Court Opinion

ID: 2954480
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2015-09-16 23:44:12.06188+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:58:19.372016
License: Public Domain

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN

NO. 03-09-00551-CV

Rhett Webster Pease, Appellant

v.

First National Bank of Giddings, Appellee

FROM THE COUNTY COURT OF LEE COUNTY
NO. 3014, HONORABLE EDWARD F. JANECKA, JUDGE PRESIDING

M E M O R A N D U M   O P I N I O N

		Appellant Rhett Webster Pease obtained an emergency writ of reentry from the justice
court, Precinct No. 3, of Lee County regarding a property owned by appellee First National Bank of
Giddings and claimed by Pease as his homestead.  Thereafter, First National appealed to the county
court seeking to have the writ vacated.  First National also filed a motion to dismiss in which it
notified the county court that Pease had previously been declared a vexatious litigant and was
therefore required to comply with section 11.103 of the Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code,
which he had not done in filing the instant litigation. (1)  The county court (2) granted First National's
motion to vacate the writ of reentry without considering the issues raised in its motion to dismiss. 
On September 14, 2009, Pease filed a notice of appeal of the county court's September 10, 2009
order on First National's Motion to Vacate Writ of Reentry.  In response, First National asked this
Court to dismiss or, alternatively, to abate Pease's appeal based on his failure to comply with the
procedural requirements of the vexatious-litigant statute.
		Section 11.103 of the civil practice and remedies code provides that the clerk of a
court may not file a litigation presented by a vexatious litigant subject to a prefiling order under
section 11.101 unless the litigant first obtains an order from the local administrative judge permitting
the filing.  Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code Ann. § 11.103(a) (West 2002).  If the clerk mistakenly files
a litigation without an order from the local administrative judge, any party may file with the clerk
and serve on the plaintiff and the other parties to the suit a notice stating that the plaintiff is a
vexatious litigant subject to the prefiling order under section 11.101.  Id. § 11.103(b).  "On the filing
of the notice, the court shall immediately stay the litigation and shall dismiss the litigation unless the
plaintiff, not later than the 10th day after the date the notice is filed, obtains an order from the local
administrative judge under Section 11.102 permitting the filing of the litigation."  Id.  In the present
case, the record suggests that the mandatory procedures of chapter 11 may not have been followed.
		Accordingly, we abate this appeal and remand the cause to the county court of Lee
County for further proceedings to address the implications of chapter 11 of the civil practice and
remedies code.  Any orders resulting therefrom shall be filed with the clerk of this Court no later
than February 22, 2011.

  
						J. Woodfin Jones, Chief Justice
Before Chief Justice Jones, Justices Puryear and Pemberton
Abated
Filed:   January 20, 2011
1.   By order dated January 5, 2004, the 335th District Court of Lee County deemed Pease a
vexatious litigant and ordered that he be prohibited from filing any further litigation in a court of this
State unless he is granted permission by the local administrative judge of the court in which he
intends to file further litigation.  Since that time, the Texas Office of Court Administration has
included Pease on its "List of Vexatious Litigants Subject to Prefiling Orders under Section 11.101,
Civil Practice and Remedies Code," available at www.courts.state.tx.us/oca/vexatious_litigants.pdf.
2.   The record indicates that the constitutional county judge of Lee County, Hon. Paul Fischer,
recused himself.  The constitutional county judge of neighboring Fayette County, Hon. Ed Janecka,
was appointed visiting judge and signed the order on appeal.