NUMBER 13-05-090-CV
COURT OF APPEALS
THIRTEENTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS
CORPUS CHRISTI - EDINBURG
RENZENBERGER, INC., THE
BURLINGTON NORTHERN AND
SANTA FE RAILWAY COMPANY
AND SAMUEL GRANT EVERSON, Appellants,
v.
CORNELIOUS O’BRYANT, JR., Appellee.
On appeal from the 239th District Court of Brazoria County, Texas.
DISSENTING MEMORANDUM OPINION
Before the Court En Banc
Dissenting Memorandum Opinion by Justice Yañez
Joined by Justices Rodriguez and Garza
The majority holds that appellee, Cornelious O’Bryant, Jr., failed to establish an essential need to have his lawsuit tried in Brazoria County. Accordingly, the majority reverses the trial court’s order denying appellants’ motion to transfer venue. Because I would hold that O’Bryant met his burden to establish an essential need to try his lawsuit in Brazoria County, I respectfully dissent.
Background
This is an accelerated interlocutory appeal under section 15.003 of the civil practice and remedies code. Appellants, Rentzenberger, Inc. (“Rentzenberger”), The Burlington Northern and Santa Fe Railway Company (“BNSF”), and Samuel Grant Everson (“Everson”), appeal from the trial court’s order denying their motion to transfer venue. O’Bryant filed suit against appellants, alleging personal injuries arising out of an automobile accident. In a single issue, appellants contend the trial court erred in denying their motion to transfer venue because O’Bryant failed to establish an “essential need” to have his lawsuit tried in Brazoria County as required by section 15.003.
O’Bryant and Randy Daniels (“Daniels”) are railroad workers employed by BNSF. BNSF contracts with Renzenberger, a crew transportation company, to transport BNSF employees to and from various points. On February 14, 2004, BNSF arranged for Everson, a driver for Renzenberger, to pick up O’Bryant and Daniels in Davidson, Texas, and drive them to Temple, Texas. En route to Temple, the vehicle was involved in a single-vehicle accident in Buckholts, Texas, which is located in Milam County. O’Bryant and Daniels allege that they suffered personal injuries as a result of the accident. They filed suit in Brazoria County based on the Federal Employers’ Liability Act (“FELA”).
Suits brought under the FELA are subject to the mandatory venue provisions set forth in section 15.018 of the civil practice and remedies code. Appellants concede that Brazoria County is a proper venue for Daniels under the FELA because he resides there. O’Bryant is a resident of Harris County, however, and cannot properly maintain venue in Brazoria County independently. Therefore, he seeks to join Daniels’s suit pursuant to section 15.003 of the civil practice and remedies code.
On May 10, 2004, appellants filed a motion to transfer venue, requesting that O’Bryant’s claim be transferred to Tarrant County, where BNSF’s principal place of business is located. Appellants also denied O’Bryant’s claim that venue was proper in Brazoria County pursuant to section 15.003. In the same document, “subject to the foregoing Motion to Transfer Venue,” appellants filed an “Original Answer,” which included a general denial of the plaintiffs’ claims and various alternative defensive pleadings. O’Bryant filed a response to the motion to transfer. He attached various affidavits and other evidence, which he contends establishes, by prima facie proof, each of the joinder elements under section 15.003.
On November 22, 2004, seven days prior to the hearing on the motion to transfer venue, appellants filed a “reply” to O’Bryant’s response and motion for severance. In the reply, appellants requested that venue be transferred to any of the three counties of proper venue: (a) Milam County (where the accident occurred); (b) Tarrant County (where BNSF’s principal place of business is located); or (c) Harris County (the county where O’Bryant resided at the time of the accident).
On November 29, 2004, the trial court held a hearing on appellants’ motion to transfer venue. At the hearing, O’Bryant’s counsel objected that appellants “have not amended their motion to transfer this case to Harris or Milam County.” At the conclusion of the hearing, the trial court noted, “You know, we got the cases here. We got both these cases here in Brazoria County.” The trial court denied appellants’ motion to transfer venue. This appeal ensued.
Standard of Review and Applicable Law
We review the propriety of a trial court’s section 15.003 joinder decision by conducting an independent de novo review of the entire record.
The plaintiff bears the burden to offer prima facie proof of each joinder element in section 15.003(a). Prima facie proof consists of properly pleaded venue facts along with filed affidavits and duly proved attachments to the affidavits that fully and specifically set forth the facts supporting each pleading. If the defendant offers no rebuttal evidence, the inquiry is over. The trial court has discretion to consider a broader range of evidence in making a section 15.003(a) joinder determination than it would in a venue hearing. The court of appeals is not constrained solely to review the pleadings and affidavits, but considers the entire record, including any evidence presented at the hearing. Any affidavit evidence relied upon in support of venue allegations must be made on personal knowledge, set forth specific facts as would be admissible in evidence, and show affirmatively that the affiant is competent to testify.
Analysis
O’Bryant had the burden of establishing, by prima facie proof, each of the above-listed joinder elements. He attempted to do this by attaching the following documents to his response to appellants’ motion to transfer:
(1) the affidavit of Clint E. McGuire, attorney for O’Bryant and other plaintiffs, which states, among other things, that: (a) O’Bryant’s and Daniels’s suits arise out of the same occurrence and thus involve the same facts, causes of action, evidence and witnesses; (b) Daniels is an indispensable witness to O’Bryant’s case and his live testimony is essential to the case; (c) Daniels will appear and testify for O’Bryant only in Brazoria County, and will not travel to any other county to testify on O’Bryant’s behalf; (d) Daniels’s case will be tried in Brazoria County, regardless of the outcome of appellants’ motion to transfer in O’Bryant’s case; and (e) trying both cases in Brazoria County will preserve judicial resources, reduce litigation costs for all parties, and eliminate the possibility of inconsistent judgments.
(2) Daniels’s affidavit, which states, among other things, that: (a) his case will be tried in Brazoria County, regardless of whether O’Bryant’s case is transferred; (b) because of family responsibilities, he will testify for O’Bryant only if O’Bryant’s case is also tried in Brazoria County, and will not testify for O’Bryant if his case is transferred to any other county; and (c) he has personal knowledge of the facts regarding the accident, and is therefore an indispensable witness for O’Bryant.
(3) O’Bryant’s own affidavit, in which he states, among other things, that Daniels has crucial knowledge regarding the accident and is therefore an indispensable witness in O’Bryant’s case.
(4) Everson’s deposition testimony, in which he states that he does not recall the details of the accident because it “all happened so fast.”
(5) appellants’ responses to O’Bryant’s requests for admission.
Appellants filed a November 22, 2004 “reply” to O’Bryant’s response. In their reply, appellants argue that O’Bryant failed to establish the “essential need” element of section 15.003. Appellants argue that O’Bryant’s reliance on Daniels’s unwillingness to travel outside of Brazoria County to testify fails to establish an “essential need” for O’Bryant to try his lawsuit in Brazoria County because if O’Bryant’s case were transferred to either Milam or Harris County– both counties of proper venue– Daniels could be subpoenaed to testify because his residence is within the 150-mile subpoena range of the court. See Tex. R. Civ. P. 176.3(a).
Appellants attached two documents to their reply: (1) the accident report, establishing that the accident occurred in Milam County and that O’Bryant is a resident of Harris County; and (2) an excerpt from the investigating officer’s deposition testimony establishing the validity of the accident report.
In their sole issue, appellants contend that O’Bryant failed to establish an essential need to have his lawsuit tried in Brazoria County. Before examining the evidence, however, I first address appellants’ argument that their “misnomered” reply was an amended motion to transfer venue.
Appellees argue that appellants’ May 10, 2004 motion to transfer venue requested transfer to Tarrant County (BNSF’s principal place of business) only and that appellants never amended their motion to request transfer to any other county. Appellants argue that although “misnomered a ‘reply,’” their November 22, 2004 pleading was, in substance, an amended motion to transfer venue. Thus, appellants argue that their “amended motion” requested transfer of venue to any one of three counties of proper venue: Milam County, Tarrant County, or Harris County. I turn to appellants’ contention that their November 22 “reply” was an amended motion to transfer venue.
In determining the nature of a pleading, we must look to the substance of the pleading and not just to the title given to the pleading. A "supplemental" or reply pleading is filed in response to the last pleading of an adverse party and repeats allegations previously pleaded only when necessary. An amended petition, on the other hand, adds to or withdraws from that which was previously pleaded, such as a new cause of action. An amended petition also supersedes all prior petitions. An amended pleading is to be entire and complete in itself; it is a substitute for the instrument amended.
As noted, appellants argue that their November 22, 2004 reply—which expands their request to transfer venue to Milam and Harris County, in addition to Tarrant County— is an amended motion to transfer. If we accept appellants’ argument, however, the November 22 reply is a substitute for appellants’ May 10, 2004 motion. Appellants’ November 22 reply: (a) argues that the mandatory venue provisions of section 15.018 of the civil practice and remedies code defeat O’Bryant’s joinder argument pursuant to section 15.003; (b) pleads alternatively that even if the court determines that section 15.003 applies, O’Bryant has nonetheless failed to establish an “essential need” to try the case in Brazoria County because Daniels resides within the 150-mile subpoena range of Harris County and Milam County; and (c) moves that O’Bryant’s claims be severed and transferred. Appellants’ November 22 reply does not contain an answer to the plaintiffs’ pleadings. Looking to the substance of appellants’ November 22 reply, which does not contain an answer or other defensive pleadings, I conclude it is a reply pleading and is not an amended motion to transfer venue.
I now turn to appellants’ argument that O’Bryant failed to establish an essential need to try his suit in Brazoria County.
Daniels’s affidavit asserts that he has personal knowledge of facts regarding the accident and is therefore an indispensable witness for O’Bryant. He also states that because of family responsibilities, he will only testify for O’Bryant if the case is tried in Brazoria County. O’Bryant’s affidavit similarly asserts that Daniels is an indispensable witness in his case. In his affidavit, counsel for O’Bryant and Daniels also states that Daniels is an indispensable witness in O’Bryant’s case and will testify only if O’Bryant’s case is tried in Brazoria County. Everson, the only other person involved in the accident, confirms in his deposition testimony that he does not know what happened. I conclude that O’Bryant offered prima facie proof that he has an essential need to try his lawsuit in Brazoria County.
Appellants’ rebuttal evidence established that Milam County and Harris County are counties of proper venue. In addition, appellants argued that if the case were transferred to either Milam County or Harris County, Daniels could be subpoenaed to testify because he resides within the 150-mile subpoena range applicable to Milam or Harris County. I have determined, however, that appellants’ November 22 reply is not an amended motion to transfer venue. Appellants’ May 10 motion to transfer requested transfer only to Tarrant County. Because appellants’ rebuttal evidence relies on a presumption that their “amended motion to transfer” requested transfer to Milam County and Harris County—a contention I reject—I conclude that appellants have offered insufficient evidence to rebut O’Bryant’s prima facie proof establishing essential need. Accordingly, after conducting an independent de novo review of the entire record, I would hold that O’Bryant met his burden to establish an essential need to try his lawsuit in Brazoria County. I would overrule appellants’ sole issue and affirm the judgment of the trial court.
LINDA REYNA YAÑEZ
Justice
Dissenting memorandum opinion joined
by Justices Rodriguez and Garza
Dissenting memorandum opinion delivered
and filed this the 9th day of June, 2005.