the potential for an irreparable miscarriage of justice in order

to obtain the anti-suit injunction.21 When a suit is filed in a court of competent jurisdiction,

that court is entitled to proceed to judgment and may protect its jurisdiction by enjoining the

parties to a suit subsequently filed in another court of this state.22

        An anti-suit injunction is appropriate in four instances: (1) to address a threat to the

court’s jurisdiction; (2) to prevent the evasion of important public policy; (3) to prevent a

multiplicity of suits; or (4) to protect a party from vexatious or harassing litigation.23 The

circumstances of each situation must be carefully examined to determine whether the

injunction is necessary to prevent an irreparable miscarriage of justice.24

        The majority rule in Texas is that in addition to meeting the requirements necessary

to obtain an anti-suit injunction, the traditional prerequisites to injunctive relief must be met

by a party seeking an anti-suit injunction.25

                                               III. Discussion

                                           A. Separate Issues

        In its first sub-issue, Freddie contends that the Hidalgo County court abused its

discretion in granting the anti-suit injunction because the Hidalgo County suit and the

        21
             Id.

        22
             Gannon, 706 S.W .2d at 305-06.

        23
          Gonzalez v. Reliant Energy, Inc., 159 S.W .3d 615, 623 (Tex. 2005) (citing Golden Rule Ins. Co. v.
Harper, 925 S.W .2d 649, 651 (Tex. 1996)).

        24
             Gannon, 706 S.W .2d at 307.

        25
           See Yarto, 287 S.W .3d at 88 n.8 (collecting cases). In Yarto, this Court expressly declined to
decide this issue, but rather, assum ed arguendo that the traditional prerequisites are applicable to an anti-suit
injunction. See id. Traditionally, an applicant for a tem porary injunction m ust plead and prove: (1) a cause
of action against the defendant; (2) a probable right to the relief sought; and (3) a probable, im m inent, and
irreparable injury in the interim . See id. at 88. W e note that Freddie does not challenge the anti-suit injunction
on grounds related to the traditional prerequisites. Thus, we do not address the issue.

                                                         8
Nueces County II suit “do not concern related issues.” According to Freddie, the Hidalgo

County suit is a declaratory judgment and breach of contract action to determine whether

Ayala has met his obligation to deliver fourteen albums to Freddie as required under the

agreement. In contrast, the Nueces County II suit concerns Freddie’s ownership, control,

and right to distribute the master recordings prior to any other company.

       We are unpersuaded by Freddie’s argument. Paragraph I of the agreement

provides that “[t]he term of this agreement shall be for a period of seven (7) years in which

Ayala will deliver to Freddie fourteen (14) albums.” The agreement begins on the date of

execution and “continue[s] until delivery of the fourteenth (14th) and final album under this

agreement.” Thus, the agreement itself ceases to operate upon Ayala’s delivery of the

fourteenth album to Freddie. Accordingly, if—as Ayala claims—he has met his obligations

to deliver the required number of albums under the agreement, Freddie’s claims that Ayala

breached a separate provision of the agreement fail as a matter of law because the

agreement is no longer operative. At the May 22, 2007 temporary injunction hearing, the

trial court noted that if:

       they [Ayala] in fact prove at trial that there have been over 14 masters turned
       over to Freddie under this contract, the contract actually, you and I differ on
       one thing. Well, maybe we don’t, you just didn’t discuss it that way. The
       provisions requiring him [Ayala] to turn over masters to Freddie has ceased.

We agree with the trial court, and reject Freddie’s argument that the provision of the

agreement at issue in the Nueces County II suit “does not address, either directly or

indirectly, any of the issues addressed in the Hidalgo County Suit.” We overrule Freddie’s

first sub-issue.

                                             9
                                B. Effect of In re Ayala

       By its second sub-issue, Freddie contends that by declining to grant Ayala the relief

he requested in his April 24, 2007 “Emergency Motion to Show Cause,” filed in his then-

pending original proceeding (In re Ayala), this Court “already decided” that Ayala was not

entitled to any relief enjoining the Nueces County II suit. In Ayala’s emergency motion, he

argued that Freddie, by filing the Nueces County II suit, had violated this Court’s stay order

(entered in the mandamus proceeding) and was attempting to evade this Court’s

jurisdiction. In the emergency motion’s prayer for relief, Ayala requested, among other

relief, that Freddie “be ordered to immediately cease and desist from the prosecution of the

Second Nueces County Case, dismiss it, dissolve the temporary restraining order, and

cancel the hearing on the request for a temporary injunction.” As noted, this Court, without

explanation, declined to grant any of the relief requested in the emergency motion except

the request for expedited review.

       We reject Freddie’s argument that this Court’s failure to grant Ayala his requested

relief in the mandamus proceeding is somehow “the law of the case.” Freddie’s counsel

made the same argument to the Hidalgo County court at the temporary injunction hearing,

characterizing this Court’s ruling in In re Ayala as follows:

       And the Court of Appeals from Corpus Christi said two things: Number one,
       Case No. 2 should be abated, but No. 2, we are not going to do a doggone
       thing to No. 3. We are not going to stop it. There is a TRO in place. We are
       not going to overturn that. We are not going to sanction Freddie Records for
       getting it. And we are going to allow the imminent temporary injunction
       hearing which was scheduled for two days later, we are going to allow that
       to go forward.

              So this very issue before Your Honor has been ruled upon by the
       Corpus Christi Court of Appeals. They said that Case No. 1 is dominant;
       Case No. 2 will be abated; and it is proper for Case No. 3, with these new
       facts and circumstances and this need for extraordinary relief—.

                                             10
The trial court correctly noted that this Court’s opinion “doesn’t say why it was denied.” The

trial court also noted:

       I’m not sure I would have disagreed with the Thirteenth Court. The way you
       [Ayala] pled your request for relief to the Thirteenth Court, you are basically
       asking them [Freddie] to be held in contempt for violation of the stay. But
       they look at those stays specifically. And I don’t think that they [Freddie]
       were stayed from filing another lawsuit. They were stayed from proceeding
       in the lawsuit that existed. That’s probably why you were denied.

        We also note that at the April 30, 2007 temporary injunction hearing in the Nueces

County II suit, Freddie blatantly misrepresented this Court’s opinion in In re Ayala to the

trial court. Freddie’s counsel told the Nueces County II trial court:

       The Court of Appeals ruled that this Court [Nueces County II] should go
       forward with the temporary injunction hearing today. So, I can give the Court
       a copy of that opinion, but the Court has ruled that this hearing is
       appropriate. . . . It also does conditionally grant a writ of Mandamus on the
       Plea in Abatement in the other matter but specifically takes up the matter of
       today’s hearing and tells the Court to go forward.

              ....

       But, interestingly, along with those rulings [the Thirteenth Court] said this
       case, case number three [Nueces County II] should go forward. . . . All of that
       information, though, was before the Court of Appeals who instead of staying
       the third suit or issuing any sort of slap on our wrist for filing a lawsuit, a third
       suit, instead said, “Go forward. Proceed,” and I think it’s because the Court
       of Appeals understood we had no other relief available.

       As is abundantly clear from the record, this Court made no such rulings or

statements. We overrule Freddie’s second sub-issue.

                            C. Special Circumstances

       By its third sub-issue, Freddie argues that “[n]o evidence for any of the four

special circumstances required for the issuance of an anti-suit injunction exists in

this case.” Freddie argues that there is no threat to the Hidalgo County court’s

jurisdiction because “the two cases [Hidalgo County case and Nueces County II]

                                            11
seek adjudication on separate and independent issues and events.” We have

already addressed this argument in Freddie’s first sub-issue, and found it

unpersuasive.

       At the Hidalgo County injunction hearing, Ayala’s counsel addressed the

findings and orders contained in the temporary injunction issued in Nueces County

II:

       Well, and Judge, you’ve nailed the issue because if you view the temporary
       injunction that they obtained ex parte, it also says, it has a finding that Mr.
       Ayala breached the contract, so you’re exactly right. It’s not just the fact that
       there’s two cases. It’s one case in particular, but they’re asking the court and
       are getting contrary findings that will have an impact on this case. And in the
       final analysis, Your Honor, the only thing we’re asking is let them take their
       best shot. That’s fine. But it needs to be here. If they want to do whatever
       they need to do, they need to do it here in one case here in Hidalgo County.

       As noted, the temporary injunction issued by the Nueces County II court enjoined

Ayala from delivering any new masters to Sony until they were first delivered to Freddie.

As the Hidalgo County court noted, however, if Ayala’s obligations have been met under the

agreement, “then [Freddie’s] lawsuit dealing with those masters being delivered to Sony and

they should have been delivered to us first and all that, all that is moot. It’s gone. It’s

done.” The Hidalgo County court also stated that it should decide the issue of whether a

valid agreement remains between the parties because it is the court of dominant jurisdiction

and “that’s precisely why these rules are set up.”

       At the May 22, 2007 hearing, Ayala testified, among other things, that: (1) he has

delivered to Freddie all albums due under the agreement; (2) he was not served with

citation to appear in the Nueces County II suit; and (3) that he delivered an album to Sony

in mid-March 2007 and “[had] one more to finish up with [Sony].” Ayala also introduced the

following documentary evidence: (1) this Court’s opinion in In re Ayala; (2) Freddie’s

                                             12
petition and application for injunctive relief in Nueces County II; (3) the temporary restraining

order issued in Nueces County II; (4) a November 16, 2006 “demand letter” from Ayala’s

counsel to Freddie; (5) a February 20, 2007 letter from Freddie’s counsel to Ayala’s counsel

regarding the denial of Ayala’s plea in abatement in Nueces County I; (6) a copy of the

agreement; and (7) a copy of the transcript of the January 12, 2007 plea-in-abatement

hearing in Nueces County I.

       At the time of the May 22, 2007 hearing in the Hidalgo County court, the court had

before it: (1) this Court’s opinion establishing the Hidalgo County court as the court of

dominant jurisdiction over Nueces County I; (2) evidence that the trial court in Nueces

County I had failed to sign an order of abatement; and (3) a temporary injunction in Nueces

County II, which enjoined Ayala from meeting his contractual obligations to Sony. We

conclude that as the court of dominant jurisdiction, the Hidalgo County court had the power

to protect its jurisdiction over the parties and the issues before it by enjoining Freddie from

pursuing its suits in Nueces County I and Nueces County II, filing additional suits based on

the same claims, and from interfering with Ayala’s obligations to Sony.26 We overrule

Freddie’s third sub-issue.

                                        D. Impermissibly Broad

       By its fourth sub-issue,27 Freddie contends that the language of the temporary

injunction is impermissibly broad because it (1) prevents Freddie from bringing any action

        26
           See Henry v. McMichael (In re Henry), 274 S.W .3d 185, 193 (Tex. App.–Houston [1st Dist.] 2008,
orig. proceeding, pet. denied) (op. on reh’g); London Mkt., 95 S.W .3d at 708.

        27
             Although listed separately in the “Issues Presented” section of its brief, Freddie addresses its fourth
and fifth sub-issues together in the “Argum ent” section of its brief. Freddie’s sixth sub-issue regarding Sony
was m entioned only briefly within the discussion of its fourth sub-issue and was not separately addressed.
Thus, we conclude that Freddie’s sixth sub-issue regarding Sony is waived as inadequately briefed. See T EX .
R. A PP . P. 38.1(i).

                                                       13
against Sony; and (2) prohibits “any claims between Freddie and Ayala—despite having no

relationship with the current dispute” insofar as the prohibition includes claims that “could

have been made” in the Nueces County I and Nueces County II suits—a category which

includes “permissive and wholly unrelated claims.” We are unpersuaded by Freddie’s

argument. The injunction enjoined Freddie from pursuing the Nueces County I and Nueces

County II suits and from filing any new suits “based on or stemming from the claims that are

made or could have been made” in those suits or the Hidalgo County suit. We note that at

the end of the Hidalgo County temporary injunction hearing, the following exchange

occurred:

       [Court]:               I’m going to rule whether or not this case should go first
                             and that case should be abated, period. That’s what
                             you’re asking for. It’s basically an abatement issue but
                             it’s in the form of an injunction enjoining them from
                             doing it.

       [Freddie’s counsel]: And we would only note that this junction [sic] here is
                            much broader than mere request that you order us to
                            abate case number three and we would submit that that
                            [sic] extra is—would be—would be inappropriate
                            regardless of the court’s findings.

       [Ayala’s counsel]:    Oh, it is, Judge, I’ve learned my lesson from the court of
                             appeals, you know. We need to keep these people
                             from filing—if you just abate they’ve got to file another
                             one. I mean, we just need to put an end to this.

       We conclude that the temporary injunction is not impermissibly broad.

       Within this sub-issue, Freddie also contends the trial court exceeded its authority

by “deciding the ultimate issues for trial.” We recognize that “[a]t the hearing for a

temporary writ of injunction, the applicant is not required to establish that she will prevail

on final trial; the only question before the trial court is whether the applicant is entitled to

                                              14
preservation of the status quo pending trial on the merits.”28 A ruling on temporary

injunctive relief may not be used to obtain an advance ruling on the merits.29 Here,

however, Ayala did not receive all the relief requested in his “Third Amended Petition for

Declaratory Judgment, for Injunction and Damages.” For example, in his petition, Ayala

alleged Freddie owed him income and royalties, failed to provide him an accounting of

income and royalties, and claimed exemplary damages. Thus, the Hidalgo Court did not

grant relief identical to that requested in Ayala’s third amended petition.30

        We also note that at the temporary injunction hearing, Ayala’s counsel told the court:

        You’ve also had the benefit of Mr. Ayala’s testimony in this case with regard
        to the elements. I don’t know that when we’re dealing with an anti-suit
        injunction it’s necessary to prove the elements of your traditional injunction,
        but we did so anyway. The only evidence you’ve got before you today is Mr.
        Ayala’s position that he has not been accounted for in terms of all the
        records and royalties owed, that he believes that he has met all of his
        obligations under the contract alternative. What he’s asking for is for the
        court to say, you owe whatever it is that he owes, so he’s not running away
        from his obligations. He’s said that he will abide by whatever the court’s
        decision is, even though he feels and we feel confident that we’ve delivered
        all the albums necessary.

               Now they’ve claimed side letters and all this other kind of stuff. Of
        course you don’t have any evidence of that because they didn’t put on any
        proof, you know, by choice, so the only evidence you have then is Mr.
        Ayala’s testimony with regard to having fulfilled his obligations under the
        contract and Freddie not having fulfilled his.

                   ....

                   Judge, this is a case that cries out for an anti-suit injunction under

        28
             See W alling v. Metcalfe, 863 S.W .2d 56, 58 (Tex. 1993).

        29
             See Iranian Muslim Org. v. City of San Antonio, 615 S.W .2d 202, 208 (Tex. 1981).

        30
           See, e.g., R & R Res. Corp. v. Echelon Oil & Gas, L.L.C., No. 03-05-479-CV, 2006 Tex. App. LEXIS
326, at **30-31 (Tex. App.–Austin 2006, no pet.) (finding ruling granting tem porary injunctive relief did not
consist of advance ruling on the m erits where parties seeking injunctive relief did not receive all relief
requested in m otion for tem porary injunction or petition); Tri-Star Petroleum Co. v. Tipperary Corp., 103
S.W .3d 583, 593 (Tex. App.–El Paso 2003, pet. denied) (sam e).

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       these circumstances. I mean, no one—no litigant, no person should have to
       go through what Mr. Ayala has gone through just to get his day in court,
       which is why we’re asking that the court protect its jurisdiction so that we can
       have that day in court and present our evidence.

       We conclude that the trial court did not decide the case on the merits without a full

trial. We overrule Freddie’s fourth and fifth sub-issues.

                                           IV. Conclusion

       Drawing all legitimate inferences from the evidence in the light most favorable to the

trial court’s ruling, we conclude there was “some basis” on which the trial court could have

held as it did; thus, the trial court did not abuse its discretion.31 Having overruled Freddie’s

issue and sub-issues, we affirm the trial court’s judgment.

                                                            LINDA REYNA YAÑEZ
                                                            Justice

Memorandum Opinion delivered and
filed this the 30th day of September, 2009.

       31
            See London Mkt., 95 S.W .3d at 708.

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